RealGM Top 100 List #65
Posted: Thu Dec 25, 2014 12:37 am
PG: Never been sold on Cousy but you have to consider him here. Nate Archibald and Penny Hardaway are the main short peak guys. Tim Hardaway and Mark Price are the best long peak guys left.
Wings: Sam Jones and Bill Sharman should get a look soon; Sharman has more accolades and is better for his day, but the 50s are far less competitive than the 60s. Sidney Moncrief may be the 3rd greatest 2 guard ever . . . for 4 years. Billy Cunningham, Chet Walker, Bernard King, Glen Rice, Mitch Richmond, there are a lot of scorers out there, how many are at this level, I'm not sure.
Best bigs left: My favorite is Mel Daniels with his 2 ABA MVPs and 3 rings (2 as clearly the best player) -- played like Alonzo Mourning offensively and Moses defensively. Bill Walton, Connie Hawkins, and Bob McAdoo for short peak guys . . . in that order for me I would guess. McAdoo, Neil Johnston, Amare, Issel, Spencer Haywood have offensive creds but bigs who don't play defense are problematic for me. Ben Wallace, Nate Thurmond, or the Worm also could come up here as well as guys like DeBusschere, Bobby Jones, etc., even Zelmo Beaty and Yao Ming.
Vote: Sidney Moncrief -- very short peak but gives you GOAT man defense and superefficient 20ppg scoring. His peak is at least 1/4 of Walton's peak in my opinion and with Walton only staying reasonably healthy to the playoffs once as a starter, I'd rather take my chances on a 5 year ride with the Squid. He lost out to the Bird Celtics or (when he beat them) the fo fo fo Moses/Erving Sixers during the era of superteams and his playoffs are mixed -- he had some monster runs but also some weak ones -- though his defense shut down several opposing scorers even in the weaker offensive runs.
Of the short peak guys, who are you most likely to win a title with during their years of dominance?
Moncrief -- the stopper, has the best chance of anyone in history to actually shut down a James Harden type scoring wing. Offensively, the most efficient of the 3, will get you around 20/game on .600 efficiency.
Archibald -- the crowd pleaser, led the league in scoring and assists, on good efficiency both individual and team! I can't see him over Moncrief if you want to win a ring with the team though; it's hard to build a championship around a ball dominant small man whose main value is high point/assist numbers and who has major defensive issues.
McAdoo -- the scorer, can get you 30 a game on good efficiency and average rebounding at the cost of defense and some locker room issues. Would he have been better if his defensive issues could have been hidden at PF or would forwards have been more able to defend him out on the floor more effectively than the centers of his day did?
I prefer Moncrief's chance to get you rings. He's the most efficient scorer, did it within a share the ball offense (which has generally been the most efficient) rather than being the featured star, and he's the most impactful defender, not just individually but with his aggression translating to his teammates so that during his star seasons, his team was consistently at the top of the league defensively despite never having great defensive bigs (it continued there 1 season after he left with Paul Pressey taking his spot but then slipped and never recovered). Hill on good team wont be as ball dominant and would probably not be a first option which means his boxscore numbers will decline across the board and McAdoo's individual brilliance never translated into team success for whatever reason. Moncrief's did, the most of the three, though he had the bad luck to run into either the Bird/McHale/Parish Celtics or the Moses/Erving led Sixers almost every year of his prime. It was the era of the superteam and Milwaukee never had that third star to go with Sid and either Marques Johnson or Terry Cummings and fell short of those 2 all-time top 10 stacked teams.
Although both McAdoo and Archibald had stretches of value as a role players, their value over replacement isn't enough to make up for Moncrief's defensive impact (as well as his offense which is outstanding if not as impressive as the other two in terms of numbrs).
Wings: Sam Jones and Bill Sharman should get a look soon; Sharman has more accolades and is better for his day, but the 50s are far less competitive than the 60s. Sidney Moncrief may be the 3rd greatest 2 guard ever . . . for 4 years. Billy Cunningham, Chet Walker, Bernard King, Glen Rice, Mitch Richmond, there are a lot of scorers out there, how many are at this level, I'm not sure.
Best bigs left: My favorite is Mel Daniels with his 2 ABA MVPs and 3 rings (2 as clearly the best player) -- played like Alonzo Mourning offensively and Moses defensively. Bill Walton, Connie Hawkins, and Bob McAdoo for short peak guys . . . in that order for me I would guess. McAdoo, Neil Johnston, Amare, Issel, Spencer Haywood have offensive creds but bigs who don't play defense are problematic for me. Ben Wallace, Nate Thurmond, or the Worm also could come up here as well as guys like DeBusschere, Bobby Jones, etc., even Zelmo Beaty and Yao Ming.
Vote: Sidney Moncrief -- very short peak but gives you GOAT man defense and superefficient 20ppg scoring. His peak is at least 1/4 of Walton's peak in my opinion and with Walton only staying reasonably healthy to the playoffs once as a starter, I'd rather take my chances on a 5 year ride with the Squid. He lost out to the Bird Celtics or (when he beat them) the fo fo fo Moses/Erving Sixers during the era of superteams and his playoffs are mixed -- he had some monster runs but also some weak ones -- though his defense shut down several opposing scorers even in the weaker offensive runs.
Of the short peak guys, who are you most likely to win a title with during their years of dominance?
Moncrief -- the stopper, has the best chance of anyone in history to actually shut down a James Harden type scoring wing. Offensively, the most efficient of the 3, will get you around 20/game on .600 efficiency.
Archibald -- the crowd pleaser, led the league in scoring and assists, on good efficiency both individual and team! I can't see him over Moncrief if you want to win a ring with the team though; it's hard to build a championship around a ball dominant small man whose main value is high point/assist numbers and who has major defensive issues.
McAdoo -- the scorer, can get you 30 a game on good efficiency and average rebounding at the cost of defense and some locker room issues. Would he have been better if his defensive issues could have been hidden at PF or would forwards have been more able to defend him out on the floor more effectively than the centers of his day did?
I prefer Moncrief's chance to get you rings. He's the most efficient scorer, did it within a share the ball offense (which has generally been the most efficient) rather than being the featured star, and he's the most impactful defender, not just individually but with his aggression translating to his teammates so that during his star seasons, his team was consistently at the top of the league defensively despite never having great defensive bigs (it continued there 1 season after he left with Paul Pressey taking his spot but then slipped and never recovered). Hill on good team wont be as ball dominant and would probably not be a first option which means his boxscore numbers will decline across the board and McAdoo's individual brilliance never translated into team success for whatever reason. Moncrief's did, the most of the three, though he had the bad luck to run into either the Bird/McHale/Parish Celtics or the Moses/Erving led Sixers almost every year of his prime. It was the era of the superteam and Milwaukee never had that third star to go with Sid and either Marques Johnson or Terry Cummings and fell short of those 2 all-time top 10 stacked teams.
Although both McAdoo and Archibald had stretches of value as a role players, their value over replacement isn't enough to make up for Moncrief's defensive impact (as well as his offense which is outstanding if not as impressive as the other two in terms of numbrs).