Doctor MJ wrote:MyUniBroDavis wrote:Steve Nash absolutely does not play anything like a 1950s guard aside from the fact that he’s not very athletic. Jokic isn’t athletic but he’s also 280-300 pounds with an absurd touch and while he’s slow he is very fluid for his size. Never really watched Stockton though.
I think that’s a vast oversimplification of the improvements in skill on both ends guards and wings have made from the 50s to now, learning from the past, iron sharpens iron and increased incentive to play and all of that, and all of that but just to be clear
Are you in the side that, A. They’d still be good if they grew up today? Or B. An adjustment period with the new rules is all they would need if teleported today in their peak.
When it comes to to A, I think it’s reasonable for some great players (60s, not 50s)
Strongly disagree with B at least for the perimeter guys ive watched from that time (never seen Oscar)
So, when you talk about Nash & Jokic like this, it reads as "Yeah, but those guys are special, and so they are exceptions to the rule." To which I'd say: I don't know what gave you the impression that I was looking to champion every guy from the past.
Steve Nash is special. Nikola Jokic is special. Oscar Robertson is special. Jerry West is special. They are all of them outliers.
I have a lot of experience with folks coming in to basketball analysis and looking to write off the past. Before Nash became an MVP, they'd have told you that nobody who looked like him could be anything like an MVP level player in today's game. New legends emerge, but the songs remain the same. Some will say the new guy is overrated. Some will say that the new guy was fundamentally unlike what came before. And eventually, a new group of people will come in and use the fact that a guy who looks like Nash is proof that the era he was in must not have been very good.
I'd urge you to really think about what I said about jumping S-curves. You believe based on your video scouting you can tell glaring superiority-inferiority between the eras, and I can understand thinking this, and I'm not saying that the difference you spot aren't real. But if things are progressing at such a drastic rate, we should see it analytically. If instead things are roughly looking the same as before - same average height, same average weight, about the same FG%, superstars having decade plus where the only thing driving them out of the game are clear cut signs of aging - then things just really aren't that dramatic.
Re: A vs B. Eh, let me address both, though more B than A.
On A: I don't think it's any kind of given that any player would be as good in any different era, and I'm not trying to argue that all eras are of equal quality. Me talking about a lack of massive statistically salient trends may seem like I'm saying the quality is not improving, but I think it is, just not like it does when you're in the middle of a serious paradigm shift.
On B: I do think that things like 3-point shooting, dribbling technique, etc is something that can be picked up without growing up with it as a child. Not everybody from the past would ever be able to become a great 3-point shooter, but I certainly believe there are guys from prior eras who could pick it up pretty quickly. I don't think an overall adjustment can be done simply with an off-season - because there's no substitute for real season competition - but I think some of these guys could pick it up effectively in the span of a year.
One thing I'll say: Things like previous exposure to formal basketball is important. One of the reasons given for Connie Hawkins' struggles as a defender is that he didn't learn a lot of the standards of the time due to not playing college ball. He had physical defensive talents, but in terms of knowing about different schemes and what he should be doing within those schemes, he struggled.
But if we're talking about college stars like Oscar & West, I would not be concerned.
“So, when you talk about Nash & Jokic like this, it reads as "Yeah, but those guys are special, and so they are exceptions to the rule." To which I'd say: I don't know what gave you the impression that I was looking to champion every guy from the past.
Steve Nash is special. Nikola Jokic is special. Oscar Robertson is special. Jerry West is special. They are all of them outliers.
I have a lot of experience with folks coming in to basketball analysis and looking to write off the past. Before Nash became an MVP, they'd have told you that nobody who looked like him could be anything like an MVP level player in today's game. New legends emerge, but the songs remain the same. Some will say the new guy is overrated. Some will say that the new guy was fundamentally unlike what came before. And eventually, a new group of people will come in and use the fact that a guy who looks like Nash is proof that the era he was in must not have been very good.”
This isn’t what I was saying at all though. Like even remotely.
I don’t even remotely look at Nash and think of a 1950-60s player. I absolutely had a different impression of him when hearing how he played vs watching him and him being ridiculous even 100% ignoring his passing. Jokic otoh, while I understand the idea he isn’t athletic, fluid 300 pound man with a better touch than Dirk and GOAT level passing isn’t really a question.
What do you mean by looks like? I was talking about how they played, Nash isn’t a player who I look at play and see someone that I don’t feel plays in a modern way or demonstrates a modern skillset he looks insane watching back, not just in his iq but his overall skill and ability to read
With Nash especially though he looks nothing like a 50s or 60s player aside from having a really stupid haircut some years lol. Like yeah he’s not a great athlete, but aside from the shooting, if we’re just talking about asthetically in some ways he resembles a looser Curry more than any 50s player. His slashing and finishing in particular, and craftyness around the rim.
I don’t view either as exceptions or anything like that to any sort of rule.Sure they aren’t particularly fast or athletic, but that doesn’t mean they can’t be insane or anything. My main criticism watching 50-60s players has absolutely nothing to do with the athleticism, it’s lower but the gap in skill level for a large majority of players is substantially more obvious to me. It’s to the point where it feels people are so astonished by regular basketball plays in that context that they overcompensate for it
I think people assume I think every player in history sucks. I’m not gonna pretend I have much viewing experience on the 70s or the 80s, but I absolutely don’t look at guys like bird or magic and see players I don’t think would be exceptional today. (As in I think they would be exceptional today) I don’t really make sweeping conclusions on Oscar Robertson because I haven’t watched him play. I saw a bit of him the other day, just a few highlights but I saw more there than anything with west so far to be honest.
I don’t believe because a player has similar impact to someone in era I should believe he would be similarly impactful today if both are in the same situation. More than that, certain things absolutely do translate 1 to 1, and extreme athleticism and slashing finishing ability are some of those things. But certain things I believe don’t translate very well, depending on how far you go back. When it comes to making offensive reads for example, I can look at guys like magic and bird and appreciate their incredible passing ability but In the 60s games I watched I was incredibly unimpressed with the defensive and offensive playmaking.
I can understand the “they aren’t athletic how are they good” but I really don’t agree they’re even remotely similar to 50s players. Jokic is a bit of a weird case physically because offensively it’s not a negative, but Nash especially plays exactly like a modern guard other than not pulling up from three as much
“I'd urge you to really think about what I said about jumping S-curves. You believe based on your video scouting you can tell glaring superiority-inferiority between the eras, and I can understand thinking this, and I'm not saying that the difference you spot aren't real. But if things are progressing at such a drastic rate, we should see it analytically. If instead things are roughly looking the same as before - same average height, same average weight, about the same FG%, superstars having decade plus where the only thing driving them out of the game are clear cut signs of aging - then things just really aren't that dramatic.”
Is average weight the same? Every position aside from the small forward spot (+6) from 1960 to now went up about 10-15 pounds, and it’s gone down since the mid 2000s where it would be +20, I’m assuming from teams downsizing a bit probably. Don’t think anyone would say they are fast in those times.
Height I’ve heard is because players measure in shoes or out of shoes now. Wingspan would be interesting, and we don’t have any real concrete vertical measurements, but we know west had a max reach of 11ft4, which was considered impressive at his height at the time since it’s cited as a feat, but it is below average in the draftexpress database for drafted shooting guards, while the actual vertical is realistically somewhere from 32-34 inches (Curry and reaves are at 35.5 and 35 respectively for reference).
As for general statistical arguments, there are certainly some trends but I don’t envision it to be offense alone that improves either.
Of course comparing 2p% because 3PA.
From 1960-70, it ranged between 41%-46%, but never passed 45% other than 1970 and it dropped off again
From 1970-1980, it ranged between 44-48.5%
From 1980-1990, 3 point shooting made it a bit weird but 2 point percentage generally ranged from 48-49%, where it stayed at till rule changes occurred, where it drops to 45-47%, and then throughout the decade rises to 48-49% again. It had been rising before the rule changes in 06 actually, which I personally think came from offenses s Lowkey going more to spacing and pick and roll most likely. Isolation effeciency overall seemed incredibly low when I saw some synergy data, especially in 2005, and it’s risen substantially today. doubt it was previously.
Then spacing happened and now it’s at 55%
Now let’s look at the top 5?ppg scorers that are not bigs (so non PF or C) and their shooting percentage inside the arc. Looked on bbref so they have to qualify to count
1960 season
Jack twyman 42.2% 31.2ppg
Elgin Baylor 42.4% 29.6ppg
Cliff hagan 46.4% 24.6ppg
Gene shue 41.3% 22.5ppg
Paul arazin 42.0% 22.3ppg
1970 season
Jerry West 49.7% 31.2ppg
Billy Cunningham 46.9% 26.9ppg
Lou Hudson 53.1% 25.4ppg
Connie Hawkins 49.0% 24.6ppg
Havlicek 45.4% 24.2ppg
1980 season
George Gervin 54.0% 33.1ppg
World B Free 47.6% 30.2ppg
Adrian dantley 57.7% 28.0ppg
Dr J 52.3% 26.9ppg
Otis birdsong 51.1% 22.7ppg
1990 season (Barkley listed at fs)
Michael jordan 54.8% 33.6ppg
Wilkins 50.4% 26.7ppg
Barkley 63.2% 25.2ppg
Chris Mullin 57.3% 25.1ppg
Reggie Miller 55.2% 24.6ppg
2000 season
Allen iverson 43.5% 28.4ppg
Grant hill 50% 25.8ppg
Vince Carter 47.5% 25.7ppg
Payton 49.7% 24.2ppg
Jerry stackhouse 46.2% 23.6ppg
2010 season
Durant 50.6% 30.1ppg
Lebron 56.0% 29.7ppg
Carmelo 47.8% 28.2ppg
Kobe 48.7% 27.0ppg
Wade 50.9% 26.6ppg
2020 season
Harden 55.6% 34.3ppg
Beal 51.5% 30.5ppg
Lillard 52.4% 30.0ppg
Trae 50.1% 29.7ppg
Luka 57.4% 28.8ppg
This kind of aligns with what I said, In terms of a clear rise, a fall late 90s with rule changes, then slowly rising from basketball strategy evolving to become more effective, with spacing and help beaters and what not.
I wanted to see within eras peoples data as well, maybe the higher percentages could be explained by worsening defense and I was wrong about “iron sharpens iron”
I went to 1970 to 1975 to see, and sorted it so they’d be under 28.
Unfortunately players were either in the ABA or dealt with injuries
Jack Marin
1970- 19.7ppg 48.9% age 25 season 4
1975- 11.8ppg 45.5%
Played 74+ games all seasons midway, so doubt he has a big injury
Archie Clark
1970- 19.7ppg 49.6FG% age 28 season 4
1975- 13.9ppg 49.5FG%
Seemed to have an injury in 1973
Gail Goodrich
1970- 20.0ppg 45.4FG% age 26 season 5
1975- 22.5ppg 45.9FG%
Chem Haskins
1970- 20.3ppg 45% age 26 season 3
1975- 4ppg 39.7%
All seasons at or above 70
Jimmy walker
1970- 20.8ppg 47.8% age 25 season 3
1975- 16.7ppg 47.5%
All seasons at or above 70
Frazier
1970- 20.9ppg 51.8% age 24 season 3
1975- 21.5ppg 48.3%
Dick van arsle
1970- 21.3ppg 50.8% age 26 season 5
1975- 16.1ppg 47.0%
Jeff Mullins
1970- 22.1ppg 46.0% age 27 season 6
1975- 8.2ppg 45.5%
66 games in 1975, maybe got hurt early but numbers had trended down
Tom van Arsdale
1970- 22.8ppg 45.1% age 26 season 5
1975- 18.4ppg 42.8%
Dave bing
1970- 22.9ppg 44.4% age 26 season 4
1975- 19.0ppg 43.4%
Earl monroe
1970- 23.4ppg 44.6% age 25 season 3
1975- 20.9 45.4%
Might have dealt with an injury the season prior, numbers trended down but bounced back
Connie Hawkins
1970- 24.6ppg 49.0% age 27 season 3
1975- 8ppg 42.6% (half season but trended down)
Average age around 31
What makes this difficult is that it’s hard to know what roster construction or stuff like that turns out, or if they had injuries and played through it.
Furthermore, this is only 5 years, if they themselves as basketball players, declined from age, or improved from experience. Peaks happened much earlier on back then, and I think it’s a fair question to ask, is this because they played longer in college? Because the league outpaced their growth? Or a lack of modern health stuff meant even wear and tear and smaller injuries caused a big issue.
Finally, 5 years isn’t enough to make a large difference, I don’t think it’s a singular era where a huge paradigm shift occurred more so incremental change that looks larger when comparing multiple years together. I don’t think, for example, west wouldn’t make the nba in 1980. For the most part, a players personal growth will far outstrip the league getting stronger over any period of time.
I think what’s important to note here is that I’m not really saying there’s a large difference in league situations between those years, there probably isn’t, but a small difference that likes on year after year would be signficant by what is now year 60 since that era.
I went through the top 50 scorers of all time and picked modern players (still playing). I don’t believe defenses have gotten better since the mid 2000s, and honestly we can just more easily evaluate how these players have gotten better or worse. These are their age 26 to 31 seasons, as well as their 4th season to their 8th season below that
Derozan
2016 vs 2021
2013 vs 2018
Curry
2015 vs 2019/2021
2013 vs 2018
Paul
2012 vs 2017
2009 vs 2014
Westbrook
2015 vs 2019
2012 vs 2017
Harden
2016 vs 2021
2013 vs 2018
Durant
2015 vs 2019/2021
2011 vs 2016
Lebron
2011 vs 2016
2007 vs 2012
Comparing their 4th to 8th seasons we see a pretty uniform improvement. Age 26 to 31c in spite of the fact not all these guys are super healthy I’d say most of them improved, in an absolute sense. At the very least, had a peak in between those years
In any case, while I do believe it’s more incremental, when you think, what would be the years where you would expect the most growth, it would likely be the 1990-2023 time period, since the nba had a revival in popularity in the 1980s, so I’m thinking more guys who grew up watching magic and bird.
If you consider that the nba hit its revival more so in that 1984-1987 period, you’d probably expect an influx of talent a bit more than a decade or so after (like a 10 year old inspired in 1984 would play his first season probably in 1994 or 1995). It wouldn’t be anything huge but you’d probably see a slightly stronger increase than previously, but this essentially coincides exactly with illegal defense rules. Conversely, with how absolutely awful it was in the 70s you probably don’t have many people inspired watching finals games on tape delay to take up basketball.
More than anything though, I don’t believe you can assume a steadily growing league will have any large statistical evidences of that if you assume defense is growing concurrently. Had we seen a situation where they all went against the exact same defenders and there had been no change of data I would agree with you, however that is not the case. If offensive players grow as they emulate and refine things they learn from their idols growing up, defenders going against these players will improve to. If offensive players become harder to stop with more freedom allowing them to showcase their ability and allow for more ways to attack, defenders must improve going against these stronger attackers
It’s a similar idea to scheme. A 2023 defense will be more adept at defending against a 2003 offense and attacking weaknesses they have in terms of not being optimized with their spacing and all of that. If we be realistic about cross team comparisons that’s why a 2016 warriors vs.1996 bulls matchup under the context that defense is allowed the same freedom positioning wise it has now, has a lot of caveats to it if you really break it down.
This isn’t to say, defenders are far better now than they were 10-15 years ago because they’re facing curries or something, I do believe that, and especially with wings, top end talent somewhat leveled out, outside of pullup 3 point shooting vs non aggressive pick and roll coverages essentially.
In any case, I disagree that there is much statistical evidence to show the league hasn’t evolved as much as it seems to have when watching film. Beyond this, had there been no rule changes or subtle ref changes between 1997-2002 overall, I wouldn’t probably expect inside the arc FG% to be higher than 50% by now even without the spacing revolution
Finally, I’m much more talking about an average guard. If we take something to an absolute extreme and say, bob cousy averaged 21-8 on 39.7% shooting in 1955 and then averaged as a declined 32 year olds 15.7 on 39.1% shooting, therefore he could probably average 20 per game on poor effeciency in his peak in the 60s and therefore could probably average like 10 per game on poor effeciency in the 2000s, well that’s just taking it to an unnecessary extreme because that’s a player who really if we’re talking about his pure scoring game and nothing else, certainly isn’t better than a good recreational player at all.
More than that I’m against the idea that impact or data>film when translating people accross eras, it’s much more akin to scouting than comparing players accross similar eras. Certain things translate better than others. I mean, it’s similar to two dominant players in a bad highschool go to a good one and only one of them remains effective. It’s not as if the average 60s guard is better than a top 10 highschool senior guard now, I hope that isn’t controversial because it shouldn’t be.
“Re: A vs B. Eh, let me address both, though more B than A.
On A: I don't think it's any kind of given that any player would be as good in any different era, and I'm not trying to argue that all eras are of equal quality. Me talking about a lack of massive statistically salient trends may seem like I'm saying the quality is not improving, but I think it is, just not like it does when you're in the middle of a serious paradigm shift.”
Talked about
On B: I do think that things like 3-point shooting, dribbling technique, etc is something that can be picked up without growing up with it as a child. Not everybody from the past would ever be able to become a great 3-point shooter, but I certainly believe there are guys from prior eras who could pick it up pretty quickly. I don't think an overall adjustment can be done simply with an off-season - because there's no substitute for real season competition - but I think some of these guys could pick it up effectively in the span of a year.
So it depends to an extent.
One thing I'll say: Things like previous exposure to formal basketball is important. One of the reasons given for Connie Hawkins' struggles as a defender is that he didn't learn a lot of the standards of the time due to not playing college ball. He had physical defensive talents, but in terms of knowing about different schemes and what he should be doing within those schemes, he struggled.
But if we're talking about college stars like Oscar & West, I would not be concerned.
I think the environment of how basketball is played between the 60s vs now is enough that it’s just an entirely different league.
On statistics remaining somewhat the same, it’s not really too suprising at all for me. I have never really been in the camp that players back then are tiny or anything, it’s much more that iron sharpens iron and players on offense and defense both improve. Within a decade, I don’t think players improve so much that a guy won’t make the league, or that a top player would be reduced to a role player after a class gets in, but within 6 decades I do think so. Addressed this more earlier like I did, but I don’t think it’s a 60-70 year paradigm shift as much as a 60-70 year incremental shift. I have no real issue saying you can drop west to a 80s team and he’d be fine, have an issue saying you drop him in today
On B, so I think it depends
When it comes to perimeter skills, offensively, we can try to break down offense in a few ways, but to oversimplify it
IQ
Ball handling
Shooting
Finishing/slashing
Triple threat
Playmaking and pick and roll play
Can players with only experience palming learn to dribble to not lose the ball and be able to reasonable move around well? Likely. Will they be able to handle the ball at a level of a modern guard who utilized it to get past modern defenders in a variety of ways? Absolutely not. An average 60s ball handler doesn’t have more control of the ball than any decent high schooler does. Ball handling under palming rules, people seem to have an opinion that in comparison to today it took an incredible amount of skill and restraint to dribble around with both hands normally without palming constantly, and to be frank it’s not hard to dribble at the level that many of those players normally did with palming rules in place. While there are probably some exceptions, west absolutely was not one of them.
I feel I need to hammer that point home because it’s always been one of the strangest points people make on here. To say an decent (emphasis on the word decent, there are players this probably wouldn’t apply to) 60s ball handler can become an nba level ball handler with a year or two of training is like saying the same about a random decent player on a junior varsity team. It would be different if defenders clearly displayed an incredible intensity in that era to take advantage of less controlled ball handling, but that isn’t really the case at all. There’s an unbelievable gap between the two, dribbling at the level of an nba guard is something probably less than 0.1% of serious basketball players can do, dribbling a ball obeying palming rules strictly without losing it against defense content to concede to your body protecting the ball is something that any guard that even remotely seriously plays basketball can do.
When it comes to shooting I’m inclined to agree with your take, although one thing I would like to say is I feel people assume there are upper limits to shooting percentages and that only really comes from there being general upper limits depending on the defense you face, and normally defense and offense has grown concurrently. There’s a reason why 45-50% midrange shooting had been seen as somewhat of a upper limit and recently there are multiple players suddenly able to hit 55%+ on those shots. I mean, if random population member with no help, were to guard KD but KD can only take midrange jump shots, KD is probably hitting 80%+ if not more.
Meanwhile, while not nearly as big as the gap with ball handling, things like their triple threat game and post game certainly weren’t polished at all compared to elite guys with those skills today, although what stood out more was the defense especially in the post many times.
Slashing is a more difficult area to evaluate. The finishing ability for guards at that time for many players, in the games Ive seen, have been absolutely in the dirt if I’m gonna be honest. This isn’t to say good finishes don’t occur or no player looks good finishing (in the very few clips I’ve seen of Oscar I’ve liked it). I understand a lack of a gather step and palming make it harder as well but for a lot of players they just aren’t driving fast or doing much to set up their drives and defenders just look somewhat embarrassing
Iq and playmaking is the biggest thing for me though. I feel that people just assume high IQ translates and, as I’ve grown more knowledgeable about the intricacies of how teams run their offense the past few years, I really don’t see it whatsoever. This isn’t for everyone but particularly in that era.
Like with guys like magic or bird, they are genuinely making these incredible reads in these incredibly tight windows with minimal time.
When it comes to 60s playmaking or basketball IQ I really don’t even remotely see it the same way. Pick and rolls are ran at times but the intensity both players and the screener ran them with (for the Lakers at least, I only saw one clip with Oscar running one a few times and it looked pretty good) is much more comparable to high school than the nba (if even! It was so peculiar). And when it comes to IQ I get it’s popular to assume it translates perfectly but it’s hard to emphasize how much more pressure there is making these reads nowadays, much more controlled but defenses take things away and deny with far more intensity than before. I certainly wouldn’t classify some of the players I watched as consistent elite decision makers in that regard
This is prevelant on defense too, much much more actually, but I feel I don’t want to open that can of worms. Defense is honestly 1000% the biggest issue, off ball defense in the 60s and in the 2020s are so different in complexity that you might as well compare highschool basketball to the nba if you’re talking about the complexity of schemes and the speed of the reads.
Iq goes beyond that do, ability to read defenders guarding you and all of that and I feel people assume nba players have this level of deep understanding we could never even remotely comprehend. I don’t really agree with that, it’s more the speed in which they do it and how precise and effecient and effective they are at attacking from these reads, to put it simply there’s an incredible gap in this sense you compare it to much older years.
There’s a tendency to go, “he had a great iq he’ll figure it out” and I don’t really think that’s justified. For the most part, players don’t nearly have as much “meta” knowledge as people expect. if pick and roll offense fell off and had marginally become worse than isolation, I have no doubt in my mind this wouldn’t be something a guy like Nash would notice, know what I mean?
High bball iq is obviously a thing and incredibly important, but a guy like Jokic isn’t drawing up the playbook or even calling out most plays as much as executing the gameplan where they have preset reads off of specific situations the coaching staff makes that he is adept at executing, which really is alotnof playmaking . We’ve even seen multiple Nuggets players talk about their offensive coordinator. Likewise with Chris Paul’s passing second wind with the Suns despite his scoring threat being far gone vs his earlier years.
What I’m saying up there is, if you take guys from 60 years ago and assume greatness equates to they’ll be able to understand the game and process it at an nba level, it just isn’t really realistic at all. More on defense than anything else, it’s actually fare more prevelanr in that regard with the pace of the game and action and stuff within possessions, but like, my expectation certainly wouldn’t be that the smarter guards in that era would be among the highest IQ pick and roll operators in the league today