Vote for #26: Nikola Jokic
Alternate Vote: Dwyane Wade
Nomination: Kawhi Leonard
Alternate Nomination: Rick Barry
JokicI provided an explanation about Jokic in the last thread, so I’ll refer back to that:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=108214417#p108214417. To me, Jokic is just clearly the best player left. I don’t care about lesser longevity when we’re at a point where we’re at #26 and a guy who I think plausibly might have the #1 all-time peak is still left to be voted in.
WadeNow that Giannis is voted in, my alternate vote goes to Wade. I think he accomplished more as a player than the others, and am especially persuaded by how dominant he was in the 2006 championship run. Wade is the only player on the board except for Jokic that actually won a title as his team’s best player. Barkley and Harden never did so at all, while Pettit won a title but Cliff Hagan was the superior player in the playoffs (and also I just don’t weigh stuff from 1958 very highly anyways). And that’s not even getting into what he did as a second-fiddle with LeBron. And it’s not just playoff accomplishment—this is also one of the few guys in history with a season with 30+ PER. Guys like Barkley and Harden may well have been as good of players as Wade. And they’ve got longevity over Wade. But there’s such a vast gulf in concrete achievement in the league that Wade has to go above for me. It’s a “ringz” argument to a large degree, but to me that’s part of greatness and it’s not like Wade is actually an inferior player. I don’t see way better impact signals or box numbers from Barkley or Harden. What I see is greater longevity from them. And in a battle between higher longevity and significantly greater concrete achievement, I’ll choose the latter.
KawhiAs for the Kawhi nomination, I explained that in the above-linked post as well.
Rick BarryOn my alternate nomination, I just want to get people thinking about this.
Rick Barry has, as far as I’ve seen, not been discussed at all. But this is a guy who was the best player on an NBA championship team (an increasingly rare thing at this point in the project). Before moving to the ABA, he also took his team to the NBA Finals and, while they lost, they gave one of the greatest teams of all time (the 1967 Sixers), their hardest series (harder than their series against Russell’s Celtics), while Barry put up 41 points a game in the Finals. In the ABA, Rick Barry also went to the finals once and lost, this time putting up 32/6/5 stats in the finals, after having beaten the Julius-Erving-led Virginia Squires in 7 games in the prior round. So this is a guy with a lot of playoff success and deep runs as his team’s best player. He averaged 27/6/4 in the playoffs for his career (between NBA and ABA). Maybe I’m missing someone, but I don’t actually think there’s much of anyone left who has that kind of playoff resume, besides my main nomination vote.
And, in terms of regular seasons, we’re talking about a player who, between NBA and ABA, was voted to the all-league first team 9 times (along with a 2nd team another year). So he was consistently an elite player in the regular season for like a decade. Not a lot of players left to be nominated can say that.
It must be said of course that he played in a weak era, since his era coincided mostly with the ABA having split the talent. But, in 1967, right before the ABA started, he averaged 36/9/4 in the regular season, followed by 35/8/4 in the playoffs and took his team to the Finals and played one of the best teams ever fairly close (and closer than the Russell Celtics did). So I don’t think this is really someone who was just a product of the ABA era.