leashyourkids wrote:
FavreFan wrote:
veganfan21 wrote:
FavreFan wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
It's no one's fault that the game has evolved the way it has... and I know some prefer it... but I just can't appreciate living and dying by the three as much as they do. The games often just come down to who hits a barrage of threes. Again, it's just personal preference, but mine isn't this. It's nearly impossible to guard, and it makes the teams bipolar. It's sometimes exciting, but the way a team can win by shooting 35 foot jumpers isn't as cool to watch for me personally.
Gotta love overreactions to one record setting game
I'll let LYK speak for himself, but he clearly was referring to the general style of play nowadays and not just last night's game.
I was just giving him shit but "whoever hits the most threes wins" is oversimplistic and wrong.
I'm not reacting to one game. This entire series between the best two teams in the NBA has been like that. Of course "whoever hits the most threes wins" is overly simplistic, but it's absolutely the style of the game. You don't have to get butthurt... I'm not even saying it's bad - it's just not something I enjoy as much as I did prior styles of play.
I was also going to comment that, even though I troll about the Bulls sweeping these teams, I don't really think that. Either one would be a tough out... the Warriors moreso than the Cavs... but I do think you have to account for the fact that most teams in the league play a similar style to GS now (just not as good), and they have little option not to due to the way young players are developed. The Cavs are basically Lebron, Kyrie, a couple rebounders, and a slew of three-point shooters. That DOES have a tendency to make the style look better than it is because there are no teams who can play a different style and capitalize on GS's weaknesses. If GS played a team that was built with physical interior and wing players across the board, they wouldn't look as dominant or offensively unstoppable as they do. The difference in style would slow them down and force them to play a different style of game. There's no team in the NBA capable of that right now, though.
This goes back to something others like JORR and LTG have brought up, that being the death of the post game or maybe the post player. Guys 6'8, 6'9, even 6'10 are messin around with a dribble drive, pull up J game instead of banging around in the paint. At his size, if Kevin Durant was born in the 1960s instead of the 1980s does he even attempt 10 three pointers over the course of the season? My guess is no - in his youth, someone would have taken him aside, told him to put some meat on those bones, and then taught him how to leverage his length and skill to become a great post player. Same with all these tall ass "small forwards" messing around on the perimeter these days. To be honest, I enjoy watching KD's game more than I would watching him if he had a classic post game, but that doesn't mean I don't see the value of a post game and how having one changes the flow of the entire game on both sides of the ball, to LYK's point. It's become a lost art.