NoDopeOnSundays wrote:RakimAbdulJabar wrote:NoDopeOnSundays wrote:
Rodman would be borderline unplayable on offense, nobody would guard him.
So? No one guarded him back then either and he still found a way to make himself more than effective.
Joakim Noah (the Bulls version) is a guy teams didn't need to guard out on the perimeter, often felt like the Bulls were playing 4 on 5 on offense yet with his passing, offensive rebounds and defense he was a huge factor in their success, there's more to basketball than just being able to shoot. Did Ben Wallace need to be guarded? Guys like Rodman, Noah, Wallace etc have a place in the league and are extremely valuable because they can focus on doing the things a lot of guys don't want to
Noah is 7 feet tall and can finish at the rim if you just let him roll down the lane, I don't think Rodman rolling to the rim at 6'7 and trying to finish over guys as one of the pillars of your offense is a good idea. The difference between then and now is that the rebounding guys who don't have a lot of offensive skill are heavily involved in the pick and roll with the guard to keep them a threat on offense, and even then they get played off the court (Gobert, Capela). His biggest advantage would be his switchability on defense, but the offense would be a major problem, more so today than when he was playing in the triangle because his role on offense would be different, he'd now have to finish at the rim or make reads and hit the corner on passes.
Why are we assuming Rodman would need to be the guy put into pick and rolls? You see just as many bigs that can shoot setting the screens and looking for pick and pop plays in fact you probably see that more these days than bigs rolling to the basket, so he depending on the roster he wouldn't need to be the guy setting up those plays
We're talking about arguably the greatest rebounder of all time and he wasn't doing it against little guys, the quality of big men and toughness in the paint was well above what we see now. You didn't need to run any plays for him then and wouldn't need to run any plays for him now, so no one said having him roll to the basket would be one of the pillars of an offense.
I also think people are underestimating Rodmans abilities, it wasn't that he was useless on offense, he made a conscious decision not to shoot or look for his offense but he could finish just fine when he wanted to, especially as a Piston, but people seem to remember the Bulls version of Rodman. He was sneaky enough to get into good position and most of all he was constantly working to get on the offensive glass, you don't see it from many guys these days and I personally feel he'd be just as successful today as he had a nose for the ball
He was fast and ran the break filling the lane when guys wouldn't run to the 3 point line, if he caught it on the block he was constantly looking for cutters and could deliver the pass, if his guy turned away for a moment he'd find his way under the basket and more often than not be in play for the rebound.