Monday, August 27, 2012

BREAKDOWN - Shohoku vs. Seirin

This is my nerdiest post yet, combining basketball, Japanese manga meta-analysis, and Bill Simmons. After the jump, I try and pick a winner of a hypothetical match between two fictional basketball teams: Shohoku High School (Slam Dunk) and Seirin High School (Kuroko's Basketball).

Some background before the background: like most fans of sports journalism, I have a love-hate relationship with Bill Simmons. I adore his basketball lexicon and game descriptions and I can't stand his Boston homersexuality; I love his wordplay and reader mailbags and hate his intellectual elitism; I alternately love and hate his obscure pop culture references. I bought his 800+ page basketball book last year and read it cover to cover. It made me a born-again fan of "lost greats" like Bernard King and Bobby Dandridge, made Dave Cowens my favorite Celtic (before it was Bird by default, who's still awesome), and reaffirmed my great admiration for Scottie Pippen, Charles Barkley, and David Robinson (my favorite non-Jordan stars of the 90s). Good on you, Bill Simmons.

My favorite Simmons pieces are his Dr. Jack Breakdowns. Dr. Jack Ramsay is a legendary basketball coach whose career highlights were the 1977 and 1978 Portland Trail Blazers. Ramsay was well-known among journalists for his detailed pro/con explanations when he was analyzing a team or player. In his own Breakdowns, Simmons pits two similar people, teams, TV shows, or Olympic events against one another and attempts to subjectively and objectively decide which is the superior entity. My favorite Simmons DJB is Carver High vs. Hickory High for its great matchup and interesting analysis; my second favorite is the 1986 Celtics vs. the 2007 Patriots because it's so hilariously easy to mock in hindsight.

So with that out of the way, I'm going to do my very own Dr. Jack Breakdown. Here's the real background: I'm a manga addict that owns dozens of volumes of the stuff and devours sequential art online. My favorite genre of manga is sports manga (!?), because A) I love sports, B) sports is perfect theater for the melodrama, character arcs, and action sequences on which manga thrives, and C) when you combine the over-the-top nature of manga action and superpowered teenagers with sports, awesome shit happens. So which two bodies am I breaking down? Well, I said so earlier: Seirin and Shohoku.

Let's talk about these two stories for a second: Slam Dunk is an enormously popular basketball manga that did wonders for the sport in Japan and is one of the top-selling manga of all time. It has fantastic action and characters and I will defend its greatness to the death - every basketball manga since Slam Dunk is compared to it, and none of them measure up. Slam Dunk's action, characters, phenomenal artwork, and beautiful basketball is an incredibly tough act to follow.

Now Kuroko's Basketball is a different beast entirely. Instead of mimicking the faithful basketball action of Slam Dunk, Kuroko takes basketball to silly extremes. You have characters that shoot 100% on 3-pointers and teams with multiple 6'6" Japanese teenagers dunking dozens of times each game. Kuroko's series' villains all obsess over winning and are evil and/or vindictive to a degree that makes much more sense in a fantasy or thriller story and not a sports series. But hey, I love the basketball craziness and Kuroko is my 2nd-favorite shounen series right now, after One Piece.

These two teams have some interesting similarities: they use a very similar color combination and they're "main character teams" starring two freshman forwards that wear #10 and #11. Let's properly introduce the teams with a few images and then get on to the breakdown!

In red, representing Slam Dunk...

SHOHOKU HIGH
Shohoku
(left to right: Ayako, Miyagi, Rukawa, Akagi, Anzai, Mitsui, Sakuragi, Kogure)



And in white, representing Kuroko's Basketball...

SEIRIN HIGH
Seirin
(front row: Kiyoshi, Riko, Kagami [with basketball], Kuroko, Hyuga, Izuki)
(back row: Koga [hand raised], Mitobe)

POINT GUARD
Handling the point for Shohoku is Ryota Miyagi, a diminutive, nimble waterbug whose incredible agility, sneaky passes, and chip on his shoulder make him one of the best PGs in the series. Seirin's standby at the point is Shun Izuki, a mild-mannered guard with excellent vision and passing. Both are team players that love watching their taller, more scoring-inclined teammates succeed, but Miyagi's weakness (he's a hothead who is easily baited and contained by bigger PGs) is probably a little less grievous than Izuki's (he's can't create his own shot). Ah, who am I kidding, Miyagi would run circles around Izuki. EDGE: SHOHOKU

SHOOTING GUARD
Shohoku's 2-guard is Hisaishi Mitsui, one of the top-rated middle school players three years prior to the events of Slam Dunk, who was derailed by a knee injury and eventually descended into juvenile delinquency. Mitsui attempts a basketball comeback at the behest of Shohoku's coach and other seniors. A skilled all-around player with stellar shooting form, Mitsui's nearly goddamn automatic from beyond the three-point line. Representing Seirin is Junpei Hyuga, the team's captain, who, like Mitsui, has a knack for threes. Hyuga's calling cards are a quick, reliable step-back jumper and his fierce leadership, and Mitsui's chief calling card is... that he lacks the stamina to last a full forty minutes. They're both clutch, but Mitsui's weakness (that he usually fights through, but still...) is crippling. EDGE: SEIRIN

SMALL FORWARD
In our weirdest mismatch in this entire piece, we have Shohoku's ace freshman Kaede Rukawa against Seirin's phantom sixth man Tetsuya Kuroko, formerly of Teikou Middle. Rukawa's and Kuroko's character arcs are strangely opposite. Rukawa is an outrageously talented scorer (he's like an Asian Bernard King circa 1984) who routinely puts the team on his back to win big games, but occasionally acts selfishly and plays 1v5. Kuroko's only real talent is a lack of presence; he never scores and rather plays to make his teammates stronger with trick passes and surprise steals. Or at least for their respective mangas' first halves.

During the final match in Slam Dunk, Rukawa has met his match for the first time ever in Sannoh Tech's Eiji Sawakita (who I'm 90% sure is Slam Dunk's answer to Michael Jordan). Sawakita owns Shohoku for most of the fourth quarter. Rukawa can't beat him defending alone, and eventually (for the first time ever) places faith into his teammates for victory, willingly passing the ball on drives and teaming up with Sakuragi on defense. Kuroko's arc is... stranger. When Seirin loses badly in their first match against Touou High and Daiki Aomine (Kuroko's former teammate and ex-best friend), Kuroko develops unusual driving and shooting techniques in order to contribute to Seirin more directly. Kuroko also creates a Misdirection Overflow technique that temporarily lends all of his teammates Kuroko's misdirection skill, but can only be used once. Yes, it's every bit as retarded as it sounds.

So this is Rukawa's talent against Kuroko's lack of talent, which is a weird comparison. Kuroko's bullshit has contributed directly to every single Seirin win that takes more than two chapters to wrap and Overflow is shenanigans so ridiculous and dirty that I'm surprised The Little Giants never tried it. Kuroko's efforts did lead Seirin to victory against Aomine, whose game resembles that of Rukawa, but does that make Kuroko better than Rukawa? ...of course it fucking doesn't. Rukawa is one of the best players in either series, and Kuroko is the defining gimmick in a story that thrives on really dumb gimmicks. MAJOR EDGE: SHOHOKU

POWER FORWARD
Battle of the big redheads! Shohoku's athletic big is Hanamichi Sakuragi, Slam Dunk's main character. Sakuragi doesn't know what basketball is (seriously) until he asserts to the cute Haruko that he's a basketball genius to try and impress her. The tall Sakuragi then nearly dunks a ball on his first attempt and quickly discovers an aptitude for the sport, improving with every game and alternately frustrating opponents and his own teammates alike. Kagami is also redheaded and talented, but he's a Japanese student that's lived in America prior to the events of Kuroko's Basketball and his development is less learning the basics of basketball and more about taking himself to the limit. Seriously, Kagami has power, hops, and air mastery comparable to Dominique Wilkins.

This isn't as bad a mismatch as you think. With every new game (starting with the Ryonan High rematch in particular) Sakuragi's skills grow dramatically. At times Sakuragi's insane athleticism and instincts have him outplay his teammates in virtually every aspect of the game other than long-range shooting - Sakuragi has key blocks, steals, dunks, short- and medium-range shots, and defensive stops at the end of nearly every game, and he's only been playing for a few months!

Still, this theoretical match only takes place as each team peaks over the course of their story, and while Sakuragi takes a few months to learn how to shoot properly, Kagami takes a few months to learn how to play above the rim and perform monstrous METEOR JAMS over 6'10" centers. We have a talented basketball novice against a talented basketball force of nature that can make lightning come out of his eyes by entering The Zone for massive damage (I wish I was kidding). Sorry, Sakuragi. EDGE: SEIRIN

CENTER
The two centers are also the two elder statesmen. Shohoku's center is Takenori Akagi, a massive, determined pillar of a man who has teammates that match him in body and mind for the first time in his basketball career. Seirin's center is team founder Teppei Kiyoshi, a skilled big that can play any position (including PG) and whose quick footwork and massive hands allow him to change angle and technique in midair with ease. Akagi (who I think resembles a young David Robinson) is a terror on boards and blocks and is extremely skilled in the low post - he is nearly peerless among Slam Dunk's centers until the final match, where the faster, broader Masashi Kawata of Sannoh Tech gives him fits. Kiyoshi is like a 1986 Kevin McHale - a skilled big that can score with either hand, has dozens of post moves to be an efficient scorer, and possesses the size and strength to power through opponents when he wants or needs to.

This is a classic matchup of power vs. finesse. Akagi would try to muscle through the paint every time, and Kiyoshi's rebounds and defense would thwart him on occasion. Kiyoshi would try to fool Akagi with low-post tricks in the paint, but he won't be able to run over Akagi without fouling and Gorilla's experience, size, and toughness would give him stops. Akagi struggles at range, Kiyoshi struggles with an old knee injury. These are two different players with similar levels of effectiveness - both are universally acknowledged as top-tier bigs, but struggle against their top rivals at center - and I can't pick between them. EDGE: EVEN

BENCH
Shohoku has a veteran duo of swingman Kogure and forward Kakuta (who are soon replaced by Rukawa and Sakuragi) in addition to the smart, solid combo guard Yasuda on their roster, plus three zero-impact freshmen. Seirin has silent center Mitobe, loudmouthed swingman Koga, and rebounding forward Tsuchida in addition to three zero-impact freshmen. Both teams get ENORMOUS mileage out of their starters, and resorting to the bench is often a major downgrade (Kakuta got worked over to the point of exhaustion by Sannoh's Nobe after just a few minutes and I don't think I've ever seen Koga make a jump shot ever).

The best players here are probably Kogure and Mitobe. Mitobe is a capable stand-in for Kagami or Kiyoshi and rocks a silky-smooth hook shot, while Kogure is a reliable shooter and veteran presence who has one of the most memorable baskets in Slam Dunk when he makes an open three in the Ryonan rematch. Really, though, the best bench is the bench that actually gets playing time. Has Izuki or Hyuga ever been subbed out? Not sure. EDGE: SHOHOKU

COACH AND MANAGER
Big mismatch here. I love Riko dearly, but she's out of her league as a game-time coach when she's up against professionals that were her father's contemporaries during his time on the Japanese national team. She's a capable scout and trainer, but again needs to rely on her father to bring out the best in her boys. Shohoku has a knowledgeable, reliable trainer in Ayako and one of the absolute best coaches in sports fiction history in Anzai. The White Buddha keeps cooler than Santa Claus while impeccably managing player minutes and putting up with Sakuragi's bullshit. His training and advice brings Sakuragi's game to a new level and other coaches can't help but admire and fear him every game. No contest. MAJOR EDGE: SHOHOKU

QUALITY OF COMPETITION
If we were to assemble all-star teams of Shohoku and Seirin opponents, how would they fare against the heroes from the other series? For Slam Dunk, I'm thinking a team of Maki, Sawakita, Sendoh, Kawata the elder, and Horishige with Fukatsu as the sixth man. For Kuroko's Basketball, I'd just as well take the whole Generation of Miracles: Akashi, Midorima, Kise, Aomine, and Murasakibara, then adding one of Akashi's Rakuzan teammates to come off the bench. How would the stars of one manga fare against the villains of the other?

...poorly, if you're Shohoku. Sannoh is a hell of a final boss, but what the fuck could Miyagi do against Akashi? And how could Shohoku stop Aomine and Murasakibara without double-teaming both of them? It helps that nearly all of the best players in Kuroko's Basketball suit up for different teams, but the over-the-top shounen soul of the series means the villains are fucking incredible. MAJOR EDGE: SEIRIN

RIDICULOUS FEATS OF BASKETBALL
So here's one problem - Slam Dunk strives for realism, while Kuroko thrives on basketball ridiculousness. Just like how a character from Rurouni Kenshin would never be able to touch a character from Dragon Ball Z, Kuroko's characters and basketball gambits are way more over-the-top and balls-out-crazy than Slam Dunk's. It's hard to top a character that can steal the techniques of his opponents or a point guard that sees the future. But in the interest of fairness (and accepting that most of the silliness is in Kuroko's villains and not its heroes), Slam Dunk can get pretty wack as well. I mean, Sakuragi (a 6'2" Japanese 16-year-old) dunks from the foul line when he's only been playing basketball for a few months. That isn't silly? Yes it is, but not silly enough. EDGE: SEIRIN

SWAG
The ultimate SWAG moment in Kuroko is probably in the first Shutoku game, where Kagami and Kuroko foil Midorima's buzzer-beating shot with teamwork and mind games. I have to hand the SWAG trophy to Shohoku, however, for the classic "it feels good to be the villain" line when they enter the gym full of screaming Sannoh fans, and immediately follow that up with a Miyagi-to-Sakuragi alley-oop dunk in the first twenty seconds of the game. EDGE: SHOHOKU

MAIN CHARACTER X-FACTOR
If this was a five- or seven-game series, then the whole boat capsizes because Mitsui's lungs and Kiyoshi's knees aren't lasting for that long, and Kuroko could only have Overload work once. Instead, it'll be two run-and-gun teams in a single-elimination game. We can assume that Rukawa and Kagami will both find The Zone and score at will at times, the veteran centers will get touches, both shooting guards will launch threes, and the two point guards will set the table. Both teams will execute on offense most of the time, because that's how these teams are built: fast breaks and high-scoring games.

So now we have the two big mysteries on each team, who both play at forward but weren't matched up against each other earlier: Sakuragi's defense and rebounding against Kuroko's passing and misdirection. Just like in their respective series, it's up to the main character to make the final difference. Kuroko will give his team several assists and steals in opportune moments, plus a few points off his weirdo unblockable push jumper. Then, probably in the last ten minutes of the game, he'll make his teammates invincible with Misdirection Overload. Sakuragi will probably outrebound everyone else on the floor (yes, even Kiyoshi) and provide a defensive presence that confounds opposing players and coaches alike. Sakuragi can defend shooters like Scottie Pippen, crash the boards with the ferocity of Moses Malone in his prime, and create havoc like Dennis Rodman at his Wormiest.

In every Seirin game, opposing teams discover the limits of Kuroko's misdirection only for Kagami to come through in the end with some gravity-defying craziness. In every Shohoku game, no-one can solve the bizarre rookie Sakuragi, whose confidence exceeds his experience, and only occasionally manage to contain the talented, solitary Rukawa. Kagami and Kuroko know they need tricks and teamwork to win, and don't always win. When Rukawa and Sakuragi, antagonistic to one another for 274 out of 276 chapters, teamed up for one play, they were unstoppable. (Evidence). If Seirin and Shohoku played a game, I'm pretty sure Anzai could come up with a stratagem for dealing with Kuroko. When he reached his peak against Sannoh, I'm not sure anyone had an answer for Sakuragi. FINAL VERDICT: SHOHOKU

---

So that's that. I should do that more often. Now I gotta go sleep, then go and earn a paycheck for more food and videogames. Until next time, stay classy.

26 comments:

  1. i dont agree with with you on some things

    first, sure mitsui cant keep up but he is a very good defender who can defend someone who is bigger than him, hyuuga is not a good defender, he can defend but he is not as good as mitsui

    second, bench should be seirin, cause other than kogure who is a clutch shooter, who else is reliable on shohoku? seirin has mitobe who is a good center, knows pressure defense and a good hook shooter, tsuchida who is known as a rebounder, and koganei who does all the things but still gets the job done better than yasuda or kakuta

    third, i would give sakuragi a little bit of edge, just a tiny bit because of the fact that they are both equal except for sakuragi who just learns how to shoot midrange, ive never seen kagami shoot a midrange, like what midorima said on one of the episodes, the defender already knows that kagami will dunk the ball

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hyuga's improvements in both skills and leadership over the course of the series are valuable. Mitsui is a better defender, but his stamina is too huge a weakness to ignore. I didn't say it was a major edge.

      Your points on Seirin's bench are only from reputation. Tsuchida and Koganei had their skillsets mentioned during the early games in the first tournament and they started one game in the winter cup, but neither of them have made a jump shot or pulled off a rebound on the manga's pages anywhere - where are you getting the idea that they're better than Yasuda or Kakuta? Two pages of saying "these are our skillsets" don't make them better than either of those other two benchwarmers. And I still think that Kogure is the best bench player on either team.

      And also, have you even read the full Touou rematch or the Yosen match? Kagami doesn't take mid- or long-range shots, but he can control his body in the air absurdly well and makes post moves and layups all the time, even if he eventually devolves into dunking all the time. I think my comparison to Dominique Wilkins is fair. I stand by my choices.

      Delete
    2. i dont agree mitsui vs hyuga, even when mitsui was out of stamina he pulled off that huge run shohoku had against shoyo before he went out, for me it was the equivalent of entering the zone

      i dont know about the bench but i probably give it to seirin because i dont think kogure's even that useful..but none of them matters because they probably wont be seeing any play time unless teppei gets injured or mitsui collapses

      i agree on kagami being better than sakuragi, because sakuragi has only months playing ball and has less training & experience

      i also dont agree with teppei/akagi matchup since teppei had a hard time against nebuya with his injury, considering the fact that akagi is the #1 center in kanagawa, i believe that akagi isnt a meat head but also has technique (he was the one that taught sakuragi how to play) that will allow him to overpower & match teppei's technique

      Delete
  2. Did you finish reading the post? I said that Shohoku wins because of Sakuragi.

    ReplyDelete
  3. It's been a while since I last read Slam Dunk and I do know that Sakuragi has managed to improve enough to avoid fouling out every single game. What I want to know, however, is if he has fixed that flaw enough to deal with Kuroko's strategy of causing his opponents to foul. Sakuragi just seems to me like a prime target for that specific type of strategy. It's cheap, I know, but it can be very effective, especially as psychological warfare. It doesn't even have to be Sakuragi who gets fouled out. Take out any of the starting five players like this and Shohoku will be crippled for the rest of the game.

    Also, I have to disagree with your assessment of Sakuragi's main character X factor. The Generation of Miracles made for great practice for dealing with some of the most outrageous of opponents, making Seirin one of the few teams equipped with dealing with a player like Sakuragi. If Seirin can deal with Murasakibara, they'll come up with an answer for Sakuragi sooner or later. (I'm also posting this under the assumption that Sakuragi at his best is as though he found the zone... in fact, isn't that really what it is?)

    I do agree that Anzai will come up with a plan for dealing with Kuroko's misdirection trick, though. He may even save Sakuragi from getting fouled out of the game (though I'm not sure if Sakuragi can remember to keep an eye out for Kuroko once he's completely focused on winning the game). I just think that if Riko and Kuroko worked together, they'll be able to come up with some sort of counter-plan.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hadn't taken in Kuroko's ability to foul players out under consideration, but if Seirin couldn't foul out Murasakibara, Himuro, Aomine, or Kise when it counted, I doubt that they could for any of Shohoku's starters.

      The weird thing about Sakuragi is that he has both bizarre athleticism and a mentality that defies his lack of basketball experience, so much so that the best players and coaches in Slam Dunk could never solve him. When Shohoku peaked, nobody in the Slam Dunk universe could stop them and I'm sure they would have beaten Maki and Horishige in the semifinals and finals if Inoue hadn't decided to end the series early.

      Every time Seirin wins, it's with tricks and misdirection. Every time Shohoku wins, it's with defense and grit. The two main characters are always key ingredients to those wins, and I'd bet on Sakuragi, Anzai, and Shohoku over Kuroko, Riko, and Seirin if this hypothetical match between two fictional teams ever took place.

      EDIT: I originally posted this without a reply tag. Whoops.

      Delete
  4. Man i wish you make a Generation of miracles (or knb allstars) vs Slamdunk allstars. I really love this post XD so much i view it every time i read knb or rewatch slamdunk..which happens almost everymonth

    ReplyDelete
  5. Since deciding to rewatch Slam Dunk after over a decade and closely following the KnB anime (Sports Mangas don't appeal as much to me since I like seeing characters doing their ridiculous moves in a frame-by-frame animation rather than by panel-to-panel stills), I've always wondered what would've happened if these two protagonist teams clashed. Some part of me would keep saying that the super saiyan-esque retardedness of the KnB character abilities would make them capable of trouncing my favourite fictional sports team ever, and another part of me kept saying that Shohoku's awesomeness and unbelievable collective tenacity would help them pull through. So thank you for making this article. You've put my mind at ease. What makes me personally favour Shohoku was the fact that although Seirin has some awesome skillsets under their belt, their two main characters would usually overshadow the rest with their OMGWTFBBQ moves despite their good team-central strategies, with the exception of Kiyoshi at times(in other words, I sometimes see Seirin games as the Kuroko x Kagami show featuring Kiyoshi with guest stars Hyuuga and Izuki). On the other hand, I've always seen Shohoku as a 5-man team. Every member makes a huge contribution to the team, even when and after Sakuragi peaks. I don't know, maybe that's just me? In any case, thanks for this article. It was a very fun read! SHOHOKU ROCKS.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Sakuragi...why? remember the better the player he is defending the better sakuragi becomes as a player (he's real in-born talent i may say).
    ex. vs shinichi maki
    vs sendoh
    vs sawakita
    he may have been beaten at the start of the game but he overcame at the end which is the most critical in any basketball game (if you are really a beasketball fan)

    ReplyDelete
  7. You should read the full article before making this comment. I did say that Kagami is a better player than Sakuragi, but that Shohoku would beat Seirin because of Sakuragi's unpredictability and talent. Kagami's ability to enter "The Zone" at will and his predisposition to matching the ability of his mark makes him a lot like Sakuragi in a few ways.

    And if you are really a basketball fan, you should probably know how to spell the word "basketball."

    ReplyDelete
  8. Nice breakdown but the fact is no one can shoot a 100% from outside the arc ever.

    Frankly Hanamichi's unpredictable bursts of pure monstrous athleticism would tear the Seirin team to shreds. Come on, Who on Seirin could guard a 210 cm, 130 kg guy like Hanamichi ??

    Hanamichi was just 189.2 and 75-80 kg. It was like seeing Dennis defend Shaq. Shohoku for the win.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Totally agree with the whole post, especially the SWAG part. It was just sooo damm epic, but hey... you can't except less from Tensais.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Damn straight! And I'm glad you enjoyed the post!

      Delete
  10. Replies
    1. Alright, very good points however I do have to disagree with a couple things here. 1. Kagami destroys Hanamichi in every category besides rebounding. First off, Kagami is a more complete player, having a better shot than Hanamichi but the difference is almost non existant. Kagami is a much better defender (It wouldn't be far fetched for him to shut down the entire offense in the zone, besides, outside of zone he could easily deal with Rukawa since that's what we should be expecting considering it'll be a ace 1on1) Kagami was capable of shutting down Midorima, Kise (non PC), Himuro (in semi zone), multiple uncrowned kings, need I go on? Athletiscm is actually easy to calculate. Kagami is 190 cm, he headbutted the rim (post training camp). we can assume his eyes is roughly 12.7 cm below the top of his head, therefore 312.7-190=122.7cm. 122.7cm= 48 inches. This is OUTSIDE of zone. In the zone (Mura vs Kagami) Kagami easily got his head above the rim, the average human head is a sixth of the persons head, there fore 190/6 roughly 31 cm. [300 (height of rim) + 31 (his head)] - 190 (the rest of his body) = 141 cm = 55.5 inches!!! His speed feats (I can only calculate his speed in the zone since we haven't seen a calculatable speed scene.) In the zone vs Rakuzan Kagami was around the top third of the paint, the paint is 15 feet long, a thrid of that is 5 feet, the three point line is 19 feet 9 inches. from the FT to 3pt line its 4 feet 9 inches, that means Kagami must travel 9 feet 9 inches in .8 seconds (the rough NBA estimate for spot up shooters since I couldn't find the time it takes for a highschool player to complete his shooting motion) but this part is irrelevant as I couldn't calculate Hanamichi's speed. Hanamichi jumping feat is at the beginning of the series (as he didn't improve his jumping ability throughout the series) where the top of his head is around the rim, 300 cm - 190 cm (Hanamichi height) = 110 cm = 43 inches. There is about 5 inches difference between Hanamichi's vertical and Kagami's vertical outside of zone. However Hanamichi outlasts Kagami but in a 48 min match it won't be much of a difference. Major edge :Seirin

      Aight, let's go onto some interesting things. While we can't be sure of who'll be marking who my best guess is to keep Kuroko off ball on defense as much as possible (meaning Kagami will likely be on Rukawa, Hyuga on Mitsui, Izuki on Ryota, Kiyoshi on Akagi and Kuroko staying in the passing lanes. If push comes to shove they'll probably sub out Kuroko for Mitobe to guard Hanamichi.) Izuki vs Ryota, this is interesting as Ryota is very similar to Hayama and Kasamatsu in terms of speed so I don't think it'll be so hard for Izuki to guard Ryota and vice versa as they both faced higher caliber players. As fro Mitsui vs Hyuga this is just a shoot out, first one to miss loses, sorta like Mibuchi vs Hyuga and Mitsui vs Jin. Rukawa vs Kagami... Jesus christ... Kagami can definitely slow down Rukawa and beat him in a 1v1, I mean... He shut down Rakuzan in the zone and stopped Kise, stopped Himuro, went head to head with AOMINE for christ sake (If this was Too vs Sannoh, Aomine stomps lol) so yeah, It'll be much easier for Kagami to guard Rukawa vs the competetion he had to guard while on the other end Kagami usually duo's with Kuroko to get by defenses but I do feel that Rukawa can definitely do some damage but nowhere near the damage that Kagami and Seirin has faced from the GOM (This hurts to write as I'm a Rukawa fan...) Akagi vs Kiyoshi is very difficult to get an outcome as Kiyoshi is more dynamic and more of a guard while Akagi is like a Shaq, Both can stop each other, I'd say their even :P. Now Kuroko will sit in the passing lanes getting steals or Mitobe will atleast try to guard Hanamichi.

      Overall I'd say their even but with Kagami in zone or true zone Seirin wrecks like an NBA team playing in the Rec league.

      Delete
    2. depends on what universe theyre playing really. if its KNB universe, their feats will dwarf probably most of shohoku's. if its SD/realistic universe, most of seirin's skills will be nullified.

      Delete
    3. not really, the only big hit Seirin will face is likely Kuroko's misdirection overflow and his phamtom drive but that's about it. Zone will probaby just stay the same just a bit weaker but that's about it, besides, experience is also keey here.

      Delete
    4. Very funny thing you just said about height and their jumping ability. Both Sakuragi and Rukawa is able to reach top of the backboard of basket with their hands. They are high jumper in Slam Dunk anime. In manga, they are able to reached left leg jumping ability of Kagami which was considered as very amazing even in Kuroko's basket. Kagami is not that much better shooter than Sakuragi. I agree kagami is more experience and has some skill than Sakuragi but compare to Rukawa, Kagami is not that much. Also we do had actual calculated speed for both Rukawa and Kagami. For Rukawa, it was final seconds of the match with sannoh, he run through from base line to other side of court within 2 second. For Kagami, it was final seconds of the match with Kaijo in winter cup, kagami run through near mid court to free throw line within more than 1.1 sec. Calculate speed for both are 10.3m/s(Rukawa), 6.1m/s(kagami).

      Delete
  11. Second time here lol.
    I don't think Seirin would play man to man per position, my guess would be Kiyoshi vs Akagi, Sakuragi vs Kagami, Rukawa vs Kagami, Hyuga vs Mitsui, Izuki vs Miyagi with Kuroko playing the passing lanes as Kagami has shown to have a HUGE defensive range, prob bigger than Murasakibara which is complete bull by itself. Sure Kagami will have a tough time guarding Rukawa (I mean look at what Himuro was doing to him). But Kagami has an absurd recovery, probably better than Sakuragi's. Idk what Shohoku has to answer zone or Kuroko. I feel it'll end VERY similarly to Yosen vs Seirin with Seirin winning via zone and Kuroko.

    ReplyDelete
  12. I don't agree with Center and Shoot guard because it favour more on shohoku. I don't know do you know about basketball drills but I will explain why. Mitsui had shot, fadeaway three points(which was only Mibuchi do in knb, even Hyuga consider it was very amazing level of play), double step three points ( step back play was considered barrier jump in knb and it was only use by Hyuga and aslo Hyuga only do one step back. The only person in knb who do double step back is Allen from jabberwock. I am not saying Mitsui is at the level of jabberwock. I just want to point out how skillful Mitsui double step back is even in the term of knb view), force release or one motion jump shot three points (you can see it in the match with sannoh and one on one with Rukawa or in the match with shoyo).

    As for center Akagi is very strong, he may be as strong as Nebuya from Kuroko because just like Nebuya, Akagi had shake basketball tournament hoop with his dunk, which was considered very powerful move even by Himuro and Murasakibara was a little bit shocked by the fact Nebuya dunk shake basketball tournament hoop. But Akagi is more than strength, he has a lot of post up moves as center. You can even say Akagi is Nebuya with more technique.

    Kiyoshi had hard time against Nebuya.
    Imagine how would Kiyoshi would be When he face against Nebuya with more technique.

    ReplyDelete