- Zeke
Bing
Lanier
Dumars
Grant Hill
Ben Wallace, George Yardley, Chauncey, Lamb, DeBusschere would fill out my top ten.
Here's a list of top 100 Pistons from NBA.com:
http://www.nba.com/pistons/history/alltime100_50-1.html
Moderators: dVs33, Cowology, theBigLip, Snakebites
Q00 wrote:Isiah
Dumars
Rodman
Ben Wallace
Laimbeer
Lanier, Bing, Yardley, etc may all have been greater individual players than some on my list, but they didn't bring the Pistons franchise the great success that the guys on my list did, so I have to give them the edge overall if we're talking careers as Pistons only and what they did for the Pistons.
hoophabit wrote:I know Rodman turned into a circus act, but he had as much to do with the first two championships as anyone. This is a case where a players stats don't tell it all. Rodman's defense, rebounding and general toughness were huge.
Uncle Mxy wrote:hoophabit wrote:I know Rodman turned into a circus act, but he had as much to do with the first two championships as anyone. This is a case where a players stats don't tell it all. Rodman's defense, rebounding and general toughness were huge.
Rodman sprained his ankle during the second championship series and missed games as a consequence.
He played <16 mpg and clearly wasn't himself.
Fortunately, we won without him.
beau wrote:How is Billups not there?
5 time all star, 3 time all NBA, Finals MVP
Arguably the best all around player on the pistons from 2003-2008, which coincide Bens defensive dominance.
If anything, Joe Dumars is getting overrated here just because he played so long for the Pistons.
If Joe doesnt f@@@ up and trade him, Billups would have probably gotten a couple more allstar selections and still been the face of the franchise.
Its sill mind boggling JoeD completely undervalued Billups' effect on winning basketball. The dude was an ultimate winner, and a person that sacrificed personal statistics for the better of the team.
Snakebites wrote:No list with Billups in it yet?
StickAndMove wrote:In my opinion, the most underrated players are those who played so long ago that it's unlikely there are many fans on here who can remember watching them play.
For example, Laimbeer and Ben Wallace are ranked above Lanier and Bing on the majority of the lists. As great as Lamb and Big Ben were, they weren't the same caliber of players that Lanier and Bing were. The stats indicate this, as well as the Hall of Fame. I know Ben's not eligible yet, but he's clearly not close. No disrespect -- I have him in my top ten, but it's the truth.
I think Lamb and Ben are being overrated because they epitomized "Detroit basketball" and also because they played recently enough that many of the posters on here likely lived through their careers. It could also have to do with being on great teams, where they played an important role in championships.
Heatin4 wrote:Snakebites wrote:No list with Billups in it yet?
He would be up there as a floor general but what category does he lead as a Piston? Also those guys on the top five played out most if not all of their tenure with the Pistons. Something Billups as a traveler has not done.
Snakebites wrote:Heatin4 wrote:Snakebites wrote:No list with Billups in it yet?
He would be up there as a floor general but what category does he lead as a Piston? Also those guys on the top five played out most if not all of their tenure with the Pistons. Something Billups as a traveler has not done.
What category? You mean measured out over a career?
Honestly, I don't care about that. He was the clear best player on a team of ours that won 63 games, played with us for a number of years in which he made multiple all star teams, and we won the finals MVP and was just a few minutes short of winning a second.
I've got him over Ben Wallace and on the list alongside Isiah, Dumars, Lanier, and Bing. Put him 5th out of that group if you like but I don't see a 5th player that deserves to be ranked over him.