I don't see Larry's game survives the HS coaching and the college coaching. His game would be too effected. I don't see NBA coaches doing much better at the later stage in his game.
Larry wasn't the player he was due to coaching. The only way coaching could have affected his game is if he had 5-10 years of Pitino as a coach, or maybe Jphn Thompson. Aside from that he'd be fine.
I agree that he wasn't the player he became because of coaching but if you have 6-8 years of coaches ordering you about you're game will develop habits. The part I'd be concerned about is his off the ball skills because so many players today are very poor without the basketball. I think he'd end up worse of for it.
I disagree with this. Somebody mentioned how hard-headed Larry was. THat's absolutely true. Remember, he first went to Indiana University, not Indiana State, and walked out after maybe one practice with Bobby Knight. From what I recall, it wasn't so much Knight (although he had no interest in being a backup and not being used properly for a couple years) as it was the overload from being at such a huge school.
Had Bird been coming up today, he probably would have gone the same route - tried out a big school, hated it, walked away, then transferred to a small school to lead a different Cinderella run, like he did with the Sycamores back in the day. Given the recent tourney success of teams like George Mason, I'd bet that if Indiana State had a talent like Bird now, they'd be able to make the same type of run he led them on in 79.
Bottom line, I don't think anybody would have coached Bird out of his game today just like they couldn't in 79. His personality just wouldn't allow it. When it came to the NBA level, we'll see but his NBA impact was immediate then, and I bet it would be immediate now. All-time players are all-time players. Doesn't matter what era you put them in, they'll excel.
Bird's height wouldn't change, nor would his shooting ability, rebounding, inner drive, work ethic, basketball IQ, very underrated athleticism (why does everybody forget how well the 80s Celtics ran the break?) and defense (the guy stopped 2 and 3 on 1s like nobody's business and always played the passing lanes beautifully). With that skill set, whether he became more athletic through medical and technological advancements or not, he's still a multiple MVP and title winner in today's game.