ItsDanger wrote:Perimeter shots won't have as much physical contact given space. Its not a complicated concept.
Okay but again... we've seen a fairly similar proportion of shots inside the RA for the past quarter century or so, and people weren't bitching about this in 1998 or 2000. Even in today's game, there's like a 3, 4% different in total proportion of shots from 0-3 feet compared to those seasons. There are still plenty of opportunities for physicality. And it's not like guys were getting tons of physicality on those shots from like 10-15 feet.
There is only so much difference in the nature of how the game is being played. And that remains true when you start to realize how much of the earlier portions of NBA history were played at tempos far faster than the current game. Like, everything from the 80s (literally 1989 and earlier) and before.
But we HAVE seen considerably more advanced use of screens in today's game. Much more complex and nuanced offenses. CONSIDERABLY superior shooting, particularly from the bigger guys. A lot more spacing as a result of the range guys exhibit. Zone defense is legal now. League-average PPG aren't a lot different than they were over the first 5 or 6 years of the 1980s, either.
Anyway, there's a great deal of bitching. There's about a 10% increase in the proportion of shots taken from 16+ feet from about 1997 compared to today. That isn't a huge deal. More of them are threes than long twos, of course, but from the POV of taking away from physicality, no big deal. The proportion of shots from the rim, like I said, isn't hugely different over the past quarter century.
So a lot of this is directly a great deal of whinging.
I've watched a lot of 80s and 90s ball; the idea that today's era is a lot more physical just doesn't make sense to me. There are some playoff series with the Pistons and the Knicks and Heat and stuff which were pretty heated, for sure, but there are physical series in the postseason even today. So that doesn't really mean a lot to me. If you want to argue that queueing up some random Nuggets/Warriors/Mav game was going to show you this insane level of physicality compared to today, you've got another thing coming. Even the average Lakers or Celtics game, not really a ton more physical than today's game. It's just a lot of nostalgia and poor understanding of the differences in the game when you have really good shooters all over the place. There are many fewer guys in the league who just can't shoot unless spoon-fed around the rim (that Danny Fortson/Reggie Evans archetype) than in earlier eras. And you see many more bigs with some range. Many smaller guys playing the frontcourt positions, as was more common in the 70s and before, as it happens.