70sFan wrote:Have anyone consider Paul Arizin and Bob McAdoo at this point? Both peaked quite high and their longevity aren't terrible.
McAdoo - no, not yet for me. His prime is quite short (like 6 seasons), so his longevity actually isn't all that good [particularly considering all the injury troubles thru his later years]; and his peak two years seem sort of outlier to the rest of his prime, too, fwiw. The fact that it occurred in a rather diluted 70s league doesn't help tremendously.
Not that he's eons away for me, but he's not particularly close either.
Arizin - sort of the same as for McAdoo. His prime's a little longer, though I think he peaked a little lower, too. Among guys of that era, without a doubt Schayes is the guy who deserves the serious traction. Though I've not given him my vote(s), I'd not be the least bit upset if he's picked this thread or next (I'm really waffling on my 3rd pick actually [Westbrook, Payton, also thinking about Schayes, among others]).
Doctor MJ wrote:Oh also, I think I've got to have Bill Walton ahead of Jokic still for the moment.
Yeah, I kinda think I still have Walton marginally ahead, too (both outside my top 100 [you know I'm a longevity guy]). Jokic is close now; I'm fairly certain I'll have him ahead of Walton after '21. EDIT: btw, don't see a vote from you.
My gut is leaning toward Pau Gasol or Paul Pierce (which is why they're my top two picks). Other guys I'm thinking hard on [this section of my ATL, and really ALL sections that follow is seriously jumbled/close] include:
Dolph Schayes - A monster of the early era, whose stat-line held up reasonably well as the league quickly evolved [despite him getting on in years]. Had his peak in the shotclock era, and has a true NBA player size/build, with versatile skillset (outside shooting, passing, ambidextrous finisher, decent defensive instincts, etc). He's in my top 45, and tbh I'm thinking hard on moving him up and possibly making him one of my three picks.....I begin to feel like I'm reaching a little to place others ahead of him.
I'd also note that while Bob Cousy won the 1957 MVP, he basically just won a popularity contest......imo, Dolph Schayes, Bob Pettit, and probably Neil Johnston all had a better claim to the award (not to mention Bill Russell, though I'd personally exclude his candidacy against these guys given he missed a third of the season [and rookie Bill wasn't yet the Bill we'd come to know]).
Imagine if Dolph won the '57 MVP.....tbh, I don't think he'd still be on the table. At least one member of the active voter pool has explicitly declared such things are a major factor in his criteria/consideration; and as much as the most of us try to ignore such factors or declare they don't matter, they do [at least a very tiny bit].
With an MVP tacked on to his legacy, I suspect Schayes would have gone somewhere in the 35-40 range.
And the other factor I've actually not previously considered [which I need to] is that he had one pretty notable year in the NBL ['49], before his BAA/NBA career that's usually considered (was the NBL Rookie of the Year, and appears to be [probably] the best player on a pretty good team). I'll be considering that.....it could be enough of a tipping point factor to move him up a couple spots in my ATL.
Russell Westbrook - my current [tenuous] 3rd pick. Fairly big peak [though I do NOT think he deserved his MVP]; a decent floor-raiser capable of shouldering some insane volume in a variety of way, though lacking offensive efficiency, and struggling to mesh with other on-ball stars. Longevity isn't terrible, considering how good he was out of the gates.
Gary Payton - a player who, until very recently, I had ranked in the early-mid 30s of my list. Unfortunately, as I look closer, I struggle to find the reasons why I had him ahead of various other players. Not that he isn't a great player [he is], but we're barely outside the top 40 EVER, so there are A LOT of great players still on the table. I could still be convinced to switch back to him, if someone wants to make the case; he's definitely in the forefront of my candidates. Excellent two-way player who had very good longevity.
Robert Parish - Obviously never a superstar, but quite a lot of years at an All-Star or borderline All-Star level, peaking at roughly All-NBA 3rd Team [if maybe not borderline 2nd Team] level. And tremendous overall longevity:
*he came into the league a decent player
**could be said he had like a 13-year prime
***played 21 seasons, and was a legitimately useful role player [not merely "filling a garbage roster spot"] as far as his 18th season
****and durable throughout: note Parish is still to this day #1 all-time in career rs games played [1,611]. Recall he not only surpassed KAJ to get there, but iron men like Karl Malone, John Stockton, and Jason Kidd failed to catch him on that too.
ALL of his career is post-merger, too, btw. Remarkable.
Dwight Howard - Has at least a semi-tenable case as the best peak left on the table (or at least there very close with guys like Kawhi, AD, and Giannis [+/- others]). Put together a number of other statistically big(ish) [if somewhat unequal in terms of impact] seasons before/after his back injury. And just got himself a ring as a valuable 6th/7th man.
Isiah Thomas - Prime Zeke I see as roughly similar in quality as a peak John Wall [which is decidedly good, but not great]. Obv Isiah had much better durability [and subsequent longevity--->which is actually pretty good overall] compared to Wall, better playoff resiliency (or even upward scalability), and certain intangible qualities that made him the undisputed leader and figurehead of a near-dynasty. Thru his qualities as a player, leader, and certainly with fortune simply smiling on him in terms of circumstance, he was able to obtain some pretty notable legacy points (by way of titles, a FMVP). It's enough to give him traction here for me.
+/- others on my radar, including Ray Allen, Kevin McHale, and maybe Chauncey Billups and yes......Kawhi Leonard.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire