Re: Greatest player of all time? : Sat Nov 01, 2014 3:47 pm
Voltaire wrote:
For example, take the current England international scrum half Matty Smith, full time player, oodles of time to train every facet of his game ,massive facilities at his disposal, sports science , numerous conditioners ,trainers , physios, doctors etc etc etc every advantage a player could possibly wish for...plays maybe 25 to 30 times a year on superb surfaces , with massive recovery resources.
International scrum half of the 80s Andy Gregory, part time in a non science era , very little back up apart from the odd physio , trains on dark nights for a few hours, plays on mud heaps at various times in a 40 plus game year, playing very often 3 times a week with no recovery resources.
Given those two scenarios i would suggest that Gregory is still some distance in front of Smith as a player...despite Smith having every advantage going over Gregory...
Now swap the scenarios around, give Gregory ALL the advantages, transport Smith into the 80s with all the disadvantages..what would the gap in quality be then..????
International scrum half of the 80s Andy Gregory, part time in a non science era , very little back up apart from the odd physio , trains on dark nights for a few hours, plays on mud heaps at various times in a 40 plus game year, playing very often 3 times a week with no recovery resources.
Given those two scenarios i would suggest that Gregory is still some distance in front of Smith as a player...despite Smith having every advantage going over Gregory...
Now swap the scenarios around, give Gregory ALL the advantages, transport Smith into the 80s with all the disadvantages..what would the gap in quality be then..????
Hang on. Why is today seen as having an "advantage"? Why do you think players have all the time to train as much as they want on every facet of the game?
Gregory would have had to seriously improve his athleticism and speed, both of foot and of mind.
The game is far, far faster, players are far, far stronger and far more powerful. I'd say that's an advantage to Gregory not to Smith.
Players can't train all day long, in fact they'll probably do no more than 1.5 - 2 hours on-field training per day. Probably 3 days a week. The rest is recovery and rest time alongside off-field training. You train much more than that and your players will be tired on matchday.
If you put Gregory into that environment today he might flourish, he might crumble but I don't see why he's be somehow streets ahead of the top current SL players.
Too many RL fans have a habit of thinking players in the past were somehow amazing compared to modern players. Especially half backs because they put players through gaps. Well there were a hell of a lot more gaps and a far, far slower and much less effective defence for them to deal with. Just because it was better to watch doesn't mean it was a better standard.
Don't get me wrong I'm not one who thinks everything is better today either. But I think there's a lot of lack of respect for current players in RL when compared to past players. And I don't agree with it. I think today's players are just as skillfull.
I think if you put great players from the past into today's teams (having gone through modern training etc) then I think some would suffer and fall away and some would still be great players. And vice-versa for modern players.