Non basketball fans can just skim until the last two
paragraphs.
Once the Malcom Gladwell’s idea of an all-Nigerian team came
up, minds like mine want to develop such things. I thought there could be lots of regional
all-time teams it would be fun to invent.
The initial entertainment exists purely in the mind, as I try to
remember what players came from Australia or South America, and how good they
were. I count them off on my fingers to see if we can get to at least 8 very
good ones – then I put it aside because I know other names occur to me
after. Eventually my memory can’t
uncover more and I make combinations and splits. If a region cannot get to 8 on its own, I
look to combine it with something else. If I have so many that I have to start
leaving off exceptional players, I go looking for ways to split the group into
two. This happened with Europe, which I
expected to be able to field only one exceptional All-World All Time Team for
my imaginary league. Yet there were so
many players from former Yugoslavia plus some Lithuanians, Latvians, Russians,
etc that I thought I could make both an All-Slav team and an All-RestofEurope
team.
The background is that one could make team after team of
American blacks. One can make up All-Caribbean, All-African, or All-American
White teams that might beat anyone. Yet once you have all those teams set up –
I think I’m going with 5 teams – you can find five teams to match those, and
then I think five more after that, all of American black players. At the level of skill we are talking about, I
don’t think one could safely say that a distilled single team of American
blacks could “of course” beat everyone else.
It starts to get tricky at that point, and styles matter, playing together
matters. Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Lebron James, Karl Malone, and Wilt
Chamberlain would certainly have the highest possible upside. But how are those going to fit? There might be other teams which could consistently
beat them.
Once I get to that point, I go to reference materials to see
who I forgot and add those to my mental lists.
This is where these sorts of exercises get embarrassing, when you start
going “I can’t believe I forgot Patrick Ewing was born in Jamaica.” Then the
whole thing starts to fall apart, and I realise I’m going to have to write all
this down, as it has become too large.
And now I’m in real trouble, because once I start writing it down, my
OCD starts to kick in, as there are hard distinctions to make and I want to be
consistent. Dominique Wilkins was born
in France to American parents, but there is nothing else French about him. Europe doesn’t get him. Yet what about Hakeem Olajuwon from
Nigeria? He never played for that
country, he became naturaised and played for the US. Yet in an All-World league, shouldn’t he be
playing for the African team? And what
about JJ Barea from Puerto Rico? Does he
play for the Americans or for the Caribbeans?
I tended to make similar decisions to the calculations the athletes make around the
Olympics. JJ is not making any American team. But the Caribbean team is going to need guards
badly, and he might make the final cut of ten or fifteen players. Yet I’m
getting into the weeds at this point, and it’s not fun anymore because of
obsessively trying to decide what my cutoffs are and sticking to them.
So South America hasn’t got a team of its own. Manu Ginobilli is mostly Italian by descent,
so he’s going to the all-Europe team. Unless I decide Africa can't quite make a team of its own and I'm going for an All- Southern Hemisphere team, in which case he goes there.
I am not going to formally list the players on those teams, because of the
above. Once I start, I will be obsessively checking basketball reference stats and Wikipedia pages of one Australian versus another for the third center, working at a level of expertise I do not possess. But I will talk about them, because of something I suspected at the
outset – the players from outside the US are disproportionately centers and big
men. The All-Caribbean team has Patrick Ewing, Tim Duncan, Mychal Thompson, Al
Horford, Karl-Anthony Towns, and now DeAndre Ayton. They might be able to hang
with anyone up front, both in older style and new stretch styles. But for
guards and smaller forwards the pickings are slimmer. The same is true for the All-Africa team,
with Hakeem Olajuwon, Joel Embiid, Dikembe Motumbo, Manute Bol. Other big men are newer players Pascal
Siakam, Serge Ibaka. But that team is
also hurting for guards. If a country has only a few players represented in the history of the sport, those
are going to be huge. Gheorghe Muresa at
7’6”, Yao Ming at 7’6”, Manute Bol at 7'7".
Basketball is not that important in other places. If you are an athlete, no one thinks of
putting a basketball in your hands until it’s clear that “hey this kid is going
to be really big! Too big for even a soccer goalie or tennis player, even. We’d better see if there is a basketball
court around here somewhere. Maybe he
could go to America (Or Spain) and make some money.” If you are 6’3” and a
great athlete, you are still in goal, or water-polo, or volleyball, or tennis.
No one moves you to see if you might be even better at basketball. That’s
partly true in America as well, but every athlete at least has the rudiments of
basketball here, and people are happy to have 6’6” baseball pitchers, swimmers,
or tight ends. When you read the biographies of most of these foreign players,
they didn’t even start playing basketball until they were 12 or 16 or even 20.
The All-World League teams would be All-Slav, All-RestofEurope, All Caribbean, All North American White
guys, All-Southern Hemishere, then ten teams of American blacks. Maybe the Canadians could field a team of their own, but not likely. If it seems that a lot
of these teams are drawn from only two ethnic groups, you should know that
its even truer than you thought. Kevin McHale and George Mikan are of Croatian decent and Pete Maravich was a
Serb. John Havlicek is Czech and Croatian. Looks like Larry Bird and Bill Walton would have to carry a lot of weight without the Slavic additions. Nowitzki isn't a particularly German-sounding name; Tony
Parker, Giannis Antetokounmpo, not very typically French and Greek.
Yeah, it's apparently two tribes that can play this game. White men can’t jump, apparently, except Slavs.
You can play soccer on a grass and dirt field, using an unripe grapefruit. Dribbling on grass is not as satisfying. Tennis might be problematic too, until you can get to a nice flat concrete slab. Maybe a road would work, if it isn't used too much and doesn't have big ruts.
ReplyDeleteinteresting thought, james. Most sports actually reqire fairly little equipment, usually just a ball or something resembling one. A stick and a ball for baseball. Even football can be played with just a ball if you aren't doing full speed hitting. Basketball is definitely a First World sport since you really need that dribbling surface and the mounted goals. Tennis and golf, First World too, though you might get access to facilities built for tourists.
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