Insomniacal Fan
Starter
I think it would be cool if the NBA could figure out how to have small guards filling a regular niche. Now everybody under 6'3" is considered undersized.
Yuki’d be a star if he weren’t 5’4”
I think it would be cool if the NBA could figure out how to have small guards filling a regular niche. Now everybody under 6'3" is considered undersized.
Yuki’d be a star if he weren’t 5’4”
Yuki’d be a star if he weren’t 5’4”
Just wait another decade when anyone under 6'7" would be considered undersized and media heads would be talking whether MJ can survive in the league.I think it would be cool if the NBA could figure out how to have small guards filling a regular niche. Now everybody under 6'3" is considered undersized.
I think it would be cool if the NBA could figure out how to have small guards filling a regular niche. Now everybody under 6'3" is considered undersized.
Nope he went there driving his car actually, was about to take the plane to go to Utah (after the JJJ trade) but things changed, kind of a "revenge game" as well in a way. Would be fun though to go to Utah first, then travel with the team to Atlanta and play against them!Jock Landale stepped off the plane in Atlanta and dropped a career high 26 11 5 and 4
Rasheed Wallace approves.Jock Landale stepped off the plane in Atlanta and dropped a career high 26 11 5 and 4
Jared McCain, probably: "I'm quite confident that I'll never play for the Sixers or Daryl Morey again."
Season-to-Seavis
Yes I’m sure that’s why
Kyle Lowry thinks they got four first round picks for him, so maybe Morey does too? lolJared McCain, probably: "I'm quite confident that I'll never play for the Sixers or Daryl Morey again."
Like, why would you say that out loud?
Hey, the player we traded for was only injured *after* we got him
It's an interesting balance that you're pointing out, eliminating hand-checking creates an larger offensive niche for small guards, but bigger players are eventually able to outcompete and dominate in that niche (everybody can shoot 3s now.) The emergent effects of rule changes are a demonstration that the sport is fundamentally driven by competitive forces. Ya love to see it.I'm not sure there's a good answer to this one. Banning the hand check is what gave smaller guards an edge in the first place. Stephen Curry (6'2") doesn't become the stratospheric, game-altering force that he is if that rule change doesn't arrive. It gave him literal space on the court to be who he is. It also had the side effect of encouraging taller players to become more adept ball handlers. They had less to fear at the point of attack, thus the explosion of ball handling and playmaking from wing players that beset the league in the wake of the ban.
Of course, this had the ultimate effect of marginalizing all of the small guards who aren't at Curry's level (though the Dubs have always had to hide him on defense), because now teams could stack size at just about any/every position. If ball handling and playmaking can theoretically come from anywhere, then there's just not much advantage to going small these days if you can avoid it.
So maybe you bring back the hand check? But that marginalizes the smaller guards again, who all of a sudden need to get stronger to create space. Ironically, a guy like Davion Mitchell, with the strength he possesses for his size, could thrive in the era of the hand check. It's honestly kind of amazing that this one tiny rule change had such an enormous impact on the shape of the entire league.