RebelWithACause wrote:I personally would prefer about 10 wings at this point, before even thinking about Moncrief to be honest.
Prime vs prime comparison (let's say the best consecutive 5-year stretch), I think that Moncrief can be argued over any of the remaining wings, and among all perimeter players (so including PGs), I think that only CP3 and Frazier are better. It seems kinda weird to argue Moncrief over Baylor, for example, but I think that Moncrief's big edge in terms of scoring efficiency (obviously on a much lower volume, but Baylor was never noticeably better than league average, no matter the volume, except for the 1969-70 season), and I think it's safe to assume that Moncrief was much better on D, makes it debatable.
Oh, and Durant is obviously better, forgot about him.
I can certainly see about 10 wings being better career-wise, though, as Moncrief's longevity is very weak (as you pointed out), but prime vs prime, his chances are IMO way higher.
RebelWithACause wrote:His longevity is mediocre.
Pennbeast spoke about his terrific man defense often. Yet as great as his man defense was his help defense was not nearly as good and help defense is something much more valuable regarding value and impact especially among wing players.
Help defense is more impactful/important in general, I agree with that, but for me, man defense is actually MORE important on the perimeter, than in the post. Guards like Moncrief, who can put a ton of pressure on opposing ballhandlers, are IMO pretty valuable.
I certainly agree with the notion that Moncrief's man D was better relative to his help D, though.
RebelWithACause wrote:His offense was simplistic, yet effective. His skill set does not strike me as great.
Most of his games I watched were from the 84-85 season, which is his prime/peak and from the eye test I was not that impressed actually (as I am with other wings that are not in yet)
I look at Moncrief as a poor man's version of Wade (obviously not nearly as great, not as athletic or explosive, but quite similar stylistically), offensively - aggressive slasher (amazing free throw rate, because of that), but possibly even a bit better shooter than Wade, from what I've seen - really consistent pull-up jumper from 15-18 feet, excellent FT shooter, very strong for his size, too, which allowed him to score in the post, at times, pretty good ballhandler. Nothing special as a playmaker, and like many players of his time, didn't really have a 3-point shot in his arsenal (but it wasn't emphasized during the 80s, and he actually seemed to develop that, towards the end of his prime (shot 32.0% on 1.4 attempts during the 85-86 season, and then 34.2% on 1.2 attempts in 88-89), so I think there are reasons to believe that he would develop that shot, if he played today. Pretty good rebounder for a guard, as well, particularly on the offensive glass (Kobe level, as an overall rebounder, and actually his peak rebounding season, 81-82, is better than any of Bryant's).
I don't think his skillset was any less impressive than many of the other stars' of the 80s.