ScrantonBulls wrote:DOT wrote:My favorite part of these threads is people who haven't watched a game from the 90s in 30 years saying they remember every game perfectly
Or them pulling up playoff games as proof
Show me a game in the middle of January between 2 teams that would go on to win 30-ish games that year and tell me it's as good as you remember lol
I guarantee you not a single person here was watching on January 11th, 1992 as the big 3 of Mitch Richmond, Lionel Simmons, and Wayman Tisdale of the Kings take down the Moses Malone and Dale Ellis Bucks in OT, and if you did, you don't remember nearly as much about it as you would the Lakers-Rockets game from 2 days ago.
So much this. I know not to take somebody seriously if they say "lol you never even watched player XX play. your opinion is invalid." That's what we call the MavsDirk41 special. It's usually and argument somebody makes when they have nothing else. The human memory is not good at remember intricate details. A person's memory from games 30 years ago is complete ****. That's why we use statistics to tell a story, or go back and rewatch full games if you so desire.
Couldn't find anything from that actual game, but here's some Moses Malone highlights from that same year against the 1992 Chicago Bulls:
I think my favorite part is at 39 seconds where Malone faces up, and the defender just stands there and lets him get around him, then the help defense doesn't even try to contest, he just gets out of the way. Then the last clip, nobody even puts a body on him, they just fly by falling for pump fakes
Where physical defense?
But this actually goes back to my other point, that the reason we have video of this game is cause it was against the Bulls. Games weren't as easily accessible back in the day, if you weren't in that specific media market, you would only see nationally televised games. So even if you were around back then, you didn't get a complete picture
We also tend to compress the past, like that person saying if I were to watch that Kings-Bucks game, I'd've seen "great" post play from Moses Malone, because they just see the name and assume he was Moses Malone for his entire career. He was still a starter in 1992, but he was 36, hadn't made an All Star game in 3 years, and would be basically out of the league after that season. What I would've seen was an old man who still had a few tricks up his sleeve, but whose glory days were long past. That's why I said people don't remember specifics, just the broad strokes.