Warspite wrote:cpower wrote:tsherkin wrote:
League average TS% was what, 47.9% in 1965? If you use that as a representative element, before you start considering health, handles and footwork... Steph has made 4,058 3s in his career. Without those, his career TS% goes from 62.5% to 52.5%.
So assuming that he'd be able to still just move around and take jumpers and stuff, that's still a pretty efficient player. Not game-breakingly so, but still a good player. And D out on the perimeter wouldn't be as tight, so he wouldn't have to get away with some of the stepback footwork from today which is dicey by 60s travel standards. The thing is, Steph shoots 52.4% inside the arc on his career, and 54.9% over the past decade. Odds of that happening in the 60s are pretty low, so it's likely that his efficiency erodes even further. Still, he's like a 46-47% shooter in each of the zones from 3-10, 10-16 and 16-23, so it's more likely that his finishing around the rim would suffer, for fairly obvious reasons. Dunno exactly how that'd change, don't have a TON of shooting data for the time. Jerry West, a noted slasher, shot 47.4% from the field on his career, mixing jumpers and slashing, but his efficiency was a product of his ability to draw fouls. Given Steph's proficiency with his shot, if you translate that back, he probably WOULD shoot over 47% from the field, even if you knock his rim FG% down to like 58% or whatever it might be in the 60s. It'd erode his efficiency a little beneath that 52.5%, but on about 15% of his shooting volume. So straight adjustment down to 58% actually only change's Steph's raw FG% by 1%, because he takes over half his shots from above the 3pt line, and shoots about league-average for 1965 from 3 (42.3% on his career, league-average raw FG% in 1965 was 42.6%).
(EDIT: this change drops his adjusted TS% down to... 52.4%, for reference)
Sooooooo....
Yeah. He'd probably still be pretty good. One of the better scorers in the league, even just bombing from deep. Nothing like he is today, but still quite good.
i am pretty sure you calculated it wrong. Steph career TS% without three is 61.6%....how does he become a 53%TS player with elite mid range J, elite finish and best FT shooter of all time?
He has to face weak side help from Russell, Wilt or Thurmond for about 40% of his games.
When healthy Curry is battling with West and Greer for best guard in the league. His issues will be health and the simple fact that guard play is pretty weak or an afterthought for coaches. Some of the places he plays in will have lower ceilings prohibiting high arc shots. I do wonder how he will deal with the travel, 1960s phobias and no video/shoes/modern training and having to sell cars or unclog toilets in the offseason.
Oscar is somewhere between a rich mans Jaosn Kidd or a poor mans LBJ. Just depends on the team needs. I do question Oscar being able to communicate with this super soft, entitled, narcissistic generation. Im having trouble myself dealing with these kids and Oscar is generations behind. He was born in the Great Depression and lived WWII/jim crow. He knows what going without and sacrifice means. His demeaner was barely tolerable in 65 in 2025 he would come off stronger than a Marine drill Sargent.
Players today work ten times harder than Oscar did. Not because Oscar is lazy or anything, but because back them teams didn't have proper workout regimes and diets for guys to follow. Most guys didn't even do weights.