There are not as many hard fouls today because of the rules. That is definitely true.
The average play, however, allows far more contact than ever before in today's NBA, so long as the defender is making a basketball play and not simply trying to take someone out Kevin McHale style.
The failing of the "1990s cult" belief is that players would stubbornly cling to 2013 rules.
That is 100% wrong.
Without the 2013 rules, the players of today would also enjoy greater physical play as well.
The players of today are bigger, faster, and stronger.
If they got to play with less restrictive rules, they would immediately dominate the 1990s.
Lebron would not be an idiot and play with the 2013 rules while every scrub in the 1990s was hacking at will.
If you look at old footage, most NBA players in the 1990s were scrawny non-athletic looking.
Sure, the superstars had more prominent athleticism. Sure, Karl Malone was a beast.
But, overall the rank and file masses of 1990s NBA players were much skinnier and less athletic.
Lebron would use the 1990s rules.
At 6"8" and 260 pounds, he would be downright scary.
He would be tossing aside the skinny defenders like they were made of balsa wood.
Lebron would average 50 points and 15 rebounds versus those smaller defenders.
Sports medicine, training, and athletic evolution happens.
It is silly to cling to nostalgia to the point of never opening your eyes.
homer much...?
Good point, it may actually be a bit of a wash, now that I think about it!! Post play was much more physical in the 80's and 90's than it is today, but the perimeter play, for the most part, was less physical. I don't agree that there is far more contact allowed today, but I think guys are allowed more "bumps" out on the perimeter today than was allowed in the 80's and 90's!!
It maybe that the game isn't so much "less physical" as it is that where players are being allowed to play physical has changed.
Lebron will win 7 titles by the end of his career and with the stats and accolades he has and will accomplish WILL become the best ever.
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Opinion.He will never be known as the best or greatest ever. He will forever be known as the guy who was an athletic freak who had to join up with 2 other super stars and go get a HOF 3 pt shooter to get his rings. He built nothing, just had good friends.
Had he done this in Cleveland, then we could talk.
Opinion.
Built the worst team in the league to almost the best in Cleveland. He beat the championship Pistons by himself, he went to game 7 with a team that had 3 superstars. No way he could of beat the C's by himself.
And I wouldn't call Bosh a superstar, he is an All-Star at best. So he has 1 other superstar. This isn't any different than Shaq coming to LA with Kobe.
You Lebron haters will have excuses no matter what.
The King is here and will be dominated for the at least the next 7 years.
Lebron will win 7 titles by the end of his career and with the stats and accolades he has and will accomplish WILL become the best ever.
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Reality, is Lebron's has performed miserably in the finals every time. How does Lebron erase all those embarrassments?
if there are less teams, then the title is easier to win. It's called mathematics. If the league had two teams, the title would be easier. you guys cannot be this stupid.
An extremely simplistic and inadequate view. On average, you're clearly right, but for a good team, the distribution of talent has at least as much of an impact as the number of teams.