writerman wrote:
The problem with this vote is that it is (though through no fault of the panel) dominated by posters under thirty, at the oldest under forty. No matter how smart or perceptive they are (again, I'll cite tsherkin) they never saw the Wests, the Chamberlains, the Robertson, the Fraziers, the Havliceks actually play. There's a real difference between seeing players on the court than seeing them in old clips. That creates an insurmountable bias in the voting, and makes any such list essentially worthless.
Mmmm... I've seen about as many games that Wilt Chamberlain played as you can find and I've seen a fair bit of Jerry West, too. I saw a lot of Walt Frazier and John Havlicek and Oscar Robertson, too. I've spent many an hour watching tape of old players. Hell, I've seen tape of Wilt when he was in HS, lol. I'd wager I haven't seen as much of these guys as you, and I certainly never saw any of them live, but it's insulting to me to be included in your list of people who don't carry the appropriate respect for these guys. Bear in mind, you're talking to a guy who holds Wilt as the best player in NBA history, and who holds West and the Big O as 11 and 12 on his all-time list. I've got Havlicek and Frazier in my top-22 as well. I am familiar with the old players, and I take the time where possible to review their circumstances, their achievements, their near-misses, watch them play in-game, read what's said about them by peers and analysts (then and now), etc, etc.
So again, I don't really appreciate being lumped into a category of people the way you did. Yes, I occasionally waffle between Kareem and Wilt in terms of whom I prefer as #1 overall but that's primarily because I like to have a big who can hit his free throws or take a game-winning shot with a strong chance of success. Wilt was dominant and I'm comfortable weighing that dominance against Kareem's greater number of MVPs and titles for various reasons and so on, but sometimes, the past doesn't hold all the keys and you have to at least be open to the idea that it's POSSIBLE that someone better has come along. In the Wilt/Kareem case, it's not really clear (certainly given the competition Wilt faced in Russell and his Celtics), but there's a case to be made.
There is likewise a case to be made for a guy like Michael Jordan; certainly, he is being represented by the younger generations who are more familiar with his game but whether you want to accept it or not, Jordan was an EXCEPTIONAL player, easily one of the 3 or 4 best players to ever play the game. He is, as he himself has noted, the product of the evolution of the game and himself has commented on how David Thompson and Dr. J and others influenced the development of his own style, but the end result is a magnificent player with some seriously incredible achievements.
You hate on him for traveling a lot, which he didn't actually do as often as people believed. You hate on him for the foul calls he got, but don't tend to note that he's not the only star since the beginning of the game to benefit from favorable calls. You hate on him for not having serious competition at the 2, but neglect to note that he was one of the forerunners as far as bigger 2-guards (he was scouted initially by the Tar Heels and others as a SF). Jordan changed the game. What he did on the court was amazing. That he was a guard who scored at a level of efficiency and volume that was comparable to Wilt's career averages (including Wilt's down seasons, obviously) is nothing short of a STAGGERING achievement, especially since he lead his teams to 6 titles. Yes, he had great teammates and a great coach but so did Wilt and so did pretty much every non-Hakeem/Barry player in NBA history, and even they had strong contributors.
You dislike Jordan so much you can see it dripping out of your teeth but you fail to see the positives and it blinds you, makes your arguments one-dimensional and stale, just the same as the people you so readily argue against with your characteristic vehemence.
Yes, a lot of people overrate Jordan; no, most people don't. He really was that good, he was an incredible innovator, he was an incredible player, etc, etc. Yes, the media protected him and a lot of the stuff that a guy like Carmelo takes crap for these days, the media passed on that but that was true of Magic and others as well, that's just the media, they stir the pot for those they don't like and make golden boys of those they do. Jordan was marketable, yes, but he also wasn't generally getting away with stuff other big names weren't as well. Complain that he pushed off on Bryon Russell? Find me a game where Stockton or Malone didn't set a half-dozen illegal screens.
Find me a game where Jerry Lucas or Wilt or any big man who has ever had success didn't set an illegal screen or throw an elbow when a ref wasn't looking, or grab hold of a jersey, or shuffle his pivot foot, or something. Refs can't always see everything and the great ones take advantage of their lapses wherever and whenever possible because they're scrapping for every advantage.
You are often guilty of the very kind of prejudice that you attempt to project onto us, however. For every moment that you spend telling us we haven't seen enough of the old guys to properly weigh their value and relative merit, you spend an equal amount of time pointlessly hating on guys because you don't like the way they are spoken of compared to the players from your own time (pardon the phrase), and without due respect given for the way these guys have impacted the game or the merits of their play.
Too, I think that your pejorative comments about Michael Jordan are excessive, and the way you talk about guys like JordansBulls ("nose so far up his anus he can't see anything but his buttcheeks" ring a bell?) is not doing your argument any favors. Your aggressive and abrasive style of argumentation don't do you any favors. I get that you're frustrated, I get that you're tired of seeing players disrespected because of the generation divide (and it certainly happens, a lot of people now don't properly respect older players for various reasons), but you can't let that lead to the kind of comments you've been making here. You're not the only one at fault but rise above, man, rise above.
Think about what this whole endeavor is, what does it mean to rate a player?
Would a guy like Elgin Baylor look different in the modern era? Probably. He was known for his shooting ability and that didn't really translate into FG efficiency the way we like to see it today, etc, etc. He is known as an innovator in terms of his above-the-rim game, though, and for playing games around military service. He was a very good player, but would he look as good in the modern game? Maybe, though he'd lose some of his luster as a scorer because he wouldn't be jacking 25+ shots a game. You knock 25% off of his career averages in FGM and FGA (or just pace-adjust him to 92 possessions a game or so) and his lower DrawF will drop that scoring average pretty noticeably. Then you have to re-adjust because he'd get more foul calls, so he'd probably be a 25-27 ppg scorer on most teams in the NBA these days. He was a phenomenal athlete with a well-rounded scoring game.
But would he be dominant? His rebounding wouldn't translate quite so well because was (listed) 6'5 (and probably 6'6 or 6'7), though his passing might.
So if you're evaluating him on the basis of how he'd be today, it's probably a step back from where he was in the 60s, or no movement at all. Then you're left with his individual and team career achievements, which don't really elevate him to a place where he can be really held among the greats, so you're left looking at the impact he made on the game as a whole to find his place and there are other guys with significant impacts and greater achievements.
Then you look at a guy like Wilt.
You stack him next to a guy like Kareem and it's tough not to see why the newer player might be looked upon more favorably; 50% more MVPs, 3x as many titles, greater longevity, made his free throws... similarly disliked for a chunk of his career but opened up more as his career came to a close and found some media support that Wilt never really did because he was similarly stand off-ish with the giant-hating media of his own era. He's got the big numbers (but that 100-point game came against a depleted Knicks team and he was force-fed the ball to get the record, kind of like D-Rob's 71 to win the scoring title against Shaq); he's got the 50 ppg average, he's the most prolific per-game rebounder in NBA history, he's got the huge volume of 40+ games and stuff. He's got scoring record after rebounding record after records for a center, etc. But he never won as much as some of the other guys in the top tier and that hurts him, circumstances aside.
You've got to understand that this isn't a comparison of raw ability; if it were, then you'd see guys like Derrick Coleman here, guys like Michael Ray Richardson, players with raw talent that was at least partially realized but never really manifested into serious accolades or achievements. You'd see a lot more of George Gervin and Alex English, guys who never really won anything but had all the talent you could ever ask for.
This is a rating of the 100 best players in NBA history and it necessarily includes a component that is described by performance relative to the player's peers and achievements/accomplishments relative to players from other eras. Wilt doesn't actually stack up to a guy like Michael Jordan in some respects because Jordan matches a lot of Wilt's achievements, bettered him in MVPs (and probably should have won 6 or 7 because there were 1 or 2 that Magic and Malone took that maybe should have gone his way... probably 1 or 2 of Magic's MVPs were won because people wanted him to tie Bird's total and Jordan's teams maybe weren't QUITE good enough yet), bettered him in titles.
Was Wilt the best center to have played the game? The best player? Well, it depends on how you define best. You'll note, however, that in this very thread, "best" is defined by Baller 24 to be based primarily on accomplishments and stats, and that heavily weighs things like MVPs and championships. Wilt stacks up pretty well... but the three guys with more MVPs than he has also happen to have more championships, so it follows that he's "only" 4th overall out of 100 players.
Revisit the debate held over the 4 spots in this little event:
The #1 spot opened up with Wilt, Jordan, Kareem, Russell, Magic and Bird as the basic nominees.
First thing you notice is that everyone has 3+ MVPs and everyone but Wilt has 3 or more titles (and in fact, four of them have 5 or more titles and four players, including Wilt, had 4 or more MVPs). This is a pretty good starting sample for the #1 overall player based on the ranking system outlined in this thread and through discussion related to this endeavor.
Some of the rationales included:
- Jordan being the best non-center and then trying to figure out who was the best center
- Kareem's longevity
- Jordan as the career-leader in PER (though that one sucks, because PER includes blocks, which weren't included in Wilt or Russell's career, or the first four years of Kareem's)
- better stats in the playoffs than in the regular season (pro-Jordan, anti-Wilt)
- corollary to above: playoff scoring records (pro-Jordan)
- performance against competition (pro-Kareem)
- basic resume (MVPS + rings + records + stats, etc, pro-Jordan)
- only player to beat Russell's Celtics in the 60s (pro-Wilt, counter to '69 and '70 "choke jobs" as they're called)
- raw amount of winning (pro-Russell, 11 rings, 8 in a row, beating pretty much everyone... plus 5 MVPs and major pioneering of the defensive center role)
So really, if you pause and review here, Wilt's placed roughly where he belongs... not at the #1 spot.
This isn't a ranking based solely on individual talent, it's based on factual achievements, and in that area, Wilt is definitely in the uppermost elite tier, but not at the pinnacle of NBA achievement. That spot is reserved for Jordan, Kareem and Russell, the three most decorated and most successful players in the history of the game.
It's not a reflection on who was better individually, but a reflection on what a player was able to do with what he had during his career and his ranking relative to his peers, etc, etc.
Why'd he lose out for #2?
Kareem, for many of the same reasons as he lost out to Jordan; more titles, more MVPs, plenty of records in the playoffs and in the regular season...
For #3?
Doctor MJ trotted out the "he didn't have the mentality to take a team to 11 titles, according to himself" line, for starters. This was basically Wilt vs. Russell and he lost out to 11 rings and 5 MVPs.
He lost to Russell which, in the context of this exercise, is not unreasonable because Russell had nearly 6x as many titles and 25% more MVPs.
So really, there's not a lot of beef here in terms of where he was ranked, not legitimately, anyway. The criteria set out basically favor a big 3 of Russell, Jordan and Kareem in some order.
I'm rambling now, rambling and ranting, but to sum up:
- quit harrassing the youngin's
- don't lump me in with other people because you think I haven't seen enough of the old guys; I've seen more than you seem to realize
- quit being so insulting and abrasive and maybe the more persuasive elements of your arguments will come forward and help convince people to do more research before dismissing players from by-gone generations
- check yourself against committing the very sin of which you accuse others; make sure you are not yourself blinded by generation gap prejudice