Actually, the sign of a good rebounder is when he picks up the ball from the floor. It's called boxing out. If you seal your man well enough far enough from the basket, you might be 5'10 and it wouldn't matter.
Actually I`m not talking about rebounding... coz reabounding depends on where the ball will fall... I`m talking about blocking, scoring and allso defense...
Just maybe allone in Lithuania understand Basketball diferent then other people in the World...
You know, the fact that you're from Lithuania doesn't make everyone else a basketball idiot.
Let's see: Ben Wallace, one of the greatest interior defenders and shot blockers: 6'9. Paul Pierce, superior inside scorer in the NBA: 6'6. Carlos Boozer, starting power forward for the Utah Jazz, routinely having 20 and 10: 6'8.
In equal amount of training time in this game, taller folks will undoubtedly be better than short dudes. That doesn't mean that every 7-foot tall guy off the street will be walking around blocking shots and scoring like a monster in the paint. I can name at least a dozen of NBA guards that rebound, score inside and block shots better than, say, Nikoloz Tskitishvili, Todd Fuller, Ruben Wolkowyski, Jerome Moiso, Acie Earl, Zan Tabak, Michael Stewart, Bruno Sundov, or Dwayne Scintius. What's common for all these folks: all of them were 6'10 or taller and neither of them could play. So yeah, height helps (in game terms: helps with training speed) but it doesn't make you a player. It's that simple.
"I don't know half of you half as well as I should like; and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve."