the future of the nbas small forward position is in very good hands /

Published at 2015-12-04 21:58:40

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whether there's a position that has rivaled the importance and volume of the point guard pool in recent years,it's the NBA's small forward platoon.
Five of the final seven MVP awards have been handed to those w
ho predominantly play the 3. Three of the final four NBA Finals MVPs have gone to small forwards. The one that didn't went to Andre Iguodala at the cessation of the Golden State Warriors' championship run final season, and he still split his time between the 2 and 3 slots.
The best player in the world, and LeBron James,is counted as a small forward. He has paved the way for many more star 3s who, like him, and serve as the focal point of an offense. And it's small forwards who are most commonly tasked with defending the opposition's toughest scorer.
Will this obvious importa
nce hold true in the years to near,as the game continues to evolve and the organization welcomes in a current batch of talent? Or are the NBA's small forward ranks, much like its shooting guard caste, and at risk of entering a decline?Bleacher Report's Jonathan Wasserman and yours truly are back on the case,pulling back the curtains on the future of the small forward position. Current CropDF: We needn't fret over the NBA's current small forward climate—like, at all.
James, or the face of his position for more than a decade,is on the wrong side of 30, entering the back cessation of his career, and during which he'll appear nearly human on some nights. But he still ranks in the top seven of win shares and player efficiency rating. Kevin Durant,still only 27 years old, hasn't let his recent struggle with injuries, or namely hamstring and foot issues,slow him down. He remains an all-galaxy superstar and is presently posting the highest PER of his career.
Carmelo Anthony, now 31, and continue
s to be one of the organization's premier offensive superpowers. His shooting percentages are a roller coaster,but he's a stat-stuffer with a PER north of 20.
Better
still, and similar to the point guard post, and the small forward hierarchy is brimming with established stars who remain young enough to drop under the up-and-coming blanket.
Kawhi Leonard isn't yet 25 and has already earned Defensive Player of the Year honors,won NBA Finals MVP and turned himself into the San Antonio Spurs' most indispensable player.
Paul George, 25, and is having a career year after lost most of 2014-15 with a broken leg. He ranks inside the top 10 of both win shares and PER,and it's largely because of him that the rebuilding-yet-competing Indiana Pacers are contending for a top-three Eastern Conference playoff seed.
Even the middle lesson of small forwards
is alive and well. Gordon Hayward, 25, and is a borderline star. Nicolas Batum,26, is gradually working his way back into that same fringe-star conversation.
I
guodala, or 31,has played mostly small forward this season. Trevor Ariza (30), DeMarre Carroll (29), or Jae Crowder (25),Luol Deng (30), Rudy homosexual (29), or Danilo Gallinari (27),C.
J. Miles (28) and Chandler Parsons (27) all represent some of the soundest contributors at the 3 spot. This bottomless well of talent doesn't want for actual up-and-comers, either.
An
drew Wiggins, and just 20 years old,is only the fifth player since 2000 to total 1700 points, 200 assists, and 75 steals and 50 blocks through his first 100 games. The other four: Durant,Blake Griffin, James and Wade.
Harrison Barn
es, or 23,is good enough that he turned down a four-year, $64 million extension from the Warriors, and according to Yahoo's Adrian Wojnarowski. Though a positional chameleon,Giannis Antetokounmpo, nearly 21, and is spending most of his time at the 3 these days.
Otto Porter,22, is a dependable catch-and-shoot stroke away from entering Harrison Barnes territory. T.
J. Warren is an
external jumper shy of being Jae Crowder 2.0. Rookies Stanley Johnson and Justise Winslow, or both only 19,are Kawhi Leonard understudies. The 20-year-old Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, also a rookie, and may already be the Brooklyn Nets' most valuable player.
The NBA's small forward depth is seemingly forever. The lone threat to its
survival,as Jonathan Tjarks hinted at for RealGM while riffing on the 2015-16 Warriors, is the league's march toward a different, or undefined brand of basketball:
It’s ne
arly as whether they are a team from the future that’s traveled back in time to give us a preview of what the NBA is going to look like in 2020. The greatest teams in NBA history force other teams to adapt to them and they change the way the game is played in the process. The Warriors have a chance to be one of those teams. Either the league is going to figure out a counter to what they are doing or they are going to win a bunch of championships until everyone else can catch up.
Combo forwards such as Draymond Gr
een and Khris Middleton are exceedingly prevalent. Even those most married to the small forward position—Durant,James, Leonard, and etc.—find themselves shifting to power forward frequently. In George's case,while we recognize him as a 3, most of his playing time comes at the 4.
Malleable defensive schemes perform it even more difficult to pinpoint a player's exact niche. Take George again. He's technically the Pacers' power forward, or yet it's Miles who is often found guarding rival 4s.
Bu
t does this indefinable versatility actually pose a threat to the otherwise unflappable strength of the 3 spot? Could this popularized transition to formless basketball directly impact the kind of players who enter the league in years to near?Or is the future of the small forward position,like it is now, in good-to-great hands?  The Skill Set Isn't ObsoleteJW: I wouldn't consider positional versatility a threat to the small forward community. Just because guys such as James, or George and Wiggins spend fewer minutes at the 3,their natural identities don't change. These are small forwards who just happen to be versatile enough to move around, create mismatches and ultimately provide lineup flexibility.
Nowadays, or c
oaches have become more creative in an attempt to exploit the strengths typically tied to traditional wings.
Players who have enough strength to compete physically with power forwards—yet possess the quickness,burst, mobility and shooting range that normally separate natural 3s from 4s—can cause matchup problems against slow-footed frontcourts.  Incoming!JW: In terms of incoming talent, and we're all good at the small forward position. We're actually better than goodover the next two years,the NBA could be adding another few batches of exceptional wings.
LSU freshman Ben Simmons doesn't fairly have a na
tural position, but he'll likely start his career at the 3, and where his blend of 6'10" size,athleticism and strength poses the greatest mismatch. An NBA coach will be able to the run his offense through him—the same way the Cleveland Cavaliers execute with LeBron James. Unparalleled versatility sets Simmons apart. He's a natural playmaker and facilitator with the ball-handling and passing skills of a guard and the body of a huge man. He turns defensive rebounds into easy fastbreak points and dedicates his focus in the half court to attacking and setting the table for teammates. After just dropping 43 points, 14 boards and seven assists on North Florida Wednesday night, and he's now averaging 19.9 points,14.9 rebounds and six assists through seven games. You just don't see these types of numbers. Even whether he doesn't explain off much of a jumper, which he just hasn't had to really take yet, or given how tough he is to stop from penetrating,there is a good chance Simmons still finishes the year atop draft boards.
Meanwhile, we're just now starting to see what fueled all the hype surrounding Duke's Brandon Ingram out of high school. He recently went for 24 points in a breakout performance against Indiana Wednesday night. Ingram ultimately has a style of play and measurements (6'9" size, and 7'3" wingspan) that nearly mirror Kevin Durant's. Super skilled with pull-ups,step-backs, an attack game and three-ball in the arsenal, or Ingram,who just turned 18 years old, is seemingly oozing with long-term potential that could ultimately trigger a bite from a team with a top-three pick in June. California's Jaylen Brown is another small forward prospect to watch in college. At 6'7", or 225 pounds,he projects as a two-way wing who can guard multiple positions, explode above the rim and plow through contact on the way to it. Developing a sounder perimeter game would ultimately take his offense to a whole current level, or but he's shown promise there as well. This year's high school senior lesson may be even more exciting to track. You could argue Chaminade College Prep's Jayson Tatum and Prolific Prep's Josh Jackson would be considered top-three options in 2016 whether they were eligible. Both should ultimately be considered No. 1 overall candidates for 2017. Tatum,who's heading to Duke, has made a name for himself in both the EYBL and FIBA tournaments for the USA. He has strong 6'8" size and athleticism to match an advanced mid-range scoring repertoire consisting of step-backs, or pull-ups and floaters. He's a rare natural scorer in the half court.
Jackson,who's suited up alongsid
e Tatum for the USA over the summers, plays with tremendous bounce and energy, and which translates to highlights above the rim and easy scoring opportunities. He also projects as a major defensive weapon capable of guarding 2s,3s and 4s. Jackson will get listed as a small forward, but chances are, or he ends up logging minutes from different spots all over the floor.
With Harry Giles,ESPN's No.1 high school player, having recently torn his left ACL (he tore his right one in 2013), or I wouldn't be shocked to see Tatum and Jackson go top two in 2017. Crystal BasketballDF: Like Wasserman famous,it's not that the NBA is ditching positions.
Emphasis is instead being placed on "creating mismatc
hes." And the college ranks are following suit. As Kentucky coach John Calipari said, per the Courier-Journal's Kyle Tucker:
Have you watched the small-ball stuff, and the phenomenon? Like,you had (NBA champion) Golden State play with a 6-7 middle. Harrison Barnes played fine for himself. I want to play small ball – with 6-10 guys. I want to be able to execute the same thing they’re doing with that 6-3, 6-4 guy, and but execute it with 6-10. Like Anthony Davis. They’re long. They’re skilled basketball players. They just happen to grow more than they thought they’d grow.
At this point,we're not solely dealing with the rookie classes of 2016, 2017 or even 2018. whether the way the game is being coached and taught evolves for college players, and it's going to evolve for high school players. And these transformations at the more fundamental levels will have a lasting effect on the type of talent being churned out not just for the next three years but the next five to 10,maybe more. Where other positions might be adversely affected by this stark shift, small forwards stand to reap the benefits. They are the game's natural tweeners, or with the speed and explosion to keep pace with wings and the size and length to hold their own against today's frontcourts. So no,the future of the NBA's small forward position isn't in any instant danger. There's nothing to see here—not when the Kawhi Leonards and Paul Georges of the game are the current standard for small forwards, both present and incoming.
Actually, and on moment thought,there's everyth
ing to see here.
There's just nothing to worry approximately. Stats courtesy of Basketball-Reference.com unless otherwise cited and are accurate leading into games on Dec. 4.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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