iggymcfrack wrote:Should we be linking the previous threads in the first post so they don’t get lost? I mean it’s not a big deal now when they’re all so recent but they could be a pain in the ass to find later.
I'm doing this in the project OP.
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iggymcfrack wrote:Should we be linking the previous threads in the first post so they don’t get lost? I mean it’s not a big deal now when they’re all so recent but they could be a pain in the ass to find later.

eminence wrote:What year do folks lean towards for Magic overtaking Kareem?
OhayoKD wrote:lessthanjake wrote:One_and_Done wrote:Bird was regarded as the best player in the world in a league that included prime Jordan, Magic and Hakeem. Kobe was never the best player in the league. He is a long way from nomination for me. His extra longevity is irrelevant when you factor in the much higher peak of Bird. The lift Bird gives you, as demonstrated in 1980, is something well beyond what Kobe's impact can bring.
Kobe is an ancillary weapon you add to help get a great team over the top. Bird makes a team great, and lets you build a whole system around him.
I’m not sure Bird was ever regarded as the world’s best player in a league that included prime Jordan. He was considered the best in Jordan’s first two years, but that’s basically just Jordan’s rookie season and an injury season (so not exactly Jordan’s “prime”). After that I think Jordan passed him in peoples’ estimation (indeed, he was always behind Jordan in MVP voting after that, for instance). That said, Bird did have a span in the mid-1980’s where was considered the best player in the league—which is a significant thing that very few possible nominees can say. And he also was consistently considered a top 3 player every year for his first 9 seasons—which is super impressive.
The weird thing with Kobe is that I don’t actually think it’s right that Kobe was never at least regarded as the best player in the world. In the mid-late 2000’s, the most commonly-held view at the time was that Kobe was the best player in the NBA. I didn’t agree with it then, and I don’t agree with it now, but I do remember that being the general consensus view.
Anyways, ultimately, it seems to me that Bird vs. Kobe is partially a peak vs. longevity question, but also a question of what one thinks of Kobe’s supporting cast in the two titles in the late 2000’s. If one doesn’t think too highly of them, then Kobe winning two straight titles with them is probably a more impressive achievement than any of Bird’s achievements (though I wouldn’t characterize the 1980-1981 Celtics as complete world-beaters either).
Kobe is easily still the consensus best player in the world in 07 and 08. At the time I'm not sure Lebron was rated higher. Not to say consensus should be utilized here(I certainly won't), but I'm not sure how Bird wins out there. Kobe is compared to lebron and jordan by many
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
One_and_Done wrote:If Kobe was ever the consensus best player he would have more than one MVP (which let's be real, was a lifetime achievement award, he arguably shouldn't have been top 3 on the ballot that year). To the casual fan or LA media he was the best, but to informed viewers he clearly was not. The POY project this board did has him as the best player for a given year exactly zero times; and I agree with that assessment. The baton was passed from Duncan to Lebron, with maybe KG or Dirk deserving consideration in the tiny interregnum of 08, depending on how you feel about 08 (and 07) Lebron.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
One_and_Done wrote:Consensus means near uniform agreement. Winning only 1 MVP, and a token one at that, shows he was nothing like the consensus best player at the time, not even in the media.


Doctor MJ wrote:eminence wrote:What year do folks lean towards for Magic overtaking Kareem?
'81-82 (Year 3) and I'd see this as the natural choice that you'd have to justify going in the other direction.
Played more in both RS & PS.
More WS/VORP in both RS & PS.
Better finish in MVP, won Finals MVP.
Doctor MJ wrote:eminence wrote:What year do folks lean towards for Magic overtaking Kareem?
'81-82 (Year 3) and I'd see this as the natural choice that you'd have to justify going in the other direction.
Played more in both RS & PS.
More WS/VORP in both RS & PS.
Better finish in MVP, won Finals MVP.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
lessthanjake wrote:
People were widely saying Kobe was the best from like 2005-2006 to 2009-2010. I don’t think he actually was the best in any of those years (with various combinations of Duncan, Garnett, Nash, LeBron, and maybe even Dirk being better in those years). But my recollection is that Kobe did have that 5-year time period where people at the time were widely saying he was the NBA’s best player.
trelos6 wrote:While I'm happy Steph's got the nomination, he doesn't have the complete body of works that some of the other guys do. He might still get there, his playstyle and shooting should keep him in All-NBA contention for a few more seasons.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
rk2023 wrote:Similar to a past PC board project, how would you all rank the best 12 years played by Wilt and Shaq?
After eliminating all of those, what about repeating the exercise for the next 12?
They both stand out akin to one another in the sense of higher, but shorter-lived apex points with some questions (though perhaps overblown) as it pertains to playoff translation. Out of their very best, I’d say 00 > 67 > 64 > 01 - but there’s a lot of grey area for me after that which I’m currently not sure on and where clarification would impact my 7/8 vote split. Longevity, even unadjusted to era, would help Wilt imo. He served as a key-cog through anchoring an elite defense while play-finishing well off of Goodrich / West at age 35/36 on two all time great teams for example. I’d say that impresses me more than anything Shaq did post 2003, despite only being only 31? at the conclusion of that campaign.


Dooley wrote:I think these nominees can basically be divided into two different groups. Group A: Two-way players who excel on both sides of the ball but probably aren't good enough to carry a really good offense (Garnett, Chamberlain). Group B: Offensive centerpieces who can carry a good offense but are not super impactful on defense (Steph, Magic, Shaq).
On reasons of general principle, I consider the second group more valuable, because I think offensive centerpieces are rare and because I think they're more valuable in basketball. I tend to think that basketball offense is more of a strongest-link thing, and basketball defense is more of a weakest-link thing. All other things being equal, I think great offensive centerpieces carry more value for their teams. And I don't think the winning imprints of Garnett and Chamberlain really change that.
ijspeelman wrote:I like that KG's offenses on the Wolves seem to hold up relative to era as compared to Wilt. I don't think it would be wrong to say KG had less to work with that Wilt did in his pre-Lakers days.
Its odd to see that KG's defenses were pretty much average and occasionally peaking to top 5. I like to attribute this to KG being a guy that fits more in the mold of a disruptor and help defender and being thrust into a post defense role which I think he also exceled at, but that was not backed up by great perimeter defense and help defense. Wilt held defense in the top third nearly his entire career. The center position also held up much better as a generator of defensive impact back in Wilt's era with more primitive spacing and no three point line.
Mogspan wrote:I think they see the super rare combo of high IQ with freakish athleticism and overrate the former a bit, kind of like a hot girl who is rather articulate being thought of as “super smart.” I don’t know kind of a weird analogy, but you catch my drift.