Monday, May 2, 2011

Thibodeau Earns Coach of the Year Honors

Thibodeau energy has injected life
back to Chicago baseketball.
In his first season as head coach of the Chicago Bulls, Tom Thibodeau has taken home the honor as being the NBA's best coach in 2011 being named the Coach of the Year Sunday afternoon.

Thibodeau is the first rookie head coach to lead his team to a 62-win season since Paul Westphal did so with the 1992-93 Phoenix Suns.

The news of the award does not come as much of a surprise as Thibodeau has taken a .500 team and turned them into the best team in the NBA record-wise in only a one-year span.

Last season the Bulls finished the regular season 41-41 and were the No. 8 seed heading into the postseason. A year and 62 wins later, the Bulls finished with the best record in the NBA at 62-20.

Chicago would be bounced out of the first-round of last year's postseason by the NBA's best Cleveland Cavaliers in five games.

A lot has changed since then with the Bulls beating a pesky Indiana Pacer team in five games to advance to the second-round for the first time since 2007. Thibodeau led Chicago to their first Central Division title since Michael Jordan's Bulls in 1998.

Thibodeau has brought a toughness and since of strength to this Chicago team and it all starts on the defensive end of the floor. The Salem State graduate has been known as a defensive mastermind around the NBA for a long time.

That was never more apparent during his time with the Boston Celtics, where he was the assistant coach to Doc Rivers from 2007-10.

Thibodeau made the Celtics become a defensive juggernaut during this tenure and help lead them to the NBA Championship back in 2008. Boston ranked in the top five in every defensive category while Thibodeau was there and might be the single reason why Boson has created such a tough, physical presence about themselves the past several years.

He has done much of the same in the Windy City, having the Bulls rank second in the NBA in points allowed at 91.3 per contest behind none other, the Celtics, at 91.1 points per game. It's a vast improvement from a year ago when the Bulls allowed nearly 100 points per game at 99.1, good enough for 13th in the NBA.

Thibodeau is only the fourth coach in Bulls history to win the award since its establishment in 1962.

The last Chicago coach to win the award was legendary and current Los Angeles Lakers head coach, Phil Jackson. Jackson won the award back in the 1995-96 season, where his team won an NBA record 72 games in the regular season.

Jackson would go on and lead the Bulls to their fourth NBA Championship under his watch and begin the start of his second career three-peat. That same season, Jordan would win his fourth of five NBA Most Valuable Player Awards and fourth NBA Finals MVP. Many believe that Chicago's point guard Derrick Rose is the front-runner to receive this year's highest individual honor.

Rose and Thibodeau try to become only the second player and head coaching duo in Bulls history to win those awards in the same year and finish with an NBA Championship.

The last player and head coaching duo to receive the Most Valuable Player and Coach of the Year Awards in the same year were Cleveland's Mike Brown and LeBron James, capping their great 2008-09 regular season. However, Brown and James would come up short in the postseason, losing to the Orlando Magic in the Eastern Conference Finals in six games.

Thibodeau and Rose hope for a different result, much like that Bulls team fifteen years ago.

For what he's done, there was not a coach more deserving in the NBA this season than Thibodeau to receive the award.

Chicago kicks off their second-round matchup against the Atlanta Hawks, who will be without former Bull Kirk Hinrich for the series, Monday in the Windy City.

No comments:

Post a Comment