Jordan had no defence for poor defending

Why was Eddie Jordan fired by the Washington Wizards on Monday, just two months after the team picked up his contract option for the 2009-10 season? That’s easy: defense.

Jordan is regarded by most league insiders as a polished offensive coach. As an assistant, he was credited with developing the offense that helped the New Jersey Nets advance to back-to-back NBA Finals, beginning in 2002.

His schemes were brilliant: using the Princeton offense as a template, Jordan’s plays were fluid and spread the metaphorical wealth evenly among stars such as Jason Kidd, Kerry Kittles, Kenyon Martin and Richard Jefferson.

Jordan had similar success after he took over the Wizards, who, when healthy, were regularly among the NBA’s best offensive units. His brilliance, however, did not translate defensively.

As disciplined and effective as Washington was on offense, it was equally as disorganized and mediocre on defense. Whether in half court or transition, opponents rarely struggled to score against a Washington team that appeared to have the size and skill to be stingier. In 2006-07, Washington surrendered a whopping 104.9 points per game. And that was a playoff team.

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Washington’s defensive deficiencies were not lost on Wizards management, particularly GM Ernie Grunfeld.

According to league sources, Washington had considered firing Jordan on several occasions, including early in the 2006-07 season, just a few months after he signed a new three-year, $12 million contract. Among the team’s concerns was Jordan’s propensity to spend most of Washington’s practices working on the offense.

In fact, when Washington did step up its defense, Jordan didn’t receive much credit.

Last season the Wizards were downright stingy, giving up 99.2 points per game, the 12th-best average in the league.

However, assistant coach Randy Ayers, a defensive specialist who was hired the previous offseason, was given the bulk of the praise for that turnaround.

A return to Washington’s sieve-like form this season was the final straw. Washington’s perimeter defense has been downright pathetic (the gun-from-anywhere Knicks connected on 29 threes in two games against Washington this year). In 11 games this season, 10 of which it lost, Washington gave up 103.5 points on 47.5 percent shooting.