madmaxmedia wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:madmaxmedia wrote:
This aspect goes both ways, which makes for really good discussion but a lot of stupid hot takes (not saying yours is.) It's not hard to discuss this with just a little nuance, but if you just want to yell at clouds or wave off the past it's pretty easy too.
When the sport is worth many, many billions a year through multiple revenue streams, players are going to practice and go through advanced development from an early age, go through all the prep and HS stuff, and enter the league as absolutely elite athletes. It's both a credit to them and to the environment.
OTOH players way back in the day didn't get paid nearly so much, often there wasn't even live telecasts, and yeah many worked in the offseason because they didn't get paid that much relative to the normal population. It made more sense to work a separate job than to train in the offseason and essentially work for nothing instead (remember this was not the days of collective bargaining agreements and free agency.) How many grade schoolers and high schoolers trained back then the way they do now? Or had specialized training programs in the offseason?
If you literally transplant a 28 year old star player 60 years in the past (or future), their performance is going to necessarily reflect differences in the environment they grew up in. OTOH if you take baby Wilt or Jerry and have him born in 1996, or take MJ (or JJ Redick) and have him born in 1940, obviously that would change who they are as adults.
Transplanting a baby is just a silly discussion though. We can only discuss who these players actually were and what they did. Anything else is into pure fantasy. What's staggering is that people can't grasph that a JJ Redick who was a MEGA star in college. You put him in the 1950's NBA and he's a mega star.
I bring those things up because there end up being a lot of assumptions people make in arguing for this or that. It's just conjecture either way.
It would be interesting though to consider how putting JJ Redick in 1950's NBA would change the NBA, because people would see what he's doing and try to pick up on things. You'd have a bunch of guys trying to emulate and learn his shooting form, and it would actually speed up development in the game.
I agree that would change the course of NBA history. But how fast would it really travel? It might take years for coaches at the highschool level to even see it. There was so little basketball on tv at that time. We're talking about a league that had the finals on tape delay into the 1980's. There just wasn't "game film" even then. The league was barely in the infancy of integration midway through the 1950's.
Just look through the all nba list from 1951. This was a truly infant league at the time.
1st Team
Ralph Beard
Bob Davies
Alex Groza
Ed Macauley
George Mikan
2nd Team
Frankie Brian
Joe Fulks
Dick McGuire
Vern Mikkelsen
Dolph Schayes

















