weneeda2guard wrote:Jcool0 wrote:coldfish wrote:
I disagree with that to an extent. They might seem like nice players with good attitudes but none of them strike me as super high basketball IQ guys. Someone pointed out in the NBA thread that Zion had more high IQ plays last night than some of the Bulls have had in their careers.
- Zach is not a high IQ player
- Coby seems to be a low IQ player
- Lauri doesn't seem to be a high IQ player
- Dunn seems like he only started "getting it" this year
Wendell and Otto seem like good basketball IQ guys but they are out all the time.
Side note: There is a difference between high IQ and high basketball IQ. I think I'm reasonably smart but at game speed, I make a lot of dumb decisions when I play.
Can we stop with the IQ nonsese. Its like just something you make up to fit your narative. I mean just because Zach jacks up 3-4 bad shots a game does not mean he is not a high IQ player. It means he is on a team with almost no other scorers on it.
I'm kinda tired of hearing about levels of basketball IQ from a bunch of people who dont play basketball themselves. A lot of young players have so called low basketball iq. That's why it takes time for them to learn how to win and adjust to nba championship caliber systems that produce winning.
We are a long way from worrying about who has the intelligence to win anything we are in deep need of just pure talent. As these players mature they will get smarter but right now we dont even have another quality 20 point scorer other than lavine. If anyone expects me to believe if lavine was smarter it would equal more winning for us sorry not buying it. Lebron is one of the smartest basketball players ever and he missed the playoffs last year not because he lacked high basketball IQ but because his team didnt have the talent. We need more talent.
It's true - Birds, Magics, Lukas, Duncans are highly unusual, and you gotta say that each guy entered a rather elite organization/coaching staff with HOF/champ-caliber vets and pedigree.
Even Jordan and Lebron needed about 5+ years and a system (and all-star teammates) before they really "figured it out."
Rose was a "low-IQ" super talent - it was get the ball and take it to the hole. If he had his current IQ and pacing with his youth and health, the kid might've conquered the Miami cHeat in 2011.
LaVine is just a less dominant player than all the guys, plus his ACL happened right as he started performing like into a starter-caliber player... which means he also missed about 1.5 years of crucial early development... and he had a short UCLA college stint... so it's just entirely unfair to the guy to call him a moron.
He was hard to watch last year, but he's overcome some pretty strong adversity. I wouldn't call him "high IQ", because I'd reserve that for the Kidds and the Lebrons, but I also wouldn't call him low IQ - that's for barely coachable chuckers (which there are a lot of, in the NBA).