Pete Dominguez on coaching the Milwaukee Bucks at NBA Summer League (Hear District – Episode 22)



Pete Dominguez on coaching the Milwaukee Bucks at NBA Summer League (Hear District – Episode 22)

[Music] five time Allstar Marcus Johnson alongside Marcus Johnson what’s up everybody hey this is the here District captain of this vessel and I got my first mate my number one son Christian Johnson what up talk to me H Rain Man Let It Rain I go guess what we’re going back can’t pass s to break go go fight go go fight welcome everybody to the here District Marcus Johnson you’re listening to a buck plus audio production on the buck Plus network your weekly pulse on the Milwaukee Bucks straight from a buck Legend This Is Here district with Marcus Johnson alongside his son and 1995 NCAA Champion Chris here’s MJ all right welcome to here District I’m the captain of this vessel on this Fantastic Voyage got my first mate Chris Johnson my son alongside and uh we are uh extremely uh fortunate to have a young man who has uh moved over a couple of seats on that bench he’s got to be in the hot seat head coach of the buck Ser League team bucks assistant coach Pete Dominguez welcome to here District Pete hey how’s it going how’s it going uh happy to happy to be here really really glad you all decided to invite me and uh yeah really looking forward to to Summer League with we got a really good group so we’ll be heading out tomorrow and I think I think we got good things in store go Ahad so before we jump into that let’s talk about you in terms of um your background your relationship with Doc Rivers let’s just start off with basketball your your love for basketball when did that happen how did that happen just kind of where you grew up just kind of give us a little synopsis of of the backstory of Pete Dominguez yeah uh I’m from Los Angeles California uh I played high school basketball and I was never I was never good I was I was actually really bad player but it was I was fortunate to to maybe not have as much talent as I’d like to have because I knew from a young age that I wanted to get into the coaching side um so I played basketball and then uh when I was done with high school I went up to San Francisco finished uh finished school at San Francisco State University and during my time in in the Bay Area I got an internship in uh media relations with the Golden State Warriors W and I was working under a gentleman who’s their VP of communications right now named Raymond Ritter and I work years yeah Raymond is uh Raymond’s a mentor of mine and and he’s done really well by me and I’m really grateful to have have worked under him um but what that internship with the Warriors really afforded me was a a look into how basketball operations departments operate and what Avenues were available for me uh once I graduated in terms of pursuing a coaching path uh at the time it was it was the video room right that was the lowest of of the Low video internships uh assistant video coordinator position so I got my hands on the software that all the NBA teams use around the league kind of just uh started messing around with that and then when I graduated moved back home to LA and I kind of just started going around to coaching clinics uh I got really lucky I went to a coaching clinic in Orange County met a gentleman by the name of Russell Turner who’s the head coach at UC Irvine men’s basketball uh I was able to connect with Coach Turner and kind of let him know you know where I was at and what I was trying to do coach set me up with an internship with his uh his Doo his director of basketball operations came in and uh I kind of showed them what I could do with with with the Limited film skills that I had and uh coach really did me a solid and he did me a big favor and he offered me an opportunity with uh with really no experience in video uh I worked two years at UC Irvine under coach Turner and I learned a ton uh I was just you know I was in coaches meetings and I was just you know I was in the mix every day I wasn’t able to do anything on the court because of the N CA rules at that time but I was working with the coaches every day in terms of scouting game plan creating practice plan stuff like that and I was handling all the video responsibilities uh I was really lucky we we were able to have a ton of success while I was at UC Irvine I was a part of the school’s first ever NCAA tournament uh um birth uh really had some good players come through the program and then after two years there the Clippers at the time had a had an internship available in their video room and I was living literally literally across the street from their facility at the time so I got in touch with their video guy was able to schedule a meeting had a cup of coffee with him they brought me in uh for an interview and and I think more than anything I was right place at the right time and I was really easy to hire for them so uh was able to meet Doc and interview with some of the coaches um got on with the Clippers as a video intern worked my way up through through the video room and then when doc went to Philadelphia he offered me an opportunity to to go with him and that’s kind of when I started my coaching career out in Philadelphia spent three years with Coach there and then uh at the end of last season when doc made the decision to to he was going to do TV for a year or what we thought was going to be a year right uh it kind of put me in unfamiliar Waters and I had to figure something out um I’ve always been a big big fan of international basketball um even you know as a kid in high school I remember coming home from school and watching Euro League games and stuff like that maab Tel was like everyone asked me you a Laker or a CLI fan I’d be like I’m a macabi fan that was my thing so I always had that passion I always wanted to go overseas and and and have the opportunity to to to learn a different game I got really lucky a gentleman by the name uh Fabian Boro who’s the president of club called orra sanas in Buenos Ares Argentina was able to get in touch with him through through one of my dear friends Pablo Pion and uh went down to Argentina around this time last summer and uh took up a head coaching position with with OAS the team was in the the first division in Argentina and I had I had the time of my life both professionally and socially um and I think you know the biggest thing for me was the growth opportunity I really got a chance to be uncomfortable and and and put myself in a position where I had to do it you know you’re uh I was so used to working in the NBA where the staffs are so big you got Player Development coaches you got offensive coaches defensive coaches but when I was down there it was me two assistants and a strength coach yeah um so I did that sounds like when I sounds like when I played Pete we had Don Nelson and John we had we had a we had a head an assistant and and a trainer but tell me about you know before you continue but but the video room what is it Eric sposta uh Mike buen holer Frank vogle there just so many coaches great head coaches championship coaches in this league that got started in the video room what it is about the video room that that has that that that leads to the development a really good solid NBA coaches yeah so a lot of people say it’s like the incubator of uh of of of coaching staffs for the league right that’s where they develop a lot of their young talent but everything comes through everything comes through the video room everything starts in the video room so I think the biggest way of teaching at least I believe is through film and obviously all that film is produced through the video room and and and it’s really hard to to skip steps in the video room right so you’re you’re working with the Player Development coaches putting together development plans for your young guys you’re working with the offensive guys um and you’re looking at you know the defensive side of the ball you’re working with the defensive guys so you’re seeing the offensive side of the ball so you’re really not skipping any steps and you’re really thrown into the fire and um yeah it’s a grind It’s a Grind my first two years I was working under uh Lawrence Frank at the time with the Clippers was our defensive coordinator and uh Lawrence is someone I got tremendous respect for uh he taught me a ton he taught me a ton both with his professionalism and his work ethic and I think just cutting my teeth for those two years with Lawrence really prepared me for for for you know the rest of the years that I had ahead of me in the NBA Pete I’m curious just as you have gone on your coaching Journey just some of the things that you have taken from some of these stops like for instance Argentina like what was like maybe like the most important thing from a coaching perspective that you learned and that you that you took from that stop and then your time spent at other other areas too Clippers video room around these people as well Argentino is incredible it’s just such a different brand of basketball and uh I’m so lucky and so privileged to have been around the NBA the last 10 years and I think you know the NBA’s got the best players and I think it’s got the best coaches but uh because of the level of talent in the NBA I think it lends to a style of play that is so direct right so direct like you some of these guys all they need is is one screen and they just need space and then you know they can create Magic out of that uh fact there’s a ton of talented people uh basketball players down in Latin America but they’re not the level of your average NBA player player so the systems that I saw down there were incredible um trying not to use too much coach terminology but in the NBA a lot of people they kind of get turned off by what we call call it like window dressing or smoke actions right false motion stuff like that yeah yeah and you know people don’t run that with a purpose here like people don’t really value it as much but down there man they got so many wrinkles to their stuff and you’ll have a you know you’ll have a slot cut to a cross screen to a pin down to a and then they’ll throw it to the post and then all of a sudden be uphill dho to a swing and then that’s when the action starts um and seeing those teams execute those systems with so many wrinkles and and so many nuances to them guys that have been playing for the same club for seven eight years which is a lot more common out out there than it is here uh man they got some stuff to them and and having to defend that and having to coach against that was really really challenging and uh I got to be honest man I I for a while there thought I bit off more than I could chew cuz it was really really tough and I knew that I had to adjust some of my NBA philosophies really quickly but uh luckily I had a really good staff down there and I was able to do that and we enjoyed some success in Argentina yeah man and so let’s talk about Summers and so you know for me Pete couple of things Larry Brown I was gonna jump out of college into the ab at the time with the Denver Nuggets Larry was a coach we had dinner I flew down to Denver to ask who paid for it but I flew down to Denver to watch the ABA finals Dr J against David Thompson the New Jersey Nets against the different one of the greatest aial shows i’ ever seen in my life but so Larry and I had dinner Larry told me really a sound piece of advice the most important Summers of your of your career will be the summer before your rookie year when you get ready to be a rookie and then the summer after your rookie year when you see what you need to work on and improve upon then Don Nelson uh after my rookie year brought me out to LA in the summer I didn’t play in the summer league but he he he corrected my jump shot form I shot with just all wrists and all wrist didn’t have great form he told me to let that arm kind of float through I went out piz to a playground right after that I couldn’t miss and I wound up averaging like 26 points a game uh my second year in the league first team All Pro but it was that just that little adjustment that nobody had ever told me that before no one they’d all made suggestions but nobody told me that the point being Summers just in terms of importance and a player’s developmental trajectory I mean that that’s that’s serious business I mean in terms of what these guys are out there doing talk about that and and and your responsibility to these young players to get better yeah I mean there’s no offseason especially for these young guys right the offseason is kind of it’s it’s uh it’s moving time for them it’s when they take steps forward um Doc’s always really emphasized having a elite level Player Development staff every place that he’s been um he’s brought in a couple coaches specifically Jason love and Spencer Rivers this uh this off season who these guys are incredible at what they do um not just the technique and the skill but you know to get these guys to come in every single day and work on a lot of these things create these habits that just require a tremendous amount of repetitions is not an easy thing especially one so many of these guys have already enjoyed so much success right doing it a certain way so getting them to buy into uh creating new habits and and and kind of developing new techniques is not an easy thing so I think one thing that a lot of our skill coaches do is it’s about creating an environment that’s conducive to to to getting better and flourishing in and just enjoying being in so our gym every morning is is humming with with coaches flying around putting guys through jills but we got music going and it’s really fun I think the guys really enjoy being in there and that’s the biggest thing you want to create an environment where guys we got a we got a program where we send guys out for a week let them do their thing and they’ll work with their trainers and then they’ll come back for a week or so and they’ll work with our coaches here in Milwaukee but when they’re in the gym man it’s Smiles it’s laughs but it’s also business and I think finding that balance is is a key to the summertime because there’s so much work that goes in in the off season um it’s important also finding a balance I think where you got to let guys you got to give them a little bit of rain to to to get outside of their normal skill set or maybe what they do in in in in our system offensively cuz we all we’re all trying to grow we’re all trying to stay take steps forward but at the same time balancing that with work that you know when you’re playing with the yanis you’re going to be required to do certain things or when you’re playing off a Dame you’re going to be required to do certain things so finding that balance is big but again uh just the energy in the gym and I think during our summer league practices is something that we’ve done a really good job maintaining Pete when I hoop man I you know I played overseas and I played every summer in the summer league you know I was a scorer so my mindset when I got to Summer League was to put up buckets I remember one Summer League in Long Beach Randy Moss the receiver he decided to play I gave him 40 it was nothing I still but on the heels of that I didn’t get no I didn’t get one invite to NBA training camp that summer my question for you Pete when you have a certain profile a guy that’s on the summer league roster like what type of skill sets or what type of value are you looking for them to demonstrate in order for the bucks and you guys to even have them under consideration to even invite them back to training camp camp or mini camp or anything like that to be for further involvement in the organization yeah I think you just overall you want competitive guys you want guys that are going to compete on both sides of the ball because having that having those guys in your gym at any level whether that’s the 13th 14th 15th guy on your roster or whether those guys are under G League consideration those guys are going to be around your guys and you want guys around your guys that are going to push your guys uh I think John and and mil and the rest of the front office do a really really good job of identifying those two things hi character guys and high competitors um we got guys that really get after it um I think the biggest thing for summer is like Doc came in and he he spoke to the team uh and he said you know look we got we got Giannis we got Dame we got Brook Lopez we got Bobby poris we got Chris Middleton you know when you add up those shots at the end of the night there’s only about 14 16 more shots to go around so you guys better do something besides score the basketball you guys better do something that impacts winning besides putting the ball on the hoop and as you guys know there’s a lot of other aspects to basketball right that that that are conducive to winning so um we really emphasize I think guys who who who communicate on both ends of the floor uh we believe in that especially defensively I think it’s imperative but yeah guys who really know how to play off of superstars that can play without the ball understand spacing understand when to cut when to hold stuff like that P what will make this a successful summer in your mind for the draft picks AJ and and Tyler what are you looking to to do kind of with these two young players who at 19 years old you know I don’t know how much they will contribute at all this season but what are you looking to try and get out of them developmentally over the course of this summer yeah I think them just building their confidence is the big thing um as you continue to take steps in your development uh you know there’s more required out of you but I think you have to maintain that confidence that got you there and it’s harder to do that the the higher up the tree the higher up the ladder that you climb uh we talk about you know success isn’t always linear right it’s not a straight line it’s going to have you’re going to have setbacks you’re going to have days in the gym where you just can’t make a shot but you know you got to just keep having good days and we say good days add up you know so you make sure that you put in the the required amount of work you make sure you do the stuff that you got to do and you do it every day and in over the long run you’re going to We believe that you’re going to have success uh both of those guys my biggest thing for them is being as young as they are and they’ve both been so impressive in the practice that practices that we’ve had is they’re not going to uh play mistake free basketball they’re going to make mistakes but my job is to getting them to to play through mistakes right and not let those mistakes hinder them not let them set them back for two three possessions where I got to sub someone out Sit Them Down build them back up understand that you’re going to make mistakes and and it’s not about making mistakes or not Mist not making mistakes it’s about how you react to that mistake the next play and having that next play mentality is big for them cuz uh they’re going to have ups and downs you know it’s just part of it but I’ve been really impressed with both of those young guys in terms of your position as coach how much autonomy do you have is it an organ organizational thing where you meet meeting every day with Doc or talking with joh horse J Milt or somebody about kind of what you want to get out of certain players on on a day-to-day basis or they just kind of give you an overview of what they’re looking for and then leave it up to you to figure out the rest yeah I talked to doc d uh Doc’s awesome I think doc does a really good job of finding the balance of of making sure that I’m putting some of our younger guys in situations that they need to be in during this summer league but I think he also understands that it’s an opportunity for growth for a lot of our staff so he’s kind of letting me do some of my ideas and summer league is a great opportunity to try some stuff out X’s and O’s that you know let’s take a look at it and maybe this is something that we could Implement for next year so uh I talk with Doc every day but he’s been really good at uh at kind of giving me some space and and um Ronald Dupri’s been a part of our meetings uh every day he’s with us and and and dup’s been great I rely on him for a lot of things but I have a tremendous staff um not just of other assistants our g-league head coach Beno udri is one of my assistants Spencer Rivers we brought over Jack herum uh those guys have been absolute studs this summer league but we got a lot of guys even in lower level positions video positions stuff like that who are uh have the opportunity to kind of use this summer league to develop their coaching voice and get reps at doing some stuff that maybe they normally wouldn’t get to do so uh collectively it’s an it’s it’s an effort for everyone and I think you know I got a lot of good people working around me and it is my show but you know we got a lot of people who are who who are really influ influential and and helping me make decisions are you able to implement some of those multitude of wrinkles from the Argentinian team that you talked about earlier are you able to you able to have to kind of uh Freedom offensively or you or you just got to got to play close to the best no man I got I got I got Aj Johnson I got Mar boam Andre Jackson we don’t need all that we’re trying to score in the first eight seconds we’re trying to play vertical so yeah yeah that hasn’t transitioned yet over to the summit of team that’s a good thing all right man look man we we appreciate the time man and uh this is an important area important aspect of these players getting better as you talked about just getting better building good habits this is kind of where it starts man this is a hell of a responsibility for you good luck with it and congratulations on it more than anything else uh Pete Dominguez thank you bucks head coach for the summer league thank you guys so much look forward to seeing y’all soon all right appreciate you take care all right welcome back to the Fantastic Voyage I’m Marcus the captain of this vessel here’s my first mate Chris Johnson don’t want to thank again Pete Dominguez the assistant coach of the Milwaukee Bucks Head Coach Chris for the bucks summer league team man and it’s it’s a I can recall Chris when you were at Montclair Prep High School this little small school out in the and Van eyes van eyes thank you very much a school that uh in terms of celebrity alumni share with the school there Michael Jackson with the school there the Kardashians with the school there Eddie cyprian nice nice C talented act cyprian talented actor had had a series on uh on NBC uh thick thick what’s the thick Robin Robin Thick thi they don’t know we used the carpool Robin Thick they won’t believe the stories d think I I coached him as he was a JB basketball player little little cocky guy with the long hair could really really play a little bit too but anyway so I’m an assistant coach Bob Webb who played at UCLA on those great uh uh Bill Walton lead teams in the early 70s was the head coach Howard Abrams was his first assistant I was like third assistant so there was a game Chris where where Howard Abrams couldn’t be there for some reason I had to move over one seat and just moving over that one seat that that was that from that third assistant to that second was so dag on hot you know it had to be more alert more aware you know just couldn’t like you know fold my arms you know fold my legs and sit back and watch and enjoy the game I had to be involved in the game so so uh Pete Dominguez as an assistant coach moving into that head coach’s role even though it’s at Summer League it’s still going to be a fun experience a different experience now let’s talk about these ladies let’s talk about these ladies man and you and I uh we kind of go back and forth a little bit on this rookie of the Year race in the WNBA and uh you love and rightfully so with good reason Caitlyn Clark and what she has done as a rookie Angel Reese I believe you know 14 straight double doubles something impressive no other player has done in WNBA history is impressive but what what did Caitlyn do today so Caitlyn had uh 29 Points 13 assists uh five steals five rebounds three blocks five threes something that has never been done in WNBA or NBA history so as of this recording Caitlyn has done something that has never been accomplished before she was the first woman rookie first rookie to record a triple double in WNBA history only 16 players have ever recorded a triple double and she did so as a rookie becom in the first now look Angel Reese look I give Angel Reese her props she also became the broke Candace part rookie record of double doubles in a row anytime you put yourself in the name of an icon like the goat in my opinion CP3 right right CP3 right you you on the same level as her when they we didn’t they didn’t expect Angel to be this good they didn’t expect Angel to have this type of impact so yes I am impressed today she got her 14th straight double double that is impressive well and something comes to mind that that we we’ve been talking about a lot uh as you’re you know in charge of development develop developing uh the development of uh you know your sister my daughter Shiloh going to be a ninth grader coming into High School in September but Candace Parker had a brother right Anthony Anthony Parker and so I’m sure I’m sure they had some some some really intense battles Angel Reese got a brother Julian that I’m sure they’ve had some pretty intense battles Caitlyn Clark I think there was a broken nose somewhere in their history battles going at so my point is is that you know and and you brought you brought this to my attention it really behooves in terms of the development like my daughter other other other other lady players that have aspirations of playing you know big-time high school college basketball I mean it helps to play against boys I me playing against boys and to that point I talked to a couple of really outstanding players who who we watched this weekend the sparks in La did a great job with their promotional thing they had a junior Sparks tournament my daughter Shiloh played in that they won their tournament but uh there was a young lady princess poale hunin from Hawaii going to Santiago High School I asked her mother after the tournament what’s responsible for her being so advanced in terms of her development she she played with boys all the time in Hawai that was her thing uh you know I talked to some other players um AEL cook who’s an outstanding star of the tournament you know same situation um um um Khloe Jenkins another player who going to be from later uh played against so this whole idea of competing against boys I well I’m watching the tape this a big the important Point watching the tape of the UCLA women’s team summer workout and and Hae hz’s sister Gabriella she’s going against this at least Collegiate level player guy that that’s quicker that’s stronger but she’s taken to the hole she’s got to be more creative there’s a lot to be said man for that whole concept of playing kind of you know you know kind of Coss Crossing the the the gender boundaries and girls kind of playing against boys just to get better I think it’s it happens a lot more than we understand and realize it’s just not talked about and publicized but when you look around NCAA college basketball Division One women’s basketball on the highest levels South Carolina has a entire roster of dudes that they kind of that they kind of Shuffle in and out that practice against the ladies during the year Yukon I mean every UCLA I mean every Big Time program has male counterparts at their practice and this has been the case since 9596 yeah okay I I I know guys this guy named rondre Jackson man he ended up working as the assistant to the GM of of the Lakers Mitch cubjac but he was a practice player at UCLA back in the day and what it happens is from a biological standpoint in my opinion you these ladies are going against strength speed quickness advantages athletes that have advantages over pretty much everything physical right so now you’re able to react quicker you’re able to get through physical contact or shoot over a tall longer quicker reacting hand than you than you typically would this is the way to go in women’s basketball and it and has been for a while MJ I mean look at the goats look at some of the greatest of all time Cheryl Miller brother Reggie an Meyers brother Dave I mean it’s not coincidence with all these people well and and to that point Cheryl Miller worked out with us at you CLA worked out with with myself and Reggie Theus and Kiki vanderway and David Greenwood I mean you know she was out there balding and you know as cut as as pretty as she was she would go through this molecular change where she would turn into this just basketball demon and she attack us and try and take us to the hold and and you know and and we had to like you know we we we couldn’t just relax you know you know she wasn’t on our level athletically or quickness wise whatever but in terms of coming at us trying to trying to try to take us on a daily basis she was doing that andm same thing she would practice with us when I was with the Milwaukee Buck she’ come into town she’d come to practice run some drills run some three on two stuffs so it’s you’re right it’s been around for for quite some time and and just to piggyback on that Lisa Leslie and Tina Thompson were Main Stays in our workouts at UCLA when I was at UCLA make no mistake about it they were going against us and we were not taking it easy you can ask Lisa and Tina today and they’ll tell you that I was trying to block every shot and guess what they’re telling me Chris please don’t take it thank you they see me now it’s all love it’s respect it’s admir it’s like the most love in the world because they knew that hey just because you’re a young lady that you’re not going to get it easy out here and by taking it easy dad taking it easy MJ and we kind tou we touched on this with an when we had an Myers on the podcast that’s a disservice to them dis they don’t want you to take it easy on them bro that’s the whole thing about it yeah and so a lot of biological differences but the but the competitive Gene that competitive angle is is prevalent in all uh major class type as athletes like that and uh especially these ladies so that’s just a really fascinating Dynamic to me when I think about angel Ree and her brother I think about Caitlyn Clark and the credit she gives to you know playing against playing against the boys all the time and some of these recent uh young ladies that you will hear more from uh special cake Kina Smith she’s a guard at Ontario Christian Tatiana Griffin I want to throw their names out the mix too they’re in the same back court freshman and Southmore then Caris Rainey is a Southmore at Winward where where Shiloh your sister my daughter and Mel cook who is going to be heard from a lot more in the re in in in in in future times as a as a genuine baller basketball-wise so uh just something to keep in mind but uh just want to give a shout out to the ladies man they’re doing a fantastic job it’s just so much fun to watch where the the growth of the ladies game the WNBA where where where where it came from I’m watching the Milwaukee Doe’s back in 1979 you know back there that style of basketball and it was you know it was it was legitimate but right now where it’s come from uh from from from uh 40 years ago has just been nothing short of remarkable so just want to give a a shout out to that so anyway here District he’s the first mate Chris Johnson I’m the captain of this vessel had a great show uh and then again good luck to Pete Dominguez uh summer league team down in Vegas man let’s see what you got and uh let’s help these guys get better are we going to Vegas man it’d be nice I need to talk to Peter Fagan or somebody in the they need they need to get us down there man Johnny Watson you dut and God see somebody man get us down there man we want the he District live in Las Vegas baby viva viva Las Vegas vas Viva Las Vegas here District we’re out of here Viva Las Vegas Viva Las [Music] Vegas this has been a buck plus audio production [Music] n

This week on the Hear District podcast, Marques and Kris are thrilled to host Milwaukee Bucks assistant coach, and the team’s coach for this year’s NBA Summer League, Pete Dominguez. Dominguez explains why his lack of basketball success on the court paved the way for his passion for coaching. Then, he speaks about how he first got into the coaching profession and how he was in the right place at the right time to begin his career on Coach Doc Rivers’ Clippers staff. There he became part of a long lineage of great coaches who started out in the video room. Dominguez also details his experience being the head coach for a professional club in Argentina and how it helped him grow his understanding and vision for the game. Kris shares a story about dropping 40 points on Randy Moss as a Summer League player, and Pete reveals what characteristics teams are looking for from prospects that can translate well to the team roster. They also break down what the Bucks are expecting from the team’s new draft picks, and recent Hear District guests, AJ Johnson and Tyler Smith. Marques and Kris wrap the show with their thoughts on the WNBA’s heated Rookie of the Year race, and why both frontrunners Caitlin Clarke and Angel Reese are deserving of the honor.

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4 comments
  1. This is a really good interview. I like this dudes personality. He seems like a dude I would want to play for. When he said that Doc prides himself on an elite player development staff I loved hearing that. That is something that the Bucks really need. They really havent drafted well at all since Giannis. Thats definitely one of the places the Bucks needed improvement. Also I want to say that people need to stop overreacting about losing in summer league. I seen a lot of Bucks fans losing it over the loss to Cleveland and I think its crazy. Even if we won every Summer League game by 50 it would mean nothing at all. Another thing I want to say is I know Doc gets a lot of shit in the media, but I think hes the right guy for the job. I am really excited for this season. I really like this podcast too im glad yall started it. GO BUCKS!!!

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