Michael Jordan vs Real Defenses
Michael Jordan faced the most traps & double/triple teams in NBA history, MJ also DEFEATED the most traps, double teams, and triple teams in NBA history. Unlike other players presented with a double team, Jordan shows his ultimate team IQ by giving up the ball and re-establishing himself for a better shot. Jordan could score over anyone and any type of defense. As long as Jordan had his dribble, you virtually almost could not ever trap him. He was too fast. Jordan would either make a move to defeat the trap, or get the ball out of there to an open teammate swiftly. Jordan's decisionmaking can be seen in this video like no other video. Zones allow defenders to play an area, rather than stick to a man. I don't know about you, but I prefer playing against a zone because it is so much easier to find space in a zone if you are good at working without the ball. When you are facing man to man it requires that you run your defender into screens, and it requires more effort to create space. This was especially true in the Michael Jordan era where perimeter contact was allowed. The Jordan era featured man to man with rotating traps and weakside help which is very hard to defeat as an individual player. The NBA created the defensive 3 second rule & it opened up the lane like never before, you see layups now in the half court set more often than ever before. You would think these guys were getting layups in transition they get to the hoop so easy sometimes. I remember watching the dunk contest in Jordan's era and it was so exciting because players rarely got dunks in the half court set so it was nice to see them show their stuff at the dunk contest. Usually you were lucky to see your favorite player show off on a breakaway, the game was more hard nosed than that at the time. Also keep in mind that with no contact rules, it does not matter if you double or triple a player in today's game, the great players should be able to back out, slip out, split, slip through, or shake the double. I mean hell, if the offensive player draws contact he's gonna draw a foul anyways. It's not like the old days where you actually had to fight through traps and double teams. Players in Jordan's era were like track athletes, most of them were so fast. The dunk contests in the 80's and 90's are a testiment to the athletes in the game at the time. Forget the creativity of the dunks, look at the athleticism. Old era teams were also better at getting back on transition defense. Creating all-time rankings takes research and film study. Highlight videos show you Michael Jordan scoring, but not what he had to do to get open in most cases, or the plays he was stopped. Never scout with highlight videos, use raw film. The only way to seal off penetration today is to get directly in the path of the ball handler with both feet planted, outside of the circle in the paint, to get credit for drawing a charge. Now keep in mind that the offensive player already has the advantage of decision; defenders have no choice but to react, it puts the defender at a 1/4 a second disadvantage anyways. Jordan's era utilized handchecking, which is similar to what offensive linemen & defensive backs use in the NFL to detain receivers and pass rushers. In the NFL, allow a pass rusher to penetrate the pocket, it's a sack. A defensive back lets the receiver penetrate the secondary & catch the ball, first down or TD. In the NBA, allow players to penetrate the paint, it makes it easier for them to score. At the very least physical resistance should be offered to make it a level playing field. This is not allowed in today's game. Of course in any era, under any rules, there are defensive breakdowns, coaches who use bad coaching schemes, among other factors that can contribute to non-contested shots. There are those players who are able to shake defenders in such a fashion that it doesn't matter if you double, or triple them, they are gonna get loose. Tex Winter and Joe Dumars opinions of today's defenses: http://hoopshype.com/articles/... BlitzFeatured in this video:Scenes from Jordan scoring 55 points/other on the 90's Knicks.Scenes from Jordan scoring 69 points on the Cavs.Scenes from Jordan dropping a routine 30+ and 40+ on the Hornets.Jordan vs an 80's Sixers team playing with subs. (still doubled)Jordan vs an 80's Blazers team playing with subs. (still doubled)A scene from Jordan scoring 61 on the PistonsI did not use many games folks. Keep that in mind.I enjoyed watching MJ play Jim Jackson, Rolando Blackman, Clyde Drexler, Gerald Wilkins, Nick Anderson, Kendall Gill, Reggie Miller, Michael Cooper, Glen Rice, Mitch Richmond, Kobe Bryant, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Calbert Cheaney, and many more. Joe Dumars was one of the better defenders in that era, that doesn't mean they were all Dwyane Wade's height. Thanks for watching and reading.
Channel: Sports
Uploaded: June 21, 2008 at 4:41 pm
Author: mustseebbtv
Length: 10:00
Rating: 4.67
Views: 177302
Tags: away basketball blitz brick bruce bruceblitz Bryant channel Defenses dunk era fade fadeaway hardcore highlight hl James Jordan Kobe lebron Michael mix modern music old overrated Real reel remix school show sucks swish tags: the thebruceblitzchannel tribute video VS Zone
Video Comments
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johnnycage2010 (October 13, 2008 at 7:00 am)
meant to say *no matter who the opposition is-Personally, I think I would prefer to play in today's era as a scorer. I think Kobe fans overrate the insurmountability of double teams. LeBron and Wade seem to be able to do it on a pretty regular basis. If you're a trascendant athlete and good ball handler, it shouldn't be that hard to split traps if you know nobody's gonna touch you.
johnnycage2010 (October 13, 2008 at 6:56 am)
schematically, defenses are definitely tougher now than they were back then. However, the game is obviously less physical now than it was back then as well. I guess the nature of the scorer would indicate which one would be harder to contend with. I don't think that Kobe would be more than a mid 40 percentile shooter in any era of basketball, though, simply because his shot selection is poor nobody who the opposition is. We all witnessed that in the Olympics.
LostInTranslation78 (October 12, 2008 at 1:33 am)
I tried commenting on kb42pah's version of this, but the motherf#$er blocked me. In his video, he actually states that today's defense is the best it has ever been. He is dellusional.In fact, a 40-year old John Stockton averaged almost 1.7 steals per game in 28 minutes per game during 03, yet KB42pah's favorite player, Kobe Bryant averaged 1.7 steals in 38 minutes per game in 04.Same era, Stockton is 40 and averages the same amount of steals in 10 less minutes than a 24-year old Kobe.
AceroySangre (September 13, 2008 at 2:18 am)
FG% is as important and should be taken into consideration even more for focal scorers and "go to go guys". It also depends on how many shot attempts you take. The more shot attempts you take = the more chances you have for high scoring games. Great players whom are Focal Scorers can score alot at a very high FG% taking alot or few FGA. As Barkley use to say "Anyone Can Score, If you Shoot Often Enough" = a man that shot 58.13% & 55.13% from the 2-POING FG only attempting 12-13 2-Pointers!
AceroySangre (September 13, 2008 at 2:16 am)
FG% is as important and should be taken into consideration even more for focal scorers and "go to go guys". It also depends on how many shot attempts you take. The more shot attempts you take = the more chances you have for high scoring games. Great players whom are Focal Scorers can score alot at a very high FG% taking alot or few FGA. As Barkley use to say "Anyone Can Score, If you Shoot Often Enough" = a man that shot 58.13% & 55.13% from the 2-POING FG with only attempting 12-13 2-Pointer!
ClipCoug (September 8, 2008 at 7:27 pm)
"81" has been countered so many ways, whether it's Jordan's 69 and 63 games against Cleveland and Boston (both more complete that Kobe's 81 and against tougher competition), the way he got shut down alongside his team-mates against hard-nosed defensive minded teams (Pistons and Celts), or the fact that he's the only NBA player to miss 30 shots in a game (17-47 for 41 pts against Boston). As far as the game is concerned, it went from too physical to too soft. Both had their advantages.
LostInTranslation78 (September 5, 2008 at 4:40 am)
Bruce, 5*.I went on some Kobe pages like "In the air tonight" and notice there are still homers out there.They still fucking use 81 points as an excuse.David Robinson scored 70+, but that never meant that he was a better scorer than Hakeem, Kareem, Bird, English, or the Ice Man.
ClipCoug (August 30, 2008 at 9:15 am)
With a defensive 3-sec, any big man can't stay in the restricted area now and wait for guys like Kobe and MJ to make their move so that they can hammer them and that means that it's not a true zone defense. Plus, no team in the NBA trusts playing with a "zone defense" (or this watered down man-to-man defense) anyways. Since they can try and make it a half-arse zone, it's going to leave star players open more often because they will likely not have a man on them.
Hypebusta (August 29, 2008 at 6:48 pm)
It was sarcasm you dolt.
AceroySangre (August 29, 2008 at 10:28 am)
Amen to accepttrue. The NBA was way tougher in the late 80s and early 90s (in the 80s even more court vision, passing, all players had basketball iq!) basketball iq, passing abilities, fundamentals have all been replaced by the this pathetic zone rule (which is designed for bad defenders) which has no effect on Great Fundamental Players that can Shoot at high FG%, Pass Off and Post Up, Pussy Fouls, Ghost Calls and the hanchecking rule. Which makes it easierThe Game has Lost Its Physical Side |
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