Building an NBA Franchise: Is Going Big Still the Way to Go?

Discussion in 'NBA General' started by Legacy, Jul 24, 2009.

  1. Legacy

    Legacy Beast

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  2. TheFreshPrince

    TheFreshPrince JBB JustBBall Member

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    I dig it. Especially with the way the rules are these days. If you are a star perimeter player and you get touched on a drive you get to the line. Its a little ridiculous sometimes, but i def like the idea of building around guards, and filling in with quality role playing bigs ie the nuggets.
     
  3. Hoops Manifesto

    Hoops Manifesto Member

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    You've gotta go big. I've written stories about it, but you don't win a title unless you have an All-NBA level big man. Look through the list of champions of year's past - noone has won a title without an All-NBA big man since Jordan's Bulls - but they had Rodman.
     
  4. Foulzilla

    Foulzilla No Blood, No Foul.

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    It's quite simple. You need both a great big and a great wing.

    Kobe + Pau.
    Pierce + Garnett.
    Duncan + Ginobli.
    Shaq + Wade.
    Wallace + Billups (ok, neither are really dominant, but nor is anyone else on that team. There's an exception to every rule.)
    etc.
     
  5. Shapecity

    Shapecity S2/JBB Teamster Staff Member Administrator

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    You have to build with size despite the changes to the NBA rules. It doesn't matter much in the regular season, but in the post season you can get a better idea of how skilled big men dominate a series. They get you easy baskets, they create extra shots with offensive boards, they protect the rim, and they disrupt a game plan by getting the opposing team into foul trouble. A perimeter player can also do this, but the percentages are higher for big men.

    Having a big who demands a double team makes the game much easier for his teammates. It creates an open look or mismatch on offense when they get touches.
     
  6. Boob-No-More

    Boob-No-More Why you no hire big man coach?

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    Defense and rebounding wins games - and more importantly wins championships. If you look back over the past 25 years, almost every NBA champion has had either a dominant big man, and/or multiple elite defenders. Even the Jordan Bulls, without a dominant center, had great rebounding (Grant/Rodman) and multiple all-NBA 1st and 2nd team defenders (Jordan, Pippen, Grant/Rodman). You want to win a title, you need to be able to rebound and defend. It's that simple. If you have a big man who is both a dominant rebounder and can defend the paint (Shaq, Duncan, Garnett, Ben Wallace, etc.), that's a huge step in the right direction.

    BNM
     
  7. TheBeef

    TheBeef Commish of FUN!

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    I don't think it will ever change. I do think that more teams are being forced to build small because the quality bigs are just not available. Some of the most talented and legit 7 footers choose to develop their games facing the basket, and that has hurt the cause of the bigs as well.
     

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