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0:00
Should the NBA move the three-point line back and add a four-point line?
0:04
Absolutely not.
0:07
Hi, I'm Dwyane Wade, and today I'm answering your Twitter questions.
0:09
This is Basketball Support.
0:17
The first question comes from @trustavoid.
0:23
Are three-pointers messing with the game of basketball?
0:21
Would you enjoy watching the NBA if 80% of shots were just three-pointers?
0:25
How many is too many?
0:28
If you're making them, it's never too many.
0:29
If you're missing all of them, that's too many.
0:31
I wouldn't enjoy playing the game with 80% of the shots being threes, but I can understand the nature of the game today.
0:37
I know that three points is more than two points, and so if his team is shooting 63s and one team is shooting 30, who's going to win that game?
0:43
Coming from a different era, you want to see the game played just the way that you played it, but you've got to try to figure out a way to appreciate the game the way it's played in today's arrow.
1:06
@ta_green30, what's worse: getting blown out by 20 or losing by one because of a buzzer beater?
1:06
Losing by one because of a buzzer beater.
1:06
If you get beat by 20, I mean, you've known for a long time that the game was over.
1:06
You get beat at the buzzer, it's immediate.
1:06
You don't know how to process it.
1:06
So playing Toronto Raptors in the playoffs in 2016, and Kyle Lowry hit this like past half court three-pointer the center game in overtime, that hurt.
1:06
I think if you if anybody can see the clip, you'll see my body just kind of like fall down and fade.
1:06
It hurt so bad.
1:06
@shootinglikeagod, what is the hardest shot in basketball?
1:06
The open shot.
1:06
Sounds like it would be the easiest, for me, the open shot.
1:06
I personally like a contest because a contest allows me to be able to understand how much arc I need to put on a shot.
1:06
Makes me focus a little bit more.
1:06
Open shot, it makes me think too much.
1:06
So I'll take a contest.
1:06
So the question is from Ed Miles Polytic, and he asked, what rule changes or enhancements would you like to see added or altered in the NBA?
1:54
You know what, I actually and I personally think the NBA does an amazing job of understanding that they need to adjust to the style of play of players, that they need to always make sure they're adding to the game of basketball.
2:12
So I came in the NBA when people were hand-checking, when people could put their hands on and they can guide you over screens and where you can go.
2:13
And then I was in an era where they took your hands off and you had to guard a guy like this.
2:20
How do you guard a guy that's super fast and super strong and you know all that that's getting the ball screen?
2:24
You can't touch him.
2:26
So the NBA understands what the fans need.
2:28
The fans at that time wanted more scoring, they wanted more excitement, and so they changed the rules to alter that.
2:33
So I'm open to, you know, the the evolution and the growth that the NBA always think of, so I think it's great.
2:38
X fast model defense debate: no middle or no baseline?
2:44
Great question.
2:45
I've always been taught no middle, because once the offensive player gets to the middle, everything on the court opens up.
2:52
And so now you have to pull help off of the shooters, off of the scores because the ball has penetrated the middle of the gap, right?
3:00
And so once the penetrates the middle, now everything opens.
3:07
If you go baseline, the baseliner becomes a defender, and so now all you need is you as a defender and then just the baseline.
3:05
And so I think no middle.
3:12
This next question is from @meech_bold.
3:16
Do you think the triangle offense as a primary motion offense can work in today's NBA?
3:16
I do, I actually do.
3:16
To me, it's not about the offense, it's about the mindset of the players in the offense.
3:24
It's an offense that's set up for a lot of movement, a certain talent of of individuals.
3:29
So if you have the right team, you're right, if you have the right personnel, 100%.
3:55
Next question is from the VJB17.
3:55
Why do NBA players have such a hard time running offense against zone?
3:55
That's a great question.
3:55
Once you go to a zone, it makes you play straight up, you know, most of the game, you know, you're in attack mode if you have the ball off a pick-and-roll or if you catch it on the wing, you're in attack mode.
3:55
Something about the zone that puts you around the perimeter and it makes you catch the ball straight up.
3:59
And so first thing you're going to do besides pass fake is try to figure out a way to pass the ball to someone else.
4:05
It's not set up for you to be in attack mode.
4:10
Any player that it figures out that you can still stand in attack mode, you can still run your regular offense through his own are the best offensive teams in the game.
4:10
@gabby_roma, how do you break someone's ankle in basketball?
4:23
It's having the ability to be able to shift your body quick enough, stopping on a dime like this while the defender is trying to cut your move off and be able to bring it back or stop on a dime and the defender's now is trying to recover and maybe they slide or maybe they fall or maybe they trip over their own feet.
4:45
@fabio11, is there any traveling calls in the modern NBA?
4:42
I don't think so.
4:46
As a fan watching the game just like you, Fabio, I never see a traveling call.
4:48
You can call travel on almost every play, and once the NBA has allowed an extra few steps, it becomes hard to even call travel.
4:57
So I would say if you're a veteran in the NBA, you don't get troubles called.
5:00
If you're a rookie in the NBA, you're going to hear that whistle a lot.
5:06
Next question is from @mfort_13.
5:06
Should the NBA move the three-point line back and add a four-point line?
5:06
Absolutely not.
5:06
I don't think so.
5:06
You know, maybe you have to ask guys who are shooting these threes.
5:06
I wasn't really a three-point shooter, but I do think it's incredible that guys are coming past how of course shooting the ball like it's a layup, but the court is the same size, the rim is the same height.
5:27
Like certain things is just the same when you're trying to match guys and say this guy is the greatest and this guy's the greatest.
5:32
How do you do that when you put a four-point line or eventually if you put a five-point line and then now it doesn't make it an even playing field from the standpoint of stacking up, you know, the talent in each generation.
5:43
The next question comes from @claydave.
5:50
Who's the best player to never win an NBA MVP regular season?
5:50
He says, I say Dwyane Wade.
5:50
I don't know all the guys who have not won NBA regular season MVP, um, so Clay, I'm going to go with you that guy, Dwyane Wade.
6:02
Next question comes from Et Hartfield Annie.
6:04
She's never gotten a satisfactory answer to why the Harlem Globetrotters don't play in the NBA.
6:08
So I'd like to say this: it's a lot of basketball players who are very very good to make it to the NBA.
6:13
The level of greatness you have to be, the level of a teammate you have to be is different.
6:22
The Harlem Globetrotters and guys who play in the playground, they're more individual players.
6:23
You know, the NBA really focused on the team aspect and not having five guys for individual, individually great, maybe having one, two, and three at max, but you have to play roles.
6:34
It's hard to learn how to play a role even though you're talented in the game of basketball.
6:38
Next question from @waldi_2000.
6:43
How do I hit clutch free throws?
6:43
It's something about that free throw line when you're up there by yourself and everyone's watching you.
6:49
It's the only time where everything stops.
6:50
I always try to visualize the moment.
6:53
If I miss certain free throws in practice, I would make myself run for it, and I don't like running.
6:59
So I would when I get to line, I'm going to focus more.
7:01
And so when I got to the game, I was I was able to be able to focus more because I know that I didn't like, you know, missing free throws, you know, kind of as I practice and trying to get to that point.
7:10
Next question is from @danesnz, which is season_.
7:18
What NBA player has the best nickname of all time?
7:18
It's a lot of guys.
7:27
The first one comes to mind is Paul Pierce, The Truth.
7:39
I feel like it gets no doper than that.
7:39
But Alan Armstrong, Anser to be the answer, that's dope.
7:39
Dame Lillard, Logo Lillard, like there's so many amazing nicknames, but the first one comes to mind is The Truth.
7:50
Next question is from @esther_carolines.
7:54
How do I get in the zone?
7:54
I cannot tell you, Esther, how to get in the zone, but what I can say is once you're in that zone, you will never want to leave it.
7:54
Next question is from @mr2humble3.
7:54
Who is the hardest person in the NBA to guard?
7:54
Well, first of all, it's Kevin Durant.
7:54
He's a 6'11", maybe 7'1" depending on how KD, you know, want to be perceived, but it's hard to guard a guy who has so much talent to be able to put the ball on the floor, can score from inside the paint to the free-throw line to the mid-range to the three-point line back at half court.
8:02
But if I had to pick another player, I would say Giannis.
8:15
It's hard to guard Giannis because of his uh his attack.
8:19
He's also 7'1", he's a footer coming down with with the ability to be able to handle the ball.
8:23
He runs fastest point guards and just as big as the center, so it's hard to guard a guy like that who's strong and who is aggressive and his monsters he is on a basketball floor.
8:49
It's hard to guard him as well.
8:49
Next question comes from Justin Wolfson.
8:49
He says, I think D-Wade is going to explain in his memoir how he flipped Andy V upside down on that dunk.
8:49
How I think it happened is, I'm coming down the floor and I'm coming down full steam ahead.
8:49
Andy is backing up right away.
8:49
I'm winning because I have full force and Andy's already he's backpedaling because he's trying to get back on defense.
8:49
And so once I take off and I hit Andy body to body, he doesn't have as much momentum.
8:49
I have all my momentum coming this way.
8:49
He only has the ability to jump straight up this way.
8:49
So the force that I was bringing coming down the court made him not only get dunked on, but made him fall back, legs flipped up and hit the back of the uh of the thing behind him.
8:49
So I think that's the way that dunk has been called maybe top 10 greatest dunks um NBA of all time, and it's definitely my best dunk in my career.
9:29
So it's a big moment.
9:33
It was one of my favorite NBA moments.
9:35
Every every year is one of the things they bring back, like this happened on this date.
9:38
And so if they bring it back as November 12th, this happened, then you know, it was some.
9:47
And finally, I'm going to say KR Junglas, sorry if I got that wrong.
9:47
What makes the difference between a great player and ordinary and average ones?
9:51
To make it to the NBA is, you know, 400 plus players, so it's a very small amount of players that make it to the NBA.
9:59
It's millions every year that's trying to get into the NBA, and what separates a player who's who's very good and who has talent is something as simple as the work that you're willing to put in, you know, on your craft, in the at your craft, is understanding what to work on, how to work on it, and when to work on it.
10:16
So for me, it's something as simple as hard work.
10:18
A lot of guys have talent and they think that their talent is going to take them to, you know, that level, but the work that you put in, the environments you put yourself in when you're working hard, allows you to be great in moments where a lot of people shrink.
10:35
Alright, that's it.
10:33
I hope you guys learned something from me about my knowledge of the game of basketball.
10:36
I hope you guys are as excited as I am to pick up my new book, Dwyane.
10:46
Until next time, that's all I got you.