bballsparkin wrote:MEDIC wrote:
I don't even know what that means.
You don't enjoy watching players that are competitive & play hard?
For me, its not about the NBA. Its about watching people compete. In all levels of basketball and all levels of sports.
There is an appreciation for guys that work hard & give it everything they have.......regardless of skill. It shows character.
I have that same appreciation whether I am watching a high school game, college game, the olympics, Euroleague, NBA.......whatever.
Gradey is giving it his all. Competing to the best of his abilities. Do you appreciate that? : )
Is he? He looks very different than Walter out there on the defensive end. Walter is skinny too. Some people have that fight in them. Some don't. It's a mentality of aggression rather than fear.
If he is working as hard as he can, he is getting outplayed and outmatched every night & isn't ready for the NBA or NBA minutes. That makes it a coaching/ organization problem. Ideally, Gradey stays in College for 3 years, works on his game and his body. If this was the NHL or MLB, he would still be in the minors.
I could put a 10 year old on an NBA court & have him work as hard as he can (& I would respect that), but the truth is, he shouldn't be there. You need to be able to compete at the level that you are playing. Especially defensively.
I think if Gradey had done the work on his body early on (16 +), he would have been much more prepared for the league. If you look at RJ when he entered the league, he was physically prepared. RJ worked hard to make sure he was strong enough. Gradey relied too much on his mom teaching him to shoot. The NBA is a mans game.
If Gradey starts to look as strong as RJ, Martin, Shead when he is 23 years old, I will give him props for his hard work. Tmac completely changed his body by his 3rd year in the league. He looked like a new man.