Tha Cynic wrote:Hackett wrote:He still seems a little immature to me. I remember seeing an interview with him and the reporter asked if he had a chance to watch the playoff games, and Scottie answered something along the lines of, if its not Raptor related, he is not really interested in watching it.
He gave off the impression that what other teams do, Miami, Philadelphia, does not really interest him. I am not sure if that was just a way of him trying to compliment Toronto or if he was not understanding the implications of the question at hand, but it kind of bothered me and I got the impression that he still has lots of maturing to do.
Take Lowry as an example, he could not go a day without watching at least 3 basketball games, preferably something fresh, but if that was not available he still had to quench that thirst with games from other teams other seasons. He made it sound like an addiction and like he could not go a day without getting his basketball fix.
I got the impression that he had a technical way of viewing it, more along of a mental exercise that would allow him to test his own play calling and counters based on what he saw on screen. Whatever it was, it gave me the impression that this guy had a thirst for this kind of knowledge about the game that would only be useful to someone who actually controlled that rock and had a team to lead. I felt that him watching a game was the equivalent of him doing his mental reps as the execution of both teams unfolded. This is the sort of habit you would expect from a championship point guard, always thirsty for knowledge always wanting to see how others lead and how others counter.
So the comment by Scottie about not finding other teams games interesting rubbed me the wrong way, kind of like he did not realize yet the knowledge that could be gained from watching. I don’t know if this is common amongst rookies, as it seems to me its usually the vets that take the video sessions seriously, but it also may be what separates the wheat from the chaff. Some rookies improve, others never seem to get past a certain ceiling. You may need that hunger, that not everyone with the talent has.
I also don't care to watch basketball after the Raptors are eliminated. I watched this year because Denver is fun to watch, but I typically tune out since it's the same teams every year and I hate watching other teams play after my team has been eliminated. I would rather the players just relax for a bit and then go train. I think you're taking way too much out of this.
I am not worried about your habits since we do not have you penned in as the cornerstone of this franchise.
HiJiNX wrote:You’d be surprised how many people who play sports seriously don’t obsessively watch the sport they play.
That said, seems like we are just nitpicking Barnes at this point.
I am sure there are a lot in both camps, but I imagine that the one's that obsessively watch tend to have a higher IQ and understanding for the game. Guys like Kobe for instance had a much different approach to the game than guys like A.Iverson, yet both had extensive impact on the game if anyone should be lucky to have such names you would not look a gift horse in the mouth. However at the same time, I do notice that guys like Chris Paul, Kyle Lowry, Kobe, Draymond, Shane Battier, Jrue Holiday, JJ Redick tend to be the ones that see a lot of value in watching other players games and it's no surprise that these players are also posses the highest IQ and leadership qualities.
Since one of the aspects of Scotties game that has me the most excited about is his distribution of the ball. I hope that he sees the benefits of watching as much video as he can of his opponents because there are things he can learn and other players who thrive in these roles say that the habit has been more than beneficial to them.
DemHeavyHands wrote:Seems like a whole lot of overthinking going on here

He probably meant to say he rather be there playing than watching it
This is the same guy who told his trainer that he thinks the raps could run the offense thru him like Jokic
I’m gonna say Scottie watches enough basketball lol
I honestly don't know how much Scottie watches video of the game and the importance he places on it, that is why that quote stood out to me as it came directly from him. As for "rather be playing than watching", I hope that is true of every single player on our roster, if it isn't, I don't want them on our team.
This is where his maturity can be assessed, if he told his trainer that he feels the raps could run the offense thru him like Jokic, I would hope he does every single thing he can to get that advantage on court. Watching tape is one way to prepare for your opponents. IF he wants to distribute like Jokic, I would recommend watching every single game Jokic has ever played. It's not a tall order, guys like Kobe have watched every single Jordan game, multiple times. Stopping, slowing down, watching re-watching, checking reactions... they don't get tired from it because there are things that can be learnt from the greats in this game.
If Scottie reads this forum, PLEASE WATCH JOKIC games, over and over, it will help trust me. Not just the ones against Toronto, but the ones against other great opponents.
MoMan24 wrote:The Scottie critiques are getting bizarre. It's basically he doesn't think like me so he is immature or doesn't work hard.
Really you think it's bizarre for fans to worry about how much prep a player puts into his game?