dhsilv2 wrote:MJ was seen as the better prospect. The blazers did something idiotic and tried to draft based on their needs, which is ALWAYS WRONG. You talks take the best talent available. If you have to move pieces you move pieces.
It's 1984. The past 20 MVP awards have been won by a center 18 times, and by a forward twice. Once by Dr. J and the most recent one at that point by Larry Bird. Not one was one by a guard.
I mean, I'm sure it must stroke your ego to believe that you would've been smarter than the Blazers, but it's just hindsight talking. The pick was obviously not without controversy, and I'm not pretending that Bowie was a consensus choice, but Portland was widely expected to take Bowie before the draft. And for a reason. The prevailing logic at the time was that you need a quality center to win a title. The number one picks before Olajuwon were Sampson, Worthy, Aguirre, Carroll, Magic, Klay Thompson's old man, and Kent Benson. The Rockets did take a guard in John Lucas first in 1976, but that turned out to be a terrible pick. Take a look at the sheer number of big men taken top 10 in those days. It most certainly was not a "take the best player available" kind of league.































