C-izMe wrote:Who do you rank over Wilt, MJ? 13 seems too low (I have him in the 8-10 range).
Last ranking:
Russell
Jordan
Kareem
Magic
Bird
Hakeem
Duncan
Garnett
Shaq
Kobe
Erving
Mailman
Tee off where you see fit.
Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ
C-izMe wrote:Who do you rank over Wilt, MJ? 13 seems too low (I have him in the 8-10 range).
MisterWestside wrote:So you think Bynum can give you similar statistical production to Wilt in any category? Please explain yourself.
Don't get me wrong; I'm more with you in this debateI was simply thinking of what Bunum or Howard would be like if they had Wilt's ability. Can anyone honestly imagine how that player would not help his team today offensively? Especially at the modern-day devoid center position? And with players who know how to shoot the ball?
I read ElGee's posts and learn a lot; I value Doctor MJ's insight on these boards. But I'm not sold on Wilt simply being a taller version of Melo/Iverson, players who actually score at volume by chucking inefficiently and hurt their offenses in the process. And I was one of those people who thought Wilt was overrated before learning statistics
C-izMe wrote:I can't see the argument for Malone or Dr. J. I've also been dropping Bird on my list recently and I don't think he's over Wilt (same for Garnett).
Doctor MJ wrote:C-izMe wrote:Who do you rank over Wilt, MJ? 13 seems too low (I have him in the 8-10 range).
Last ranking:
Russell
Jordan
Kareem
Magic
Bird
Hakeem
Duncan
Garnett
Shaq
Kobe
Erving
Mailman
Tee off where you see fit.
And no, that doesn't automatically make him a taller version of AI or Melo, but it means like every player in NBA history there is WAY more to judging him than raw box numbers.
'salright, we'll win you over in time Westside
Doctor MJ wrote: Well, to me it's about Wilt, not about these other guys. Traditional beliefs for Wilt have him ahead of these other guys, so to have that reversed you need to pretty strongly believe the argument that he spent a lot of his time not actually have that much impact.
Dipper 13 wrote:
If true, all this tells me is he was born too early, well ahead of his time in terms of physical talent and often underutilized due to the often primitive strategies. He would be much more effective in say the 90's.
MisterWestside wrote:Dipper 13 wrote:
If true, all this tells me is he was born too early, well ahead of his time in terms of physical talent and often underutilized due to the often primitive strategies. He would be much more effective in say the 90's.
Cosign.
For reference purposes, Amare Stoudamire's 10-year oRAPM sits at a not too shabby +2.6 (and for those that love to look at RAPM as the holy grail stat around here; no, I DON'T buy that number for a second. But let's say it's accurate...). If you don't think an effective low-post scorer/rebounder who can pass the ball wouldn't at least match the impact today of a power forward who is allergic to post play and is a black hole on offense, your posts aren't worth a reply. Harsh, yes; but that's the "I've watched several decades of basketball and I know what I've been watching" side of me talking, not the stat side.
Who is saying this in this thread?
Doctor MJ wrote:C-izMe wrote:I can't see the argument for Malone or Dr. J. I've also been dropping Bird on my list recently and I don't think he's over Wilt (same for Garnett).
Well, to me it's about Wilt, not about these other guys. Traditional beliefs for Wilt have him ahead of these other guys, so to have that reversed you need to pretty strongly believe the argument that he spent a lot of his time not actually have that much impact.
Who is saying this in this thread?
Amare isn't even a top 30 player all-time
Dipper 13 wrote:Having trashed Wilt's career portraying it as a bit above average, Elgee is now attempting to do the same to his peak. The exact words he used are "slightly better" in reference to his offensive peak compared to his first 7 seasons. Of course given that his team estimates from the RPOY paint the 76ers as not much better than an average defensive team, this may be spun by him, you, & many others to say Wilt at his peak was nothing special.
Will Wilt's peak eventually slip out of the top 30 on this forum? I wonder where this random figure came from in reference to Amare, who ranks well outside the top 100.
C-izMe wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:C-izMe wrote:I can't see the argument for Malone or Dr. J. I've also been dropping Bird on my list recently and I don't think he's over Wilt (same for Garnett).
Well, to me it's about Wilt, not about these other guys. Traditional beliefs for Wilt have him ahead of these other guys, so to have that reversed you need to pretty strongly believe the argument that he spent a lot of his time not actually have that much impact.
But what I see went people talk about Wilt's lack of impact is that even when he wasn't impactful he still was up there compared to the rest of the league. He led the third ranked offense in his third year and as early as his second year was impacting the game well (I believe his rookie season is overrated because of raw numbers though). The only issue I have with him is that his offensive impact is high, but not amazingly high and he had very inconsistent effort in defense.
MisterWestside wrote:For reference purposes, Amare Stoudamire's 10-year oRAPM sits at a not too shabby +2.6 (and for those that love to look at RAPM as the holy grail stat around here; no, I DON'T buy that number for a second. But let's say it's accurate...). If you don't think an effective low-post scorer/rebounder who can pass the ball wouldn't at least match the impact today of a power forward who is allergic to post play and is a black hole on offense, your posts aren't worth a reply. Harsh, yes; but that's the "I've watched several decades of basketball and I know what I've been watching" side of me talking, not the stat side.
Doctor MJ wrote:Just feel obligated to say that I could substitute Mike Conley's name in for Amare, and the numbers would still work (except Conley's numbers just a touch even less shabby). I'm not one to say Wilt couldn't perform in the modern game, but there +2.6 here is not "not too shabby" for an offensive star like Amare.
kasino wrote:Wilt significantly improved the offense and defense of his teams
Warriors he never had significant help but improved their defense and offense all throughout his stint there. Mostly improving their offense, middling or pushing their defense above average(similar to Shaq's impact)