The ’96 Draft That Changed Everything
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Kiss and Shamm open by debating the greatest rookie class in NBA history — landing on the '96 draft as a cultural turning point that merged hip-hop and basketball in a way the league had never seen before. From Iverson's impact to Marbury's New York legacy, the conversation is a love letter to their era. God Shammgod pulls back the curtain on playoff scouting — explaining how strategy shifts from series to series, why leaving Caruso open was a deliberate scheme to neutralize Shai, and how his time in Dallas under defensive coordinator Sean Sweeney directly connects to what's happening in the current Finals. The analytics debate gets heated. Kiss challenges the idea of 'winning analytically' while losing on the scoreboard, and Sham breaks down why mid-range basketball isn't just valid — it's the foundation of every great scorer in history, from Jordan to Kawhi to Jalen Brunson.
The episode takes a personal turn as Kiss opens up about his basketball upbringing in Yonkers, the influence of Coach Rob Morton and the Westside Cobras, and the moment in sixth grade his father helped him choose basketball over other sports — before he eventually made a left turn from the gym to the studio. Sham and Kiss then go in on the AAU circuit: how money, politics, and misplaced priorities have corrupted what was once a pure grassroots system. They share their own bootstrap experiences — raising funds with cans in front of the shop — and contrast that with today's NIL-fueled culture that's producing transfers, inflated egos, and kids without fallback plans. The GPS metaphor closes the episode powerfully: life doesn't tell you you're wrong, it just reroutes you.
Whether it's Jalen Brunson going in the second round or Sham choosing coaching over celebrity training, the destination is what matters — and the struggle is what gets you there. Kiss and Sham also touch on mental health in professional sports, arguing that preparation needs to happen before the money arrives, not after a crisis. And they emphasize the importance of growing together — making your best friend the accountant, not leaving people behind.
Host: Jadakiss (Kiss) — Hip-Hop Legend and die-hard Knicks fan
Host: God Shammgod (Shamm) — NBA Assistant Coach, New Orleans Pelicans | Former NBA Player & Streetball Icon | Lifelong New Yorker
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.