alebaba wrote:Sedale Threatt wrote:If hard work and training is all it took, you'd see lots of Steph Currys. For example, by all accounts Avery Johnson had an insane work ethic, and he wasn't in the same galaxy as a shooter. It's easy to look at freak athletes/specimens and see their gifts, but something like, say, hand-eye coordination doesn't register. Another example, I remember reading an anecdote about Steve Nash that he could pick up his golf clubs after not playing for extended periods and still hit in the low 70s. That's nuts. Many people play their entire lives and don't shoot that well, let alone with little to no practice. So while you obviously have to work your ass off to hone skills like his, it's always seemed pretty obvious that Steph is insanely gifted, to an extent we've never really seen before.
You will see more Stephen Curry soon in the future, lil kids will be growing up shooting threes. Jordan was a prime example of this, it will be the same with Curry.
This… along with basketball getting more and more popular worldwide, we will continue to see strides taken in the sport. Just like this class of players are generally better shooters, ball handlers and finishers than eras in the past, it will continue to go forward… only thing that would change that is if the sport died down in popularity. Most guards in past eras had little to no left at all. You can’t be a guard in the NBA today without a left. Mark Jackson, who was a great point guard never even attempted a left finish, and you would look at more and realize how much that alone has evolved, its not just shooting like everyone here says. The game has evolved a ton and will continue to. Weirdly, its also the only sport that the fans, ex players and media actively deny this to prop up the “golden” eras of the sport.
And Curry’s skills are 100% a result of his training. Its ALL reps and more reps… and then even more reps. I was a really good 3 point shooter and played up until college and I trained a ton, but compared to today’s players, it was a complete joke, maybe a 10th of the time they spent playing ball from ages 10 to college lets say.
And no I wasn’t born with good shooting genes or dribbling genes lol. The reason my hand eye coordination was so good was 100% a result of playing triple A baseball from a very young age, tons of basketball and a lot of football too. Now genetically, my 6’3 height surely helped but by NBA standard, at 6’3, you better be more skilled than the big guys, yes.