ElGee wrote:Before I vote, I'd love to hear more debate/analysis between Gilmore and McGinnis. These are the two players I know the least about, and I'm having a hard time seeing why some value Artis so highly when he never gets MVP love and I've never a seen an old source that really talks him up too much. Going to try and research this more before voting but I'd love to hear others weigh in. Doc, you like Artis a lot - care to make an argument outside of 25-16 62% that I can sink my teeth into?
Hmm.
Well first off, I'm actually shocked to learn that he received zero MVP votes in '74-75. That has me reeling a bit. With that said though, he did win the MVP his rookie year, and he did make All-ABA 1st team and All-Defensive 1st team every year of his ABA career, and was voted the #2 player in ABA history. So it's not like he wasn't getting love.
How to really make an argument for him without using stats, I'm not sure. Some things that just stand out to me about him:
Rick Barry wrote:"Artis Gilmore was incredibly agile and was just an amazing shot blocker. In fact, I've had him on my radio show a couple times, and I think that he stopped blocking some of the shots because they were calling goaltending on him. I don't think that anybody had ever seen anything like that and they figured that he had to be goaltending, that you can't possibly block somebody's jump shot."
This isn't him talking about a couple questionable calls here. Gilmore has 7 goaltends called on him in a single game as a rookie. This was something had a substantial impact on Gilmore's block totals, and he still blocked 5 shots a game.
So understand from the start, that at least in his rookie season, Gilmore was one of the most athletic big men anyone had ever seen.
Second, his effect on team defense was clear. Huge improvement when he joined Kentucky (they were below average the previous year), and the team then had the best defensive efficiency 3 of those last 5 years of the ABA, then goes to the Bulls, and turns their defense from mediocre to #2 in the league. This was a classic dominant big man on defense.
On offense, one can object to him not being more of a volume scorer. With that said, in basketball history, the most successful big men led teams aren't led by volume scoring big men. Gilmore's putting up 20-ish with a history of fantastic efficiency, year in and year out.
You put that all together, that's someone I'd kill to have on my team. Dominant defense, and flexible enough to sacrifice his scoring and just get more and more efficient as he picks & chooses. What's the down side?
McGinnis on the other hand is someone who clearly had problems working with other big time talent. (Hence why he got trade from Philly for lesser talent) He was prone to inefficiency - and he was a headcase. If memory serves, McGinnis was the reason Larry Brown quit as coach of the Denver Nuggets and fled NBA basketball entirely for a few years. Granted Brown's a bit of a diva, but McGinnis just refused to do what he was told ball hogging and coasting on defense - and since it was Brown telling him what to do, you KNOW that it all made strategic sense.
If I have to pick which of these two is going to be on my team, it's no contest.