bigfoot wrote:JMac1 wrote:bigfoot wrote:
Until Ayton tries to post up PJ and takes the worst percentage shot in the NBA and misses. Then Ayton can't cover the guard in the switch on the pick-n-roll on the other end. Over many possessions the 3ptr will beat the post-up every time.
A dunk is the best shot.
An uncontested dunk is the best shot. It will be contested by PJ or another stout defender with long arms that is faster all day long. People ignoring the history since 2005. D'Antoni changed the system with seven seconds or less and the GSW/Rockets have perfected it. The game has changed since Shaq, Duncan, Ewing, Yao, and Olajuwan played. Dominate bigs are going extinct like the dinosaurs ... too big and slow to survive.
This is the chart we all need to be paying attention to with this discussion.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/leaders/ts_pct_career.html IMO, the SSOL Suns could have developed into one of the all-time great teams, had Amare not gotten injured. That's because Amare's percentages - at that volume - was crazy high. That 04-05 team started the transition to where the league is today.
A big part of the change in styles is due to rule changes, sure, but the biggest part has been skill development, pure and simple. Take the three, focus on the three, get great at it. NBA players are simply much, much better shooters than they were in eras past.
The league that SSOL transitioned away from, however, is important to remember. The reason the league had transitioned from the run-n-gun eighties to such a post-up oriented game in the nineties was because of the extraordinary talent of the bigs of that generation - Olajuwon, Barkley, Ewing, Malone, Robinson, and finally, Shaq. When all the rest of those guys were gone, we were left with Shaq, and a league desperate to stop him. Otherwise, the game that was sort of dead. A generation of "superstars" like Carter, McGrady, Iverson, Francis and Marbury never really learned to be efficient and productive offensive players. Iso ball up top with bigs defending down low. Teams were designed to contend with a type of player that no longer existed - except for Shaq.
I know post ups
in general are not good, but a Shaq post up was unstoppable, and still would be today... Your biggest big is Zaza Pachulia? Nene? Uh, pleeeease. It wasn't until Shaq and Kobe split (and Shaq precipitously declined) that the modern offense began to take shape here in Phoenix and now in Golden State and Houston.
THE THING YOU'RE MISSING is that the post up is not how the big is most often used in the modern offense - and that would be true even if the offense were designed around him. Of any team's fans, ours should know this best, because we all watched Amare. The ideal modern big rolls to the rim, catches everything, finishes everything, over and against anyone. A great one will turn a 12 footer into a layup with a dribble, hit his free throws and step out for the open shot when offered. He'll gobble up boards and keep defenses honest with his tremendous gravity. Everything we've seen from Ayton suggests he'll be able to do all those things.
By now we've all seen teams stacked with shooters better than any known to the NBA of the past. Now let's see what happens when you put one of those great wrecking balls of yesteryear in the middle of it.
SHAZAM!!! Ayton's home in the US is Arizona. He wants to be here. We have the #1 pick. The 50/50 curse has been lifted. The modern NBA offense was birthed here. Now, like a Phoenix, the modern offense must here be reborn.