LAL1947 wrote:Pennebaker wrote:mastermixer wrote:He’s very borderline. I think you could make the case to sneak him in there.
I know I would personally put Pau in AD’s spot in the top 50, but I would understand if not everyone agreed too.
Is AD in the top 50? I know AD made the NBA's 75th anniversary team but that list wasn't ranked. ESPN ranked the NBA's top 75 and had Anthony Davis at #71.
I think this is a good point to bring the thread to back on topic. ESPN's ranking was done in Feb 2022, so very recently.
In their ranking, they had:
76 - Bill Sharman
75 - Dame Lillard
74 - Dave Bing
73 - Dave DeBusschere
72 - Billy Cunningham
71 - Anthony Davis
70 - Dolph Schayes70sFan wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:sp6r=underrated wrote:Salieri wrote:
Instead of making this discussion about Kobe or Kobe-fans... let's talk about why you think Gasol should be ranked higher than these guys as a starting point. I mean, to get into the Top 50, he must first pass those who are #75 to #51 in descending order. Right?
Cheers!
I said I probably don't have Pau in my top 50, you don't read my posts. I'll waste my time again to answer your question though:
1. Bill Sharman - this one is quite clear to me. Sharman had quite short career and his prime lasted around 8-9 years. Pau played on all-star level for almost 15 years in comparison. Another thing is that I have Gasol's peak a bit higher due to his postseason work in Los Angeles. Sharman was very good, he was arguably the best shooter of his era, but I value Gasol's passing, post defense and versatility on offense more. Mostly it's massive longevity advantage though.
2. Damian Lillard - I don't think I have to explain that. Lillard is another one with much shorter career and he's weak postseason performer as well. You can argue that Lillard peaked higher, but he's much less consistent and has a long way to catch Pau in my opinion.
3. Dave Bing - Bing has no case to be on this list, as much as I respect him. He had a brief peak that was quickly destroyed by injuries and was never the same after that. His teammate, Bob Lanier should have been picked ahead of him on the list. I don't think I have to explain it here - Pau was better basketball player than him on all accounts - better peak, longer and more consistent prime, far better longevity.
4. Dave DeBusschere - Dave is an interesting player who is heavily underrated by boxscore numbers. He was elite defender who also gave his team spacing at PF spot, very modern-ish player in that aspect. I'd probably have Gasol ahead of him still, due to Gasol's far better offensive game but it is closer than the previous comparisons.
5. Billy Cunningham - I love Billy and I think he's very underrated. I am glad that NBA put him on the list. At his peak, he was legit great player but he's another one with very short prime and almost no post prime career. For peaks, I'd go with Billy but Gasol has much longer and more successful career.
6. Anthony Davis - this one is all about peak vs longevity. Davis definitely peaked higher than Pau, but the problem with him is that he has very few healthy seasons. Is 5 strong all-nba seasons better than 15 all-star seasons? It's up to you to decide, but I'm a longevity guy and Davis needs at least two another healthy seasons to put him ahead of Pau.
7. Dolph Schayes - Schayes is criminally underrated on this list. I have him higher than Pau and he's much better basketball player than some of the ones ranked ahead of him.
You have a lot of other players on that list who shouldn't be ahead of Pau - Monroe, Maravich, Lenny, Melo, Archibald, Lucas, Walton. Other ones are questionable as well. As I said, I don't have Pau in my top 50 but he's definitely in my top 75.


















