I_Like_Dirt wrote:The.. speed of the game matters and that's where Bryant has had problems. He's not alone. There are lots of players who try to make the NBA and very few succeed. Bryant moves well and has some skill, but he doesn't have the elite level read/react that is basically mandatory in the modern NBA. ...
Humbug. How much of Thomas Bryant had you seen when you wrote the above? How do you know what his "read/react" level is? From the 2 SL games you'd seen when you wrote the above? How much of him did you see at Indiana? In the G League? You see problems that Rob Pelinka just doesn't have the ability to pick out?
Players are as good as the numbers they put up. Period. They are as good as their ability to score efficiently (the more they can do that the better), rebound compared to other guys at their position, & so forth. At the end of a game, we don't compare read/react times & give the victory to the team whose players do that a more "elite" level. We just look at the scoreboard, where the numbers were created by the players' ability to do what I just described.
For any player, of course, the only numbers we have that tell us how he does that stuff are recorded against the competition he actually saw. Last year, in those ways, Bryant was a dominant player in the G League -- not "good" but dominant. He'll have to demonstrate that he can do well in the NBA too.
I_Like_Dirt wrote:I know the draw of jumping on the guy picked off of waivers who is coming in as the underdog, but you really should join me on the Troy Brown hype train. It was pretty empty until summer league started, and even with summer league it's more quieted the complaints than converted too many believers just yet.
?? The 2 guys have nothing to do with one another.
Bryant is not the usual "guy picked off waivers." He is not someone who couldn't make it on the Lakers. He got caught in a numbers game & especially in a complete shift of direction of the team.
Brown is a very talented player -- as you'd expect from a guy picked #15 in the draft. All the same, what he mostly demonstrated in SL was how much development he still needs to have! Nor was it hard to see where his athletic challenges will be.
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:Count me among those who disagree with the conventional wisdom that being lighter help. The very first basketball game I ever went to my dad took me to was in 1972. My dad took me to see West Unser and the bullets. Wes was so fat that when he threw an outlet pass I can see the fat jiggle. Hall of Famer West unsell
I_Like_Dirt wrote:It's different times, though. Steve Kerr wasn't wrong when he pointed out how much better the conditioning has gotten in the modern NBA. Unseld was incredibly skilled, but if he didn't shape up, his career would never have gotten off the ground. That isn't to say he wouldn't have shaped up given the advantage of modern training and such, but there's just no comparison.
Pick a sport and it's patently obvious. Watch Babe Ruth waddle around the base paths and tell me with a straight face he would thrive in the modern game as he was. The Oilers with some of the greatest of all time in Gretzky, Messier and a host of others revolutionized hockey, and if you watch those games from back then, and then watch a game from today, the speed of everything is just ridiculously different. Even golfers have revolutionized their workout regimens dramatically. There has been a quiet revolution in athletic training and conditioning over the past few decades. Not all sports had it happen at the same time, but it's hit every sport now.
Basketball is no exception. People look at pure minutes played and think the old guys were in better shape, but no, the pure effort to be on the floor in the modern NBA is far more excruciating, and if you try to take it too easy, you get exploited and your team winds up behind by 30. That's where bigs are being phased out of the game now. It isn't because they're not skilled or because being tall or strong isn't an advantage, all other things being equal; it's because it's tougher to develop that kind of conditioning as a taller player due to increased pressure on your joints and you wind up being left behind. And given how many bigs historically (and currently, even) haven't been as committed to the game as much as some of the shorter players, those guys are being phased out of the league slowly but surely. Not a knock on them because to make the NBA is extremely competitive and takes a massive toll on your body. It's just how things have moved. You mentioned Shaq in a different post and Shaq was basically superhuman. If you can get another player as big and quick as him, great, and even he struggled with conditioning and had to take regular seasons off and his health started crumbling towards the end of his career.
Bigs are being phased out of the game? Really? Is that a scalable phenomenon? If guys who are 6'9" are quicker & better conditioned than guys who are 6'11" then I guess guys who are 6'7" are quicker & better conditioned than guys who are 6'9". Meaning that guys who are 6'5"... you get my point.
Things change all the time. Then they change again. Pretty soon they change to a way they were some previous time. Every fad looks like a revolution powered by an ineluctable set of previously undiscovered facts.
What's' the average height of an NBA player these days? Is it taller or shorter than 10 years ago? How about 20 years ago?