Doctor MJ wrote:OldSchoolNoBull wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
Re: forced inclusion of entire previous list. Yup, that's the big sin. I'm still stunned they let that happen given that's not how previous updates to the NBA & WNBA's lists along these lines go. I feel like it's likely nobody told the voters to do this, but because the old voters were biased and the young voters they chose weren't qualified by actual expertise, this became the easy way out.
It wouldn't surprise me if the NBA did want the whole previous list to carry over - not for any ideological or basketball reasons, but public relations reasons. A majority of those older guys are still alive, and the ones that aren't, their families are probably still around and their teammates might be too. It's a very public list and if some older players who were on the 50 don't make the 75, like Maravich or Monroe or whoever, then it becomes a story. People can get offended. It's one thing to not make a list, it's another to be removed. So it wouldn't surprise me at all if the powers that be in the NBA just decided it wasn't worth the potential headaches.
But that's just pure speculation on my part.
I think the fact that they were seen as "already on the list" was part of the problem, but I think it's important to recognize that the NBA 75 is just another increment of the type of list the NBA has been doing for forever, and in the past they had no such reluctance. Guys like Bob Davies & Joe Fulks made previous lists, for example.
There's an extra weirdness here for me because honestly I think if there was any pull to keep legacy guys on the list, Davies should have been carried through indefinitely. The idea that there was ever a time when Dave Bing was more worthy than Davies just seems silly to me.
Fulks of course on the other is the type of guy who represents a clear decision path. If it's about who is best at basketball, Fulks deserves no mention, because he really couldn't even compete within his own era once the big boys from the NBL joined the league. If it's about the NBA celebrating its own history from the start, then Fulks should be mentioned.
I am aware of the earlier lists, but I think it's also worth underscoring that the media in general had grown exponentially by the late 90s(expanded cable and satellite packages with sometimes hundreds of channels, the internet/web existed in its early state) in comparison to when the previous lists were done in 1971 and 1981, and that the NBA specifically was being paid attention to MUCH more in 1996 than in those earlier time periods. The 50 at 50 was just a bigger deal. It was a year-long celebration. There were those interview commercials(with 50 at 50 players) that were on NBA TV for what felt like years after. NBA Live 2000 was the first basketball simulation game to feature classic players, and the list of players, thought not 100% identical to the 50 at 50, was close, and I'd find it hard to believe that's a coincidence.
My point being, I wouldn't be surprised if in 1996, nobody but the most hard core of NBA fans even knew the 25 year anniversary team was a thing(and a lot of them may not have known or remembered who Bob Davies was). When the 75 was announced, everyone was comparing to the 50 at 50.
There are just more eyeballs on it now, more media platforms to debate/complain on, etc, than ever before.
But again, total speculation on my part.
OldSchoolNoBull wrote:Re: current MVP guys move up too fast on RealGM. I definitely think this happens sometimes, and it speaks to a certain assumption that a guy's prime status won't age poorly that I don't necessarily object to. While it makes sense to try to be conservative in your assessment to avoid having a guy awkwardly move back down your list, I'm okay with this happening on my personal lists because it just means I changed my assessment about the guy.
Dwight Howard's the guy I think of here. I memory serves I wasn't actually a Top 100 champion for him in any project, but when he made his debut - and to this day peak - in 2011 at #39, I didn't think that was crazy high for him, because at the time I thought more highly of what could be built around him. I did not know at the time that early weirdness in his relationship with the Orlando Magic would bloom into a bizarre situation where he'd bounce from team to team insisting that he wanted to play as a volume post-scorer at a time when NBA teams were realizing that almost no one should be a volume post-scorer. I did not know, in other words, that anything built around Howard was destined to fall apart.
Depending on one's philosophy, one might believe none of this relevant, but I think the reality is that for most, even those who don't want to be swayed by stuff like this probably are.
So yeah, there's a non-zero probability that we'll eventually see how high we placed Giannis or Jokic and cringe at how much we overrated them, but I think documenting the phenomenon behind the cringe is worthwhile.
Yeah, I've been fairly vocal about my feelings about certain active players being pushed too early. I've pointed to examples from past lists too, like when LeBron made the 2006 list despite only being in the league for three years and having won nothing at that point.
But to be fair, if you look at the NBA's 50 at 50, which was announced in 1996, they voted Shaq in, who had only played four years at that point and - though he'd been to the 1995 Finals and 1996 ECF - hadn't won anything; likewise they voted David Robinson in, who had seven years at that point and on WCF appearance in 1995. (There wasn't anything quite like that on the 75 - I think the closest was Giannis, who was starting his ninth season and already had a ring when that list was announced.)
I do think Wade & LeBron making it in 2006 represents a bit of an obsolete viewpoint for this group back when it was more influenced by the NBA 50. The fact that Shaq made the 50 despite not really achieving much to that point spoke to a bit more of a "most outstanding" focus, and in 2006, Wade & LeBron felt outstanding.
I don't think a player analogous to 3-year LeBron would make the 100 today.
On the other hand, we really haven't seen a 3-year player like Wade since Wade, and so I'd stay he still makes the 100 but does so at a lower rank.
Just responding to the underlined, because I starting thinking about it - Kawhi, maybe? Drafted in 2011, made the Finals in years 2 and 3, won a championship and Finals MVP in year 3?