‘It’s always throwing your team under the bus‘: JJ Redick blasts Doc Rivers for lack of accountability

Basketball
Published 21.02.2024
‘It’s always throwing your team under the bus‘: JJ Redick blasts Doc Rivers for lack of accountability

JJ Redick didn’t simply take Doc Rivers’ outdated job — he eviscerated him.

The ex-NBA star joined Mike Breen and Doris Burke on ESPN’s prime broadcasting workforce after Rivers left the gig to teach the Milwaukee Bucks in a midseason rent, however Redick isn’t giving him any leeway in his return to the bench.

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“I’ve seen the trend, I’ve seen the trend for years,” Redick mentioned on “First Take” on Tuesday, excoriating his former coach.

“The trend is always making excuses. Doc, we get it. Taking over a team in the middle of a season is hard. Just like getting traded in the middle of a season is hard for a player, we get it.

“It’s always an excuse. It’s always throwing your team under the bus. They lose to Memphis, ‘oh it’s his players fault!’ Memphis was playing G League guys and two-way guys. You look at his quotes over the weekend and now he wants to take credit for the James Harden trade to the Clippers working out? He wants credit for that? There’s never accountability with that guy.”

Rivers, in taking on the Bucks in late January, mentioned throughout his introduction he wished he had waited to take over till after the All-Star break.

In the ultimate recreation earlier than the break, Milwaukee — at 35-21, the No. 3 workforce within the Eastern Conference led by stars Giannis Antetokounmpo and Damian Lillard — fell to a shorthanded Grizzlies workforce, prompting Rivers to quip that they “had some guys in Cabo.”

He additionally mentioned he was consulted earlier than the 76ers despatched Harden to Los Angeles in an early season blockbuster — whereas he was working for ESPN.

“I was the one, obviously, they consulted,” Rivers informed ClutchPoints on the All-Star festivities. “They made calls and I was one of the guys who said it would be a great deal for them because I thought he fit them better than he would fit the Sixers team. I think he’s a perfect fit there.”

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Rivers is without doubt one of the NBA’s most achieved coaches, having accrued a 1,100-770 mark over 24-plus season — together with a 3-7 file with the Bucks to this point — and coached Redick from 2013-17, one thing present Milwaukee guard Patrick Beverley identified in defence of his new coach.

“This Man Doc actually saved your career,” Bucks veteran Patrick Beverley wrote on X. “Started you when no one else wanted 2. And u retire go on TV and say that.”

Redick didn’t again off his take and disputed Beverley’s.

“Pat my guy I had a four year offer with player option for the same money to be a starter for a different team. FOH “saved my career,” he responded.

Redick’s first-hand expertise with Rivers leant credence to his phrases for his fellow “First Take” panelists, who predicted a few of that accountability.

“I said this, JJ, the second he got the job,” Stephen A. Smith mentioned, “If Doc Rivers — and I’m not talking about this season, because he came in there halfway through — If Doc River between this year and next season, doesn’t win, I think it’ll be his last coaching job in the NBA.”

This article first appeared on The New York Postand was reproduced with permission.