70sFan wrote:AEnigma wrote:Strong strong strong disagree. You think someone averaging 24/9/7 would not be cited obsessively? George McGinnis won an MVP doing that!
I mean, you're proving my point - nobody remembers McGinnis now, outside of hardcore NBA history fans. Nobody says that the 1970s was full of talent, because McGinnis played in that era.Centre play has maintained well. Maybe could argue declined depending on your framing. But pretty much every other position has seen huge leaps in quality of play. I like Gus Williams a lot, but he was probably the second best guard in the league at his peak, and I do not see him coming close to that level today. Bob Dandridge was one of the top forwards; again, like him as a player, but certainly not today.
That's not what I'm arguing though. it seems that you miss my point.colts18 wrote:Siakam is going to be easily forgotten in 20 years. Hell he is forgotten now and he won a title. How many people still remember and talk about Vin Baker, Steve Francis, Alex English, Glen Rice, or Danny Manning? Not many. Tom Chambers was a star player and he is forgotten outside of one dunk.
That's my point exactly.
Which takes us right back to:
AEnigma wrote:So what is the relevance? Fine, the average casual fan memory is short and only can keep a few key players in their mind. But seems meaningful how high the calibre of “fringe-all-star” is compared to eras past, even if they ultimately fail to stick in the collective memory because of how memory works.
To which you replied:
The relevance is that we always forget how good fringe all-stars were in older eras.
I got your point; you ignored mine. I am saying Siakam is a better player than George McGinnis. Whether or not he is remembered is irrelevant to that idea, and irrelevant to the thread topic.
So in talking past the OP about how people are remembering players, you are either disagreeing that the league is more talented now, or you are just taking us down a purposeless tangent no one was discussing.