jaypo wrote:I'll address Shaq playing against aging centers first. I brought up that argument about Wilt and Mikan because the majority of the people they played against (and there were exceptions like Russell) were a lot smaller and shorter, and not on the same level as either one. But does that either player any less great????
First of all Mikan isn't considered one of the greatest centers, and at most hes considered a top 50, I'm pretty sure many would agree.
As I remember, Shaq came into the league during the primes of the likes of Ewing, Robinson, and Akeem. And Shaq in his 3rd year actually held his own against Akeem at his peak in the finals at a more efficient rate than Akeem.
Also like to mention these stats, Shaq was less efficient in the finals then Hakeem.
# Game 1: Olajuwon: 31 pts - O’Neal 26 pts
# Game 2: Olajuwon: 34 pts - O’Neal 33 pts
# Game 3: Olajuwon: 31 pts - O’Neal 28 pts
# Game 4: Olajuwon: 35 pts - O’Neal 25 pts
Also if you look at the box scores, sure Shaq scored that many points, but he also commited twice the amount of turnovers per game, since Hakeem was also VERY good at steals (ended up top 10 in total steals, not to mention number 1 in all time blocks).
And get this: beginning in 1992, Olajuwon’s teams were 14-6 when facing elimination.
For a comparison, Shaquille O’Neal’s teams are 5-6 when facing elimination, and 1-6 prior to the Lakers’ three-peat.
Also visit this link
http://espn.go.com/page2/s/list/readers ... mance.htmlShaq admitting someone is better then him? thats a first.
"If I can't beat you, I'll be a man and say I can't beat you. I'm not going to [cry about it] ... I'm the first guy to say that somebody is better than me. I was the first guy to say Hakeem Olajuwon beat me in the [1995] NBA finals. He killed me. He dominated me. I didn't go, 'Oh, he's traveling. They had experience. Wah-wah-wah.' I'm a man. Hakeem Olajuwon dusted my butt."
In a Life magazine story, San Antonio's David Robinson seemed perplexed.
"Solve Hakeem?" said Robinson. "You don't solve Hakeem."
Orlando's Shaquille O'Neal felt the same way after going down in a Finals sweep .
"He's got about five moves, then four countermoves," said a stunned O'Neal. " That gives him 20 moves.
Ewing was the one that got his ass handed to him the most btw in the 1994 NBA finals.
I am not comparing the players based on their ages. I'm comparing them based on stages of their careers. Some players peak younger and fade out younger or vice versa. I'm talking about the years after their peaks. A couple of years ago, Shaq was 2nd in MVP voting, and should have been first. The next year, he won a title. And his prime ended years ago.
Yes you were earlier saying that Shaq is much more efficient then Hakeem was at his age, and you brought up the Raptors, where he was 39 yrs old.
Anyways...whats the point of saying this? Hakeem at age 34 in 1997 ended up 7th in MVP voting, while getting the All NBA third team, Shaq's last season in top 10 MVP voting was when he was 32, with the Heat, after that his downfall occurred. In 2006, he did make the all nba first team, but he didn't deserve it at all, Yao played just as many games but averaged more points and rebounds, while he was more efficient, I guess D Wade can do a lot when you have him by your side.
In one breath, you say that Akeem never had the help Shaq had, but in the next breath, you mention Barkley and Drexler. Let alone Pippen, Kenny Smith, Horry, Sampson, etc.
Haha...this is funny Barkley, Drexlar, and Pippen were all at the ends of thier career when they joined Hakeem. Kobe, Penny, and Wade all weren't. Smith and Horry weren't even close to how good Shaq's supporting cast was. And Sampson, well he was just a big let down, he was always injured, and finally the injury ended his career. Hakeem was the reason they advanced far, I'd also like to add that against the 1986 Celtics, with Larry Bird Hakeem couldn't be stopped.
Olajuwon was unstoppable in the 1986 Finals, averaging more than 25 points, 12 rebounds, and three blocked shots against the greatest frontcourt in history. The 1986 Celtics were 40-1 at home and 10-0 in the postseason at home. Olajuwon’s eight blocks in the fifth game cut the Celtics lead to 3-2.
I never said Shaq or Duncan was more skilled than Akeem. About Akeem's skill set, he had prettier moves and was more agile. So does Dirk Nowitzki. Would you say he's better than Shaq or Duncan??
Lawlz, I'm not talking about how good his moves looked, I'm talking about statistics and all the different types of things he accomplished, and for the record, I would NEVER EVER say Dirk has pretty moves
Actually, I remember more professionals saying that Shaq was the person that they would choose to build a team around and also was the hardest to play against on both ends of the court. And that was while Akeem was still in the league with Barkley and Drexler.
Well no ****, Hakeem was 34 yrs old, Shaq was a young and in his mid 20s dominating, why wouldn't you take him?
As far as Akeem's supporting cast being mediocre compared the the ones I mentioned, pretty much any team I'd mention would be mediocre to those guys. They were all top 50. However, Shaq had Penny and a bunch of chokers and led them to the finals where the "mediocre" supporting cast that Akeem had destroyed the "superior" Magic supporting cast. Shaq and Wade won the finals with their next best player being Antoine Walker. And the Lakers, well, they were a great team, but give me an older Barkley over AC Green and Samaki Walker any day. Or give me an older Pippen over Slava Medvedenko any day. Give me Kenny Smith over Mike Penberthy any day. See the pattern? Nobody does it on their own, and while some people here say that Akeem singlehandedly led an inferior team to a championship, he had role players that actually stepped up. That was thru no fault of Shaq's. Shaq wasn't guarding Kenny Smith when he hit that miracle 3 or Horry when he hit his. He wasn't missing 4 free throws allowing those 3's to tie the game. He was posting roughly the same numbers as Akeem was while fighting thru double and triple teams and scoring the same points while taking half the shots Akeem was taking. So, actually, Shaq had the inferior supporting cast in that series. Akeem's stepped up, and Shaq's didn't.
Hakeem's cast stepped up, and so did Hakeem, you keep saying that Shaq was more efficent but it doesn't quite matchup to Hakeem in the stat sheet. But Shaq throughout the playoffs and throughout the season had the better team, record, and players. But they didn't step up, while Shaq didn't make the extra push, and he admits it, go back and look at that quote.
The reason I rank Shaq above Akeem has to do with what he accomplished, not how pretty his post moves were. Shaq has been to the finals 6 times on 3 different teams and won 4 of them. He has 3 finals MVP's. He is responsible for multiple rule changes (much like Wilt and Mikan). He has been an MVP, all nba 1st and 2nd teams, all star for a record 14 (or 15, I can't remember) years and would have been last year if he wasn't injured, all star MVP, scoring champ, and the most dominant force in the league for years. (And not to nit pick because I know what the response will be, but Akeem never went thru Jordan for his titles. Shaq did it for him!)
Oh btw, Shaq is only an 11 time all star.
You want to talk about statistics? alright sure why not.
In 1993-94 he had a storybook season, becoming the first player to be named NBA MVP, NBA Defensive Player of the Year and NBA Finals MVP in the same season. The following season he rallied the Rockets from a sixth seed in the playoffs to their second straight NBA crown, making Houston the fifth NBA franchise ever to win back-to-back titles.
In his rookie year, Olajuwon averaged 20.6 points and 11.9 rebounds while shooting .538 from the field and finished second to Jordan in Rookie of the Year balloting. The Rockets went from a 29-53 record before Olajuwon’s arrival to a 48-34 mark, but they were eliminated in five games by the Utah Jazz in the first round of the 1985 NBA Playoffs.
Olajuwon ranked fourth in the league in rebounding and second in blocked shots with 2.68 per game. He played in the 1985 NBA All-Star Game and was named to the NBA All-Rookie Team and the NBA All-Defensive Second Team. He and Sampson became the first teammates since Wilt Chamberlain and Elgin Baylor in 1970 to both average better than 20 points and 10 rebounds.
In 1986-87, Sampson began to suffer from injuries and the following season he was traded to the Golden State Warriors. Olajuwon's production simply increased as he developed into one of the game’s top big men. Olajuwon led the Rockets in 13 statistical categories, including scoring, rebounding, steals and blocked shots. He began a string of selections to the All-NBA First Team (1987 to 1989) and NBA All-Defensive First Team (1987, 1988 and 1990), and was the starting center for the Western Conference All-Stars four years in a row (1987-90).
Olajuwon regularly placed among the league leaders in scoring, rebounding, blocked shots and steals. He won rebounding titles in 1989 and 1990, averaging 13.5 and 14.0 boards, respectively. And in 1989 he became the first player to finish among the league’s top 10 in scoring, rebounding, steals and blocked shots for two straight seasons. That same year against the Milwaukee Bucks, Olajuwon had 18 points, 16 rebounds, 11 blocks and 10 assists, recording the rare quadruple-double. He also led the NBA in blocked shots in 1989-90 with 4.59 per game and in 1990-91 at 3.95 per contest.
1993 season’s end, Olajuwon finished second to Charles Barkley in the voting for the NBA Most Valuable Player award. He was also named NBA Defensive Player of the Year for the first time, while reclaiming spots on the All-NBA First Team and the NBA All-Defensive First Team.
To summarize everything:
All NBA 1st: 6 times
All NBA 1st defense: 7 times
All NBA 2nd: 3 times
All NBA 2nd defense: 4 times
All NBA 3rd: 3 times
NBA MVP: 1 time
NBA DPOY: 2 times
10 time TOP 10 MVP vote getter
NBA champion: 2 times
11 time All Star
One of only 4 players in NBA history to get a QUADROUBLE DOUBLE.
500 win shares
number 1 all time in defensive win shares
9th all time in career points
1st all time in blocks
8th all time in career steals
He never had the supporting cast Shaq did EVER. Those were small role players that stepped up when they had to, but they were in no means a Kobr Bryant. And for the record I'd take old Barkley over AC green and Walker to, but I'd also like to have Hakeem in his prime, not out of his prime.
Top Tier All time: Wilt, Kareem, Russell, Shaq, Hakeem, Moses
2nd tier all time: Ewing, Robinson, and others...
Mikan I don't know how the hell you even think hes top tier, I'm pretty sure over 80% of the posters would agree that he is not even 2nd tier material. His efficiency was horrible, and his FG % just makes you say eww.
I love Shaq, and I don't have anything against him, him and Hakeem IMO are neck to neck, but your just underrating Hakeem like hes a piece of ****.
I am the opposite of a Tim Duncan fan, but I think he also belongs above Akeem because he has 4 titles.
Well according to your logic, Bob Cousy is a better player then Kobe Bryant since he has about what? 7-9 rings?
I dare you to make a thread on who is ranked higher all time, Duncan or Hakeem, plz.