DannyNoonan1221 wrote:ThaRegul8r wrote:ShaqAttack3234 wrote:Barkley led the league in rebounding in 1986-87 with 14.6 per game—becoming the shortest player in NBA history to do so; he finished second in 1985-86 (12.8 RPG), 1988-89 (12.5 RPG) and 1998-99 (12.3 RPG). “Pound for pound, Barkley and Wes Unseld are the greatest rebounders in the history of the game,” said Kevin Lougherty. “Charles wasn’t even 6-foot-5, you know” (Elliot Kalb, Who’s Better, Who’s Best in Basketball?: Mr. Stats Sets the Record Straight on the Top 50 NBA Players of All Time, p. 196). “I don’t know when I’ve seen a better rebounder,” said George Karl (Philadelphia Daily News, May 13, 1986).]
I have a problem with this quote. So we are strengthening Barkley's rebounding numbers because he was short, diminishing Moses' because he was a big center, yet in all the other threads guys are getting nods on the defensive end because their position is more of an anchor than guards.
I am not saying you specifically are doing this- but that quote will persuade other people in what I think is an unfair way. "Barkley's rebounding numbers don't match up with Moses' " "but he was 6'5" so pound for pound his numbers are better". That's essentially ranking players off of 'what could have been'. If we are doing that, then we should be trying to translate all guards to centers to see how much defensive impact they WOULD have had and ranking them based on that.
I'm the one who wrote the quoted text, so it is to be attributed to me, not ShaqAttack. They are from my own personal notes.
When I wrote it (years before today), I did not do so to "strengthen Barkley's rebounding numbers." If you watched the NBA while Barkley played, you know that was mentioned frequently. I recorded a fact. Nothing more, nothing less. I also record contemporary accounts and opinions, which I have posted on numerous occasions during my time here, and I recorded what his contemporaries had to say while he was playing.
Moses has always been recognized as one of the greatest rebounders in NBA history, without qualification, in the same category as Wilt, Russell and Rodman. So I'm not sure what the problem is when Moses is regarded as the better rebounder.
I post to inform, not persuade. I care nothing about persuading anyone, as I get no benefit from persuading anonymous people on the internet, rather than people I actually interact with face-to-face, who I actually could derive some benefit from. Nevertheless, if it doesn't meet with your approval, I'll remove it, as I don't really care. I thought when I posted it that it was likely too long for most people anyway.















