Sun Jan 20, 2013 8:46 pm
Brent Barry e-mailed. He was wondering why these days so few NBA players average 20 or more points per game.
There's just nine in the whole league, at the moment, he pointed out. As recently as 2007-2008 there were 27.
Three times as many!
Remember, those are the most exciting players to watch. The human highlight reels, the putting-butts-in-seats guys, the players a million kids on a million blacktops dream of becoming.
And two-thirds of them have essentially gone missing. As if stolen.
Gone with them are a bundle of special memories, including almost all the 50-point nights.
If aliens had lured them to another planet to start a highly rated hoops league there, we'd have a massive story worthy of Hollywood.
But they have disappeared in some other way that's tougher to notice. Slipped out the back door. And ... crickets. Our scorers have gone, our scorers have gone and ... barely a whisper.
Sun Jan 20, 2013 11:14 pm
Mon Jan 21, 2013 8:07 am
Kobe is responsible for 24 of 143 50-point nights since 1989-90 -- that's 17 percent of them. That's more than any other player in that span, ahead of Michael Jordan (15), Allen Iverson (11) and LeBron James (nine)
Mon Jan 21, 2013 12:57 pm
Andrew wrote:Interesting observations, I noticed that myself when I glanced at the scoring leaders the other day. I don't think it's hurt the sport though, we still get to see some exciting games and big scoring performances.
Mon Jan 21, 2013 2:19 pm
dei. wrote:All-star players joining other All-star players might also factor into that.
Mon Jan 21, 2013 7:23 pm
Once upon a time, lots of teams preferred an "isolation" offense, which meant one player dribbling alone against one defender, while as many as eight guys caught breathers. On many NBA plays these days, nobody stands around. It's common to see 10 guys flying all over the court. This is not your daddy's NBA.
Mon Jan 21, 2013 8:20 pm
dei. wrote:All-star players joining other All-star players might also factor into that.