falcolombardi wrote:Lakers LeBron wrote:So obviously lack of highly rated modern players in lists such as this or the Top 100 Players Project is beginning to stand out. For example in this list, there are multiple seasons from the 60s, 80s, 90s, and early 2000s in the top 10 including a 17 year stretch from 86 to 2003 that apparently has 6 of the top 10 seasons of all time. Yet there's only one season from the last 19 years in the top 10 and that was LeBron's 2013 season which happened almost a decade ago. I simply find it hard to believe that players are now peaking lower given the greatly increased 3 point shooting skills and the larger talent pool of international prospects.
One area of bias that I've noticed is that a lot of thought is given to how older players would be able to adapt to and dominate the modern game. But very little thought is given to how modern players would essentially break older eras. For example, watching the late 90s Bulls, one thing that immediately stands out is that opposing teams were forced to guard Rodman standing on the 3 point line due to the illegal defense rules. If Steph Curry were playing in the 90s, he would never see the type of defense that the Cavs used to contain him in the 2016 finals by helping off of Harrison Barnes every single play. Who knows what kind of mind-boggling numbers Curry would be able to put up if he were operating with as much space as Jordan or Pippen were on those Bulls teams.
I have giannis and curry botg around top 10th and jokic only a bit below. When giannis ans jokic finish their careers their peaks may be even higher to me
To be fair I think Jokic and Giannis kind of count as the next generation for me
I feel the 2010-2020 era wasn’t weaker than previous ones, lebron and the Warriors just dominated it
Because people save themselves for playoffs more among other things ranking some modern guys is hard, but while I get wanting to reward guys for having strong regular seasons and strong playoffs it feels weird to hurt modern players for not going all out in the regular season when on contests when it’s usually a smart decision overall
At their peaks, kawhi/Kobe/Durant all strike me as guys that would be incredible in other eras where their skill sets were more valuable. Not to say they weren’t incredible in their own eras of course.
My assumptions are that in eras more dominated by wing iso/post scoring, they would probably be far more impactful
It’s hard because we don’t have much data from older eras, but just looking at some guys
On one end you have guys like dantley who don’t seem to be high offensive impact guys
In the other end you have guys like gervin and Wilkins who absolutely seem like an exceptionally elite offensive impact guy,
Kobe/Kawhi/Durant all are genuinely the best 1v1 scorers of their generation while all being anywhere from willing passers to very good playmakers.
I feel the idea that 1v1 scoring is overrated historically is a bit overplayed to me, I agree it’s overrated from 2000-2016, in the sense that rule changes made iso scoring a bit less effective
I do feel like while there are definately historically volume wing scorers that weren’t as impactful as their data suggests, there are also guys that seem pretty crazy impactful offensicely like gervin pretty much exclusively leading top 5 offenses throughout his prime or wilkins going out and the teams off rtg going from 109.9 to 105.5
I feel Durant and Kawhi REALLY separate themselves from the pack in terms of high impact high volume 1v1 scorers, Kobe does impact wise despite his percentages because of where he got his offense from as well throughout his 06-09 prime
I’d probably rank them Kobe/Kawhi/Durant personally, but I honestly do think it’s a bit tricky, but I think if you put them in previous eras or even if they had as much seperation in these skill sets relative to their peers as they do now, we’d be looking at very high tier peaks as well