1, the first and most important, dribbling ability.
PG holds the ball the most in the whole court, so the requirement for dribbling ability is also the highest, which is also the reason why PG is generally low in height (the lower the height, the shorter the distance between the hands and the ground when dribbling, and the less likely the space will be broken; This is also a common situation, such as the magician can only be said to be a special case), which is also the most basic. A PG can be weak in other aspects, but poor dribbling is absolutely impossible.
2. Second, organizational ability.
The organizational ability here is divided into three parts, overall situation, tactical organization and passing.
The first is the overall situation and strategy. This thing is relatively empty, but to put it bluntly, IQ and EQ are higher. How to drive the rhythm of one's own team, suppress the rhythm of the other team, control the time and decide the routine depends entirely on the point guard.
Therefore, the IQ of most PG basketball players is relatively high, and most of them have good emotional control ability. Of course, some rubbish is good, which is also called emotional intelligence. People like Nash are even more examples of modesty.
The second is organizational ability, which is to deliver the ball to the right place. This is tactics. How to transport the ball to the right place depends on IQ and experience on the one hand and good vision on the other. Therefore, when the point guard plays ball, he usually looks around and listens around.
3. Scoring ability
In terms of scoring, the player who controls the ball is often the team's last scorer, which means that unless other teammates don't have a good chance to shoot, he won't shoot easily.
Usually, there are two situations in which the point guard scores. One is that there is no way to shoot to end the attack, and the other is that there are particularly good shooting opportunities, so the efficiency is generally higher.