Manuel Calavera wrote:So far I've got:
1. Bird
2. Magic
3. Dominique
4. Kareem
5. Moncrief
Explain to me how both Magic and Kareem make your list and Hakeem does not when Hakeem took them out in the WCF as a major upset?
Moderators: penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ, trex_8063
Manuel Calavera wrote:So far I've got:
1. Bird
2. Magic
3. Dominique
4. Kareem
5. Moncrief
Sports Illustrated wrote:PRO BASKETBALL—In Eastern Conference quarterfinal playoff action, Boston thrashed Chicago 122-104 for a three-game sweep of the Bulls. The Celtics held Michael Jordan—who averaged 56 points in the previous two games—to 19 points. Jordan's 131 points broke Wilt Chamberlain's 26-year-old playoff record of 116 points for a three-game series. Detroit, down 2-0, held Dominique Wilkins to 21 points and won Game 3 106-97 to stay alive in its best-of-five series with Atlanta. But Wilkins came back to score 38 points in Game 4, and Spud Webb sank a pair of free throws with three seconds on the clock to give the Hawks a series-clinching 114-113 win. Boston beat Atlanta 103-91 to take the lead in their best-of-seven semifinal opener. New Jersey, leading Milwaukee at the half after scoring 73 points, blew the lead (18 points), the game (118-113) and the series (3-0). Philadelphia, tied 1-1 with Washington at the start of the week, topped the Bullets 91-86, but the return of Jeff Ruland, who had been out since mid-March after arthroscopic surgery on his left knee, lifted Washington to a 116-111 series-tying victory. The Sixers then took the series, trouncing the Bullets 134-109 in the final game (page 50). Rookie Terry Catledge, subbing at center for Moses Malone, who will be out the rest of the season, scored 27 points. Philadelphia will face Milwaukee in an Eastern Conference semifinal. In the West, the Lakers wrapped up their quarterfinal series in three straight by defeating San Antonio in the clincher 114-94. Magic Johnson set a new three-game playoff record with 48 assists for Los Angeles, which achieved its victories by an average margin of 32 points. The Lakers then met up with Dallas, which had eliminated Utah in four games, and in their semifinal opener in L.A. on Sunday beat the Mavericks 130-116. Denver won twice and ousted Portland three games to one. Houston's Ralph Sampson and Lewis Lloyd each scored 25 points in a 113-98 win over Sacramento to eliminate the Kings in three straight. The Rockets won their semifinal series opener against the Nuggets 126-119, thanks to Akeem Olajuwon's 38 points and 16 rebounds.
Sports Illustrated wrote:The 76ers as overachievers seems a quaint notion, but it's an accurate one. Philadelphia needed five games to eliminate the Washington Bullets in the NBA's most competitive first-round series, the decisive win coming in decisive fashion, 134-109, on Sunday at the Spectrum. It's hard to say whether the clincher was the result of the Sixers' reaching down deep or the Bullets' not even bothering to stoop. The Sixers led 40-22 after one period and finished up by biting the Bullets on the break (42 points to 10), on blocked shots (13-5) and on the boards (49-42 and 255-192 in rebounds for the series). The total team effort (seven players in double figures, eight with three or more rebounds) may well have signaled the Sixers' readiness for Milwaukee, which won four of five regular-season meetings.
At the very least, Philadelphia hardly looked like a team that had lost players for a combined 119 games to a variety of injuries during the season, but it made sweet use of its adversity. Here's how:
Toney's six-game season was a nightmare, what with stress fractures of both feet, surgery to remove bone spurs from his left foot, surgery to repair a twist in his spermatic cord and an ongoing feud with management, which treated him, in Toney's words, "like raw meat." But in his absence, Maurice Cheeks, who this season became only the sixth guard to lead the NBA in minutes played, turned shootist. His 15.4 average was two points higher than his previous season best and four points higher than his career average. He was even better against the Bullets, scoring 21 per game, second only to Charles Barkley's 21.4. (If Cheeks hasn't recovered from the ankle sprain he suffered in the fourth quarter on Sunday—team officials said Monday that Cheeks would play in the first game—the Sixers can forget about beating Milwaukee.) And, save for a late-season slump, Threatt was a treat for the Sixers with his on-the-move jumper, which produced 9.9 points a game.
Erving's scoring average, never below 20 points in nine previous NBA seasons, dipped to 18.1, and he had a career low of 5.0 rebounds. Reason? The man turned 36 in February. But Doc's diminishing light was simply refracted to Barkley (20 points, 12.8 rebounds), and surely no one disputes Jones when he says, "Charles is the heart of this team right now."
Sports Illustrated wrote:Well, wonder of wonders, deep into April the name of Dominique Wilkins is still on everyone's lips. After winning the NBA's regular-season scoring championship with a 30.3 average, Wilkins scored 28 and 50 points last week as the Hawks whipped the visiting Pistons 140-122 and 137-125 in what was supposed to be the most evenly contested of the NBA's first-round miniseries. One more win and the Hawks would advance to the second round for the first time since the 1978-79 season, when Wilkins was a high-flying senior for the Washington ( N.C.) High School Pam-Pack.
What was most impressive about Wilkins' 50-point performance, the first in the playoffs since Bob McAdoo scored that many for Buffalo in 1975, was that his 19 field goals did not include a single dunk. (The next day, Chicago's Michael Jordan reached the 50 mark and then some with a playoff-record 63 against Boston, page 32.) There were square-up jumpers, post-up jumpers, jumpers off the break and jumpers off moves in the lane, but no dunks. A dunkless
ronnymac2 wrote:I'm sorry if I just haven't noticed the name, but I don't see Isiah Thomas in contention for people here. How is that possible? How? Isiah isn't somebody you can ignore this year. He had one of his best regular season, and then in typical fashion upped his game in the playoffs. I'm not saying I'm voting for him, but he NEEDS to be seriously looked at here.
1. I don't see any reason to doc Dominique's placement for his playoff performance when he played the best defensive team in the league for 5 of the 9 games. I haven't seen it be touched on that much though.
2. Houston's 2-4 seems to have substantially outplayed the Lakers 2-4, but that's just my impression from the articles I read. It also seemed like the series was basically played 2 on 1 with Sampson and Hakeem versus Kareem. Kareem still played excellently though, and the article even says that Houston knew they were playing the best center in the league.
Barkley came really close. Nique wins tiebreakers- basically, better accolades, PER, and a scoring title. 2nd in MVP voting, too.
Gongxi wrote:I thought I need at first, but then you started listing random peaks?
Code: Select all
Rk Player PER WS ON SUM
1 Larry Bird 24.9 20.9 10.7 56.5
2 Magic Johnson 24.6 15.9 7.9 48.4
3 Kevin McHale 21.4 14.5 8.6 44.5
4 Hakeem Olajuwon 24.9 14.2 4.3 43.3
5 Adrian Dantley 24.6 12.8 3.1 40.5
6 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 22.2 12.0 5.6 39.8
7 Charles Barkley 22.9 13.3 3.5 39.7
8 Sidney Moncrief 18.1 10.6 4.5 33.1
9 James Worthy 18.0 9.7 5.3 33.1
10 Kiki Vandeweghe 19.7 10.7 2.1 32.5
11 Dominique Wilkins 21.6 9.7 0.9 32.2
12 Moses Malone 20.6 8.9 2.1 31.6
13 Isiah Thomas 21.2 8.8 0.8 30.8
14 Alex English 20.4 9.8 0.5 30.7
15 Larry Nance 20.5 8.4 0.2 29.1
16 Terry Cummings 18.4 8.1 2.3 28.8
17 Mike Gminski 18.7 9.1 0.0 27.9
18 Alvin Robertson 19.6 8.3 -0.1 27.8
19 Ralph Sampson 17.8 8.3 1.7 27.8
20 Michael Jordan 28.7 2.3 -4.2 26.9
ronnymac2 wrote:^^^Ehh....I see Moncrief as a "he won't hurt his team, but he won't take the big chances to push you over the top" type of player. I think that is a good quality to have if you are a superstar, and Isiah had it. Barkley is a young guy who makes a ton of mistakes. Nique...ehh, I'd rather have Isiah.
Isiah was all-nba first team and was top 10 in MVP shares, PER, apg, and spg. That's a nice amount of stats/accolades.
Rather reminds me of ESPN panels being awed at Nash's 15, 11 and 50+% on FGs as a PG back in 2005, as if we hadn't seen this or better for a about a decade from a recently-retired PG that faced tougher defenses. All of is of the moment -- which might mean that Isiah's best argument is weakened competition between years.
bastillon wrote:Rather reminds me of ESPN panels being awed at Nash's 15, 11 and 50+% on FGs as a PG back in 2005, as if we hadn't seen this or better for a about a decade from a recently-retired PG that faced tougher defenses. All of is of the moment -- which might mean that Isiah's best argument is weakened competition between years.
lol, nobody was awed by his boxscore numbers. it was all about making teammates better, always.