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Best Player Since Jordan

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 8:41 pm
by milesfides

NOTE: This thread was split from the Manu thread that was going way off topic. That might clarify some of these early posts.


Kirk Moon wrote:
4 rings as the main guy, probably in the toughest division in the league, with different support players, against different main rivals. Ultimate team guy, who is also one of the toughest in the league, especially among "stars".

Top player in his position ever, and top 10 player in the history of the game.

I will ask you back, how can he not to be the best player since Jordan?


First of all, we're talking about who the MVP is this season. You're expanding this further to mean something else. Nowhere above do you address this issue at all - how is Tim Duncan the MVP over Kobe this season?

Second, and this is OT for the thread but I'll address your peripheral argument.

I question this logic:

"Top player in his position ever, and top 10 player in the history of the game....how can he not be the best player since Jordan"

Two words: Kobe Bryant. Number one, not all positions are created equally. There is the possibility that the second best shooting guard is better than the best power forward. When analysts discuss overall basketball skills, the complete package, Duncan isn't included in that discussion. Duncan won't be invited to the Skills Challenge anytime soon. And Duncan may be a top 10 player, but Kobe may be a top 5 player, hell, for 10 years, Kobe has been compared to the very standard you mentioned, Jordan - and the comparison is just getting stronger every year.

Yes Duncan has 4 rings. Kobe has 3. Let's not get carried away with ring counting though. Shaq has 4 rings too. And one could just as easily say that Shaq exhibited a dominance during his career that Tim Duncan never achieved. Quite simply, Duncan was never the force, has never impacted the game as much as Shaq (as to change rules in the NBA).

Rings aren't everything. Nobody can win a ring by himself, and there's no question Duncan had the benefit of having the best teammates, one of the best coaches, etc.

Case in point? Kevin Garnett. KG had none of the benefits Duncan had, he had crappy teammates, bad coaches, etc., but he is comparable to Duncan in nearly every aspect of the game - 20 and 10 every night, even a better passer, a game changing defender, a complete team guy, and plays with unparalleled passion. But that logic (ring counting) shouldn't be the end-all when it comes to comparing players, as long as one assumes the idea that "one player can't win it" to be true.

Duncan had the benefit of playing next to a hall-of-famer in David Robinson, and always had a quality veteran cast and young talented players. Duncan's last 3 championships also featured Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker who had significant roles in each championship. Both became all-stars eventually, could easily be considered top 5 in their position.

I mean, Tony Parker was the latest finals MVP. How long are people going to pretend Duncan does everything for that team?

And Manu Ginobili, the subject of this thread, was the Euroleague MVP even before joining the Spurs. There were several stretches when Duncan was out (and maybe Parker) and Ginobili straight up carried that team and showed what he could do. Superstar. And yes, he is comparable to Kobe Bryant, imo the second best shooting guard in the league since Tracy McGrady became irrelevant a few years ago.

And of course, the Spurs have arguably the best coach in the league and always one of the best veteran supporting casts, including sharpshooters and a perennial defensive player of the year candidate.

So attributing all the Spurs success to Duncan is ridiculous, imo. In the same vein, people who say the Spurs are boring are the same people who say that Duncan is everything on the Spurs. These are people who don't watch the Spurs, imo, because anybody who watches the Spurs would see that 1) the Spurs play some exciting and dynamic basketball 2) Ginobili is really, really good and quite frequently the best player on his team 3) Tony Parker can change the game 4) Bowen (used to be) unbelievable 5) Greg Popovich is a terrific coach.

Yesterday, Reggie Miller declared that if Kobe were on the Heat, that team would make it into the playoffs. Well, if KG were on the Spurs, not Duncan, why wouldn't they have won as many championships? I would say they would've won more, because Kevin Garnett has been more durable.

Duncan has always been the analysts' choice because he's a vanilla choice. He's the best player on the best team of the last decade. Does that automatically make him the best player? Too many gaps in logic as I showed above.

But the players know. They're the ones who have to compete against each other. Team USA surely knows - Duncan was the centerpiece of that team that settled embarrassingly for the bronze.

Best player since Jordan? Based on what I've read and heard the past 10 years, most people involved in the NBA in any way would say Kobe Bryant. MVP this season? Sounds like a consensus.

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 8:51 pm
by LLcoleJ
DarkoMilicic wrote:
Don't degrade a fellow star to put Kobe on a pedestal far above other players. Is he the best individual player in the game? Yes. The best team player? No. That's why he will be out in the WCF Semifinals this year, again.


these statements make me laugh

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 8:55 pm
by Lost Angel
great post miles, but one thing.


the NBA's measuring stick of success is the number of rings you have at the end of your career, which is why Kobe will not be satisfied with less than 6 rings.


(actually, i guess thats just my opinion)

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 9:43 pm
by brandonkb8
hahah this is funny....manu cant even hold kobes jock strap..lmao

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 9:58 pm
by blix
doozyj wrote:-= original quote snipped =-



"If you, iamworthy, numbas, doozyj, or anyone else, would take the time to read (I know, it makes your head hurt), ST didn't compare the two in terms of their overall talent and impact on the game."

These are your words, you specifically mentioned my user name.

Yes, it is yesterday and no I didn't appreciate your insult, (that is not back seat modding as you are effecting me DIRECTLY in public). I would never say a remark like that to any fellow member here if I disagree with an opinion or post. That's it. We are both adults and now we can leave it alone and get back on topic. All good?


:kiss

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 10:25 pm
by doozyj
blix wrote:-= original quote snipped =-



:kiss


:D haha

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 10:42 pm
by TonyMontana
Lost Angel wrote:great post miles, but one thing.


the NBA's measuring stick of success is the number of rings you have at the end of your career
(actually, i guess thats just my opinion)


Im going to have to disagree .
Like I posted these same players before , players like Ewing , Malone , Dominique Wilkins , Reggie Miller , Barkley they are not considered successful .

How about in other sports like lets say football , players like Jim Kelley who was one of the best Q.Bs in the game , players like Randy Moss , and Bo Jackson , Junior Seau, Barry Sanders ....

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 10:55 pm
by SDChargers#1
First off I want to say that yes, Manu is incredibly underrated. When in comes to SGs in the league, outside of Kobe, Manu is the most complete. He can drive to the basket, hit 3s, jumpers, fts, play defense, and pass the ball. Simply put, he is amazing, and a sure fired winner.

With that said, he does not compare to Kobe, and just proves how flawed PER really is. It just discounts so many intangibles, like defense, getting double teamed, etc.

Don't get me wrong, Manu is good. He may one day be considered one of the top 50 greatest players ever (he aint there yet). But Kobe is already top 15 in my honest opinion. And after these seasons coming up (got knows the Lakers are stacked) Kobe may be top 5 when it is all said and done.

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 11:03 pm
by Sedale Threatt
I've heard plenty of people refer to Kobe as the best player in the NBA recently. But in the post-Jordan era? Hogwash. I remember the debate between Shaq and Duncan getting pretty heated last summer, but I can't recall too many, if anybody, making the case for Kobe.

Seriously, how can an objective case be made? As great as Kobe has been, and as poor as his supporting cast has been over the past three seasons, the stone-cold facts are:

1. He's never been the undisputed focal point of a single title team.
2. He's won no MVPs.
3. He's won no Finals MVPs.
4. Shaq and Duncan have done all three on multiple occasions.

Did Shaq and Duncan earn such honors on their own? Of course not, and nobody in their right mind would argue otherwise. By that standard, one could argue that Kobe would have zero rings had he not played next to arguably the most dominant physical force in NBA history. Which would be grossly unfair...but if we're going to play that game, why not?

No matter what qualifications you come up with, no matter how much you want to debate the circumstances, these are the raw facts, and these are some of the most important measures by which players who play different positions, and in different eras, are compared and judged.

They all matter, and they all count on the grand scorecard. At the moment, Kobe simply doesn't measure up to either, let alone Jordan (the comparison there reads like a tennis rout: 6-0, 5-0, 6-0). He very well could in five years if this team achieves like it should.

But until then, he doesn't, and it's not close.

And that's not even getting into the fact that big men are inherently more valuable than perimeter players.

Kobe might be one of the greatest scoring machines in league history, a highly-decorated defensive player and the mythical "most skilled" player in the league at the moment (I'm sure Cavs fans would debate that).

But with the exception of Jordan and perhaps Magic, it's exceedingly hard, if not impossible, to put a perimeter player, even one as gifted as Kobe, ahead of the great big men simply because of how many areas in which they impact the game.

Volume scoring, high-percentage shooting, rebounding, blocked shots, the ability to create for teammates out of double teams...other than 3-point shooting, there is virtually no facet of the game in which players like Shaq and Duncan don't make a major impact.

It's not Kobe's fault he's not 7 feet. But neither is it the fault of Shaq and Duncan that they are, or that they have been blessed by excellent supporting casts. Indeed, they performed accordingly and for that they should be celebrated. They've earned the title of best post-Jordan.

Kobe, thus far, with the most important chapter in his career about to be written, has not.

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 11:29 pm
by doozyj
I don't see why so many dismiss Kobe's 3 rings. He was part of that team as much as Shaq was. It takes a team effort, teams are two stacked in recent basketball to win it alone. MJ and MJ the two top players evey had a hell of a supporting cast. Even Malone and Stockton 2 top 50 players failed to do it. They are great players but not Champions. Kobe is a Champion 3 x over, and just because we had a luke warm cast the past 3 years, Kobe shouldn't be discounted. He can only make bad players so much better.

My point is Kobe has done so much in this league, I think we get blinded to how good he actually is. We expect it now, we expect 30 point games everynight. We expect him to save every game in clutch moments. Him not winning an MVP is irrellevant, it is a award based on opinion rather than stats or facts. Being Kobe, his reputation as being somewhat hated by others, ruined his chances many times of winning the award. If he had the personality of Lebron for instance he would have had had 3-4 by now. (maybe, maybe not just my point of view and opinion.).

Wow we are really going OT a little. Sorry all.

Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 11:54 pm
by iamworthy
doozyj wrote:-= original quote snipped =-



"If you, iamworthy, numbas, doozyj, or anyone else, would take the time to read (I know, it makes your head hurt), ST didn't compare the two in terms of their overall talent and impact on the game."

These are your words, you specifically mentioned my user name.

Yes, it is yesterday and no I didn't appreciate your insult, (that is not back seat modding as you are effecting me DIRECTLY in public). I would never say a remark like that to any fellow member here if I disagree with an opinion or post. That's it. We are both adults and now we can leave it alone and get back on topic. All good?


Nice post. I wasnt even going to say anything about the insults.

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 2:29 am
by milesfides
Sedale Threatt wrote:I've heard plenty of people refer to Kobe as the best player in the NBA recently. But in the post-Jordan era? Hogwash. I remember the debate between Shaq and Duncan getting pretty heated last summer, but I can't recall too many, if anybody, making the case for Kobe.


What was the debate? Can you find the thread? I've rarely heard Shaq or Duncan being touted as the best player in the league. Yes, they've always been discussed as the best big man, player you want to build around, etc. But even when Shaq was in his prime, people openly acknowledged the distinction between being dominant at his position (shaq) and being the best all-around basketball player (kobe).

Seriously, how can an objective case be made? As great as Kobe has been, and as poor as his supporting cast has been over the past three seasons, the stone-cold facts are:

1. He's never been the undisputed focal point of a single title team.
2. He's won no MVPs.
3. He's won no Finals MVPs.
4. Shaq and Duncan have done all three on multiple occasions.


For the same reason that one could say KG is one of the greatest big men to have ever played the game without batting an eye. Awards and rings obviously play factors, but there's no question individually ability doesn't necessarily yield those things. Basketball is a team game, and championships rely on a multitude factors and variables that are independent of an individual's performance.

Did Shaq and Duncan earn such honors on their own? Of course not, and nobody in their right mind would argue otherwise. By that standard, one could argue that Kobe would have zero rings had he not played next to arguably the most dominant physical force in NBA history. Which would be grossly unfair...but if we're going to play that game, why not?


What game? You're using different criteria. Yes, basketball is a team game and championships rely on more than one player's contributions. It's the same reason that one can't credit Jordan for all those championships (never won anything without Pippen) nor can one credit Shaq for all the championships (never won one without a great perimeter player).

You just validated my point - these are just games. At the end of the day, rings play a factor, but they shouldn't trump the statistical as well as intuitive evaluation of a player. For the same reason, Lebron is comparable to Kobe even though Lebron has ZERO rings. Yes, some Laker fans say, Kobe's got the hardware, Lebron could suck it. But anybody with an objective mind can see Lebron's talent and skill and acknowledge that Lebron is comparable, even without the hardware.

No matter what qualifications you come up with, no matter how much you want to debate the circumstances, these are the raw facts, and these are some of the most important measures by which players who play different positions, and in different eras, are compared and judged.


Yes, but there is no systematic way it's determined, certainly not a consensus standard, and the only "raw facts" are that player evaluations are open to interpretation. It's not a science, no matter what Hollinger tries to claim.

They all matter, and they all count on the grand scorecard. At the moment, Kobe simply doesn't measure up to either, let alone Jordan (the comparison there reads like a tennis rout: 6-0, 5-0, 6-0). He very well could in five years if this team achieves like it should.

But until then, he doesn't, and it's not close.


And if it's not close then why does everybody compare Kobe to Jordan every year of his career? And how is it that people who have seen them both, played with them both, played against them both, coached them both, say that Kobe IS comparable? Aren't their opinions a little more valuable than say, random fans who hardly have the benefit of firsthand experience?

And that's not even getting into the fact that big men are inherently more valuable than perimeter players.


That's just nonsense.

Kobe might be one of the greatest scoring machines in league history, a highly-decorated defensive player and the mythical "most skilled" player in the league at the moment (I'm sure Cavs fans would debate that).

But with the exception of Jordan and perhaps Magic, it's exceedingly hard, if not impossible, to put a perimeter player, even one as gifted as Kobe, ahead of the great big men simply because of how many areas in which they impact the game.

Volume scoring, high-percentage shooting, rebounding, blocked shots, the ability to create for teammates out of double teams...other than 3-point shooting, there is virtually no facet of the game in which players like Shaq and Duncan don't make a major impact.


Yet you're forgetting they don't handle the ball and they're not responsible for running the offense. Guards are the ones who set things up, guards are the ones who work hard in creating shots for their teammates, even setting up Duncan and Shaq.

And big men have a limited offensive game. No, they don't shoot threes, even the midrange game is rare, they struggle at the free throw line, and both Shaq and Tim Duncan have been liabilities at the charity stripe.

Defensively, yes they block shots - but guards also create steals and pressure the perimeter. It goes both ways. If guards didn't do their jobs, big men would get in foul trouble and become marginalized. Shaq and Duncan have always played next to great perimeter defenders. Defense goes both ways.

It's not Kobe's fault he's not 7 feet. But neither is it the fault of Shaq and Duncan that they are, or that they have been blessed by excellent supporting casts. Indeed, they performed accordingly and for that they should be celebrated.


First of all, your bias against guards is blatant, and second, nobody's taking anything away from Shaq or Duncan or any other big man. They deserve all the praise they get. However, one thing they don't get praised for (at least not regularly) is being the best player in the league, so I'd say you're celebrating the wrong thing.

They've earned the title of best post-Jordan.


According to who? Most of the articles I have read, most of the commentaries I've heard, puts Kobe at that position. He's been the best player in the league for the better part of a decade, and that comes from past teammates such as Shaquille O'Neal, analysts, commentators, etc.

Kobe, thus far, with the most important chapter in his career about to be written, has not.


Maybe, but that doesn't take away one bit from what Kobe has accomplished in 12 seasons in the NBA. And that's what is remarkable about Kobe - even considering his championships, his individual feats, all the great things he's done over his illustrious career, he's still only 29.

Just because Kobe has the opportunity to win 5 or 6 more rings doesn't take away from 12 amazing years.

Hell, it's even more remarkable that he's performing at such a level considering all that he's been through. Duncan never had to suffer through a rebuilding period - neither had Shaq. Neither had to assume so much responsibility with such little help.

I'm not saying Shaq and Duncan had it easy, but they simply didn't have to go through what Kobe had to go through. As long as we're looking at the context, allowing for the relative, carrying a crappy team on his back in a tough conference to the playoffs two years in a row is something that's not on Shaq or Duncan's resume.

Kobe survived it, accomplished some incredible and unbelievable things during it, and now is looking at the second half of his career, poised to continue doing what he aimed to do the moment he entered the NBA: to be the greatest player to have ever played this game.

And that's what makes Kobe's career so unique: his precociousness, his consistency, resilience, and a somewhat incredible ability to get better every year, even this late into his career. Like Jay-Z says, "30 is the new 20."

Like Mark Jackson said, there's the possibility that Kobe will go down as the greatest player in the history of the game.

When it's all said and done, there might not be any way to dispute that - rings, MVP counts, or anything else.

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 2:44 am
by iamworthy
milesfides wrote:
Sedale Threatt wrote:I've heard plenty of people refer to Kobe as the best player in the NBA recently. But in the post-Jordan era? Hogwash. I remember the debate between Shaq and Duncan getting pretty heated last summer, but I can't recall too many, if anybody, making the case for Kobe.


What was the debate? Can you find the thread? I've rarely heard Shaq or Duncan being touted as the best player in the league. Yes, they've always been discussed as the best big man, player you want to build around, etc. But even when Shaq was in his prime, people openly acknowledged the distinction between being dominant at his position (shaq) and being the best all-around basketball player (kobe).

Seriously, how can an objective case be made? As great as Kobe has been, and as poor as his supporting cast has been over the past three seasons, the stone-cold facts are:

1. He's never been the undisputed focal point of a single title team.
2. He's won no MVPs.
3. He's won no Finals MVPs.
4. Shaq and Duncan have done all three on multiple occasions.


For the same reason that one could say KG is one of the greatest big men to have ever played the game without batting an eye. Awards and rings obviously play factors, but there's no question individually ability doesn't necessarily yield those things. Basketball is a team game, and championships rely on a multitude factors and variables that are independent of an individual's performance.

Did Shaq and Duncan earn such honors on their own? Of course not, and nobody in their right mind would argue otherwise. By that standard, one could argue that Kobe would have zero rings had he not played next to arguably the most dominant physical force in NBA history. Which would be grossly unfair...but if we're going to play that game, why not?


What game? You're using different criteria. Yes, basketball is a team game and championships rely on more than one player's contributions. It's the same reason that one can't credit Jordan for all those championships (never won anything without Pippen) nor can one credit Shaq for all the championships (never won one without a great perimeter player).

You just validated my point - these are just games. At the end of the day, rings play a factor, but they shouldn't trump the statistical as well as intuitive evaluation of a player. For the same reason, Lebron is comparable to Kobe even though Lebron has ZERO rings. Yes, some Laker fans say, Kobe's got the hardware, Lebron could suck it. But anybody with an objective mind can see Lebron's talent and skill and acknowledge that Lebron is comparable, even without the hardware.

No matter what qualifications you come up with, no matter how much you want to debate the circumstances, these are the raw facts, and these are some of the most important measures by which players who play different positions, and in different eras, are compared and judged.


Yes, but there is no systematic way it's determined, certainly not a consensus standard, and the only "raw facts" are that player evaluations are open to interpretation. It's not a science, no matter what Hollinger tries to claim.

They all matter, and they all count on the grand scorecard. At the moment, Kobe simply doesn't measure up to either, let alone Jordan (the comparison there reads like a tennis rout: 6-0, 5-0, 6-0). He very well could in five years if this team achieves like it should.

But until then, he doesn't, and it's not close.


And if it's not close then why does everybody compare Kobe to Jordan every year of his career? And how is it that people who have seen them both, played with them both, played against them both, coached them both, say that Kobe IS comparable? Aren't their opinions a little more valuable than say, random fans who hardly have the benefit of firsthand experience?

And that's not even getting into the fact that big men are inherently more valuable than perimeter players.


That's just nonsense.

Kobe might be one of the greatest scoring machines in league history, a highly-decorated defensive player and the mythical "most skilled" player in the league at the moment (I'm sure Cavs fans would debate that).

But with the exception of Jordan and perhaps Magic, it's exceedingly hard, if not impossible, to put a perimeter player, even one as gifted as Kobe, ahead of the great big men simply because of how many areas in which they impact the game.

Volume scoring, high-percentage shooting, rebounding, blocked shots, the ability to create for teammates out of double teams...other than 3-point shooting, there is virtually no facet of the game in which players like Shaq and Duncan don't make a major impact.


Yet you're forgetting they don't handle the ball and they're not responsible for running the offense. Guards are the ones who set things up, guards are the ones who work hard in creating shots for their teammates, even setting up Duncan and Shaq.

And big men have a limited offensive game. No, they don't shoot threes, even the midrange game is rare, they struggle at the free throw line, and both Shaq and Tim Duncan have been liabilities at the charity stripe.

Defensively, yes they block shots - but guards also create steals and pressure the perimeter. It goes both ways. If guards didn't do their jobs, big men would get in foul trouble and become marginalized. Shaq and Duncan have always played next to great perimeter defenders. Defense goes both ways.

It's not Kobe's fault he's not 7 feet. But neither is it the fault of Shaq and Duncan that they are, or that they have been blessed by excellent supporting casts. Indeed, they performed accordingly and for that they should be celebrated.


First of all, your bias against guards is blatant, and second, nobody's taking anything away from Shaq or Duncan or any other big man. They deserve all the praise they get. However, one thing they don't get praised for (at least not regularly) is being the best player in the league, so I'd say you're celebrating the wrong thing.

They've earned the title of best post-Jordan.


According to who? Most of the articles I have read, most of the commentaries I've heard, puts Kobe at that position. He's been the best player in the league for the better part of a decade, and that comes from past teammates such as Shaquille O'Neal, analysts, commentators, etc.

Kobe, thus far, with the most important chapter in his career about to be written, has not.


Maybe, but that doesn't take away one bit from what Kobe has accomplished in 12 seasons in the NBA. And that's what is remarkable about Kobe - even considering his championships, his individual feats, all the great things he's done over his illustrious career, he's still only 29.

Just because Kobe has the opportunity to win 5 or 6 more rings doesn't take away from 12 amazing years.

Hell, it's even more remarkable that he's performing at such a level considering all that he's been through. Duncan never had to suffer through a rebuilding period - neither had Shaq. Neither had to assume so much responsibility with such little help.

I'm not saying Shaq and Duncan had it easy, but they simply didn't have to go through what Kobe had to go through. As long as we're looking at the context, allowing for the relative, carrying a crappy team on his back in a tough conference to the playoffs two years in a row is something that's not on Shaq or Duncan's resume.

Kobe survived it, accomplished some incredible and unbelievable things during it, and now is looking at the second half of his career, poised to continue doing what he aimed to do the moment he entered the NBA: to be the greatest player to have ever played this game.

And that's what makes Kobe's career so unique: his precociousness, his consistency, resilience, and a somewhat incredible ability to get better every year, even this late into his career. Like Jay-Z says, "30 is the new 20."

Like Mark Jackson said, there's the possibility that Kobe will go down as the greatest player in the history of the game.

When it's all said and done, there might not be any way to dispute that - rings, MVP counts, or anything else.

:bowdown: :bowdown: :bowdown: :bowdown:

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 2:48 am
by TonyMontana
WOW Miles , nice post Mang .

I bet you always Ace'd your Biology Exam .

You took these posts and tore it's A55 up like it was a finals exam . :rofl:




Example .


Well you first take the worm, dorsal side up, place it on your dissecting tray.
Pin down the anterior and posterior ends at the last segments. Lift the dorsal skin with forceps.
At the forceps' position, you then insert your scissors and cut an off-center line through to the anus. :rofl:

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 3:01 am
by milesfides
Thanks, you know I love you guys, but I'm not trying to show up anybody here...

this isn't a contest!

We should all respect differing opinions.

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 3:11 am
by iamworthy
milesfides wrote:Thanks, you know I love you guys, but I'm not trying to show up anybody here...

this isn't a contest!

We should all respect differing opinions.


I agree 100%. We battle way to much on the Laker board. We are all on the same team. We need to act like it. :hug:

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 3:13 am
by doozyj
milesfides wrote:Thanks, you know I love you guys, but I'm not trying to show up anybody here...

this isn't a contest!

We should all respect differing opinions.


A stellar post. This my friends is how to debate an argument. Notice no hostility.

:clap:

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 6:52 am
by Sedale Threatt
What was the debate? Can you find the thread? I've rarely heard Shaq or Duncan being touted as the best player in the league. Yes,
they've always been discussed as the best big man, player you want to build around, etc. But even when Shaq was in his prime, people openly acknowledged the distinction between being dominant at his position (shaq) and being the best all-around basketball player (kobe).


Nope, I sure couldn't. So I started one. Not that it really matters, but we'll see what the results are. (It was 11 for Shaq, 4 for Kobe, 3 for Duncan before I posted).

http://www.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?t=767977

My recollection hinges on the rash of articles I recall reading immediately after Duncan's Spurs won their fourth championship. Mind you, not who was the best last season, or the few seasons before that, but as a whole over the past decade since Jordan retired. There's a big difference, and I want to make it clear.

Interesting you used the phrase "player you want to build around," especially in acknowledging that this is a title that has often been bestowed upon Shaq and Duncan. Wouldn't this by default also equate to best player?

Kobe might be more skilled than either, but if GMs would rather build around Shaq or Duncan -- I highly, highly doubt many would turn down that opportunity in favor of a 6-6 shooting guard, even one as great as KB -- does it really matter?

Maybe the whole problem is how we each define "best". In my mind, it has less to do with skill or talent, and more to do with overall impact. Which is why I would rank Duncan and Shaq ahead of Kobe (for now). But the concept of "best player" can obviously be defined in any number of ways, and we're obviously on different wavelengths here.

What game? You're using different criteria. Yes, basketball is a team game and championships rely on more than one player's contributions. It's the same reason that one can't credit Jordan for all those championships (never won anything without Pippen) nor can one credit Shaq for all the championships (never won one without a great perimeter player).

You just validated my point - these are just games. At the end of the day, rings play a factor, but they shouldn't trump the statistical as well as intuitive evaluation of a player. For the same reason, Lebron is comparable to Kobe even though Lebron has ZERO rings. Yes, some Laker fans say, Kobe's got the hardware, Lebron could suck it. But anybody with an objective mind can see Lebron's talent and skill and acknowledge that Lebron is comparable, even without the hardware.


I agree that awards and championships are not absolute measures of greatness, and that they result from factors that are often outside of a particular player's control. At the same time, they're some of the few indisputable standards that can be applied in the highly subjective business of ranking and judging players.

You can come up with all sorts of qualifications relating to supporting casts, quality of coaching, playoff matchups, health, simple dumb luck, on and on and on. But the bottom line is, when given the opportunity to win major awards and championships as the alpha dogs, Shaq and Duncan did so on multiple occasions. Kobe, as of yet, has not. In my opinion, that should weigh heavily in the discussion.

Maybe that's not fair. But I think it's even less fair to take such achievements out of the equation. They happened, they matter, and they should be given the weight they deserve.

And if it's not close then why does everybody compare Kobe to Jordan every year of his career? And how is it that people who have seen them both, played with them both, played against them both, coached them both, say that Kobe IS comparable? Aren't their opinions a little more valuable than say, random fans who hardly have the benefit of firsthand experience?

I think it's pretty clear that, when comparing the two, the experts are basing their opinion on factors such as style, production, maybe even ability. But in terms of their respective resumes, again, it's not close.

*Five MVPs for Mike, zero for Kobe.
*Six Finals MVPs for Mike, zero for Kobe.
*Six championships won by Jordan's Bulls (all as undisputed team leader), three championships won by Kobe's Lakers (none as undisputed team leader).
*One Rookie of the Year for Mike, zero for Kobe.
*One Defensive Player of the Year award for Mike, zero for Kobe.
*Eleven scoring titles for Mike, four for Kobe.
*Seven PER titles for Mike, zero for Kobe.
*Three steals titles for Mike, zero for Kobe.

Giving each category equal value, that's a 40-7 advantage. Frankly, the only tangible area I can think of where Kobe bests Jordan is career scoring high. Other than that, Jordan's trophy case is superior, and his individual statistics are superior.

I'm not listing these things to belittle Kobe in the least. It's no shame to come up short in a head to head comparison with the best player of all time. But there's no way to ignore the absolutely massive chasm that exists relating to their respective resumes. It just can't be done.

That's just nonsense.

Well, there must be some reason that prize 7-footers always go No. 1 in the draft, or for the adage that you never trade bigs for smalls, or that the list of all-time NBA MVPs are dominated by big men.

If you're comfortable making a leap of faith like this:

Based on what I've read and heard the past 10 years, most people involved in the NBA in any way would say Kobe Bryant.

then I have absolutely no problem arguing that, if given a choice of positions, each and every GM in the NBA would build their team around a young, talented center every single time.

Yet you're forgetting they don't handle the ball and they're not responsible for running the offense. Guards are the ones who set things up, guards are the ones who work hard in creating shots for their teammates, even setting up Duncan and Shaq.

Don't centers also set teammates up by virtue of drawing double teams and finding the open man? They might not handle the ball nearly as much as guards do, but it's not as if play making is the exclusive realm of perimeter players.

And big men have a limited offensive game. No, they don't shoot threes, even the midrange game is rare, they struggle at the free throw line, and both Shaq and Tim Duncan have been liabilities at the charity stripe.

Limited? By what definition? Big men like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Hakeem Olajuwon, Kevin McHale and Tim Duncan had/have low-post games that took years to hone, and a high level of skill to execute. They're not the norm, of course, but neither are multi-faceted perimeter scorers like Kobe and Bryant. Maybe Shaq and Chamberlain weren't so versatile, but considering the rate and efficiency with which they scored, who cares?

I'll take an open dunk over an open 3 every trip down court.

Also, I'd argue that the fact that low-post players typically shoot much better from the floor negate any short-comings at the line. Which is another reach; while free throw struggles do seem more prevalent among big men, it's not uncommon for many to excel in this area. For example, Kareem was a career 72 percent shooter, Hakeem 71, McHale 80, David Robinson 74, Moses Malone 77.

[/i]Defensively, yes they block shots - but guards also create steals and pressure the perimeter. It goes both ways. If guards didn't do their jobs, big men would get in foul trouble and become marginalized. Shaq and Duncan have always played next to great perimeter defenders. Defense goes both ways.[/i]

I don't buy this at all. In my opinion, there's absolutely no way you can compare the impact of an ball-hawking, shutdown perimeter defender, such as a Bruce Bowen, with the impact of a mobile, shot-blocking big like Tim Duncan.

Bowen is, or perhaps was, a fabulous man-up defender capable of shutting down anybody in the league. But no matter how well he's playing, he's still impacting just one man.

On the other hand, shot blockers like Duncan and Olajuwon can not only handle their man, but they also can disrupt an entire offense by shutting down the lane and forcing teams to settle for jumpers.

First of all, your bias against guards is blatant, and second, nobody's taking anything away from Shaq or Duncan or any other big man. They deserve all the praise they get. However, one thing they don't get praised for (at least not regularly) is being the best player in the league, so I'd say you're celebrating the wrong thing.

If preferring 7-footers who score at a high clip, shoot quality percentages, dominate the glass, block shots and draw double teams is "celebrating the wrong thing" then I guess I'm guilty as charged. You can have the mythical "best player in the league." I'll take the dominant big man every single time -- which in the majority of cases over the years was one and the same.

According to who? Most of the articles I have read, most of the commentaries I've heard, puts Kobe at that position. He's been the best player in the league for the better part of a decade, and that comes from past teammates such as Shaquille O'Neal, analysts, commentators, etc.

Again, I agree with your assertion that Kobe has earned these plaudits, but only over the past four years (which is generous, considering the case you could make for LeBron this, and maybe even last, season). I'm thinking about the entire decade since Jordan retired, stretching all the way back to the 1998-99 season.

If you can find me an expert who argues that Kobe is definitively the best since Jordan hung em up, or was calling Kobe the best back in 1999 or 2000, I'd love to see it because I don't recall reading it.

But again, we're probably back to having differing definitions on what the term "best" means, so I'm not sure what good it will do.

Maybe, but that doesn't take away one bit from what Kobe has accomplished in 12 seasons in the NBA. And that's what is remarkable about Kobe - even considering his championships, his individual feats, all the great things he's done over his illustrious career, he's still only 29.

Again, I didn't feel like I was taking anything away from Kobe. If he quit tomorrow, he will have established himself as one of the hardest-working and most gifted players to ever pick up a basketball.

I just don't think he deserves this unofficial mantle as "best since Jordan retired," nor do I think his resume can be compared to Jordan's.

Yet.

Which is the key word. He has an unbelievable opportunity over the next five years to achieve at the highest level, both individually and from a team standpoint.

It all boils down to winning. If things pan out like they should, and if Kobe is truly as great as he aspires to be, I don't see any reason why this team doesn't win two championships, possibly even three with a little luck.

Do that, and I'll be more than happy to kneel at the alter like everybody else. Until then, I'll hold to my opinion that he wasn't even the most important player on his own championship teams, let alone the best since Mike retired.

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 7:02 am
by LLcoleJ
This is Kobes first year at the helm with a team with talent. So really the jury is still out. Its not as if Duncan or Shaq has went through such years with such limited talent and even in their prime as well. That clearly is a factor, that I hope is not overlooked. So, if you want to look at winning and factor in because they had the talent, then sure.

Posted: Sat Mar 1, 2008 7:17 am
by Sedale Threatt
I absolutely acknowledge that Kobe's supporting cast has been weak over the past three years.

By the same token, Shaq and Duncan shouldn't be punished because they've never had to rebuild.

To be honest, you can probably argue that San Antonio's 2003 team was relatively weak with an aging supporting cast augmented by a rookie Ginobili and a 19-year-old Parker.

You can also argue that O'Neal's arrival was the driving force behind the substantial improvements of three separate franchises.

Any way, my bottom line is this: I sincerely hope Kobe achieves everything he wants, and that this debate is rendered moot over the next few years, because it will have meant that we won more championships.