I guess you can say I disagree with this immensely. Black players were playing in the 50's gradually, but had to deal with the whole don't do too well. Guys like Clifton were doing all of the dirty work. The shame is he would be one of the greatest players if he wasn't handcuffed by on style of play. The next few years players were coming in and making everyone adjust to them. Less than a decade later you have Oscar coming in and showing the future. But, for you to say competition is better today, I think you are missing a big point. Today we have 12th men making a million dollars (please no lists proving or disproving) and are more content and not as hungry as a player making ten thousand and fighting to make the team and some more to stay. Today players get cut and go overseas to many more leagues than were ever available or the minor leagues (NBDL and such) which were not options. In those days if guys didn't have other careers (because they had degrees) they ended up selling insurance or working at Sears (or whatever misery you can imagine). Even stars weren't making tons as of yet until possibly Wilt. The physicality of the game was a lot tougher then as well. The officiating was still developing so fouls had to be real fouls (not like if you tip a pinky stuff like today). Where do you think the phrase 'no blood, no foul' came from?MW00 wrote:.hpanic7342 on RootZoo forums wrote:Also, I need to mention: there was an adjustment made for when a player played. Basically, the earlier his career took place, the more his rating was scaled down. Players in the 50s didn't have to play against blacks, in the 60s they didn't have to play against Southern blacks, and not until the 2000s did they have to play against lots of internationals. I wanted the ratings to reflect that the competition's gotten better.
There is a lot of assuming being thrown around. You think getting hit on the hand affects the shooting percentages that we keep mentioning? Remember the other common early phrase 'hand's part of the ball' which is a way of saying play on.
I am not seeing how it is tougher today. Coaches then had players play all out in practice. There was no 'gee you need to rest that' mentality and what about travel? They didn't take 1st class flights; they took all night bus trips, carried their own bags, bought their food...I think we are missing the point by scaling down the era that actually had it harder.
There are more teams today, but there are more bad teams today with more players who aren't NBA caliber. Careers were shorter because being a pro athlete then was more similar to the military than the current country club. I'd scale down today's players if you are to scale down anyone at all.