Goudelock wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:I'll nominate Sweetwater Clifton & Connie Hawkins.
Hawkins is an interesting inclusion, since I've never heard anyone else reference him as a passer. He's only spoken of as a great slasher (proto-Giannis or supersized Julius Erving).
I'll need to do a little more research on him later.
He was said by some to be the best passer in the NBA the moment he joined the league - at a time where Oscar Robertson was still there.
We can break it down more precisely than better or worse though:
Hawkins excelled at what I call "big hand passing" which was something cultivated by the Harlem Globetrotters for decades specifically because of the way you could use it to make fools out of your opponents. Imagine being able to make all the actions for a pass except letting go with your hand, thus allowing you to choose at the last possible moment whether to make the pass or not based on whether the defender was trying to stop the pass or not. It was absolutely devastating.
I recall one description where Hawkins had the ball facing forward somewhere a bit above the high post - he looks to make a pass to the right and when one defender bites, he instantly flicks his wrist in the other direction to make a pass to the other side of the court, and when more defenders bit he just keeps it and dribbles casually down the open lane for a layup.
I would argue that this particular skillset is one of the few that's been truly lost from the pipeline, and it's how you could get someone even more devastating than Jokic at this. I'm not saying Hawkins or anyone else was better than Jokic - because I think Jokic has the best brain we've ever seen along these lines - but imagine what Jokic could do if he had hands like that.
Incidentally, I think this is something that gets completely missed when people draw the comparison to Erving. Erving never developed this set of skills, and I think there's good reason to think that a fully healthy, prime Hawkins was better than Erving ever was.
But with that said, when we're talking about Hawkins the high school phenom or the teenage ABL MVP, I don't think he had this yet. He began as a proto-Erving, but then the unusual road he traveled going back & forth between the schoolyard and the Globetrotters led him to develop a skillset that in total is probably distinct from anyone else in history.