Djoker wrote:EmpireFalls wrote:Djoker wrote:
Dude I wasn't denying that there is more international talent in the NBA today. There obviously is. That's a fact.
I was simply saying that instead of the reason being that international players have improved, it could also be that US players have declined which makes international players look better in comparison. Or it could be that those international leagues (mainly European) got worse in terms of both status and pay which makes more players come over to the NBA. Which of those is true is hard to tell. Could be a bit of all of them too.
I genuinely don’t know how to respond to this sort of argumentation tactic.
Yes, I put a pot of water on the stove and turned the knob on, and it magically started boiling.
Could it be that the stove provided the heat? It is hard to tell. It could be that there is some external heating source above the water. It could also possibly be that the rest of my house got so cold that the water started boiling magically. I guess we’ll never know.
If you think what I said is anything like your "water boiling in a pot" example, then I don't know what to tell you.
I could extend his metaphor. I don’t believe having more pots on the stove changes the boiling point of water.
The thing is whether having a wider talent pool regardless of whether the pool is as deep changes anything about extreme statistical outliers such as Jordan and LeBron. I saw somewhere that Babe Ruth still has hit one of the longest home runs ever and there are a lot of reasons why modern baseball players should be stronger. The best ever cricket test batsman who had nearly twice the average of the next best player started playing in the 1930s. Statistically a player like him should only come around every 10000 years. Was Wilt Chamberlain less of a physical freak because he arrived in the 1960s when the sport was much smaller ?.
Jordan and LeBron both could only beat the players who turned up to face them. Perhaps the circumstances which produced Jordan are no longer extant in the USA, and people can and have argued that the defense allowed by the rules of his day was tougher. I have a chuckle when the Jordan didn’t have to face the KD GSW team argument is brought up, since a team of that strength was LeBron’s constant aim after 2010, and he pretty much created his own opposition which wouldn’t have arisen imo and that of others without his own superteam endeavours including his first super team beating KD’s baby OKC team, the second superteam with the Cavs, and the gamesmanship to get Green suspended etc.















