wigglestrue wrote:Owly, you rock.
Again, I'm sure there's no shortage of reasoning behind the weirdness. This board features some of the world's brightest NBA history obsessives. There's just something amiss with the voting. The method, the criteria, the voting pool, something.
Miller being 40 is bad enough. I know there are sophisticated arguments for his one trick being super-valuable. Maybe in 2003 he had a better case for being Top 50 than I realized at the time, however I might still strenuously argue for more well-rounded players over him. He might have had a non-illegitimate case for Top 50 then. In the dozen years since several new players have entered the Top 50, e.g., Chris Paul. So, regardless of the mainstream consensus on Miller (which is based way more on the shallow impressions of crowdthink and way less on this board's signature rational deliberation) that now has Miller as a shoo-in Top 50 candidate, given how many new players have passed the longevity test and since established clearcut claims to Top 10/20/30/40/50 status, Miller should only be even further away from the Top 50, not closer within it. This board ought to be a rare place of sanity re: ranking Reggie Miller. Not a place where a wack consensus is reinforced. But not a place where a genuinely-illuminating next-level argument against the equally-reflexive anti-Miller anti-consensus (e.g., me at times, sorry) gives everyone the vapors, either.
There are many more players than before on this new list who Miller has no business outranking, even considering any deserved pro-Miller re-revisionism. There are also now players in Miller's vicinity who've within the last decade held very firm claims to Top 25 status, even Top 10-15. I have no idea what is happening to Isiah's reputation, but whatever it is, it's a damnable shame. I see Olajuwon now outranking Bird, in no small part because of the two titles he snagged while Jordan sat out. Isiah's two titles were gained only by conquering Bird, Magic, and Jordan. Ah, but so the new wrinkle is that it wasn't "Isiah's team" as much as people have thought, or that he wasn't really a first-tier star? Or maybe it has something to do with how basketball nerd-dom has decided that assists are overrated? Whatever it is, it's an instance of thinking about 50-75% too-damn-much. Anyway, the juxtaposition of Isiah and Reggie is just the epitome to me of what's wrong with the list, whatever that happens to be. I'll be glad to do a deep, error-by-error postmortem once the list is complete, diving into the discussions here pertaining to each. I need to know what the hell has happened to, say, Elgin Baylor. Or, for the love of all that is holy, Bob Cousy.
For those players, the answer is simple . . . more advanced statistics have to some degree shown a light on their weaknesses where the original counting/box score statistics that they made their reputation on have been reinterpreted in light of newer knowledge. I often feel like I'm a generation behind in terms of analyzing numbers but even my level of understanding had dropped those 3 players below where their prior reputation had them the last time we did this project. Heck, when I came onto this board, there were a significant number of posters claiming Allen Iverson had a claim to being one of the top 5-15 players of all time.