lessthanjake wrote:I’m curious if anyone can articulate to me an argument in favor of nominating someone else over Moses Malone. Only one other guy on the table was the best player in the league over significant timespan (Mikan), and Moses Malone had way better longevity than Mikan and faced much stiffer competition for being best in the world (i.e. prime Kareem). And no one else being considered on the table at this point actually won more than Moses. He led one of the greatest teams of all time and also took a team to the finals (past the 1980s Lakers) that would proceed to win 14 games on -11.12 SRS when he left a couple years later.
The advanced numbers we have look pretty terrible for him:

He ranks 44th all-time in career VORP between Anthony Davis despite playing at the best possible time to get a high VORP since it was he came into the league right after it became calculable meaning that he got to play against easy competition without having any seasons not counted. From the Backpicks article, he apparently ranked in the 3rd percentile in Box Creation among 24 point per 75 scorers due to his lack of court vision and passing ability. Also, here's the relevant section on the plus/minus (again secondhand, not the actual raw data):
Backpicks wrote:Fortunately, we have Harvey Pollack’s plus-minus data for Moses’ four seasons in Philadelphia to help evaluate his impact. His AuPM oscillates between strong (but not transcendent) and pedestrian in those four seasons, with ’83 and ’85 looking like typical top-20 seasons and ’84 and ’86 lacking impact. Similarly, Moses’ regressed game-level data tells us that he made a difference, but that his impact was far short of a Grade-A superstar’s.
So, given bottom tier passing, average to above average defense, and good but not great scoring, I don't see a case for him over someone like David Robinson who was an elite all-time defender while also being a much more complete player offensively. The only area where Malone was really elite was offensive rebounding where he does rank #1 all-time ahead of Dennis Rodman, Tristan Thompson, Kevon Looney, and Roy Hibbert. I mean, its a nice skill to have, but does it make someone a top 20 player? Not in my book.