Stalwart wrote:tsherkin wrote:Stalwart wrote:
Im not sure what you guys have against Ewing lol. He was a great post player in addition to being able to face up. He can hit the turn around jumper over either shoulder from anywhere in and around the paint. Jump hooks over either shoulder. He had mini dream shakes in his repitoire. Up and unders. Running hooks. Leaners. Fadaways. He could go over top. He can go outside, inside. And most importantly he can chain these things together fluidly.
That's a defensive response.
Ewing wasn't known in his own time for his diverse array in the post. He was a stiff, mechanical offensive player who did his best offensive work leveraging his first step against slower big men and wielding his jumper. He was pretty good at that in the RS. He had like 2 good postseason runs as a primary scorer because his offensive game was not particularly special. This isn't news.
There's a reason he looked like stank ass against Olajuwon, and it wasn't just strong individual defense. He struggled in general when he didn't physically overwhelm his opponent because his skill set was neither advanced nor diverse.
These are just your characterizations of Ewing not necessarily facts: "He worked better shooting jumpers, hes mechanical, and he's not special". Ok, that could all be true, or false. But when I turn on the tape and watch Ewing work in the post I see better footwork and more moves. Plain and simple. I see Ewing chain these moves together in a way I don't see from Wilt. Now if you want to bring passing into it or athleticism then that's something else. But as far as moves and footwork in the post...I see more of that of Ewing.
Ewing also spent his career going against better more modern defense then Wilt Chamberlain did. So if he struggled here or didn't match up well there then that just speaks to how good his peers were and how strong the defense was. You point out that he looked like "stank ass"(so disrespectful) against Olajuwon. Ok. Thats Hakeem Olajuwon, a great post and team defender from a more modern era. Thats also just one series at the tail end of his prime. Put the '90 or '91 version of Pat Ewing up against Bill Russell and lets see what those numbers look like.
So when someone watches the game and comes to different conclusions than you it's a "characterization, not fact", but when you talk about your opinions they seem to be indeed factual, right?
Even when you make factually incorrect statements, like with Ewing using hook shots over the right shoulder.