Dajadeed wrote:What’s hilarious is them laughing at GP being a defensive stopper because he’s little and the best defensive free agent right now is Patrick Beverly.
The more ridiculous part about it is that Gary Payton is 6-foot-4, which is taller than Gilbert Arenas (6-3) and Lou Williams (6-1), a pair of undersized shooting guards. Not to mention Payton has a 6-9 wingspan, which means Payton would have engulfed a player Williams' size.
Obviously, Arenas and Williams don't understand the difference in athletes today vs. 20 years and 40 years ago are the advances in exercise science and nutrition, not human evolution. Put Arenas in the 1970s and his career would have been over even faster than it was when he tore his MCL in 2007; surgery back then meant doctors likely would have cut on his leg and taken out ligaments hatchet job-style. The "bigger, stronger" comment really is bizarre when there are 6-foot-1 shooting guards playing in the NBA in 2019 (Williams). I grew up watching a 6-9 point guard (Magic Johnson) dominate the league.
I don't understand the Scottie Pippen comments at all. If anything, Pippen is the archetype for the modern NBA wing player: a 6-8 small forward with a 7-3 wingspan, athletic, can handle the ball and pass like a point guard, an elite defender in the passing lanes and stay in front of all perimeter positions, score, great transition scorer. Pippen has the same dimensions as Kawhi Leonard and a longer wingspan than Paul George.
And Dennis Rodman was incredibly athletic and flexible, from his Detroit days until his first season in Chicago. Rodman also has a 7-3 wingspan, which allowed him to grab all of those rebounds. At his peak, Rodman literally could guard all five positions. In an NBA where teams shoot 3-point shots and spread out the floor, Rodman would be a major rebounder even more than he was (especially on the offensive boards, now that teams spend more time guarding out to the 3-point line).
If anything, Pippen, Rodman and Michael Jordan as defenders were the early versions of the switching, near positionless style of basketball playing style that is so prominent today. But then, Arenas is the same person who helped derail his career by getting into an argument with a teammate over a card game and bringing guns into the locker room.