BruttoNostra wrote:It has to be green font, right? Right?


Moderators: Clav, Domejandro, ken6199, bisme37, Dirk, KingDavid, cupcakesnake, bwgood77, zimpy27, infinite11285
BruttoNostra wrote:It has to be green font, right? Right?
I just forgot his name and when I was trying to remember it, that guy Linn who played for the Knicks ~10 years ago got in the way.Demagoog wrote:How the hell he forgot Yao Ming, one of the most globally popular players ever is not something I understand.
Jamaaliver wrote:HotRocks34 wrote:Robinson was older than Wemby as a rookie but he put up:
24/12/2/1/3
26 PER; .241 WS48; 6.9 BPM
ROY
6th in MVP voting
Robinson was a freak.
Part of the problem for him was that Jordan and Olajuwon were around.
Indeed.
David Robinson is largely forgotten as an all time great...for whatever reason.
dhsilv2 wrote:Having guys like Avery Johnson has your point guard didn't exactly give him spacing in his prime.
Jamaaliver wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:Having guys like Avery Johnson has your point guard didn't exactly give him spacing in his prime.
Agreed.
To the team's credit, they did feature Old Man Dale Ellis and young Vinny Del Negro in an attempt to space the floor.
But they didn't offer much else than catch and shoot threats -- particularly during the playoffs.
dhsilv2 wrote:Of course in his MVP season that everyone always references with Dream...he also had Rodman on the floor. I wonder who faced more double teams? Hakeem with a wheel spoke 3 point shooting power house...or the guy with Johnson and Rodman![]()
But yes, they did have some shooting for sure.
Jamaaliver wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:Having guys like Avery Johnson has your point guard didn't exactly give him spacing in his prime.
Agreed.
To the team's credit, they did feature Old Man Dale Ellis and young Vinny Del Negro in an attempt to space the floor.
But they didn't offer much else than catch and shoot threats -- particularly during the playoffs.
Kineto wrote:I'm not really good at NBA tactics, but I try to listen to those who are, and what I understand is that spacing wasn't much of an issue at that time, because of the illegal defence, which forced defenders to stay close to there men even if they were poor shooters.
Kineto wrote:Jamaaliver wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:Having guys like Avery Johnson has your point guard didn't exactly give him spacing in his prime.
Agreed.
To the team's credit, they did feature Old Man Dale Ellis and young Vinny Del Negro in an attempt to space the floor.
But they didn't offer much else than catch and shoot threats -- particularly during the playoffs.
I'm not really good at NBA tactics, but I try to listen to those who are, and what I understand is that spacing wasn't much of an issue at that time, because of the illegal defence, which forced defenders to stay close to there men even if they were poor shooters.
Jamaaliver wrote:Kineto wrote:I'm not really good at NBA tactics, but I try to listen to those who are, and what I understand is that spacing wasn't much of an issue at that time, because of the illegal defence, which forced defenders to stay close to there men even if they were poor shooters.
Sounds right.
But big men dominated in the post in that era. Defenders could double team the Centers in the paint as soon as he caught the pass.
Having catch-and-shoot players standing in a single spot, wide open, waiting for the pass was the best way to punish teams when they double teamed.
Shaq had Robert Horry, Rick Fox and Derek Fisher in LA. Nick Anderson in Orlando.
Olajuwon had Robert Horry and Sam Cassell.
Karl Malone had Jeff Hornacek, John Stockton and Byron Russell.
Spurs struggled for years to find the right 3 & D players to complement their HOF big men.
NoDopeOnSundays wrote:Spurs are 9-5 without Sochan, and 9-13 with him. Is he in the lineup just to ensure that they don't win enough so they can be in the lottery?
Rust_Cohle wrote:NoDopeOnSundays wrote:Spurs are 9-5 without Sochan, and 9-13 with him. Is he in the lineup just to ensure that they don't win enough so they can be in the lottery?
He's been absolutely fantastic on the defensive end and is coming back from injury. Spurs have been playing tougher teams with Sochan in the lineup than without. Their next 5 games will be brutal. Sochan has his issues (like no jumpshot whatsoever even though he can get hot from time to time) but he has easily been the most improved Spur outside of Wemby. His 2 man game with Wemby is only second best to Wemby and Paul.
NoDopeOnSundays wrote:Rust_Cohle wrote:NoDopeOnSundays wrote:Spurs are 9-5 without Sochan, and 9-13 with him. Is he in the lineup just to ensure that they don't win enough so they can be in the lottery?
He's been absolutely fantastic on the defensive end and is coming back from injury. Spurs have been playing tougher teams with Sochan in the lineup than without. Their next 5 games will be brutal. Sochan has his issues (like no jumpshot whatsoever even though he can get hot from time to time) but he has easily been the most improved Spur outside of Wemby. His 2 man game with Wemby is only second best to Wemby and Paul.
The lack of a jumpshot is the biggest issue, he plays a good two-man game with Victor because teams are much more willing to sacrifice 2 points to him than they would with whatever Victor might do with the ball. I get that he's a solid defender, but that team simply looks like a modern basketball team when they have either Champagnie or Castle in the lineup without him. They are able to play 5 out when Sochan isn't in, he hangs out around the dunkers spot which makes it too easy for a team with the right personnel to park their center on him and guard Wemby with a wing.
Jamaaliver wrote:David Robinson is largely forgotten as an all time great...for whatever reason.
tsherkin wrote:TBF, it isn't "for whatever reason."
It's that he struggled as a scorer in the playoffs and has a shorter prime than a lot of others due to injury. And that he languished on poorly-constructed San Antonio squads pre-Duncan, so he doesn't have the same sort of team achievements. And he has a high-profile series being embarrassed by Olajuwon at the latter's peak. It is, perhaps, given too much weight because loads of guys have a bad series (Shaq getting swept by Utah, Jordan struggling to score efficiently against the Pistons, Knicks and Jazz), Tragic Johnson, Bird's early and disastrous playoffs (especially against Philly and the Bucks), and on and on.
But for D-Rob, lots of stuff lines up together and it pushes him down. He was a beast in the RS, he's an ATG defender and he teamed well with Duncan late, but there are indeed reasons why he doesn't get quite the same love as some others.
Jamaaliver wrote:tsherkin wrote:TBF, it isn't "for whatever reason."
It's that he struggled as a scorer in the playoffs and has a shorter prime than a lot of others due to injury. And that he languished on poorly-constructed San Antonio squads pre-Duncan, so he doesn't have the same sort of team achievements. And he has a high-profile series being embarrassed by Olajuwon at the latter's peak. It is, perhaps, given too much weight because loads of guys have a bad series (Shaq getting swept by Utah, Jordan struggling to score efficiently against the Pistons, Knicks and Jazz), Tragic Johnson, Bird's early and disastrous playoffs (especially against Philly and the Bucks), and on and on.
But for D-Rob, lots of stuff lines up together and it pushes him down. He was a beast in the RS, he's an ATG defender and he teamed well with Duncan late, but there are indeed reasons why he doesn't get quite the same love as some others.