That Nicka wrote:I have never, ever heard of Hakeem being only 6'10... He was listed at 7' from the time he was drafted and even in college I believe... Unless you can show me something that states this or proves it, i simply do not believe this
I thought that was common knowledge by now. Hakeem himself admitted he wasn't really 7 foot. It sounded better to be able to say that had two seven-footers in the Twin Towers of himself and Ralph Sampson. Same thing with the Spurs' Twin Towers. Tim Duncan was originally listed at 7 ft, and everyone talked about the two seven footers, but now Duncan's listed as 6-11. Players listed heights aren't always their actual height. Some players have done it in the reverse, like Bill Walton not wanting to be listed as 7 foot to avoid the stigma of it, and Kevin Garnett doesn't either, and he's been jokingly called "6-13."
http://basketballreference.com/players/ ... =OLAJUHA01I'll see if I can find more.
That Nicka wrote:This is great support for showing Bill Russell could dominate today, because it shows someone with a similar frame and size can be successful against someone much bigger...
Which is why I love how people seem to have developed amnesia regarding that.
That Nicka wrote:But I am somewhat skeptical... Did Dennis always guard Shaq (the entire game or just down the stretch)? Did Was Dennis still able to get his 18 rebounds? What were Shaqs numbers exactly? (If Shaq still had something like 24 and 10 on 8-18, that is great defense considering its Shaq, but those are still monster numbers)
Like I said, I'll have to find it. I saved them as proof for the "Russell couldn't compete today" debates, but I no longer have them now because it happened over a decade ago now. (Wow, it's been that long ago now?)
That Nicka wrote:Defense is more than just rebounds and blocks though... Camby averages 14 and 4, but he is not a DOMINANT player... He's not even an All Star.. He wont make an All NBA team.... Ask Denver fans and they will tell you that Camby gets the emptiest 14 and 4 you have ever seen.. and doesnt want to leave the basket so he can block shots and grab all the rebounds... I dont doubt that Bill Russell would still be able to put up nice stats... But would he Dominate? I dont think he could, but again thats just my opinion
You miss the point. I was laying the groundwork and showing the precedent that Russell's size would not be a handicap today. Then with that done, the examples of Rodman and Olajuwon would show players his height who have dominated on the boards and defensively. But combine them together. That wouldn't be dominant? What's your definition of dominance? Does dominance only mean offense? The majority of fans seem to think so.
That Nicka wrote:Im not saying youre right or wrong here but Camby and Ratliff are both listed at 235 lbs
Ratliff led the league in blocks in 2000-01, 2002-03, and 2003-04. At that time he was listed at 225. I wrote it down
at that time. It
is possible for a player to gain 10 pounds in four years. The source I saw listed Camby at 220. A Google check shows only a 100 hit difference between 220 and 235. Either way, the point was to give examples of current players of approximate size to refute the assertion that Russell's size would be a problem today, notwithstanding the fact he'd be able to use the same stuff everyone today uses.
That Nicka wrote:Difference is Wilt grabbed all those boards while putting up 30+ ppg on 50%+...
So Wilt was no longer dominating when he stopped scoring 30+? In 1971-72 when the Lakers won a then-record 69 games, it was Wilt's rebounding and defense that enabled them to do what they did. In the Western Conference Finals against the Milwaukee Bucks, it was Wilt's defense on Kareem