Was Kareem Definitely the King of the 70's?
Posted: Sat Oct 7, 2023 9:19 am
Hello friends! I just made an account, but I tune in here and there - particularly for projects like the Top 100.
Something I find special about this board, besides a breadth of knowledge about the game's history, is an unusual willingness to humor ideas that challenge convention. A particularly fascinating example of this to me is when consensus generational standouts - Lebron, Jordan, Kareem, and Russell - see their stature questioned.
Over this top 100, it seems the board has shifted towards team-performance - and lack thereof when a player is absent - as a core factor in evaluating a player. The results were a touch surprising: While players more commonly doubted like Russell and James seem to have solidified their status as true standouts with this means of assessing goodness, king of kings Jordan looks a bit shakier with a reasonably concrete challenger in Magic - as well as a conceptually interesting maybe-usurper in Olajuwon.
Omitted from this process - excepting a comparison to Moses apart from his summit - was Jabbar. Moreover, there seems to be a tendency among Jordan-skeptics to group Kareem alongside Lebron and RussellĀ in a new three-faced mountain still wanting for a name.
But was Jabbar truly unassailable?
There were vigorous defenses naturally - sometimes coloring him as an ancient, misunderstood James - but those defenses omitted a key point:
By the method of looking at a team's win totals - or net-rating or simple-rating - Bill Walton trumps Kareem. While many numbers and guesses were thrown for Kareem in various years - all rather impressive - I do not think I have seen the value of 12.
12 points of net-rating was what Walton was worth to the Blazers. Has Jabbar even been worth that?
While Jabbar seems to have many possible peaks - a trait he shares with James - 77 was the only year at his summit - with the acknowledgement that 80 was also very impressive - where everyone had a shot at his crown. That is because before 77, the league was split into two sparing Kareem challengers like Erving.
While Kareem was impressive in defeat, it was nonetheless a defeat to an eventual champion led by Bill Walton in the year he was worth 12 points of net-rating to his team.
I do not mean this as an attack. Kareem was a great great player and perhaps even greater than we remember.
But if we must make a new mountain, with the chief consideration being the estimated worth of a player's play...
Does there need to be a 3rd face?
Aren't all our bases are covered with two?
And if Kareem is of that calibre, what does that say of the man who swept him?
Something I find special about this board, besides a breadth of knowledge about the game's history, is an unusual willingness to humor ideas that challenge convention. A particularly fascinating example of this to me is when consensus generational standouts - Lebron, Jordan, Kareem, and Russell - see their stature questioned.
Over this top 100, it seems the board has shifted towards team-performance - and lack thereof when a player is absent - as a core factor in evaluating a player. The results were a touch surprising: While players more commonly doubted like Russell and James seem to have solidified their status as true standouts with this means of assessing goodness, king of kings Jordan looks a bit shakier with a reasonably concrete challenger in Magic - as well as a conceptually interesting maybe-usurper in Olajuwon.
Omitted from this process - excepting a comparison to Moses apart from his summit - was Jabbar. Moreover, there seems to be a tendency among Jordan-skeptics to group Kareem alongside Lebron and RussellĀ in a new three-faced mountain still wanting for a name.
But was Jabbar truly unassailable?
There were vigorous defenses naturally - sometimes coloring him as an ancient, misunderstood James - but those defenses omitted a key point:
By the method of looking at a team's win totals - or net-rating or simple-rating - Bill Walton trumps Kareem. While many numbers and guesses were thrown for Kareem in various years - all rather impressive - I do not think I have seen the value of 12.
12 points of net-rating was what Walton was worth to the Blazers. Has Jabbar even been worth that?
While Jabbar seems to have many possible peaks - a trait he shares with James - 77 was the only year at his summit - with the acknowledgement that 80 was also very impressive - where everyone had a shot at his crown. That is because before 77, the league was split into two sparing Kareem challengers like Erving.
While Kareem was impressive in defeat, it was nonetheless a defeat to an eventual champion led by Bill Walton in the year he was worth 12 points of net-rating to his team.
I do not mean this as an attack. Kareem was a great great player and perhaps even greater than we remember.
But if we must make a new mountain, with the chief consideration being the estimated worth of a player's play...
Does there need to be a 3rd face?
Aren't all our bases are covered with two?
And if Kareem is of that calibre, what does that say of the man who swept him?