So-called "new breed" of PF position - chokers?
Posted: Mon Jun 16, 2008 7:03 am
All right, hear me out.
Back in the day, as they told me, power forwards were about one thing - power. They banged bodies down low, played gritty defense, chased boards, served as enforcers for their teams and scored very rarely. Back in the day, centers were the main scorers, PFs did all the dirty work. So history books almost never wrote about them. You can hear about guys like Oakley and Rodman now, cause they were dying breed even in their day and therefore stood out, but guys before them? Forgotten.
But then everything changed. Scoring centers became extinct and power forwards like Elvin Hayes, Kevin McHale, Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, Chris Webber, Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett, Rasheed Wallace and Dirk Nowitzki took their scoring game on new levels and far away from the low post. You see this list and all you can think is: wow, all of them are GREAT scorers! And: wow, almost all of them are CHOKERS!
Before fans of San-Antonio start cursing at me, let's make one thing clear: TD plays center. He don't want to admit it, but if he was playing in 60-80s, he'd be called a C. Now you took his name off this list and... well let's say the have only five championships COMBINED! Three for McHale, one for Sheed and one for Hayes. Those are BEST POWER FORWARDS OF ALL-TIME, people! And they have only 5 rings to show? Compare them to best centers of all-time and gues what? One Bill Russel has more chips then all of them combined!
Okay, let's break it out:
1. Karl Malone - big time choker, dirty player and a pedo. Famously struggled in the '97 and '98 Finals against Jordan and the Bulls. No rings.
2. Charles Barkley - never played defense, never won a ring. A great TV-person though.
3. Kevin McHale - won three, playing alongside Bird, who was the most clutch player of his generation. Tough as nails (played on a broken leg for entire playoffs), but hardly clutch (missed two freethrows in the end of game 5 in '81 NBA Finals against LA). Also horrible GM.
4. Elvin Hayes - Big time offensive machine and a big time choker. In the '78 Finals against Seattle, Hayes scored 133 points in the first six games, but only 19 of those came in the fourth quarter, a statistic that became the key subplot of that Finals. In Game 7 in Seattle, Hayes scored just 12 points and fouled out with eight minutes remaining.
5. Chris Webber - Well, what can you say? Refs probably robbed him in Game 6 of the '02 WCF, but what about Game 7 of that series? And that time-out was bad idea too.
6. Rasheed Wallace - Never had it with Portland, won one playing in deep Detroit team with Billups and Big Ben, pulled a dissapearing act even since.
7. Dirk Nowitzki - Choked many times in the playoffs, capped with a lose to 8th seed after 60+ season.
8. Kevin Garnett - Look I'm a hige KG fan, but facts can't be ignored. And facts are telling me that he hasn't delivered in big times situations and Finals MVP title should go to Pierce.
Guys like Odom, Jamison, Gasol and many others are known for not getting it done late in the fourth too. So is it a trend? or not? What's up with this high scoring, perimeter-oriented, good passing power forwards? Is their game just not cut out for being clutch? Can you built a championship team around that kind of a player?
Discuss!
Back in the day, as they told me, power forwards were about one thing - power. They banged bodies down low, played gritty defense, chased boards, served as enforcers for their teams and scored very rarely. Back in the day, centers were the main scorers, PFs did all the dirty work. So history books almost never wrote about them. You can hear about guys like Oakley and Rodman now, cause they were dying breed even in their day and therefore stood out, but guys before them? Forgotten.
But then everything changed. Scoring centers became extinct and power forwards like Elvin Hayes, Kevin McHale, Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, Chris Webber, Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett, Rasheed Wallace and Dirk Nowitzki took their scoring game on new levels and far away from the low post. You see this list and all you can think is: wow, all of them are GREAT scorers! And: wow, almost all of them are CHOKERS!
Before fans of San-Antonio start cursing at me, let's make one thing clear: TD plays center. He don't want to admit it, but if he was playing in 60-80s, he'd be called a C. Now you took his name off this list and... well let's say the have only five championships COMBINED! Three for McHale, one for Sheed and one for Hayes. Those are BEST POWER FORWARDS OF ALL-TIME, people! And they have only 5 rings to show? Compare them to best centers of all-time and gues what? One Bill Russel has more chips then all of them combined!
Okay, let's break it out:
1. Karl Malone - big time choker, dirty player and a pedo. Famously struggled in the '97 and '98 Finals against Jordan and the Bulls. No rings.
2. Charles Barkley - never played defense, never won a ring. A great TV-person though.
3. Kevin McHale - won three, playing alongside Bird, who was the most clutch player of his generation. Tough as nails (played on a broken leg for entire playoffs), but hardly clutch (missed two freethrows in the end of game 5 in '81 NBA Finals against LA). Also horrible GM.
4. Elvin Hayes - Big time offensive machine and a big time choker. In the '78 Finals against Seattle, Hayes scored 133 points in the first six games, but only 19 of those came in the fourth quarter, a statistic that became the key subplot of that Finals. In Game 7 in Seattle, Hayes scored just 12 points and fouled out with eight minutes remaining.
5. Chris Webber - Well, what can you say? Refs probably robbed him in Game 6 of the '02 WCF, but what about Game 7 of that series? And that time-out was bad idea too.
6. Rasheed Wallace - Never had it with Portland, won one playing in deep Detroit team with Billups and Big Ben, pulled a dissapearing act even since.
7. Dirk Nowitzki - Choked many times in the playoffs, capped with a lose to 8th seed after 60+ season.
8. Kevin Garnett - Look I'm a hige KG fan, but facts can't be ignored. And facts are telling me that he hasn't delivered in big times situations and Finals MVP title should go to Pierce.
Guys like Odom, Jamison, Gasol and many others are known for not getting it done late in the fourth too. So is it a trend? or not? What's up with this high scoring, perimeter-oriented, good passing power forwards? Is their game just not cut out for being clutch? Can you built a championship team around that kind of a player?
Discuss!