lessthanjake wrote:One_and_Done wrote:lessthanjake wrote:
Yes, FT numbers don’t tell you specifically what aspects of a player allowed them to get to the FT line so much.
And fortunately I watched prime Ray Allen. Reggie had nothing like that burst and athleticism.
https://youtu.be/_J_csbymwXE?si=ANAvvWm-2z5hMbrs
And yet, despite having better athleticism, Ray Allen did not get to the line nearly as much as Reggie Miller. To be a dynamic scorer, you really don’t necessarily need to have that type of athleticism. Craftiness is actually much more important. It’s why guys like SGA and Luka are top-tier scorers these days, despite really not being the most athletic guys. They are just really crafty about getting to their spots and also about drawing fouls in order to get high-percentage trips to the FT line. Reggie Miller combined a quick first step with being extremely crafty, and that was a potent combination then and that type of thing is still a very potent combination now. The idea that he was simply a one-dimensional scorer who just “scores off screens and open shots” is just demonstrably wrong. And since that notion was your only defense for your view that Reggie Miller wouldn’t translate well to today’s game despite being an amazing three-point shooter.
Basic deductive reasoning should tell being an amazing three-point shooter in the 90s is a massive translation issue for the 2020s where three-point shooting is a far better developed attribute among Reggie's competition.
But luckily for us, I’ve actually watched prime Reggie Miller, and I can tell you that he had a very quick first step and was very crafty about drawing fouls on drives.
Unlucky for you, you've built a reputation of frequently being wrong on claims regarding old basketball players, which is why most of us don't give a **** what you say you've watched. There is really no reason to think you've watched anything one and done hasn't or vice versa. Neither of you have ever broke out film for anything, and the one time you tried to look at tape someone else provided, we found you unable to differentiate between there being two defenders around a player vs one.
"i watched reggie play" is not an argument for his craftiness translating. That is a position that would require noting what specifically he is doing someone more explosive like Allen is not. And fwiw, for the singular poster in this thread who actually brought that up
tsherkin wrote:One_and_Done wrote:tsherkin wrote:
He also drew fouls on fadeaways by kicking people like nobody's business, matched only by Old Jordan and Old Karl Malone. xD
But yes, Reggie was EXTREMELY crafty about drawing fouls.
And today he wouldn't get alot of those calls.
And?
His craftiness
would not translate leaving us a limited passer and ball-handler trying to make bank with deep shooting: an attribute he used to be the best at and is now nowhere close.
And that is before we consider the massive (recorded) gap in measurables between players from when he retired to the players of today, or the far bigger talent pool.
Which is to say, if you think Reggie Miller would be as good today as he was in the 90s. Your eyetest is pretty ****. Which, to be fair, alot of us already suspected.