cyanide wrote:Ball distribution, imo. If a team works together by passing around, including their superstar player making the passes or the extra pass, it makes the team better. If the superstar gets the ball and hesitates without thinking about making a pass but thinking about scoring, then it doesn't make the team better. For example, LeBron would be given two options in an instant: he would either pass or think about driving or shooting. With Kobe, it's 'I got the ball, I'm going to either shoot or drive. If I get screwed, I'll find somebody or make a turnover." Just an example
but I am more wondering how he makes the individual guy better. He may pass him the ball in good spots to score more points, but how does it improve the individual player's skill-level if all he is doing is hitting more easy shots?
cyanide wrote:Ah, I see. I think it might just be a confidence booster. If he's getting his opportunities, he's willing to play harder, knowing he's part of a cohesive unit. If he's just standing around and watching the superstar try to score each and every time, he could become disinterested or disgrunted because he feels left out of the cohesive unit.
maes wrote:Early in his career Jordan's idea of "passing" was slashing into the lane, getting triple-teamed and then just dumping the ball because he didn't want it anymore & then get furious that his teammates couldn't hit that shot from some random place on court. That changed after a few years.
Now lets say you are playing with a superstar who doesnt give his teammates too many freebies/opportunities etc because he has no confidence in their skills.
If a player on that team works hard and puts up decent numbers even if another player dominates the ball wouldnt that improve his skill slightly since he has to work harder to create the few opportunities he has for himself and also gain the confidence of the superstar?
cyanide wrote:Now lets say you are playing with a superstar who doesnt give his teammates too many freebies/opportunities etc because he has no confidence in their skills.
If that's the case, then that's a big problem. Players that are in the NBA are guys who have credibility to play in the NBA. If they don't have the skills, they wouldn't be in the NBA. They still need to develop, so it's important for superstars to have confidence in their teammates, because they're not going to win by themselves. True superstars utilize the strengths of each of their teammates.If a player on that team works hard and puts up decent numbers even if another player dominates the ball wouldnt that improve his skill slightly since he has to work harder to create the few opportunities he has for himself and also gain the confidence of the superstar?
I still think the superstar should have confidence in the teammate in the first place rather than having to win the superstar's confidence. It's true that work ethic can overcome the lack of talent to be a good teammate. He can work his ass off and score garbage points while the superstar just shoots, but the guy can get pissed off at the superstar for not having confidence in him or get sick of not even getting passed the ball even when open which could just make him not care about the game. It's hard to set aside egos, but confidence and trust within teammates puts those egos aside temporarily.
I look at a player like Q-Rich who was decent in Phoenix and then expected to make some form of impact in New York but hasnt done anything. Last year it was said how Nash made this guy a better player but from the way he is performing this is not evident. How then did he become a better player?
cyanide wrote:I look at a player like Q-Rich who was decent in Phoenix and then expected to make some form of impact in New York but hasnt done anything. Last year it was said how Nash made this guy a better player but from the way he is performing this is not evident. How then did he become a better player?
I'm not too clear which 'individual' you're referring to - the superstar or the teammate. In Q-Rich's case, he's a one-dimensional player and he thrived in Phoenix simply because Nash was able to create the open shot for Q-Rich to drain the three. It also has a lot to do with Mike d'Antoni's run and gun system that Q-Rich was in comfortable in.
Sometimes the teammate needs a superstar to create open shots for the teammate. Kobe has the skill to draw double teams and find open players, but he doesn't pass as often as he could.
MetalHead wrote:They mean Nash made him a better player, but this only means when he was on the same court as him. You see, the minute Joe and Quentin left Phoenix, they statistically played much poorer.
Joe was .47 at the three in Phoenix, and now he's down to .34. Nash penetrates, kicks out to Joe he buries the three. Now, in Atlanta, Joe has to do it all by himself. Rebounds, and Field Goal Percentage down. Turnovers up.
Quentin was well...no explanation needed. 14.9 ppg to 7. nuff said.
Diaw is now at 11 ppg, after two years of staying at 4.5 ppg. Boards are up by 4 a game. Averages one more block a game, and three more steals.
Coincidence? Im not sure, but I think the Nash-factor had some influence.
cyanide wrote:I'm not too clear which 'individual' you're referring to - the superstar or the teammate.
Andrew wrote:Consider some of the role players on great teams who become a little overrated because they get so many open looks because of a great offensive player who won't mind sharing.
dadamafia wrote:Its a fairly simple question and all I ask is your opinion of what it is about a player that leads you to believe they make their teammates better? Why do people believe Nash, Wade, Lebron Shaq and so forth are such players?
Also, does a player who has a career year due to more open shots and freedom on the court produced by these players (Nash and so forth) necessarily mean that he has gotten better?
If they have gotten better, then I would like to have a better understanding of why is it that when they leave their team to go elsewhere to play, they never seem to perform on par.
Anyways, just tell me what you think.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests