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I think the modern day post play is different from the post play during the 80's & 90's era. Yung 80's & 90's post play was more of a main designed play in which the big man posting up is usually in an isolation play & the post player takes his time to maneuver inside. Modern post play is usually a quick seal made by the big man in which he seals deep inside, then as he gets the ball, he'll make quick maneuver to the basket or go for a turnaround fadeaway shot or a semi-hook shot. I think modern day post play is more like a "nakaw" play.
I think the modern day post play is different from the post play during the 80's & 90's era. Yung 80's & 90's post play was more of a main designed play in which the big man posting up is usually in an isolation play & the post player takes his time to maneuver inside. Modern post play is usually a quick seal made by the big man in which he seals deep inside, then as he gets the ball, he'll make quick maneuver to the basket or go for a turnaround fadeaway shot or a semi-hook shot. I think modern day post play is more like a "nakaw" play.
Ideally, if we have a good offensive big, our guards should be trained in making a proper entry pass once the big seals down low. Reward the big.
Eto problema when our offenses are often guard-centric.
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Wow!
How good kaya is the son? This boy can grow to 6-foot-9 to 6-foot-10 max. If he plays like his dad, then imagine what a 6-10 RDO can do in the game.
"A king may move a man, a father may claim a son, but that man can also move himself, and only then does that man truly begin his own game. Remember that howsoever you are played or by whom, your soul is in your keeping alone, even though those who presume to play you be kings or men of power, when you stand before God, you cannot say, 'But I was told by others to do thus,' or that virtue was not convenient at the time. This will not suffice." - King Baldwin IV
Ideally, if we have a good offensive big, our guards should be trained in making a proper entry pass once the big seals down low. Reward the big.
Eto problema when our offenses are often guard-centric.
Specially during transition, the big man has a good seal down low tapos hindi papasahan ng gwardya. Parang gusto kong batukan yung gwardya. I like what you said, reward the big fella for running down quickly in offense.
I'm a lousy basketball player but in terms of passing, I can say I'm above average
"A king may move a man, a father may claim a son, but that man can also move himself, and only then does that man truly begin his own game. Remember that howsoever you are played or by whom, your soul is in your keeping alone, even though those who presume to play you be kings or men of power, when you stand before God, you cannot say, 'But I was told by others to do thus,' or that virtue was not convenient at the time. This will not suffice." - King Baldwin IV
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Wow!
How good kaya is the son? This boy can grow to 6-foot-9 to 6-foot-10 max. If he plays like his dad, then imagine what a 6-10 RDO can do in the game.
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Wow!
How good kaya is the son? This boy can grow to 6-foot-9 to 6-foot-10 max. If he plays like his dad, then imagine what a 6-10 RDO can do in the game.
He would be a Euroleague/NBL-caliber player. A 6'5 RDO was already a force in Gilas. Imagine, if his son becomes 6'10-6'11 with his skills - he will be basically unguardable. The frontline of Kai, Kouame, Edu and this kid (assuming he becomes the bigger RDO) will be a formidable force in Asia. That's a wishful thinking ofcourse.
DE OCAMPO FAMILY
LEFT: RDO WITH HIS SON RDO JR.
RIGHT: YDO WITH HIS SON YONRY
DE OCAMPO FAMILY
LEFT: RDO WITH HIS SON RDO JR. ( Probably 6'6-6'7)
RIGHT: YDO WITH HIS SON YONRY ( hard to measure especially he is w shoes while YDO is w/o shoes. But YDO is taller. i think yonry is maybe 6'2-6'3 at best)
Anyway, I hope they play basketball like their fathers
post play is definitely not dead. kobe was making the most of his late stage career with his post plays. the reason why a lot of traditional big men are not getting minutes in the NBA is because most of them cannot defend guards on switches. if kai can be quick/smart enough to guard the perimeter on the defensive end while relying mostly on post plays on the offensive end he can have a long nba career
I think in Asian basketball level, the post play would still be very relevant in the years to come. If an asian team has a Hadadi, or a Wang Zhizhi, or a Mengke Bateer, or a Seo Jang Hoon, pweding gawing palabigasan ang post play specially if it can find a mismatch.
It's crucial that we train both big positions to post-up. It adds another dimension to our offense if we have fours that can post-up. Hopefully we can teach bigs the size of Baltazar and Tamayo how to post up as a 4.
Japan just lost a close game vs. Senegal in the 2021 FIBA World U-19 Cup. Checking Japan's roster, they have about 5 players standing 6-7/6-8. The Jap youth team has become bigger. I remember the Jap team in the FIBA asia u-16 tournament a few years ago na maliit with hardly any player standing at least 6-6. Batang Gilas on the other hand had Kai Sotto
"A king may move a man, a father may claim a son, but that man can also move himself, and only then does that man truly begin his own game. Remember that howsoever you are played or by whom, your soul is in your keeping alone, even though those who presume to play you be kings or men of power, when you stand before God, you cannot say, 'But I was told by others to do thus,' or that virtue was not convenient at the time. This will not suffice." - King Baldwin IV
He would be a Euroleague/NBL-caliber player. A 6'5 RDO was already a force in Gilas. Imagine, if his son becomes 6'10-6'11 with his skills - he will be basically unguardable. The frontline of Kai, Kouame, Edu and this kid (assuming he becomes the bigger RDO) will be a formidable force in Asia. That's a wishful thinking ofcourse.
How tall is Ranidel De Ocampo Sr actually?? He was measured at 6'4" back in 2004. Looks like 6'5" in last few years in the PBA
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