What separates Wilt & KG?

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What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#1 » by MacGill » Mon Feb 25, 2013 3:20 pm

I have been thinking about this for awhile now as I researched and read great pro/con arguments for and against both mentioned players.

Universal both top 15 players but I'd like to hear reasons why Wilt was a better basketball player then KG and should be ranked above him?

I have both players in the #10-#13 range personally, but I am finding it hard how to justify Wilt over KG and this isn't to start a flame war.

I have KG as a much better, versatile defender, overall much better offensively, as good of a passer, while size allows Wilt to be a stronger man to man defender. As for rebounding, it is hard for me to say Wilt was that much better of a rebounder then KG as I cannot remove era bias here. KG, was more mobile, could run the court as good or better then Wilt and both didn't have fantastic post season performances until on the right team (which I fully understand both arguments either way).

Haven't really seen these two players compared all that much but in reviewing some old DRZA's posts, I am a bit stumped here.

Let me know your thoughts :)
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Re: What seperates Wilt & KG? 

Post#2 » by tsherkin » Mon Feb 25, 2013 3:33 pm

Garnett was not better than Wilt offensively. Chamberlain was more efficient and looks like a way better offensive rebounder (an area of weakness for KG), plus less prone to taking long two-pointers while acting as a similar passing hub. He was a comparable defensive rebounder to KG's 4-year peak... But over more of his career.

You are starting out with some problematic assumptions as you start his debate.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#3 » by colts18 » Mon Feb 25, 2013 3:33 pm

Yeah you can say the same with how Wilt and Bird are ahead of Shaq and Duncan. Old school in NBA means they get overrated.
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Re: What seperates Wilt & KG? 

Post#4 » by kasino » Mon Feb 25, 2013 3:34 pm

Much better scorer, rebounder(theses seem to be glossed over by you to have him in the 13 range, league leader in both not many do that) and as good of a defender we could get, I would say better then KG
What do you use to determine defensive prowess?
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#5 » by pancakes3 » Mon Feb 25, 2013 3:45 pm

I think the most obvious and era-proof points are that 1) Wilt was a monstrous 7'2 and 2) played with his back to the basket.
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Re: What seperates Wilt & KG? 

Post#6 » by MacGill » Mon Feb 25, 2013 4:01 pm

tsherkin wrote:Garnett was not better than Wilt offensively. Chamberlain was more efficient and looks like a way better offensive rebounder (an area of weakness for KG), plus less prone to taking long two-pointers while acting as a similar passing hub. He was a comparable defensive rebounder to KG's 4-year peak... But over more of his career.

You are starting out with some problematic assumptions as you start his debate.


Fair point here tsherkin, it appears I was not fully clear in my initial statement. Clearly Wilt was a larger volume scorer, more efficient, I meant to have KG as the more versatile scorer.

I understand that Wilt was more efficient offensively, and well he should be given his size and position of his stature of player, but I am looking for solid reasons as to why he was an overall better basketball player here? While efficient, it has been shown that his contribution didn't provide great overall team lift.

As an FYI, my assumptions are my own conclusions from my own research which I am trying to expound upon here. I was clear in saying that 'I have' versus 'he is'. So if others aren't cool with my thoughts, ok, debate away but I don't think this is a never could happen comparison?

There has been great information passed through this forum on Wilt's great feat that certainly makes me question where I rank him. So this is where I am at.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#7 » by Dr Pepper » Mon Feb 25, 2013 4:10 pm

pancakes3 wrote:I think the most obvious and era-proof points are that 1) Wilt was a monstrous 7'2 and 2) played with his back to the basket.


Yea, Wilt's combination of phsyical talent and basketball skills is nearly unrivaled.

KG is listed at 220 pounds on basketballreference, and that's what a 6'9" Bill Russell was listed at. The physical differences between KG and many other great bigs are profound, KG is more of a wiry, mobile finesee forward player than someone who would abuse you (physically that is, KG would definitely abuse anyone verbally ;) ). IIRC KG's game doesn't draw as many fouls as other greats either FWIW
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Re: What seperates Wilt & KG? 

Post#8 » by tsherkin » Mon Feb 25, 2013 4:30 pm

MacGill wrote:Fair point here tsherkin, it appears I was not fully clear in my initial statement. Clearly Wilt was a larger volume scorer, more efficient, I meant to have KG as the more versatile scorer.


When you say 'more versatile,' you mean 'has more range' but hat hasn't helped KG be a more effective scorer. In fact, 40% 17-footers have been more of a crutch than a benefit. Versatility is only useful if efficacy is maintained and Garnett is not, nor has he ever been, one of the three best offensive players in the league. Top 10, sure, and a brilliant defender and defensive rebounder, but offense has not been his driving strength. Wilt was much more useful, despite his weaker range. Much like Shaq.


There has been great information passed through this forum on Wilt's great feat that certainly makes me question where I rank him. So this is where I am at.


Don't mistake me, I'm down with a more careful approach to Wilt's impact using modern analytical techniques and likewise propping up Garnett's talent despite his teammates... Bt Wilt had the 60s equivalent of insufficient teammates in a smaller league, had more team success (different playoff environment, of course) and was a much more individually accomplished and recognized player while replicating a lot of what Garnett did.... Even while doing more offensively.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#9 » by ardee » Mon Feb 25, 2013 5:05 pm

What separates Wilt and KG?

A massive, gigantic gulf in talent, impact and dominance.

1) Wilt is arguably THE greatest scorer in NBA history. You open the record books, it's not Jordan, it's not Kobe, it's all Wilt. His footwork was incredible, he was 7'1 and could power his way to the rim like Shaq yet at the same time he possessed a fadeaway jumper much like Dirk.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OugQ16KaR50[/youtube]

It's funny that the fadeaway was KG's main scoring weapon, and for Wilt it was just one in a vast arsenal. The scoring gap is so massive it's not worth discussing.

2) Wilt is one of the three best rebounders ever, along with Russell and Rodman. I understand the pace factor but earlier in his career he was averaging close to 30 rebounds per game. They had to widen the lane just so that he couldn't catch every offensive rebound and stuff it down the opposing centers throat. It's not just numbers. Wilt attacked the boards like they were food, and he was a starving man.

I appreciate KG was a great rebounder, but Wilt has 11 rebounding titles while KG has 2.

3) Shot-blocking. KG was probably a better PnR and team defender, but no one except Russell was a better shot blocker than the Dipper. KG was not known for his shot blocking in any case. Wilt probably blocked 6-8 shots a night. In today's slower environment, with less run and gun play which doesn't allow the defense to get settled, it would probably be more.

Jack Ramsay wrote:
"Harvey said he used to tell one of his statisticians to keep track of Wilt's blocks in big games...One night, they got up to 25".



4) Playoffs. This argument alone ends it. I really like KG, great player, but he has a nasty habit of performing abominably in closeout games. Wilt didn't, and here's proof:

1960 G3 vs. Nationals: 53 points, ? rebounds (playoff record at the time for pts)
1962 G5 vs. Nationals: 56 pts, 35 rebs (breaks his own playoff record)
1962 G7 vs Celtics : 22 pts, 21 rebs (7/14 shooting - Warriors were on the verge of pulling off this upset but Sam James hit a clutch shot. Wilt was undoubtedly fronted by the entire Celtics frontline, as was the case for most of his games vs. Celtics in mid-60s, a defensive strategy which would have been illegal in 80s/90s mind you)
1964 G7 vs. Hawks: 39 pts, 26 rebs, 12 blocks (many of which led to 14-0 run…and scored 50 pts a couple of days earlier in the pivotal game 5)
1965 G7 vs. Celtics: 30 pts, 32 rebs (famous game where Havlichek stole the ball, had 30/26 to save team from elimination the game before)
1968 G7 vs Celtics: 14 pts, 34 rebs, (wilt’s role different, but he definitely could have stepped up offensively in the second half)
1969 G7 vs. Celtics: 18 pts, 27 rebs (injured in final 6 minutes of game, attempted to come back, coach held him back...and Lakers end up losing close game on a lucky shot by Don Nelson)
1970 G7 vs. Suns: 30 pts, 27 rebs, 11 blocks (Lakers come back from down 3-1, and Wilt was 34 at the time)
1970 G7 vs. Knicks: 21 pts, 24 rebs (45 pts 27 rebs in the game before this to save Lakers from elimination, and AGAIN, he is 34 years old)
1966 Game 5 vs. Celtics: 46 points, 34 rebounds in an 8 point loss
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgEmNgfscIg#t=3m34s
1968 Game 6 vs. Knicks: 25 points, 27 rebounds in an 18 point win. Little known fact is that Chamberlain led BOTH TEAM in points, rebounds, and assists for the entire series, whilst nursing an assortment of injuries, including his annual shin splints. This against two Hall Of Fame bigs Walt Bellamy & Willis Reed.
1970 Game 5 vs. Suns: 36 points, 14 rebounds in a 17 point win
1971 Game 7 vs. Bulls: 25 points, 18 rebounds in an 11 point win
1973 Game 7 vs. Bulls: 21 points, 28 rebounds in a 3 point win (Bulls had the ball and a one point lead with 30 or so seconds left in the 4th. Norm Van Lier goes up for the shot only to have it rejected by Wilt down court right to Gail Goodrich for the go ahead basket.


Meanwhile, tsherkin has a great post analyzing KG in big games:

viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1204941&start=150

So really, there's no debate. The only aspect of basketball that KG was better at than Wilt was team defense, nothing else. Wilt was a better scorer, rebounder, shot-blocker, passer, big game player, and had far tougher competition (going up against the GOAT defensive player in Russell). No contest.

I respect you MacGill, you're a great guy and poster, but I think this thread is disrespectful.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#10 » by MacGill » Mon Feb 25, 2013 6:30 pm

A massive, gigantic gulf in talent, impact and dominance.


Ok, ease up a bit Ardee. I am asking a serious question here with all good intentions.

Look, you know myself and others rank Wilt outside of the 'traditional' of what is classified to as the immortal 6. I have flip flopping #10-11. I also have KG right below him, so I hope you can see I am not trying to start a ridiculous comparison of Wilt vs Sheed or something here.

In your very own thread 'reasonable ranking of KG, you had posters placing him top 10, 11-13 range, so I hope we can loose all the animosity here. Cool?

1) Wilt is arguably THE greatest scorer in NBA history. You open the record books, it's not Jordan, it's not Kobe, it's all Wilt. His footwork was incredible, he was 7'1 and could power his way to the rim like Shaq yet at the same time he possessed a fade away jumper much like Dirk.


This is not my feeling on him at all. The greatest center stage act ever, but not scorer, and not close. No other player in the history of this league had his teammates feed him the ball some much so where he could average 50 points a game or do you not remember it took 69 FGA's for him to score 100. Hence why his own offense only propelled his teams so far.

Sure, he could power to the rim but his game was nothing like Shaq's. Only that he was of similar height and largest athlete during his tenure. I won't even get into the Dirk comment. Did you not notice in the highlight video you posted you rarely saw the ball actually go into the basket? But enough about that.

It's funny that the fadeaway was KG's main scoring weapon, and for Wilt it was just one in a vast arsenal. The scoring gap is so massive it's not worth discussing.


But not in his later years, not once his scoring impact was recognized. I get that Wilt was a better inside presence then KG but look at Wilt's second half of his career, 67+, his scoring had to take a backseat to perform the way he did in other area's. Especially after rule changes and such.

2) Wilt is one of the three best rebounders ever, along with Russell and Rodman. I understand the pace factor but earlier in his career he was averaging close to 30 rebounds per game. They had to widen the lane just so that he couldn't catch every offensive rebound and stuff it down the opposing centers throat. It's not just numbers. Wilt attacked the boards like they were food, and he was a starving man.

I appreciate KG was a great rebounder, but Wilt has 11 rebounding titles while KG has 2.


Yes but to understand the pace factor, you also have to understand the inefficiency league factor and difference in finishing at the rim factor. You also had Baylor, Petit, Lucas averaging 19+/game some years but Wilt was still leaps and bounds bigger and more athletic then almost anyone he played against, so he did exactly what he was supposed to do. I do not think rebounding titles is a fair way to look at things here given difference in position, game played and most importantly era. The same way that I don't think because KAJ has the most points scored that he was the greatest scorer.

3) Shot-blocking. KG was probably a better PnR and team defender, but no one except Russell was a better shot blocker than the Dipper. KG was not known for his shot blocking in any case. Wilt probably blocked 6-8 shots a night. In today's slower environment, with less run and gun play which doesn't allow the defense to get settled, it would probably be more.


We both know shot blocking has little value in terms of overall defense. Now because that game was played much more traditional positional back then, maybe shot blocking held more zest back in his days. Players wouldn't be scared of Wilt today and stop to pull up a 17 foot inefficient jump shot. he would be called for more often for 3 in the key, have to deal with the 3 point line and players wanting to make him a poster.

This is where KG, to me, makes up the difference. Able to guard to effect all 5 positions on the court even if the flash of say 'the shot block' isn't there. Agile, much like Russell but was still required to be the teams offensive anchor as well when we know he isn't a true anchor on O.

1960 G3 vs. Nationals: 53 points, ? rebounds (playoff record at the time for pts)
1962 G5 vs. Nationals: 56 pts, 35 rebs (breaks his own playoff record)
1962 G7 vs Celtics : 22 pts, 21 rebs (7/14 shooting - Warriors were on the verge of pulling off this upset but Sam James hit a clutch shot. Wilt was undoubtedly fronted by the entire Celtics frontline, as was the case for most of his games vs. Celtics in mid-60s, a defensive strategy which would have been illegal in 80s/90s mind you)
1964 G7 vs. Hawks: 39 pts, 26 rebs, 12 blocks (many of which led to 14-0 run…and scored 50 pts a couple of days earlier in the pivotal game 5)
1965 G7 vs. Celtics: 30 pts, 32 rebs (famous game where Havlichek stole the ball, had 30/26 to save team from elimination the game before)
1968 G7 vs Celtics: 14 pts, 34 rebs, (wilt’s role different, but he definitely could have stepped up offensively in the second half)
1969 G7 vs. Celtics: 18 pts, 27 rebs (injured in final 6 minutes of game, attempted to come back, coach held him back...and Lakers end up losing close game on a lucky shot by Don Nelson)
1970 G7 vs. Suns: 30 pts, 27 rebs, 11 blocks (Lakers come back from down 3-1, and Wilt was 34 at the time)
1970 G7 vs. Knicks: 21 pts, 24 rebs (45 pts 27 rebs in the game before this to save Lakers from elimination, and AGAIN, he is 34 years old)
1966 Game 5 vs. Celtics: 46 points, 34 rebounds in an 8 point loss
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgEmNgfscIg#t=3m34s
1968 Game 6 vs. Knicks: 25 points, 27 rebounds in an 18 point win. Little known fact is that Chamberlain led BOTH TEAM in points, rebounds, and assists for the entire series, whilst nursing an assortment of injuries, including his annual shin splints. This against two Hall Of Fame bigs Walt Bellamy & Willis Reed.
1970 Game 5 vs. Suns: 36 points, 14 rebounds in a 17 point win
1971 Game 7 vs. Bulls: 25 points, 18 rebounds in an 11 point win
1973 Game 7 vs. Bulls: 21 points, 28 rebounds in a 3 point win (Bulls had the ball and a one point lead with 30 or so seconds left in the 4th. Norm Van Lier goes up for the shot only to have it rejected by Wilt down court right to Gail Goodrich for the go ahead basket.


7 finals and only 2 titles, both coming after he transformed his game from your first point made in this thread (scoring).

Look, the fancy box score stats are nice but the context around them take away from Wilt's impact with me. If we are saying teammates and coaches are the catalyst here then look no further to the 08 Celtic's, when KG like Wilt could concentrate on the main part of his game and see the result.

KG gave you almost 10 years of 20/10+ while never taking more then 19.6 FGA/game but affecting the floor much more defensively in total court covered, much like Russell. So what do you credit (x) amount of lesser rebounds, once translated in era, but with much more court defensive impact? Especially when Wilt isn't going to shot block any better then what we have already seen.

If we are talking era differences, what about KG would not excel in Wilt's era? I don't think individual accolades should be the difference maker here given the difference in competition faced.

Wilt couldn't cover court like Russell did so I know he couldn't match KG. While Wilt was the more prolific scorer, and some by team design much earlier in his career, this doesn't mean to me that he was far and away the better scorer (although more efficient but context by position here) or that it is the difference maker on who was the better player. Wilt had a lot of luck on era played and timing that to me, overvalue his accomplishments listed.

So really, there's no debate. The only aspect of basketball that KG was better at than Wilt was team defense, nothing else. Wilt was a better scorer, rebounder, shot-blocker, passer, big game player, and had far tougher competition (going up against the GOAT defensive player in Russell). No contest.


Well KG had a tough conference as well (no need to rehash that) and I disagree about passing. Another stat which Wilt was given full reign of the ball to work with while his players scored. KG has always been a non-selfish player averaging around 5 assists a game for nearly 10 years.

To me, while Wilt may have done certain aspects of the game at a higher level during certain points of his career, KG looks to have done all things more consistently, even if some were at a lower level individually then Wilt throughout his prime.

So again, I am not sold here but just wanted to spark some interesting conversation with no disrespect intended.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#11 » by ardee » Mon Feb 25, 2013 7:23 pm

MacGill wrote:
A massive, gigantic gulf in talent, impact and dominance.

Ok, ease up a bit Ardee. I am asking a serious question here with all good intentions.

Look, you know myself and others rank Wilt outside of the 'traditional' of what is classified to as the immortal 6. I have flip flopping #10-11. I also have KG right below him, so I hope you can see I am not trying to start a ridiculous comparison of Wilt vs Sheed or something here.

In your very own thread 'reasonable ranking of KG, you had posters placing him top 10, 11-13 range, so I hope we can loose all the animosity here. Cool?



My apologies, friend, must've come out as being snarky. Got a calc paper tomorrow and differential equations are devouring my soul from the inside out, so I must've sounded a little off. It's 1 am, I'll respond to this tomorrow after I get back... If I survive.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#12 » by TheSheriff » Mon Feb 25, 2013 7:25 pm

Wilt Chamberlain was probably the most dominant offensive player ever. He was clearly the best offensive player during his peak. KG, while a good offensive player has never been the best offensive player. If Wilt Chamberlain at his peak was playing in this era, he would easily be the best player in the league. KG at his peak would be ONE of the best players, but clearly THE best player.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#13 » by Dr Pepper » Mon Feb 25, 2013 7:29 pm

MacGill wrote:I have been thinking about this for awhile now as I researched and read great pro/con arguments for and against both mentioned players.

Universal both top 15 players but I'd like to hear reasons why Wilt was a better basketball player then KG and should be ranked above him?

I have both players in the #10-#13 range personally, but I am finding it hard how to justify Wilt over KG and this isn't to start a flame war.


Wilt is a "universal" GOAT candidate/top 5 GOAT, or at least more universal than KG is at being a top 15 GOAT. KG's ranking has been and is more debatable; and for what it's worth I think even Celtics homer Bill Simmons has ranked KG no.22, below both Malone and Barkley. KG's peak/prime doesn't seem to compete well against Wilt, and Wilt was a top 10 GOAT physical specimen to boot, but I agree KG can be seen as the more finesse/mobile player
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#14 » by Sharifani_San » Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:15 pm

This thread is a joke for several reasons. The biggest is that KG comes nowhere close to the individual dominance in almost any way imaginable that characterized Chamberlain on the court. The second is that KG doesn't have the playoff accomplishments that Wilt does...which was to reach the conference finals or finals 12 out of his 14 seasons in the league. And it's not as if he got swept repeatedly (like some people named Shaq), no in fact he only lost to the Celtics until the 70s rolled around and he lost in GAME 7s (1960 game 6 2 point loss in his ROOKIE season). KG went to the conference finals or finals 3-4 times total. In the seasons that Wilt won the championship, his team was an all-time team.

Wilt was a better everything than KG, making his team a contender (and don't bring up 1969 either) immediately. It's also pointless to talk about someone's impact on the floor (statwise) unless they're ball dominant. A center by definition cannot be ball dominant unless the ball is passed to him, and IF it is passed to him then that introduces a team dynamic, not an individual one. When he has 20+ rebounds a game, 10+ blocks a game in his first few years in the league, and never mind the points, their can be no questioning impact. Now I personally do question his impact when he actually stopped trying to score, because there is no reason that the celtics should have beat him or the knicks beat him from 1968-1970 had Wilt continued to look for his scoring like he did when he was younger....and i don't put all the blame on him as the coach's all deserve blame too.

You can only question impact if someone is completely ball dominant or in cases does not demand the ball and hence is a liability on the court. Allen Iverson is ball dominant, to the detriment of his team. So is Rajon Rondo at times (always ball dominant, sometimes a detriment). Wilt chose the wrong time to be a detriment in those game 7s, but his team wasn't actively looking for him either, and neither was each of his coaches.

Remember, the mark against Wilt is not that he wasn't really as good as people say he was, the mark against him was that he didn't win when he should have. In other words, to even THINK of putting KG ahead of Wilt when Wilt was better at almost everything and Wilt has 1 more championship (and more impressive ones than the one that KG got) is what ultimately makes this question a joke. I really hope you were not serious and this is just a troll thread.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#15 » by Sharifani_San » Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:36 pm

On the contrary, Wilt would perform even better today. Back then when he was a big scorer and a good one at that (1959-1963) he and his team played in absolutely the worst way a team could play. The game was a fast paced game, particularly in 1962, but his team was playing a half court game on most possessions. So not only did they have to deal with fast paced volume scoring on the other end, they also got their points the hard way. and if this happened this also means that their team made no effort to stop that fast paced game other than Wilt probably trying to block shots around the rim.

Today's half court offenses would be for Wilt like stealing candy from a baby. Not that nobody would be able to do anything, but that he didn't have to worry about the point differential in the game because he would be able to get his points easily on the offensive end with nobody in the league even remotely close to being able to stop him individually.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#16 » by MacGill » Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:58 pm

This thread is a joke for several reasons.


Well the first would be your contribution to it ;)

The biggest is that KG comes nowhere close to the individual dominance in almost any way imaginable that characterized Chamberlain on the court.


It's also pointless to talk about someone's impact on the floor (statwise) unless they're ball dominant. A center by definition cannot be ball dominant unless the ball is passed to him


:-?

This makes zero sense over Wilt's career? It makes you wonder how he ever averaged 50ppg in a season by not being ball dominant :o

So what were you actually trying to say here? And dude, I am not in the habit of making troll threads. You act like there aren't players ranked lower then others who had a higher peak or something?

Relax man, and just present a rational pov.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#17 » by GYBE » Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:59 pm

Sharifani_San wrote:The biggest is that KG comes nowhere close to the individual dominance in almost any way imaginable that characterized Chamberlain on the court.


I agree. Wilt was the greater player. Having said that...

The second is that KG doesn't have the playoff accomplishments that Wilt does...which was to reach the conference finals or finals 12 out of his 14 seasons in the league. And it's not as if he got swept repeatedly (like some people named Shaq), no in fact he only lost to the Celtics until the 70s rolled around and he lost in GAME 7s (1960 game 6 2 point loss in his ROOKIE season). KG went to the conference finals or finals 3-4 times total.


Surely you realize it was easier to make it farther in the playoffs with less teams. Wilt was competing with 4-5 other teams to get to the Finals! KG was competing against 14 other teams with a vastly inferior cast and some historically bad management. Wilt's Philly teams were incredibly talented, as individuals they were every bit as good as the Celtics and better than everyone else. KG didn't get support like that until he was past his prime.

Wilt was a better everything than KG, making his team a contender (and don't bring up 1969 either) immediately.


Uh, KG made Boston a contender immediately. They had the largest regular season improvement in NBA history for god's sake. As soon as KG got out of the worst situation in the league, his team won a title.

10+ blocks a game in his first few years in the league


...which is a guess, since the stat wasn't recorded and took place against vastly inferior shooters.

and i don't put all the blame on him as the coach's all deserve blame too.


Wilt chose the wrong time to be a detriment in those game 7s, but his team wasn't actively looking for him either, and neither was each of his coaches.


I have to admit, I do enjoy the way Wilt fans try to deflect blame and soften his Game 7 record. "Chose the wrong time to be a detriment" is an elegant way to summarize his failures in that area.

In other words, to even THINK of putting KG ahead of Wilt when Wilt was better at almost everything and Wilt has 1 more championship (and more impressive ones than the one that KG got) is what ultimately makes this question a joke. I really hope you were not serious and this is just a troll thread.


How are Wilt's titles more impressive than KG's? Again, the Celtics had the largest turnaround over one season in NBA history. The defense that year was historically dominant, the best we've seen in modern times. Wilt's 72 title came when he wasn't even the best player on the team, so calling that more impressive is a joke. Goodrich and West both had higher PER's that year. I don't really know how to quantify if his 67 title was more impressive than 2008. It was a transition year for the Celtics with Red retiring and Russell's first season coaching the team. But KG took a franchise that had been without a title in two decades and transformed them into the best defensive team of his entire generation, so I was impressed.

Wilt was a better player because the scoring gap is so massive, no amount of anything else KG brings can match it. But it's weird that some of you guys are focusing on the playoffs for your argument.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#18 » by Sharifani_San » Mon Feb 25, 2013 9:03 pm

MacGill wrote:
:-?

This makes zero sense over Wilt's career? It makes you wonder how he ever averaged 50ppg in a season by not being ball dominant :o

So what were you actually trying to say here? And dude, I am not in the habit of making troll threads. You act like there aren't players ranked lower then others who had a higher peak or something?


If the team has to pass him the ball (that is, it was purposefully done and orchestrated by the TEAM as a whole), then you can't pin "impact" on the individual, you can only look at what he did, and on what efficiency, and judge it in that way. and in that way, no matter how you want to cut it, Wilt was the most dominant force the league or anyone has ever seen.

Its funny that people want to talk about Wilt's impact in his younger years when it's really his impact in game 7's later in his career that deserved the most scrutiny.
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#19 » by The Infamous1 » Mon Feb 25, 2013 9:04 pm

The scoring gap is just too large for KG to overcome
We can get paper longer than Pippens arms
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Re: What separates Wilt & KG? 

Post#20 » by Sharifani_San » Mon Feb 25, 2013 9:20 pm

GYBE wrote:
Surely you realize it was easier to make it farther in the playoffs with less teams. Wilt was competing with 4-5 other teams to get to the Finals! KG was competing against 14 other teams with a vastly inferior cast and some historically bad management.

Not disagreeing what KG had to deal with, but he didn't put up the individual numbers to compensate for it. You can talk all you want about his defense, which was very good, but that doesn't match up to Wilt in any sense.

Furthermore, fewer teams means talent is more concentrated. So this argument won't go anywhere.

Uh, KG made Boston a contender immediately. They had the largest regular season improvement in NBA history for god's sake. As soon as KG got out of the worst situation in the league, his team won a title.

Also noteworthy how their adversary in the 2008 conf finals was the Cavaliers, who had Lebron and nothing else. And by this point Lebron hadn't QUITE exhibited the dominance which he did in the next season and beyond. The league was horrid during this year, and you can't deny this. You also take out the impact Ray Allen also had on the ballclub, the same with Pierce taking up his game a notch.

...which is a guess, since the stat wasn't recorded and took place against vastly inferior shooters.


Actually the Warriors/76ers statistician harvey pollack swears that in the 1962 season Wilt averaged double digit blocks and probably did in the prior year as well. Pollack actually did a 3 game sample at one point during the season and he AVERAGED 25 blocks a game for those 3 games (which were not indicative of other games in the season necessarily, but goes to show what Wilt did during that year). Pollack, as you may know, has a statbook that he updates every year and which you can still buy on the 76ers website.

and i don't put all the blame on him as the coach's all deserve blame too.


I have to admit, I do enjoy the way Wilt fans try to deflect blame and soften his Game 7 record. "Chose the wrong time to be a detriment" is an elegant way to summarize his failures in that area.


But you ignore what he did during the season and how he got to that point to begin with. Its not like he loses in the 1st round, its not like he misses the playoffs, no in fact he loses in game 7 in the conf finals or finals. That says nothing about his skill but definitely something about his drive (and other factors we can only guess). Though again, this type of criticism only applies from seasons 68-70, not in 1960, 1962, 1964, 1965, or 1966.

How are Wilt's titles more impressive than KG's? Again, the Celtics had the largest turnaround over one season in NBA history. The defense that year was historically dominant, the best we've seen in modern times. Wilt's 72 title came when he wasn't even the best player on the team, so calling that more impressive is a joke. Goodrich and West both had higher PER's that year. I don't really know how to quantify if his 67 title was more impressive than 2008. It was a transition year for the Celtics with Red retiring and Russell's first season coaching the team. But KG took a franchise that had been without a title in two decades and transformed them into the best defensive team of his entire generation, so I was impressed.


Now you're starting to become a little more annoying and quite simply WRONG. In 1967 Wilt averaged near a quadruple double vs. the Celtics in the playoffs. Never mind the 68-13 record, never mind his 24-24-8 on amazing efficiency (minus his FTs...).

In 1972 he stopped a KAJ in his offensive peak which Jerry West called "the best ball-busting performance I had ever seen". Never mind the 33 game win streak and 69-13 record, and oh in fact Wilt WAS the best player on the team that year, for you to say otherwise shows you clearly did not do your homework on that season and are simply taking what happened for granted. PER is a flawed stat for you to be using, when blocked shots for one weren't recorded, and of course higher PER's are awarded for usage, if the ball isn't in your hands your PER is lower. Wilt was of course all NBA defensive first team (would have definitely been awarded DPOY had it existed) and was second in MVP voting to Kareem. Some could argue that the MVP was stolen from him that year because the MVP is awarded based on wins most of the time, it was just fortunate for the Bucks that they also had 60+ wins.

Wilt was a better player because the scoring gap is so massive, no amount of anything else KG brings can match it. But it's weird that some of you guys are focusing on the playoffs for your argument.

No dude, that stuff is so much more obvious, but Wilt detractors don't like those arguments because it's one that they'll never win, so they focus on other stuff that can't really be measured individually to knock wilt down. My argument was that even focusing on the playoffs, Wilt took his team farther much more often.

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