WillyJakkz wrote:EarlTheGoat wrote:LOL, whats the **** difference between doing a top 10 all-time list and a top-10 most dominant list?
This is (Please Use More Appropriate Word). I presume when you say "dominant" you are actually talking about peak, conditions for playing basketball or what?
If thats the case, take Kobe, Erving and probably Bird of there. Throw in Mcgrady, Oscar Robertson and basicly, all the all-time Centers.
But if we use logic we can realize the best players of all time are also the most dominant. Its an obvious assumption, there is no difference.
All Time top 10 list = All Time top 10 dominant list
Let me put it to ya like this:
Being "all time dominant" doesn't make someone "all time best" if you understand the science behind the list.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar/ Lew Alcindor was one of the best to ever play the game but was not one the most all time dominant players imo. All time great, YES.
Same w/ Bill Russell to me.
Spoken by someone who knows nothing about Russell's career other than "guy who won 11 rings." Someone who couldn't tell you anything whatsoever about any given year of Russell's career as the legion of Jordan or Kobe fans could do with their favorite player.
In his best years (92 goals in one season, 215 points in another) Gretzky outscored every other individual in the NHL by a quarter to a third. Remember when office hockey pools wouldn't even allow his numbers to be included? It is by such a standard that Gretzky may be viewed as the greatest team sport player ever. In their sports and in their times, some other names that come to mind as dominators include Michael Jordan and Bill Russell in basketball, Babe Ruth in baseball, Jim Brown and Joe Montana in football, Pele in soccer and Bobby Orr and Gordie Howe in hockey. To name a few.
It's like, "If I'm not aware of it, it didn't happen." Then to top it all off, people have the nerve to get an attitude over their own ignorance, instead of saying, "Oh, okay. I didn't know that." People wanna make statements on stuff they don't know. “The difference between a wise man and a fool is that a wise man knows what he doesn’t know; a fool thinks he knows everything.”
















