1993Playoffs wrote:Just to piggyback off some of the other comments. I wonder if Kobe or Wade meet the “generational talent “ criteria. I’m some areas they do. And some places they don’t
Their athletic profiles don't really stand out, so that angle wouldn't be it. But Kobe was the biggest guard star after Jordan and was/remains an absolutely huge persona in basketball, even after his death. So from an angle of impact/influence, he's certainly up there.
From some definitions, though, you have to wonder. Dirk is a generational, game-changing talent.
Texas Chuck wrote:You will note I left off guys like Steph and Shaq and Larry/Magic and Wilt and Oscar and West. That's how high I think this standard should really be. There just shouldn't be much overlap excepting of course guys like Lebron, Duncan, Kareem who just dominate for so long that there will be some.
I stray away from this thought. Steph definitely changed the game and from a talent POV, Shaq was also generational. We hadn't seen anything like him since Wilt (and even then, not quite the same) and haven't since. He also changed an entire era of basketball. Magic/Larry were generational in the sense of their skills and how they influenced the game, even if their run/jump athleticism wasn't out of this world. I struggle with a definition for 'generational' that doesn't include Wilt based on his physical profile and his achievements. Oscar and West are like their era's Larry/Magic to me in the sense of being twinned in comparison/discussion and being the high-end guys and all that.
But it all comes down to a subjective definition in the end, so everyone will be a little different in how they construct the idea of what 'generational' means, just the same as what 'talent' describes. If we're only talking about what someone's born with, then that list shrinks considerably, for example. If we also include skills, if we look at how that actually unfolded on the court, if we consider how they impacted the game forward and so forth, it all changes. Every little piece of information will subtly alter the concept.