Thread drift:
Decline of the center?
I had a senior this year who I'd coached when he was a frosh (then I stopped coaching). Six nine, six five as a frosh, and I'd worked with him on post moves and understanding how to play with his back to the basket. He never really picked that stuff up, ended up as a jump-shooter who would block some shots in a zone -- during AAU season he'd try to be KG or Dirk, but he didn't have the skills to be any kind of face-up player, so he ended up as a big kid who just wasn't very good. I mentioned watching some McHale video on You Tube to him, and said "you know, kids just don't learn that anymore...a guy who really worked that would be very recruitable." His response: "it's not a big man's game anymore."
WTF?
Down here at least, every tall kid wants to be a face-up player, a huge 3 or face up 4 than developing a post game. So open question -- chicken or egg time.
Why? Because a generation of tall kids skipped college or came out as freshmen and never really developed, so now we have no classic big men in the NBA, so kids who want to be like their heroes want to play like Dirk or KG instead of Jabbar or McHale? AAU coaches (who sometimes become more important than HS ones) trying to groom every big kid into a face-up 4?
Discuss.
Thread drift:
Decline of the center?
I had a senior this year who I'd coached when he was a frosh (then I stopped coaching). Six nine, six five as a frosh, and I'd worked with him on post moves and understanding how to play with his back to the basket. He never really picked that stuff up, ended up as a jump-shooter who would block some shots in a zone -- during AAU season he'd try to be KG or Dirk, but he didn't have the skills to be any kind of face-up player, so he ended up as a big kid who just wasn't very good. I mentioned watching some McHale video on You Tube to him, and said "you know, kids just don't learn that anymore...a guy who really worked that would be very recruitable." His response: "it's not a big man's game anymore."
WTF?
Down here at least, every tall kid wants to be a face-up player, a huge 3 or face up 4 than developing a post game. So open question -- chicken or egg time.
Why? Because a generation of tall kids skipped college or came out as freshmen and never really developed, so now we have no classic big men in the NBA, so kids who want to be like their heroes want to play like Dirk or KG instead of Jabbar or McHale? AAU coaches (who sometimes become more important than HS ones) trying to groom every big kid into a face-up 4?
Discuss.
It's very true, everyone wants to shoot threes and play the point. It's become extremely rare to see a kid like Jared Sullinger come along any more. Sullinger came in to the B10 as a freshman with a great back to the basket games, tons of polished post moves and great footwork.
I don't think coaches try to develop everyone into face up players, I think it's more of a problem of that's how kids want to play.
If you are going to fairly compare layers from different eras I think you have to physically enhance the players from earlier eras and give them the benifit of modern day diet, strength and conditioning. It was a different game in the 70's.
Doing that My list would go
Kareem
Wilt/Shaq
Walton
Hakeem/Malone/Russell
Robinson/Ewing/Dawkins/Parrish
I know i'm forgetting some but that's how I see it.
Going a step further, without giving any points for to older era players.
College/rookie Lew Alcindor vs Shaquille O'neil despite the physical mismatch of 100 plus pounds, neither one would have a great answer for the other defensively. I think that would have boiled down to who got who into foul trouble. That Sky hook was friggin unstopable.