The Death Of The Power Forward, & Who's Next...

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All music is from epidemic sounds
0:00 Intro
2:34 Prologue
4:41 Chapter 1
16:11 Chapter 2
23:00 Chapter 3
29:23 Chapter 4
36:25 Conclusion

Пікірлер: 2 100

  • @npc_search8870
    @npc_search88705 ай бұрын

    The idea of the NBA evolving into a PG, 3 wings and a center was a genius take.

  • @hollywoodagenda7881

    @hollywoodagenda7881

    5 ай бұрын

    Pretty accurate given the landscape

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    Could it be said that in general, the players who were only good at a couple particular skills are the ones who we see fewer players like in later eras because of a lack of versatility? Edit: And could it be said that if a player who had the skillset and height of David Lee or Zach Lavine came up today for the first time that the player would not make an NBA roster?

  • @user-iy3ub3jo5t

    @user-iy3ub3jo5t

    5 ай бұрын

    I love it fr

  • @killakam8738

    @killakam8738

    5 ай бұрын

    Not really a take when its been public knowledge and seen for several years now

  • @zanturk9997

    @zanturk9997

    5 ай бұрын

    Love the new rusty ❤

  • @donk8052
    @donk80525 ай бұрын

    Rusty is in his hour long video essay era and I'm all for it

  • @chalnervassor9430

    @chalnervassor9430

    5 ай бұрын

    Fr. My man moved and got in his bag. Rudy's editing also taking a leap too.

  • @bludgeonedfate708

    @bludgeonedfate708

    5 ай бұрын

    Hour long video and looking clean AF 🥶

  • @antonbradley

    @antonbradley

    5 ай бұрын

    While still in his pat riley hair phase. I love it.

  • @versatillion15

    @versatillion15

    5 ай бұрын

    This is only half an hour...

  • @asahihardy962

    @asahihardy962

    5 ай бұрын

    I support this message 💯

  • @kohgoomah0105
    @kohgoomah01055 ай бұрын

    What’s interesting is Aaron Gordon IS the PROTOTYPICAL old school Power Forward. Denver was able to win with the traditional 4, who bangs inside- interior offense and defense, but was able to overcome that with spacing from their 5. 4 out, 1 in. Numbers and “positions” don’t matter. It’s about the roles you play and how that provides spacing, execution, and offensive flow/efficiency on the court. And great defense ofc.

  • @aidanparrott1810

    @aidanparrott1810

    5 ай бұрын

    He’s not prototypical defensively though. He’s very versatile

  • @vamoneygroup

    @vamoneygroup

    5 ай бұрын

    Ben is a 3. He only seems like a 4 because there are no 4s.

  • @aidanparrott1810

    @aidanparrott1810

    5 ай бұрын

    He also shoots about 3 threes a game,which is hardly prototypical. You must not know ball

  • @jdurrant5633

    @jdurrant5633

    5 ай бұрын

    Gordon has always been a 3 he's just big i.e 6'9 235+ so you can consider him a 4

  • @arandomname3458

    @arandomname3458

    5 ай бұрын

    @@aidanparrott1810he doesnt make a lot of them, he mainly hangs out near the dunker’s spot or cuts

  • @josephferano
    @josephferano5 ай бұрын

    Another data point for the PF transition is 2009-2010 Lakers B2B chips. While Andrew Bynum was starting, Lamar Odom was finish games with Gasol shifting to the 5. Back then it was called a "stretch 4".

  • @dapper892

    @dapper892

    5 ай бұрын

    Toni Kukoc and Antoine Walker were “stretch” PFs in the 90s. Didn’t watch the whole vid. Not sure if he mentioned them.

  • @maartenvz

    @maartenvz

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@dapper892Antoine Walker would have been the worst three point shooter on high volume if Russell Westbrook hadnt existed

  • @dapper892

    @dapper892

    5 ай бұрын

    @@maartenvz I’m aware. Doesn’t mean he wasn’t doin it when no one else was.

  • @abel6298

    @abel6298

    5 ай бұрын

    Read your bible! (KJV, preferably) ♥‎‎ ‎

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@maartenvzIn Bill Simmons’ redraftable series from 2020, he said that Rick Pitino told his players: “you can take all the bad shots you want as long as you play defense”. Walker shot 32.5% on 4.8 threes a game, and 25.6% on 3.5 threes a game in 1999-00. Granted I’ve heard early 2000’s spacing was basically non-existent, but terrible splits either way.

  • @sahtera
    @sahtera5 ай бұрын

    with the SG death, it's like if you're a 2 that can playmake, you become a 1 (Shai, Luka, Murray, Booker, Harden as you mentioned) but i also think if you're a 2 that defends well, you essentially become a 3 think PG13, Jimmy Butler, Jaylen Brown, OG, Dort, even Klay gets significant minutes at 3

  • @DemonKingBadger

    @DemonKingBadger

    5 ай бұрын

    It might end up being about height. Anybody under 6"4 who can't PG might become automatically obsolete.

  • @mxhughes

    @mxhughes

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@DemonKingBadger 6'4-6'5 players are always the hardest to categorize if they don't have immediate skills and abilities that can put them in a automatic position.Marcus thornton (if anybody remembers him) could hoop but he because he was a certain size,length and type of player he was too slow to guard pg's,too small to guard sf's and sg's were more times then not bigger then him. Dwyane Wade was the only exception to the rule in modern time because he had great athleticism,long arms,humongous hands,extremely physical in the paint and weighed like 220 even though he didn't look like it

  • @TheIcemanthomas

    @TheIcemanthomas

    5 ай бұрын

    @@mxhugheswade definitely did look it. He was super bulky and muscular for a guard.

  • @undercoverss6106

    @undercoverss6106

    5 ай бұрын

    @@TheIcemanthomashe was more 205-210 during his “flash prime” years but still super physical.

  • @silversoulken

    @silversoulken

    5 ай бұрын

    @@undercoverss6106 Nah fr bc his weight was one of the factors that did him in, injuries wise. Being able to do the stop n go as well and FAST as he does it was only a matter of time

  • @henry7486
    @henry74865 ай бұрын

    We’ve already seen the death of the shooting guard. Shai, Devin Booker and Luka are the only three truly elite shooting guards yet all of them are basically just point guards. Others players such as Tyler Herro, Jalen Green and Derrick White are also essentially Point Guards too. The only real Shooting Guards left are Klay, Desmond Bane and I guess Zach Lavine. edit: I typed this right before he actually talked about this

  • @luizansounds

    @luizansounds

    5 ай бұрын

    Can we say Klay was the last historically important "pure" shooting guard if this trend stays? BCS after him no other team won with a tradition shooting guard as a protagonist

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    @@luizansoundsOut of curiosity the players he listed as shooting guards: Could those players not defend?

  • @luizansounds

    @luizansounds

    5 ай бұрын

    @@fortynights1513 most of them couldn't in a high level, pre ACL and Achilles Klay is by far the best defender of the bunch (even post Injury I think he is better than many) From the op only Derrick White is a high level defender

  • @baxterbrown8088

    @baxterbrown8088

    5 ай бұрын

    Jaylen Brown I would call a pure Shooting Guard. With the sad decline of Klay Thompson it almost feels like JB is a unicorn in this league. Even Bane feels more like an undersized forward

  • @henry7486

    @henry7486

    5 ай бұрын

    @@baxterbrown8088 yeah JB is another one and I just thought about Khris Middleton too. However, Khris plays more as a small forward now but I still think of him as a ‘true’ shooting guard

  • @Ollig999
    @Ollig9995 ай бұрын

    The 2, 3, and 4 are really the 3 wing players ordered by size in most cases. I don’t think shooting guards are dying or undergoing some great transformation. I think it’s just the lines between positions are blurring overall. Teams don’t have 1 of each position but instead most have 1 big guy, 1 main ball handler (sometimes a big time secondary one too), and 3 players that are out there for their versatility and defensive matchups

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    3 ай бұрын

    Two questions: 1. He mentioned David Lee’s career died out. Why couldn’t he play center? And 2. Could the future shooting guard position be the best shooter among your wings, the future small forward be the most versatile player of your wings, and the power forward be the best rebounder among your wings?

  • @wouldntglidingbefaster1704

    @wouldntglidingbefaster1704

    3 ай бұрын

    @@fortynights1513no, there's no set roles for positions, that's the point. Someone like Robert Covington could play the 2, 3, or 4. NBA plays and defense nowadays arent based off position, just skill set. Ben Simmons plays point but you wouldn't match him with Trae Young just because they're both pg. Offensively, teams usually just run some form of 4-out/5-out motion if they're not running set plays, where everyone on the perimeter can shoot, dribble, and pass. Some good examples are the Celtics or the Clippers. You can throw in the 2022 Warriors as well. The only really defined positions are PG and C, and even those are becoming blurred. PG is usually just the guy who brings the ball down and sets up the offense, but we see players like Lebron and Wemby doing that so it's not really that defined anymore. Likewise for C, they're usually defined as the tallest and worst shooting player on the team, but you have players like Wemby, Chet, Jokic, Embiid, etc. who can basically play like wings.

  • @bedstuy4_l895
    @bedstuy4_l8955 ай бұрын

    Can tell this is the most effort Rusty has ever put into a video ever. If this is the norm then I am more than ready for it. Glad that you were open about issues with this channel over the past year or so and glad you made the change. Clearly you’re getting better as a person and it is reflecting on KZread.

  • @coleniebur9049

    @coleniebur9049

    5 ай бұрын

    I think he took a lot of pride in his lebron most points video. He has it pinned on his channel and it’s another 38 min banger. I wonder if a vid like that is what Rusty was wanting to rekindle with his changes

  • @abel6298

    @abel6298

    5 ай бұрын

    Read your bible! (KJV, preferably) ♥‎‎ ‎

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    I think the Goatmentary series from 2019 probably took more effort if only due to its length, but this video certainly took a ton of effort and deserves a lot of attention.

  • @Tomtainius
    @Tomtainius5 ай бұрын

    40 minutes long!? Damn I’m looking forward to more videos like this. This is one of the more obvious topics to dive deep into, so I’m interested to see what else Rusty + Rudy have planned!

  • @user0x0x6

    @user0x0x6

    Ай бұрын

    You powered forward to it?

  • @TheWolfster
    @TheWolfster5 ай бұрын

    The PF in my opinion is one of the most important positions. Each team who won a championship in the past all had PFs who were superstars or contributed heavy to winning the title (Anthony Davis, Aaron Gordon, Draymond Green, Pascal Siakam, Giannis, Kevin Love, Pau Gasol, Kevin Garnett) the list goes on. Its the most underrated position in basketball

  • @user-db6ec2nd4n

    @user-db6ec2nd4n

    5 ай бұрын

    How can u forget the best power foward of all time off the list

  • @za5528

    @za5528

    5 ай бұрын

    It kind of makes his point too though. None of them were PF in the sense of being a second big on offense, they either had the capabilities of SFs or had bigs that spaced the floor instead of being in the paint so those PFs was the offensive player at the rim instead of the 5. AD played at the 5 in the Lakers' best lineups, Gordon is a former SF, Draymond played at the 5 in GSW best lineups, Siakam did play like a PF in 2019 but with the speed and skillset of a SF, Giannis is more like a traditional PF but generational talents can be the exception to the rule and even then he attacks more from the perimeter on drives than a typical PF + on offense Giannis is the one in the paint because Brook Lopez is generally spacing the floor instead of doing typical center stuff, Kevin Love could shoot. That's around everyone after the Dirk 2011 ring. So the only way to be an elite PF these days is by being a supersized SF on both ends of the floor, or the only paint-presence on the floor with a spacing center on offense while being either a supersized SF or a help defender on defense

  • @baxterbrown8088

    @baxterbrown8088

    5 ай бұрын

    Draymond is almost impossible to slot in at any one position

  • @Rievax17

    @Rievax17

    5 ай бұрын

    That just means you need to have really good players at all positions to win the championship

  • @taharqa332

    @taharqa332

    5 ай бұрын

    @@baxterbrown8088That’s because he brings no value at any position.

  • @lrkcm373
    @lrkcm3735 ай бұрын

    We often talk about how the transition between eras affected centers, but I think it affected power forward just as much. At a time when center was the weakest, the best power forwards were all old, and the most impactful players were all smaller. It forced the power forwards to pick up the slack of centers or change into big wings, instead of being able to hone their skills and be elite like previous power forwards.

  • @cunninghamster1954
    @cunninghamster19545 ай бұрын

    This video is incredible - keep it up!! Your knowledge and analysis is first class and we're all better off as basketball fans for following you.

  • @Reloaded51224
    @Reloaded512245 ай бұрын

    Rusty this is by far your best video in a very long time. Keep working we can see the love and effort

  • @legendarymajin1535
    @legendarymajin15355 ай бұрын

    We supporting this one big time 💪🏾

  • @bortonshort3761
    @bortonshort37615 ай бұрын

    I'm so glad to see you've come out swinging for this new stage of your life, Rusty! Keep up the good work!

  • @BIGBIB222
    @BIGBIB2225 ай бұрын

    Damn this was so good! Thank you for putting the time and work into this incredible video essa

  • @trevmorin
    @trevmorin5 ай бұрын

    Thank you Rusty for pushing elite content. Yesterday's video was heartfelt and makes us wish you the best in future endeavors. Keep delivering💯🐏

  • @raphab0
    @raphab05 ай бұрын

    Kevin Love came to mind while I was watching. He had traditional big man skills like rebounding, outlet passes and post up shots, but later developed into a 3pt shooter. He never fully became a center like Aldridge/AD since he sometimes played alongside a center in Cleveland and Minnesota but he also didn't fit the Jerami Grant archetype. Great video overall!

  • @dapper892

    @dapper892

    5 ай бұрын

    You can go before him to Antoine Walker. He was the first 4 I remember to really start “stretching” the floor. He shot an abnormal amount from the outside. It was really stupid (at the time). Poor %.

  • @Simataa

    @Simataa

    5 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@dapper892There was Rasheed Wallace before that too. Ironically his 3 point shooting may have been a curse. Not because he was necessarily bad but because he was just so much better in the post.

  • @dapper892

    @dapper892

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Simataa yep. Rasheed definitely was another around the same time. Agreed, he was a victim of too much skill lol. Barkley was another early one, shooting from the outside back in 1993. Garnett really started to step out too, not from 3, but 16-17 feet quite a bit. Malone too. Horace grant. (Just named popping into my head). There were centers starting to stretch the floor in the 90s a bit, at least to mid range. Many centers were like Ewing, smits and Hakeem. Taking 3s was still a no-no though for centers. It was just something you didn’t dream of doing. Anyway. It was coming, gradually.

  • @ZaeOSWS

    @ZaeOSWS

    5 ай бұрын

    What yall know about Antawn Jamison? Dude was a force, essentially a blueprint alongside Dirk for the modern forward styles.

  • @dapper892

    @dapper892

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ZaeOSWS another good one

  • @tiffany5441
    @tiffany54415 ай бұрын

    Rusty, I love these types of videos! Make this the style you go for, and keep the other videos on “also rusty buckets.” This video is on pace to be a top 10 highest viewed video on your channel. Congrats man!

  • @trasda2475
    @trasda24755 ай бұрын

    LOVE THIS!!! thanks Jacob, keep it up and good luck with these new videos

  • @jeremytheoutlaw4112
    @jeremytheoutlaw41125 ай бұрын

    This video is amazing Rusty You have a talent for storytelling and presentation that is sorely missed in basketball discussion This style fits you and your strenghts alot more than small "spur of the moment" videos

  • @henry7486
    @henry74865 ай бұрын

    I used to love your old deep dives so it’s cool to see them comeback

  • @Scisca1a2a
    @Scisca1a2a5 ай бұрын

    Your new format is awesome, vids like this are really worth watching. I like the way you evolved the channel, good job!

  • @DarrenPrintemps
    @DarrenPrintemps5 ай бұрын

    This is a brilliant video. Well articulated and paced. Great work 🤘🏾🤘🏾

  • @itisnottaken4444
    @itisnottaken44445 ай бұрын

    Funny thing about Blake is that he had that style of game all along. If you watch some clips of him in Oklahoma and also his pre draft workouts, he showed his ball handling and passing ability. Oddly enough I think CP3 coming to LA is what forced him into a traditional PF role because of his dominance on ball.

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    Could they have been better off if both of them shared ball handling?

  • @itisnottaken4444

    @itisnottaken4444

    4 ай бұрын

    @@fortynights1513 absolutely but doc rivers didn’t have the vision to see it that way. Probably would’ve saved years on Paul’s career and Blake’s knees as he wouldn’t been forced to jump at people all game.

  • @AB-sw4kb

    @AB-sw4kb

    4 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I paused the video when his whole argument for the PF position is just three point stats. Obviously shooting is part of the spacing of the modern game, but there are also skills like passing. Blake Griffin would still use his size to post up, but would often pass out of the post to cutters or shooters. Rather than strictly being a play finisher, he was using his PF size and PF skills to be a facilitator on offense. Spacing affects more than just the three point shot. And yes, Blake was always an underrated ball handler and passer!

  • @braxtenswearingen3092
    @braxtenswearingen30925 ай бұрын

    Damn, you weren’t kidding. This new format is so much more professional and polished. The difference between this and your old stuff is like night and day. Keep it up, this was awesome and engaging.

  • @TheUltraSaiyanGoku
    @TheUltraSaiyanGoku2 ай бұрын

    I've been a fan for few years, and I gotta you've really hit gold with this new format of vids. i watched your update video and am glad you're doing much better. it really reflects in your work. not that your vids have been bad, its just that you've turned up the heat and I can't wait for a new video

  • @ionutalex5529
    @ionutalex55295 ай бұрын

    love this new format and i hope you're doing well with your addiction and mental health, all the best!

  • @TylorHuebner
    @TylorHuebner5 ай бұрын

    It's interesting to see how the death of the PF is pretty much the same as the death of the full back. Tight ends were just shown they could do pretty much all the full back things but in a more versatile role with the "passing revolution".

  • @jaend6924

    @jaend6924

    5 ай бұрын

    yeah and now young QBs in HS level are being trained to essentially eliminate the classical RB position

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    4 ай бұрын

    @@jaend6924Could Derrick Henry be the last running back in NFL history to run for as many yards as he has?

  • @toob_noob4381

    @toob_noob4381

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@jaend6924 its not really the detah of the RB, but rather the "Star" RB A good RB will alwayne be needed hut.kist teams will go the committe route rather than the workhorse route.

  • @paulidson1483

    @paulidson1483

    Ай бұрын

    QBs who run first will not last. The ball can move quicker through the air than anyone can run with it Poor throwing QBs are using their feet as a crutch

  • @TraeYoungLuva
    @TraeYoungLuva5 ай бұрын

    Love this content!!!! This stuff sets you apart man no one is doing this like you. 1000% sure you will find success with this type of content.

  • @JVersez
    @JVersez5 ай бұрын

    Great video enjoyed it. Felt Charles Barkley should of been an honorable mention. He literally was the prototype to the modern PF way before Draymond. Barkley skill set being an undersized 4 was 30 years ahead of its time.

  • @kylec2761

    @kylec2761

    3 ай бұрын

    Maybe by size, but he played in the paint and not with the spacing of a modern 4

  • @phyzix5052

    @phyzix5052

    3 ай бұрын

    Should have

  • @yokabomb
    @yokabomb5 ай бұрын

    Absolutely incredible video. Loved your old long form videos and I’m sure I’ll love the new ones even more

  • @Romanus-
    @Romanus-5 ай бұрын

    Loving the new style of content Rusty. Looking forward to seeing the channel continue to grow man👍🏻

  • @Toad22484
    @Toad224845 ай бұрын

    This is definitely one of your best videos so far. I've been following for years but the quality, knowledge, research and heart is all felt hear and explained well. Thank you for this

  • @willmartinez7177
    @willmartinez71775 ай бұрын

    i love the new video format, can't wait to see what you put out next!

  • @christannerman622
    @christannerman6225 ай бұрын

    This is the best basketball evolution doc I’ve seen in my life. Great job!!!

  • @timitnyre5831
    @timitnyre58315 ай бұрын

    Love the longer essay format. I think it really brings out your strength at laying out the history behind basketball's evolution. I got into watching basketball in the late 90s qnd for years it was a league of great power forwards and shooting guards. It's wild to be watching the demise of both positions.

  • @martisam21
    @martisam215 ай бұрын

    Love this! I think a good video would be breaking down the wing position. Since it seems like anyone without the height to be a center, or the playmaking skills to be a PG has to be a wing, there has to be many molds a wing can come in.

  • @kingdeedee
    @kingdeedee5 ай бұрын

    This video was EXCELLENT and possibly even my favourite you ever made. It really made me think and realize that most of the shooting guards in the league now are pretty much just catch and shoot role players. Even Booker, Edwards and Herro have all been at least floated as options at PG. As a Heat fan, no doubt in my mind D Wade would’ve been a PG in today’s league too but I think the Clippers messy Harden-Westbrook situation is one of the final nails in the coffin for the SG position. The fact that Harden is a (mostly) career SG while Russ is a career PG, but Russ still has to be damn near pushed out of the rotation for Harden to fit on the team is really telling

  • @abel6298

    @abel6298

    5 ай бұрын

    Read your bible! (KJV, preferably) ♥‎‎ ‎

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    Would the guys playing point guard next to Wade be 1’s today as well? Or not.

  • @kingdeedee

    @kingdeedee

    5 ай бұрын

    @@fortynights1513 I think the answer to that lies in how well you think their shooting and defence would translate to today’s game. I think someone like Chalmers was a sneaky good defender and would fit right into a 3&D 2 guard role despite being only 6’2” Especially since he didn’t do too much handling anyway. A player like Jason Williams though, I don’t think could play another position. I feel that was a pairing that worked in the 00s game but won’t translate too well today

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    @@kingdeedeeSo Jason Williams was a guy who could pass but not as much else, and was playing the one because that was all he could be? Correct me if I’m wrong but that sounds like what was implied. If so, would you say that that was a game that belonged to the 2000’s and earlier before people’s views on positions changed?

  • @kingdeedee

    @kingdeedee

    5 ай бұрын

    @@fortynights1513 I’m not necessarily saying J Will couldn’t do anything else, but in today’s game his lack of size and athleticism would really hold him back. Nowadays for a guard to be successful they either have to be able to score effectively or be ruthless defenders, or both. In a way, yes I am saying J Will’s archetype just isn’t made for today’s game. Like most of the top 10 assist leaders in the NBA today are also explosive scorers. Teams just no longer want to have the ball in the hands of someone who isn’t a meaningful scoring threat like they used to

  • @robadams4375
    @robadams43755 ай бұрын

    RUSTY!!!! This is what we've been waiting for, as a fellow recovering addict and young 20 something my heart is with you as you walk the path of recovery. Obviously much love to rudy too, I think this was your best video since the video that brought me to your channel the goat debate video mj VS. bron. I'm so excited to watch your new content and i cant wait to see what you put out next

  • @CP0rings33

    @CP0rings33

    Ай бұрын

    Rusty is a recovering addict?

  • @bobbob5386
    @bobbob53865 ай бұрын

    Video contains Raptors Bosh highlights, instantly makes it a 10

  • @ericchlumecky8588
    @ericchlumecky85885 ай бұрын

    Always like when someone's passion for a topic shines through in their work. This new long-form format is great for going in-depth and showing how much he cares about the history of the game and where it's headed

  • @Ramzzzes21
    @Ramzzzes215 ай бұрын

    Love the video and where the channel is going! If anything, I'd note that the chapter cards are a little long on my end (like Chapter 2: What is even is.. was like 10 seconds), but otherwise excited for the future

  • @Nihilus_Outis
    @Nihilus_Outis4 ай бұрын

    Great analysis. Looking forward for more content like this. That being said, l really miss the late 70's, 80's, and 90's NBA.

  • @dmichael100

    @dmichael100

    3 ай бұрын

    Me too. I watch more videos from the 70s, 80s and 90s than modern games- and, except for Golden State- enjoy them much more.

  • @sysomi
    @sysomi5 ай бұрын

    I adore long-form content and I'm eagerly awaiting more of these videos. I loved your deep dives before. - Jrez

  • @damckissen
    @damckissen5 ай бұрын

    You should do a video about the evolution of point guards focusing on the shifts between Stockton, AI, CP3, Curry, and now Haliburton

  • @vdoggydogg3922

    @vdoggydogg3922

    5 ай бұрын

    There have always been prototypical point guards and ones that were were more scorers. AI really made it more possible for the pg to be the primary scorer though.

  • @Taurox220

    @Taurox220

    5 ай бұрын

    Oscar robertson before that

  • @maartenvz

    @maartenvz

    5 ай бұрын

    I think the impact of the Detroit Pistons bad boys played a big role in the 90s teams playing slower half court oriented basketball while the 80s and current era has a way higher pace and more free flow

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    He did a video awhile back on why “true” or otherwise pass first point guards are a flawed concept and why those players are often overrated. But he hasn’t done a video on the evolution of the way that position is played.

  • @billyroscher3417
    @billyroscher34175 ай бұрын

    This is the best rusty buckets video I’ve seen in a long time. I have watched this channel for years on and off but this is an era I’m so happy is here. I’m definitely subscribing now

  • @chrisg4659
    @chrisg46594 ай бұрын

    Very insightful and well-thought-out! Think you are pretty spot on on all of this.

  • @treejan5782
    @treejan57825 ай бұрын

    Always love these type of “evolution of the game” type essays. Great quality too, looking forward to more

  • @joemomma7751
    @joemomma77515 ай бұрын

    Love the new style of content, can’t wait for more. Keep it up rusty!

  • @CapDanAddams
    @CapDanAddamsАй бұрын

    This is one of the best videos ive ever watched. Thanks for making.

  • @AntwynJackson
    @AntwynJackson5 ай бұрын

    That was excellent… loving the new longer form content. Keep doing it

  • @somregularguy
    @somregularguy5 ай бұрын

    I really love these long videos, not many basketball KZreadrs do them anymore but there’s always a ton of topics you can use to make these vids

  • @amazingkook143
    @amazingkook1435 ай бұрын

    I love this video and what your doing. Would love more of this but understand that it might take a long time to make them.

  • @holidayarmadillo8653
    @holidayarmadillo86535 ай бұрын

    This video was absolutely exceptional and it has inspired me to subscribe. Great job, sir. Your analysis was excellent and great food for thought.

  • @HaitiSpaceAgency
    @HaitiSpaceAgency5 ай бұрын

    Fantastic video. Can’t wait for what’s next!

  • @hexmark21
    @hexmark215 ай бұрын

    Fantastic work, Rusty. Initially I thought the point guard position might be next with the expectation that every non-big on the team should at least make a play for themselves or others but I get why a position who's only expectation is to score would be next

  • @schuylersavage276

    @schuylersavage276

    5 ай бұрын

    So…I think non transcendent point guards might seem like the logical next step to be whisked away with the evo of the game. BUT, guys like Cp3, hali, Nash, and you name em, even Trae, those guys who can create literally like 90 high quality shots a game jusr due to their freaking mental brilliance and creativity and passing? I don’t think the game will ever evo past them. No matter their size. Truly. I mean I guess they’d have to be at least 6’2” or so duh, but you know what I mean. Guys who master the PG position like that, they just transcend the norms sometimes. Transcend the trends. Clearly their will be some issues on defense if the game continues to evolve and more and more small guys get played off the court, BUT, if the guys like CP3 and Nash and Trae and etc that keep popping up every so often also continue to be so brilliant they break defenses? I think their teams will find creative ways to keep them on the floor and hide the areas they aren’t elite.

  • @hendude127
    @hendude1275 ай бұрын

    Rusty, Ive been dealing with depression too, I just wanna let you know that youre not alone, and I am here to support your new content. Gonna get comfy in my bed and enjoy the video!

  • @yaeevsthewrld3087
    @yaeevsthewrld30875 ай бұрын

    I really enjoy these type of videos just as long as your consistency doesn’t decline I would say it’s a good thing

  • @topramen5718
    @topramen57185 ай бұрын

    R buckets you nailed it ! Great show with tons of insight . Awesome job one if the best I've seen in a minute

  • @zaqsiefert5508
    @zaqsiefert55085 ай бұрын

    I've started referring to positions as "guards, wings, and bigs" a few years ago. Every team is heavier in one of those categories than the others, but its the best categorization imo

  • @mishcav
    @mishcav5 ай бұрын

    100% agree with this, I've been saying it without saying it for some time now, it's not enough to just be a scorer you need to bring another elite skill to contribute to winning basketball. Love the high level analysis & basketball knowledge, you are clearly a student of the game. Thanks for putting the time and effort in to create such high quality, thought provoking content 👏

  • @tipsy09

    @tipsy09

    4 ай бұрын

    i've been a die hard raps fan from day one and i started to say this about derozan near the end of his run and definitely after kawhi came and brought us a ring. and i specifically said this: if derozan brought either elite 3 point shooting or elite defence, the raps would have made at least one finals with him. but derozan brought pretty much nothing of either 3 or D. then kawhi comes along and give you elite defence with good 3 point shooting. derozan is essentially a glorified jamal crawford. guys like derozan get disposed to bottom feeding teams who need to give their fans something to cheer about or players like him will be used as a bridge to mentor the blue chip prospects on the team.

  • @rentilley
    @rentilley5 ай бұрын

    I agree with all your points. Great video, and congratulations on your new direction

  • @jacobmartin3781
    @jacobmartin37815 ай бұрын

    Been watching for a couple years and this is the best video you’ve ever made. Good work Rusty

  • @Simataa
    @Simataa5 ай бұрын

    I agree with everything you said. The only thing I’d add is that part of the reason the 2 is dying is height. As you correctly pointed out, taller and taller players are developing perimeter skills as opposed to big man skills. Ideally, you need to be around 6’8 to be an effective wing in the NBA these days. Teams can’t afford having 2 6’5 or under guys in the line up. If you can score and are undersized, but also can’t really play the one. The best you can hope for is being a back up one. Also: I’ve always believed small ball officially started with the Heat as well. I’d say the Lakers (with Odom) followed by the Magic (with Hedo Turkoglu and Rashard Lewis) were what gave it intrigue.

  • @justinmaxwell4329
    @justinmaxwell43295 ай бұрын

    The idea behind the evolution of positions is a good way to put into words what the media and fans have been discussing for the previous 5-6 years and its a great way to look into the future. I've always been uncomfortable looking at a 2 and seeing them "carry" a team because it seems impossible without a good facilitator by your side, and I'm glad to hear that this seems to be a big change. Also, not a necessary insight, but you look like a mix between the Technology Connections youtuber and late season Timothy Magee from NCIS. That's it.

  • @casimodo285

    @casimodo285

    5 ай бұрын

    Man your fucking right

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    Could it be argued that “traditional” shooting guards are less valuable now because the pace is higher, and teams score more points in general?

  • @TheLolman3433
    @TheLolman34335 ай бұрын

    im lovin the change man, keep it up

  • @aledthomasdavies4254
    @aledthomasdavies42545 ай бұрын

    Love this new form of video. Great instincts to switch it up!

  • @freakreacts7575
    @freakreacts75755 ай бұрын

    Clicked on it. Liked it. Turned out to be an amazing video and hear for more

  • @bc2002
    @bc20025 ай бұрын

    Shooting Guards are tuning into wings I think Anthony Edwards will bring the position back. Its also interesting that they have been using him at the 1,2 and 3 so this will be interesting

  • @trixssbm

    @trixssbm

    5 ай бұрын

    SG has always been wings they were the OG wing

  • @lou1s111
    @lou1s111Ай бұрын

    Great story telling Rusty, thoroughly enjoyed.

  • @antonioleon3123
    @antonioleon31235 ай бұрын

    Amazing video! Instantly puts you right at the frontier of basketball knowledge

  • @camaxxor
    @camaxxor5 ай бұрын

    I would like to see a breakdown of the OKC Thunder in the 2016 playoffs. For the final 3 games of the conference semis against the Spurs and the first four games of the conference finals against the warriors, they went 6-1, against two teams whose combined regular season record was 140-24. When the Thunder would go big with Adams at the 5 and have Kanter come off the bench to play the 4, then you put Ibaka at the 3 and then you have Durant (an effective 5 if he played 40 years ago) who is playing the 2. This lineup was unstoppable for a time! I would like to see a breakdown of how this lineup dominated two of the best regular season teams of all time and then choked.

  • @johnnydeboio3340
    @johnnydeboio33405 ай бұрын

    If you were to guess another position to "die" / be remodeled. Which position would it be? Personally, I think we are gonna see it at the point guard position over the next decade. (More so in the sense of a small guard, like a CP3, IT, Nash, )

  • @benjespina

    @benjespina

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes! The fixation with the "true point guard" will endand combo guards will become the norm.

  • @nicmagtaan1132

    @nicmagtaan1132

    5 ай бұрын

    Even Isiah Thomas and Isaiah Thomas were combo, tiny Archibald too

  • @paquinraino8180

    @paquinraino8180

    5 ай бұрын

    @@benjespina "true point guard" stopped since a moment, GM and owners realize that true PG as your 1st or 2nd option don't win you chip unless you're a point forward like Magic. The only one who did it is Zeke and even him has shooting guards kind performance ( most points in a quarter in playoffs history) and stats ( 26-5-3) when he won ( basically you can't distinguish his FMVP stats from Dumars FMVP stats)

  • @donnyg9993

    @donnyg9993

    5 ай бұрын

    @@benjespina”true point guards” died out a long time ago. If you’re a point guard and can’t shoot 3’s you can’t even get on a G league team anymore (with exceptions)

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    4 ай бұрын

    @@donnyg9993Could Rajon Rondo be the last of those to have a significant career in the league?

  • @callumbishop1193
    @callumbishop11935 ай бұрын

    Great video allows us to see your real knowledge on subjects and to get really in depth on interesting topics

  • @jandrashriker5861
    @jandrashriker58615 ай бұрын

    This is my second watch and the video goes so fast that it doesn't even feel like 40 mins. Really love it!! ♥️

  • @JuanNunez2023
    @JuanNunez20235 ай бұрын

    The first guy that I can remember breaking the PF model was prime Shawn Kemp. At the time, the prototypical PF was Charles Barkley and other similar guys like Dennis Rodman and Larry Johnson. Muscular, fast but not agile, rebound and post up focused. The Reign Man was a 6'10 PF on defense but he could run the floor like a Wing and could stretch the floor a bit(by 90's standards) with a decent mid range game.

  • @christianstylz6158

    @christianstylz6158

    3 ай бұрын

    Kevin Garnett also helped change the position. He was tall, thin, quick and could shoot away from the basket.

  • @RHOMB0ID
    @RHOMB0ID5 ай бұрын

    I think that instead of OG Anunoby, Scottie Barnes is the example that I would go to for the future of shooting guards. He’s an excellent defender and (this year) an excellent shooter. He is also good enough to be a very good-great secondary playmaker, which I think is the main point that might have been missed in the video. Overall though, great video Rusty, I can’t wait to see more.

  • @samoso6979

    @samoso6979

    5 ай бұрын

    Scottie is not a shooting guard lol.

  • @RHOMB0ID

    @RHOMB0ID

    5 ай бұрын

    He’s started nearly every game at the 2 for the Raptors so if you think he’s not a shooting guard you clearly didn’t watch the video.

  • @alohatigers1199

    @alohatigers1199

    5 ай бұрын

    Scottie Barnes is a 4 in my eyes.

  • @davyunwashington3613

    @davyunwashington3613

    5 ай бұрын

    @@samoso6979just like what rusty said he just gonna be a wing which can be the 2-4

  • @Jj-jb4qy
    @Jj-jb4qy5 ай бұрын

    This was vital. Thank you sir

  • @Justvibing5831
    @Justvibing58315 ай бұрын

    Love this style of content and am excited for future videos :)

  • @dionisisbalas6990
    @dionisisbalas69905 ай бұрын

    honestly I am not THE biggest fan of your prior videos, but I understand how much research goes into doing these new types of videos that you are trying to do and in all honesty (with me as mentioned not being so much into your content) this is a great video and a really good analysis, and I cannot wait what is in store for next, keep it up and great job

  • @mystictsukuyomi9007
    @mystictsukuyomi90075 ай бұрын

    Zach lavine as the thumbnail for a power forward video is crazy💀

  • @lost-claim0

    @lost-claim0

    5 ай бұрын

    he’s part of “who’s next”

  • @GiverOfEnergy

    @GiverOfEnergy

    5 ай бұрын

    Common sense is not so common

  • @joehooker7522

    @joehooker7522

    5 ай бұрын

    The thumbnail says death of positions but the title says power forwards

  • @npc_search8870

    @npc_search8870

    5 ай бұрын

    Watch the full video to understand

  • @rolo_swirl1440

    @rolo_swirl1440

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@joehooker7522and who's next

  • @luisgomez-jordanamartin4776
    @luisgomez-jordanamartin47765 ай бұрын

    This was absolutely great. Really happy with the new format, something i can be invested in for 40 minutes. I hope that you are in a better mind state, and that you finding friends around you. I also hope that you found help and got out of the hole that depression makes your life. Weed is a real addiction, it is easier to fight than other addictions but it is still an addition. It makes people more depress, and reduces motivation. Their is actual science behind it, so reducing the levels of weed you consume or cutting out for a while will help. In pandemic i was in a similar hole, and cutting weed out of my life really help. Im happy you move out to a new home and you feeling better. I think on the topic of the video. The Power foward and shooting guard are nowadays kind of lost positions. With the less specified roles what make them special, kind of been hibrid high scoring positions have lost relevance. Nowadays other positions do the same, score a lot, capability to defend multiple positions. I think that explains why they are disappearing. SF was always the more hybrid position, so it has somehow also disappear. Now all that three positions are merging into the foward positions as you saying. The only two positions that still make sense are C and PG. C is defensive anchor and rebounder, PG is the ball handler and playmaker. They will never disappear but all the other three have merge into a nothingness XD

  • @zacharygaskin3668
    @zacharygaskin36685 ай бұрын

    I love this video format. Fantastic.

  • @machravens
    @machravens5 ай бұрын

    This is a great analysis, but one guy that's worth mentioning in the preamble is Robert Horry. Drafted as a 6'9 small forward, he played that position his first two years in the league and won a championship in 1994. In 1995, the Rockets traded their All-Star power forward Otis Thorpe for a wing, and moved Horry to the power forward position. They'd win a championship that year with four shooters and Hakeem. A year later, Horry found himself paired with Shaq and won another three championships, before going to the Spurs and winning another two with Tim Duncan. While he wasn't a true "stretch forward," Horry could guard down to the wings, help on centers, and had three point shooting range in an era where that wasn't really what a "traditional" 4 did.

  • @Jimba93

    @Jimba93

    2 ай бұрын

    You may have a point here. But bear in mind you can't fully explain Horry's legacy with logic. The very fabric of space and time used to bend to accommodate his legend.

  • @q.7556
    @q.75565 ай бұрын

    As a biologist and a basketball fan that Darwinism comparison was awesome and totally echoed my own perspectives. I would argue that in truth, the game will break down over time to really big wings. Point guards are definitely useful, but dudes like Luka who are somewhat of a point forward are pretty ideal. Above Luka in terms of what I expect a star player to look like in about 20 years is Jayson Tatum. Tall, fast, great on defense, willing to make the right play, and an excellent shooter and cutter. I expect to see a lot more “two way” forwards in the near future that overtake the shooting guard position, and eventually the point guard position.

  • @schuylersavage276

    @schuylersavage276

    5 ай бұрын

    YES. Felt this myself for years now. As soon as we started to see so many players 6’8” and up who could do “PG” things when they had the ball? Only seemed logical to think that when there is enough of them that’s what it’s all gonna be?

  • @joaopescusa

    @joaopescusa

    5 ай бұрын

    "what I expect a star player to look like in about 20 years is Jayson Tatum. Tall, fast, great on defense, willing to make the right play, and an excellent shooter and cutter. " That's basically Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant.

  • @paquinraino8180

    @paquinraino8180

    5 ай бұрын

    @@joaopescusa he's talking about a 6'9 player doing that not a 6'4-6'6 player doing it, there's already player like that, but what he's talking about is basically LBJ or PG13

  • @joaopescusa

    @joaopescusa

    5 ай бұрын

    mah man, pg is not great on defense, and his very average offense wise, I'd take a 6'6-6'7 SG who excelled at that than a mid level player like pg.@@paquinraino8180

  • @q.7556

    @q.7556

    5 ай бұрын

    @@joaopescusa Fr fr, but Jayson is taller than the two of them

  • @breadenthusiast
    @breadenthusiast5 ай бұрын

    Wow! Great video Rusty Buckets! One of the best NBA related videos I have seen in a long time. Also looking fresh bro!

  • @bilotto93
    @bilotto934 ай бұрын

    Hands down your best video, loved it!

  • @User45x92
    @User45x925 ай бұрын

    Jacob, I’m turning 21 in a few weeks, and this has been the first year that I have actually been sober from weed and nicotine in 4-5 years. The difference has been night and day. I found the love of my life and have been so motivated that I have even learned a new language in only 7 months. It all started with me making the decision to admit that weed wasn’t medicine for my depression, but rather a major contributing factor. All that to say, I am so happy to see you admitting your addiction, because that’s the first step into a new life. I am also so excited to see your much improved content and wish you best of luck for your creative ventures. You can do it! And don’t forget that help is always a Rudy away❤

  • @tavistaite8592
    @tavistaite85925 ай бұрын

    While I think the PG/Wing trio/C is a good take, don't forget about the other teams who are doing a PG Duo type of approach and finding varying success. Celtics doing the best with it rn, Dallas has quite the offense with their duo, OKC and Atlanta has potential to grow if they can get some better forwards or develop their current ones faster. Also, where does this leave SGs that aren't quite great passers, but have high scoring potential like Anthony Edwards or a bench player like Tim Hardaway Jr.? Nice video Rusty.

  • @jaend6924

    @jaend6924

    5 ай бұрын

    good point. Rockets could have potentially won at least one championship with that Harden CP3 duo

  • @tipsy09

    @tipsy09

    4 ай бұрын

    so what about a guy like derozan

  • @tavistaite8592

    @tavistaite8592

    4 ай бұрын

    @@tipsy09 Well... Go look at Chicago's record xD

  • @tipsy09

    @tipsy09

    4 ай бұрын

    they got two obsolete players in their starting lineup lol@@tavistaite8592

  • @kiyanweiss7085
    @kiyanweiss70855 ай бұрын

    THIS VIDEO WAS REALLY GREAT, LOVING THE NEW UPLOAD STYLE

  • @allenllewellynkra
    @allenllewellynkra5 ай бұрын

    Great video. One of the best basketball analysis videos I've seen in a while

  • @readingrainbow8112
    @readingrainbow81125 ай бұрын

    Joel Anthony is one of those players who seems bad but actually played a large role in that team. Played a lot of defense and made a lot of hustle plays.

  • @Peakfreud

    @Peakfreud

    5 ай бұрын

    Very True

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    5 ай бұрын

    Hustle isn’t a stat so he probably has a worse box score than his value in that regard

  • @jacobyounce3223
    @jacobyounce32235 ай бұрын

    LETS FUCKING GOOOOOOO ITS FINALLY HERE

  • @elliottrusso7351
    @elliottrusso73515 ай бұрын

    This is awesome dude. So proud of your evolution.

  • @BrianDBacon
    @BrianDBacon5 ай бұрын

    One of the best pieces of basketball content I’ve seen in quite awhile. Excellent work. Great to me that you ended it as an opportunity for open discussion. I’ve been sensing what you are espousing as well. I don’t currently have much to argue about. I’m an avid spurs fan and I’m watching a failure of a point forward happen in front of my eyes with the experiment with sochan… it would appear the league might turn into a bunch of point guards with length and high value playmaking ability with scoring and dynamic centers. The roster construction of what I would consider high value add players tend to be one or the other with a lot of tremendous defensive talent and pure athleticism coupled with the 3 pt consistency at the other “positions”. Quality rim protection and length will always be valuable. As will ball handling and decision making with the ones with the ball in their hand.

  • @bobhollywood4093
    @bobhollywood40935 ай бұрын

    Love the new format! It's crazy to think that SGs will go the way of the dodo. Twenty years ago, that was probably the most hyped position with Kobe, McGrady, Vince and AI. All good things must come to an end, however.

  • @billblaski9523

    @billblaski9523

    5 ай бұрын

    Lol for real, no superstar shooting guards anymore really

  • @billblaski9523

    @billblaski9523

    5 ай бұрын

    And most those guys played the 3 as well yes?

  • @bobhollywood4093

    @bobhollywood4093

    5 ай бұрын

    @@billblaski9523 no.

  • @bobhollywood4093

    @bobhollywood4093

    5 ай бұрын

    @@billblaski9523 I misread yer comment. Yes. They occasionally played up a position, but they were primarily twos.

  • @fortynights1513

    @fortynights1513

    4 ай бұрын

    @@bobhollywood4093Wouldn’t the shooting guard be more valuable if points are more scarce?

  • @rocketdoggie6441
    @rocketdoggie64415 ай бұрын

    Not home rn but I’m really excited to get home and watch just to figure out why the hell Zach Lavine is next to Tim Duncan

  • @marshallhanlon1872
    @marshallhanlon18725 ай бұрын

    Great video! Wonderful use of both history and theory to chart out a position on the game.

  • @fitzgeraldgerundio8123
    @fitzgeraldgerundio81234 ай бұрын

    It's just so amazing that when you are seeing this kind of videos, it's like you're reading a book. This is so nice❤ keep it up❤

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