One thing to note about Reggie that can't be measured with stats is that he had the most incredible stamina that I've ever seen in a basketball player. He would run around off ball all game long. His defenders chased him around for 3 quarters, running into brick wall screens from Smitts and the Davis boys. Then the 4th would come and Reggie still had opening tip energy and speed while the defenders were worn out. 21 PPG and Reggie being known for his 4th quarter performances. I suspect that Reggie was on cruise control just wearing out his defenders for 3 quarters in a lot of games. Not unlike a boxer who goes to body shots for 10 rounds so that he can wear his opponent down for the later rounds. I can remember watching some Pacers games where Reggie would have like 8 points going into the 4th and explode for 15 points.
Can we get a video on Ray Allen? Some argue he was robbed of the 2001 NBA finals appearance, the 2008 finals MVP, 2008 all star MVP & the reason lebron & Miami Heat were saved in 2013!
In so many ways, I love your analysis on players like Miller even more than your series on the greatest peaks. Nobody will ever put Reggie on the GOAT list, but that does nothing to take away from just how effective a player he was, and how terrifying it was to face him late with a small lead.
Absolutely. Let's appreciate what players did, rather than comparing them to some absolute standard of perfection...especially since there are no defensive stats that do justice to guys like Olajuwon...
Great point. People tend to know decent amount about the greatest but there are other players who aren't top 20 all time players but had major contributions.
creative ball player ... who accepted his weakness in physical game and jumping power ... and develop the shot and a game around it... dude is not talented, but hard work and a determination to compete ... reggie is respected becoz he have a no quit underdog mental game ... i loved his game ... second to pippen .... in the 90s ... like ppl copy him ... that is respect ...
@@Jesko_VRS is not physical, he has the height, but he is skinny and cannot jump, he is not athletic ... esp when compared to his peers ... we all know shooting skill is all hard work ... he isn't someone u draft like zion ...
@@josefliu You can work as hard as you want, if you don't have the massive talent needed to make the NBA, you are never ever getting there. Miller made the NBA and left his mark, so he had to be massively talented, he's no unicorn like MJ, but he has raw talent.
@@josefliu"Not talented". That's just going too far. He was 6'7", lengthy, fast, very quick and could shoot the lights out. Yes shooting is a talent. Of course you work hard for that skill, but not everyone has the talent to hone elite shooting. You think Charles Oakley, Shaq, Barkley, bigger stronger guys could ever shoot as well as Miller? No amount of practice makes them as good of shooters as Miller. Part of Miller's elite shooting was having the frame and touch for it. Claiming Miller isn't talented is another way of accrediting "will" or "killer instinct" instead of unique ability and obvious talent.
Living in Indianapolis my whole life and being born in 1990. Reggie miller is my childhood for sports. Even those retro 90’s jerseys bring back nostalgia that I can’t explain.
That shot of Manu in the opening has me so excited. I hope he gets a full episode breakdown like this. His game is truly unique, and every opportunity to prevent him from becoming known as "just a 6th man" should be taken.
Just like greatest peaks, part of the fun of this series is gonna be us guessing/pondering who's gonna get an episode and who won't. This should be good
I was thinking the same thing for this season idk who the hell is gonna pop up maybe Kevin guarnett or dirk but this one is so broad it’s hard to guess
@@t-god2439 I think there's gonna be a third series about great defensive players and KG might be on there. Otherwise, he might just use it to highlight other players since Garnett got a Peak episode
Exactly. I saw a pretty long shot of Manu in the intro and I'm like damn, is Manu going to get his own episode? He could feature some very unexpected names in this series.
Is he actually underrated? I know he didn't get his Hall of Fame induction right away, but that seems to have been corrected by his inclusion into the list of the 75 (76) greatest players list (by the way, the reveal when he learned he made the list is one of the best honest reactions you'll see from an NBA legend). Fans from the 1990s remember his great moments and his playoff heroics.
@@sinatra222 He's underrated by the general public, especially the younger generation that only knows how to judge an old player by stats and accolades
@@jamalwalker04 ; On a hardcore fan channel like this, Miller is not underrated. But you are right that Miller is underrated by casuals who make up the majority of the fan base.
@@beechboiii Rodman could end up on the offensive episode more likely than a defensive one! He is 5th all time on Offensive rebounds whereas he sits 22nd all-time on defensive rebounds. Rodman is remembered for his rebounding not only because he was great but because he did it so well on OFFENSE.
@ShynyMagikarp Eh... it would be a pretty damn quick offensive episode for Rodman. Rodman got rebounds. He would usually pass it out to teammates, which bolstered the teams offense. Sometimes he would take the shot. He was not efficient in these shots. How about that Rodman, eh? Whoo boy. Thanks for watching.
@@ShynyMagikarp while his rebounds are definitely the most impressive stat he has, his defensive presence was also huge and instrumental in the teams he was in.
@@supersammich344 Look, I'm not saying he SHOULD be in one of these episodes. If you ask me he probably shouldn't. All I was saying was his case for being in an offensive one may be just as strong if not stronger than a defensive one. Not saying EITHER CASE is strong, or deserved. That is a debate for another reply chain. My point was just to say Rodman's greatest rebound contributions were on the offensive end, and not by a small margin, by a shockingly large margin.
This is one of those moments when I really hear “Where is Larry Bird in all this ?” The role of the disruptor and a great off ball player. Yes, Reggie was ahead of his time. Thanks for this.
26:20 This is truly amazing I’m blown away I didn’t know he was THAT good🫡 Imagine that ten year run from 92-02 in this era😮💨 He was ahead of his time for sure
@@ThinkingBasketball You’re a GOAT for *TRUE* basketball analysis🫡 I love your content and you’re the only person who could justify Kobe not being top 10 to me Never stop putting out videos
Reggie was a nightmare... Watching your team play against his Pacers is a recipe for nervous breakdown, even if your team is up by 10 with 2 minutes remaining. That teammate grab play is legendary.
Ray Allen was a stud, but I do find it funny how arguments involving him vs Reggie almost never bring up how Reggie consistently ramped it up in the playoffs and became an elite offensive force
Ray allen is one of the more clutch buzzer beater guys in history too. His best fors and highs came vs the spurs second round with Duncan and Bowen Greg pop defending him and Rasheed Lewis was hurt and under performing big time and he played terrible but ray took them to six games in a year the spurs won the ring. He played good and was a possible finals mvp vs Kobe and the lakers and Kobe couldn’t defend him for long periods. He played great in that stretch where they almost made the nba finals vs iverson and the 76ers in game seven. Ray has had moments too but I would still rank him below reggie in clutchness but against many other ray is probably more clutch than them. We never got to see Reggie miller play on a stack teamed like curry and the warriors with or without durant or ray allen with the Celtics pierce and Garnett so we don’t know how clutch he could have been with less weight on his shoulders to carry. I feel like he would have had some all time feats with more distractions around him allowing him more space to operate.
@@freddyes2242 yes, but because Reggie was the sole Hall of Famer, until the Pacers got Mullin, is what made him more impressive than Allen. Ray couldn't make his team consistent by himself. Reggie WAS the Pacers.
Reggie Miller is underrated while Ray Allen is overrated. Miller vs Jordan was some of the best basketball ever played. Miller vs Spike Lee and the Knicks was legendary. Ray Allen was usually the second or third best player on his own team while Miller was the whole show.
One of the things you mentioned but didn't go deep enough... Miller truly mastered every kind of shot. The spot-up, the trailer, the step-back, the leaner, off the curl, off the screen, the pump-fake and shot, the jump shot, the triple, the turnaround, the floater... every type of shot was literally in his arsenal, and he made all of them at an efficient rate. Still, fantastic analysis
Another great video from TB. It’s interesting that Miller was not only punished by the anti-three-point sentiment of his day, but also by a lack of reliable three-point shooting around him. In a world where there’s only one or two volume 40% three-point shooters in the league, teams can’t even effectively take advantage of the gravity of such an elite sniper because everyone else is packed within 18 feet. Curry creates layups for Green, but Miller couldn’t do the same for , say, Smits - not because he wasn’t a good enough shooter or even because coaches didn’t value the three appropriately, but because the ancillary shooters that you’d need to create the space for Smits to roll to the basket just didn’t exist. In 2015, even excluding Klay, Curry had enough shooting around him to mitigate this issue. It’s both impressive and unfortunate that Miller was so ahead of his time. It’s fun to imagine what you could do as a time-traveling GM if you could acquire him and surround him with good-enough shooting.
That's all I could think about while watching this video it's weird to think that you could make a lot of average basketball intelligent people today a gm/coach in the 70s-90s and really go crazy with the right pieces
I’d have to disagree here… from the KD era and onwards the Warriors’ spacing has been subpar relative to the rest of the league. Their starting lineup features two complete non shooters - an absolute no go for many teams
@@JohnSmith-th6wr Subpar? Are you kidding me? Not every team has shooter the caliber of Klay on the wing. Even fewer teams have someone like Wiggins as another catch and shoot 3-ball who is good. Otto Porter and Jordan Poole in the 21-22 season are good above average shooters with Poole being 3rd in 3pt volume for the team. If anything there aren't enough teams who have the quality shooting *AND* option for ball handlers that the Warriors have. Especially come playoff time. Draymond as a non-shooter is counter balanced by his ability to handle the ball and pass. The Kings roster is not any better in those roles and they were the darlings of floor spacing last season while playing at a break neck pace in the regular season.
@@JohnSmith-th6wr I kinda agree that relative to the league the warriors spacing actually isn't that great anymore. However any edition of the modern warriors are miles ahead of the 90s Pacers in terms of the absolute spacing they have on the court.
@kanajingly8957I agree with you to an extent, but I think there's two aspects to it: how valuable you are off-ball, *and* what's the delta between your on ball and off ball value. the LeBron greatest peaks video talks about it, he's always been a great cutter and became an ok shooter but considering he's one of the greatest slashers and playmakers ever that's a lot less valuable than having the ball in his hands, and it's a reason he gives Jordan's peak a slight edge. your off ball value can only be so much without being a great shooter off the catch, the next best thing is being a devastating rim runner, with shaq being the most extreme example, but that's an aspect of value only bigs can fully access. and guys who derive a lot of their value from passing are always going to skew ball dominant, jokic is definitely a huge outlier, it would be very interesting to see bird play today, as.the other great "off ball passer" in history, but more perimeter oriented
I think the gravity, auxiliary creation, off-ball playmaking, portability, scalability, and overall adroitness of Reginald Miller was so stimulating that it sways me to put him over James Harden in my totally not arbitrary and useless peak for peaks list!!! I really think Ben would agree with me.
exactly, the Oscar Robertson, Lebron, Harden, Westbrook, Luka template is overrated. Big stat piling and only Oscar and LeBron could win that way when they formed superteams. If you take a closer look, you can have very good regular season records playing that way, but it always comes crashing down in the playoffs until of course the decks are stacked with talent like Oscar teaming with Kareem and LeBron teaming with everyone
@@HailKingCeezer not really considering lebron did went to the finals with two pretty mid/awful teams. plus they werent really op superteams. the cavs never really had a big three with how love played, wade declined steadily during the heatles years and bosh underperformed frequently and ad and lebron are just a duo. considering he won with every team he has, none of his teamates has had succes after him, and the fact the he had probably around or lesser teams than guys like bird or magic, i think that template works if you have an all time player and just actual championship calliber teams. now yes it is definitely safer to play the curry/jokic style, although jokic seems to be a cross between lebron and curry as he doesnt really move off ball that much and does pass like a dominating playymaker, i dont think its valid to undervalue the lebron, robertson ways. at the ende of the day if you have the right team it will work. just let me remind you that many players have tried to move into superteams and so far the only consistent succes is lebron so go figure. also kareem didnt won without oscar or magic so i guess that dominating playmakers are also very important in championships.
@@mythification11 Lebron's teams are not awful especially his 2nd stint Cavs teams. The man only knows how to play one style, him dominating the basketball. This reduces his teammates abilities and since they don't practice, they look "awful" when he is not out there because they are just waiting for him to check back in. One of the main reasons why his teams in his latter years were successful was because his competition in the East was not as talented, so the Cavs could coast in the regular season and when they pull up in the finals, they always got outplayed.
Lol what? Reggie is in the top 75 all time and regularly is on TV as an announcer. Nobody is forgetting reggie, the younger generation just might not know who he is
@@realfloxks__0637 I lost what? Lots of people "know of" someone. I knew of Bob Cousy, Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain and Kareem when I was a kid. Hell I knew of Napolean. Didn't mean I knew a thing about them or had ever seen them play (wouldn't have been possible, obviously).
Amazing video. This is one of the best videos on Reggie Miller I have ever seen. Pls make one on Charles Barkley. He shortly missed out on the top 10 greatest peaks list you made. I have a feeling you already plan on making one video on him.
As a Warriors fan, so many of these plays shown in the first part are to the letter what the Dubs do. I now wish I was in a position to interview Kerr because I wonder whether he took some of his playbook from those Pacers teams.
He was on basketball breakdown interview a few days ago and he says his plays are directly from the Bulls triangle and San Antonio's motion offense. I love thinking basketball but i completely disagree with how he painted comparing Miller off ball to MJ on ball. Mike made fast decisions and was not a ball pounder and was great off ball himself, whether running around screens or post positioning. The Bulls triangle had beautiful off ball movement.
Miller is one of my top 3 favorite players all time, I was thrilled to sit and watch this. Before Dame-time it was Miller-time and if I needed a player to play 5 minutes of clutch time to save my life, Miller is my number one.
I really like these kinds of videos about the 'other guys', so to speak. There's a lot more chatter about Larry Bird or Michael Jordan than there is about Reggie Miller. I feel as if I learn a lot more from videos like these.
Reggie was so good, extremely underrated for what he did in his time. Him and especially Rip Hamilton were always fun to watch cause they kept moving and had great jumpers. Fun fact Reggie was the only superstar in the 90’s to push MJ’s Bulls to 7 games but in the ECF I believe
While not the only team, the Pistons were favorites and hosted game 7, and the Knicks had no chance of winning game 7 at Chicago Stadium. But the Pacers went into Chicago as underdogs and made every Bulls fan hold their breath until late in the game. That in itself was a great accomplishment.
@@mrmacross yeah that’s why I brought it up. Came straight from Jordan’s mouth that the Pacers were tough like the Pistons. They had a real shot to bounce the Bulls especially after Reggie hit that Game 6 three
This channel is so good. I don’t even actively watch basket-ball anymore, sometimes in the playoffs, but these videos are just great and interesting anyway.
Meh depends who you talk to a lot of fans today don't think much of miller a lot just see him as low scoring shooter who couldn't do much else he'll ask Jordan haters he is one of the many "plumbers" Jordan got to play against lol
cus his game would translate perfectly to this era.. he didnt shoot 3's with alot of volume back in the day.... also with less physical defense i assume he would be even more punishing off ball. also... lmao the nba made a rule called the " reggie miller rule " because he was pioneer at drawing fouls when he was shooting by kicking his leg out. he would have found other ways to do it in this era.
Thank you for making this video! Reggie was one of my favorite players growing up as a kid. One mistake in the video, he was drafted in ‘88, not ‘98 (which I’m sure you knew).
Being from Indiana and growing up during Reggie's prime, he is the reason I fell in love with basketball. He stayed loyal to a small market team and gave our state a ton of memories. I still think they would've won the championship the year of the malice at the palace thing. That was sad to see that happen at the end of his career. Great video
I modeled my own game after Reggie despite me being a lifelong bulls fan. I cannot tell u the joy when i saw you were breaking this down. As usual excellent video
I have such vivid memories of playing NBA on my N64. I was like 7, and being Nordic I knew NOTHING about how basketball worked, but I knew one thing - I could hit shots with Reggie Miller! Absolutely loved it
Reggie Miller and John Stockton were my guys growing up back in Chicago! My Bulls were cool, but those two men were the reason I initially fell in love with the game.
Just found this channel and I subscribed the moment the video was done. I have never seen someone break down Reggie Miller's game before. It gave me whole new appreciation for Reggie and the 90's Pacers in general. Great video!
@ThinkingBasketball thank you SO MUCH for doing legendary basketball player series like you've been doing. To Ben Taylor & the rest of the contributors to the channel, PLEASE keep up the fantastic work. As a somewhat young fan & player, your "Greatest Peaks" series helped me assimilate the skillsets, mentality, & play styles of certain NBA legends i can incorporate into my game. I'm TOO ANXIOUS to see who all the featured players of this Offensive Legends series will be. And finally, i can only assume optimistically that there will be a DEFENSIVE Legends series forthcoming.👀🙏🏿
Enjoying this series so much man, you should cover Tracy McGrady or Carmelo Anthony. Both were so elite offensively and made it look so easy to score the ball, I’d love to see a break down of either their games.
The thumbing technique you pointed out at 11:48 actually isn't all that unusual. There's a few players who do it, Kyrie being the most prominent I can think of. The shooting hand wrist pronation is definitely weird, but I would guess it's probably actually training scars from his youth where he was told to end his shot with his off hand touching his shooting hand wrist. That's a good learning technique for making sure his arms stay balanced, but obviously nobody told him to stop doing that later (probably because he was so naturally gifted shooting that they didnt want to mess with success)
Born in 91, lived in indiana all my life. Reggie is the fucking man. I was too young to fully appreciate his game but I loved him all the same. Great video
Miller is today one of a paltry few b-ball talking heads who is worth hearing. I enjoyed your thoughtful retrospective for an inventive, skilled player who inspired future generations and raised the level of play for his team.
92' Reggie was signing autographs at Lafayette Square Mall at the Finish Line, I was 9 and my mother had me and my 2 brothers dressed in Bulls gear, like my brother had on Bulls pajama pants😢 we get to the front and he goes "Oooooh?? You want an autograph from me???" But man he was so cool, took pics, signed, and made another joke about the Bulls. Been my favorite player since. My son is 15 & plays just like him instinctly just from watching me when he was younger. Salute!
This is a great breakdown of Reggie miller game. He one of the most underrated players of all-time. He had more playoff success in da 90's other than the Bulls with less talent.
That bit about all that holding and grabbing Miller did actually made me want a video or series on what makes some "dirty" players successful (Miller, Laimbeer, Artest, etc.), or how some can overcome the reputation while others embrace it or are haunted by it (again Miller, Laimbeer, Artest...)
Would be interesting to see content about that. I think there are 2 buckets you can put these type of players' with their 'dirty' on court play. You have players like Grayson Allen and the Morris Twins who end up playing overly physical which is perceived dirty because that is their limitations. They are good defensively against most players but they will get burned against the best regardless of how much smarter or physical they have to be. Then you have Reggie Millers' pulling actions and driving himself for contact in traffic. He gets away with it in part because he's already playing physical having to bump with other guys off-ball and him being a 185 lb string bean. So he's a smaller looking guy already inviting for contact either way. You can also lump Garnett giving birth to moving screens in the late 2000s. Which is a cue that since a well placed one is hard to discern in play for refs, physical bigs with even post 2013 Bogut (who was already limited offensively) would be Steph's first PnR partner via moving screens. They Draymond would learn how to play that game with Steph later.
Incredible story telling on this. I love the off-ball players that make themselves a threat without the ball. Those tend to be the dangerous ones because it splits your attention and makes rotating very difficult.
The long twos some of these amazing shooters took before three point shooting really took off is infuriating. Dirks 2011 playoffs are such an example. He was insane this season but if you rewatch those games you see how often he catches the ball behind the three point line, takes a step forward and shoots (and obviously hits) the longest possible two. If I would watch something like that live today I might attack the TV. I wonder how much he would have dominated if he took those threes.
He would dominate regardless even if his diet of 3 FGA were lower for the modern standard. The key with Dirk's game was that even if he had range from beyond the arc, he was still money from working the mid range via a back to basket game. Which he could turn to a contested shot into FTs (which he had a good amount of FTAs throughout his prime) or into his patented big man fade away jumper. Besides the spacing worked out because Dirk was also flanked with shooters throughout his key playoff runs.
i wish he got more recognition. i feel like people recognize ray allen, but dont realize without miller there may have never been a 3pt heavy ray allen. and if miller played today i think his numbers would be a lot closer to curry. thank you for recognizing miller and sharing it for the world
I always thought Reggie's jumper was beautiful. Back in the 90s there weren't so much footage of 'how to shoot it right' so I just ran with how Reggie did it because it seemed to efficient and fluent. I actually molded my game after Reggie. I was the lanky guy in my teens with high stamina so I kept on running around and around on offense, tiring up my opponents and launched my shot when I got an opening from the catch. And when my opponents eventually started to pay more attention to my off ball movements suddenly my mates got more time and room for their moves.
Awesome. Making my way through my rewatch of Greatest Peaks and this is exactly what I wanted to see pop up in this series! Hoping so badly for a Steve Nash episode soon too
Part of what hurts Reggie is them not making the finals. But when you have to play through MJ and those Knicks teams, it's gonna be tough. Thank you for the Pacers and Reggie love!
@@sideshowbobsaget8876 right 1 time on the back end of his career. They had better teams in earlier years that either lost in the first round or ran into the Knicks and Bulls.
@@TheBackno Well it certainly sucks Reggie played his prime ball in an era of another legendary players' prime and in the same Conference no less. Also sucked that he played under then under Larry Brown who is a great defensive minded coach but was stubborn in some ways with how he liked his team lineups. Which is no wonder why Bird as the Coach was able to get the Miller core pieces and surround him with an infusion of other talents to overachieve getting into the Finals. But also running into the buzzsaw that is the Lakers quest for a 3peat.
Grew up east side Naptown. Loved watching Reggie. Appreciated how surprisingly balanced this video was, making exquisitely clear why Miller was great but also his limits and downsides. New to your channel, good stuff!
1:20... Bro the stats you said blew me away. SO I looked it up and you were incorrect, Reggie came in the league "1988" not 1998. Thats why I was confused... so yes in 1988 I think Bird had more 350 3 pointers or so... he ends up getting more than that. But id go back and fix that because it had me stumped
Reggie is a legend and one of the best to ever do it. He was 6'6 and 195 lbs, if he was 210-215 lbs like today's players he could've dominated even more
I love your take on player's like reggie miller. He made a hall of fame career out of being an incredible off-ball player. It's the most underrated part of the game relative to how impactful it is. It makes every player dangerous, because the offense flows and the ball doesn't stick.
People and the Basketball world will grow to appreciate you more. For the basketball education that you give. Talking about legends and explaining why and what makes them legends is so valuable for the next generation of basketball players. You can not get this type of brake down no where else. I me myself appreciate you for helping me understand the game more🙏🏾 you on to something big for the game of basketball Ben. You have to keep goin, the game need you bro.🔥🏀
Oldheads are so anti-off ball. That’s why they don’t understand and appreciate the beauty of the modern game. It’s crazy that Reggie pulled this off in a old era
@@ThinkingBasketball that's an excellent point. Reggie Miller wasn't your stereotypical baller and I wonder how much that's plagued the minds of superficial basketball fans over time (keep in mind, pre-social media.) And hurt his brand. When you think of a baller, it's Shawn Kemp's athleticism, Magic's finesse, Jordan's 'airness.' Reggie is a nice guy. All in the midst of an NBA crowd who want smashing the boards and hard fouls-a generation that faux-proudly proclaims this generation is soft. "Soft as Charmin," Kobe would say. Thanks for responding. Didn't you make it big and get a gig or something? Big ups to you, my man.
The value of off-ball play. So much creation that often doesn't show up in the box score. People still don't understand, there are people who STILL look at purely pts+asts of an individual player as being creation.
I grew up in the 90s watching that style of basketball and Reggie was one of those dudes who put fear in folks hearts. I remember that he was one of the first to use those staggered screens that RIP Hamilton, Ray Allen, and eventually Steph Curry would use. Looking at old footage with modern advantages and hindsight see that we can see some of the germs that eventually would go on to develop the current NBA. Can't wait to see the next player breakdown.
Finally! No one really acknowledges how good Reggie Miller was. I've been saying this since Curry's unanimous MVP season. He is what Miller and Ray Allen would be if the green lights were given to them during their time.
To me it is crazy to call him dependent on good teammates, and not say that he enhances the other players. Not just because of current basketball and statistics, but more so on fotball and just having Messi on your team gives everyone an extra second to controll the ball
I'm glad we're all starting to recognize Reggie Miller is one of the greatest and most efficient shooters of all time, no pun intended, next to Steph Curry
Yes! He’s got an awkward sort of grace. It’s compelling to watch. It must be as compelling for the players on the court with him. You can’t take your eyes of him.
As many of you have noted, the Bird record was through 1988, not 1998. Those words sound a lot a like apparently!
One thing to note about Reggie that can't be measured with stats is that he had the most incredible stamina that I've ever seen in a basketball player. He would run around off ball all game long. His defenders chased him around for 3 quarters, running into brick wall screens from Smitts and the Davis boys. Then the 4th would come and Reggie still had opening tip energy and speed while the defenders were worn out. 21 PPG and Reggie being known for his 4th quarter performances. I suspect that Reggie was on cruise control just wearing out his defenders for 3 quarters in a lot of games. Not unlike a boxer who goes to body shots for 10 rounds so that he can wear his opponent down for the later rounds. I can remember watching some Pacers games where Reggie would have like 8 points going into the 4th and explode for 15 points.
Reggie was drafted during the 1987 NBA Draft too
Yep, just like @BradleyTosh said, Miller entered the league in 1987
Can we get a video on Ray Allen? Some argue he was robbed of the 2001 NBA finals appearance, the 2008 finals MVP, 2008 all star MVP & the reason lebron & Miami Heat were saved in 2013!
Please do a video on Charles Barkley please please please
In so many ways, I love your analysis on players like Miller even more than your series on the greatest peaks. Nobody will ever put Reggie on the GOAT list, but that does nothing to take away from just how effective a player he was, and how terrifying it was to face him late with a small lead.
So true. The greatest are always talked about. But I love hearing deep dives on lesser talked about players.
imagine him and Dennis Rodman on a team just to infuriate their opponents all game. That alone is worth his pickup.
Absolutely. Let's appreciate what players did, rather than comparing them to some absolute standard of perfection...especially since there are no defensive stats that do justice to guys like Olajuwon...
Reggie was also deceptively strong. You can see the defenders wrestling him but dude was strong even with his wiry frame.
Great point. People tend to know decent amount about the greatest but there are other players who aren't top 20 all time players but had major contributions.
Reggie is a pioneer and it’s even more amazing when you consider the era he played in
creative ball player ... who accepted his weakness in physical game and jumping power ... and develop the shot and a game around it... dude is not talented, but hard work and a determination to compete ... reggie is respected becoz he have a no quit underdog mental game ... i loved his game ... second to pippen .... in the 90s ... like ppl copy him ... that is respect ...
@@josefliudude was talented, just not flawless. Without talent, you don't even make the NBA scouting reports, let alone become a Hall of famer.
@@Jesko_VRS is not physical, he has the height, but he is skinny and cannot jump, he is not athletic ... esp when compared to his peers ... we all know shooting skill is all hard work ... he isn't someone u draft like zion ...
@@josefliu
You can work as hard as you want, if you don't have the massive talent needed to make the NBA, you are never ever getting there. Miller made the NBA and left his mark, so he had to be massively talented, he's no unicorn like MJ, but he has raw talent.
@@josefliu"Not talented". That's just going too far.
He was 6'7", lengthy, fast, very quick and could shoot the lights out. Yes shooting is a talent.
Of course you work hard for that skill, but not everyone has the talent to hone elite shooting.
You think Charles Oakley, Shaq, Barkley, bigger stronger guys could ever shoot as well as Miller? No amount of practice makes them as good of shooters as Miller. Part of Miller's elite shooting was having the frame and touch for it.
Claiming Miller isn't talented is another way of accrediting "will" or "killer instinct" instead of unique ability and obvious talent.
Living in Indianapolis my whole life and being born in 1990. Reggie miller is my childhood for sports. Even those retro 90’s jerseys bring back nostalgia that I can’t explain.
Pacers have had some great jerseys over the years, but my favourite was those side chevron kind of things in the 90s.
That jersey those Pacers wore from the early to mid 90’s is one of greatest jerseys ever made🔥🔥🔥
Remember when we tried to name us hwy 31 after him?😂
Born in 91. Lived in indiana all my life. Reggie is the fucking man
Born in 93 baby. R-e-g-g-i-e Reggie from the top of the key!!
That shot of Manu in the opening has me so excited. I hope he gets a full episode breakdown like this. His game is truly unique, and every opportunity to prevent him from becoming known as "just a 6th man" should be taken.
Just like greatest peaks, part of the fun of this series is gonna be us guessing/pondering who's gonna get an episode and who won't. This should be good
I was thinking the same thing for this season idk who the hell is gonna pop up maybe Kevin guarnett or dirk but this one is so broad it’s hard to guess
@@t-god2439 I think there's gonna be a third series about great defensive players and KG might be on there. Otherwise, he might just use it to highlight other players since Garnett got a Peak episode
Exactly.
I saw a pretty long shot of Manu in the intro and I'm like damn, is Manu going to get his own episode?
He could feature some very unexpected names in this series.
Another thing, at least with the greatest peaks episode we got a preview of who was next at the end of the video.
No previews so far on these.
@@WhelmedButReady that is true but he also did wilt in both so idk this is so hard to guess but I’m here for it I want to see where it goes
Babe wake up, new Thinking Basketball just dropped
Scratch that, wake up the whole fam
Ong time to roll up and lock inn🤣
Typee shiii
Ben dropped
But actually though I wish my girlfriend knew enough about basketball to appreciate greatness smh
One of the most underrated players of all time. Playoff Reggie was unreal
He was a 5-time All-Star, is in the Hall of Fame, and was recently selected as one of the 75 greatest players ever. How is he "underrated"?
Is he actually underrated? I know he didn't get his Hall of Fame induction right away, but that seems to have been corrected by his inclusion into the list of the 75 (76) greatest players list (by the way, the reveal when he learned he made the list is one of the best honest reactions you'll see from an NBA legend). Fans from the 1990s remember his great moments and his playoff heroics.
"Miller Time"
@@sinatra222 He's underrated by the general public, especially the younger generation that only knows how to judge an old player by stats and accolades
@@jamalwalker04 ; On a hardcore fan channel like this, Miller is not underrated. But you are right that Miller is underrated by casuals who make up the majority of the fan base.
It's episode 2 and I can't wait for season 3 and defense already. This prolly gonna be a banger still
I can't wait for the Rodman episode
@@beechboiii Rodman could end up on the offensive episode more likely than a defensive one! He is 5th all time on Offensive rebounds whereas he sits 22nd all-time on defensive rebounds. Rodman is remembered for his rebounding not only because he was great but because he did it so well on OFFENSE.
@ShynyMagikarp
Eh... it would be a pretty damn quick offensive episode for Rodman.
Rodman got rebounds. He would usually pass it out to teammates, which bolstered the teams offense. Sometimes he would take the shot. He was not efficient in these shots. How about that Rodman, eh? Whoo boy. Thanks for watching.
@@ShynyMagikarp while his rebounds are definitely the most impressive stat he has, his defensive presence was also huge and instrumental in the teams he was in.
@@supersammich344 Look, I'm not saying he SHOULD be in one of these episodes. If you ask me he probably shouldn't.
All I was saying was his case for being in an offensive one may be just as strong if not stronger than a defensive one.
Not saying EITHER CASE is strong, or deserved. That is a debate for another reply chain. My point was just to say Rodman's greatest rebound contributions were on the offensive end, and not by a small margin, by a shockingly large margin.
This is one of those moments when I really hear “Where is Larry Bird in all this ?” The role of the disruptor and a great off ball player. Yes, Reggie was ahead of his time. Thanks for this.
26:20 This is truly amazing I’m blown away I didn’t know he was THAT good🫡 Imagine that ten year run from 92-02 in this era😮💨 He was ahead of his time for sure
Same -- I think when Dean Oliver first ran "advanced" numbers over 20 years ago, he thought the Miller data was an error.
@@ThinkingBasketball You’re a GOAT for *TRUE* basketball analysis🫡 I love your content and you’re the only person who could justify Kobe not being top 10 to me
Never stop putting out videos
@@ThinkingBasketball Who would you say is a comparable player to Reggie in the past twenty years
@@GreedyGlo and annoying
@@GreedyGlo and a butt kisser
YUUUUUUS, I've always wanted a Reggie Miller video. From anybody really, but Thinking Basketball? My life is complete.
Reggie was a nightmare... Watching your team play against his Pacers is a recipe for nervous breakdown, even if your team is up by 10 with 2 minutes remaining. That teammate grab play is legendary.
Ray Allen was a stud, but I do find it funny how arguments involving him vs Reggie almost never bring up how Reggie consistently ramped it up in the playoffs and became an elite offensive force
Ray allen is one of the more clutch buzzer beater guys in history too. His best fors and highs came vs the spurs second round with Duncan and Bowen Greg pop defending him and Rasheed Lewis was hurt and under performing big time and he played terrible but ray took them to six games in a year the spurs won the ring. He played good and was a possible finals mvp vs Kobe and the lakers and Kobe couldn’t defend him for long periods. He played great in that stretch where they almost made the nba finals vs iverson and the 76ers in game seven. Ray has had moments too but I would still rank him below reggie in clutchness but against many other ray is probably more clutch than them. We never got to see Reggie miller play on a stack teamed like curry and the warriors with or without durant or ray allen with the Celtics pierce and Garnett so we don’t know how clutch he could have been with less weight on his shoulders to carry. I feel like he would have had some all time feats with more distractions around him allowing him more space to operate.
@@freddyes2242 yes, but because Reggie was the sole Hall of Famer, until the Pacers got Mullin, is what made him more impressive than Allen.
Ray couldn't make his team consistent by himself.
Reggie WAS the Pacers.
Miller was much more flashy than Ray Allen. Ray was more tactical.
Reggie Miller is underrated while Ray Allen is overrated. Miller vs Jordan was some of the best basketball ever played. Miller vs Spike Lee and the Knicks was legendary. Ray Allen was usually the second or third best player on his own team while Miller was the whole show.
Reggie was way better than Ray Allen
One of the things you mentioned but didn't go deep enough... Miller truly mastered every kind of shot. The spot-up, the trailer, the step-back, the leaner, off the curl, off the screen, the pump-fake and shot, the jump shot, the triple, the turnaround, the floater... every type of shot was literally in his arsenal, and he made all of them at an efficient rate.
Still, fantastic analysis
Another great video from TB. It’s interesting that Miller was not only punished by the anti-three-point sentiment of his day, but also by a lack of reliable three-point shooting around him. In a world where there’s only one or two volume 40% three-point shooters in the league, teams can’t even effectively take advantage of the gravity of such an elite sniper because everyone else is packed within 18 feet. Curry creates layups for Green, but Miller couldn’t do the same for , say, Smits - not because he wasn’t a good enough shooter or even because coaches didn’t value the three appropriately, but because the ancillary shooters that you’d need to create the space for Smits to roll to the basket just didn’t exist. In 2015, even excluding Klay, Curry had enough shooting around him to mitigate this issue. It’s both impressive and unfortunate that Miller was so ahead of his time. It’s fun to imagine what you could do as a time-traveling GM if you could acquire him and surround him with good-enough shooting.
That's all I could think about while watching this video it's weird to think that you could make a lot of average basketball intelligent people today a gm/coach in the 70s-90s and really go crazy with the right pieces
I’d have to disagree here… from the KD era and onwards the Warriors’ spacing has been subpar relative to the rest of the league. Their starting lineup features two complete non shooters - an absolute no go for many teams
@@JohnSmith-th6wr Subpar? Are you kidding me? Not every team has shooter the caliber of Klay on the wing. Even fewer teams have someone like Wiggins as another catch and shoot 3-ball who is good. Otto Porter and Jordan Poole in the 21-22 season are good above average shooters with Poole being 3rd in 3pt volume for the team. If anything there aren't enough teams who have the quality shooting *AND* option for ball handlers that the Warriors have. Especially come playoff time. Draymond as a non-shooter is counter balanced by his ability to handle the ball and pass. The Kings roster is not any better in those roles and they were the darlings of floor spacing last season while playing at a break neck pace in the regular season.
Even without that he still created enough space for teammates by mlving
@@JohnSmith-th6wr I kinda agree that relative to the league the warriors spacing actually isn't that great anymore. However any edition of the modern warriors are miles ahead of the 90s Pacers in terms of the absolute spacing they have on the court.
Understanding the gravity that you posses to bend a defense is a massive skill that all stars should learn to be effective without the ball
Not all stars have gravity off the ball though. Like Jokic, giannis, lebron, etc…much more effective with the ball in their hand
@kanajingly8957I agree with you to an extent, but I think there's two aspects to it: how valuable you are off-ball, *and* what's the delta between your on ball and off ball value. the LeBron greatest peaks video talks about it, he's always been a great cutter and became an ok shooter but considering he's one of the greatest slashers and playmakers ever that's a lot less valuable than having the ball in his hands, and it's a reason he gives Jordan's peak a slight edge. your off ball value can only be so much without being a great shooter off the catch, the next best thing is being a devastating rim runner, with shaq being the most extreme example, but that's an aspect of value only bigs can fully access. and guys who derive a lot of their value from passing are always going to skew ball dominant, jokic is definitely a huge outlier, it would be very interesting to see bird play today, as.the other great "off ball passer" in history, but more perimeter oriented
I think the gravity, auxiliary creation, off-ball playmaking, portability, scalability, and overall adroitness of Reginald Miller was so stimulating that it sways me to put him over James Harden in my totally not arbitrary and useless peak for peaks list!!! I really think Ben would agree with me.
Players like Steph and Jokic not needing to dominate the ball make their teams better sense their not forced to be spot up/corner shooters
exactly, the Oscar Robertson, Lebron, Harden, Westbrook, Luka template is overrated. Big stat piling and only Oscar and LeBron could win that way when they formed superteams. If you take a closer look, you can have very good regular season records playing that way, but it always comes crashing down in the playoffs until of course the decks are stacked with talent like Oscar teaming with Kareem and LeBron teaming with everyone
@@HailKingCeezer not really considering lebron did went to the finals with two pretty mid/awful teams. plus they werent really op superteams. the cavs never really had a big three with how love played, wade declined steadily during the heatles years and bosh underperformed frequently and ad and lebron are just a duo. considering he won with every team he has, none of his teamates has had succes after him, and the fact the he had probably around or lesser teams than guys like bird or magic, i think that template works if you have an all time player and just actual championship calliber teams. now yes it is definitely safer to play the curry/jokic style, although jokic seems to be a cross between lebron and curry as he doesnt really move off ball that much and does pass like a dominating playymaker, i dont think its valid to undervalue the lebron, robertson ways. at the ende of the day if you have the right team it will work. just let me remind you that many players have tried to move into superteams and so far the only consistent succes is lebron so go figure. also kareem didnt won without oscar or magic so i guess that dominating playmakers are also very important in championships.
@@HailKingCeezer LeBron and Luka are exceptions. Luka just needs a proper team. He’s been the truth since he was a rookie
@@mythification11 COOK😮💨
@@mythification11 Lebron's teams are not awful especially his 2nd stint Cavs teams. The man only knows how to play one style, him dominating the basketball. This reduces his teammates abilities and since they don't practice, they look "awful" when he is not out there because they are just waiting for him to check back in. One of the main reasons why his teams in his latter years were successful was because his competition in the East was not as talented, so the Cavs could coast in the regular season and when they pull up in the finals, they always got outplayed.
Love that curry is not letting Reggie’s name be forgotten, so so cool man
Lol what? Reggie is in the top 75 all time and regularly is on TV as an announcer. Nobody is forgetting reggie, the younger generation just might not know who he is
@kanajingly8957 You think people remember Oscar Robertson? He was near the end of his career in the 70s, lol. Bill Walton was more relevant.
@@Cannon4545nah you lost you’ll be surprised to know how may 13-25 year olds know who Oscar is
@@realfloxks__0637 I lost what?
Lots of people "know of" someone. I knew of Bob Cousy, Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain and Kareem when I was a kid. Hell I knew of Napolean.
Didn't mean I knew a thing about them or had ever seen them play (wouldn't have been possible, obviously).
Amazing video. This is one of the best videos on Reggie Miller I have ever seen. Pls make one on Charles Barkley. He shortly missed out on the top 10 greatest peaks list you made. I have a feeling you already plan on making one video on him.
Your breakdowns help me to appreciate basketball and its athletes and coaches so much more. Thank you ❤
As a Warriors fan, so many of these plays shown in the first part are to the letter what the Dubs do. I now wish I was in a position to interview Kerr because I wonder whether he took some of his playbook from those Pacers teams.
He was on basketball breakdown interview a few days ago and he says his plays are directly from the Bulls triangle and San Antonio's motion offense. I love thinking basketball but i completely disagree with how he painted comparing Miller off ball to MJ on ball. Mike made fast decisions and was not a ball pounder and was great off ball himself, whether running around screens or post positioning. The Bulls triangle had beautiful off ball movement.
Miller is one of my top 3 favorite players all time, I was thrilled to sit and watch this. Before Dame-time it was Miller-time and if I needed a player to play 5 minutes of clutch time to save my life, Miller is my number one.
I really like these kinds of videos about the 'other guys', so to speak. There's a lot more chatter about Larry Bird or Michael Jordan than there is about Reggie Miller. I feel as if I learn a lot more from videos like these.
Reggie was so good, extremely underrated for what he did in his time. Him and especially Rip Hamilton were always fun to watch cause they kept moving and had great jumpers. Fun fact Reggie was the only superstar in the 90’s to push MJ’s Bulls to 7 games but in the ECF I believe
in 1990 the bulls and pistons went to 7 games in the ecf and the pistons won
The '92 Knicks and Bulls went to 7.
Thanks guys lmao
While not the only team, the Pistons were favorites and hosted game 7, and the Knicks had no chance of winning game 7 at Chicago Stadium. But the Pacers went into Chicago as underdogs and made every Bulls fan hold their breath until late in the game. That in itself was a great accomplishment.
@@mrmacross yeah that’s why I brought it up. Came straight from Jordan’s mouth that the Pacers were tough like the Pistons. They had a real shot to bounce the Bulls especially after Reggie hit that Game 6 three
This channel is so good. I don’t even actively watch basket-ball anymore, sometimes in the playoffs, but these videos are just great and interesting anyway.
I think Time has been very generous to Reggie Miller. The more time passes, the more people tend to appreciate how good he was.
Well deserved.
It has also been generous in that he doesn't look to have aged much (nor put on weight)!
@@gregoryrowlerson8457 I was about to say. He's a vampire lol
Meh depends who you talk to a lot of fans today don't think much of miller a lot just see him as low scoring shooter who couldn't do much else he'll ask Jordan haters he is one of the many "plumbers" Jordan got to play against lol
cus his game would translate perfectly to this era.. he didnt shoot 3's with alot of volume back in the day.... also with less physical defense i assume he would be even more punishing off ball. also... lmao the nba made a rule called the " reggie miller rule " because he was pioneer at drawing fouls when he was shooting by kicking his leg out. he would have found other ways to do it in this era.
If he was playing in this era would prob add 5-10 points to his regular season average. No defense today plus all the foul shots he would get.
Thank you for making this video! Reggie was one of my favorite players growing up as a kid. One mistake in the video, he was drafted in ‘88, not ‘98 (which I’m sure you knew).
taking MJ to 7 games in your rookie year would be insane lol
I can't believe that greatest peaks is back! I'm so pumped!
So nice to see these longform videos when you're able to put them together.
Loved this. Those 90s Pacers teams were always sooo close.
Being from Indiana and growing up during Reggie's prime, he is the reason I fell in love with basketball. He stayed loyal to a small market team and gave our state a ton of memories.
I still think they would've won the championship the year of the malice at the palace thing. That was sad to see that happen at the end of his career.
Great video
Weirdly I knew of Reggie Miller before I knew of MJ as a kid (around 2005-6). Definitely most underrated of all time
I modeled my own game after Reggie despite me being a lifelong bulls fan. I cannot tell u the joy when i saw you were breaking this down. As usual excellent video
I have such vivid memories of playing NBA on my N64. I was like 7, and being Nordic I knew NOTHING about how basketball worked, but I knew one thing - I could hit shots with Reggie Miller! Absolutely loved it
thank you for this. my introduction to the nba was watching reggie's 25 point 4th quarter on NBC as a kid, and i've been a megafan ever since.
Reggie Miller and John Stockton were my guys growing up back in Chicago! My Bulls were cool, but those two men were the reason I initially fell in love with the game.
This was an excellent video! As a long-time nba fan, I appreciate the deep breakdown of this legend.
Ben finally got to make his Reggie Miller video!
I play the long game!
Just found this channel and I subscribed the moment the video was done. I have never seen someone break down Reggie Miller's game before. It gave me whole new appreciation for Reggie and the 90's Pacers in general. Great video!
@ThinkingBasketball thank you SO MUCH for doing legendary basketball player series like you've been doing. To Ben Taylor & the rest of the contributors to the channel, PLEASE keep up the fantastic work. As a somewhat young fan & player, your "Greatest Peaks" series helped me assimilate the skillsets, mentality, & play styles of certain NBA legends i can incorporate into my game. I'm TOO ANXIOUS to see who all the featured players of this Offensive Legends series will be. And finally, i can only assume optimistically that there will be a DEFENSIVE Legends series forthcoming.👀🙏🏿
I just wanted to say it was so awesome to see you on NBA RUclips breaking down one of my favorite nba finals game! You are a national treasure.
Enjoying this series so much man, you should cover Tracy McGrady or Carmelo Anthony. Both were so elite offensively and made it look so easy to score the ball, I’d love to see a break down of either their games.
Reggie was one of my favorite players growing up, thank you for doing this series. Can't wait to see which player you do next. Cheers!
The thumbing technique you pointed out at 11:48 actually isn't all that unusual. There's a few players who do it, Kyrie being the most prominent I can think of. The shooting hand wrist pronation is definitely weird, but I would guess it's probably actually training scars from his youth where he was told to end his shot with his off hand touching his shooting hand wrist. That's a good learning technique for making sure his arms stay balanced, but obviously nobody told him to stop doing that later (probably because he was so naturally gifted shooting that they didnt want to mess with success)
Born in 91, lived in indiana all my life. Reggie is the fucking man. I was too young to fully appreciate his game but I loved him all the same. Great video
Miller is today one of a paltry few b-ball talking heads who is worth hearing.
I enjoyed your thoughtful retrospective for an inventive, skilled player who inspired future generations and raised the level of play for his team.
His monday interviews on dan Patrick show are great
Thank you for blessing me with a great example to show people when people complain about players traveling in the modern game (8:33 mark)
That's not good evidence for you. 1d1ot
And way to like your own comment
I always enjoy content from this channel, and it enables me to enjoy the sport and the athletes in a richer way.
M0r0n
92' Reggie was signing autographs at Lafayette Square Mall at the Finish Line, I was 9 and my mother had me and my 2 brothers dressed in Bulls gear, like my brother had on Bulls pajama pants😢 we get to the front and he goes "Oooooh?? You want an autograph from me???" But man he was so cool, took pics, signed, and made another joke about the Bulls. Been my favorite player since. My son is 15 & plays just like him instinctly just from watching me when he was younger. Salute!
Love this. Reggie was my favourite player growing up.
This is a great breakdown of Reggie miller game. He one of the most underrated players of all-time. He had more playoff success in da 90's other than the Bulls with less talent.
That bit about all that holding and grabbing Miller did actually made me want a video or series on what makes some "dirty" players successful (Miller, Laimbeer, Artest, etc.), or how some can overcome the reputation while others embrace it or are haunted by it (again Miller, Laimbeer, Artest...)
Would be interesting to see content about that. I think there are 2 buckets you can put these type of players' with their 'dirty' on court play. You have players like Grayson Allen and the Morris Twins who end up playing overly physical which is perceived dirty because that is their limitations. They are good defensively against most players but they will get burned against the best regardless of how much smarter or physical they have to be. Then you have Reggie Millers' pulling actions and driving himself for contact in traffic. He gets away with it in part because he's already playing physical having to bump with other guys off-ball and him being a 185 lb string bean. So he's a smaller looking guy already inviting for contact either way. You can also lump Garnett giving birth to moving screens in the late 2000s. Which is a cue that since a well placed one is hard to discern in play for refs, physical bigs with even post 2013 Bogut (who was already limited offensively) would be Steph's first PnR partner via moving screens. They Draymond would learn how to play that game with Steph later.
Incredible story telling on this. I love the off-ball players that make themselves a threat without the ball. Those tend to be the dangerous ones because it splits your attention and makes rotating very difficult.
The long twos some of these amazing shooters took before three point shooting really took off is infuriating. Dirks 2011 playoffs are such an example. He was insane this season but if you rewatch those games you see how often he catches the ball behind the three point line, takes a step forward and shoots (and obviously hits) the longest possible two. If I would watch something like that live today I might attack the TV. I wonder how much he would have dominated if he took those threes.
He would dominate regardless even if his diet of 3 FGA were lower for the modern standard. The key with Dirk's game was that even if he had range from beyond the arc, he was still money from working the mid range via a back to basket game. Which he could turn to a contested shot into FTs (which he had a good amount of FTAs throughout his prime) or into his patented big man fade away jumper. Besides the spacing worked out because Dirk was also flanked with shooters throughout his key playoff runs.
This is such a good video. My biggest basketball regret is not having born early enough to see the magic of those early 90s stars 🔥
Definitely ahead of his time💯 He would get a *BAG* in this era😂
M0r0n
Bless you for this. Huge Miller and Pacers fan growing up in Houston, Texas and had to fight so many battles explaining how Reggie was the future.
the goat is back with another basketball masterclass , i hope you keep making these , i am so doing for the steve nash episode , keep it up
M0r0n
i wish he got more recognition. i feel like people recognize ray allen, but dont realize without miller there may have never been a 3pt heavy ray allen. and if miller played today i think his numbers would be a lot closer to curry. thank you for recognizing miller and sharing it for the world
I absolutely love how Reggie Miller played, especially when he got to shine in the playoffs
Your analysis and commentary, skillful play from Miller, and actual BASKETBALL being played with sets and plays. This video was a dream lmao
I always thought Reggie's jumper was beautiful. Back in the 90s there weren't so much footage of 'how to shoot it right' so I just ran with how Reggie did it because it seemed to efficient and fluent.
I actually molded my game after Reggie. I was the lanky guy in my teens with high stamina so I kept on running around and around on offense, tiring up my opponents and launched my shot when I got an opening from the catch. And when my opponents eventually started to pay more attention to my off ball movements suddenly my mates got more time and room for their moves.
I very much enjoyed this video, the 90s Pacer were incredible
those passes by mckey were amazing!
As a lifelong Pacers fan. Also, as huge Reggie Miller fan. I thank you for the love and appreciation of my man! #boombaby #millertime
Awesome. Making my way through my rewatch of Greatest Peaks and this is exactly what I wanted to see pop up in this series! Hoping so badly for a Steve Nash episode soon too
4:32-4:51 is just amazing. This is incredible basketball.
Reggie was ELITE. That Reggie vs Knicks 30 for 30 really sheds light on his killer mode
What a break down! I loved this video very much! Reggie Miller was a true matter of the offball game.
Reggie's leaner was lethal. That was that era's floater.
glad to see Reggie and his Pacers get more recognition. Great vid as always!
Part of what hurts Reggie is them not making the finals. But when you have to play through MJ and those Knicks teams, it's gonna be tough. Thank you for the Pacers and Reggie love!
Miller and the Pacers made the Finals in 2000.
@@sideshowbobsaget8876 right 1 time on the back end of his career. They had better teams in earlier years that either lost in the first round or ran into the Knicks and Bulls.
@@TheBackno Well it certainly sucks Reggie played his prime ball in an era of another legendary players' prime and in the same Conference no less. Also sucked that he played under then under Larry Brown who is a great defensive minded coach but was stubborn in some ways with how he liked his team lineups. Which is no wonder why Bird as the Coach was able to get the Miller core pieces and surround him with an infusion of other talents to overachieve getting into the Finals. But also running into the buzzsaw that is the Lakers quest for a 3peat.
Grew up east side Naptown. Loved watching Reggie. Appreciated how surprisingly balanced this video was, making exquisitely clear why Miller was great but also his limits and downsides. New to your channel, good stuff!
1:20... Bro the stats you said blew me away. SO I looked it up and you were incorrect, Reggie came in the league "1988" not 1998. Thats why I was confused... so yes in 1988 I think Bird had more 350 3 pointers or so... he ends up getting more than that. But id go back and fix that because it had me stumped
Clueless little boy
Reggie was so ahead of his time and deserves way more credit for popularizing the 3 point shot
Reggie is a legend and one of the best to ever do it. He was 6'6 and 195 lbs, if he was 210-215 lbs like today's players he could've dominated even more
I love your take on player's like reggie miller. He made a hall of fame career out of being an incredible off-ball player. It's the most underrated part of the game relative to how impactful it is. It makes every player dangerous, because the offense flows and the ball doesn't stick.
I need an analysis of Allen Iverson from this channel ASAP
People and the Basketball world will grow to appreciate you more. For the basketball education that you give. Talking about legends and explaining why and what makes them legends is so valuable for the next generation of basketball players. You can not get this type of brake down no where else. I me myself appreciate you for helping me understand the game more🙏🏾 you on to something big for the game of basketball Ben. You have to keep goin, the game need you bro.🔥🏀
Oldheads are so anti-off ball. That’s why they don’t understand and appreciate the beauty of the modern game.
It’s crazy that Reggie pulled this off in a old era
Shutup kid
The guy was a legend, never wud've thought of him in such light if it wasn't for your video....thx for making such content.
Imagine FG % being the standard for efficiency 🤣🤣
New subscriber, and hit like.
14:07 that pass, damn.
Great editing and content. You can tell how much time spend on these. Thanks for the laughs.
When I think of pure shooters I think of Reggie Miller first. Kids don't know that this man stood up to Jordan.
I'm wondering if we ever really thought of Reggie "scoring on" Jordan because using screens was seen as a weird crutch back then.
@@ThinkingBasketball that's an excellent point. Reggie Miller wasn't your stereotypical baller and I wonder how much that's plagued the minds of superficial basketball fans over time (keep in mind, pre-social media.) And hurt his brand.
When you think of a baller, it's Shawn Kemp's athleticism, Magic's finesse, Jordan's 'airness.' Reggie is a nice guy.
All in the midst of an NBA crowd who want smashing the boards and hard fouls-a generation that faux-proudly proclaims this generation is soft. "Soft as Charmin," Kobe would say.
Thanks for responding. Didn't you make it big and get a gig or something? Big ups to you, my man.
That circle screen had me laughing for a full minute. That's HILARIOUS
THERA GONNA BE A MANU EPISODE?!?!? LETS GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
The value of off-ball play. So much creation that often doesn't show up in the box score. People still don't understand, there are people who STILL look at purely pts+asts of an individual player as being creation.
i can’t wait for the Defensive legends
Need this for sure especially in the modern era
@@GreedyGlothere is no defense in the modern era
I grew up in the 90s watching that style of basketball and Reggie was one of those dudes who put fear in folks hearts. I remember that he was one of the first to use those staggered screens that RIP Hamilton, Ray Allen, and eventually Steph Curry would use. Looking at old footage with modern advantages and hindsight see that we can see some of the germs that eventually would go on to develop the current NBA. Can't wait to see the next player breakdown.
Finally! No one really acknowledges how good Reggie Miller was. I've been saying this since Curry's unanimous MVP season. He is what Miller and Ray Allen would be if the green lights were given to them during their time.
Steph has far superior handles and vision to either Miller or Allen.
Another great video. I remember watching Miller as a kid and once I saw this title, I recognized it instantly. Well done!
To me it is crazy to call him dependent on good teammates, and not say that he enhances the other players. Not just because of current basketball and statistics, but more so on fotball and just having Messi on your team gives everyone an extra second to controll the ball
36 born and raised in Chicago off MJ last 3 chips as a NBA fan, Indiana the only team ever made the city sweat a little in the East come playoff time.
I'm glad we're all starting to recognize Reggie Miller is one of the greatest and most efficient shooters of all time, no pun intended, next to Steph Curry
Miller the Knicks killer..😂 that was amazing to watch
I'm bulls fan,
I know he already talks about Jokic a lot, but I wonder if there is gonna be a Jokic episode
I hope not. We got like 10
Episodes on him already lol
Haven't finished watching the video, but I was waiting on the Rip Hamilton and Ray Allen shoutouts for their off ball work 👉🏽 9:53
Reggie is weird for having a funky form that's graceful at the same time
Yes! He’s got an awkward sort of grace. It’s compelling to watch. It must be as compelling for the players on the court with him. You can’t take your eyes of him.
M0r0ns
The way you all use film to demonstrate your point is unparalleled. Thanks for the quick turnaround on this monster vid ❤