2. Kareem
3. Gervin
4. Thompson
5. Hayes
Putting Walton over Kareem is tough because he just isn't a better player. Both were extremely valuable to their teams which is shown by their team record with and without them. I just think this year, Walton was more important to his team. If you ever catch a Blazers game from '77 and '78, you will notice several things that don't show up on the stat sheet for Walton, 1) no other player to me (aside from Russell who has very limited footage available) contested more shots than Walton. Key word is contested, not blocking. Walton would jump out at perimeter players 15 feet out if he thought he could change their shot. His activity on defense during the '77 finals is unbelievable. 2) He was the coach on the floor, not Ramsay. Most of the time when the team is running up the floor, Walton is the one reading the situation, throwing up signals to call the plays. And on defense, you can see him positioning his teammates to where they should be. That type of leadership is invaluable. 3) The entire "team" philosophy of those Blazer teams started and ended with Walton. They were a talented sure (Maurice Lucas still led them to 45 wins and playoffs the following season without Walton), but it was Walton's presence which brought the ball movement that got everybody involved (striking guards on cuts, directing ball to Lucas when he had good position etc).
And by the way, Walton was doing the dreamshake before Hakeem even picked up a basketball...


Kareem averaged 27/14/4/4 in the playoffs, lost to a better team withotu HCA, but still underperformed apparently. Despite the fact he had 5 blocks in the fourth quarter of game 2 to save his team from elimination, or that he was the only one on his team rebounding. The minute a shot went up Dantley was already past half court looking from an outlet so he could score, never once considering that rebounding could help out the team (and don't even mention defense...). The team only had 31 rebounds in the elimination game (Kareem had 11 of them). This really is a trend you see over and over again in '78 and '79 Lakers, they just get killed on the boards even though they have the guy who is leading the entire series in rebounds.
JordansBulls wrote:4. Kareem - 4th in MVP voting, 1st in PER, 3rd in Win Shares, 1st in Win Shares PER 48 Minutes
Only won 45 games this year. 2nd team All NBA
That is because in the 21 games he missed that year (only played two minutes in the first one so it is basically a missed game), the Lakers were 8-13. And after that he was getting in game shape for the first couple of weeks. The team was 17-24 at one point and with Kareem back in shape for the last 3 months of the season they finished 28-13. Shows his tremendous value to his teams if anything. You see a similar story in '75, Bucks were worst team in the league without him (3-14!) and then when he came back there was a huge turnaround (keep in mind the team went from NBA finalists to worst team in the league in the time he missed).
JordansBulls wrote:Kareem in 1981 lost to a team below .500 in round 1 in one of the greatest upsets ever.
Er, I'm not sure how much it was Kareem (at 34 years old) losing it as much as it was Magic choking. In the game 3, which came down to a single possession, Magic shot 2/14 from the field and 6/11 from the field (had 10 pts total). This includes him bricking clutch FTs and also airballing the potential game winning shot on a play that was designed for Kareem. I don't know if anything in a 3 game mini-series can ever even be considered "one of the greatest upsets ever".