parsnips33 wrote:Would be funny if the actual Mt Rushmore worked like this. Which 4 historic presidents would be best in 2025
There is a continuing misunderstanding about Mount Rushmore. According to its sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, it was not intended to depict the four "greatest" presidents; it was intended to represent four key eras of U.S. history. Those were the nation's birth (represented by Washington), its expansion (represented by Jefferson and the Louisiana Purchase), its development (represented by Theodore Roosevelt and his work on the Panama Canal), and its preservation (represented by Lincoln having led the country through the Civil War).
While one can debate whether there are better examples of each era today, for the purposes of this thread a Mount Rushmore of NBA guards would properly focus on who best represents the birth of guard play, the expansion of guard play, the development of guard play and its preservation. It is not about who the four "best" are and certainly nothing in Mount Rushmore's history would suggest it is about who would be "best" today or which US presidents would be "best" in today's world. So my first crack at a Mount Rushmore of guards might be:
Cousy (personally not a fan of his at all but he seems as good as any to represent the birth of NBA guard play)
Magic as a representative of the expansion of guard play to show that big guys can also play guard, including the point, and be great rebounders as well as passers.
Jordan as an example of the development of guard play and that a guard can be the leading influencer of a game that had previously been dominated by centers.
Curry and his 3-point shooting has ushered in a new era in which players now spam 3-pointers at never before seen rates and frequency. Whether you like that style of play or not, it seems to be the new norm and Curry represents the preservation of the new style of play.