No.It wouldn't shock me if Malone played today if he would be a carbon copy of LeBron.
I don't know how many 3s per game were shot by this team, but I seem to remember the Jazz shooting a healthy amount. Probably above average for the era.The old school Jazz wouldn't have to change much to compete in today's nba, they would just need to actually use the 3pt line. Stockton/Malone would still decimate with the PNR, maybe even with better efficiency.
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No, the Sloan era Jazz were typically along the lowest in the league when it came to number of 3s attempted.I don't know how many 3s per game were shot by this team, but I seem to remember the Jazz shooting a healthy amount. Probably above average for the era.
Yes and no. It was harder to legally pack the paint back then because of the illegal defense rules. Of course, we also know that one of the pillars of the Bulls winning philosophy was to put the pressure on the refs to call it every single time, knowing they wouldn't. And they were right.Can you imagine defenders not being able to touch Stockton. like in today's NBA? If Scotty Pippen had been unable to manhandle Stockton, the Jazz would have had at least 1 championship. Obviously, Stockton gave as well as he took, but he would be amazing with the new rules. With the absolute lack of legit interior defenders in the NBA today, the Stockton to Malone pick and roll would absolutely destroy. Think of the front lines of beef in Portland and Houston the Jazz had to regularly face, none of that happens in today's NBA.
I'm familiar with the narrative, but was somehow skeptical since Jerry Sloan isn't supposed to be an idiot.No, the Sloan era Jazz were typically along the lowest in the league when it came to number of 3s attempted.
I'm familiar with the narrative, but was somehow skeptical since Jerry Sloan isn't supposed to be an idiot.
Well...
The Jazz had the 4th-best 3-point FG% in '97-'98 and were DEAD. LAST. in attempts. Furthermore, they shot less than 2/3rds the league average. In all my Sloan grumblings, I've never thought him an outright moron, buuut...
He knows those shots are worth more, right? And they render illegal defenses moot, right?
*grumble grumble*
In Sloan's defense, the analytics to break things down (what fraction of missed 3s result in fast break points, etc) didn't exist back then. It was all just kind of done via gut feelings, and looking at more general trends such as "How successful are the teams that shoot a lot of 3s?" By the end of his career that second question was starting to be answered, but for much of his career even that wasn't very clear.His theory was that a missed 3 would often lead to a fast break by the other team. I think that was the major reason he didn't like them.