nbafan23
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Bulls are now what? 5 games away from winning 50 games? Think they can pull it out?
Bulls are now what? 5 games away from winning 50 games? Think they can pull it out?
agreed. but at the same time the whole obsession with minutes is pretty silly IMO. these are some of the worlds best athletes, I don't think it makes a ton of a difference if they play 38 or 35 or 32, etc minutes a game. on the current bulls roster id pay attention to noahs minutes because of the knee, and pau because he is an older big man. I mean those bulls teams on the 2nd three peat were older and yet played big time minutes still.....and I don't recall anyone giving phil Jackson shit over it :shrug:
You're able to get away with some shit when you've already won three titles.
agreed. but at the same time the whole obsession with minutes is pretty silly IMO. these are some of the worlds best athletes, I don't think it makes a ton of a difference if they play 38 or 35 or 32, etc minutes a game. on the current bulls roster id pay attention to noahs minutes because of the knee, and pau because he is an older big man. I mean those bulls teams on the 2nd three peat were older and yet played big time minutes still.....and I don't recall anyone giving phil Jackson shit over it :shrug:
I disagree, it takes a toll on your body eventually. And personally, I'm tired of people mentioning the old Bulls and especially MJ. Let's not forget that MJ took a couple years off cuz he was burnt out on basketball. :dunno: No one seems to mention that at all. Plus, the game is different today.
Let's be honest. Jordan wasn't burnt out on basketball at all. His father was murdered and it messed with Jordan mentally to the point he had no desire to play the game anymore. He was going to honor his father by playing baseball (since thats what his father always wanted him to do). Once Jordan spent a year and half failing miserably at doing that, he decided to return to the game he loved.I disagree, it takes a toll on your body eventually. And personally, I'm tired of people mentioning the old Bulls and especially MJ. Let's not forget that MJ took a couple years off cuz he was burnt out on basketball. :dunno: No one seems to mention that at all. Plus, the game is different today.
yeah, the game isn't as physical today as it used to be :shrug:
so you think that there is a true difference in playing 35 min a game and 30 min a game? for a healthy player there isn't any difference IMO. these guys are world class athletes for the most part, running up and down the court a few extra minutes isn't a difference maker
and I could have mentioned several other teams back then playing players that kind of minutes but referenced the bulls since people on here are more likely to remember the old bulls as opposed to the old knicks or some other team. which btw ewing played 38 min a game at age 31 and Olajuwon played 40 min at age 32 while winning a title
Let's be honest. Jordan wasn't burnt out on basketball at all. His father was murdered and it messed with Jordan mentally to the point he had no desire to play the game anymore. He was going to honor his father by playing baseball (since thats what his father always wanted him to do). Once Jordan spent a year and half failing miserably at doing that, he decided to return to the game he loved.
No, MJ spoke many times about being burnt out after playing so many games during the repeats. That's why it's so hard to repeat. Yes, MJ had other stuff going on too, but I watched with my own eyes many times where he talked about being burnt out from playing so much. Still, MJ was MJ, a very rare athlete to begin with.
Wrong. In fact MJ was one of the first former players to speak to how ridiculous he thinks the "minutes" debate is.
MJ was never burnt out by playing too much. He could play 48 minutes, then party at a club til 5am, and play 48 minutes the next night. MJ left the game because he felt he accomplished everything he possibly could & he wasn't having much fun anymore. There was the gambling investigation & a possible suspension looming over the next season. Then his father was murdered. He was mentally burnt out, not physically. Hell he returned to the game after nearly 2 years away and barely missed a beat.
If he truly was so burnt out by the minutes, why would he exert all the physical effort to attempt his lifelong dream of becoming a baseball player after retiring the first time? MJ is a freak of nature and I agree all players shouldn't be held to his standard. However, I've always felt the minutes debate has been overblown, especially in today's infinitely less physical NBA.
"Coaches are smarter to the extent that they're using their entire roster of players, and not only that, developing them," said former Chicago Bulls player and head coach Bill Cartwright, who was also an assistant for the Phoenix Suns and New Jersey Nets in the 2000s. "To me, that's the biggest advantage of any championship team—that your bench is fully developed, your bench is making a contribution."
Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra added, "Coaches want to work in that depth to keep their players as fresh as possible for that stretch run."
"Al's thinking, 'Back in the day, there was no second unit; there were a couple subs.' Even the Pistons teams that won championships (in 1989 and 1990) with Joe Dumars and Isiah (Thomas), they had (Dennis) Rodman and (John) Salley off the bench, and Vinnie Johnson was the guard. It was like a three-guard rotation. That's not the case any more."
"Not only are you developing your team using your entire roster, but you're also giving your guys more time to rest," Cartwright said. "It's not a sprint, it's a marathon, and the healthier that you can stay during the course of a season, the better."
"Now, people are afraid to play guys 42, 44 minutes a night," he said. "It's just part of the times, part of the expanding of the staffs. There are that many more people involved, and you have that many more opinions. And they think this guy will last longer in the NBA if we cut down his minutes to 34, 36 minutes a night."
"We're smarter in how we train and play," Cartwright said. "It's so unbelievable with what's happening now with how players are being taken care of after the game with the trainers. You've got Jacuzzis, cold tubs, masseuses, oxygen tanks for the guys and cryotherapy that freezes the players. We didn't have any of that when I came into the league."
"That does not mean we're devaluing regular-season games by any stretch of the imagination," he said, "but we want to make sure that they're reaching top physical and mental performance, and hopefully staying relatively healthy as possible."
"There are so many more people evaluating minutes played and who's tired, who's not tired," he said. "It's like Kevin (Garnett) not playing in back-to-backs (this season). They never did that in the '80s, like with Moses Malone. When they were tired, they were tired. They never did all the (testing) and the body analysis—the stuff that they're going through now.
"Back then, they didn't have six guys on the training staff analyzing the body. Nowadays, every team has one, maybe two, therapists. Now, there's the trainer, the strength coach, a director of performance like in Toronto."
Spoelstra said he and the team's trainers are in "constant communication" pointing out "possible red flags" regarding injuries and creating "specific plans" to help players stay fit, strong and productive.
"They implement a systematic injury-prevention and movement-enhancement program, and then overlay that with athletic performance training, and then overlay that with appropriate recovery, like nutrition, hydration, stress management," he said.
"Now, you start to see athletes maintain their durability to peak into their later years and still be playing at a very, very high level."
"Coaches have found out with many players, you reach a point of diminishing returns," Heat assistant Rothstein said. "Most players, to quote Chuck Daly, 'want 48 minutes and 48 shots,' and they all think that they should be starting and they all think they should be stars. But certain guys, if you play them 24 minutes a night, and then you start playing them 32 minutes a night, their numbers won't increase.
"Coaches have sort of figured out over the long haul, 'OK, we're better if this guy is a limited-minutes guy because some guys are limited-minutes guys.' They don't want to buy it, but the more they're on the court, the more their weaknesses become exposed. And the shorter their stint, the more their strengths are apparent."
"It's about making the most of whatever those opportunities are for the benefit of the team," Spoelstra said. "Getting a group of 15 men to buy into that takes an incredible amount of sacrifice.
You've got to have the right type of pros who understand the big picture and are in it for the reasons to keep the main thing the main thing, and that's to win. Our guys have done that, and it hasn't been easy."
"Money changes everything," Rothstein said. "Guys are taking better care of themselves because they're more concerned about the length of their careers and how much money they're making, and they want to pile all of that away. You probably have more guys who have people telling them that you don't want to wear yourself out.
Players have expressed to coaches and training staffs that they'd like to limit their minutes. There's a little bit of a herd mentality in everything. One guy sees it and the other guy says, 'Well, if that's good for him, maybe it's good for me too.'"
"We used to play when we were injured all the time," he said. "If you twisted your ankle or your knee swelled up, the next day you're just going to put some tape on it and play.
Now, guys are going to take some time off and get themselves back to where they were, so they can play at a very high level. If you look at those old films, guys were bandaged by the end of the season from head to toe, and just playing with whatever was bothering them. Now, they don't do that."
"In order to play productive minutes, we try to emphasize the intensity of how hard you're playing and not pacing," Spoelstra said. "If you're playing at the intensity level that we would expect, you shouldn't be able to play 45 minutes a game."
"The days of guys coming into training camp to get in shape are over," Rothstein said. "And I think that has led to the mindset, 'I can't give you everything in 44 minutes that I can give you in 36 minutes.'"
"Everybody could do a much better job on recovery, and recovery is your nutrition," he said. "When you're done with practice or a game or training, you have a 30-minute window opportunity where you can take a sports protein shake.
Your body can recover nutritionally very, very quickly, but most athletes don't like that. They just want to get out, practice, shower up and get out of there.
"Also, a lot of guys don't hydrate themselves enough after practice, training or a game. Once you start to become dehydrated, that affects your tissue, flexibility, it affects your recovery, all that stuff.
A lot of guys don't go through and re-lengthen their muscles that just got short by either training, practice or the game, so they don't stretch. While a lot of guys are pretty good about icing their knees—getting into the cryotub, sauna, whatever—most guys do not do enough flexibility and tissue laceration at the end of the session."
Is the Thibs debate spilling into another topic?
Eastern Conference | W | L | Pct | GB | Home | Road | Conf | Div | Streak | L10 |
1 z-Atlanta | 55 | 18 | 0.753 | - | 31-5 | 24-13 | 34-10 | 11-3 | L1 | 5-5 |
2 x-Cleveland | 48 | 27 | 0.640 | 8 | 27-9 | 21-18 | 30-15 | 8-5 | W1 | 8-2 |
3 x-Chicago | 45 | 29 | 0.608 | 10½ | 24-14 | 21-15 | 28-16 | 7-6 | W3 | 6-4 |
4 y-Toronto | 43 | 30 | 0.589 | 12 | 25-13 | 18-17 | 29-16 | 11-2 | W1 | 5-5 |
5 Washington | 41 | 33 | 0.554 | 14½ | 26-12 | 15-21 | 26-19 | 9-6 | L1 | 5-5 |
6 Milwaukee | 36 | 37 | 0.493 | 19 | 21-15 | 15-22 | 25-18 | 6-8 | L1 | 3-7 |
7 Miami | 34 | 39 | 0.466 | 21 | 18-18 | 16-21 | 22-22 | 4-10 | W1 | 6-4 |
8 Brooklyn | 32 | 40 | 0.444 | 22½ | 14-20 | 18-20 | 19-24 | 8-6 | W3 | 7-3 |
Indiana | 32 | 41 | 0.438 | 23 | 19-18 | 13-23 | 23-22 | 7-8 | W1 | 3-7 |
Boston | 32 | 41 | 0.438 | 23 | 18-19 | 14-22 | 20-23 | 10-4 | L1 | 5-5 |
Charlotte | 31 | 41 | 0.431 | 23½ | 17-19 | 14-22 | 23-20 | 8-6 | W1 | 3-7 |
Detroit | 28 | 45 | 0.384 | 27 | 15-21 | 13-24 | 19-24 | 6-7 | L1 | 5-5 |
o-Orlando | 22 | 52 | 0.297 | 33½ | 12-25 | 10-27 | 13-33 | 4-11 | L3 | 1-9 |
o-Philadelphia | 18 | 56 | 0.243 | 37½ | 12-25 | 6-31 | 12-33 | 2-13 | L2 | 4-6 |
o-New York | 14 | 60 | 0.189 | 41½ | 9-27 | 5-33 | 8-36 | 4-10 | L7 | 1-9 |
Western Conference | W | L | Pct | GB | Home | Road | Conf | Div | Streak | L10 |
1 z-Golden St. | 60 | 13 | 0.822 | - | 34-2 | 26-11 | 35-8 | 11-3 | W9 | 9-1 |
2 x-Houston | 50 | 23 | 0.685 | 10 | 27-10 | 23-13 | 28-17 | 6-6 | W4 | 7-3 |
3 x-Memphis | 50 | 24 | 0.676 | 10½ | 27-9 | 23-15 | 31-15 | 8-7 | L3 | 5-5 |
4 Portland | 47 | 25 | 0.653 | 12½ | 29-7 | 18-18 | 27-16 | 10-3 | W3 | 5-5 |
5 x-L.A. Clippers | 49 | 25 | 0.662 | 11½ | 27-10 | 22-15 | 30-14 | 9-3 | W7 | 8-2 |
6 San Antonio | 47 | 26 | 0.644 | 13 | 29-8 | 18-18 | 26-19 | 6-7 | W3 | 7-3 |
7 Dallas | 45 | 29 | 0.608 | 15½ | 25-12 | 20-17 | 24-20 | 7-8 | L2 | 5-5 |
8 Oklahoma City | 42 | 32 | 0.568 | 18½ | 27-9 | 15-23 | 22-23 | 8-6 | W1 | 7-3 |
New Orleans | 39 | 34 | 0.534 | 21 | 25-13 | 14-21 | 23-20 | 7-6 | W2 | 5-5 |
Phoenix | 38 | 36 | 0.514 | 22½ | 21-18 | 17-18 | 20-25 | 6-8 | L3 | 5-5 |
o-Utah | 32 | 41 | 0.438 | 28 | 18-19 | 14-22 | 17-26 | 6-7 | W1 | 5-5 |
o-Denver | 28 | 46 | 0.378 | 32½ | 17-20 | 11-26 | 17-27 | 6-9 | L1 | 5-5 |
o-Sacramento | 26 | 46 | 0.361 | 33½ | 16-21 | 10-25 | 15-27 | 5-9 | L1 | 5-5 |
o-L.A. Lakers | 19 | 53 | 0.264 | 40½ | 11-24 | 8-29 | 8-35 | 2-10 | L2 | 3-7 |
o-Minnesota | 16 | 57 | 0.219 | 44 | 9-27 | 7-30 | 7-38 | 4-9 | L3 | 2-8 |
Bucks remaining schedule: @Atl, Bos, Chi, Orl, Cle, NYK, Bky, Phi, Bos
Heat remaining schedule: SA, @Cle, @Det, @Ind, Cha, Chi, Tor, Orl, Phi
Bucks have the overall harder schedule. Neither team has a cakewalk though. Heat still have 2 games to make up as well.
Let's be honest. Jordan wasn't burnt out on basketball at all. His father was murdered and it messed with Jordan mentally to the point he had no desire to play the game anymore. He was going to honor his father by playing baseball (since thats what his father always wanted him to do). Once Jordan spent a year and half failing miserably at doing that, he decided to return to the game he loved.
I disagree, it takes a toll on your body eventually. And personally, I'm tired of people mentioning the old Bulls and especially MJ. Let's not forget that MJ took a couple years off cuz he was burnt out on basketball. :dunno: No one seems to mention that at all. Plus, the game is different today.
Jordan was not physically spent. He was mentally out of it (for whatever reasons). Big difference.
He was 30 years-old? Or 31? That's pretty much LeBron's age right now. Remember Kobe at 31? He was winning championships and lighting up dude's nightly. And he was playing big minutes for roughly 80 regular season games.
Popovich resting guys like Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili doesn't mean Thibodeau should start resting Jimmy Butler, Joakim Noah, Taj Gibson, and D-Rose (all much younger) just as frequently. Maybe Pau Gasol. But, otherwise, it is comparing apples and oranges.