So now even NBA rookies get load management... Ja Morant OUT (rest)

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Stop saying shyt like this. This won’t fix the problem. If you don’t want to watch 82 games, dont watch.

If the nba season was 62 games, players would still find a way to play 42 and still want 82 games worth of money. You would still have silly dnp’s like this.
No they wouldn’t. Less games in the season values wins even more. The best player sitting out 20 games in a 82 game season (about 25%) is not as impactful as the best player sitting out 20 out of 60 games (33%) of the season.
It’s the reason load management will never exist in the nfl. Wins come at a premium for coaches and teams in a season.
 

nieman

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Not just that.... niccas (Due to the pressure from us fans) constantly push there bodies with insane training year in and out.

Back in the 80s and 90s guys wasn’t training like that. When the season was over they was done with basketball till training camps and preseason.

Now cats are immediately going back to the gym and weight room the minute their season is over and still go hard in the summer

Another false statement. Barkley and his gen always said the vets would tell them to work on different aspects of game each summer. I think the only difference is the vets don't really have a voice now, so some players are doing it without encouragement.
 

theflyest

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"What our orthopedics are telling us," Silver says, "is they're seeing wear-and-tear issues in young players that they didn't used to see until players were much older."

What Silver could not have known was just how steeply injuries -- and especially injuries to young players -- would impact the NBA the very next season. In 2017-18, the number of NBA games lost to injury or illness surpassed the 5,000 mark for the first time since the league stopped using the injured reserve list prior to the 2005-06 campaign, per certified athletic trainer Jeff Stotts, who has cataloged the careers of more than 1,100 players since that point and is considered the most authoritative public resource for tracking injuries in the NBA. This past season, in 2018-19, the league topped the 5,000 mark again.

In 2017-18, players who had been named to multiple All-Star teams missed an average of 14.63 games due to injury, the second-highest such figure that Stotts had recorded. That figure jumped this past season to 17.02.

And according to Stotts' database, the four highest tallies of games missed by young players in their first two seasons have occurred in the past four seasons. Players picked in the 2014 first round missed 838 games to injury during their first two seasons, the highest figure Stotts has ever recorded; in 2015, 637, the third-highest tally; in 2016, there were 548 missed games; and in 2017, 751 games, the second-highest.


The question is why.

Through dozens of interviews over the past two years with NBA team and league officials, current and former players, AAU coaches, parents, youth players, researchers, medical and athletic training officials in and around the NBA, as well as those intimately involved with youth basketball, one possible answer repeatedly emerged: Players, they say, are physically broken down by the time they reach the NBA.

"It is grave," says one NBA general manager, who says his team's injury databases on players entering the draft, dating back decades, leave "no question" that there are more orthopedic issues among young players in recent years. "It's very sad, where a kid has an NBA body, he's got NBA talent, he's got even an NBA mentality, but he doesn't have a body that can withstand the rigors of the training and the actual games, whether it's to get to the NBA or just to hold up. It's a tough deal."

'These kids are ticking time bombs': The threat of youth basketball

As someone that has been around AAU/Youth basketball scene forever, I don't think it's due to actually playing basketball. Playing tournaments is basically always been part of AAU culture.

I wouldn't be surprised if it's the way these kids train. A lot of kids train like they are grown men. I think weight lifting is incorporated way too early now.
 

Bryan Danielson

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#We Are The Flash #DOOMSET #LukeCageSet #NEWLWO
Another false statement. Barkley and his gen always said the vets would tell them to work on different aspects of game each summer. I think the only difference is the vets don't really have a voice now, so some players are doing it without encouragement.

Man fukk all that shyt ...... I just wanna see zones:camby:


Every year in the March Madness tournament we get hyped seeing guy try to break presses or trap guys in full and half court.


Would love to see that in the NBA:rudy:
 

GunRanger

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As someone that has been around AAU/Youth basketball scene forever, I don't think it's due to actually playing basketball. Playing tournaments is basically always been part of AAU culture.

I wouldn't be surprised if it's the way these kids train. A lot of kids train like they are grown men. I think weight lifting is incorporated way too early now.
Lifting isnt a problem. I do think you ger cats are doing PEDs more now
 
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These threads always bring out the false equivalences of bu-bu-but back in the day
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