Originally posted by ShockTalk
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That was 4 decades ago and obvioulsy it wasn't as simple to successfully implement as it it obviously did not catch on widely. Maybe because it is hard to assemble the collection of athletes needed to make such an approach work well over the long haul.
Not really sure what my point is. I think there will always have to be designated positions. However, more and more you will see teams fill those positions with players that seemingly or clones in terms of size and athleticism and with some overlapping skill sets although most players will have a skill set that lends itself more to a specific postion in a scheme. Soem will be versatile enough and have the right size to be a combo 1/2, 2/3, 3/4 or 4/5. With really versatile players maybe able to play 3 postions. But then again those versatile players have to learn each position. The more set plays you have the more of a challenge that becomes. So maybe more of "positionless" scheme requires a less complicated scheme that, like Paul Westhead's Loyola Marymount teams which was more a 40 minutes of hell philosophy but using the offense as the club and not the defense.
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