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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]i'm actually not.
if someone came along that was better than MJ, i would be thrilled... that would be amazing... i'd be the first guy in line to see him with my tongue wagging.
like, pleeeease show me the guy that is better than MJ... I WANT to see that guy - that would be [I]utterly amazing[/I].. i love basketball.[/QUOTE]
All three players who can be argued as on MJ's level had retired or were on the back 9s of their careers by the time he came into the league. Not much footage of Russell and Wilt. Some people aren't high on them because of when they played, so we can set them aside.
There's a good deal of tape of prime Kareem out there though. I think it's important to try and watch as much as possible. There's a lot of MJ stuff out there too fortunately (I didn't start watching live until the last year of the first threepeat, but there are dozens and dozens of his best games available).
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=fpliii]All three players who can be argued as on MJ's level had retired or were on the back 9s of their careers by the time he came into the league. Not much footage of Russell and Wilt. Some people aren't high on them because of when they played, so we can set them aside.
There's a good deal of tape of prime Kareem out there though. I think it's important to try and watch as much as possible. There's a lot of MJ stuff out there too fortunately (I didn't start watching live until the last year of the first threepeat, but there are dozens and dozens of his best games available).[/QUOTE]
no, you can't set them aside. not happening.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
3ball is actually trying to tell us three steps are legal? :roll:
Just cause the refs have turned a blind eye to it, doesn't make it legal. I guess 3 in the key is legal by your definition also since it's basically never called.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=MP.Trey]
I guess 3 in the key is legal by your definition also since it's basically never called.
[/QUOTE]
it's rarely called, because players make sure to keep the lane clear.
the league is very strict in making sure they call defensive 3 seconds, which is why the paint is kept clear on every possession in today's game.
if the league wasn't strict in enforcing the rule, than their objective of "opening up the game" would not be achieved... but it clearly has been.
btw, see the "gather provision" posted above by JohnMax, which the league instituted to formally legalize taking 3 steps with one dribble.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
You know how difficult it is to call those travels in real time? Anyway, on that oldies clip, you can see how the player was unable to contour his body and set his feet properly to perform an explosive move. Back then, they didn't go low enough with the dribble and didn't have enough control and power on wide steps. You couldn't train or had difficulty training on these skills due to a lack of examples and inventions. It isn't too much about the referees letting it slide nowadays as much as it is that these 60s/70s players weren't exposed to such creativity yet. It wasn't a problem though because their defensive techniques weren't as advanced either. This is no knock on anyone as great players will always remain great based on the circumstance that surrounded them. I always rank players based on how dominant they were against their peers anyway. The main point is that in real time, these modern-era moves involving gathers and such is a pain to judge accurately. You don't blow the whistle on things you are iffy about.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=Mass Debator]
You know how difficult it is to call those travels in real time? Anyway, on that oldies clip, you can see how the player was unable to contour his body and set his feet properly to perform an explosive move. Back then, they didn't go low enough with the dribble and didn't have enough control and power on wide steps. You couldn't train or had difficulty training on these skills due to a lack of examples and inventions. It isn't too much about the referees letting it slide nowadays as much as it is that these 60s/70s players weren't exposed to such creativity yet. It wasn't a problem though because their defensive techniques weren't as advanced either. This is no knock on anyone as great players will always remain great based on the circumstance that surrounded them. I always rank players based on how dominant they were against their peers anyway. The main point is that in real time, these modern-era moves involving gathers and such is a pain to judge accurately. You don't blow the whistle on things you are iffy about.
[/QUOTE]
taking 3 steps with one dribble is not a creative move... not at all.... you see the junior highers itt doing it as a standard... elementary school kids too - there's plenty of footage of 5th graders doing it... it's done literally dozens of times per game, maybe over a hundred times per game.
the reason they didn't do it in the 60's is because carrying and travelling would be called.
if any of the moves in these gifs were done in the 60's, the whistle would have been blown [I]instantly[/I].
btw, your defensive techniques don't have to be advanced if you don't have to guard 3-pointers and can camp in the lane.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=La Frescobaldi]no, you can't set them aside. not happening.[/QUOTE]
I'm not setting them aside, just meant for the sake of that post. :cheers:
I have both as unquestionably as among the best 4 players ever (with KAJ/MJ). Was just mourning the lack of tape.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE]
btw, your defensive techniques don't have to be advanced if you don't have to guard 3-pointers and can camp in the lane.
[/QUOTE]
like, if the league were to call the Cavs before their next game and say:
"[I]Hey Dan, we're going to remove defensive 3 seconds for one game, so your guys can camp in the lane just for this one game.... oh, and we're going to remove the 3-point line entirely for this one game too[/I]."
all of a sudden, all the "advanced strategy" of today's defenses goes out the window... not needed... it was only invented in the first place so defenders could cover the extra ground required to guard 3-pointers and defend effectively despite having to stay out of the lane.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]taking 3 steps with one dribble is not a creative move... not at all.... you see the junior highers itt doing it as a standard... elementary school kids too - there's plenty of footage of 5th graders doing it... it's done literally dozens of times per game, maybe over a hundred times per game.
the reason they didn't do it in the 60's is because carrying and travelling would be called.
if any of the moves in these gifs were done in the 60's, the whistle would have been blown [I]instantly[/I].
btw, your defensive techniques don't have to be advanced if you don't have to guard 3-pointers and can camp in the lane.[/QUOTE]
So are you implying that they were taught to do 3 steps, are purposely doing it, or referees just don't care about it? Have you ever done a cross right into a layup or dunk? There's a very fine line at when the ball is back in your hands and controlled before the 2 steps is counted. I bet 60s players rarely did a cross to a layup if ever. I'm serious about that too.
You're exaggerating everything due to ease of ability to seek specific highlights in the modern day era. I advise you to go watch a full game of AI and chances are he does that 3-step travel 0 to only once per game. Players do perform such illegal moves from time to time, but if you ever refereed at any level, it's pretty difficult to call a lot of things and this is one of them. They even can't get a definitive decision on Ray Allen's 3-pointer against the Spurs even in super slow motion.
You think a player from the 60s can guard someone like Kobe one on one? These 60s players are never low with their legs spread out when guarding someone. And the skill involving efficient feet placement when laterally moving isn't something that was too good back then.
I repeat, I am no way bringing down the 60s but the game has evolved and nothing is wrong with that.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=Mass Debator]
So are you implying that they were taught to do 3 steps, are purposely doing it
[/quote]
exactly.
[quote]
Have you ever done a cross right into a layup or dunk?
[/quote]
the crossover for a dunk (one dribble, 3 steps, just like all the GIFs) is my favorite move now that i'm old - it's very hard for me to dunk on guys off two feet anymore, so using a move where i can end up taking off the left leg and be in-stride with max momentum is the easiest way for me to catch a guy at my age.... this is how standard the move is in today's game.
[QUOTE]
You're exaggerating everything
[/QUOTE]
not one iota - do you think those are the only GIF's of that move??... there are DOZENS AND DOZENS EVERY GAME.... here's nash going BEHIND THE BACK with his one dribble, then he takes the 3 steps..
[IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/422bf41d001ec44eef96030dd771d7fb.gif[/IMG]
[QUOTE]
I advise you to go watch a full game of AI and chances are he does that 3-step travel 0 to only once per game. Players do perform such illegal moves from time to time, but if you ever refereed at any level, it's pretty difficult to call a lot of things and this is one of them.
[/QUOTE]
refereeing is really really really hard..
but you lost me here - you simply have a knowledge deficit as it relates to footwork - guys do this move DOZENS of times per game - how is it the move doesn't look VERY familiar to you?
[B]and btw, it hasn't been mentioned in the thread yet, but you don't have to crossover to do the move - the MOST COMMON one-dribble, 3-step move is when the players is going the same direction... here's lebron from last night - this move is done dozens and dozens of times per game - one dribble, 3 steps.. all day long:
[/B]
[IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/f67477ea5be0a4eec82c0dcb6f210474.gif[/IMG]
like, if you are a ref for decent players, like good high school comp or better, and you think all the GIFs itt are a travel, than you miss a TON of calls in your reffing.
(and actually, the lebron move above is how i dunk on most guys - i don't have the blazing speed to blow by guys cause i'm older, but i have a lot of hesitation moves off the dribble and moves where i can upfake the defender while dribbling to give me the step - obviously, i don't get up like lebron does here, but i get up)
[quote]
You think a player from the 60s can guard someone like Kobe one on one?
[/quote]
guys today can't guard 36 year old kobe 1-on-1 let alone prime, 81 point kobe.
and yes, the athletic guards and wings of the day back then would absolutely be able to do the same job that guys do today... it would be a little easier overall actually, because the rim protection was much better back then.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
I don't consider the last Lebron dunk you posted as travelling. I consider this what I call game slippage. Most of the time the ball hitting the ground and the gather step are not totally in sync and I don't have any problem with that. It's really obvious in the slow motion, but in real time, you can barely notice it. I don't think this gets called in the 60s. I can tell you for sure it doesn't get called in the late 70s in Europe.
As for Nash's move - to me this is a travelling. But I guess it depends on which step do you consider to be the gather step. The idea behind calling it a non travel is that the gather happens only when he gathers the ball with both hands, since he could still continue his dribble when he planted his left foot for the first time. I don't really agree with this definition. To me the gather happened on the step where the dribbling actually stopped. But I guess this really isn't a problem as long as it's called the same for al the players. Which it does in NBA, not so much in Europe.
I had a similar discussion about James Harden's eurostep a couple of weeks ago. I do not agree with what seems to be now the official application of this rule, but as long as there is no strict definition of when gather really happens, it's up to the refs to call it as they want.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
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[B]MJ's 1989 vs. Lebron's 2009
[/B]
[I]The fact that Jordan's 33/8/8/54 in 1989 resulted in only 47 wins, while Lebron's 28/8/7/49 in 2009 resulted in 66 wins, can only mean MJ either had a weaker supporting cast or played tougher competition, or both.. Regardless, we have proof that MJ's 1989 Bulls were more of a 1-man team than Lebron's 2009 and 2010 Cavs:
[/I]
We've already established that Lebron's supporting cast added enough help on top of his 28/8/7/49 to win 66 games in 2009, while MJ's supporting cast only added enough help to his 33/8/8/54 to win 47 games in 1989.
[COLOR="Navy"]If you think that all 19 of the Cavs' higher win total was due to worse competition (and not better supporting cast)[/COLOR], then consider how much better that makes MJ's playoff stats look, since they came against far better competition... Lebron's 35/9/7/51/1.6 stl playoff averages in 2009 are invalidated compared to MJ's nearly identical 35/7/7/51/2.5 stl playoff averages in 1989, due to facing vastly inferior competition..
Of course, the other alternative is that Lebron's supporting cast was better, in addition to the aforementioned weaker comp.. This of course, must be true.. Lebron's supporting cast included an all-star and a slew of veterans, a stark contrast from MJ's young cast.. MJ's 1989 Bulls and the "Jordan Rules" that [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QIY_4vIxGEE&t=22m52s]MJ faced[/url] were simply more of a 1-man team.. Therefore, the gap in RS records was due to a combination of BOTH competition level and supporting cast - the superior competition Jordan faced and 1 man show he that was is underscored by the Bulls being a 6-seed, and severe underdog in every series, compared to the Cavs being the #1 seed and favorite to make the Finals.
[B]Average wins of opponents during MJ's 24 game stretch at PG and Lebron's 12 game stretch
[/B]
Seattle: 47
Indiana: 28
Cleveland: 57
New York: 52
Indiana: 28
Lakers: 57
Phoenix: 55
Portland: 39
Seattle: 47
Warriors: 43
Bucks: 49
Cleveland: 57
New Jersey: 26
Charlotte: 20
Detroit: 63
Detroit: 63
Atlanta: 52
Indiana: 28
New Jersey: 26
Cleveland: 57
New York: 52
Washington: 40
Washington: 40
Cleveland: 57
______________
[COLOR="Blue"]45 win average[/COLOR]
Lakers: 57
OKC: 50
Miami: 47
MIN: 15
IND: 32
LAC: 29
MEM: 40
MIA: 47
NYK: 29
New Jersey: 12
Orlando: 59
____________
[COLOR="Red"]34 win average[/COLOR]
[I]It's common knowledge that the 1989 Eastern Conference was much tougher than the 2009 or 2010, but here's the data anyway (above) proving that MJ faced the tougher stretch of competition
[/I]
So considering MJ's competition was much tougher, then consider how much better that makes MJ's playoff stats look, since they came against far better competition... Lebron's 35/9/7/51/1.6 stl playoff averages in 2009 are invalidated compared to MJ's nearly identical 35/7/7/51/2.5 stl playoff averages in 1989, due to facing vastly inferior competition.
Of course, the other alternative is that Lebron's supporting cast WAS better, in addition to the aforementioned weaker comp.. This of course, must be true.. Lebron's supporting cast included an all-star and a slew of veterans with better stats, which is a stark contrast from MJ's young cast.. MJ's 1989 Bulls and the "Jordan Rules" that [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QIY_4vIxGEE&t=22m52s]MJ faced[/url] were simply more of a 1-man team.. Therefore, the gap in RS records was due to a combination of BOTH competition level and supporting cast.
Btw, MJ's stretch of 10 triple-doubles in 11 games destroys Lebron's little run of 12 games anyway - this shouldn't even be debatable.. And MJ's stretch was twice as long, against 45-win competition, not 34-win like Lebron.
[B]Pippen vs. Worthy or any atg that was good right away
[/B]
[I]It's about even and the Pippen backers are being results-oriented and using a bad way of evaluating it by only contemplating the MJ-developed Pippen.. But if you're being realistic and considering how they would do if they were drafted by 100 different teams, Worthy was the better player.[/I]
Pippen was a raw, undeveloped player, who needed to find the right situation to develop the most he was capable - this is proven with the 1988 Laker example.
If he were drafted to a good team like the 88' Lakers, he'd never get to play - that championship roster of veteran all-stars had no room for a 7.9 ppg rookie, so and much of Pippen's early development would be pushed back a few years or never occur - either way, he'd be less likely to develop the maximum he was capable on the Lakers or any good team.
If he was drafted to any variety of bad teams, he wouldn't develop the same way that he did alongside MJ - much of Pippen's value was his defense - he simply wouldn't have developed the same way on that end alongside Barkley or Magic as he did alongside MJ, the dpoy winner in Pippen's rookie year..
And most significant is the offensive end - Pippen was BAD his first couple years - he had no moves, bad handle, sloppy, scrawny, rigid.. bad shooter..[I] But look how much he improved - then look at who he was watching every single day on and off the court.. [/I]He's simply NOT going to improve that much offensively alongside Barkley as he did alongside the goat.. And as for Magic - I'm sure Pippen would improve OFF-ball alongside him, but there was only 1 primary ballhandler on the Lakers... :confusedshrug:
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]doesn't really matter - it's all semantics - the 3-step, one-dribble move is done every other play in today's game.[/QUOTE]
I think it actually does. I don't think Lebron gained any advantage using that move. Nothing changes if he syncs his gather step with his dribble. Nash on the other hand takes 3 full steps and evades another dribble he should've taken.
[QUOTE=3ball]
[B]and let me tell you something - if lebron is forced to take another dribble there, that slows him down significantly and he doesn't generate the same momentum to go up nearly as explosively as he did - but that's the circumstance guys were in back in the 60's (where their explosiveness is hindered because they must take an extra dribble, or get called for travel and carry).
[/B][/QUOTE]
I don't agree. The extra dribble doesn't slow him down at all. It does however give Calderon a chance to steal the ball, but that's not the topic of discussion. You sometimes see guys like Lebron and Westbrook dunking after taking only one step after they gather the ball, so the number of the steps taken is not the only factor.
I agree with you that the rules today allow for more dunking. But there are also other reasons. I believe the average level of athleticism is higher today, mostly because the talent pool is so much bigger and because athleticism is regarded more important when drafting players. Not to mention that today there is more weightlifting and plyometrics training, which improves players explosiveness tremendously. Another factor is dunking is considered a cool thing today and everybody wants to do it. There are 5'5 guys on youtube that perform alley oop dunks and youtube is full of guys under 6'0 with crazy athleticism who perform amazing dunks. Then there's PEDs which are better and more easily available as they used to be.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=iznogood]
You sometimes see guys like Lebron and Westbrook dunking after taking only one step after they gather the ball, so the number of the steps taken is not the only factor.
[/QUOTE]
yeah, and when they do, they have less explosiveness than otherwise.
in those spots, they look more like elgin baylor, because that's how he dunked.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]yeah, and when they do, they have less explosiveness than otherwise.
in those spots, they look more like elgin baylor, because that's how he dunked.[/QUOTE]
Baylor was without a doubt a formidable athlete, but his dunks don't look nothing like Westbrook's.
Here's a dunk he does after taking only one step after gathering the ball.
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X42udSG_HB0#t=2m28s[/url]
Than there's a couple more in that same video where he takes two full steps, which is legal by any rules. It doesn't get any more explosive than that. Then there's Rose, who doesn't dunk as powerful, but gets up even higher. Even Nate Robinson who is only 5'9 makes crazy dunks after taking only 2 steps.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/f67477ea5be0a4eec82c0dcb6f210474.gif[/IMG]
:lol
I'm seeing it, i'm not believing it. Like the traveling the using of his off arm to push away defenders wasn't bad enough, now dude can slap people out of the way.
NBE 2015 Slapping edition!
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=iznogood]
Here's a dunk westbrook does after taking only one step after gathering the ball.
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X42udSG_HB0#t=2m28s[/url]
[B]It doesn't get any more explosive than that.
[/B]
[/quote]
lol, are you serious... you know who invented that particular dunk?
Michael Jordan... he invented the lean-in dunk that you posted of westbrook... and actually, not a lot of guys do that dunk consistently - westbrook is one of those guys... but c'mon, westbrook is giving 1000% to get the explosion he gets - Jordan exceeds that explosion and makes it look so much easier.
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBQx6MRqXZg&t=0m41s[/url]
westbrook's dunk over omer asik is an example (it's queued in the link above) - he has to strain his absolute hardest and he barely sneaks it in.... Jordan throws that down cleanly, super-hard and with super-ease - westbrook's explosion is a dimension or two below Jordan... [B]for every Westbrook dunk, Jordan has 3... literally - Westbrook gets 50 dunks per season and Jordan got 150 per - we have dunking data for Jordan here:...[/b] [url]http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=352399[/url]
[quote]
Baylor was without a doubt a formidable athlete, but his dunks don't look nothing like Westbrook's.
[/QUOTE]
[B]have you checked out the rest of the thread?... because it has been demonstrated that the explosiveness of players in the 60's was hampered by restrictions on ball-handling - go re-read the OP - that's the entire point of the thread... the rules back then prevented guys from having all the moves guys have today - so for you to go back to the whole "[I]players today are more explosive[/I]" line - you are just cluttering the thread with shallowness.[/B]
also, elgin was 6'5"... and not like, austin rivers 6'5" (a very diminutive 6'5" due to tiny bone structure), but a huge, powerful 6'5"....
and he averaged 39 points and 19 rebounds per game, while playing Wilt and Bill Russell 24 times per regular season (that's 30% of his regular season games).
i'm going to be completely honest, and i should have said this right away when you brought up westie - but westie does not compare to elgin at all.
westie displays more hops, but that is only because guys today are allowed to dribble better, and that affects hops... elgin baylor's strength, power and finesse would be unmatched at the guard position in today's game, and if he dribbled like today's player and used today's moves, you would see the same highlights out of him that you see out of westbrook.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]if he dribbled like today's player and used today's moves, you would see the same highlights out of him that you see out of westbrook.[/QUOTE]
Oh you mean if only he has Westbrooks' skills. Damn if only Howard has good post moves or make free throw like Yao, he could be dominating. :lol
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=iamgine]Oh you mean if only he has Westbrooks' skills. Damn if only Howard has good post moves or make free throw like Yao, he could be dominating. :lol[/QUOTE]
shows how little you understand about basketball that you think westbrook's skills are as good as elgin's.
even without being allowed to dribble like today's players, elgin was better and more skilled.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]lol, are you serious... you know who invented this dunk?
Michael Jordan... he invented the lean-in dunk that you posted of westbrook... and actually, not a lot of guys do that dunk consistently - westbrook is one of those guys... but c'mon, westbrook is giving 1000% to get the explosion he gets - Jordan exceeds that explosion and makes it look so much easier.
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBQx6MRqXZg&t=0m41s[/url]
westbrook's dunk over omer asik is an example (it's queued in the link above) - he has to strain his absolute hardest and he barely sneaks it in.... Jordan throws that down cleanly, super-hard and with super-ease - westbrook's explosion is a dimension or two below Jordan... [B]for every Westbrook dunk, Jordan has 3... literally.[/B][/QUOTE]
This is ridiculous, are you saying that you can judge the amount of effort someone gave in just from looking the video? Nice job! :applause:
And it doesn't even matter who invented that dunk. Why are you even bringing Jordan into this discussion? This was about comparing Westbrook and Baylor. Westbrook took 2 steps for most of the dunks he took in the video and that that's the same amount of steps Baylor was allowed to take, yet Westbrooks dunks are so much more athletic it's not even comparable.
[QUOTE=3ball]
[B]have you checked out the rest of the thread?... because it has been demonstrated that the explosiveness of players in the 60's was hampered by restrictions on ball-handling - go re-read the OP - that's the entire point of the thread... the rules back then prevented guys from having all the moves guys have today - so for you to go back to the whole "[I]players today are more explosive[/I]" line - you are just cluttering the thread with shallowness.[/B]
also, elgin was 6'5"... and not like, austin rivers 6'5" (a very diminutive 6'5" due to tiny bone structure), but a huge, powerful 6'5"....
and he averaged 39 points and 19 rebounds per game, while playing Wilt and Bill Russell 24 times per regular season (that's 30% of his regular season games).
i'm going to be completely honest, and i should have said this right away when you brought up westie - but westie does not compare to elgin at all.
westie displays more hops, but that is only because guys today are allowed to dribble better, and that affects hops... elgin baylor's strength, power and finesse would be unmatched at the guard position in today's game, and if he dribbled like today's player and used today's moves, you would see the same highlights out of him that you see out of westbrook.[/QUOTE]
You are grasping straws here, my friend. I just proved you Westbrook needed same amount of steps to pull of much crazier dunks, yet you claimed his dunks when he took the same amount of steps would look much more like Elgin's, which is as far from the truth as it could be. You were proved wrong, yet you're cycling and repeating the same thing. That's no way to argue.
Now you're restoring to the argument that Baylor was bigger and the type of dribbling that was allowed was holding him back? So he was basically the size of Andre Iguodala, yet his dunks don't look nothing like Andre's. He doesn't even get the explosiveness Lebron, Jeff Green or some other athletic forwards, who are even bigger than him.
And if you're claiming the dribbling rules are holding him back, then show me some clips of him finishing on the alley oop. No dribbling needed here, agreed?
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball][IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/f67477ea5be0a4eec82c0dcb6f210474.gif[/IMG][/QUOTE]
damn lol. crazy to think how often this shit happens yet never goes called.
I'd reccomend this to anyone saying dumbass shit like "how can you not enjoy LeBron's game?" in that one thread. The guy gets away with so many travels and off arm fouls, it's absurd. You'd think that this shit would never fly with the "best in the business" officiating the sport.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]shows how little you understand about basketball that you think westbrook's skills are as good as elgin's.
even without being allowed to dribble like today's players, elgin was better and more skilled.[/QUOTE]
:oldlol:
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball][IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/f67477ea5be0a4eec82c0dcb6f210474.gif[/IMG]
[IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/422bf41d001ec44eef96030dd771d7fb.gif[/IMG][/QUOTE]
Lebron only took 2 steps and did not use gather provision. That extra step your counting is the gather step.
Otherwise it would mean Nash took 4 steps without the gather provision since his right foot would have been the gather step when he dribbles behind his back.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
Lebron doesn't travel in that clip
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
It's not impossible to cover a lot of ground if you have ridiculously long strides. It's all in the mechanics of the player. A lot of players these days don't have the long strides and take what I call bunny steps to gather momentum.
One dribble from beyond the 3 point line, two long strides and dunk on Zo.
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/alYTroN.gif[/IMG]
One dribble from beyond the 3 point line, two long strides and dunk on Zo.
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/hk3BCzD.gif[/IMG]
One dribble beyond the 3 point line, two long strides and finish with the layup
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/Gru3HgS.gif[/IMG]
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=iznogood]
And it doesn't even matter who invented that dunk. Why are you even bringing Jordan into this discussion?
[/QUOTE]
i bring up jordan into the discussion, just for the heck of it - it's never wrong to bring the GOAT into any basketball discussion... but i also brought him up specifically because you posted that westbrook dunk like you were so proud, when Jordan did it so much better... the lean-in dunk is maybe THE most popular, coolest-looking dunk today - but jordan invented it, and 35 years later, still no one does it better than he did.
btw, it is a FACT that Jordan dunked 3 times as often as Westbrook - Westbrook dunks 50 times per season - so not even once per game... Jordan used to dunk 150 times per season - we have his data from the old philly 76er's media guides... [url]http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=352399[/url]
[quote=iznogood]
You are grasping straws here, my friend. I just proved you Westbrook needed same amount of steps to pull of much crazier dunks, yet you claimed his dunks when he took the same amount of steps would look much more like Elgin's, which is as far from the truth as it could be.
[/quote]
the lean-in dunk going left is a move that doesn't require extra steps, but the culture of dribble restrictions hampered ALL dribbling creativity.
the way the game was officiated and played at the time did not allow players to show the full capability of their athleticism.
so it's not surprising that they didn't do the lean-in dunk back then - Dr. J and David Thompson didn't even do it, although they obviously had the capability to do it if someone would have shown them the move - but again, dribbling creativity was hampered back then by the restrictive rules.
[quote=iznogood]
elgin was basically the size of Andre Iguodala, yet his dunks don't look nothing like Andre's. He doesn't even get the explosiveness Lebron, Jeff Green or some other athletic forwards, who are even bigger than him.
[/quote]ur mind is kind of a civ on this issue - one of lebron's most common moves is the one-dribble, 3-step move going one direction, posted earlier itt - lebron attempts this move a dozen times per game, literally.
this move is THE move used by all players driving to the rim in today's game - it's used literally a hundred times per game - but this move WAS NOT ALLOWED IN ELGIN'S ERA.
this hampered explosiveness of players back then - it's been explained, but you keep ignoring this truth and repeating the shallow, ignorant line "players today are more explosive", even though i've shown that the most common move in today's game, was not allowed in elgin's era.
[quote=iznogood]
And if you're claiming the dribbling rules are holding him back, then show me some clips of him finishing on the alley oop. No dribbling needed here, agreed?
[/QUOTE]
similar to Dr. J and David Thompson having the capacity to do the lean-in dunk, the capacity was there for guys like Elgin to do alley-opps back then too, but the way the game was officiated and played at the time did not allow players to show the full capability of their athleticism.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
Yeah this is all just hypothetical based on OP's opinion. :oldlol:
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]...[/QUOTE]You're the most pathetic poster I've seen on this board. Excuse after excuse, talking about "facts" when you really are talking about your opinions, changing the subject of the debate...I'm done with you. It's been nothing but frustration.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=iznogood]You're the most pathetic poster I've seen on this board. Excuse after excuse, talking about "facts" when you really are talking about your opinions, changing the subject of the debate...I'm done with you. It's been nothing but frustration.[/QUOTE]
[IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/55917c2186fc8b7461919f413284068c.gif[/IMG]
[B]here's a fact[/B]: the moves above - one dribble, 3 steps - is the most common move in today's game, but it was not allowed in the 60's - that is a fact.
and the restrictive rules in the 60's created an environment that hampered the creativity of [I]all[/I] moves off-the-dribble, which restricted how explosive players could be.
[B]oh, here's another fact[/B]: [url=http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=352399][u]Jordan dunked 3 times as often as Westbrook[/u][/url].
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
I wasn't old enough to watch the 60's, but I'm assuming what 3 steps means is the current gather step + layup. Can anyone clarify when this gather step started gaining popularity/become allowed? Or rather, who started it?
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=Kvnzhangyay]I wasn't old enough to watch the 60's, but I'm assuming what 3 steps means is the current gather step + layup. Can anyone clarify when this gather step started gaining popularity/become allowed? Or rather, who started it?[/QUOTE]
They changed the travelling rule in 2009 to allow 2 steps when gathering.
[url]http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/7097/the-two-step[/url]
[url]http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=4563546[/url]
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=Kvnzhangyay]I wasn't old enough to watch the 60's, but I'm assuming what 3 steps means is the current gather step + layup. Can anyone clarify when this gather step started gaining popularity/become allowed? Or rather, who started it?[/QUOTE]
[IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/55917c2186fc8b7461919f413284068c.gif[/IMG]
the 3 steps-one-dribble move has been the most commonly-used move in NBA games since the 80's, possibly the 70's.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball][IMG]http://gifsforum.com/images_new/gif/other/grand/55917c2186fc8b7461919f413284068c.gif[/IMG]
the 3 steps-one-dribble move has been the most commonly-used move in NBA games since the 80's, possibly the 70's.
.[/QUOTE]
Exactly, they just codified and gave definition to it in 2009 but players have been doing it way before then.
Problem is you say players weren't allowed to do this in the 60's, only problem is we have to trust people's word for it, I need to see footage of players executing this move and getting called for it.
Even if we accept that it this move was expressly forbidden SURELY there were folks who broke the rule either trying to skirt the rules or by just mistakenly screwing up their footwork. Surely such footage exists.
Just like you say all the time about how defensive 3 is STRICTLY enforced, yet I would have no trouble amassing a dozen gifs of guys camped out in the paint for 4+ secs (Andrew Bynum was notorious for this)
Otherwise, I will just assume it was a lack of innovation why the move wasn't being done, similar to how no one back then was using the pendulum style dribbling that is routine today or doing a bunch of alley-oops.
I await the gifs/vids.
Any footage of INTENTIONAL lob dunks (alley oops) from the 60's BTW?
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
OP is such a pseudointellectual. He is also a phony. Former D1 basketball player my ass lmao won't even give a name
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
wait a minute... you want me to go find GIF's of travel and carry calls from the 60's?... do you have any idea how littel footage we have from then?
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]wait a minute... you want me to go find GIF's of travel and carry calls from the 60's?... do you have any idea how littel footage we have from then?[/QUOTE]
So in other words, you're talking out your azz and making absolute statements on the biased testimony of a man who is prone to making goofy hyperbolic statements like "wilt would avg 70 in today's game" (Walt Frazier)?
ok, fair enough.
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]i'll tell you what.... anyone that wants me to prove i played D1 can PM me - i will provide enough details and photos for them to do a little legwork and figure out who i am...
if anyone PM's me, they have to promise not to out me in the forums.[/QUOTE]
afraid you'll be outed for being morbidly obese?
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=Akhenaten]Exactly, they just codified and gave definition to it in 2009 but players have been doing it way before then.
Problem is you say players weren't allowed to do this in the 60's, only problem is we have to trust people's word for it, I need to see footage of players executing this move and getting called for it.
Even if we accept that it this move was expressly forbidden SURELY there were folks who broke the rule either trying to skirt the rules or by just mistakenly screwing up their footwork. Surely such footage exists.
Just like you say all the time about how defensive 3 is STRICTLY enforced, yet I would have no trouble amassing a dozen gifs of guys camped out in the paint for 4+ secs (Andrew Bynum was notorious for this)
Otherwise, I will just assume it was a lack of innovation why the move wasn't being done, similar to how no one back then was using the pendulum style dribbling that is routine today or doing a bunch of alley-oops.
[B]I await the gifs/vids.[/B]
Any footage of INTENTIONAL lob dunks (alley oops) from the 60's BTW?[/QUOTE]
you are being pretty shallow here... why would they execute the move if they are going to get called for it?... i would not expect there to be many instances of guys trying the move, because that type of play would be so blatantly illegal back then.
and just look at defensive 3 seconds - in today's game, it could take hours to go through footage and find a defensive 3 seconds call despite all the footage available today... why?... because defensive 3 seconds is an actual rule - [I]so guys abide by it[/I] and full games go by where it is not called.
now compare to footage from the 60's - we have a total of 2% of game footage from the 60's... but you want me to go through the footage and find travel and carrying calls while you tap your foot?... i have an idea for you - go **** yourself.
but most importantly, the fact that today's moves would be travels and carries in the 60's is COMMON KNOWLEDGE - i'll tell you the same thing i told poster iamgine - it's always annoying when someone wants you to "prove" something that is common knowledge, just because [I]they[/I] happened to be one of the minority that isn't aware.
it is very common knowledge that in the 60's, you couldn't carry or take extra steps while gathering the ball, and people's concept of what constituted a travel was much more stringent back then.
Many players, coaches, league officials - you know, the experts - they all state that most of the moves today would be carries or travels in the 60's.
[B]Here's Elgin Baylor talking about this exact topic..[/B]
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rjNS_oYE92E&feature=youtu.be&t=16m3s[/url]
[B]Here's an article where Clyde Frazier weighs in (his quote is excerpted below)[/B].. [url]http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/6035/nba-traveling-we-really-don-t-reference-the-rulebook[/url]..
"[i]It's very blatant now,[/i]" says Walt "Clyde" Frazier. One of the greatest point guards in NBA history, Frazier is also, as a Knick team broadcaster, a close observer of today's game. "[i]They go twenty feet to the hoop without dribbling one time. This is what they are getting away with nowadays. Some of them are so obvious. You'll hear me on the broadcast saying 'That's a travel! Watch the feet!' Wilt [Chamberlain] would have averaged 100 points a game if they had let him do that."[/I]
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]i warmed the bench for raja bell and carlos arroyo... that's all i'll say publicly.[/QUOTE]
lol so you are obese? They sat next to each other didn't they :oldlol:
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Re: Navigation Efficiency
[QUOTE=3ball]i'll tell you what.... anyone that wants me to prove i played D1 can PM me - i will provide enough details and photos for them to do a little legwork and [B]figure out who i am...
[/B]
[/QUOTE]
[img]http://stream1.gifsoup.com/view5/2319374/chris-tucker-friday-o.gif[/img]
bitch you aint nobody :roll: