I think short tough CAN be effective. Boozer had a playoff rebounding rate of 13.2 and his not quite 6'9". Milsap averaged 8.9 rpg in the playoffs.
IMHO, rebounding is a funtion of several things:
1) Length - rebounds are made by the hands, not the head.
2) Strngth - being able to push people areound is very important or keeping from being pushed around.
3) Hops - A short jumper has a big advantage of a taller "feet of stone" player
4) Positioning - It takes even natural rebounders a few years to know where to set up to get the rabound or when to block out.
5) Anticiapation - Great rebounds get to the ball first by anticipating where the ball will go. Rodman was tiny compare to other forwards, but he had great anticipation and averaged 16 rpg one year.
6) Hustle - Lots of balls come off the basket strangely, but whoever gets to the ball first is key.
Getting a guy like Frye to become a better rebounder is going to take getting him to focus on the task and hand. Getting stronger wouldn't hurt.
Good post. Rebounding of having any game in the paint is not purely about height (although it helps). There is so much more then height to determine if a player is soft or tough or if he can bang or play in the post. There are lots of examples of guys shorter in this league who have much more toughness then their taller counterparts.
I look at it like this....in almost every sport we see guys with the tools to play their respective sports and they just never get there. Sometimes it's height, sometimes its athleticism and sometimes it's a size etc. So, they might have some of those tools but it doesn't mean they ever use them. It's a combination of things that certain players have that allow them success.
You can't just say...well he's tall..that equals he's tough or he's short that equals him being soft. That is ridiculous.
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