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View Full Version : Id like to ask the people who dont accept that defense is worse now a question.



Kblaze8855
08-16-2019, 10:27 PM
Those of us old enough have a pretty set opinion on the matter but quite a few 20 somethings are pretty set as well.

I was watching clips of some game from the early 2000s and there were comments on the apparently worse players and worse defense that such and such would exploit. These are the people who believe scores were so much lower because of a lack of offensive talent and depth. Apparently unwilling to accept the correlation between the higher pace and worse defense and role players looking better/being more productive and being a better deterrent to putting all your energy into stopping the stars....

My question to such people....

What do you think stopped the incredibly talented lineups from scoring?


Lets look at the Mavs....



Steve Nash
Finley
Dirk

NVE off the bench. A stretch 5 in Lafrentz. Offensive genius in Don Nelson coaching.

The had 7 total players shooting 37+ percent from 3 though obviously on less attempts.


The impression has often been that Nash became the real Nash in Phoenx and at this point his Dallas days are barely even brought up. Go watch his top 10s on NBA.com. They pretend he wasnt even in Dallas. Steve Nash was 28 in 2002. If you think a guy at 28-29 isnt in his prime yet.....I dont know what to tell you. He was more productive at 36 than 28....as the league had started to change. Doesnt make him better at basketball. He was doing all the Steve Nash MVP shit on the Mavs:









https://thumbs.gfycat.com/CarelessEveryArcticduck-size_restricted.gif




Same guy essentially.




For those of you who dont know much of Finley....imagine Jimmy Butler with much worse defense but a better jumper...and more prone to:



https://thumbs.gfycat.com/UnluckyColorfulGnatcatcher-size_restricted.gif



With the same 2 foot takeoff poster twice a week. Supposedly had like a 44 inch vertical. Good post game. Shot 38% for his career from 3 with years of 40% on like 5 a game. So he could shoot though he did have up and down years.



You had NVE who was about 30 and still capable of games like this where he dropped 40 off the bench:




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wm5YkSQnyNA






Lafrentz was a center who shot 37, 39, and 41% from 3 over a few years taking about 3.5 a game.





Dirk....was already Dirk. More mobile a little less reliant on just getting to his spots. Could attack facing up a little more. Run the floor. Essentially....he was Dirk but maybe 10% less deadly on a contested midrange but more athletic.


So....




This team that should have been an offensive juggernaut(and we thought it was)?



They scored 103 ppg.





Meanwhile a team that had talent and crazy depth was in Cali...


They had

Jwill/Bibby depending on the year
Christie
Peja
Webber
Vlade
Bobby Jackson(6th man of the year)

Added to that was a great group deep on the bench....

Hedo(future borderline all star...barely played)
Jim Jackson(not in prime but 45% from 3)
Damon Jones(not a very good player...but a career 39% 3 point shooter)
Gerald Wallace(future all star...couldnt get into games)



Gerald just came in for some:




https://thumbs.gfycat.com/TepidUnsteadyEland-size_restricted.gif






Now and then and reported back to the bench till the Bobcats took him in the expansion draft because as good as they knew Wallace could be.....he wasnt one of their top 8 players they could protect.




So they had shooting, slashing, all star bigs and some of the best passing his history. The highlights you see....really arent. Its how they played all the time. This is standard Kings play:









https://thumbs.gfycat.com/BlushingSnarlingCockroach-size_restricted.gif






https://thumbs.gfycat.com/DistortedRingedBunny-size_restricted.gif










https://thumbs.gfycat.com/BleakPitifulFlyingfish-size_restricted.gif







So....9-10 deep with offensive threats. Brilliant ball movement but guys who could score individually too if it came to that. Adleman coaching. Should be a juggernaut.


They scored even less than the Mavs. 101.7.


So mavs 103. Kings 102. Two highest scoring teams in the league most of those years.


Lowest scoring teams in the NBA last year?




Grizzlies, Cavs, and Knicks from 103-105.

Bucks and Warriors both scored 118 a game. Pelicans 115. So did the Clippers, Blazers, and Thunder. On defense 4 teams give up 117 to 119 points a night.

So....

The best we could expect from teams full of talent....playing what we considered uptempo ball relative to the time...was about 100 a night. In one of their best seasons the Kings only had 2 games with 120 points in regulation. The Bucks just had 5 games of 140 in regulation with a peak of 148. No OT...148 points.



Is it as simple as hands off defense and freedom of movement and all the ignored moving screens?


No.


The pace is up. Plenty of players try on defense but its harder to make a defensive impact with floors so spaced minimizing help and the ability to roam. There will be shitty defensive sequences in any era of course. Its not as simple as the players not being able to/willing to play D. But its harder to play team D....and it makes a lot of these guys and teams look more talented than they are.

Now....


Did the teams back then play the most optimal basketball? Thats one thing id like your opinion on.


The defense was(in the eyes of us old people) better both due to rules and the style many of those coaches wanted to play and insisted on a commitment to....but that isnt all in truth. I have thoughts but first id like to know what in the opinion of our 20 somethings kept those amazingly talented offenses in check....since many dont accept that defense was better as even a potential starting point.


Do you believe they werent as talented as we think they were?

Do you believe they didnt play the "right" way as analytics have made modern teams do?


Id say both of those teams could score a comfortable 120ppg today even without adjusting their threes up by the ratio one might expect....but I will accept your arguments otherwise which I expect to be purely analytical.




To keep this simple after way too many words to begin with....


If not defenses being harder to score on....


Why did even the super talented teams then not score very much?


Do you believe modern offenses are better by a greater margin than those defenses were better? Do any of you fully reject the premise that the defenses were better to begin with? I know some people who do. Nobody who was old enough to drive in the early 2000s. But....some people.

PickernRoller
08-16-2019, 10:36 PM
.since many dont accept that defense was better as even a potential starting point.


Who the f' cares about what the new youngings think?

Everytime I hear kids say the GSW dynasty would bulldoze through the early 2000s West I completely time out on the convo...

You can't argue with that level of ignorance. Those GSW teams would be lucky to make it to the WCF.

NBAGOAT
08-16-2019, 10:50 PM
01-04 shouldn’t be challenged by anyone as a tough defensive era. With an era adjustment, the mavs are a goat lvl offense. Kings aren’t even with seemingly great talent but you can question whether Webber is a great lead guy. Handchecking and no illegal defense rules is a tough combination. Pace does matter more when it comes to ppg however.

The kings and mavs obviously wanted to run but it’s hard when so many teams in the league are fine going down to 10 in the shot clock and then giving it their star. I’m oversimplifying their offenses but you get the idea. There’s some suboptimal shot selection which is the analytics part but that’s not a huge deal.

Something I think gets overlooked however even if it doesn’t seem like it with harden is whether it’s the lack on handchecking or more 3s being taken or smarter defenses is guys arent getting as many free throws, that’ll bring down the mavs and kings ppg some.

I think it’s ok to call Nash the same guy but oversimplifying to attribute it just to rules. As good as Nelson was for Nash, Dantoni was that much better especially the last year where walker was on point forward duty and Nash was a spot up guy at time.

iamgine
08-16-2019, 10:53 PM
Defense is not worse. Offense is just better. The spacing nowadays is just much better than what it used to be. Everyone has multiple deadly shooters who take a lot of 3s. This opens up the court and puts the defense in a compromised position. Protecting the rim is much less valuable. Shaq would be a huge defensive liability in this era. He might not be playable at times.

tpols
08-16-2019, 10:58 PM
The '03 mavs had the # 1 offense... the **** you rambling about?

Wally450
08-16-2019, 11:18 PM
TL;DR, what's the question?

sdot_thadon
08-16-2019, 11:20 PM
The freedom of movement rule was the nail in the coffin for a few years till teams adjust. The 3 point revolution was pretty close to being the answer to the zone revolution a few years prior. We know with hand checking and less spacing defenses were tougher overall, but I've always maintained that with all the rule changes it takes more skill to be a lockdown defender today than in the handchecking era. Also need to consider the proportion of 3s today compared to back then and how much bearing that has on ppg.

tpols
08-16-2019, 11:25 PM
What the hell happened to bobby Jackson?

He was a gangster player to match the name.

NBAGOAT
08-16-2019, 11:34 PM
Teams also don

FKAri
08-17-2019, 01:51 AM
Defenses feel more helpless now. Morale is lower as a result. It's harder to get up for it. But when teams need to buckle down and play defense, they do it better than at any other point in NBA history. I'm probably the same age as you so you can check that BS at the door.

Mr Feeny
08-17-2019, 04:30 AM
Defense is not worse. Offense is just better. The spacing nowadays is just much better than what it used to be. Everyone has multiple deadly shooters who take a lot of 3s. This opens up the court and puts the defense in a compromised position. Protecting the rim is much less valuable. Shaq would be a huge defensive liability in this era. He might not be playable at times.

How about individually speaking? Did Nash' offense improve overnight as he aged and exited his prime?
How about Michael Redd?

Overdrive
08-17-2019, 04:30 AM
The '03 mavs had the # 1 offense... the **** you rambling about?

QED

Mr Feeny
08-17-2019, 04:32 AM
[QUOTE=NBAGOAT]01-04 shouldn

Reggie43
08-17-2019, 06:11 AM
Defense is much worse because of the rule changes obviously and thats how the league wants it to be. Not saying that players now are not capable of being good defenders but they are at a disadvantage on how the refs call the game.

iamgine
08-17-2019, 11:53 AM
How about individually speaking? Did Nash' offense improve overnight as he aged and exited his prime?
How about Michael Redd?
Actually it did improve overnight due to the sudden new rules and the new system which provides much more spacing. Dallas took much less 3s than Phoenix.

StrongLurk
08-17-2019, 12:05 PM
Defense isn't worse now, the biggest difference between now and 15-20 years ago is pace and change of prioritized skills.

Indian guy
08-17-2019, 10:15 PM
If by "now", OP mostly means last season. ORTG has only really spiked above the norm over the last 3 seasons, given the ever-increasing focus on 3pters post GS' record breaking 2016 season. Plus the faster pace leading to easier scoring opportunities. Pace-and-space has made offenses more dangerous than ever.

Let's look at average ORTG over the last 30 seasons:

1990 108.1
1991 107.9
1992 108.2
1993 108.0
1994 106.3
1995 108.3
1996 107.6
1997 106.7
1998 105.0
1999 102.2
2000 104.1
2001 103.0
2002 104.5
2003 103.6
2004 102.9
2005 106.1
2006 106.2
2007 106.5
2008 107.5
2009 108.3
2010 107.6
2011 107.3
2012 104.6
2013 105.9
2014 106.7
2015 105.6
2016 106.4
2017 108.8
2018 108.6
2019 110.4

Contrary to popular belief, numbers clearly indicate majority of the 90's were easier to score than the 00's and most of the 10's. And that holds true for the 80's as well if you simply look up the numbers. So much for it was tougher back in the day.

As far as the current decade's concerned, obviously, there's a noticeable increase in scoring from 2017 onward. Not at all a coincidence that it started right after GS' 73-win season, with almost every team making 3pt shooting a major part of their offense.

And it just went completely crazy last season, with ORTG topping 110+ for the first time in NBA history. This is why I'm a major proponent of capping 3pters to 30/G and bringing some of the physicality back. Nothing excessive, just some. The league is more talented than ever and the rules/style of play is clearly geared towards scoring, so the NBA needs to do something to interject some balance again. It dampens its own credibility when every team is consistently scoring 120+ and nobody cares about a guy scoring 40+ anymore.

Mr Feeny
08-18-2019, 02:43 AM
Defense isn't worse now, the biggest difference between now and 15-20 years ago is pace and change of prioritized skills.

It's more than pace. They're playing at a crazy pace but the game barely resembles basketball anymore. Defenders aren't allowed to play any defense. Removing handchecking is one thing, but instituting that "freedom of movement" crap is another, altogether. The lane is empty. It's a layup drill every night for anyone who drives.

tanibanana
08-18-2019, 04:19 AM
Defensive skills, knowledge, system NOW is BETTER.
Defensive intensity, physicality, competitiveness BEFORE was BETTER.

Defensive RULES today makes Players don

Stephonit
08-18-2019, 04:36 AM
Mavericks' Nash vs. Suns' Nash should explain a lot.

Mr Feeny
08-18-2019, 04:38 AM
[QUOTE=tanibanana]Defensive skills, knowledge, system NOW is BETTER.
Defensive intensity, physicality, competitiveness BEFORE was BETTER.

Defensive RULES today makes Players don

tanibanana
08-18-2019, 05:56 AM
That's just it, though, isnt it? The rules dont allow proper defense, which is why we end up with this in the NBA finals:

https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/8617171/kd_dunk2.0.gif

When your not allowed to play tough/gritty/physical defense. Plus add to the equation of stricter and expensive penalties, you develop bad habits, mentally and physically (muscle memory).

Phoenix
08-18-2019, 07:17 AM
When 9 of the top 10 scorers in the NBA are perimeter players immediately after hand checking is removed and when you see everyone's numbers shoot up at the exact same time as well as their efficiency, it's much more than a coincidence. It's a myriad of factors but the rules change is the most determining factor.

Allen Iverson was a prime example of that. In 2006 when Kobe scored over 35ppg, people tend to slide over that a 31 year A.I on the back nine of his prime scored 33ppg on a then career high 54% TS. And by that point he was already beginning to lose some of that blinding speed he had in the late 90's. As Kblaze likes to say, he didn't suddenly get better at basketball, not at that age and not with that style. This was the same guy in his Philly peak doing 31ppg and barely getting over 50% TS with some sub 50% years sprinkled in. Then you look at guys like Dirk, Arenas, Pierce, Lebron producing peak ppg numbers. So yeah, not a cosmic coincidence that alot of the star perimeter players all had career PPG numbers in that 2005-2007 period.

90sgoat
08-18-2019, 07:26 AM
You can't really play defense when there is a defensive 3 seconds.

That rule is a complete joke, essentially saying that you're not allowed to contest a layup.

Mr Feeny
08-18-2019, 08:01 AM
Allen Iverson was a prime example of that. In 2006 when Kobe scored over 35ppg, people tend to slide over that a 31 year A.I on the back nine of his prime scored 33ppg on a then career high 54% TS. And by that point he was already beginning to lose some of that blinding speed he had in the late 90's. As Kblaze likes to say, he didn't suddenly get better at basketball, not at that age and not with that style. This was the same guy in his Philly peak doing 31ppg and barely getting over 50% TS with some sub 50% years sprinkled in. Then you look at guys like Dirk, Arenas, Pierce, Lebron producing peak ppg numbers. So yeah, not a cosmic coincidence that alot of the star perimeter players all had career PPG numbers in that 2005-2007 period.

Exactly. Lebron had his career high scoring season as well. Even scrubs were averaging 27 ppg, overnight.

DMAVS41
08-18-2019, 10:27 AM
I know the point you are trying to make...and I agree defense was better back in the early 00's, but using points per game as a metric to measure offense is outdated to say the least.

As for the Mavs, they had some of the best offenses of all-time relative to the league.

I believe the 04 offense was the best ever and the 02 offense was the 3rd best ever when accounting for the average league offense.

IIRC, they also, just on net offensive rating (which is what should be used, not ppg) they still have like 2 of the best 80 offenses ever...which is crazy if you think about the era they played in.

As for Nash...yes, he was Nash for the most part...just with injuries and wearing down because of the physical style of the game back then.

Anyone that says defense isn't worse now than it was in the early 00's is either lying or has an agenda. Nobody could watch that era and look at the numbers...and think that the current defenses are as good.

Hey Yo
08-18-2019, 11:10 AM
That's just it, though, isnt it? The rules dont allow proper defense, which is why we end up with this in the NBA finals:

https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/8617171/kd_dunk2.0.gif
What was score of the game at that time? What quarter was it? Was that a regular season game or a Finals game?

context, chico.

Mr Feeny
08-18-2019, 11:29 AM
What was score of the game at that time? What quarter was it? Was that a regular season game or a Finals game?

context, chico.

If you knew anything about basketball or were even watching those games,I wouldn't have to tell you when this happened.

Kblaze8855
08-18-2019, 01:08 PM
I know the point you are trying to make...and I agree defense was better back in the early 00's, but using points per game as a metric to measure offense is outdated to say the least.

As for the Mavs, they had some of the best offenses of all-time relative to the league.


When the issue is one league vs another one with almost no common elements(Vince Carter and 3 head coaches still active) relative to the league isnt really the issue. Of course the Mavs and Kings had great offense relative to the league. The best. But scoring a lot less than teams do now....which impacts the productivity of the players. Which is largely the point.

You couldnt hold those teams to anything close to 100 a night playing in 2019.

stalkerforlife
08-18-2019, 01:12 PM
Physical defense has been outlawed.

AND offensive skills have diminished.

The NBA knew these super athletes with a lack of basketball skill needed an advantage and they outlawed physical defense to keep the novice entertained.

Kblaze8855
08-18-2019, 01:24 PM
Not that anyone cares but let me change my Vince as the only active player left from then(2002) to include Tyson Chandler, Jamal Crawford, and Gasol. That would have bugged me if I didnt say so.

DMAVS41
08-18-2019, 05:35 PM
When the issue is one league vs another one with almost no common elements(Vince Carter and 3 head coaches still active) relative to the league isnt really the issue. Of course the Mavs and Kings had great offense relative to the league. The best. But scoring a lot less than teams do now....which impacts the productivity of the players. Which is largely the point.

You couldnt hold those teams to anything close to 100 a night playing in 2019.

I agree with you, but points per game just isn't the metric one should use...it is offensive rating.

And, yes, that was my point about the Mavs...I think they had like the 80th best offense of all-time in 04 according to offensive rating, but we all know...at least those that lived it...know that scoring on a per possession basis was way harder back then...and when you account for the conditions...there is an argument that it might actually have been the best regular season offense ever.

All the evidence one needs is to look at the league average offensive rating for the early 00's compared to now...and that should end any issue at all with this.

Not even sure what the issue is.

Are there actually people saying that defense is just as good now as it was in the early 00's?

Kblaze8855
08-18-2019, 05:45 PM
Quite a few yes. But even more numerous are the people doing straight up statistical comparisons of players as if they don

Bronbron23
08-18-2019, 07:59 PM
Defense is not worse. Offense is just better. The spacing nowadays is just much better than what it used to be. Everyone has multiple deadly shooters who take a lot of 3s. This opens up the court and puts the defense in a compromised position. Protecting the rim is much less valuable. Shaq would be a huge defensive liability in this era. He might not be playable at times.
And this is where you should hand in you basketball card. Saying Shaq wouldn't be playable is just dumb. Yeah he would have a tough time on switches against gaurds but his competition would have a much harder time stopping him. The warriors would be a prime Shaqs main competition in this era but who in the hell on the warriors would be able to stop Shaq? Her absolutely destroy them. Especially with how defences are more spread out because of the threat of the three ball. It be barbeque chicken all day.

NBAGOAT
08-18-2019, 08:16 PM
[QUOTE=Kblaze8855]Quite a few yes. But even more numerous are the people doing straight up statistical comparisons of players as if they don

DMAVS41
08-18-2019, 09:17 PM
[QUOTE=Kblaze8855]Quite a few yes. But even more numerous are the people doing straight up statistical comparisons of players as if they don