Isiah Thomas:9 Facts That Will Make You A Better Basketball Player
by: Ian Douglass, State Games of MichiganDetroit Pistons legend Isiah Thomas is one of the greatest point guards in basketball history, and arguably the greatest “little man” to ever play in the NBA. Under Isiah’s leadership, the Pistons followed his example, sacrificed personal statistics for team success, and broke through to win multiple NBA championships in an era that had been dominated by high-powered teams from Boston and Los Angeles.
While the present-day NBA features several well-rounded point guards with captivating dribble moves and startling quickness, Isiah was the prototype of the total-package small guard when he entered a giant-infested NBA in the early 1980s. In order to combat the trend that pushed undersized players out of the league, Isiah relied on the knowledge he had gained from a lifetime of life experiences and athletic experiences. And, while you might be tempted to file away Isiah’s abilities as a simple case of God-given talent, the reality is that much of what made Isiah great can be learned by anyone who cares to study a few simple lessons about his life, and put those lessons into practice.
1. Isiah played several sports other than basketball
You would probably assume that a player as gifted at basketball as Isiah would have practically grown up with a basketball glued to his hands. And, you would be wrong. Isiah played organized football, baseball and volleyball in addition to basketball, and he only became a full-time basketball player after his high school basketball coach barged into the locker room and personally stopped Isiah from trying out for the freshman football team.
According to Isiah, one of the things that ultimately made him such an effective point guard was the time he spent playing other sports, which not only taught him to rapidly bond quickly with different groups of players in order to accomplish goals, but football in particular taught him to how to anticipate player movements as they ran routes and prepared to receive the ball.
“Football was all about the angles,” Isiah explained. “So in terms of passing angles and anticipation, all of that comes into point guard play in basketball. When you’re running routes as a wide receiver, the timing has to be perfect. You have to hit a certain marker, and you have to turn and catch the ball. In basketball, a guy is running a pattern, and he has to run it with timing and precision every single time, and if he’s slow, it disrupts the timing of the play. You learn those things in different sports, and then you bring them into your one sport.”
2. Isiah was taught how to dribble by the Harlem Globetrotters
Everyone that appreciated the flashiness of Isiah’s ballhandling will probably still be somewhat surprised to discover that he learned his skills through interacting with legendary Globetrotter playmakers Marques Haynes and Curly Neal. Eloise Saperstein, daughter of Globetrotters founder Abe Saperstein, brought Haynes and Neal to the Boys and Girls Club of Chicago to share their knowledge with young players. Anxious to improve his skills, Isiah participated in the Globetrotters’ clinics, and elevated his game in the process.
“The Globetrotters would come through Chicago because they were touring a lot,” Isiah explained. “I was fortunate enough that Eloise Saperstein took a liking to me and what we were doing at the Boys Club, and I got to spend some quality time taking lessons from them, watching them dribbling the basketball and seeing the drills they did. Then I would go home and replicate the things they were doing out on the floor.”
3. Isiah wasn’t even the best dribbler in his own peer group
4.Isiah approached the game on an intellectual level
Ask Isiah what it takes to play point guard well, and the answer you receive will resemble something out of a graduate-level course in metaphysics. Rather than tackling the question from the standpoint of physical abilities and skills, Isiah explains point guard play in intellectual and emotional terms, and his answer reinforces the notion that a point guard is truly the floor general for his team.
“The point guard has to be the smartest guy on the floor, because he has to retain the most information during the course of a game,” Isiah explained. “You have to understand time, score and tempo, but you also have to keep a mental file of who’s in foul trouble on the other team, how many time outs they have left, who’s shooting well on the other team, and who’s shooting well on your own team. Moreover, you have to understand the emotional intelligence of the team you’re playing against as well as the emotional intelligence of your team on that particular day, because peoples’ emotions change. It’s a game of physics and emotional intelligence that you have to be able to manage. You have to handle the emotions of the other team and the emotions of the team you’re playing against them with.”
5. Isiah’s inspirations were local legends, not NBA stars
Because Isiah lacked access to televised NBA games, he didn’t get an opportunity to pattern his style of play after NBA legends playing at the time like Earl Monroe or Walt Frazier. However, patterning his game after more accessible players in the Chicagoland area worked out just as well, so superstar inspiration wasn’t necessary in order for Isiah to ultimately become a superstar in his own right.
“The heroes in the neighborhood were my brothers and people that played at different high schools,” Isiah said. “The two guys I tried to pattern my game after were my older brother, Lord Henry Thomas, and Sammy Puckett who played at Hales Franciscan and also went on to Notre Dame. Sammy actually wore number 11, and I wore number 11 because of him. He and my brother had a great rivalry, and those were the two players I would emulate, mostly on an intellectual level. They taught me that basketball is like chess; you have to learn to strategically manipulate and position the other four men with you out on the floor and use them to beat the other team.”
6. Isiah learned how to position himself for success
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