Texas Chuck wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:NBA players tend to think that whatever was in the cultural waters when they came of age IS basketball, and to have no understanding for how thinking has shifted back & forth over the longer history of the game.
I'm going to be a dissenting view on this. Sure for some of them this is true. But there are plenty of exceptions. The Lakers new head coach a great example. James Harden another. Al Horford and Brook Lopez big man examples. Your guy Steve Nash has been very vocal about this even as he failed as a coach for reasons besides understanding the direction the game was going.
In fact I would say a much higher percentage of players adjust than do basketball fans who tend to be much more stuck in the generation where they first found basketball. It's the main reason Jordan and Kobe topics get so off tracks all the type. These fans just can't possibly imagine a possibility where their hero wasn't playing optimally at all times. Players certainly respect these former greats and hold them in high reverence, but also don't try and play like them knowing better.
Good to have dissenting views.
I will say right from the jump, we've got a point of debate because I believe you're saying that Redick understands the deeper past, and I don't think he does. In fact, he's basically made a point to act like an elementary school kid bullying players from the deeper past to give himself more credibility with modern fans and players.
This YouTube video from the Wilt Chamberlain archives responds to Redick and I think really makes clear that Redick either never did his due diligence (likely) or is just choosing to tee off on the older players.
Note that it is about Dolph Schayes who I personally have always been skeptical about, so this isn't a situation where my prior takes come off looking great either, but when you can see people do serious video analysis on these older players, I think you tend to get more well-rounded opinions.
Redick and myself have both knocked Schayes for the lack of scalability to the modern game in his set shot, which is what so many writings in the past focused on when talking about how he succeeded. But with the aid of the (still small) video we now have, we can see that the Schayes' set shot didn't actually represent the fundamental limitation for Schayes' that it did (or at least we think) for others.
I'll leave some of the other commentary to the video itself but in a nutshell, Redick literally thinks he's a way better player than Schayes because of FG% and the superiority of shot technique, but I think it's pretty clear that if Redick went and played back then, he wouldn't be able to do what Schayes did.
As I say all of that: I think Redick is very, very smart when it comes to understanding the state of the art of NBA basketball - way ahead of most other NBA players, way ahead of most other NBA commentators, ahead of most NBA coaches, and way, way, way ahead of me. I'm not sure whether that's going to make a difference for the LeBron era Lakers - are they even underperforming given the talent on their roster at this time? I'm not sure - but I'm excited to see what they try.
Now, as you mention other guys it seems like you're more focused on players jumping on trends than understanding deeper basketball history, and I understand why you saw that as the thrust of my post. Certainly guys like Horford & Lopez are clear cut examples of guys who pivoted mid-way through their career toward new trends, and in doing so extended their in-demand career by more than half a decade.
Re: players more likely to adjust than fans. That's true, but of course, I'm not talking about comparing the average of one group to the average of another. I'm talking about the interaction between players stuck in their ways and analysts with historical awareness, where the players act as if those who can't play as well as themselves must be wrong because players know better.
I'm talking about the need for epistemological humility and a curiosity about what others understand that you don't. I don't dismiss the perspectives of these players - they know things I don't. And I would suggest that all of us seek to have that combination of curiosity and humility if we want to learn the game better than we already do.
Back to your average fan: Thing is here, most fans want to already-know the game. Meaning, they want to be the guy in conversation with their friends who can have a respected opinion. But this is not the same thing as wanting to be a student of the game. Most of these folks would readily embrace being a student if they had access to a teacher they respect - a Jordanite will probably listen with an open mind to anything Jordan says, for example - but if you're not someone with that pre-established respect, then differences in viewpoint become a competition where the goal isn't to find mutual enlightenment by helping each other see we couldn't see just on our own, but to find a way to get through the conversation with ego intact.
And of course: We non-average fans convince ourselves of our own immunity at our own peril. We should expect that the only way we can keep from falling into the same trap is to assume we ARE falling into that trap too, and work to escape it.