H
HOFCeluck
Guest
Any list that calls a guy with two NCs and a whole bunch of FFs overrated is a dumb list.
Anyone who makes this arguement is a dumb poster.
Any list that calls a guy with two NCs and a whole bunch of FFs overrated is a dumb list.
I don't think it is necesarily - it depends how much you consider recruiting as part of coaching. I think people can make perfectly rational arguments that some coach isn't great in games, but recruits much better and as a result achieves better results.
If you have top 5 talent EVERY year, but only make the FF once every 5 years - is that overrated? I don't know, considering it's a one and done tourney and very difficult to survive (unless you're Duke and they pave the way), it probably isn't, but if you watch the guy coach and have an informed opinion it may have some validity in spite of that success - 2 NC's and a bunch of FF's.
Joe Torre was the losingest manager in baseball history until he had a $200M payroll - now he's regarded as an all-time great manager. Is he overrated now? Circumstances matter. If Phil Jackson got a job in Minnesota instead of the Bulls he might be a nobody to this day - who really knows. I'm sure plenty of people would argue he would have made it regardless, and just as many would argue he would have floundered. If you're in the latter group you would probably argue he's overrated in spite of his billion titles because he always had far superior talent on the floor. It's a fine line.
Anyone who makes this arguement is a dumb poster.
I'm guessing that the only team on our schedule this year with more talent is Louisville, and even that is debatable.
Accordingly, if JB loses more than 2 games in the regular season I suppose he would be deemed to underachieve.
Brilliant.
I've always found it amusing that Roy Williams get stuck with the "overrated" or "just a recruiter" label.
College basketball coaches are their own general manager and to an extent owner, that's where the Torre thing is different.
Plenty of guys fell of the Carolina coaching tree that were flops, hard to say that just because of the Smith pedigree that he somehow got pushed to the front of the line. He did win two titles and is generally always in the hunt, like JB has a system in place and finds the right players - generally - to play it.
What Wooden would have trouble with would be the lack of discipline and work ethic in many of todays players who try to get by on superior physical ability.
Thanks for the response, definitely gave me a different perspective John Wooden's impact on the sport, beyond just wins and championships. The only thing I disagree with is the notion that today's players lack discipline and work ethic. Elite basketball players pretty much turn basketball into a profession at a younger age than anything done in Wooden's era. The year-round AAU tournaments and countless summer camps and recruiting showcases go far beyond what existed even twenty years ago. When you add the amount of time they spend at practice and at high level competitions with the amount they spend in the weight room, you have to respect their work ethic. These kids, for the most part, spend their lives focused on basketball or their sport of choice.
I should have clarified what I meant about lack of work ethic. Its about the lack of fundamentals. Do the elite players play alot and work hard, absolutely, the problem I have is that they don't work on the basic fundamentals of the game. Part of the problem is that they are being taught at an early age, the other problem is that even when they are they don't work at them.
Valid points. But find me some teams today playing the game like Auerbach's Celtics and Holzman's Knicks. Then show me all the guys playing today with polished mid-range games and show me all the big men that can play effectively with their back to the basket. These skills used to be commonplace at the highest levels. Today they are not.I think in general it's human nature to talk about how the players of today didn't have the fundamentals of the players from the past. We'll probably read the same thing 20, 50, 100 years from now.
In the Bill James historical abstract he would print quotes from the entire history of baseball from players talking about how the players of the current era didn't have the same work ethic or commitment to the fundamentals that the players of the older era's did. There were quotes from guys in 1925 talking about how players didn't have the attention to detail that the earlier era did and they only worried about how their investments in the stock market were doing.
Valid points. But find me some teams today playing the game like Auerbach's Celtics and Holzman's Knicks.
Then show me all the guys playing today with polished mid-range games
These skills used to be commonplace at the highest levels. Today they are not.
I think in general it's human nature to talk about how the players of today didn't have the fundamentals of the players from the past. We'll probably read the same thing 20, 50, 100 years from now.
In the Bill James historical abstract he would print quotes from the entire history of baseball from players talking about how the players of the current era didn't have the same work ethic or commitment to the fundamentals that the players of the older era's did. There were quotes from guys in 1925 talking about how players didn't have the attention to detail that the earlier era did and they only worried about how their investments in the stock market were doing.
7 seconds or less Suns?
I think that's more about the evolution of the game than anything else; the game is much slower than it was in the past. Teams don't really get up and down like they used to. I'm not sure that has anything to do with the fundamentals. I'd love to see the fast break game make a come back to the league and I'm not totally sure why the game is so much slower than it was in the past (one of my pet theories is that with every game on tv coaches are more scrutinized and want to have more control over the game).
I think this once again has a lot to do with the evolution of the game. There are guys who have mid-range games (Melo, Kobe,Durant spring to mind) but the three most efficient places to score are the foul line, the 3 point line, and the paint. There is less emphasis on the mid-range game because it's not as effective as other places on the court. I could turn it around and say show me the 7 footers in the 50's or 60's who could step out and make shots from 25 feet out like Dirk or Durant do now.
I definitely think there is something with post play; if nothing else it seems like there isn't as much as there used to be. But there are skills that are commonplace now that weren't there in the past either; it goes both ways. I picked a random season; 1961. The league as a whole shot 41.5% from the field. Throw out this year because the lockout usually drags down percentages; in 2011 the league shot 46% from the field. That's a pretty big difference and that doesn't even take into account that in 1961 there were no 3 pointers so there were a lot fewer long distance shots being taken.
And to take it a step futher; Nate Thurmond, who was a HOF who played in the 60's and 70's, and was possibly one of the guys you were referring to when you mentioned how low post skills were commonplace in the past; he shot 42% from the field for his career. A HOF big man; 42% from the field! Willis Reed; another HOF Center; 47.6% from the field for his career.
Ball handling skills have probably improved now. They didn't start tracking turnovers until the 70's; picking a random year again; in 1978 the league turned it over on 16% of their possessions. 2011 was 13.4%. (Part of that is also probably the slowing down of the league, to be fair)
In hindsight, those players were probably right to be so focused on their investments.![]()
Nice job of cherry-picking Nate Thurmond out of left field though
Haha yes, I remember the stats from the Simmons book.
I remember reading all of the 60's stats as a kid in the 90's and being amazed at how many rebounds these guys were pulling down. Jerry Lucas averaged 16 rebounds per game and had 2 seasons over 20! Wilt averaged 23 per game for his career. Took me a while to realize that there were a ton of missed shots in that era. But as a 12 year old kid, I was blown away.
Just as a for instance, Wilt had 3 years where they tracked total rebound%; he was right around 19 and he averaged about 19 rebounds per game in those 3 years. Dwight Howard has a career rebound% of 21, and averages 13 per game. (You can't compare the two directly, they didn't even track rebound% until the final 3 years of Wilt's career)
I don't understand how calipari isn't in the top 3.
Here's the reason... he's an incredible recruiter and an incredible coach.
Well, he's taken UMass to the Final Four- UMass! Look at where they were before Cal, and look where they are now.I don't understand how calipari isn't in the top 3.