Sedale Threatt wrote:Mephariel wrote:I don't know what you called "equal footing." I just know that Europe certainly has a hand in his development and the NBA does as well. He has been with the Mavs for 6 years. Majority of his prime years professionally are being developed in America. If anything, NOT giving credit to the NBA for developing him and attributing this to "natural" happening is greedy and foolish. If you believe Luka would be just as good now after spending 6 years on Fiji Islands instead the NBA, then go ahead and live that fantasy.
I don't know if there anything more to say. Anyone who is not blind will agree that the NBA has contributed massively to the development of international players, including many of the anchor players in the Olympics now.
lol, why do you keep bringing up the Fiji Islands? See, this really gives the game away.
Like I totally and completely understand how aggravating it is to have foreign posters come in here and take ignorant potshots at our league and our players. I get it. Truly. And I totally understand the desire to push back on that and plant the flag, perhaps even aggressively. I've done it for years. There are at least a few other posters I've been dying to see pop their heads back up but they probably won't now that we're on the verge of another gold.
But you're basically doing the same exact sht when, for example, you keep bringing up some random Pacific island in comparison to diminish non-NBA competition. Which I even get to an extent; I too get tired of hearing about the Euroleague as if it's even remotely in the same galaxy as the NBA. But that doesn't mean it and a handful of other leagues still aren't high quality. That's where they would be playing, not some isolated backwater. And why would a player of his caliber and schooling be significantly diminished by that? Why would he not still be a world-class player?
For the majority of these players, the NBA builds on strong foundations that have already been built elsewhere and that should be respected. That's it. It shouldn't be that hard to understand. If it's still not sinking in, go back to the very first wave of players who actually did come over here in the 80s/90s as finished products, and how good they were, and recognize that things have improved light years since then.
I don't think this is a white and black thing. If we were to attribute percentages to whom should get credit, for Luka probably NBA gets about 10-15%. He did develop further here but he was already a prodigy at Real Madrid.
On the other extreme you have Giannis, SGA, and Embiid, where 90% goes to US development.
In the middle there are guys like Jokic, Porzingis. They were polished, but far from finished product. IMO NBA should get more than 50% of the credit.
Even within Europe there is a difference between clubs, some develop better, others less so. We don't know how Luka would look like if he didn't play for Real since he was a kid. Maybe Jokic might have been so much better earlier if he went to Spain, but it's impossible to know of course.
I think multiple things can be true:
- international basketball developed a lot. They did learn a lot from US coaches and training methods and at the same time they benefited from the spectacular rise of the NBA around the world. I think basketball is the second most desired sports career in Europe.
- US still produces top talent, and here I think a lot of folks get it wrong. We see all these comments how US doesn't produce talent anymore, and that something is wrong.
-the gap of talent between NBA and the rest of the world is bigger than ever, and with the new TV deal it will get worse. There are no more players like bodiroga in Europe anymore. Every team has their top 2-3 players in NBA now and in some cases more than 5.
That makes it very hard to see how good some players can become of they never come to NBA.
The finished products have been actually worse than they were 30 years ago. Micic, Teodosic were considered the best in Europe when they came here and we see the results
- the lack of competition puts a cap on the development of a player. There is no way Jokic becomes even half the player he is today if he played his whole career with Mega Basket.