5 Reasons Why Nick Nurse Should Be 2020's NBA Coach of the Year

Before COVID-19 put all sports on hold, the Toronto Raptors' Nurse had the resume of 2019-20 NBA Coach of the Year. Allow us to explain.

nick nurse coach of the year
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nick nurse coach of the year

Mike Budenholzer has the best record in the East, Frank Vogel has the best record in the West. Erik Spoelstra has the Miami Heat surprising many, as does Billy Donovan with the Oklahoma City Thunder and Taylor Jenkins with the Memphis Grizzlies. Doc Rivers has had to maneuver without Paul George for at least half the season and load management and still has the Clippers sitting pretty behind the Lakers in second place in the West.

So why, then, is Nick Nurse the best candidate to win the NBA’s Coach of the Year award?

Simply put, the defending champion Toronto Raptors were given no chance of defending their title by NBA analysts all over. Even those most optimistic about the team’s chances saw them as the team that existed when Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan were the two main protagonists, the one that had too much institutional knowledge to finish with anything less than home court advantage but would ultimately bow out in the post-season in the absence of a true superstar.

Yet, at 46-18, Toronto looked in control of the second seed in the East with a three-game advantage over the Boston Celtics before the coronavirus-enforced stoppage. Nurse, along with the rest of his coaching staff, have navigated the Raptors past one obstacle after another to make it seem as though nothing was ever lost. In fact, the championship experience last year was only going to serve as fuel for what they could further gain this year.

Here are five reasons why Nurse has the resume of 2019-20 NBA Coach of the Year.

Managing Through Injuries

raptors bench

On Friday, Nov. 8, it appeared as though disaster struck the Raptors’ early season. Tipping off what was set to be an early stern test of a west coast trip against the New Orleans Pelicans, both Kyle Lowry and Serge Ibaka were out of the game before halftime with injuries. To this point, Nurse had employed a seven-man rotation and hardly used his bench—more on that later—and it looked as though the Raptors would struggle to cope with no dependable depth whatsoever.

Pascal Siakam torched the Pelicans in that game, but what followed against the Lakers, Clippers, and Blazers set the tone for the remainder of the season. The coach made no excuses, said that this was the time for the bench players to show they can be trusted, and pushed Siakam and VanVleet to be greater.

The Raptors pulled off a major upset against the Lakers with Nurse winning his first Coach’s Challenge at a pivotal moment. Trailing 64-60 with 7:36 remaining in the third quarter, Siakam was defending LeBron James when the Lakers superstar drove to the basket for an and-one. Nurse called for the challenge, which reversed the foul call and saved Siakam from his fourth of the game, resulted in a jump ball taking away two points for sure and possibly three. Toronto scored 13 of the next 20 points and never looked back.

Toronto finished the trip 3-2, then rode that never-say-die mentality the rest of the season. Per Man Games Lost NBA, no team has been more heavily impacted by injuries than the Raptors. In addition to Lowry and Ibaka, Siakam, VanVleet, Norman Powell, and Marc Gasol have all missed significant time this season and they’ve still managed to stand 28 games above .500. That doesn’t happen without excellent coaching.

NBA top 5, wins lost due to injured players (Lost-ws metric, lost win shares due to injured players)

1 TOR 11.31 wins lost
2 BOS 10.59
3 BRK 9.85
4 CHI 9.44
5 NOP 8.95https://t.co/oKGlYXsDQc

— Man Games Lost NBA (@ManGamesLostNBA) March 14, 2020

 

Pushing All the Right Buttons at the Right Time

nick nurse

Finding Room for Norm and Fred to Excel

norman powell

Getting Janky With It

Nick Nurse

Figuring Out Good Teams

Kyle Lowry #7 of the Toronto Raptors.

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