Common Sense, on 14 February 2017 - 04:56 PM, said:
Well that didn't take long...and yes, I'll somewhat agree with your statement. But if soccer was that difficult, why is it the first sport that kids play. Basically, it's running and kicking, which kids begin doing at the age of 4. Yes, I realize it's a little more than that later, but with basketball, you have dribbling (with your hands, and both hands), passing, seeing the floor, rebounding, and we've not even got into shooting. How many ways can you kick a soccer ball? My point is the medium to higher level basketball player takes alot more work and commitment than it does in soccer and volleyball. There are just alot more specific motor skills that need refined to play the sport of basketball than most other sports.
Because humans develop the ability to walk before they develop significant arm coordination. Put a ball in front of a children and they run into it, not really with any other specific purpose. It doesn't constitute an athletic sports move. A child can throw a baseball at age 4, does that mean there's athletic purpose behind it? Not usually. Why do children begin playing on plastic hoops 2'-3' tall and not 10'? The human body does not all grow at the same rate. Go to YouTube, there are plenty of young "prodigies" who can barely stand, but swish bucket after bucket on a small hoop.
Soccer (when done correctly): "dribbling with both" feet, "seeing the field," "rebounding missed shots," transitioning, and yes, even shooting correctly is a skill. To answer your question: ways you kick a ball: inside/outside, bend/straight, rise/drop/knuckle. I'd love to see if you can really bend a ball over a wall.
Your point is one built out of ignorance. You comparing high school basketball players to 4-year-olds proves that. Quit repeating your last sentence unless you're willing to place facts with it. Repeating it doesn't make it true. I've given you proof of useful basketball players who can't shoot or dribble but display simple athletic qualities that can help a team, especially defensively, just like nearly every sport.
Fostoria St. Wendelin had the D4 state player of the year last year who didn't dribble or shoot outside of 3 feet, except for free throws. They nearly won a state championship with their entire game plan built around her. She was gifted with great size and she played to her strengths. Don't tell me you need to be a great basketball player by doing everything correctly.
To be a medium to high level athlete in any sport takes significant work and commitment. If you disagree, please show me the data to quantify "a lot more work."
Edited by Hagen, 15 February 2017 - 10:24 AM.