Texas Chuck wrote:Im actually pretty sad to see how many guys seem so concerned with where one or two specific guys fall on the list.
I'm sure you wouldn't be too happy if someone put your boi Dirk outside the top 20 or so.
Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ
Texas Chuck wrote:Im actually pretty sad to see how many guys seem so concerned with where one or two specific guys fall on the list.
Basketballefan wrote:Texas Chuck wrote:Im actually pretty sad to see how many guys seem so concerned with where one or two specific guys fall on the list.
I'm sure you wouldn't be too happy if someone put your boi Dirk outside the top 20 or so.
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
Basketballefan wrote:rico381 wrote:He is just going to have to make deeper runs in the playoffs, the all time greats get their teams far sooner or later regardless of circumstances. Eventually the excuses will run out and he will need to get it done, he has enough help at this point.
ElGee wrote:Basketballefan wrote:rico381 wrote:He is just going to have to make deeper runs in the playoffs, the all time greats get their teams far sooner or later regardless of circumstances. Eventually the excuses will run out and he will need to get it done, he has enough help at this point.
That's circular logic. :/
You might as well say "all-time greats never let their teams fall into mediocrity or worse." Then you would have a list based on players who "proved" they are good by never being on bad teams -- if you "proved" your lack of greatness by being on a bad team in your prime, you "can't" be in the top 10.
1. Russell
2. Duncan
3. Bird
4. Magic
5. Shaq
6. Robinson
7. Nash
8. Pippen
9. Stockton
10. Dirk
Jordan can't be there.
Kareem can't be there.
Wilt can't be there.
Kobe can't be there.
Hakeem can't be there.
Garnett can't be there.
Oscar can't be there.
Barkley can't be there.
Moses can't be there.
West can't be there.
Those guys are all in the next group. But can't be among the greats if you don't prove your greatness by avoiding a marginal team record.
Now, if what I just said sounds arbitrary or silly to you, realize this is exactly what your statement sounds like (and I've used a reflective extension of your own premise). If you really believe in "regardless of circumstance," I will suggest to you that you are either not understanding probability or basketball.
Basketballefan wrote:ElGee wrote:Basketballefan wrote:
That's circular logic. :/
You might as well say "all-time greats never let their teams fall into mediocrity or worse." Then you would have a list based on players who "proved" they are good by never being on bad teams -- if you "proved" your lack of greatness by being on a bad team in your prime, you "can't" be in the top 10.
1. Russell
2. Duncan
3. Bird
4. Magic
5. Shaq
6. Robinson
7. Nash
8. Pippen
9. Stockton
10. Dirk
Jordan can't be there.
Kareem can't be there.
Wilt can't be there.
Kobe can't be there.
Hakeem can't be there.
Garnett can't be there.
Oscar can't be there.
Barkley can't be there.
Moses can't be there.
West can't be there.
Those guys are all in the next group. But can't be among the greats if you don't prove your greatness by avoiding a marginal team record.
Now, if what I just said sounds arbitrary or silly to you, realize this is exactly what your statement sounds like (and I've used a reflective extension of your own premise). If you really believe in "regardless of circumstance," I will suggest to you that you are either not understanding probability or basketball.
The point is Chris Paul now has enough help so there should be no more excuses, i already said that. I don't know what you're trying to prove obviously the top 10 Guys had great teams, but were even greater because they were there. Obviously Paul isn't on their level so i don't judge him by their standards of multiple rings. You typed all that for nothing. If Paul continues to lose early in the playoffs and you want to continue with the excuses go ahead because i won't.
Good straw man though.
EDIT: I'm pretty sure i never said anything about an all time great not being allowed to have a bad team record. All those guys you named, did they or did they not make it deep in the playoffs during their careers? Of course they did because great players eventually do go far.
ElGee wrote:Basketballefan wrote:ElGee wrote:
That's circular logic. :/
You might as well say "all-time greats never let their teams fall into mediocrity or worse." Then you would have a list based on players who "proved" they are good by never being on bad teams -- if you "proved" your lack of greatness by being on a bad team in your prime, you "can't" be in the top 10.
1. Russell
2. Duncan
3. Bird
4. Magic
5. Shaq
6. Robinson
7. Nash
8. Pippen
9. Stockton
10. Dirk
Jordan can't be there.
Kareem can't be there.
Wilt can't be there.
Kobe can't be there.
Hakeem can't be there.
Garnett can't be there.
Oscar can't be there.
Barkley can't be there.
Moses can't be there.
West can't be there.
Those guys are all in the next group. But can't be among the greats if you don't prove your greatness by avoiding a marginal team record.
Now, if what I just said sounds arbitrary or silly to you, realize this is exactly what your statement sounds like (and I've used a reflective extension of your own premise). If you really believe in "regardless of circumstance," I will suggest to you that you are either not understanding probability or basketball.
The point is Chris Paul now has enough help so there should be no more excuses, i already said that. I don't know what you're trying to prove obviously the top 10 Guys had great teams, but were even greater because they were there. Obviously Paul isn't on their level so i don't judge him by their standards of multiple rings. You typed all that for nothing. If Paul continues to lose early in the playoffs and you want to continue with the excuses go ahead because i won't.
Good straw man though.
EDIT: I'm pretty sure i never said anything about an all time great not being allowed to have a bad team record. All those guys you named, did they or did they not make it deep in the playoffs during their careers? Of course they did because great players eventually do go far.
I think you missed the entire point -- your original statement that I quoted is a Red Herring.Person A: Chris Paul is better at basketball than Dwayne Wade
You: What possible argument does Chris Paul have over Wade? The guy has never been to a conference finals.
You are equating an individual's team making it to the CF's as having something to do with how good he is at basketball. It is independent of how good CP is at basketball. The result of a team making the CF is the combination of the quality of the team and the quality of its opponents.Chris Paul may make his team 5 points better.
Chris Paul's team may be -10 without him.
Chris Paul's team may be +10 without him.
Chris Paul's team may be 0 without him.
With Paul, if his team is better than the opponent, there is still only the chance of the team advancing, based largely on things that have nothing to do with how good Chris Paul is at basketball.
You might be thinking that it's "likely" that if the player is that good, that they will make the CF's. Yes, it's likely, but it's completely irrelevant to how well the player played because it's a function of his teammates and the opponent. Correlation is not causation. It would be a logical fallacy then to use that as a check to see if a guy was indeed that good, when there is a clear chance of being that good and not reaching that mark. Furthermore, the whole point of analyzing how good someone is at basketball is to separate that individual from their team result; this isn't sprinting, or else we should just look in the standings column to rank players.
Basketballefan wrote:If you have nothing better to do then write out an essay on something like this then i feel sorry for you. Wade has had the better peak, better prime and has the success and accolades to go along with it thus he is going to be ranked higher all time which i already stated. So i guess if Michael Jordan never went to the conference finals then he'd still be the best ever right? Players to a degree are going to ranked on what type of playoff success they've had whether its fair or not that's perception. Deal with it.
Purch wrote:When making an all time list, I think it's obvious that success will have to factor into it to a certain degree. Especilly when you get higher up in the rankings, because at that point you're talking about individualy dominant players, who also have the accolades to support their position. It's not the end all be all, but if you're expecting posters to simply ignore it in this project, I think you might be sorely disappointed.
therealbig3 wrote:Basketballefan wrote:If you have nothing better to do then write out an essay on something like this then i feel sorry for you. Wade has had the better peak, better prime and has the success and accolades to go along with it thus he is going to be ranked higher all time which i already stated. So i guess if Michael Jordan never went to the conference finals then he'd still be the best ever right? Players to a degree are going to ranked on what type of playoff success they've had whether its fair or not that's perception. Deal with it.
You should actually try to listen and understand the point when someone is educating you. His point has nothing to do with Chris Paul and Dwyane Wade at all, if you actually understood it.
"Deal with it", I didn't know I was in the 5th grade again.
Basketballefan wrote:therealbig3 wrote:Basketballefan wrote:If you have nothing better to do then write out an essay on something like this then i feel sorry for you. Wade has had the better peak, better prime and has the success and accolades to go along with it thus he is going to be ranked higher all time which i already stated. So i guess if Michael Jordan never went to the conference finals then he'd still be the best ever right? Players to a degree are going to ranked on what type of playoff success they've had whether its fair or not that's perception. Deal with it.
You should actually try to listen and understand the point when someone is educating you. His point has nothing to do with Chris Paul and Dwyane Wade at all, if you actually understood it.
"Deal with it", I didn't know I was in the 5th grade again.
I did understand it, but my point is the issue he was adressing wasn't my actual argument, Educating me funny, i had real life academic education and it wasn't on realgm, something some of you people should try.
eliasrapp98 wrote:I'll go top 15 just for fun.
1. Jordan
2. Kareem
3. Magic
4. Wilt
5. Duncan
6. Russell
7. Shaq
8. Lebron
9. Hakeem
10. Bird
11. Kobe
12. Dr J
13. KG
14. Karl
15. Dirk
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Doctor MJ wrote:Alright, the Quick & Dirty Tallied Top 50:
1. Michael Jordan
2. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
3. Bill Russell
4. Tim Duncan
5. Shaquille O'Neal
6. Magic Johnson
(tie) Wilt Chamberlain
8. LeBron James
9. Hakeem Olajuwon
10. Larry Bird
11. Kobe Bryant
12. Oscar Robertson
13. Kevin Garnett
14. Dirk Nowitzki
15. Julius Erving
16. Jerry West
17. Karl Malone
18. David Robinson
19. Charles Barkley
20. Moses Malone
21. Dwyane Wade
22. John Stockton
23. Scottie Pippen
24. Bob Pettit
25. Steve Nash
26. Patrick Ewing
27. Rick Barry
28. John Havlicek
29. Walt Frazier
30. Jason Kidd
31. Elgin Baylor
32. Clyde Drexler
33. Gary Payton
34. Artis Gilmore
35. Kevin Durant
36. Chris Paul
37. Paul Pierce
38. Isiah Thomas
39. Kevin McHale
40. Reggie Miller
41. George Gervin
42. Dikembe Mutombo
43. Willis Reed
44. George Mikan
45. Dave Cowens
(tie) Tracy McGrady
47. Elvin Hayes
48. Dwight Howard
49. Alonzo Mourning
50. Ray Allen