David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports

Jamal Crawford seems to have found his calling with his NBA days now behind him. After electrifying crowds with his ball-handling and scoring in arenas for 20 seasons, he is now doing the same off the court.

Crawford has been an analyst on television and now has a mailbag series on NBA.com where he answers wide-ranging questions. Most of them are basketball-related, but he will sometimes answer something about everyday life, such as cooking in his most recent one.

One of the questions he was asked this week was about the ideal size of a basketball rotation. He used his experience as an NBA player and as the coach of a kids team to provide an in-depth answer. Most NBA teams use nine or 10 guys in the regular season and we will see that cut down to sometimes seven in the playoffs.

The question asked was directly about New York Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau. Thibodeau is notorious for using tight, nine-man rotations during the regular season. We have also seen him drop to eight in some circumstances.

It is a strategy that has come under fire at times, as people are concerned that he is running his players into the ground. The person was curious about the pros and cons of the tight rotation, which Crawford used as a way to heap praise on his former head coach. Crawford played one season under Thibodeau, in 2017-18 when he helped the Minnesota Timberwolves snap their 13-year playoff drought. 

“I coach kids and I’ve had 12- and 11-player rotations, and to me, that was too many. I have nine this year and I feel like it’s the perfect number to get guys into a rhythm while not wearing them out.

Thibs notoriously plays his starters heavily. On the other end of that, bench guys like me didn’t get as many minutes. But one thing I’m never going to do is question Thibs. Out of all the coaches I ever played for, there was nobody more prepared than him. So he has his beliefs and philosophies. But you just roll with it and support him if you’re a player,” Crawford wrote.

Thibodeau has earned a lot of praise for the work he has done as a head coach. His style of coaching is based on hard-nosed defense and with the Knicks, he has shown more willingness to adapt his philosophies to fit the modern NBA.

It has resulted in the Knicks turning things around under his watch. For years, they were a bottom-feeding franchise and laughingstock of the NBA. In Year 4 of his tenure in New York, many people are expecting the team to continue ascending the Eastern Conference standings on the cusp of being a contender.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Pacers' Pascal Siakam leads team to Game 6 win vs. Knicks
Late goal sends Panthers to Eastern Conference Finals
Ex-teammate of Shohei Ohtani placed bets with same illegal bookmaker as interpreter 
Former Rams first-round pick retires from NFL after 11 seasons
Insider provides major injury update on Celtics' Kristaps Porzingis
Watch: Bruins strike first in Game 6 with incredible backhand goal
Dodgers make series of moves involving notable players
Giants rookie CF to undergo season-ending labrum surgery
Hurricanes not expected to re-sign defenseman, center
Paul Skenes makes incredible Wrigley Field history in second-career MLB start
Maple Leafs tab former Stanley Cup winner as new head coach
NFL insider expands on competition between Steelers QBs Russell Wilson, Justin Fields
NFL sets outrageous prices for Eagles-Packers Brazil game
Scottie Scheffler shoots improbable 66 after warming up for PGA Championship in a jail cell
Nuggets star has worrying comment about latest injury
Broncos 'very unlikely' to bring back former NFL interceptions leader
Greg Olsen offers broadcasting advice to Tom Brady
Yankees' Juan Soto reacts to Hal Steinbrenner contract talk
Mets star has theory about closer Edwin Diaz's recent struggles
Scottie Scheffler arrested, still makes PGA Championship tee time

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.