Kevin Durant vs Oscar Robertson
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2025 6:18 pm
Who do you rank higher on your all-time list?
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One_and_Done wrote:KD and it's not close. Oscar is a product of his own era to a large degree. In today's league he wouldn't even be an all-star.
penbeast0 wrote:One_and_Done wrote:KD and it's not close. Oscar is a product of his own era to a large degree. In today's league he wouldn't even be an all-star.
Thank you for the extremely predictable and uninformative post that does nothing to create decent discussion.
One_and_Done wrote:penbeast0 wrote:One_and_Done wrote:KD and it's not close. Oscar is a product of his own era to a large degree. In today's league he wouldn't even be an all-star.
Thank you for the extremely predictable and uninformative post that does nothing to create decent discussion.
How is it less informative than the 1st and 2nd reply on this page?
I'm happy to elaborate of course. Do you want me to explain in more detail? I thought my reasons would be obvious, and so needed no further explanation.
Oh cool! Thanks for the game. Might try to watch the whole game if I get the chance.70sFan wrote:We don't have a lot of footage available for Oscar and highlights just don't do players like him enough justice. If anyone is interested in how Oscar impacted the game without crazy numbers (that he posted during his prime), there is no better way than to watch this sequence from the 4th quarter of the famous end of the streak Bucks vs Lakers RS game:
Watch from 1:20:10 to 1:28:20 how Oscar controlled the pace of the game, take a look how he broke down Lakers defense (the best in the league) and how his simple, methodical approach gave his team open looks inside. Take a look at his two-man game with Kareem, how effective it was despite lack of spacing around them.
All these things look very simple and not eye-pleasing for highlight reels, but it's something very few players could do at the highest level and Durant certainly isn't one of them.
One_and_Done wrote:
Ol Roy wrote:One_and_Done wrote:
Players perform based upon the stylistic and rule considerations of their era. If your baseline for comparison is the modern game, by definition older players will always fall short. That incongruity doesn't mean older players are automatically inferior, it means they were playing a different game.
On the one hand, you say you don't grant players skillsets you say they never had.
But then you will judge those same players based on conditions they never played under.
It's a selective method of player evaluation that purposefully skews in one direction.
It is true that Oscar Robertson didn't shoot three pointers and that he didn't handle the ball as players would later.
It does not follow that Oscar Robertson in a modern setting would not be able to shoot three pointers and handle the ball like modern players, and that he therefore would be relegated to the bench.
There is a difference between saying one "didn't" and "couldn't." You like to say the latter.
When transporting a player across time, hypothetically, imposing a rigid handicap is your choice. But it doesn't actually have to be that way, that's just what you like to do. And, in fact, it's not the most likely scenario for what would transpire. The idea that Oscar Robertson would demonstrate zero adaption is not plausible whatsoever. Because adapting is what humans are wired to do. So, I don't see the point in planting your flag on situations that are totally implausible.
Whether I say that Oscar Robertson could adapt, or whether you say he can't, the moment we agree to transport him to the modern era, we have created an imaginary player that didn't exist in reality, so you can't pretend you are just trying to stick to reality. This is ALL speculative.
Rather than impose selective handicaps, it makes more sense to (A) attempt to make educated projections about cross-era translation or (B) determine that cross-era translation isn't possible, and to refrain from it entirely.
One_and_Done wrote:There’s nothing complex or contradictory about the approach I’m taking.
Evaluating how a player with a certain skillset would do in different circumstances is entirely reasonable. We do that every day when we speculate what a player is worth in a trade, and whether a team should trade for a guy, or when we evaluate draft picks, or player contracts. With that comparison, only 1 element is unknown; the new situation. With the proposed approach of an imaginary player who has new skills they never possessed, both aspects of the comparison are uncertain (both the player and the situation). Everything is somewhat speculative, but the latter is what I would call too speculative.
I explained all this above. I grant that a player can deploy their skillset in the most optimal way in whatever era they play, but I don’t grant that they can develop skills they never had, because it opens a pandora’s box where we go from rating players who actually existed to rating ones who only existed in our imagination (e.g. healthy Bill Walton thanks to modern medical care, or Len Bias who didn’t OD, or Sheed with a better attitude, etc).
The reality is Oscar did not have a 3 or a good handle by modern standards, so he would be a bench player today.
Moreover, it’s not even about today. If you took a more modern player like Ray Allen, or even Aaron Nesmith, and put them into the ABA in 1974 (when Oscar was still playing), or the NBA in 1980, then had the team deploy them and their offense in the most optimal way possible, they would be more valuable players than prime Oscar. The league wouldn’t know how to react to these guys firing away automatically at high percentages from way out. It’d be the best offense in the NBA.
Oscar was certainly a product of his era, but that isn’t a good thing. Someone doing something badly by modern standards, because it was accepted at the time, makes them still bad at said thing. It gives us context to why they were doing it badly, and it doesn’t change their historical significance, but it also doesn't prove a typewriter repairman could build a computer. Oscar will always have a greater legacy and significance to the game than Ray Allen. There will be more statues and legends and tributes for Oscar Robertson. There’s absolutely no way he was objectively better at basketball than Ray Allen though.
Oscar may try to adapt his shot to the modern game, just like I might try to develop Gladiator skills if I was transported to the ancient Roman Colosseum, but it’s purely speculative if I’d be good at it.
Durant is better on both ends than Oscar. He scores much more efficiently
Oscar was a good playmaker and scorer for his own era
but his objective level of dribbling and shooting skills would not be remarkable today.
While Oscar has been praised by some on this board as having amazing court vision, it is not evident on the footage that exists
and was only on an elite team when he joined Kareem
I’m trying to decide who was best at basketball in an objective sense
I only give players credit for the skillset they actually possessed.
It might not have been fair that Len Bias died young, but that’s what happened.
I give players the skillset they actually had
It should be relatively easy for players to tone down their dribbling to adjust to 60s rules.
This is a subjective exercise, and neither viewpoint should require less analysis than the other.
If there was a player for whom we had literally zero footage, then my view is that we would be unable to rate that player at all.
The human mind is a funny thing, and nostalgia can warp memories so that a guy seems better than he was.
I watched the footage of Oscar that was linked above.
he doesn’t stand out in the 1972 league
Kareem looks great out there.
Oscar looks like a good player, but not a historical outlier
and his lack of 3pt shot would basically relegate him to a bench role
Oscar wasn't quite Durant as a pure scorer
The player Oscar Robertson, with his defined skillset, exists outside of our imagination.