One_and_Done wrote:tsherkin wrote:One_and_Done wrote:It's an extremely meaningful distinction, because we have some posters on here acting like modern players would just get ejected or be unplayable because they couldn't adapt their dribble. They easily could, as most here agree. Unfortunately the reverse does not hold true, West & Oscar can't just decide they'll start dribbling like Curry or Kyrie in the modern game.
This isnt the parallel, though. It's a fallacious argument to the extreme. Dribbling like Steph/Curry isnt at all necessary to success in today's game. Why you keep repeating that comparison is beyond me.
And it certainly doesnt equate to adapting to officiating in the older eras.
Who is the guard who had the dribbling skills of a 60s player, and improved his handle enough to become a star? Has that ever happened even once? Who is the worst dribbling star guard today? Is there even a single star guard today who lacks a 3pt shot?
I see your point but under this framing, no guard from that period would be able to develop sufficient handling skills for today, mostly because in your view, we didn't see them do it/they didn't have to.
I think people here are more willing to give older guys the benefit of the doubt that they could learn if the game required it. I understand why you aren't comfortable granting such an uptick in ability without seeing it, but the forum is coming from the view that if Oscar/West were lightyears ahead of other guards at the time, they should at least still be able to have great all-around ball skills today.
Though, this brings us to another question, which is how much do you believe the talent pool increase since then would obfuscate their apparent lead.












