Doctor MJ wrote:When talking about talent pool I think it's important to recognize:
It's entirely possible that more American kids were regularly playing basketball in the '30s than they are now.
That surely seems like a crazy statement but people need to get it into their head that just because the NBA was nascent, doesn't mean basketball was. The NBA comes about precisely because American youth was playing basketball like crazy - in a way more similar to how they play video games nowadays - and people were going out and watching local teams with an enthusiasm that they simply don't do today. It was very much a bet on a sport that already had a talent base and thus was ready to play in big arenas.
If we look at the things about the landscape that really were nascent:
1. Evaluation of basketball tactics was still primitive. They didn't have the data to really know which types of shots were the best shots for the human body to be accurate with, and they didn't understand what was possible with non-goaltending shot blocking.
2. That meant that the skills for those best moves weren't anything like optimized yet.
3. The materials - ball & court - were primitive and spotty. The average pro back then was literally a better passer than the average NBA passer precisely because you couldn't rely on dribbling at every location.
4. Primitive medicine which tended to mean that your career was over the first time you had a serious injury.
5. A lack of big-salary-goal driving young athletes. Doesn't mean they weren't playing like crazy as youths, but really it wasn't until after World War II that having a pro career became anywhere near as good of a plan as becoming a college coach.
6. The separation of Black & White basketball didn't just mean that Black players weren't getting to play in the big leagues, but that most Black players in general weren't getting the mentorship they needed to become elite pros. Example:
While the Harlem Rens & Globetrotters really were elite pro Black teams in the '30s & '40s, and they had some scouting to pick up younger talent, they didn't have the ability to scout all over the country. Bill Russell's primarily Black McClymond high school in Oakland, CA was the best team in that giant state, but California is a long way from where those Black pro teams were operating.
I think salary is really the biggest factor.
When you can't work full-time on your skills, you're simply not going to be anywhere near as good as you could have been.












