2024-25 NBA Season Discussion

Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ

User avatar
Texas Chuck
Senior Mod - NBA TnT Forum
Senior Mod - NBA TnT Forum
Posts: 92,612
And1: 98,993
Joined: May 19, 2012
Location: Purgatory
   

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#241 » by Texas Chuck » Tue Aug 20, 2024 1:00 am

falcolombardi wrote:Is probable that from schroeder perspective he doesnt realize that talking about europe being better than usa at some (vaguely defined and hard to quantify) basketball aspects like "IQ" or "fundamentals" comes across as a racially slanted stereotype at best and outright racist at worst


Disagree that has to be racist just because European teams have a higher percentage of lighter skin players. I know this is a USA-biased forum but there has been lots of credible discussion about European teams having been ahead tactically in many ways for decades particular among bigs.

Less a function of race and more of an indictment of the US allowing shoe companies to dictate too much on developing players. AAU being a huge culprit, but it even elevates into colleges where the shoe companies have outsized influence and they aren't interested in developing basketball, but in creating names to sell sneakers.

Don't think its really a racial issue. KD isn't the highest IQ player. Okay. Neither is Lauri Markannen. Lebron is the highest IQ player. Or Paul. So is Jokic. Or Rubio. Don't think race is the factor for any of them. Nor do I think Dennis, a black European, is unaware of racial perceptions when making those comments. You don't think he hasn't dealt with stereotyping personally in Germany?

Maybe its really just his opinion about KD. One shared by many posters here fwiw. Not everything is racism.
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
AEnigma
Assistant Coach
Posts: 4,130
And1: 5,976
Joined: Jul 24, 2022

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#242 » by AEnigma » Tue Aug 20, 2024 1:05 am

Maybe you should try reading comments from Eurofans first before dismissing what is by and large a pretty blatant racial component.

Schroeder is speaking for himself, but he should also be cognisant of the demographics he feeds by making those comments.
falcolombardi
General Manager
Posts: 9,568
And1: 7,168
Joined: Apr 13, 2021
       

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#243 » by falcolombardi » Tue Aug 20, 2024 5:42 am

Texas Chuck wrote:
falcolombardi wrote:Is probable that from schroeder perspective he doesnt realize that talking about europe being better than usa at some (vaguely defined and hard to quantify) basketball aspects like "IQ" or "fundamentals" comes across as a racially slanted stereotype at best and outright racist at worst


Disagree that has to be racist just because European teams have a higher percentage of lighter skin players. I know this is a USA-biased forum but there has been lots of credible discussion about European teams having been ahead tactically in many ways for decades particular among bigs.

Less a function of race and more of an indictment of the US allowing shoe companies to dictate too much on developing players. AAU being a huge culprit, but it even elevates into colleges where the shoe companies have outsized influence and they aren't interested in developing basketball, but in creating names to sell sneakers.

Don't think its really a racial issue. KD isn't the highest IQ player. Okay. Neither is Lauri Markannen. Lebron is the highest IQ player. Or Paul. So is Jokic. Or Rubio. Don't think race is the factor for any of them. Nor do I think Dennis, a black European, is unaware of racial perceptions when making those comments. You don't think he hasn't dealt with stereotyping personally in Germany?

Maybe its really just his opinion about KD. One shared by many posters here fwiw. Not everything is racism.


Saying first hand that i am not black so i cannot claim to understand how black americans deal with the "subtle" ways racism that for white people can be sometimes easy to dismiss as "oveethinking" at best or "hysteria" at worst

But i have my own perspective being from mexico and seeing the debates about american vs european basketball from both sides. From europeans in spain based forums talking from a spain biased perspective and from americans in american based forums talking in an america biased perspective

What i can tell you is that when i was a kid/teen first lurking and reading and absorbing basketball knowledge amd talking points from more experienced posters like those in this board

And even as a kid it was weird to me how consistently it was white european players that got 90+ % of the "high iq, first in the gym, plays fundamental basketball" treatment and it was 90+% black american players who got the "dumb player, depends on athletism, a diva" treatment.

Fundamentals had oddly chromatic preferences

Not knowing anythingh but vague notions about racism as a kid even i could tell somethingh was odd there.

Which is why is impressive full blown adults can go the full "race plays no part" disingenous route that i am sure nfl fans used in the 80's to explain the lack of black quarterbacks with enough intelligence to play the position.
that i am sure had no part in why a hyper explosive athlete like jeremy lin was seen as a low athletism player.

Europeans have their own obnoxious sense of moral superiority against americans amd everyone likes to toot their own horn. Saying your country (continent) bssketball is "smarter" or plays more "real" basketball is as good of a moral victory as any.

But when the topic is so historically and inherently racially charged it just becomes another dogwhistle that directly and indirectly diminishes predominantly black players skill and intelligence as athletes
Peregrine01
Head Coach
Posts: 6,716
And1: 7,637
Joined: Sep 12, 2012

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#244 » by Peregrine01 » Tue Aug 20, 2024 6:11 am

Calling a fairly innocuous remark made by a black player about Europe vs American ball racist against black players? I think ive just about seen all the possible ways one can throw the race card.
falcolombardi
General Manager
Posts: 9,568
And1: 7,168
Joined: Apr 13, 2021
       

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#245 » by falcolombardi » Tue Aug 20, 2024 6:13 am

Peregrine01 wrote:Calling a fairly innocuous remark made by a black player about Europe vs American ball racist against black players? I think ive just about seen all the possible ways one can throw the race card.


Tell me where did i say schroeder was being racist....
Peregrine01
Head Coach
Posts: 6,716
And1: 7,637
Joined: Sep 12, 2012

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#246 » by Peregrine01 » Tue Aug 20, 2024 6:27 am

falcolombardi wrote:
Peregrine01 wrote:Calling a fairly innocuous remark made by a black player about Europe vs American ball racist against black players? I think ive just about seen all the possible ways one can throw the race card.


Tell me where did i say schroeder was being racist....


Maybe you should read what I wrote and you yourself wrote a little clearer
falcolombardi
General Manager
Posts: 9,568
And1: 7,168
Joined: Apr 13, 2021
       

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#247 » by falcolombardi » Tue Aug 20, 2024 6:30 am

Peregrine01 wrote:
falcolombardi wrote:
Peregrine01 wrote:Calling a fairly innocuous remark made by a black player about Europe vs American ball racist against black players? I think ive just about seen all the possible ways one can throw the race card.


Tell me where did i say schroeder was being racist....


Maybe you should read what I wrote and you yourself wrote a little clearer



You mean this?

"But when the topic is so historically and inherently racially charged it just becomes another dogwhistle that directly and indirectly diminishes predominantly black players skill and intelligence as athletes"


Or this?

"And even as a kid it was weird to me how consistently it was white european players that got 90+ % of the "high iq, first in the gym, plays fundamental basketball" treatment and it was 90+% black american players who got the "dumb player, depends on athletism, a diva" treatment."


Cause i find it self evident that historically talking about high IQ in sports -is- racially biased

Or maybe black people who have said the same thingh for ages are just imagining thinghs.

Notice i didnt say schroeder did these comments from racism but that the european stereotype of how smarter and much more real they are at sports than americans overlaps with racial biases
OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,933
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#248 » by OhayoKD » Tue Aug 20, 2024 10:00 am

falcolombardi wrote:
Peregrine01 wrote:
falcolombardi wrote:
Tell me where did i say schroeder was being racist....


Maybe you should read what I wrote and you yourself wrote a little clearer



You mean this?

"But when the topic is so historically and inherently racially charged it just becomes another dogwhistle that directly and indirectly diminishes predominantly black players skill and intelligence as athletes"


Or this?

"And even as a kid it was weird to me how consistently it was white european players that got 90+ % of the "high iq, first in the gym, plays fundamental basketball" treatment and it was 90+% black american players who got the "dumb player, depends on athletism, a diva" treatment."


Cause i find it self evident that historically talking about high IQ in sports -is- racially biased

Or maybe black people who have said the same thingh for ages are just imagining thinghs.

Notice i didnt say schroeder did these comments from racism but that the european stereotype of how smarter and much more real they are at sports than americans overlaps with racial biases

Well done
User avatar
Texas Chuck
Senior Mod - NBA TnT Forum
Senior Mod - NBA TnT Forum
Posts: 92,612
And1: 98,993
Joined: May 19, 2012
Location: Purgatory
   

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#249 » by Texas Chuck » Tue Aug 20, 2024 3:44 pm

Spoiler:
falcolombardi wrote:Saying first hand that i am not black so i cannot claim to understand how black americans deal with the "subtle" ways racism that for white people can be sometimes easy to dismiss as "oveethinking" at best or "hysteria" at worst

But i have my own perspective being from mexico and seeing the debates about american vs european basketball from both sides. From europeans in spain based forums talking from a spain biased perspective and from americans in american based forums talking in an america biased perspective

What i can tell you is that when i was a kid/teen first lurking and reading and absorbing basketball knowledge amd talking points from more experienced posters like those in this board

And even as a kid it was weird to me how consistently it was white european players that got 90+ % of the "high iq, first in the gym, plays fundamental basketball" treatment and it was 90+% black american players who got the "dumb player, depends on athletism, a diva" treatment.

Fundamentals had oddly chromatic preferences

Not knowing anythingh but vague notions about racism as a kid even i could tell somethingh was odd there.

Which is why is impressive full blown adults can go the full "race plays no part" disingenous route that i am sure nfl fans used in the 80's to explain the lack of black quarterbacks with enough intelligence to play the position.
that i am sure had no part in why a hyper explosive athlete like jeremy lin was seen as a low athletism player.

Europeans have their own obnoxious sense of moral superiority against americans amd everyone likes to toot their own horn. Saying your country (continent) bssketball is "smarter" or plays more "real" basketball is as good of a moral victory as any.

But when the topic is so historically and inherently racially charged it just becomes another dogwhistle that directly and indirectly diminishes predominantly black players skill and intelligence as athletes


I am not arguing against the notion that comments like this have been made and for the reasons you suggest. Of course they have.

I am arguing I don't believe you've established that for Dennis regarding KD and immediately jumping to that only propagates what you (and I) want to see cease.

Also not sure Germany needs any moral victories at this point. Despite a lack of top end talent, they are one of the best national teams in the world. And because of said lack of top end talent, one might conclude Dennis thinks they play a smart brand of basketball to overcome that talent deficit. I mean no Germans would make the American roster, right? Not one.

IDK sometimes a comment isn't more than what it is. Or maybe it is. And maybe Dennis does need to be more careful because even someone like you immediately wants to make the very thing you dislike?
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
AEnigma
Assistant Coach
Posts: 4,130
And1: 5,976
Joined: Jul 24, 2022

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#250 » by AEnigma » Tue Aug 20, 2024 3:57 pm

At absolutely no point did anyone say Schroeder’s comments reflect conscious racial biases of his own. What has been repeatedly said is that they reflect a widespread racial bias, and dodging that is akin to asking, “Well, where is the problem in saying Jokic just plays a higher IQ brand of basketball than an athletic but largely unskilled freak like Giannis who just uses his natural physical advantages to dominate?”

You can say the European youth leagues do a better job of coaching young talent, and you can say the German national team does a better job of playing like a cohesive unit than what you see from the U.S. national teams, but IQ is a dogwhistle regardless of whether Schroeder meant it that way, and Durant was right to fire back.
User avatar
ronnymac2
RealGM
Posts: 11,008
And1: 5,077
Joined: Apr 11, 2008
   

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#251 » by ronnymac2 » Tue Aug 20, 2024 9:34 pm

I don't know about nor want to comment on the potential racial angle here, but I will say that Schroeder's initial comment showed a complete lack of understanding of what has gone on at the Olympics for at least the past three decades.

European basketball is played with Ruleset A. NBA basketball is played with Ruleset B. Technically...technically....they are literally different games. That's an accurate statement.

The Olympic basketball ruleset is much closer to (may even be identical to) Ruleset A. The US sends players who dedicate their careers (at least 9 months of the year) to optimizing their games for Ruleset B.

And yet, those Ruleset B-optimized players get together for a few months (weeks?) and on a fairly consistent basis have crushed all these Euro-national teams at their own game.

This means either:

1.) Ruleset A is trash, since players from a different game with minimal practice can beat the "best" of the bunch, or:
2.) The Euro teams' "tactics, strategy, and IQ" advantage is a figment in the imagination of people. If your strategies consistently get you tossed out by a better team...shouldn't the better team's strategy be more highly prized? Isn't that what sports is all about?

Nevermind the fact that just this USA iteration alone boasted the best shooter in the planet's history in Curry, perhaps the smartest player in history (certainly of his era) in LeBron, two out of the three best defensive IQ bigs in the world in Davis and Bam, etc. The same nation that fielded guys like Paul, Kidd, Magic, Stockton, etc., in the past.

I really do like Schroeder as a player, but his initial comment was simply inaccurate.
Pay no mind to the battles you've won
It'll take a lot more than rage and muscle
Open your heart and hands, my son
Or you'll never make it over the river
User avatar
Texas Chuck
Senior Mod - NBA TnT Forum
Senior Mod - NBA TnT Forum
Posts: 92,612
And1: 98,993
Joined: May 19, 2012
Location: Purgatory
   

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#252 » by Texas Chuck » Wed Aug 21, 2024 12:00 am

^ Huh?

Let's say I (a relative idiot) coached Team USA against the current Duke Blue Devils roster coached by Kerr and Spo.

My team is going to win. Should my strategy be more prized than Spo? Of course not. I have Lebron and Steph and he doesn't.

The fact that Germany with a roster full of players none of which are good enough to make the US team is competitive against the US suggests that they aren't taking a backseat against the best basketball minds the US has to offer because they are starting at a significant talent deficit.

Somehow you are taking that to mean the opposite? That we should celebrate the American tactics without taking into account the huge talent edge they still have over every other nation?

Now to be clear, I am not stating American players aren't as smart as European players. At the top end that's clearly not the case. But beyond that? Yeah I think the American developmental system is lagging behind the European one because the wrong people with the wrong motivations are dictating much of what goes on with young players in the US.

I know this bothers our American exceptionalists, but this is not exclusively an American game.

The issue isn't the rules, though that helps level the playing field. The issue is the talent gap. But that gap is going to continue to close and if the US doesn't change our youth system in a couple generations the Americans are quite likely to get left behind. There is a reason despite the huge population, the resources available, and the quality of our athletes that American men have never been competitive at world football. Other countries are light years ahead in training and development and all the best American players are now developed in Europe.
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
tsherkin
Forum Mod - Raptors
Forum Mod - Raptors
Posts: 92,305
And1: 31,881
Joined: Oct 14, 2003
 

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#253 » by tsherkin » Wed Aug 21, 2024 3:50 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:Now to be clear, I am not stating American players aren't as smart as European players. At the top end that's clearly not the case. But beyond that? Yeah I think the American developmental system is lagging behind the European one because the wrong people with the wrong motivations are dictating much of what goes on with young players in the US.


I'm with this. It's very clear that neither the AAU nor the NCAA give a crap about their players or their development. That's not what either of them are for. It would be far better if something like the G-League developed into a reasonable pro league with a lower age of entry (more like European leagues) to allow players a chance to actually develop, no doubt. Especially those borderline guys who could become useful NBA journeyman if they had a chance to play and develop outside of practice after, you know, HS and a year of college or whatever.

The issue isn't the rules, though that helps level the playing field. The issue is the talent gap. But that gap is going to continue to close and if the US doesn't change our youth system in a couple generations the Americans are quite likely to get left behind. There is a reason despite the huge population, the resources available, and the quality of our athletes that American men have never been competitive at world football. Other countries are light years ahead in training and development and all the best American players are now developed in Europe.


That said, it's worth mentioning that the US alone has about 2/3s of Europe's entire population. With Europe not fielding a coherent "European team," there's a good chance that talent development to create competition will remain in favor of the US going forward just on that basis alone. In certain stretches of time, individual teams will no doubt accrue talent, but there's a pretty good chance that the MUCH larger individual population of the US as a nation will keep producing talent for their singular squad at a higher rate than any individual European nation could ever manage. Now, how that expresses when the US doesn't send its top guys, well, that we've seen a few times now.
LukaTheGOAT
Analyst
Posts: 3,272
And1: 2,983
Joined: Dec 25, 2019
 

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#254 » by LukaTheGOAT » Sat Aug 24, 2024 8:25 pm

ronnymac2 wrote:I don't know about nor want to comment on the potential racial angle here, but I will say that Schroeder's initial comment showed a complete lack of understanding of what has gone on at the Olympics for at least the past three decades.

European basketball is played with Ruleset A. NBA basketball is played with Ruleset B. Technically...technically....they are literally different games. That's an accurate statement.

The Olympic basketball ruleset is much closer to (may even be identical to) Ruleset A. The US sends players who dedicate their careers (at least 9 months of the year) to optimizing their games for Ruleset B.

And yet, those Ruleset B-optimized players get together for a few months (weeks?) and on a fairly consistent basis have crushed all these Euro-national teams at their own game.

This means either:

1.) Ruleset A is trash, since players from a different game with minimal practice can beat the "best" of the bunch, or:
2.) The Euro teams' "tactics, strategy, and IQ" advantage is a figment in the imagination of people. If your strategies consistently get you tossed out by a better team...shouldn't the better team's strategy be more highly prized? Isn't that what sports is all about?

Nevermind the fact that just this USA iteration alone boasted the best shooter in the planet's history in Curry, perhaps the smartest player in history (certainly of his era) in LeBron, two out of the three best defensive IQ bigs in the world in Davis and Bam, etc. The same nation that fielded guys like Paul, Kidd, Magic, Stockton, etc., in the past.

I really do like Schroeder as a player, but his initial comment was simply inaccurate.


I suppose I am kind of split down the middle?

AGrowing up with AAU basketball, I believe that more development occurs on the travel circuits—like Nike EYBL, Adidas Gauntlet, and Under Armour—than in general public high school ball for most players. The simple answer might be that the U.S. produces better individual talent because AAU allows the best players to compete against each other. The American system is great for developing individual skills, perhaps as a residual effect of the country’s emphasis on individualism. The pathways that American stars typically follow generally afford them the opportunity to focus on specific skill sets and thrive. I don’t think the U.S. is deficient in developing individual talent. It would be cool if younger high school players could compete against pros earlier, similar to the European system, but overall, the system is pretty solid.

However, there might still be room for improvement in X’s and O’s, particularly in the FIBA game (though the offense in the current league is probably close to optimal).

The U.S.'s dominance over the rest of the world likely comes down to having an abundance of talent. The U.S. had 10 players who have made All-NBA at some point in their careers, with the exception of Derrick White, who, by the numbers, was arguably the most valuable piece on the recent NBA-title-winning team—a historically dominant team. The U.S. was so blessed with a surplus of talent that they could afford not to play a man who was selected to the All-NBA First Team the past three seasons, and probably the second-best player on the 2020 USA team that won gold, and still win. What other countries have this luxury? Germany, for example, has never had an All-Star (although I think Franz will in due time).

The game is different—pace is drastically slower, defensive bigs can camp in the paint, and the floor is more cramped. But at the end of the day, it’s still basketball, and a wealth of talent can often make up for strategic shortcomings. It’s perhaps a testament to Germany’s strategy that they came within minutes of beating Team USA in an exhibition, despite having less talent. This may strengthen Europe’s argument in terms of team strategy. You could also attribute the reduced margins to the slower pace—fewer possessions likely yield more volatility in outcomes. As the number of possessions increases, we would generally expect the better team to benefit. I also think less spacing constricts individually talented players, making it harder to operate in 2 or 3 vs. 1 situations.

It’s challenging to pinpoint exactly what works best for the NBA’s style of play and rules, but there’s perhaps some evidence to suggest that European teams can orchestrate better half-court offense. The following video is about an American who grew up in the U.S. but played overseas. This isn’t just anecdotal—there’s some numerical analysis behind it.

-From when the U.S. lost in the WC

- I am not sure I agree with the NBA changing its style, but the lessons from this video could apply to FIBA play, and perhaps should impact how we recruit.

Let's not forget, while the Team USA that was at the 2023 Word Cup was the C-team, it did have 4 NBA All-Stars, and they lost to Lithuania with 1 NBA, and also Germany. The extra talent that Team USA added, was essential in increasing the certainty they would win in single elimination. Otherwise, things could easily go south.
itsxtray
Pro Prospect
Posts: 757
And1: 708
Joined: Apr 21, 2018

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#255 » by itsxtray » Mon Aug 26, 2024 6:29 pm

It isn’t something so elaborate. Team USA’s problems are roster construction, chemistry, and the volatile nature of single elimination. If we have less high-end star power in the future, the roster's should focus on defense, rebounding/size, and shooting. Even with chemistry issues, those are skills that scale regardless of the setting. The World Cup team’s problems were size and defense. You remedy that and your team has a chance.
User avatar
RCM88x
RealGM
Posts: 15,234
And1: 19,162
Joined: May 31, 2015
Location: Lebron Ball
     

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#256 » by RCM88x » Mon Aug 26, 2024 7:29 pm

I'm pretty naïve when it comes to professional ball outside of the US. But is the NBA the only major league that has rules that differ significantly from the FIBA rules?
Image

LookToShoot wrote:Melo is the only player that makes the Rockets watchable for the basketball purists. Otherwise it would just be three point shots and pick n roll.
tsherkin
Forum Mod - Raptors
Forum Mod - Raptors
Posts: 92,305
And1: 31,881
Joined: Oct 14, 2003
 

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#257 » by tsherkin » Mon Aug 26, 2024 7:33 pm

itsxtray wrote:It isn’t something so elaborate. Team USA’s problems are roster construction, chemistry, and the volatile nature of single elimination. If we have less high-end star power in the future, the roster's should focus on defense, rebounding/size, and shooting. Even with chemistry issues, those are skills that scale regardless of the setting. The World Cup team’s problems were size and defense. You remedy that and your team has a chance.


Lack of roster continuity is also a concern at times, right?
falcolombardi
General Manager
Posts: 9,568
And1: 7,168
Joined: Apr 13, 2021
       

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#258 » by falcolombardi » Mon Aug 26, 2024 11:48 pm

RCM88x wrote:I'm pretty naïve when it comes to professional ball outside of the US. But is the NBA the only major league that has rules that differ significantly from the FIBA rules?


Yes, fiba rules are what basketball worldwide outside of usa use

Albeit philipines top league just introduced a 4 point shot
itsxtray
Pro Prospect
Posts: 757
And1: 708
Joined: Apr 21, 2018

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#259 » by itsxtray » Mon Aug 26, 2024 11:49 pm

tsherkin wrote:
itsxtray wrote:It isn’t something so elaborate. Team USA’s problems are roster construction, chemistry, and the volatile nature of single elimination. If we have less high-end star power in the future, the roster's should focus on defense, rebounding/size, and shooting. Even with chemistry issues, those are skills that scale regardless of the setting. The World Cup team’s problems were size and defense. You remedy that and your team has a chance.


Lack of roster continuity is also a concern at times, right?

Yeah, but there's really no way to address that. Guys will or won't play during the summer for all kinds of reasons. You just have to control what you can control.
tsherkin
Forum Mod - Raptors
Forum Mod - Raptors
Posts: 92,305
And1: 31,881
Joined: Oct 14, 2003
 

Re: 2024-25 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#260 » by tsherkin » Tue Aug 27, 2024 11:06 am

itsxtray wrote:
tsherkin wrote:
itsxtray wrote:It isn’t something so elaborate. Team USA’s problems are roster construction, chemistry, and the volatile nature of single elimination. If we have less high-end star power in the future, the roster's should focus on defense, rebounding/size, and shooting. Even with chemistry issues, those are skills that scale regardless of the setting. The World Cup team’s problems were size and defense. You remedy that and your team has a chance.


Lack of roster continuity is also a concern at times, right?

Yeah, but there's really no way to address that. Guys will or won't play during the summer for all kinds of reasons. You just have to control what you can control.


Fair enough, that does make sense.

Return to Player Comparisons