David Robinson or Kevin Garnett?
Posted: Tue Apr 30, 2019 2:47 pm
Who would you rather have? I think this is an interesting comparison. Even with the criticism Robinson gets, I would still pick him.
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I agree. But I'll probably take Robinson in both sutuations.Texas Chuck wrote:If I had a good team adding one final piece its KG. If I am starting an expansion team or a complete rebuild it's David Robinson.
AMW27 wrote:I agree. But I'll probably take Robinson in both sutuations.Texas Chuck wrote:If I had a good team adding one final piece its KG. If I am starting an expansion team or a complete rebuild it's David Robinson.
SinceGatlingWasARookie wrote:I think David Robinson was better. I like Robinson's peak better than Tim Duncan's peak.
Where I think young peak Robinson fails is leadership. If my team was full of emotionally immature players then I think KG might get more out of the team.
We still don’t exactly know, but thanks to a D-League Diary interview with Rickert that was published today we at least have a more complete and honest picture of what happened from his perspective. Said Rickert in that interview:
“I was a rookie proving myself and going in there and giving it my all. He was the reigning MVP at the time and I was going in there and not holding back and I was playing well and for whatever reason he didn’t like that. Maybe I hit a jumper on him but he sucker punched me. All I can think of is I was playing better than he expected and he didn’t like that I was playing so well against him. Growing up he was a guy I looked at and thought was a good player, so going into playing against him I wouldn’t back down from a challenge. I guess he didn’t like that.”
Billups, who teamed with Garnett in Minnesota from 2000 to '02, says one of his most vivid memories of Garnett is from a Timberwolves shootaround in which Saunders tried to familiarize the team with its next opponent. The coach attempted to run through that team's offensive sets for the starters but was thwarted by Garnett, who refused to stop denying his player the ball during the walk-through. "I warned KG," Billups says. "I told him, 'You keep yelling this s--- at people and someone is going to come back at you.'"
That guy, Billups says, was former Wolves teammate Wally Szczerbiak. "I got along with Wally just fine, but he was kind of a know-it-all," Billups says. "I took his arrogance to be a positive all players gotta have, but KG took it a different way. It was KG's team, his voice, his show, his everything. Anyone who differed was going to be an outcast."
The tension boiled over during a November 2000 practice, when Szczerbiak reportedly got picked off and chided Garnett to call out the screens. KG responded curtly, "Play some defense," the pickoff seemingly a consequence for whatever expectation Szczerbiak wasn't meeting defensively. Szczerbiak took exception. It accelerated into a shouting match, which spilled into the training room. Punches were thrown. Ask Szczerbiak about it today and he says he was simply a young player trying to stick up for himself. "I felt like I had some leadership qualities," he says. "I'm not a guy who will take a back seat all the time, and in certain scenarios I'm going to speak up for what's right. At times it definitely got me in trouble."
Deveney highlighted a number of interesting story lines from the book in a recent article, including several excerpts that suggest Allen’s notoriously icy relationship with Kevin Garnett may have been strained from the very start.
Allen recalled dribbling in front of his locker during the Celtics’ preseason trip to Rome in 2007, which was something Allen had done to prepare for games his entire career. The dribbling annoyed Garnett, though, who told Allen, “No, you’re not going to do that.”
“No,” Garnett said, “I tip way better than him, so you better give me the check.” It was the first time they’d gone to dinner together, and Allen pointed out that Garnett had no idea how much Allen tipped. “There was no point in arguing with the guy,” Allen writes. “What struck me was that he felt the need to be seen as being superior to me, even in something as petty as this.”
Garnett’s former teammate Paul Pierce said the first time Noah met Garnett on the basketball court, the very intense Garnett rubbed the then-rookie Noah the wrong way.
One time, he asked [Joakim] Noah if he could rub through his hair, like a female or something.…And I know that kind of made [Noah] hot. And this was when Noah was a rookie, too. I remember Noah looked up to KG. He was like, ‘Man, KG, I had your poster on my wall, I looked up to you, man.’ And then [Garnett] just said something like that, and was like ‘F— you, Noah.’ I was like, ‘Whoa.’ This kid fresh out of college, looks up to KG, just said he had his poster on the wall, and he tells him that! It crushed him. It crushed Noah.
The Timberwolves faced the Spurs at the Alamodome for a first round playoff game on May 9, 1999. At some point during that game, Garnett told Duncan “Happy Mother’s Day, M***********” as the Spurs legend lined up for a free throw.
Duncan’s mother passed away of breast cancer, one day before Tim’s 14th birthday in 1990.
While this incident has never been confirmed, what is confirmed is that Duncan hates Garnett, according to a 2012 Sports Illustrated profile:
“In fact, Duncan hates Kevin Garnett. Hates him the way liberals hate Sean Hannity. This information comes from very reliable sources, who talk about how KG has made a career of trying to punk Duncan, baiting him and slapping him and whispering really weird smack into his ear. They talk about how funny this is, because the worst thing you can do as an opponent is piss off Duncan. Then, as Malik Rose says, "he f------ destroys you." Duncan's lifetime numbers versus Garnett's teams, by the way: 19.4 points per game, 11.6 boards and a 44-17 record, including the postseason.
Duncan is diplomatic about the topic. Asked if perhaps all those years battling Garnett have softened his feelings for the man, led to a Magic-Larry type of kinship, Duncan leans back on the couch in his hotel room and grins. There is a pause. A longer pause. Finally he says, "Define kinship.”
eminence wrote: Robinson the most holier-than-thou star I can think of.
eminence wrote:Not a fan of either's leadership. KG is a hyper-competitive ****. Robinson the most holier-than-thou star I can think of.
eminence wrote:Probably something about AIDS being a plague sent by god.
edit: Here's an SI article that mentions the incident, though I can't find the original myself as of now.
https://www.si.com/vault/1996/04/29/212352/trials-of-david-san-antonio-spurs-center-and-born-again-christian-david-robinson-is-trying-to-lead-his-team-to-an-nba-title-and-remain-pure-in-a-world-beset-by-the-seven-deadly-sins
Texas Chuck wrote:eminence wrote:Probably something about AIDS being a plague sent by god.
edit: Here's an SI article that mentions the incident, though I can't find the original myself as of now.
https://www.si.com/vault/1996/04/29/212352/trials-of-david-san-antonio-spurs-center-and-born-again-christian-david-robinson-is-trying-to-lead-his-team-to-an-nba-title-and-remain-pure-in-a-world-beset-by-the-seven-deadly-sins
Right so its a belief you don't like. Not really at all the same thing as being holier than thou around his teammates, tho right? And nothing in that article suggests anything like that. I can appreciate being turned off by a player's beliefs or lifestyle. For instance this year when everyone was falling all over themselves over Derrick Rose, I was turned off still by some of his personal choices and refused to join in the chorus of this "amazing redemption story".
But I don't know that what I don't like about him means his teammates don't like him or that he's causing issues. And I wouldn't have Robinson being a very polarizing guy and other than Rodman(so consider the source) I don't recall hearing any teammates say bad things about the guy or that he came off overly preachy.
eminence wrote:Texas Chuck wrote:eminence wrote:Probably something about AIDS being a plague sent by god.
edit: Here's an SI article that mentions the incident, though I can't find the original myself as of now.
https://www.si.com/vault/1996/04/29/212352/trials-of-david-san-antonio-spurs-center-and-born-again-christian-david-robinson-is-trying-to-lead-his-team-to-an-nba-title-and-remain-pure-in-a-world-beset-by-the-seven-deadly-sins
Right so its a belief you don't like. Not really at all the same thing as being holier than thou around his teammates, tho right? And nothing in that article suggests anything like that. I can appreciate being turned off by a player's beliefs or lifestyle. For instance this year when everyone was falling all over themselves over Derrick Rose, I was turned off still by some of his personal choices and refused to join in the chorus of this "amazing redemption story".
But I don't know that what I don't like about him means his teammates don't like him or that he's causing issues. And I wouldn't have Robinson being a very polarizing guy and other than Rodman(so consider the source) I don't recall hearing any teammates say bad things about the guy or that he came off overly preachy.
A) No I don't like David Robinson (or at least who he was, maybe he's changed out of the public eye, I certainly haven't been following his life post NBA).
B) That is an example of the holier-than-thou attitude/view. It is not a definitive analysis on the matter. Here's a bit on Chuck that strikes me as in the same vein:
"I love Charles to death," he says. "We've had many, many great
conversations. You can just see the goodness inside him. It just
wants to come out. Sometimes, though, he just can't help
himself. He goes down that other path."
C) Not being a fan of a guy's leadership is not the same as thinking he's causing issues or saying that his teammates don't like him.
Jim Naismith wrote:A lot less aggressive than LeBron's rebuke of Barkley.
eminence wrote:Jim Naismith wrote:A lot less aggressive than LeBron's rebuke of Barkley.
Completely unrelated, but sure.
Jim Naismith wrote:eminence wrote:Jim Naismith wrote:A lot less aggressive than LeBron's rebuke of Barkley.
Completely unrelated, but sure.
You said Robinson is the most sanctimonious star. He might have have that reputation.
But LeBron might be preachier, just about different things.