celticfan42487 wrote:Harry Garris wrote:Johnny Bball wrote:
Bull ****.
You know, I really don't understand your aversion to stats. They're helpful to understand things. But here you go:
Last year teams attempted 21.8 free throws per game on average.
In the 1990 season it was 27.9. Every year in the 90's teams attempted at least 25 free throws per game on average, with a low of 25.8 in 1999.
Source: https://www.basketball-reference.com/leagues/NBA_stats_per_game.html
We are currently at an all time low for fouls called and free throws attempted in NBA history. I know you don't like to hear that because it doesn't fit your narrative that modern superstars foul bait and fool the silly NBA refs all the time and the stars of the 90s would never do such a thing. But it's true.
Neat, how about you put that in context to drives to the rim and open layups.
FTA /= worse rim protection.
If anything more free throws likely means better rim protection because there wasn't a free layup and they had to earn it at the line which is still a thing many players have as a weakness (see our reigning champion multiple time MVP, even 3 point shooters like Jaylen Brown, ect.)
You can't just list stats and think it means you're making a right conclusion. You have to think of how you're using those stats and the implications of them. Stats don't lie, but the conclusion humans draw from them can easily be foolish.
It's not really better rim protection though. It was just way easier to protect the rim back then when players weren't spacing the floor. The individual players aren't necessarily better at shutting down drives, there were just more of them in the paint so you could clog the lane with bodies.























