Here are a few thoughts I had as I reflect on one of the greatest dunk competitions EVER!!!!
- Only somebody over 6-9 with long arms and at least a 35 inch vertical could even attempt Dwight Howard's behind the backboard dunk. Nate Robinson (5'8") could elevate high enough, but his arms would be too short to reach around the backboard to do so. Nate maybe could do it if he was dunking on a goal that had only a small section of the backboard hanging below the rim.
- Gerald Green is a victim of the Steve Francis/Tracy McGrady syndrome (having a great, normally contest winning dunking performance, but being unfortunately in a contest with a pantheon dunk competition performance a la Vince Carter).
- Gerald Green blowing out the candle has to be in the top 10 of dunk competition of dunks. Not only did he demonstrate creativity, but also the skill to jump high enough (its difficult to blow out a candle that is higher than your head), AND the ability in mid air to change his brain from focusing on catching the ball off the bounce while jumping, to blowing out the candle, to dunking a basketball with TWO hands - ALL without knocking the candle down or hitting is head/mouth on the rim. Impressive.
- TNT had bad live camera angles on both the Green candle dunk and the Howard tip-it-off-the-glass-off-the-bounce-with-one-hand-and-dunk-it-with-the-other-hand dunk. I could here Green expel air from the rim being miked, but it was only when I heard Kenny Smith's jumping around about how he blew out the candle, did I get the full effect of what happened. Also, on the Howard dunk, on the live feed I was not quite sure why Kenny Smith was talking about his leaving the building and all because of what he had just seen. It wasn't until after I saw the reply that I began flopping on my bed like a fish because I couldn't believe Howard did that dunk. I think the judges should have the benefit of replay before they give their scores because the difficulty and unrealness (yes, I'm making up a word) of some dunks can't really be appreciated until they are seen in slow motion or from different angles. For example, a guy jumping from the free throw line looks impressive initially until you get an idea of where he took off from. If he took off from in front of the free throw line, it should not be considered as high of a score as if he took off from behind the free throw line. Or take Vince Carter's arm in the rim dunk -immediately after he did the dunk the crowd was quiet, but they showed the replay and the place went nuts.
- Why is Dikembe Mutombo always somebody the camera focuses on for post-dunk reaction shots? Here he is in 2000 (see 3:01), 2001 (see 1:06), 2002 (see 0:13), 2003 (briefly see 1:04), 2008 before the Superman dunk (see 0:02) and after (see 1:13).
3 comments:
I love Dwight Howard!! Now that that's out of the way, I was impressed with the slam dunk contest and have been amazed at the local lack of excitement about what took place. Based upon the professional commentary, I thought that the contest would have received rave reviews from the fans. That did not seem to be the case. As a basic (low level even) fan of basketball, I am baffled with the level of expectation of fans from these athletes. Although they are not all self-centered :), they are all human, correct? How much more creativity, height, gravity-defying feats can we expect of mere humans?
I second that emotion. I don't know why it is, but many people have become immune to what is actually going on in these dunk contest. One dunk that I didn't comment on was the Gerald Green through-the-leg dunk WITH NO SHOES!!!! There aren't many people who could even attempt to dunk barefooted and for him to add the throught the legs move was SICK!!! But that dunk was kind of shrugged aside. What these guys are doing is amazing, but i for whatever reason many people treat it with such indifference. I can't call this one.
good point on Mutombo-whats up with that? He blew tons of dunks in Philly-thats why we lost 4-1 against LA. That and Mutombo was too old and senile to move out of the lane on pick and rolls. And that finger waving thing got really old after the first 10 years in the league...
Post a Comment