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Rudy at range?

15 lbs is never nothing.

How many knee problems did Shaq have? He gained almost 100 lbs. Rudy would be better with an extra 15 pounds of muscle. Especially if he works it into his core and glutes/legs.
 
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How many knee problems did Shaq have? He gained almost 100 lbs. Rudy would be better with an extra 15 pounds of muscle. Especially if he works it into his core and glutes/legs.

A) Comparing lbs. between Rudy and Shaq is stupid.

B) Adding 15 pounds of muscle *especially in the glutes/legs* on someone like Rudy is not as easy as you may think.
 
How many knee problems did Shaq have? He gained almost 100 lbs. Rudy would be better with an extra 15 pounds of muscle. Especially if he works it into his core and glutes/legs.
Shaqs career was cut way short because of his weight.

Favors experienced his worst season because of being too heavy and developing a chronic knee issue.

The negatives of a heavier Rudy far outweighs the positive.
 
Defensive footwork on the perimeter should be the area Rudy puts the most work into. He has no fundamentals out there in addition to being super long and awkward.
 
Defensive footwork on the perimeter should be the area Rudy puts the most work into. He has no fundamentals out there in addition to being super long and awkward.
Rudy does an excellent job for his size. Saying he doesn't posses fundamentals on switches is just wrong.
 
Shaqs career was cut way short because of his weight.

Favors experienced his worst season because of being too heavy and developing a chronic knee issue.

The negatives of a heavier Rudy far outweighs the positive.
Yes especially if his joints and body base are not built for a heavier structure. Back spasms early on and knee issues are the main thing for longer players. Getting heavier doesn't help. Each time he hits the ground, the impact is more tense.
 
Rudy does an excellent job for his size. Saying he doesn't posses fundamentals on switches is just wrong.

I have to disagree. When he gets out on a switch you can tell he doesn't know what to do. He gets happy feet and starts doing the thing where he's moving in place. He gets turned around and wrong footed so much, and I'm not convinced it's because of his foot speed. When Rudy is in the paint, he can rotate his body in a cone super fast and defend multiple actions in different directions. It's because he knows what to do and has good instincts.

He doesn't know what he's doing out there. It makes sense because it's not something he's ever been asked to do in his career and probably didn't practice it much. If he works on it, he'll get better. This is where Rudy can look at Stevens Adams for inspiration. Adams was a total goof on the perimeter early on in his career, but he was able to stop us over and over on switches in the PO's because he made it a point of emphasis and developed those fundamentals.
 
Shaqs career was cut way short because of his weight.

Favors experienced his worst season because of being too heavy and developing a chronic knee issue.

The negatives of a heavier Rudy far outweighs the positive.

Shaq played 19 seasons. "Cut way short"?

He scored 46 points in a game in his second-to-last season.

Favors was out of shape, soft, not even close to the shape he was in this season.

We're talking about 15 pounds of lean muscle on an already lean 7-footer and you're claiming the negatives "far outweigh the positives"?
 
He was overpowered repeatedly. The additional strength would likely not reduce his lateral quickness.

Gobert could add 40 lbs and he's still going to "overpowered" at times. He handled Adams just fine. Additional weight does affect quickness.
 
I have to disagree. When he gets out on a switch you can tell he doesn't know what to do. He gets happy feet and starts doing the thing where he's moving in place. He gets turned around and wrong footed so much, and I'm not convinced it's because of his foot speed. When Rudy is in the paint, he can rotate his body in a cone super fast and defend multiple actions in different directions. It's because he knows what to do and has good instincts.

He doesn't know what he's doing out there. It makes sense because it's not something he's ever been asked to do in his career and probably didn't practice it much. If he works on it, he'll get better. This is where Rudy can look at Stevens Adams for inspiration. Adams was a total goof on the perimeter early on in his career, but he was able to stop us over and over on switches in the PO's because he made it a point of emphasis and developed those fundamentals.
I swear people have selective memory.
 
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