mporter said:
I'm all for the elimination of the three point line. Won't happen, but it would really change the game back to pure basketball.
one man's "pure" is another man's "boring."
i grew up on utah "running redskin" (now "running utes") basketball. i loved showtime with magic, worthy and the lakers. fast-break basketball says, the minute i grab a defensive rebound, i'm on offense. it's an open-court game. it's exciting.
in fact, two of the greatest innovators in college basketball became innovators simply by opening up the court. john wooden recognized that most kids were slow and couldn't go to their opposite hand, so he recruited quick kids, pressed full-court and created a dynasty.
paul westhead at loyola marymount was the first coach to fully exploit the three-point shot. he too pressed all over the court, but on offense, told his kids to jack up the first open shot, no matter where it was. result was, he created a wildly exciting brand of basketball, got loyola marymount on tv almost every week, and upset an alabama team in the ncaa tournament that featured future nba stars latrell sprewell and robert horry. that he failed in the pros may have had more to do with a personality conflict with magic johnson than with the system itself.
i think in the future, we'll see a further "opening out" of the full-court game. during the ncaa tournament this year, i saw a feature on kevin love of ucla, who has learned to make a full-court heave that is remarkably accurate. it's no secret teams practise last-second, half-court scenarios, and many kids have become adept at the half-court shot. i personally would like to see a true "home run" in basketball, where any shot from backcourt counts for four points. this would add a lot of excitement, and force teams to defend everywhere. that to me is exciting basketball.
but "pure"? "pure" is peach baskets. i want to be on the side of evolution.