RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Oscar Robertson)

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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#121 » by eminence » Wed Aug 16, 2023 1:54 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:I backread through this thread and what even was the point of all this 1950s talk if no one is actually making a point about it lol. Y’all really just talking to talk rn

The perspective one and done and Iggy have is that the era was dogwater therefore mikan shouldn’t be ranked high

The perspective some others seem to have can either be
- he dominated in the era he was in and that’s what matters
- the 50s weren’t dogwater (this expressed to varying degrees)

But literally none of y’all except oldschool who isn’t even part of this discussion and said it in his first post has clarified this

If you think in era trumps all or weigh it heavily and it leads to rating Mikan high obviously yeah that’s completely valid and it’s stupid for anyone to deny that he was incredibly impactful in his own era


If the idea is that his era was actually not bad or that those players in the league were actually good at basketball, that’s where then y’all should discuss. Otherwise y’all are just talking past each other with completely different criteria

It feels all of this “this many people played then” and “racially it was…” comes down to the point of contention being the second point, is that right?


In case you don't know where I stand on #1 (it's yes), but I've kind of been posting that in like the last 10 threads, didn't feel the need to re-litigate.

I'd say the degree on 50's dogwaterness is a fine summary.

One n Done and I funnily appear to largely agree in reasoning on the disappearance of White Americans from the NBA ranks (based off their post at the end of page #5), but they take the exact opposite conclusion from their reasoning. To my eye they say it's not a social issue and then immediately list a whole bunch of social changes (struggle, structure, coaching, etc).
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#122 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Aug 16, 2023 2:15 am

eminence wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:I backread through this thread and what even was the point of all this 1950s talk if no one is actually making a point about it lol. Y’all really just talking to talk rn

The perspective one and done and Iggy have is that the era was dogwater therefore mikan shouldn’t be ranked high

The perspective some others seem to have can either be
- he dominated in the era he was in and that’s what matters
- the 50s weren’t dogwater (this expressed to varying degrees)

But literally none of y’all except oldschool who isn’t even part of this discussion and said it in his first post has clarified this

If you think in era trumps all or weigh it heavily and it leads to rating Mikan high obviously yeah that’s completely valid and it’s stupid for anyone to deny that he was incredibly impactful in his own era

If the idea is that his era was actually not bad or that those players in the league were actually good at basketball, that’s where then y’all should discuss. Otherwise y’all are just talking past each other with completely different criteria

It feels all of this “this many people played then” and “racially it was…” comes down to the point of contention being the second point, is that right?


In case you don't know where I stand on #1 (it's yes), but I've kind of been posting that in like the last 10 threads, didn't feel the need to re-litigate.

I'd say the degree on 50's dogwaterness is a fine summary.

One n Done and I funnily appear to largely agree in reasoning on the disappearance of White Americans from the NBA ranks (based off their post at the end of page #5), but they take the exact opposite conclusion from their reasoning. To my eye they say it's not a social issue and then immediately list a whole bunch of social changes (struggle, structure, coaching, etc).


Gotchu, I remember you said that’s how you view guys, I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that to be clear. What do you mean by dogwaterness is a fine summary? I just don’t know what u mean by that sentence, that that’s where the disagreement is on?

It’s just a bit confusing because at this point what people mean by era translation and stuff like that is so different between everyone, because in the context of like what TREX is going for I think it’s perfectly reasonable to assume outlier historical performers in one era would be great if born in other eras, or at least it’s reasonable or fair enough for the most part, but then we get convos of time travelling and then it’ll revert back to being born in a different time out of nowhere
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#123 » by One_and_Done » Wed Aug 16, 2023 3:33 am

Imagine that humans only grew a 2nd hand in 1957. Would people here still argue the GOAT one handed player was the 15th best player of all-time? We have a hall of fame to recognise that stuff. This list is about how good you were at basketball.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#124 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Aug 16, 2023 3:38 am

One_and_Done wrote:Imagine that humans only grew a 2nd hand in 1957. Would people here still argue the GOAT one handed player was the 15th best player of all-time? We have a hall of fame to recognise that stuff. This list is about how good you were at basketball.


I mean you know I agree with you in terms of the absolute quality of players but I feel everyone can have their own criteria lol

Like I certainly feel in an absolute sense there are 100+ players that are better than west is just because going forward but that’s a bit unfair lol
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#125 » by iggymcfrack » Wed Aug 16, 2023 4:34 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:Imagine that humans only grew a 2nd hand in 1957. Would people here still argue the GOAT one handed player was the 15th best player of all-time? We have a hall of fame to recognise that stuff. This list is about how good you were at basketball.


I mean you know I agree with you in terms of the absolute quality of players but I feel everyone can have their own criteria lol

Like I certainly feel in an absolute sense there are 100+ players that are better than west is just because going forward but that’s a bit unfair lol


I wouldn't pick on West. With his shooting and quick hands, I feel like he'd adjust to the 2020s better than Mikan would adjust to the '60s. He'd be very effective as a Chris Paul/John Stockton type defender even today.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#126 » by Narigo » Wed Aug 16, 2023 4:56 am

Vote:Oscar Robertson
Alt: Karl Malone
Nom: Julius Erving

Mikans impact on offense doesn't seem all that impressive to me. The Lakers didn't get worse on offense the year that he left in 1955. I feel Robinson has more value on that end despite being worse playoff performer than Mikan

Julius Erving is confusing to rank. I'm not sure how to measure his impact in the NBA but he has pretty good durability compared to Durant and Paul
Narigo's Fantasy Team

PG: Damian Lillard
SG: Sidney Moncrief
SF:
PF: James Worthy
C: Tim Duncan

BE: Robert Horry
BE:
BE:
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#127 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Aug 16, 2023 5:04 am

iggymcfrack wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:Imagine that humans only grew a 2nd hand in 1957. Would people here still argue the GOAT one handed player was the 15th best player of all-time? We have a hall of fame to recognise that stuff. This list is about how good you were at basketball.


I mean you know I agree with you in terms of the absolute quality of players but I feel everyone can have their own criteria lol

Like I certainly feel in an absolute sense there are 100+ players that are better than west is just because going forward but that’s a bit unfair lol


I wouldn't pick on West. With his shooting and quick hands, I feel like he'd adjust to the 2020s better than Mikan would adjust to the '60s. He'd be very effective as a Chris Paul/John Stockton type defender even today.


Bro pls I don’t want to talk about him anymore I’m sick of watching those damn 60s games :lol:


I didn’t wanna mention Oscar because I haven’t watched him and mikan it’s prolly a thousand but more people would say that or not
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#128 » by LA Bird » Wed Aug 16, 2023 5:11 am

Vote: Oscar Robertson
Alt: David Robinson
Nom: Chris Paul


Haven't been able to participate in this project much but I hope to be able to vote more regularly from now on.

Personally I have Oscar at #12 but he is in the same tier as Bird/Kobe/West so it's not a big difference. His combination of scoring and passing is unparalled in history (minus maybe LeBron) and he has a strong record of anchoring elite team offenses. The Cincinnati Royals did have a horrendous defense but I blame that more on the undersized frontcourt (even relative to the era). And unlike the 7SOL Suns, they didn't even trade defense for offense because Embry and Dierking were trash offensively. His defense seems okay to me and he has good size and athleticism to not be a liability like many other point guards. Overall, Oscar has some of the best WOWY numbers in history and he was generally healthy for his career until towards the end in Milwaukee.

Robinson is one of those players where you can either be very high or very low on. His plus minus and RS box numbers point to a GOAT level player but his playoffs performances as a #1 offensive option were underwhelming. I think Robinson was too good at almost everything besides post scoring to go much lower than this, especially considering that building an offense around post bigs is generally not a smart strategy anyway. Imagine if Robinson had replaced Kareem on the Showtime Lakers and all he needed to do on offense was run the floor and catch lobs. He got to play with Duncan later in his career but twin towers are historically a sub-optimal fit and the team was still lacking in perimeter creators. Despite this, the 1999 Spurs had a dominant championship run (#17 on Sansterre's GOAT team list, above many more high profile teams) with Robinson posting the greatest playoffs on/off splits we've ever seen (+20.3 on, -14.7 off, +35.0 net). He is #16 on my list at the bottom of tier 5 but I could see him going as high as #12 and maybe even higher if he hadn't entered the league so late.

Re: Malone and off court activities
We're voting for greatest basketball players not greatest saints so this is irrelevant for this project as far as I am concerned. As an extreme example on the other end of the spectrum, even if Dillon Brooks single handedly solved world hunger and found a cure for cancer, he still won't be on my GOAT players list.

Re: Mikan and his era
Everybody knows the talent was restricted back then for black and foreign players but the bigger concern for me is Kurland and Groza. Mikan's case is based on his in-era dominance but that is made a lot easier when his two biggest rivals are out of the picture. Minus the two years of Groza, we are looking at players like Arnie Risen and Bob Davies as Mikan's main challengers for a decent chunk of his career and no offense but those guys aren't top 100 material. Mikan is still in my top 20 for now but he needs stronger competition to rank any higher.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#129 » by 70sFan » Wed Aug 16, 2023 5:24 am

iggymcfrack wrote:
70sFan wrote:Do people honestly think that white Americans are simply bad at basketball? If you find this silly, then maybe there is indeed something about cultural aspect of this phenomenon.


Bad? No. Less skilled than black Americans on average? Yes, definitely.

And why do you think that's the case?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#130 » by 70sFan » Wed Aug 16, 2023 5:25 am

iggymcfrack wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:The 50s were a weak era; not because of playstyle and innovation building over time, that's like saying Isaac Newton wasn't an impressive thinker because people have built on his thinking and every college physics major knows more physics than he does. They were a weak era because they had a relatively small talent pool thanks to a smaller U.S. population, a less popular sport, and racial segregation leaving a large percentage of the potential talent on the sidelines. This left the talent pool relatively thin compared to later eras.

That said, Mikan's domination was such that if it someone dominated like he did in any other era, they'd probably be top 5 on this list, possibly #1. As such, even with a significantly weaker era than any other eligible one for this project, he moves past the lesser players from stronger eras in my opinion. Just my opinion, balancing these factors differently can have different results.


Only because of the years where the rules were literally broken in favor of scorers who play close to the basket. Forget modern guys, give Wilt a 6 foot key in the 60s, he might score 70 a game against the exact same competition. Russell wouldn’t have had a prayer of stopping him. From 51/52 on, Mikan wasn’t any more dominant in his time than Jokic was in his era and Jokic actually played more games than Mikan and still hasn’t been nominated yet.

Yeah and you base it all on PER numbers right?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#131 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Aug 16, 2023 6:31 am

70sFan wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
70sFan wrote:Do people honestly think that white Americans are simply bad at basketball? If you find this silly, then maybe there is indeed something about cultural aspect of this phenomenon.


Bad? No. Less skilled than black Americans on average? Yes, definitely.

And why do you think that's the case?


^ 70sfan doesn’t live in America, so if some things might seem obvious living here just keep in mind he doesn’t live here so certain things might not be super apparent to him

Anyway this is a weird convo in general lol
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#132 » by 70sFan » Wed Aug 16, 2023 6:34 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
70sFan wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
Bad? No. Less skilled than black Americans on average? Yes, definitely.

And why do you think that's the case?


^ 70sfan doesn’t live in America, so if some things might seem obvious living here just keep in mind he doesn’t live here so certain things might not be super apparent to him

Anyway this is a weird convo in general lol

That doesn't answer my question. What's the reason behind white Americans being less skilled than black Americans? Do you think it has anything to do with their race or something else?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#133 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Aug 16, 2023 6:40 am

70sFan wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
70sFan wrote:And why do you think that's the case?


^ 70sfan doesn’t live in America, so if some things might seem obvious living here just keep in mind he doesn’t live here so certain things might not be super apparent to him

Anyway this is a weird convo in general lol

That doesn't answer my question. What's the reason behind white Americans being less skilled than black Americans? Do you think it has anything to do with their race or something else?


Eyyo don’t talk to me about this talk to iggy

In any case what do you mean? I don’t think white ameeicans inherently can’t play basketball or anything like that, but I think it is probably a reasonable statement to say black Americans in general are better than white Americans at basketball, just considering what percentage of the nba are black Americans vs white Americans.

As for why that’s the case, it’s probably not a genetic basketball gene or something lmao that sounds racist asf lol, but there are probably sociocultural factors or something like that
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#134 » by One_and_Done » Wed Aug 16, 2023 7:10 am

By saying 'he dominated his era' so we have to rate him higher, even if I agree that modern player X would spank him if we teleported him to his era', you are basically punishing guys for being born too late. In a way it's more inexplicable to me than the old timer fans who think players back then could actually hang today. Like, it's clearly wrong IMO, but at least it's logically consistence. That's what's so baffling about the position of voters like Colbini.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#135 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Aug 16, 2023 7:30 am

One_and_Done wrote:By saying 'he dominated his era' so we have to rate him higher, even if I agree that modern player X would spank him if we teleported him to his era', you are basically punishing guys for being born too late. In a way it's more inexplicable to me than the old timer fans who think players back then could actually hang today. Like, it's clearly wrong IMO, but at least it's logically consistence. That's what's so baffling about the position of voters like Colbini.


:0 a call out!?

Also it feels like people find the second part about spanking controversial even though I agree

I feel that people think one end is punishing players born later, and one end is punishing players born earlier.

I’m fine leaning with the dude that was better at basketball personally

Colbinii wrote:summoned


Fwiw I think colbini thinks they’re legit good more than just thinking in era but I’m not sure
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#136 » by iggymcfrack » Wed Aug 16, 2023 8:19 am

70sFan wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
70sFan wrote:And why do you think that's the case?


^ 70sfan doesn’t live in America, so if some things might seem obvious living here just keep in mind he doesn’t live here so certain things might not be super apparent to him

Anyway this is a weird convo in general lol

That doesn't answer my question. What's the reason behind white Americans being less skilled than black Americans? Do you think it has anything to do with their race or something else?


Genetics. In the same way that Asian people tend to be shorter on average, African Americans tend to be extraordinarily good at running and jumping and the kind of fast twitch movements which are very helpful in basketball. There are no cultural factors keeping white people from playing football and they’re very heavily represented at many positions, but at the position most reliant on running and jumping, cornerback, not one of the NFL’s 64 starting cornerbacks has been white for the last 20 seasons. Currently, there isn’t even a white backup cornerback in the NFL. You can pretend there’s no genetic basis for certain ethnicities having strengths and weaknesses if it fits your agenda, but the data’s pretty overwhelming in the other direction.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#137 » by iggymcfrack » Wed Aug 16, 2023 8:26 am

70sFan wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:The 50s were a weak era; not because of playstyle and innovation building over time, that's like saying Isaac Newton wasn't an impressive thinker because people have built on his thinking and every college physics major knows more physics than he does. They were a weak era because they had a relatively small talent pool thanks to a smaller U.S. population, a less popular sport, and racial segregation leaving a large percentage of the potential talent on the sidelines. This left the talent pool relatively thin compared to later eras.

That said, Mikan's domination was such that if it someone dominated like he did in any other era, they'd probably be top 5 on this list, possibly #1. As such, even with a significantly weaker era than any other eligible one for this project, he moves past the lesser players from stronger eras in my opinion. Just my opinion, balancing these factors differently can have different results.


Only because of the years where the rules were literally broken in favor of scorers who play close to the basket. Forget modern guys, give Wilt a 6 foot key in the 60s, he might score 70 a game against the exact same competition. Russell wouldn’t have had a prayer of stopping him. From 51/52 on, Mikan wasn’t any more dominant in his time than Jokic was in his era and Jokic actually played more games than Mikan and still hasn’t been nominated yet.

Yeah and you base it all on PER numbers right?


People like to **** on PER, but one of the good things about it is that it's very easy to figure out what kind of players tend to be underrated and overrated by it. The type of players who tend to have much better impact stats than PER tend to be really elite defenders and really elite passer/playmakers. Jokic clearly fits into the second category and his lead over the rest of the league in truly advanced stats has been much better than his lead in PER. Mikan was an unremarkable passer and a good, but far from elite defender. So if anyone's underrated by PER relative to their era, it's Jokic.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#138 » by SpreeS » Wed Aug 16, 2023 8:46 am

trex_8063 wrote:I want to provide some thoughts [for whatever they may be worth] on George Mikan's era, as it's been one of the most-featured topics in the last thread (maybe this one so far, too, idk).

Opening disclaimer: I am not supporting George Mikan here. Even were we a dozen places further along I would still likely not be supporting him. Part of that is my lean toward longevity. Part of that is concerns over strength of era.

That said, I had rather hoped we were past the point [on this forum] of having to speak to the "Mikan dominated a bunch of white midgets" type of narratives [myths]. While I don't think anyone used that specific line, there have been one or two that weren't far off that sentiment: referring to everyone in the league as "plumbers", saying that Mikan ONLY dominated because "he was bigger than everyone else", and so on.

"White"......yeah, ok, more or less. The pro leagues of his time were close enough to being entirely white that to argue that one is basically splitting hairs (there were no Black players in the leagues in '50 and earlier; the NBA was about 8% black at the end of Mikan's career).

As to the height thing.....
As has already been pointed out, the average pro player in Mikan's time [at least by '52 and later] was only about 2" shorter than the average NBA player of the 21st century. Is it shorter? Yes. Is it a lot shorter? No.

And we further might speculate that Mikan (and his contemporaries) would be a pinch taller if born ~60-70 years later, most likely as result of generally better perinatal nutrition and not being exposed to as much secondhand smoke at a young age (both known to influence early growth rate). i.e. same genetic pool [of those circa-1950 players], but slightly different result [in average height], based on EXTERNAL influences that would be different in the modern era.

As evidence that there has been SOME change in men's heights:
*An American insurance study performed in 1912 (looking at the heights of male policy-holders between 1885 and 1908 [i.e. turn of the century]) found the average adult male to be 5'8.5" in shoes. I would estimate that most policy-holders surveyed were White, fwiw, though I don't know the demographic details of the study.

*Research for the Society of Actuaries published in 1959 found the average 20-29 yr old male (NOTE: these would be males born in the 1930's) to be 5'9.5" in shoes. A 1965 report by the National Center for Health Statistics more or less concurred (suggests just slightly taller), reporting the average 25-34 yr old male (AGAIN: men born in the 1930s) to be just a hair over 5'9" barefoot.
So roughly two generations later (than the first dataset), men were [on average] about 1" [or slightly more] taller.

Interestingly, from there the average height (barefoot) for young men in the U.S. hasn't really changed here in the present day. Well, that's not true: it DID go up to 5'9.75" in the early 00s, then dwindled back toward where it was in those circa-1960 studies. The trend appears to MOSTLY relate to immigration, however, and the higher proportion of Hispanic (+/- Asian) men, who tend to skew a little shorter.
The average WHITE male in the U.S. has been about 5'10" in the 21st century (with the YOUNGER grown men among them trending even a hair over). [NOTE: this data from the CDC's National Health Statistics Reports, btw]

Mikan was born in 1924: between the first dataset and the second [though closer to the 2nd], in a time where average [mostly white] males were coming to be probably just a little UNDER 5'9". Whereas nowadays they come closer to 5'10".

idk, I look at the above data, and don't necessarily think it would be cherry-picking or intellectually dishonest to suggest that Mikan---if born 60 or so years later---would have been a half-inch or so taller; and his contemporaries might have averaged 6'4.5" or 6'5", too.


None of this is Earth-shattering stuff, but----if disparaging the league/era for being short----it bears considering that heights in general have changed as a result of EXTRINSIC factors......and those same factors would affect Mikan and his peers, too.
And with this in mind, it begins to look like the height difference between then and now is not all that much. And Mikan is legit "center-sized" in either era.

Which is to say he was tall; taller than most players in the league. But he didn't TOWER over them to an unusual degree, as has arguably been implied.
Mikan had the same basic height advantage over his competition [in his own era] as guys like Alex Len, JaVale McGee, Neemias Queta, Evan Mobley, and Nick Richards have over theirs in the modern era.

And where it was stated somewhere that he "was taller than everyone else"........just as that wouldn't be a true statement for the names I listed above, it is not a true statement wrt Mikan. Even as early as '52, in a 10-team league, there were THREE players a little TALLER than George Mikan. And seven of nine opposing teams had at least one guy on their roster who was [at least] within 1" of Mikan. In '54 [in a 9-team league] there were three guys listed as taller, plus a fourth listed as the same height as Mikan that appeared [however briefly, in one case] in the league, and numerous others within 1-2" of him.

And it was [I believe] also said that his prodigious size was the "only" reason he dominated. However, that begs the question: if all it takes to dominate this era is being big, why didn't these other giants dominate? Why didn't a single one of them come even remotely close to Mikan's level of domination?

The gap between Mikan and the CLOSEST of these other 6'10+" bigs of the day [who was actually 1" taller than Mikan] was similar to the gap between........maybe Nikola Jokic and Steven Adams. Pretty big, in other words. And one other 6'10" giant appears to have washed out of that mid-50s league in the shortest span I've ever seen.
And fwiw, just to speak to the race component: there were even Black big men [each 1-2" taller than Mikan, actually] in the NBA toward the end of his career......and neither of them dominated to Mikan's degree (I speak of Ray Felix and Walter Dukes, btw).

How could this be if Mikan only dominated because he was "bigger than everyone else"? The obvious answer, of course, is that George Mikan was more than simply a big guy.

We can still be skeptical of his era without going to such hyperbolic lengths as suggesting his success is entirely explained by his size.


As to the skillsets of the time period: yeah, they appear sort of "embryonic", relatively. However, when people say "so and so [modern player] would dribble circles around them, or so and so would do this, and so and so would do that...."

No, "so and so" WOULDN'T do this and that. "So and so" would actually have skillsets somewhat similar [at least in terms of foundational technique] as everyone else: because THAT'S what he would have been taught, THAT'S the only thing he would have seen tried, THAT was conventional wisdom.
You can "time-machine" a modern player back to 1954, but what's the point of such a thought exercise? To hammer home that the game has evolved? Duh, obviously.
But that modern player wouldn't have that modern skillset that's so dazzling if he was born in 1927. Gimme a break, it's not like he invented all the things he's doing. He had visual role models for his game from the modern era, he had modern coaching/training, modern skills to improvise or improve upon, he had modern competition to temper his development, and so on.

He didn't have the embryonic starting point that the players of the early 50s had.

We [as a species] don't go from inventing the wheel to flying to the moon in one step; not in ANY field of study or practice. People build on what they know, in small increments. Baby steps, not quantum leaps.

Further, some of those "modern skills" don't even translate to that era. For instance, Steph Curry or Chris Paul, transported back [time-machine] are not going to dribble circles around everyone there in the way you might imagine......because they'll get tired of committing 12 "carries" turnovers per half, and soon adopt a style of dribbling that the rules of the time period ACTUALLY PERMIT. But I digress.....

The point I'm driving at here is two-fold:
1) George Mikan [or whoever] is not going to be the same player circa-2020 as he was circa-1950 (if he was born 60-70 years later). He'd have had far different mentoring and visual models, as well as coaching. So his game would look nowhere near as "embryonic".
How good would he be? idk, that's stupendously speculative.
But that he would be a very different player today is once again: like duh, obviously.

2) The whole era translation is not a one-way door. Older players moved forward in time probably mostly get worse in more recent eras (though there may be a few exceptions). However, modern players do NOT always get better going back.
Take Steph Curry as an example. Say he's born 1925......to name a few things: his shot mechanics are now all jacked by what was taught at the time, he can't dribble circles around everyone for reasons already stated, AND there's now no 3pt line to potentiate his value. This is before we even get to things like the quality of the shoes, the floors, the ball being used, etc.
I would say Curry gets notably worse in the league of the 1950s, actually, despite it being generally lesser competition.

It's just not as cut-n-dry as some people make it out to be. As for such and such modern big guy who people "have no doubt would dominate like Mikan" in that time period........HOW DO YOU KNOW?
How do you KNOW they wouldn't be like the Chuck Shares and Don Ottens of that time? That is: pretty good, but not dominating, and regularly having their asses handed to them by George Mikan. And maybe they'd even be worse than that.
It's far from a given to suggest that any 6'11" stiff from today would dominate back then, IF BORN BACK THEN; because we SAW other guys back then who were as big as Mikan…….and none of them approached what he was doing.

Moving forward in time, I won’t try to suggest that Mikan would for sure stay “ahead of the curve” [relative to his peers] in terms of skillset, in the same manner that he did circa-1950. It doesn’t work that way; some people sort of hit their own personal ceiling.

But nor can we just assume his skillset will max out at an infantile level relative to modern players. That’s no more fair [even less, I would say] than assuming any 6’11” guy would dominate back then (when we have SEVERAL examples where they just didn’t).

Fwiw, we’ve seen a number of guys with similar physical tools as George Mikan succeed in the modern era (including one who DOMINATES it: Nikola Jokic). But there are also guys like Jusuf Nurkic, Kevin Love, Jonas Valanciunas, the aforementioned Plumlee’s, Al Horford is only slightly more athletically inclined (though also 1-2” shorter than a modern Mikan would be).
Stephen Adams is even MORE physically limited than Mikan, imo, but has nonetheless had a nice NBA career. Other guys are pretty much no more athletic and a little shorter to boot, yet carved out nice NBA careers in the modern day (e.g. Joe Ingles and Kyle Anderson).

So we cannot pretend that the physical tools he brings to the table are inadequate to be a decent modern NBA player. They very clearly are sufficient.


And again: I say ALL of this as someone who has no intention of supporting George Mikan at this stage.


As to how much bigger the player pool is now......

I agree this is the biggest factor in assessing competitiveness. One thing I'd looked at in the past to gauge this are measures which might be suggestive of the game's popularity. Such as attendance and TV contracts.

Far from a perfect system, obviously. And I think it eventually falls apart in the David Stern era--->because he was so remarkably better about promoting and marketing his product than his predecessors, that afterwards I'm skeptical they provide a remotely accurate means of gauging global popularity/interest (if ever they did in the first place).

Anyway, for whatever it's worth, I'll provide some suggestions of the game's popularity over time.....

Here are eight early franchises, and the change in their average attendance from ‘55 to ‘67:
Nationals (Sixers) - 4,539 [in '56]; 8,224 in '67 (81.2% increase in 11 years)
Hawks - 3,588 in '55; 6,829 in '67 (increase of 90.3% in 12 years)
Celtics - 7,027 in '55; 10,409 in '67 (increase of 48.1% in 12 years)
Pistons - 3,717 in '55; 6,459 in '67 (increase 73.8% in 12 years)
Warriors - 5,878 in '55; 7,727 in '67 (increase of 31.5% in 12 years)
Lakers - 5,388 in '51; 4,494 in '56 (decrease of 16.6% in 5 years; note '56 is a mostly Mikan-less year in which they weren't very good, whereas they were a champion dynasty team in '51).
11,154 in '67 (more than double over either one of '51 or '56: a 148.2% increase from '56 (in just 11 years), 107.0% increase over their championship '51 team)
Knicks - 8,565 in '55; 11,716 in '67 (increase of 36.8%)
Royals - 2,478 in '55; 4,755 in '67 (91.9% increase in 12 years)

So on average, between the mid-50s and ‘67, live attendance increased by 70% for these franchises (the league had expanded a little, too).

While bench and lower tier players did not make a lot in Mikan’s era, the better players made a decent living from basketball. And Mikan himself did VERY well.
The top-paid player in the BAA’s inaugural season [‘47] was Tom King, who received $16,500 (adjusted for inflation, it’s the equivalent of ~$226k today). Joe Fulks made just under half that.
Mikan, in the NBL, was paid $60,000 that year (modern day equiv: ~$822k), plus incentives. So he was doing just fine.
Players actually signed to full-season contracts were making at least $5,000 in ‘47 [equivalent of about $69k today]. Some bench players may have been on more temporary contracts and earned less.

By ‘63, even the scrubs and bench warmers in the NBA made a livable wage (league minimum was the equivalent of ~$70-75k or so per year in inflation-adjusted dollars, iirc [didn’t write the exact figure]). Average player salary was a very decent/comfortable living by this point (comfortably six-figures in inflation-adjusted dollars).
It was before the ‘66 season that Wilt signed his historic $100k contract (that’s the equiv of about $943,500 today).

By ‘71, league minimum was up to $17,500 (the equivalent of $132k today); so NO ONE in the league was making a bad living at that point. The AVERAGE player salary that year was $90k (equiv of ~$690k today). Kareem [then Lew Alcindor] received $250k (equiv of almost $1.9M today).

By ‘96, the league average was up to $2.2M (equiv of nearly $4.3 in today’s dollars). Michael Jordan, for the ‘97 season had a contract worth $31.8M (that’s just over $60M in today’s dollars).

Average player salary today is around $8.8M per year.

Team Salary Caps:
‘47 - $55k (equiv of about $754k today)
‘96 - $23M (equiv of 44.8M today)
‘22 - $112M


TV contract info.....

*The NBA’s first TV contract in 1954 was purchased for $39k (about $443k in today’s dollars). The first nationally televised Finals game wasn’t until 1956.

*ABC paid [in 1964] $650k for TV rights to the NBA (that’s just over $6.4M in today’s dollars). So in a single decade, the value of a TV contract got about 14.5x bigger. ***To be fair, TV [as an institution] got much more popular in that span, and TV ownership much more common. So it’s not exactly fair to look at it by this.

*ABC paid almost $1M in 1968 (equiv of nearly $8.75M today). They then spent $3M for their contract the very next year [1969] (equiv of nearly $25M in today’s dollars). TV viewership of the NBA rose steadily between 1964 and 1970; in fact, one article indicated TV viewership in ‘67 was up 26% from what it had been in ‘66. Nielsen ratings of NBA games increased by >70% from ‘61 to ‘68 (from 4.8 to 8.2).


*In 1974, CBS paid $27M for a 3-year TV contract ($9M per year); that’s roughly $51M per year in today’s dollars (and roughly 115x what a TV contract had cost two decades earlier [though again: TV’s far more common and TV viewership far more popular in general]).

Idk…..take that info for whatever it’s worth. Not sure what to make of it, tbh.

Things have clearly expanded substantially, no question. The league itself is ~3x bigger than it was in Mikan’s time (“diluting” the talent). But yeah, there’s evidence to suggest that the player pool is perhaps 100x bigger. Maybe more. EDIT: Although per Doctor MJ's post #101 itt, I may be overstating things there. bball was apparently widely popular [within the US] a bit earlier than I thought.

So it was a much much smaller pond that Mikan was the big fish in.

As much as I appear to be defending Mikan in this post, that IS a valid consideration.
However, if still very very doubtful about Mikan’s ability to translate forward, I offer one last nugget to consider: if we took a big guy who is or would be legitimately good in any modern(ish) NBA setting, and placed him in the league of the early 50s, what would Mikan’s skeptics expect that modern player to do in that environment? Totally dominate those “white plumbers”, right?

So……kinda what George Mikan did, then??


We could look from other side. How would look these days NBA w/o black race players and w/o internation players? Only 10% of all league players are white Americans. So its around 40-45 players. The best of them:

Herro
Reaves
Strus
Love
Kessler
Caruso
Lopez
DiVi
Hayward
Huerter
Kennard
Connaughton
McConnell
.....

No one will argue that Mikan would be one of the best players in this kind of league. But if we add to the pool 26% international and around 60% black american players? How would look Mikan in this pool? Kevin Love was the last white american player selected into All-Star game in 2018 and ALL-NBA team in 2014.

Love 11-14 37min 24pts 14reb 3ast TS+ 108 no play-offs
Mikan 49-54 37min 24pts 14reb 3ast TS+ 114 5 time champs
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#139 » by One_and_Done » Wed Aug 16, 2023 9:41 am

Early days yet, but vote so far suggests Oscar this round, D.Rob next.

Oscar 8, D.Rob 3, Mikan 3, Dirk 1, K.Malone 1. N preferences Oscar 9 to D.Rob 5. D.Rob has 3 Oscar voters too, so if he can't come back this time he should get up next round.

Nomination is between KD and Dr J. 4 each, but KD with more prefs (but some are Dr J voters).
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #15 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 8/17/23) 

Post#140 » by Colbinii » Wed Aug 16, 2023 1:33 pm

1. Dirk Nowitzki
2. Oscar Robertson

Nominate: Chris Paul


I think I've said enough about both these players in the best. Two GOAT-level offensive anchors who had terrific team results [as well as WOWY/+/- data]. Excellent catalysts for a great offense spanning a Decade or more.

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