One_and_Done wrote:Stuff like how much a player 'inspired' ppl or grew the game etc is irrelevant to their ability to impact winning on the court.
Other factors of relevance beyond an eye test can include award voting. It doesn't tell you how good each guy was, but it does tell you roughly how each guy was perceived at the time. The conceptual model for a guy to succeed is important too. You look at guys like Dr J and you can see how he'd succeed today, then you look at what made Mikan or Moses successful and you get the opposite feeling. If a player doesn't have an archetype to succeed, or if that archetype is an extreme outlier like Charles Barkley, then the chances are high the player won't translate.
Moses and Barkley, sure. But Mikan was a strong defensive anchor and post scorer with good passing skills with above average range for a center of his era. That seems like it would translate. The real problem is the competition for him, not really the skill set.