Warspite wrote:Thurmonds coaches didnt call plays and didnt have sets. The NBA of the 60s was pretty much playground basketball.
Great, somebody admit that. That's why 60s is worse than today (late 80s-now) basketball.
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Warspite wrote:Thurmonds coaches didnt call plays and didnt have sets. The NBA of the 60s was pretty much playground basketball.
penbeast0 wrote:Warspite, you are just plain wrong about the set plays (at least for the coaches I have read about) . . . . and jeahwe . . . .generally coaches in the 60s relied more on fast breaks then set plays designed to force the ball into the post or to free up a jump shooter because without the 3 point line, those were the high percentage shots.
Today there is a lot more improvising and one-on-one isolation plays (which is more the "playground" style) because, with the greater spacing and less packed interior defenses, now they can work instead of swing the ball around for a jump shot or forcing it in for a contended post move.
The 3 point play was the biggest change for the NBA since the 24 second clock (though things like wider lanes, goaltending rules, no handchecking, etc. all were also designed to free up space for scorers to operate in more of a playground fashion).