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Problem is that a coach is more focused on winning this year, the front office is more focused on the long term condition of the roster. A coach may prioritize a veteran with one good year left over a very young player who hasn’t had much opportunity to prove himself yet but has flashed and there’s reason to believe he will develop. For this year, yes the veteran will be better, but long-term your roster will be shorthanded after that. So it makes sense to leave these decisions with 1 person and then have the coach focus on doing his best to win with who he has - and I’m sure he gets lots of opportunity to give input in their “collaborative environment”.
If the team struggles and it’s clearly due to a talent deficiency, that will be blame laid more on Wolf than Mayo. If you let one guy make the initial decisions but then let the other guy cut it down to 53 then you end up with a lot of finger pointing. “He didn’t get me good players”, “I did but he cut them before they developed” etc.
I don't know about "the front office is more focused on the long term condition of the roster" -- I think they tend to be focused on impressing their peers across the league since they know it's a matter of if rather than when they get fired. Thus we see a lot of picks based on measurables which are easy for the GM to defend, and leave the rest of the stuff such as motivation to play, on-the-field ability, willingness to learn, etc up to the coaching staff to sort out.
Of course there are extremes where GMs pick purely on measurables and pick busts ( ref: Jamarcus Russell type ) and get roasted forever for it, but more often than not they can say we picked the best athlete, coaching staff didn't develop him right, yada yada.
I don't think it's clear when there is a talent deficiency versus a development deficiency since we see lots of GMs who did a bad job get a second bite of the apple. Same for coaches. Everyone has figured out the formulas for putting themselves in the best light.
Unless you are massively successful, there will be tons of finger pointing. Victory has many fathers, defeat has none.












