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I also lament the loss of midrange game. Not in the sense that players 'should' take midrange shots, but it's a beutiful part of the game, and it would be nice if the rules rewarded this sort of play more. For example:
1. Pushing back 3 pt line, but better;
2. Stop calling fouls when the offensive player initiates contact. Why does the NBA reward this? This is my biggest complaint about the game, it ruins the flow and nobody grows up playing like that.
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I agree with the perimeter players as the next page stage of post up threats. Strong little guys are more likely to have those skills, and the opposing small has less experience guarding them. Pairing that with a stretch big and you should be able to get a good spot most of the time, and the D players are both in less familiar positions. Jahlil Okafor and Jusuf Nurkic might turn out to be bull in a china shop bigs and be successful posting, but smalls seem most likely.
After watching Nene vs. Noah, I do miss seeing two big guys go mano-a-mano.I think the problem is that a modern post-up player has to be a really good passer and ballhandler in addition to having the size, strength, and skill to score in the post. Very few players have all of those qualities. I don't think it's a coincidence that guys like LeBron and Andre Miller are among the best post players now. But then, as Seth mentioned, a big man with all those skills would probably also be a destructive PnR roll man. Maybe the future of the post-up lies in big perimeter players, like what Brooklyn has been doing with their guys.
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Post up FG% data is generally not that impressive now, right? Was it more impressive in distant past? I don't think we have that data. I think having the post-up FG% data makes it seem less special, less worth focusing on.
I wonder what the trends are in steal and block rates on post-up plays thru the years we do have data. Anybody know? Those are pretty major negatives that might not as easy to be ignorant of now as it was in the past.
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