So, I've noticed there's been a lot of conversation recently about accolades/how a player was evaluated by the press or his peers while they were playing. The inference being, having great accolades in-era should be the most important factor in evaluating a player's greatness. I can see that as an approach, though obviously I don't agree with it. As I stated in the pre-project criteria thread, I'm one that tries to evaluate how effective a player is at helping his team win, as independently as possible from his circumstances. In this project, you guys have seen me try a lot of different ways to do that, trying to tie scouting and anecdotes with box score stats and impact stats to come up with what I believe is the best case that I can make for every player. For me, that is the best way to do it...try to incorporate all of the info I can get, and build individual cases for everyone. It's really time consuming to do well, and I can't say I get to go as deeply as I'd like with most cases, but it gives me a framework to work from.
So, when it comes to accolades and anecdotes, I'm all for utilizing them. I'm all for making note of the fact that Cousy or Baylor had a lot of excellent accolades, as this tells me that they were well thought of in their time. The anecdotes (like the ones that Fundamental21 gave for Isiah in post #41) are great info too, as they help to explain why a player is well thought of, in addition to what he might have been doing to make him impact in ways that are either tangible or intangible. I think that's good stuff. On the other hand, I also think it's good stuff to look at the box scores, and their teams' strengths/weaknesses over time, to see if that helps us to understand more about what the player is doing and how effective it is. And if we've got some next level impact stuff to work with, like WOWY for players that missed extended periods or were traded in season, that helps even more. And +/- stats, be it raw like what we have for the mid-90s or the postseason in the databall era or full PBP & regressions like what we have for full-seasons since 1998...all of that helps me to make stronger and stronger cases for a player's strengths or weaknesses.
Which brings me to this vote. I've been voting Ewing for a few threads now. Some of the big pushback against him has been that he didn't dominate the accolades of his time the way that Cousy or Baylor did. But again, while I note that, I also put it in context. Ewing only has one All NBA first team selection...but from 1986 - 1998, spanning beyond Ewing's prime in both directions, every center besides him that DID earn an All NBA first team selection has already been voted in. In 7 of those seasons, Ewing was voted either 1st team (once) or 2nd team (6 times). So to me, in context, all the accolades can tell me is that Ewing wasn't considered to be quite as good as players that we've already voted in anyway, but that he was RIGHT behind them. I don't see where this would stipulate that Cousy or Baylor would have to be better, unless there's an assumption that the talent distribution in the NBA has to be equal across eras. I don't see it like that, so the accolades don't have a lot more to offer to me in trying to estimate which were actually the best players that were helping their teams the most.
Then, it starts coming down to trying to evaluate what a player actually did on the court. Ewing's case, in a thumbnail, is that he is one of the most dominant defensive players still left on the board, and that simultaneously he's also useful on offense as a finisher that spans from leading-scoring-option-on-a-contender to scoring-role-player/big-man-with-jumper-spacing threat. That's a strong two-way impact. It's also a model that tends to have:
Excellent portability & scalability:
http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162857973161/lebron-james-impact-diminishing-returns-comparedThe ability to be almost purely additive with no downside:
http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162035208506/individual-offense-is-not-more-important-thanAnd is historically scarce:
http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162019505846/individual-offense-is-not-more-important-thanThose 3 topics are obviously interrelated, but I'd written about each of them in some detail earlier in this project. Especially during the LeBron or Duncan debates.
So, with Ewing (and without getting into a stat battle), my feeling is that his combination of elite defense and solid offense would produce a peak impact as good as any player left with close to his longevity (a couple threads back, using DocMJ's scale, I estimated about a +5 or 6 on offense and +3 or 4 on defense for around +9.5 ish at peak). That this impact would be robust in the face of different team environments. And with solid longevity to boot, that this makes the best overall package of improving his team's chances to win championships over his career.
If someone can poke a hole in that theory, based upon a tangible argument that makes sense to me, I still could be swayed. But until then, I'll continue to vote:
Vote: Patrick Ewing
2nd: TDB