I said it before (and the power of the Internet allows me to say it again

): I know it's a business, but it's a pretty cold way of doing business. Basically, it's a case of "Thanks for getting this team to overachieve, but we can't really pass this guy up."
The question is, will Larry Brown do a better job? In his last two NBA coaching jobs, he's had a proven scorer (Reggie Miller then Allen Iverson) who is more likely to play outstanding basketball than shrink when the game (or indeed the season) is on the line. In Detroit, he has guys who can score, but aren't in the same class as Reggie and AI when it comes to scorers. Can he make that work?
I really didn't like larry brown's indirect comments of iverson after he left...very cheap. I dont like that guy much....carlise's piss-tons beat him..now they fire him to hire the looser?
It's the way of the new coach - they always change their tune. Back in 1996, Phil complained about Shaq's footwork and getting away with all sorts of infractions down low. Now that he coaches the Lakers he's defending and praising the way Shaq plays, which is only right, but still funny given his comments back in the Chicago days.
Perhaps it's an expected ritual though, a way of severing ties to the former team and showing commitment to the new one.