hey its cool we came to a good understanding....when we practice here in belize am a point guard 6'2" in the IBS league( no nothing close to the nba but its fun and competitive and i like it) here in belize and during workouts we break up depending on our position to practice up and unders.... whether from the post for post players mid air up and unders( double clutch, some reverses )and as u guys call it flick flick....
i wasnt being specific like u guys when u spoke about up and upders as just the post version .in nba 2k i was being collective and packaging all the animations from post up to mid air to flick flick up and unders...
so now when i was being specific i would call the up and under out I.E. ...post up "up and under" and so on.
u see we use the term literally while u guys only refer to the post up version to be an up and under only....we call out the version of the up and under whcih just simply means to go up with the ball and down and up again.to elude shot blockers out stretched arms and to create contact and try to get to the FT line.....
unlike the NBA we play mostly zones and there is no 3 defensive in the keys(i guess this is why ballers outside the Us tend to be decent shooters,cause the paint is always guarded and compact) so ur always faced with a defender in the paint so i guess we specialized mostly on the term and branch off according to the version....so yes i understand u guys perspective and i respect that....
so to wrap this up all i was saying was that 2k has a lot of, and i used my term here:" up and under "versions ranging from the post to the mid air and "flick flick" and i just wished they would strike a balance according to who does it in nba 2k13 and not just the "flick flick" version
edith: http://www.youth-basketball-tips.com/up-and-under.html
this alone shows that its just not us here from the caribbean use the term literally and not just to refer to the post up version as being the up and under
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