daSwami wrote:Interesting thread.
I think Gladwell's 10k-hour rule definitely applies here, but of course, that's predicated on an individual having the opportunity to amass those hours. For NBA players, that means finding the time to put in to get those hours. By the time players get to the pro level, most have already (via HS, college, camps, AAU, etc...) put in thousands of hours, so I would guess that its a pretty level playing field for NBA players in terms of how many hours each has dedicated to playing basketball. So it stands to reason that the straight-out-of-high-school draftees will face a longer development arc than those, say, who've spent 4 years playing college ball or professionally overseas. The problem arises in cases (such as Blatche's) where the player never got the opportunity to learn a disciplined approach to extra-curricular skills development. I read somewhere that starting in gradeschool, Lew Alcindor shot 1,000 sky-hooks with each hand every day until he graduated from UCLA. I'm not sure that today's young athletes have the time or discipline to put into improving their games. Plus, I'm sure that alot of their time during the season is spent learning the complexities of the pro schemes so many teams use. (although I get the impression that our young players don't put in as much work as they should in this regard).
I don't agree that most NBA players have put in similar hours of PRACTICE. I'd agree they've played a similar number of hours through AAU, camps, high school ball, etc. Athleticism is one thing that will separate players who have put in similar amounts of time -- though "athleticism" is part genetics and part work (lifting, running, jumping, etc.). But, where the real separation comes is with those guys who will do what Alcindor did at UCLA. Or what Kobe did after he got to the NBA with his famous 6-6-6 schedule (6 hours a day, 6 days a week, 6 months a year). (For those who don't want to do the math, that's a 1,080 hours of practice and working out that Kobe puts in during the offseason.)
And, I don't agree that players nowadays have less time available than players of previous generations. They may SPEND less time practicing because of video games, Internet, whatever. But there's not much stopping a kid who wants to get better from going to the gym and working on some moves or a jumper or ball-handling. Or from doing push-ups and sit-ups to get stronger. Or from studying game film on the Internet.
"A lot of what we call talent is the desire to practice."
-- Malcolm Gladwell
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