Post#100 » by Greyhound » Tue Apr 21, 2020 9:40 pm
I don’t agree with the point, nor do I care what (exactly) this player thinks on the matter. What I find interesting is the sentiment.
Everyone on here is heaping praise and talking about how this documentary is going to convert all of the youth. For those who have grown up with Kobe, LeBron and Curry, it may do the opposite.
Many young folks look at LeBron as their guy (even if he is not their favorite player, they realize that he defines their era), if this is viewed as an offensive on him, it becomes a referendum on all of them. LeBron has been so prominent in this era that to knock him down is to lower all of them.
Instead of a conversion this could actually lead to a digging in. The young and impressionable may see the light (as hoped), or maybe they take it as their dads trying to force their god on them with a ten part meat beat.
Time will tell.
You are not the first generation to go out of their way to enlighten their kids on the virtues of “their” time (90’s man). It has been done time and time again. The response is always the same. They watch, they grin, then do what kids have always done... intentionally zig where their fathers zagged.
...
I grew up in the 90’s, but I must say, there is one thing about 80’s-90’s basketball enthusiasts that I find utterly obnoxious.
They discredit all the greats that came before them as antiquated and not up to par, while simultaneously discrediting all those who followed as lacking and not up to par.
It’s like the sky opened up and God placed all the true greats in the 80’s and 90’s.
Wilt and Russell... overrated (played against too many 5 foot white guys).
LeBron, Durant, Curry... can’t stack up (play in the era of milk box big men and bubble wrap defense)
Greatness began with them and it ended with them. This is what they would have you believe.
Don't believe the hype...