I love the new deep dice presentation Rusty. Good job. I come to your videos all the time but I had to unsub both channels cause you always ignore Miami. So we had to destroy your Bulls tonight AGAIN. But I still like your videos cause you do a great job.
Bro this is your best video yet! Your product has massively improved specifically the video filming, editing and equipment. You really spit some extraordinarily insightful knowledge too! Fantastic job!
One of the many reasons I love rusty is his willingness to call out Karl malone EVERY. SINGLE. TIME. he mentions him. Others definetly need to follow rustys lead on this
@@TheChrismasCow got a 13 year old pregnant when he was 20 then refused as an NBA player to pay 200 dollars a week in child support or have any relationship with his son
I always find it so crazy how some people don’t know how much Duncan really carried the early Spurs the game plan was just let Tim dominate and we’ll win
Rusty, you are getting better and better. Eloquent yet comprehensive, broad yet to the point, witty with a dash of sarcastic demeanour. And so hard working - I don't know how you manage to produce so much content, honestly. You sir, are a true gem!
This is a great video. That interview with Steve Kerr was sheer magic. He was 100% right. These championship coaches inherited teams with the necessary talent to run their system.
Another overlooked thing is that the suns took advantage of the “freedom of movement” rule changes. The head of the committee that made the change was also the suns GM. I believe his name was Jerry Colangelo.
Wilt couldve had a better career if he had a consistently good system. Philly's system made wilt less productive but more team oriented. If that system had continued, wilt would have 3-5 chips instead of 2.
Wilt was a choker in the playoffs and several coaches even teammates have said he was a stat paddler and that was his main focus. I'm sure if it wasn't for that. He would have had a goat case. Alex was a great coach for Philly and changed wilt when they won the title in 1967
I like this video idea a lot. Especially when understanding system with the player. Another example is MJ you knew he was great before the triangle, but the triangle helped make him a champion.
"System Player" in mind is a compliment because you actually need to reach a peak to be labeled one this system needs to be so dominant with you at the helm that it is a sign of personal dominance if the team is built around you which as in most ways work from the time they benefit from great coaching combined with the actual pure skill
Rusty is wearing a suit. Shits about to go down! Let't go! The way i see it, talents commands the system, because why would a coach make a system that does not help put their talent in the most winning-est position?
If you're a coach with a top talent, and are able to win some championships, that makes your career, because then you are seen as a winning coach. And people listen to what you have to say, and give you respect, which is what a coach needs. If no one listens to or respects the coach, it doesn't matter how good he is.
Rusty, these deep dives are extraordinary!!! You've become my favorite NBA UA-cam star. Aesthetically these videos have become elevated with lights, dressing, background music, nice pace and cool editing. In terms of the content it is insightful, compassionate and funny. It goes beyond basketball and makes me thing about myself, life and change how I evaluate others.
This topic exposes a lot of coaches. How many coaches can you say run a system that takes full advantage of their top talent? I feel like the majority don't. The evidence being that there are so few teams that have an easily identifiable system at all. This was especially obvious to me when the warriors were taking off. Other teams just started shooting more and more from farther out without the talent to do so. There seems to be very little creativity among nba coaches when their top player's skillet isn't the same as the top 3-5 players in the league.
The current bulls is a great example of adjusting their system on their current roster. It gave demar more wings without clipping lavine's. It surprised me ngl.
Well, consider this. The adoption of effective systems is somewhat limited by lack of continuity in many organizations, and it tends to take time to identify a system from the outside. We know D'Antoni deploys systems because his initial system was named years ago, and because he has run identified systems since. However, none of his systems have led to a championship and he has run at least four - the seven seconds or less suns, the harden-heliocentric version, the binary star harden-paul tandem, and the harden-westbrook alternating-heliocentric. Each of these systems were great to an extent, the last two were brought down by injuries primarily. This year we have a lot of teams that crawled out of the dark, including the Bulls, the Cavaliers, the Wizards and potentially the Timberwolves. Each of these teams has a new identity, a new play style, but do they have systems? I think the Cavaliers do, same with the Bulls, but we haven't really named them yet.
It's tough to coach at all in the NBA. How are you gonna demand things of your players? Remember Melo saying he didn't want to play in the Triangle? He also didn't want to play D'antoni ball. Nah, what he wanted was to jab step until the shot clock wound down, and then take a tough shot. :D Look at Curry, look at Nash, look at Duncan. All are humble, hard working, coachable stars. When your best player is coachable, it sets the tone. For most teams, the players just wanna ball out. Most players want a coach that ain't gonna tell them shit, just hype them up and let them ball out. Leadership comes from the top down, and that means owners. Good teams have good owners, and good owners get good coaches and GMs, who get good players. When everything is in alignment, dynasties happen.
I feel like the idea of “system players” comes from football as schematics affect the effectiveness of the players way more than in basketball. For example, Tom Brady was labeled a system player for a long time as the Patriots offense was still very good even when players like Matt Cassell, who hadn’t started a football game since high school, were playing, which made it seem like Brady was only good because of the system he was in.
@@kyvsthewrld tom brady is the best guy for the system he is in, or whatever it is but mostly i find the arguments about his team's defense winning stuff
That’s a good point I sometimes listen to people use the term “system player” and they know what they’re talking about but theyre using the term like you would for football
I'd argue, that "Phenomenal Player Development" is the Spurs System. It is really insane, how much value they got out of low draft picks. Like almost every pick outperformed expectations. I mean, they drafted George Hill with the 26th Pick, formed him into a "We might give up a 15th Pick" player in 3 years and then drafted a future Finals MVP with that pick. In hindsight, trading Hill for Leonard should be one of the worst all-time trades. But that hindsight only works, because the Spurs were that good at developing players...
Yeah, Kawhi was drafted as a defense guy, who might develop a 3pt shot and be a 3 and D guy. Instead he became MJ lite, before injuries. A lot of that is on him, but you could believe him developing that way on the Spurs. What if Kawhi was drafted by the Sacramento Kings? Yeeesh...
after watching all your deep dives which is personally my favorite you have def earned my sub ... should of done it sooner tbh I love your style and agree with everything you say and Im a diehard warrior and curry fan from the bay - thanks for the content
Welll done Rusty. You can also apply this to teams with good front offices like GMs and presidents for basketball operations. Take a player like Lebron who suffered from bad management his first several years and put him in the Spurs while taking away Duncan and we still would have won at least 5 chips because the front office would have given Lebron good players to play with and developed nearly everyone to their potential. Lebron would not have needed to put his team in hostage situations with his short contracts in the 2010s because they would have been competent, giving him confidence to sign long-term and not worry about bone headed decision making and failing to surround him with talent.
I think in the fullness of time, Lebron will be underrated because he wasted half his career fighting inertia and incompetence to bring a title to Cleveland.
As an ISU fan I was not expecting the Hoiberg call out. Interestingly at Iowa State we currently have one of Hoiberg's assistants as the head coach, TJ Otzelberger, who does seem to adapt to the players he has. First year no shooters so slow the game down and have grinding tough defense, we literally won a few games without breaking 50. Now we got some shooters so keep that tough defense but space it out more to let our shooters shoot and give our guards room to drive to the basket
Stephon Marbury the year before nash arrived, with amare, with marion, with dantoni as coach, still couldn't win even .500 level, let alone 62 wins. Nash made the system. Even another all star level pg wasnt gonna make close to the same impact. Also in the moment NOONE qas saying amare was as good as nash lol. Its the kids nowadays 15+ years later that simply didn't watch or follow basketball back then
My son Jacob "rusty" buckets. I'm really feeling how as your subscribers increase so does your swag. Slowly and steadily u showing where that UA-cam money is going. Salute
It boggles the mind how the Spurs tactical approach in the Duncan era is just lost to the eyes of the average watcher of this sport. OF COURSE they had a perfectly build system around Duncan, what people don't seem to get though is that Pop didn't just say "Hey Tim, just pick up the ball and carry us". The San Antonio Spurs' dynasty and basketball legacy in general was built around one of the most meticulous and detailed defensive plans in league history, all centered around Tim Duncan's ability to actually organize a defense. Sure, his individual defensive skills were amazing, but what truly made them elite was his perception of the game, ability to read the opposition's set and being able to disrupt it either by doing it himself or even by directing other around him to do so. All that was built by combining Greg Popovic and his astute basketball mind, a great player (that could positively affect others) and his strongest attributes (in this case defense) and a soundly constructed roster that could execute the plan. Stop making it about one player or one "system". Basketball is one of the most tactically deep sports, so undervaluing even on of the aformentioned factors is doing the sport a disservice.
Glad someone is talking about this topic. One of my all time favorites (Deron WIlliams) often got the "system player" tag from fans and I always said the players make the system. I was once told that D-will wasn't better than CP3 because any point guard could play that role in Jerry Sloan's system.
Nice Video! I feel like this is also happening with Jokic this season to an extent. Obviously, on defense atm, the Nuggets play a PnR defensive scheme that allows Jokic to hedge and recover, as opposed to the prior drop coverage which suited Jokic to a lesser extent. This is why a lot of people are discrediting his defensive improvements and MVP candidacy, in addition to the voter fatigue which is likely to also occur.
Rusty, we need a video about glorified role players. Guys who are 2nd or 3rd most important players on a championship team but cant carry a team to the playoffs. For example, Draymond, Rodman, Ben Wallace etc
My guy Rusty looking fresh as fuck! Also, I haven't watched the video yet, but when I think of a system player, I think of a player who needs a certain style of team play and teammates in order to maximize their abilities. Lebron, for example, requires the ball in order to maximize both his scoring and playmaking, so he's technically a system player. Hence, the "Lebron System' where his ability as the greatest Floor Raiser in history means every team that was ran through him was an instant contender when he was younger. Klay and Draymond would be system players where the offense should *not* be ran through them in order to maximize their potential offensively, since Draymond works well as a Playmaker and skip passer instead of a Scorer, and Klay works the opposite angle, being an amazing Shooter and Scorer while not being a primary or secondary Playmaker. However, a lot of fans don't care about fit and roles, and only care about production, regardless of context. If 15 2017 Russell Westbrook's were on the same team, they would still all be the same player, but their individual impact and production would be terribly diminished due to their poor fit. So while someone may be labeled a "system player", it really just means that they require a certain playstyle and teammates in order to be maximised and that when they're in a different role, they will have a decreased impact.
I know this is an old video (I’ve watched most your others) but thank you for calling out Malone like you do. What that man did was horrific and doesn’t get talked about enough. Also, excellent excellent video
@Fries even in the eastern conference in the 2000s, take like LeBron. The system wasn’t favorable which becomes a problem. Now sure LeBron was playing in the weak east, but getting that Cavs team to the finals would’ve been easier if he didn’t have to do so much on offense. Or heck, Tim Duncan having probably the GOAT coach is beneficial, but still carried the team in ‘03.
@Fries yep. I’ve got MJ at 1 and LeBron at 2. MJ’s finals opponents were some of the greatest. But yeah I always try to appreciate LeBron knowing he’s not gonna be around forever
I want to add though that good couches like Kerr and Jackson sometimes also get heat because they “wouldn’t have won without the super stars.” And that’s true! But it’s not a knock on them for inheriting good talent. Maybe the warriors would have won one less without Kerr building a proper system around his talent. I’m almost positive the lakers would not have three peated without Jackson managing the egos of Kobe and shaq. And even the bulls might not have one or two of those three peats without Jackson’s system. I think the couches deserve some credit for managing good talent, just like the players deserve credit for being talented. Everyone has a role to play in a championship.
hey rusty you should do a deep dive on 3pt shooting and how people have overrated it and overlooked mid range jump shots at the end of games specifically
Is it really? What about those 30 screens, half of which are illegal, from Draymond, what about the 2nd best player there who gives him space in Klay, everytime they win anything they’re a super deep roster with with role players playing bigger than they are
@@somregularguy It's Curry's fault the refs aren't calling ilegal screens? It's Curry's fault that Klay is a good player and Keer knows how to coach properly? In the end of the day, it's Curry's team, he IS the system, that team lives and dies playing Curry ball, he is good enough to build a team around, and good enough to make it work, Curry is not a system player, he is an all time great that got the opportunity to have a team build around him, and what happened when an team, a coach, an organization, a city put their trust on Curry, that let him go off and made all the moves to better use his talent? one of the greatest dynasties in the history of the NBA. Curry IS the System, that team will live and die for him.
I appreciate this deep dive a great deal, in part because it dovetails with my own opinion, but also because it was concise and clear. It would be interesting to see further expansion on the topic, covering how systems develop with examples of system and talent mismatch (Quinn Buckner + Triangle, Mavericks Triple J Ranch), the adjustment process in practice (D'Antoni), and systemic decay (Dame's Blazers?) and/or successful non-system teams.
I've watched a couple of your videos. But this one is so on point. When debating others. I basically wanna give em this video. Both the player and system are working together to make each other work. That's what creates the best teams and players. So as you asked. I liked and subscribed. And btw I was your 3k like. Keep up the good work.
I think its a fact that every Mike D'Antoni player becomes a system player. He elevated Jeremy Lin, Raymond Felton, Earl Clark, and Kendall Marshall from bench warmers to starters, Steve Nash and James Harden from allstars to MVPs.
There were times for the spurs (obviously not all the time) where damn near the WHOLE offensive system was give Duncan the ball down low and let something happen. So to say he was only great because of the spurs system is wild. Great video
New Deep Dive! - ua-cam.com/video/kc1mXZJ3Xb4/v-deo.html
2nd channel (post game reactions) - ua-cam.com/channels/LlZZVU8QBpMHVT7kdEbpSQ.html
This deep dive is so good I wish I could sub twice. Hope you hit 200k soon
I love the new deep dice presentation Rusty. Good job. I come to your videos all the time but I had to unsub both channels cause you always ignore Miami.
So we had to destroy your Bulls tonight AGAIN. But I still like your videos cause you do a great job.
For your next deep dive do "woulda coulda shoulda nba" and do the biggest what ifs/mistakes of the past 5 or 10 years
Bro this is your best video yet! Your product has massively improved specifically the video filming, editing and equipment. You really spit some extraordinarily insightful knowledge too! Fantastic job!
One of the many reasons I love rusty is his willingness to call out Karl malone EVERY. SINGLE. TIME. he mentions him. Others definetly need to follow rustys lead on this
What did he do?
@@TheChrismasCow got a 13 year old pregnant when he was 20 then refused as an NBA player to pay 200 dollars a week in child support or have any relationship with his son
I think that kid is now in the NFL but that might a different Karl Malone kid
Karl Malone even tried to hit on Kobe’s wife while he was injured and was kobes team / ex team mate. He’s a disgusting dude
@@gokublackarcsaga752 it be like that.
I always find it so crazy how some people don’t know how much Duncan really carried the early Spurs the game plan was just let Tim dominate and we’ll win
He went toe to toe with shaq and kobe in their primes and got the best of them a couple times
@@souljaseet438 he even had Kobe crying on the sidelines one of those years.
I think people are pretty aware of the defensive force he was for most of his career. His offence though, yeah, a lot of people forget that.
@@12savage68 yeah Duncan is underrated deserves his name in the tier just below Mj and Lebron
@@souljaseet438 maybe even above lebron ...he's beat him a few times in the finals.
Rusty, you are getting better and better. Eloquent yet comprehensive, broad yet to the point, witty with a dash of sarcastic demeanour. And so hard working - I don't know how you manage to produce so much content, honestly. You sir, are a true gem!
u spittin bro facts
@@ConnorDudley585 ong
Wats that guitar ?
Indubitably
This is a great video. That interview with Steve Kerr was sheer magic. He was 100% right. These championship coaches inherited teams with the necessary talent to run their system.
That interview came out while I was making the video too.. just amazing timing
@@rustybuckets fate, if you will
@@rustybuckets Kismet or not, I'm putting this video in my "Favorites" playlist. Awesome job!
Rusty’s going all out with the suit, gotta respect it lol
looking fine ngl
Another overlooked thing is that the suns took advantage of the “freedom of movement” rule changes. The head of the committee that made the change was also the suns GM. I believe his name was Jerry Colangelo.
LOW did a video about that.
Algo
Wilt couldve had a better career if he had a consistently good system. Philly's system made wilt less productive but more team oriented. If that system had continued, wilt would have 3-5 chips instead of 2.
He definitely should have won 69 and 70 on the lakers
The system made the team productive
Wilt was a choker in the playoffs and several coaches even teammates have said he was a stat paddler and that was his main focus. I'm sure if it wasn't for that. He would have had a goat case. Alex was a great coach for Philly and changed wilt when they won the title in 1967
@@tj5180 cant deny that. He only cared about his stats. But his chip in 1967 proves that he had some potential
@@tj5180 wilt also got fouled alot, like more than jordan rules fouled that takes a toll on your body and mind
I like this video idea a lot. Especially when understanding system with the player. Another example is MJ you knew he was great before the triangle, but the triangle helped make him a champion.
Exactly, just like curry he was already an All-star and an All-NBA team player but needed that something extra to start winning silverware
Looking real sharp and fresh Rusty my boy. I like it
It’s a team game. So crediting the entire team for an accomplishment is whats best.
"System Player" in mind is a compliment because you actually need to reach a peak to be labeled one
this system needs to be so dominant with you at the helm that it is a sign of personal dominance if the team is built around you which as in most ways work from the time they benefit from great coaching combined with the actual pure skill
Been a fan since you were sub-30k subs. It's crazy seeing how far you've grown and how much better your videos have become. Proud of you 👑
Your drip ain't rusty. What a fit.
Rusty is wearing a suit. Shits about to go down! Let't go!
The way i see it, talents commands the system, because why would a coach make a system that does not help put their talent in the most winning-est position?
Pop always openly said that his whole success happened because Duncan was an anchor of the team.
If you're a coach with a top talent, and are able to win some championships, that makes your career, because then you are seen as a winning coach. And people listen to what you have to say, and give you respect, which is what a coach needs. If no one listens to or respects the coach, it doesn't matter how good he is.
Rusty, these deep dives are extraordinary!!! You've become my favorite NBA UA-cam star. Aesthetically these videos have become elevated with lights, dressing, background music, nice pace and cool editing. In terms of the content it is insightful, compassionate and funny. It goes beyond basketball and makes me thing about myself, life and change how I evaluate others.
This topic exposes a lot of coaches. How many coaches can you say run a system that takes full advantage of their top talent? I feel like the majority don't. The evidence being that there are so few teams that have an easily identifiable system at all.
This was especially obvious to me when the warriors were taking off. Other teams just started shooting more and more from farther out without the talent to do so. There seems to be very little creativity among nba coaches when their top player's skillet isn't the same as the top 3-5 players in the league.
The current bulls is a great example of adjusting their system on their current roster. It gave demar more wings without clipping lavine's. It surprised me ngl.
Well, consider this. The adoption of effective systems is somewhat limited by lack of continuity in many organizations, and it tends to take time to identify a system from the outside.
We know D'Antoni deploys systems because his initial system was named years ago, and because he has run identified systems since. However, none of his systems have led to a championship and he has run at least four - the seven seconds or less suns, the harden-heliocentric version, the binary star harden-paul tandem, and the harden-westbrook alternating-heliocentric. Each of these systems were great to an extent, the last two were brought down by injuries primarily.
This year we have a lot of teams that crawled out of the dark, including the Bulls, the Cavaliers, the Wizards and potentially the Timberwolves. Each of these teams has a new identity, a new play style, but do they have systems? I think the Cavaliers do, same with the Bulls, but we haven't really named them yet.
It's tough to coach at all in the NBA. How are you gonna demand things of your players? Remember Melo saying he didn't want to play in the Triangle? He also didn't want to play D'antoni ball. Nah, what he wanted was to jab step until the shot clock wound down, and then take a tough shot. :D
Look at Curry, look at Nash, look at Duncan. All are humble, hard working, coachable stars. When your best player is coachable, it sets the tone. For most teams, the players just wanna ball out. Most players want a coach that ain't gonna tell them shit, just hype them up and let them ball out.
Leadership comes from the top down, and that means owners. Good teams have good owners, and good owners get good coaches and GMs, who get good players. When everything is in alignment, dynasties happen.
Looking quite drippy in this video, Rusty
I feel like the idea of “system players” comes from football as schematics affect the effectiveness of the players way more than in basketball. For example, Tom Brady was labeled a system player for a long time as the Patriots offense was still very good even when players like Matt Cassell, who hadn’t started a football game since high school, were playing, which made it seem like Brady was only good because of the system he was in.
System player arguments be so annoying I remember people were on tom brady for that and look at him now😭
@@kyvsthewrld tom brady is the best guy for the system he is in, or whatever it is but mostly i find the arguments about his team's defense winning stuff
That’s a good point I sometimes listen to people use the term “system player” and they know what they’re talking about but theyre using the term like you would for football
Joe montana and steve young are the perfect example of a system player
That ending really tied up the argument flawlessly. Amazing video.
This got a secret base vibe. I fuck with it
I'd argue, that "Phenomenal Player Development" is the Spurs System. It is really insane, how much value they got out of low draft picks. Like almost every pick outperformed expectations.
I mean, they drafted George Hill with the 26th Pick, formed him into a "We might give up a 15th Pick" player in 3 years and then drafted a future Finals MVP with that pick.
In hindsight, trading Hill for Leonard should be one of the worst all-time trades. But that hindsight only works, because the Spurs were that good at developing players...
Yeah, Kawhi was drafted as a defense guy, who might develop a 3pt shot and be a 3 and D guy. Instead he became MJ lite, before injuries. A lot of that is on him, but you could believe him developing that way on the Spurs. What if Kawhi was drafted by the Sacramento Kings? Yeeesh...
I fucking love these videos so much. I can tell how much effort is put in these videos and it shows.
Get this man to 200k he grinds his ass off he really deserves it!
Fact
If no one has said it yet Rusty (and someone already probably did) your Deep Dives are astounding! Keep doing them!
Bruh Rusty fits lately been looking too crispy 🥶
after watching all your deep dives which is personally my favorite you have def earned my sub ... should of done it sooner tbh I love your style and agree with everything you say and Im a diehard warrior and curry fan from the bay - thanks for the content
"With the exception of maybe Tim Duncan (as compared to Kevin Garnet )"
^Too true, glad KG finally got a real team and a ring before he retired.
Welll done Rusty. You can also apply this to teams with good front offices like GMs and presidents for basketball operations. Take a player like Lebron who suffered from bad management his first several years and put him in the Spurs while taking away Duncan and we still would have won at least 5 chips because the front office would have given Lebron good players to play with and developed nearly everyone to their potential. Lebron would not have needed to put his team in hostage situations with his short contracts in the 2010s because they would have been competent, giving him confidence to sign long-term and not worry about bone headed decision making and failing to surround him with talent.
I think in the fullness of time, Lebron will be underrated because he wasted half his career fighting inertia and incompetence to bring a title to Cleveland.
Great video, man! After the bit from Steve Kerr I could only think about the Nick Nurse situation in 2019…
Seeing Jannero Pargo catch slander in 2021 is something I would've never seen coming
Nash, Curry, Duncan.. they make the systems work
been here since 20k keep up the good work rusty love your content
Great Video Rusty!
As an ISU fan I was not expecting the Hoiberg call out. Interestingly at Iowa State we currently have one of Hoiberg's assistants as the head coach, TJ Otzelberger, who does seem to adapt to the players he has. First year no shooters so slow the game down and have grinding tough defense, we literally won a few games without breaking 50. Now we got some shooters so keep that tough defense but space it out more to let our shooters shoot and give our guards room to drive to the basket
I like the editing of TD and KG while narrating the comparison of the players within the system especially since im a KG fan. Subtle
Rusty is going really hard with his content! Hopefully you don’t get burned out. Your health is your wealth after all
Stephon Marbury the year before nash arrived, with amare, with marion, with dantoni as coach, still couldn't win even .500 level, let alone 62 wins. Nash made the system. Even another all star level pg wasnt gonna make close to the same impact.
Also in the moment NOONE qas saying amare was as good as nash lol. Its the kids nowadays 15+ years later that simply didn't watch or follow basketball back then
My son Jacob "rusty" buckets. I'm really feeling how as your subscribers increase so does your swag. Slowly and steadily u showing where that UA-cam money is going. Salute
Deep Dive is great dude. I loved this and Coach Pop episodes.
Loved the video. The ending quote is spot on. Keep it up Rusty!
Bro this background and set up looks amazing it got me so intrigued
Lol I loved this video Rusty, but I hope you meant except Kobe vs Nash @ 12:40
Just to let you know your my favorite UA-camr!! I love you man. god damn I just can't get enough of your videos. I wish someday I can meet you
It boggles the mind how the Spurs tactical approach in the Duncan era is just lost to the eyes of the average watcher of this sport. OF COURSE they had a perfectly build system around Duncan, what people don't seem to get though is that Pop didn't just say "Hey Tim, just pick up the ball and carry us".
The San Antonio Spurs' dynasty and basketball legacy in general was built around one of the most meticulous and detailed defensive plans in league history, all centered around Tim Duncan's ability to actually organize a defense. Sure, his individual defensive skills were amazing, but what truly made them elite was his perception of the game, ability to read the opposition's set and being able to disrupt it either by doing it himself or even by directing other around him to do so.
All that was built by combining Greg Popovic and his astute basketball mind, a great player (that could positively affect others) and his strongest attributes (in this case defense) and a soundly constructed roster that could execute the plan. Stop making it about one player or one "system". Basketball is one of the most tactically deep sports, so undervaluing even on of the aformentioned factors is doing the sport a disservice.
love the vids keep it up‼️
Glad someone is talking about this topic. One of my all time favorites (Deron WIlliams) often got the "system player" tag from fans and I always said the players make the system. I was once told that D-will wasn't better than CP3 because any point guard could play that role in Jerry Sloan's system.
Coming back to this one, glad you got over 200k subs!!!
Rudy be KILLING it extra hard on the editing on these deep dives
This videos are getting better every time
Nice Video!
I feel like this is also happening with Jokic this season to an extent. Obviously, on defense atm, the Nuggets play a PnR defensive scheme that allows Jokic to hedge and recover, as opposed to the prior drop coverage which suited Jokic to a lesser extent. This is why a lot of people are discrediting his defensive improvements and MVP candidacy, in addition to the voter fatigue which is likely to also occur.
Deep dives getting better and better!!! More power to you rusty.
Much love rusty 💯🙏🏽 been here since before 100k subs and your destined for millions
Man if y’all don’t hurry up and get this man to 200k. Dude pumps out amazing videos.
WELL DONE! Very thorough. I really enjoyed that. Very informative. Thank you. Extra points for calling out Karl Malone.😂
That joke caught me off guard ngl
BEST VID IN THE SERIES SO FAR! much love Rusty, keep up the great content. :D
Rusty, we need a video about glorified role players. Guys who are 2nd or 3rd most important players on a championship team but cant carry a team to the playoffs. For example, Draymond, Rodman, Ben Wallace etc
Or anthony davis lol
My guy Rusty looking fresh as fuck!
Also, I haven't watched the video yet, but when I think of a system player, I think of a player who needs a certain style of team play and teammates in order to maximize their abilities.
Lebron, for example, requires the ball in order to maximize both his scoring and playmaking, so he's technically a system player. Hence, the "Lebron System' where his ability as the greatest Floor Raiser in history means every team that was ran through him was an instant contender when he was younger.
Klay and Draymond would be system players where the offense should *not* be ran through them in order to maximize their potential offensively, since Draymond works well as a Playmaker and skip passer instead of a Scorer, and Klay works the opposite angle, being an amazing Shooter and Scorer while not being a primary or secondary Playmaker.
However, a lot of fans don't care about fit and roles, and only care about production, regardless of context. If 15 2017 Russell Westbrook's were on the same team, they would still all be the same player, but their individual impact and production would be terribly diminished due to their poor fit.
So while someone may be labeled a "system player", it really just means that they require a certain playstyle and teammates in order to be maximised and that when they're in a different role, they will have a decreased impact.
I know this is an old video (I’ve watched most your others) but thank you for calling out Malone like you do. What that man did was horrific and doesn’t get talked about enough. Also, excellent excellent video
I will never understand superstars getting the “system player” label, at some point you have to acknowledge their talent lol
@Fries I could see that lol
@Fries even in the eastern conference in the 2000s, take like LeBron. The system wasn’t favorable which becomes a problem. Now sure LeBron was playing in the weak east, but getting that Cavs team to the finals would’ve been easier if he didn’t have to do so much on offense. Or heck, Tim Duncan having probably the GOAT coach is beneficial, but still carried the team in ‘03.
@Fries yep. I’ve got MJ at 1 and LeBron at 2. MJ’s finals opponents were some of the greatest. But yeah I always try to appreciate LeBron knowing he’s not gonna be around forever
The last quote really got me.
Rusty goin off with the uploads 🔥🔥
Rusty looking professional today
It's like saying Rusty is a system content creator! You're lucky the NBA and youtube are here to facilitate your talents!!
I was waiting for the “that player is the system” line. Didn’t disappoint
Really enjoy these deep dives! Please keep making them!
Rusty the 🐐
Rusty is easily the best nba channel
I want to add though that good couches like Kerr and Jackson sometimes also get heat because they “wouldn’t have won without the super stars.” And that’s true! But it’s not a knock on them for inheriting good talent. Maybe the warriors would have won one less without Kerr building a proper system around his talent. I’m almost positive the lakers would not have three peated without Jackson managing the egos of Kobe and shaq. And even the bulls might not have one or two of those three peats without Jackson’s system. I think the couches deserve some credit for managing good talent, just like the players deserve credit for being talented. Everyone has a role to play in a championship.
Love what you’ve been making lately
this was an amazing video! can't believe I only found you now
hey rusty you should do a deep dive on 3pt shooting and how people have overrated it and overlooked mid range jump shots at the end of games specifically
I Love the aesthetic of these deep dives
Steph isn’t a system player. He’s a SYSTEM, player.
I AM THE SYSTEM!!! - some guy named wardell 😂
Yes, Steph, Nash, Lebron, Jordan, Duncan, Kobe, Magic etc... they made system succeed, not the system make them succeed
Is it really? What about those 30 screens, half of which are illegal, from Draymond, what about the 2nd best player there who gives him space in Klay, everytime they win anything they’re a super deep roster with with role players playing bigger than they are
@@somregularguy It's Curry's fault the refs aren't calling ilegal screens? It's Curry's fault that Klay is a good player and Keer knows how to coach properly? In the end of the day, it's Curry's team, he IS the system, that team lives and dies playing Curry ball, he is good enough to build a team around, and good enough to make it work, Curry is not a system player, he is an all time great that got the opportunity to have a team build around him, and what happened when an team, a coach, an organization, a city put their trust on Curry, that let him go off and made all the moves to better use his talent? one of the greatest dynasties in the history of the NBA. Curry IS the System, that team will live and die for him.
That last point was a really good point to end on.
Great video. Lots of great points and examples. The editing was good, and the video didn't feel drawn out at any point
I appreciate this deep dive a great deal, in part because it dovetails with my own opinion, but also because it was concise and clear. It would be interesting to see further expansion on the topic, covering how systems develop with examples of system and talent mismatch (Quinn Buckner + Triangle, Mavericks Triple J Ranch), the adjustment process in practice (D'Antoni), and systemic decay (Dame's Blazers?) and/or successful non-system teams.
I've watched a couple of your videos. But this one is so on point. When debating others. I basically wanna give em this video. Both the player and system are working together to make each other work. That's what creates the best teams and players. So as you asked. I liked and subscribed. And btw I was your 3k like. Keep up the good work.
Rusty with that METGALA DRIP 💯
I think its a fact that every Mike D'Antoni player becomes a system player. He elevated Jeremy Lin, Raymond Felton, Earl Clark, and Kendall Marshall from bench warmers to starters, Steve Nash and James Harden from allstars to MVPs.
Nash was spearheading league best offenses before and after D’Antoni.
@@rickharrison1737 But he wasn't an MVP Candidate.
Someone missed the point
U literally missed the whole point of the video
@@JD-ny3vz he should have been.
What a spectacular analysis. Long-time fan of you Rusty - phenomenal job, per usual. Glad to give you the like.
rusty talking shit about karl malone never fails to make me smile
Didn’t realize I needed my 3D glasses for this vid
this like the best video i ever saw when I was watching it no cap
Another great video. Thanks for your work!
Loved this man! Thank you!
best video so far gotta give it up to you there were no bad takes in this one
Excellent upload. Learned a lot on this one
[Insert Barry McCockiner Tom Brady Reference]
(I'm just a Giants fan clinging to the past)
Brilliant video!
Love the deep dive!
Amazing channel you got here rusty 😍
You’re on fire rusty
Great take Rusty ✨❗️
Keep up the good work and keep doing what us other nba nerds can’t. Believe in ourselves enough to speak the truth.
Yaboi out here picking up BSOLZ's slack! Damn son! Keep it up! 💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼
There were times for the spurs (obviously not all the time) where damn near the WHOLE offensive system was give Duncan the ball down low and let something happen. So to say he was only great because of the spurs system is wild. Great video
Cool video Rusty. I like your balanced takes.
Rusty is the only commentary basketball channel on the same level as funkydiebetic
Fire thumbnail and video. That thumbnail is weird but really good.
looking dapper my man