Wilt vs. Duncan?

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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#101 » by penbeast0 » Mon Oct 15, 2012 7:41 pm

Warspite wrote:Another question I have is since when is 24ppg not volume scoring?

Am I to believe that DIrk is not a volume scorer? Is Paul Pierce not a volume scorer? There best seasons are right on pace with Wilt in 67 and 68 scoring wise.


What Wilt did 60-65 shouldnt be called volume scoring. It makes volume scorers look like situational players.


Looking at pace figures and the other players on his teams, 24-25ppg is not the equivalent of 24-25ppg in the slower league today; more like 18-20ppg (haven't done the actual math). Maybe for a primary scorer there's less pace adjustment since coaches seem to try to make sure their stars get star touches but for a second or third option on a team (albeit a very efficient one), you have to make the adjustments.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#102 » by CBB_Fan » Mon Oct 15, 2012 8:26 pm

I think a transplanted Wilt would not succeed in the modern league. However, I think that if Wilt Chamberlain was born in 1990 and grew into the same athlete, he'd be just as dominant. He'd be taught better, have better moves, and probably would be a better basketball player.

Remember, he was 7'1", 250lbs. Supposedly he had a 9'6" standing reach, and of course he was crazy athletic. I think in the modern NBA, playing modern basketball, Wilt would be a much better version of Dwight Howard. Maybe he wouldn't average 50 points, but he could be the type of guy to get you 28 points, 16 rebounds, 3 blocks a night (on better TS% than he actually had in his day). No center in the league has anything close to the size or athleticism it would take to stop him.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#103 » by AdamTheGreek » Mon Oct 15, 2012 9:02 pm

Duncan accomplished so much more than Wilt while doing it in a tougher league with more competitive big men.

Does Wilt have more records? Of course, and would have more if some statistics were being collected in his era that are now.

I take Duncan and there have been some very good supportive posts in this thread that back up my Timmy selection.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#104 » by sportjames23 » Tue Oct 16, 2012 12:15 am

CBB_Fan wrote:I think a transplanted Wilt would not succeed in the modern league.


Image only posts are considered post padding. If you want to show your disagreement, do it in a more constructive manner, mmmkay? rrravenred
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#105 » by Dipper 13 » Tue Oct 16, 2012 2:26 am

I think a transplanted Wilt would not succeed in the modern league.


Why not?
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#106 » by QuantMisleads » Tue Oct 16, 2012 3:25 am

CBB_Fan wrote:I think a transplanted Wilt would not succeed in the modern league.

This is not correct, but then again you're simply just making a statement without any substance. I would advise you to stay away from doing that lest we think you're an uneducated kid whose never heard of the scientific method.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#107 » by Rapcity_11 » Tue Oct 16, 2012 3:45 am

Can some Wilt supporters address fatal's (awesome) post?
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#108 » by CBB_Fan » Tue Oct 16, 2012 3:45 am

QuantMisleads wrote:
CBB_Fan wrote:I think a transplanted Wilt would not succeed in the modern league.

This is not correct, but then again you're simply just making a statement without any substance. I would advise you to stay away from doing that lest we think you're an uneducated kid whose never heard of the scientific method.


I think you missed the point of my post. Take Wilt Chamberlain from any random season, put him in a time machine, and transport him to the modern league. He would play old-school ball, and by that I mean he would make his old mistakes. Finger rolls that wouldn't work, a reliance on a shaky fall-away "just because", etc.

That wouldn't fly in the modern league because we've have decades of experience telling us the "right way" to play. In a way, guys in Wilt's day were pioneers, playing the game before all of the knowledge was codified. Anyway, Wilt's playstyle would be more exposed.

However, I think a modern Wilt would have been raised with the modern game, and would probably be a superstar. Basically the greatest athlete in the league, plus a better understanding of the game. I'm not saying he would have a TS% of 60%, but (to relate this back to the original question) I think he would be more dominant than Duncan.

EDIT: Basically, I'm saying that many of criticisms of Wilt come from the era he played in. Remove the constrictions of that era, and you get a 7'1 center with a 9'6 standing reach and a ton of athleticism. If a player like that existed now a days, and had all of the benefits of the modern era (scientific understanding of the game, video analysis, etc.) they'd succeed. But just Wilt Chamberlain, with all of his faults, would have a harder time because of the mental gap between the eras, a gap that has nothing to do with the intelligence of the players in that era and more from the exploratory nature of the game in general at that time.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#109 » by QuantMisleads » Tue Oct 16, 2012 4:33 am

sorry man, but you're still not really making any sort of scientific statements. If you want to believe that, that's fine, but there is no need to give abstract, esoteric reasoning that cannot be tested through either some qualitative or quantitative analysis. You don't need to give false legitimacy to your beliefs, but if you do want to give legitimacy then you need to work a little harder than that.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#110 » by QuantMisleads » Tue Oct 16, 2012 5:03 am

fatal9 wrote:For someone who was as physically dominant as Wilt relative to his peers, and as great of an offensive rebounder and finisher as Wilt was (as shown by his FG% when his teams stopped asking him for post scoring), a FG% of "only" around 50% is pretty low (combined with a TS% of under 55% and probably high TOV%). In the playoffs he's at only 52.4 TS% for his career. I don't doubt Wilt made a lot of those fadeaways, I doubt how efficient he was at making them. Just because you can show me footage of Karl Malone draining turnaround isolation jumpers from 15 feet doesn't mean he was efficient at making them...he just took a lot of them. But this is something I've stopped trying to argue with Wilt fans. I've read them say that his midrange game was comparable to a guy like KG, uh seems legit...considering he was one of the worst FT shooters in history.

Actually everyone mentioned how he could hit that jumpshot but couldn't hit a free throw. His coach actually told him to shoot hte free throw like he was shooting that jump shot, but wilt said he didn't want to bring even more attention to himself by doing that.

On film, the offense looks predictable when he gets the ball. For example, watch game 7 of the '70 finals. I've seen his fans actually use this game as a "good" game by Wilt based on boxscore numbers (even put highlights of it on youtube) but look at how bad and predictable the offense is when it runs through him in the first half. Any time Wilt posts up it was either a bad shot, him drawing a foul but missing FTs (disrupts flow of offense and doesn't make defense pay for fouling) or a turnover. He was super efficient on finishes and offensive boards though (but barely converted any post up opportunities), and it kind of shows what I've thought about Wilt...he can have a nice game "FG%" wise but not be an efficient post up player. Doesn't it make sense WHY Hannum decided to not use Wilt as a post scorer anymore but mainly as a finisher/offensive rebounder? Maybe...he wasn't that efficient when used in that type of a role. It's why we don't see him make his teams great offensively during his volume scoring years despite what his boxscore numbers say.

Look nobody has made excuses for Wilt's performance in that game 7, but using that game as some sort of indication of his overall contribution is simply inaccurate.

On top of this, combined with how teams played back then, he slowed down the offense. His Warrior teammates even complained about this, how they felt "shackled" around him. Some people might find it difficult to understand, I know I did a few years ago, but you can look like a great scorer in the boxscore but not be making much of an offensive impact at all. He looks amazing on offensive boards and as a finisher, but his post offense doesn't look as efficient as guys like Shaq, Hakeem, KAJ and the like.


Yes, it can be bad if you're shooting jump shots and you're also the primary rebounder for your team in a fast paced game. I have said a thousand times over that the reason Wilt was not successful in his early, high scoring years was because it was a fast paced game, which was not conducive to having all the scoring done by one person.

Here are two games from Wilt's prime years where every post up he made is included (not handpicked misses or makes):

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oemQKScZ7MQ[/youtube].


Whoever made this video was trying to show Wilt at his worst. FIrst of all, that game 4 1967 game was immediately after the game 3 where Wilt rebounded the ball 41 times and had an unbelievable statline. After the game and for the next few days his knees were badly aching, it was in the newspapers. So you're showing us a game where his knees were hurting him and wasn't necessarily what he could do on the offensive end. Anyway, this was not Wilt in his scoring prime, so it really doesn't prove anything. and in 1964, I'll admit, Wilt looked rusty offensively. if you look at some of the other videos that were posted, however, you'd see that Wilt at his offensive best was a powerhouse. It's not for nothing that he managed to get the scoring output that he did. Most of you seem to think this happened on accident or something, it's **** bizarre. I really don't know how you guys are making this sort of argument with a straight face and getting away with it, unbelievable. Same thing with that Shaq homie in this thread, you guys all make the case, implicitly, that everything Wilt did was an accident, or if it wasn't he wasn't really doing anything of value. Again, **** bizarre.

The point isn't whether he made or missed the shots, those things vary game to game. But it's things like his awful footwork, how many dribbles he uses to make his move (this wouldn't fly in today's game where double teaming and trapping is waaay more common), his dribbles aren't fluid or in rhythm, his touch outside of 5+ feet away looks really awkward but it's pretty soft on his bank shot (though he is soo slow in getting into that move), has a bad habit of exposing the ball and he clearly doesn't have a lower base and center of gravity (long skinny legs) of a guy like Shaq to play the power game like him. These are things that are consistent on a game to game basis. But you guys can believe that a guy who was as horrible as Wilt at FTs had awesome midrange game. I just think it's a big leap of faith.

See my points made above that addressed these statements.


TL;DR: Wilt was an awesome finisher and awesome on the offensive boards but his post offense is very overrated. That combined with his historically bad FT shooting (and likely high propensity for turnovers) doesn't make him an efficient option in the post like his numbers would suggest.

If wilt had a tendency for turnovers, it wasn't when he was handling the ball. Rather, I think he had a good # of turnovers from goaltending.


Defensively, I've heard his fans compare his impact to Russell. Even at his best when he was motivated, I disagree with that strongly. He was a dominant shot blocker, a good man to man defender in the post in his later years and that's it. I've heard commentators point out how Wilt doesn't leave the paint and cover screen and rolls. Clearly doesn't have Russell's (or KG's or Hakeem's or Walton's) "horizontal" game. His defensive impact is inconsistent throughout his years. I see him defensively like I do Shaq. Great when he wants to be (though can be exploited by some weaknesses) but inconsistent effort wise. I'm pretty sure we have some data too of Wilt not improving offenses and defenses as much as you'd expect from someone with his boxscore numbers.

Saying that Wilt was comparable to Shaq defensively is much worse than saying he was comparable to Russell.



He put up 44/25 on a 31 win team in a season where he was healthy and played all games (also had two other all-star players on his team). How can you be that statistically and physically dominant and come out with such few wins? Then couple of years later, he was leading the Warriors to the worst record in the league at 11-27 in games he played, then he gets traded for peanuts, joins the Sixers who were 21-20 at the time they made the trade and finished 40-40. When Warriors made improvements next season, there are articles of Wilt's former Warrior teammates complaining about how "shackled" they were with Wilt on offense. Sixers of course became an all-time great team in a couple of years with Wilt literally being the last option on the floor scoring wise though improving other parts of his game (along with them adding guys like Billy C to the roster and guys like Chet Walker and Luke Jackson maturing).

his 1963 team sucked, they were horrible, everyone knows this and saying otherwise is revisionist history. In 1964-1965 Wilt had health issues (a heart attack), and even he knew he was playing badly and was in a funk. he was traded because frank Mileau thought he was going to be dead by the end of the year.
and as i have said a million times, 1969 was by far Wilt's worst season, for reasons due partly to him not exerting himself at all and his coach telling him to rebound and do nothing else. So that's exactly what Wilt did, which is why it was his worst season. Using this season as indicative of his overall performance is not accurate, though if one wanted to penalize him based on this poor season I couldn't blame them or argue against them.


I'd like to think a top 5 player would show a little bit more impact than that over the years. This isn't one case of finding a "gotcha" incident, this is something we see over most of his career. Then there are major concerns about his playoff performances, mentality and leadership, effectiveness and portability of his scoring, the balance in his offensive game, impact on the rest of his teammates, inconsistency of his defense over the years, and on and on. And I don't think Wilt fans on this board or other boards get it when they try to argue exclusively through boxscore stats, everyone is aware of his numbers, but where is the impact you expect? What about all his flaws? Is this someone you are comfortable building a team around? People are wrong now that they decided to look at his career in depth rather than perform a very superficial analysis based on his raw stats like they were doing before?



He did show impact, and you didn't exactly talk about that, instead you talked about the failures from your perspective. yes, these are gotcha incidents. His playoff performances were superb, lets remember that he lost a combined 5 game 7s (technically one was game 6) by 11 points. Yes, in 68/69 he was favored to win, but in 60/62/65 he wasn't, and he came close to winning. His defense was inconsistent, I'll admit, I think in 1969 all season and in 1971 regular season he didn't play defense as hard as he did before or after those moments. but that's nothing compared to Shaq, let's be serious here.

The problem is that you can't talk about his failures in his later years (where he was expected to win) and then also talk about lack of impact from his scoring, which were in a different set of years and in which he came close to winning on various occasions.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#111 » by Warspite » Tue Oct 16, 2012 5:18 am

CBB_Fan wrote:
QuantMisleads wrote:
CBB_Fan wrote:I think a transplanted Wilt would not succeed in the modern league.

This is not correct, but then again you're simply just making a statement without any substance. I would advise you to stay away from doing that lest we think you're an uneducated kid whose never heard of the scientific method.


I think you missed the point of my post. Take Wilt Chamberlain from any random season, put him in a time machine, and transport him to the modern league. He would play old-school ball, and by that I mean he would make his old mistakes. Finger rolls that wouldn't work, a reliance on a shaky fall-away "just because", etc.

That wouldn't fly in the modern league because we've have decades of experience telling us the "right way" to play. In a way, guys in Wilt's day were pioneers, playing the game before all of the knowledge was codified. Anyway, Wilt's playstyle would be more exposed.

However, I think a modern Wilt would have been raised with the modern game, and would probably be a superstar. Basically the greatest athlete in the league, plus a better understanding of the game. I'm not saying he would have a TS% of 60%, but (to relate this back to the original question) I think he would be more dominant than Duncan.

EDIT: Basically, I'm saying that many of criticisms of Wilt come from the era he played in. Remove the constrictions of that era, and you get a 7'1 center with a 9'6 standing reach and a ton of athleticism. If a player like that existed now a days, and had all of the benefits of the modern era (scientific understanding of the game, video analysis, etc.) they'd succeed. But just Wilt Chamberlain, with all of his faults, would have a harder time because of the mental gap between the eras, a gap that has nothing to do with the intelligence of the players in that era and more from the exploratory nature of the game in general at that time.


If your correct and I dont think you are it would take Wilt a yr or maybe 2 to transform from the former to the latter.

Wilt would quickly transform himself into a more athletic, more powerfull DRob. Actualy I think DRob is realy a lot closer to Wilt in ability and style. If you dont think Wilt couldnt play today then most likely DRob couldnt either. I think Bells is most likely a rich mans Bynum and this is guy who would just get embarrased by Wilt.

If Greg Oden could be the #1 pick in the draft I see no reason why Wilt wouldnt be. Am I believe that if Hibbert was at athletic as Howard he still couldnt be as good as Duncan?
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#112 » by Dipper 13 » Tue Oct 16, 2012 6:55 am

Rapcity_11 wrote:Can some Wilt supporters address fatal's (awesome) post?


It is an identical post to one he has made several times on another forum, which I and others have repeatedly disputed. I had uploaded tons of footage to a Youtube account (since shut down by the NBA) that completely disproved the idea of Wilt being an poor low post scorer. Slow excessive awkward dribbles? I'd like to see modern day centers dribbling a deflated ball on a single layer of thin wood with dead spots all over. Wilt actually made the bulk of his moves decisively & in rhythm. His favorite was a powerful one bounce drop step which easily propelled him up to the rim. Given how high his shot release point was, there is almost nobody today who could contest his shot on a consisten basis. It may not be as easy as back then, but it would still be easy. Also his lightning quick baseline spin & slam dunk. He was very comfortable using the defender's leverage against him (ala Shaq) or spinning immediately off the catch (ala Hakeem). Not sure about other fans but I have never compared Wilt's outside touch to that of Garnett. However I do believe he had the best touch with his bank shot of any big man, mainly from close range. I have disputed the claim of Wilt having a subpar center of gravity below, noting his low post wrestling matches with 6'8 Wayne Embry (who bastillon has deliberately listed as 6'5 on Page 6 of this very thread).

viewtopic.php?f=6&t=1206786&start=30#p33271171

Dipper 13 wrote:
I don't really have any doubt at all that if Shaq & Wilt were going up for a rebound, Shaq would be the one who could push Wilt out of the way.


Not so easily. Below we can see him dispose of Thurmond like a rag doll.

22:52 mark

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xq87va



Though I agree Shaq has a stronger base mainly due to his lower body mass. Wilt had a good base as well despite his thinner calves & legs, there is nobody who can physically force him off the block. Even Wayne Embry could not do it, with the refs seldom whistling fouls. I have seen a clip of Bob Ferry bodying up Wilt in the post, using his knee as leverage both arms out ready to deflect a poor pass. Below we can see Embry using two hands in the pivot defensively. Today this is whistled a foul 100% of the time.



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I have also adressed the comment regarding 1970 on this forum, though to another poster.


viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1189203&p=32325040#p32322410

Dipper 13 wrote:You may be thinking too much of 1970 playoffs, when his mobility was Bynum-esque, having just come off career a threatening knee injury. He was nowhere near the scoring threat he was in his younger years & therefore more predictable on offense. Plus NY was playing off him a bit. A player like Wilt who relied a lot on his physical power & floor positioning preferred to feel the defender on him in the pivot, so he could better read & react due to his lack of a faceup game. Despite being a stationary pivot for the most part even in Philly, he was great at moving from one side of the lane to the other as the ball swung on the perimeter. With the Lakers I have never seen him that active on offense.



I should not even bother with the baseless turnover prone accusation, when all the video footage (including extended game footage) from his prime actually indicates the opposite. He took tremendous care of the ball. Of course other posters here have spun this as passiveness on his part, and in turn use this perceived timidness to hint that he was just looking to limit his errors at the team's expense. Basically they're saying he was too frightened to consistently make big plays in the NBA. We even have seen a forum member on Page 2 of this very thread declare Wilt a "terrible passer". The smear campaign is nauseating to say the least.


viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1204967

Dipper 13 wrote:Based on some of the game footage I have seen:

1967 Playoffs vs Celtics (2nd half only)

24 Halfcourt Touches for Wilt
4 assists for Wilt
1 turnover for Wilt
56 offensive possessions for team


By all accounts this (Gm. 4) was a very lethargic & inefficient game played by the Sixers compared to their usual standard. Even if we assume that they played their worst game for every single night of the season, the above stats suggest that Wilt averaged roughly 8 assists per game that year (which is true), & only 2 turnovers. An average of 8 assists & only 2 turnovers is excellent for a big man.



In viewing the game footage of the 1964 Warriors Celtics NBA Finals matchup (Gm. 4), we can see a few statistics below.

-16 Halfcourt Touches for Wilt

-1 assist for Wilt

-1* turnover for Wilt (which came from what was clearly an incorrect traveling call, even by the textbook 60's standards)

-52 offensive possessions for team



Keep in mind this is against the '64 Celtics, perhaps the top defensive team ever, from KC Jones on down to their MVP Big Bill Russell. They featured aggressive full court pressing and swarmed Wilt in the half court denying him the ball.



Dipper 13 wrote:It was the only game footage from his prime years where he had some role in the offense. Also pre injury, which effectively limited his mobility, making him more predictable on offense, thus increasing his chance for a TO. I can see that there would be fair number of TO's in attempting to forcefeed him down low, but the patience he demonstrated with the 76ers appears to show low risk passes, where the players would be cutting by him & he would basically put the ball in their chest or hands from a close distance.

An example of his patience below shows two fake passes followed by a power move to the basket, drawing four defenders and finding an open Billy C. We can also see the defensive players with their hands up denying the active cutters. If he forced the first pass or two then it would likely be a turnover.

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x48zv5 (4:30 mark)

But it wasn't as much ball faking as it was to protect it from the defense, also with his beautiful hand offs. No center except perhaps Walton/Russell was ever better at hitting the cutters from the pivot. You may be thinking too much of 1970 playoffs, when his mobility was Bynum-esque, having just come off career a threatening knee injury. He was nowhere near the scoring threat he was in his younger years & therefore more predictable on offense. Plus NY was playing off him a bit. A player like Wilt who relied a lot on his physical power & floor positioning preferred to feel the defender on him in the pivot, so he could better read & react due to his lack of a faceup game. Despite being a stationary pivot for the most part even in Philly, he was great at moving from one side of the lane to the other as the ball swung on the perimeter. With the Lakers I have never seen him that active on offense.

There was also a video which Youtube has since deleted showing Walker, Greer, & Wilt in a triangle setup where the Bullets defense dictated the Sixers passes. Greer had the ball & saw Walker's man was sagging back so he passed to Walker, who's man thus comes up while Greer's man sags. So Walker hits Wilt who makes a two handed touch pass back to Greer for the open shot. It doesn't seem Wilt drew very many double teams due to the constant player movement. I am also assuming that a fair number of his points during the early high scoring Warriors years came in transition as a finisher (primarily from Guy Rodgers) thus inflating his regular season average & overstating his alleged playoff decline (where naturally the game would slow down & there would be less possessions).
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#113 » by Dipper 13 » Tue Oct 16, 2012 7:33 am

It's all become too cool to rip Wilt and taboo to suggest Timmy had any flaws,


It's unfair to single out Duncan like that, when your statement holds true for any player involved in a Wilt Chamberlain discussion. Let us not lower ourselves to their level. You would never see me declare Michael Jordan an offensive failure without Coach Jackson. :wavefinger:

Image


While he did seemingly have a tremendous impact as a rookie, what happened from '87-'89? Not only was Jordan much better during this period than he was as a rookie, but the team around him was better as well. How can a +5 to +6 rookie be only a +1 player in his early prime. Was a 33 yr. old Iceman that good in his lone Bulls season? Or was Coach Collins that bad? Brad Sellers?


1983: -1.3 (Same key players from '84, except healthy)
1984: -5.2 (Theus traded after 31 games, organization tanking for high draft pick & looking to sell team)

1985: +0.8 (Caldwell Jones acquired, Jordan drafted)
1986: +1.4 (Jordan out 64 games, major additions are aging Iceman & rookie Oakley) *Could not find Jordan's SIO
1987: +0.3 (Iceman retired)
1988: +0.9 (Pippen & Grant drafted, Vincent acquired midseason)
1989: +1.3

1990: +4.2 (Phil Jackson takes over, and is one reason why Jordan is better than ever.)
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#114 » by D.Brasco » Tue Oct 16, 2012 8:01 am

CBB_Fan wrote:
QuantMisleads wrote:
CBB_Fan wrote:I think a transplanted Wilt would not succeed in the modern league.

This is not correct, but then again you're simply just making a statement without any substance. I would advise you to stay away from doing that lest we think you're an uneducated kid whose never heard of the scientific method.


I think you missed the point of my post. Take Wilt Chamberlain from any random season, put him in a time machine, and transport him to the modern league. He would play old-school ball, and by that I mean he would make his old mistakes. Finger rolls that wouldn't work, a reliance on a shaky fall-away "just because", etc.

That wouldn't fly in the modern league because we've have decades of experience telling us the "right way" to play. In a way, guys in Wilt's day were pioneers, playing the game before all of the knowledge was codified. Anyway, Wilt's playstyle would be more exposed.

However, I think a modern Wilt would have been raised with the modern game, and would probably be a superstar. Basically the greatest athlete in the league, plus a better understanding of the game. I'm not saying he would have a TS% of 60%, but (to relate this back to the original question) I think he would be more dominant than Duncan.

EDIT: Basically, I'm saying that many of criticisms of Wilt come from the era he played in. Remove the constrictions of that era, and you get a 7'1 center with a 9'6 standing reach and a ton of athleticism. If a player like that existed now a days, and had all of the benefits of the modern era (scientific understanding of the game, video analysis, etc.) they'd succeed. But just Wilt Chamberlain, with all of his faults, would have a harder time because of the mental gap between the eras, a gap that has nothing to do with the intelligence of the players in that era and more from the exploratory nature of the game in general at that time.


You're missing the broader picture of that era as do 90% of people who point to wilts reluctance to play like shaq early in his career.

Wilt entered a league where blacks had only been allowed in for the first time not 10 years earlier. He got enough flack already just for his size let alone his race. Black players were under extra scrutiny back then to show they were as skilled as the white players and not just jumpers and leapers.

When wilt tried to showcase his other skills he didn't do it for just vanity reasons to "show off" it's just that people expected him to have no skill for several reasons one of them being his race and his size. As well as the fact that a player who played like shaq in the early 60's dunking and showboating on everyone would have probably been pelted with food or worse in every arena, it just wasn't accepted by society to act that way.

Later is his career wilt easily transitioned to around the rim play and dunking how do you think he had those 60%+ fg seasons? A wilt transported to the today and given free roam to play however he wanted to would have no problem.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#115 » by Mavericksfan » Tue Oct 16, 2012 1:27 pm

People really need to get out of the habit of directly comparing stats across eras. Wilt was efficient for his time but he played in an era where volume scoring wasn't nearly as important as it is in today's game. With many more possessions Wilt is scoring a lot less of his team's points percentage wise and that explains his limited "impact" offensively. Back in those days to have a great impact on the offensive end you needed to be a facilitator for others. The fact that Wilt couldn't figure this out on his own imo should be held against him but at the same time some of you guys are ridiculous for pretending like he didn't impact his teams based on some estimated numbers. At the end of the day on the court Wilt almost always improved a team he was on(Just check their playoff success with him).

I also find it funny that people are using the fact that the GOAT defender defending him one on one somehow means anyone could. If I show you a video of Nate Thurmond guarding Kareem well one on one does that mean Kareem doesn't need to be doubled?

As far as criticisms against Wilt; he was stubborn, selfish, and didn't have the same competitive edge that other GOATly players possessed. When Wilt finally beat Russell in 67' he grew "bored". Can you imagine Jordan becoming bored after winning his first championship? Or Bird, or Magic, Russell? Etc.

Another issue was Wilt's demand to be the highest paid player in the league, that always put a huge strain on team's ability to surround him with talent and it hurt his relationship with his current teammates. It's also the main reason he was traded twice during his prime. Back in those days owners weren't the luxurious billionaires of today nor was basketball a multimillion dollar investment that always led to a profit. Plenty of teams were sold/shut down/ moved etc because owners couldn't afford them. Wilt demanding so much money hurt his team and his own legacy as a basketball player but considering it's also a profession can we really blame him?

For those who want to learn more about Wilt I recommend reading "The Rivalry".
http://www.amazon.com/The-Rivalry-Russe ... etball/dp/

It's a fantastic book that gives a lot of insight about Russell and Chamberlain's careers.

On an all time list I think Wilt deserves higher because he simply accomplished more overall during his career(his accolades beat out Duncan's extra couple of rings IMO) but I can understand why someone would rather have Duncan.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#116 » by MacGill » Tue Oct 16, 2012 1:35 pm

You're missing the broader picture of that era as do 90% of people who point to wilts reluctance to play like shaq early in his career.


:-? Please elabarate further on this point because first year Shaq was already being grouped into the iconic figure like MJ. He wanted all the attention, he did not shy away from it. The only point I have ever heard regarding this was young Shaq before college where his mother told him to keep his head up and walk tall, letting everyone look up to him.

Wilt entered a league where blacks had only been allowed in for the first time not 10 years earlier. He got enough flack already just for his size let alone his race. Black players were under extra scrutiny back then to show they were as skilled as the white players and not just jumpers and leapers.


Ok, well Russell would have been in the league a few years earlier and he was never worried about showing off a full aresenal of offensive moves to show he was a complete player? The social times back then is one of the reasons I hold for weaker competition, in that not everyone would have had equal opportunity because of this stance. There very well could have been more Oscar's, Russell's, Wilt's on the side lines who were never given a fair shot at playing. But this is not something to be used as an excuse for Wilt. He wanted and made this choice .

When wilt tried to showcase his other skills he didn't do it for just vanity reasons to "show off" it's just that people expected him to have no skill for several reasons one of them being his race and his size. As well as the fact that a player who played like shaq in the early 60's dunking and showboating on everyone would have probably been pelted with food or worse in every arena, it just wasn't accepted by society to act that way.


So what does it say if you are changing your skills for the general public? What about for the benefit of his team etc? Wilt was a 'Globetrotter' as supporters like to mention, so wouldn't public perception be that he was already ultra skilled? What about all his highschool track records before the game? Again, ultra skilled? College? Ultra-skilled? Come on, to act like it wasn't vanity is ridiculous because Wilt was obsessed with individual records as he so kindly reminded us of along with all of his great feats. You can't change or make excuses for the man.

As for your Shaq comment: Shaq wouldn't care and if the league had a problem with it, they'd change the rules like they did with Wilt. What is the difference between dunking or having Wilt goaltend/block every shot, which he could do easily? The point here isn't to compare what was or wasn't socially exceptable during each other's time versus but the approach each player took. If Wilt, as a Wilt homie in this thread likes to boast was larger than life, why would he care when he had a counterpart who did whatever for the benefit of the team first? Just more excuses.

Later is his career wilt easily transitioned to around the rim play and dunking how do you think he had those 60%+ fg seasons? A wilt transported to the today and given free roam to play however he wanted to would have no problem.


Sure, I agree Wilt could play today but how he would play would depend on what the public wanted him to be, right ;). I mean, twitter, FB, Cellphones, look out. It sounds silly, right? Or the fact that he was fragile personally which also doesn't last long into today's league. So yes, Wilt would most likely be the #1 draft pick, great athletic freak, to me, much better on D than O in today's game. So now that this is out of the way can we go back to debating versus making excuses for the man?

I had uploaded tons of footage to a Youtube account (since shut down by the NBA) that completely disproved the idea of Wilt being an poor low post scorer.


I'd luv for you to upload it into these threads :)

Slow excessive awkward dribbles? I'd like to see modern day centers dribbling a deflated ball on a single layer of thin wood with dead spots all over.


Wow, now the ball is deflated? Come on man!

Wilt actually made the bulk of his moves decisively & in rhythm. His favorite was a powerful one bounce drop step which easily propelled him up to the rim. Given how high his shot release point was, there is almost nobody today who could contest his shot on a consisten basis. It may not be as easy as back then, but it would still be easy. Also his lightning quick baseline spin & slam dunk. He was very comfortable using the defender's leverage against him (ala Shaq) or spinning immediately off the catch (ala Hakeem). Not sure about other fans but I have never compared Wilt's outside touch to that of Garnett.
However I do believe he had the best touch with his bank shot of any big man, mainly from close range. I have disputed the claim of Wilt having a subpar center of gravity below, noting his low post wrestling matches with 6'8 Wayne Embry
(who bastillon has deliberately listed as 6'5 on Page 6 of this very thread).


Dipper13, let's see this video and hopefully it is new outside of what you posted prior. I am at work but found an great Shaq comp on youtube which I will upload later on describing what your are saying to a tee. Show me this side of Wilt and what you listed above.
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#117 » by Shot Clock » Tue Oct 16, 2012 1:58 pm

Mavericksfan wrote:As far as criticisms against Wilt; he was stubborn, selfish, and didn't have the same competitive edge that other GOATly players possessed. When Wilt finally beat Russell in 67' he grew "bored". Can you imagine Jordan becoming bored after winning his first championship? .


Just a side note, I don't want to de-rail this

He retired after his third due to boredom. Some people need challenges to strive for. PJ would come up with ones for Jordan. First it was a title, then it was 'did Magic or Bird ever 3-peat?' Then what?
anyone involved in that meddling to justice”. NO COLLUSION

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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#118 » by LAKERS_1981 » Tue Oct 16, 2012 2:48 pm

I take Wilt and this one is easy.
Wilt was a monster a physical monster that could play D and score at will. Duncan is a great player that plays smart and a top 10 player of all time. But he is no Wilt and starting a new team i would take Wilt because he would scare the other team.
As per the new forum rules, this kind of post is not acceptable. Take the time to flesh out your opinion or refrain from posting. rrravenred
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#119 » by JordansBulls » Tue Oct 16, 2012 6:23 pm

To me it comes down to who do you trust more in the playoffs as your star?
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Re: Wilt vs. Duncan? 

Post#120 » by Brenice » Tue Oct 16, 2012 8:41 pm

What would happen if you switched the players? How many rings would Duncan have in place of Wilt? How many rings would Wilt have in place of Duncan?

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