eminence wrote:Top 25 guys in games played and season they entered the league, as a proxy for elite longevity - it takes just short of 16 full seasons to crack the list:
Parish 1977
KAJ 1970
Carter 1999
Dirk 1999
Stockton 1985
K. Malone 1986
KG 1996
Moses 1975
Willis 1985
LeBron 2004
Terry 2000
Duncan 1998
Kidd 1995
Miller 1988
Uncle Cliffy 1990
Kobe 1997
Pierce 1999
Payton 1991
Gilmore 1972
Crawford 2001
Buck Williams 1982
Andre Miller 2000
Hayes 1969
Allen 1997
Caldwell Jones 1974
Cavsfansince84 wrote: ya, I think everyone on this board knows about Parish but I'm not sure what the context or relevance is to what is in the op. Maybe you could elaborate on it. Also worth noting that Parish didn't play over 32mpg until he was 30 years old and only did 4 times in his career. So could argue that Parish got pretty good load management throughout his career(career avg of 28.4mpg).
I think one way to alleviate [
within your own criteria] the concerns regarding longevity as it relates to load-management, etc, is to not ONLY fixate on rate metrics, per-possession impact metrics, and general "how good was he [when on the court]"......but to also consider availability to be on the court (not just in terms of games played, but in terms of quarter-to-quarter and minute-to-minute availability).
To put a vague hypothetical on it, suppose the following:
*Player A has a player [on-court] quality/impact of 9.5 [on a scale of 1-10] and plays 33 mpg for about 65 games per year.
**Player B has a quality/impact of 8.5, but plays 40 mpg for an average 78 games per year.
Who is having the "better" seasons, year to year?
Player A is clearly better on a per-minute basis, but is it by enough to offset the nearly
1000 additional minutes of availability that Player B has?
A poster somewhere on page 2 made the very salient point that the amount of ground covered [on defense in particular] and the effort/energy expended on perimeter defense is FAR more than it was 50, or even 25-30, years ago. Thus comparing minutes isn't
quite an apples to apples comparison across eras.
That said, load management is more of a focus today than it was in prior eras, that also cannot be questioned [imo].
At any rate, in effort to alleviate the above concerns regarding load management, it might be worthwhile to look also at MINUTES played, instead of just games played (EDIT: or seasons played). In fact, it may be useful to place MORE focus on the minutes than the games/seasons.
Vince Carter is 3rd all-time in games played; but do the HUNDREDS of games he played as a 15-17 mpg role player in the twilight of his career really matter all
that much? I'm as focused and sympathetic toward meaningful longevity as ANYONE on this site.....but even for me, those years don't move the needle much.
And besides, within the umbrella of longevity (or at least
meaningful longevity, and total career value), are we not talking about total mileage to a degree?
Below are the top 25 in total minutes played (and year came into pro basketball) [many of the same names as listed above (with a few notable exceptions), though the order changes somewhat]:
1. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1969)
2. Karl Malone (1985)
3. LeBron James (2003)
4. Dirk Nowitzki (1998)
5. Kevin Garnett (1995)
6. Jason Kidd (1994)
7. Elvin Hayes (1968) --notice he barely made the top 25 in games
8. Moses Malone (1974)
9. Kobe Bryant (1996)
10. Wilt Chamberlain (1959) - NOTE he
isn't even close to the top 100 in
games played, but top
10 here
11. John Stockton (1984)
12. Reggie Miller (1987)
13. Tim Duncan (1997)
14. Artis Gilmore (1971)
15. Gary Payton (1990)
16. John Havlicek (1962) - note is outside the top 30 in games played
17. Vince Carter (1999) - note is 3rd in games played
18. Ray Allen (1996)
19. Paul Pierce (1998)
20. Robert Parish (1976) - note is
1st in games played
21. Julius Erving (1971)
22. Joe Johnson (2001)
23. Hakeem Olajuwon (1984)
24. Oscar Robertson (1960) - again, not even close to the top 100 in games played
25. Carmelo Anthony (2003)
One other notable: Kevin Willis was 9th in games played; he's barely in the top 50 in
minutes played, though.
Overall, I feel minutes (or at the very least incorporating minutes
in addition to games/seasons played) gives a better representation of the effective longevity and/or TOTAL production/value of these guys.
Pretty much all decades with the exception of the 1950s are adequately represented above (Wilt being the only guy who entered the league in the 1950s, though Russell is 35th all-time in minutes).
Here's the distribution by decade entered the league (bearing in mind that the league got MUCH bigger going from 60s to modern era, so we should reasonably expect the representative numbers to get bigger for later decades, as well):
50s - 1
60s - 4
70s - 4
80s - 4
90s - 9
00s - 3
The 00's are potentially curved downward because players who came into the league in the LATE 00's have simply not had enough years to make it possible to crack the list, although Chris Paul is really the only one who MIGHT manage to crack the top 25 before he retires. I think it's safe to say the 00's will top out no higher than 4 of the top 25 [if that].
So that may provide an argument that effective longevity is going DOWN in recent times, although the # for the 90s muddies that a bit.
Other than that uptick in the decade of the 90s [or is that more reflective of the growth in league size??], it's pretty evenly distributed all the way back into the 60s. In fact, you could argue the 60s saw an uptick, too, considering the league was just 8-9 teams for most of the decade, yet it equals the decades after it (even
exceeds the 00s for now).
"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