Loved that comment haha. Watching the game. When college coaches say, “man its tough we played thursday then sunday, tired legs.” Haha give me a break. These kids play 6 games on a saturday and sunday like every weekend in high school at aau tourneysYou’re a college kid, tired is not an excuse.
Lol
Loved that comment haha. Watching the game. When college coaches say, “man its tough we played thursday then sunday, tired legs. Haha give me a break. These kids play 6 games on a saturday and sunday like every weekend in high school at aau tourneys
Agreed they literally play 4 minutes then get a 3 minute rest there is no reason a 20 year old kid can’t play all 40 minutes with ease!!!exactly right. This “tired” nonsense is such a stupid excuse. If a game goes to two OTs, I get it, but games on another day are just an excuse.
Loved that comment haha. Watching the game. When college coaches say, “man its tough we played thursday then sunday, tired legs. Haha give me a break. These kids play 6 games on a saturday and sunday like every weekend in high school at aau tourneys
I honestly do not understand people who cannot understand why players need rests during a game.You're definitely more tired at the end of a game than earlier in the game. That's why you practice foul shots at the end of practice and why your shots can be off at the end of a game. That's why you need a decent bench, so that your prime line-up can be as fresh as possible in late game situations. Obviously kids can play 40 minutes, but if you do you won't be as efficient at the end of the game.
Agreed with the exception of where the drop-off to the bench is huge and if it's a tight game. That's why Corey Sanders played so many minutes for us, but most of our guys don't have to (Myles is the closest and for him the bigger issue is probably fouling if he plays 40, plus a lot of big guys don't have as much stamina).I honestly do not understand people who cannot understand why players need rests during a game.
Sometimes your body used more oxygen that it can replenish in strenuous activities.
In fact, the way we play D.. you want your players pushing the envelope all the time.
Yes.. they can go 40.. but they will adjust HOW HARD they play to make that possible.
It is something that coaches have to watch and know what each player can do. A good player at 70% can be beat by a lesser player at 90% "freshness".
A lot of bigs appear that way in the game, but that is not the case. Leaning, pushing and shoving while jockeying for position in the post is like lifting weights and running in water at times. It takes much more energy than trying to stay with or in front of your man with jock strap defense.Agreed with the exception of where the drop-off to the bench is huge and if it's a tight game. That's why Corey Sanders played so many minutes for us, but most of our guys don't have to (Myles is the closest and for him the bigger issue is probably fouling if he plays 40, plus a lot of big guys don't have as much stamina).
I love this type of argument. It is a bad comparison. When you are running a 5k, you are dictating your own pace without the physicality of banging or wrestling for position. Reacting to someone else, stopping, jumping, starting, and using explosive energy while trying stop, start, jump, shoot, pass, or handle the ball with skill while running a team concept are completely different animals. You can not objectively compare the two. It's just dishonest. You could be a top Marathoner and it will not help much with playing basketball in a team concept.They should try running a 5K or 10K cross country race in high school or college. Runners don't get breaks during a race.
They were well rested.Today’s womens game, three players logged 40 minutes and a fourth 39. Got a W first game back from long Covid break.
This is a silly statement.These are not pros. They are not conditioned to play 40 minutes.
For me it’s not a question of whether a guy can play 40 or not, it’s more a question of how effective they will be with little or no rest.