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NBA Legend and Hall of Famer
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by beasted
Gobert probably would be a nobody in the 90s. The slow pace and lack of spacing required players to develop better post moves or to brute force it with low skill but max physicality.
I don't think frenchie would respond well to banging and getting elbowed in the mouth. He's a bit of a complainer to the refs.
He'd be a run of the mill Bryant Reeves type with the shortened career to match.
If reeves had put in the work like gobert has he might have good too. You dont over achieve without earning it. To say gobert wouldnt have been good in an era where post play dominated is short sighted. Only question would be rather his joints could handle playing with more weight
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NBA Legend and Hall of Famer
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by SATAN
lol so he doesn't deliberately push people in the back when getting rebounds? He's been called for it in this current series and I've seen him doing it without the ref noticing. Pushing guys while they are in the air and all.
Then you got stuff like this:
This is something Bill Laimbeer would be proud of.
What player doesnt try to get away with what the refs cant see? They are probably out of the league. No one ever pushes him. It was just said he couldntbplay in the 90s because hes soft. Which is it? Cany have it both ways
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NBA Superstar
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NBA Superstar
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by Im Still Ballin
Dikembe Mutombo
Toody is arguably a more skilled offensive player...
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NBA Legend and Hall of Famer
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by SATAN
Yeah but I wouldn't defend a guy I like (LeBron obvious example) for pushing a guy in the air just because someone else does it. Gobert doesn't seem soft. For his size he restrains himself pretty well, unless it's against his own teammates as we can see here:
Seeing him really put those boxing skills to work would be amazing.
Was just wondering where people would rank him and for what reasons anyway.
You wereny wondering anything. Youvre just trolling. Thats what you do
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NBA Legend
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by SATAN
Toody is arguably a more skilled offensive player...
No chance
Deke had a nice jump hook and a decent midrange j. He could actually score in the post. He just didn't get the benefit of the lob dunks guys today get because of the poor spacing back then.
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NBA Legend and Hall of Famer
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by tontoz
No chance
Deke had a nice jump hook and a decent midrange j. He could actually score in the post. He just didn't get the benefit of the lob dunks guys today get because of the poor spacing back then.
Not sure hed be that good rim running
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Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by SATAN
Toody is arguably a more skilled offensive player...
No way.
Mutumbo was decent at basic low post offense in his later career, Gobert has no moves at all.
Toody would be more important on defense and get more blocks though, because he'd be allowed to camp under the basket.
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I get superstar calls
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
This notion that every center needs to put on weight to play in the 90's is a myth and nothing more. If you put Embiid in the 90's he'd be the 2nd biggest star center next to Shaq, so Gobert would be able to handle the physicality from anyone(well, except Shaq but no one could). The reason we're seeing rosters get smaller is because as the average skill level goes up, skill plays more and more of a factor vs size.
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Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
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Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
I'm just dreaming how many left-handed facial dunks slow moving with very long stides 6' 9" tony kukoc's long wingspan will have over Gobert while driving in the paint.
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Lol
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
He'd obviously be more respected in the 90s given his skillset.
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Eye of the tiger
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by Xiao Yao You
If reeves had put in the work like gobert has he might have good too. You dont over achieve without earning it. To say gobert wouldnt have been good in an era where post play dominated is short sighted. Only question would be rather his joints could handle playing with more weight
When i said Reeves, that was only from a longevity and noteworthiness. Not a comparison of work ethic.
So by that measure, the die hard fans remember a "Bryant Reeves", but the average fan does not since he was never an allstar and Gobert wouldn't make any allstar, all-nba, etc in the 90s with the number of elite Centers. That's the reason that it's a fair and logical assumption to assume he'd be a basic forgotten player.
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NBA Legend and Hall of Famer
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by beasted
When i said Reeves, that was only from a longevity and noteworthiness. Not a comparison of work ethic.
So by that measure, the die hard fans remember a "Bryant Reeves", but the average fan does not since he was never an allstar and Gobert wouldn't make any allstar, all-nba, etc in the 90s with the number of elite Centers. That's the reason that it's a fair and logical assumption to assume he'd be a basic forgotten player.
Like mutumbo is forgotten.
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Eye of the tiger
Re: Rudy Gobert in the 90s
Originally Posted by Xiao Yao You
Like mutumbo is forgotten.
Mutumbo had better touch than Gobert, and even developed a jumper over time. Gobert doesn't even attempt shots outside of 5 feet unless they are end of shot clock heaves.
The rim running opportunities will simply be less for Rudy and it's a logical expectation that his scoring would go down.
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