RealGM Top 100 List #27
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
OK, just a little justification for my vote for Frazier above.
I can see a Pip vote; we're getting to the stage where I don't see huge separation between a lot of these players, but I like someone who shows up in the playoffs a little more, I'm not a huge fan of Pip's personality issues and I think that while Pip was likely the higher-impact defender, that Frazier was himself a 2-position defender, an excellent distributor and a better scoring threat. I think he was a more dynamic initiator, and that he backed it up with his ability to finish efficiently. His much more effective postseason offense is extremely attractive, and of course while Pip has a documented set of scoring failures and inadequacy overcome largely by Jordan's scoring dominance in the Finals, Frazier has a more significant level of high-end performance on that end.
I consider this one a lot tighter than many of the previous votes as I review, but I settled on Frazier for the above reasons.
I can see a Pip vote; we're getting to the stage where I don't see huge separation between a lot of these players, but I like someone who shows up in the playoffs a little more, I'm not a huge fan of Pip's personality issues and I think that while Pip was likely the higher-impact defender, that Frazier was himself a 2-position defender, an excellent distributor and a better scoring threat. I think he was a more dynamic initiator, and that he backed it up with his ability to finish efficiently. His much more effective postseason offense is extremely attractive, and of course while Pip has a documented set of scoring failures and inadequacy overcome largely by Jordan's scoring dominance in the Finals, Frazier has a more significant level of high-end performance on that end.
I consider this one a lot tighter than many of the previous votes as I review, but I settled on Frazier for the above reasons.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27
Doctor MJ wrote:trex_8063 wrote:
Indiana Pacers ~'90-'92: Chuck Person was consistently taking more shots than a vastly more efficient Reggie Miller.
Chicago Bulls '95: Scottie Pippen took more shots than Kukoc and Armstrong, despite worse efficiency than both. (though Armstrong in particular obv not a shot creator, and neither Kukoc or Armstong a "star").
Baltimore/Washington Bullets '73, '75: Elvin Hayes averaged more shots than Phil Chenier, Archie Clark, and Mike Riordan, despite generally worse efficiency than all three.
New York Knicks '70-'71: Reed averaged more shots than Frazier despite worse efficiency (and I don't think it can be denied that this team at least seemed to have found an effective balance).
Not saying it made sense in all instances, but I don't know for sure that it didn't make sense either (and in the case of those Knicks teams, I'm going to give them the benefit of the doubt).
-Reed in '71. Right well, this one's clear cut. Reed's efficiency fell off a cliff that year, but the Knicks kept using him as if he shot like he'd shot before. Frankly it's a bit like the situation with Baylor, and the chronology to me makes it clear what happened: A guy gets established, and then he hangs on to the same role because of inertia.
So yeah, Reed shouldn't have been shooting so much at that time given what we know now. I'll say though I don't really blame the coach for this one because he was undoubtedly hoping Reed would round back into form. When he didn't, in subsequent seasons he wasn't used in such volume again. If only the Lakers had done the same with Baylor.
Fair enough about '71, but just to make it sure I'm not misunderstood, I wasn't referring to only the 1970-71 season (the writing could be construed that way); it was also true in '70 (as in the 1969-70 season, when Willis was MVP, before his efficiency "fell off a cliff"): Frazier's efficiency was better, but Reed shot more.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
I vote for Frazier, because I see him as better overall player (I'm not even sure if Pippen has edge on defense), especially mentally and in the playoffs. Pippen was really great, but more like perfect role player, not no 1 option, while Frazier was the best player of Knicks dynasty.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
For the time being, I'm casting my vote for Frazier. Quoted my post on the two below.
I'm open to changing my mind if someone can convince me that his brand of defense would be less effective in today's game.
I'm open to changing my mind if someone can convince me that his brand of defense would be less effective in today's game.
fpliii wrote:Pretty interesting comparison IMO...
1) Both guys played elite defense in similar systems (Clyde under Holzman, Scottie under Phil who was inspired by Red) that relied a ton on pressure D
2) Both guys were the primary ball-handlers/leading playmakers on squads that played great team ball
The differences between them being:
1) Frazier seemingly seamlessly went from a member of the ensemble scoring the ball, to the key cog in that regard
2) Frazier put up what seem to be 10 quality years (68-69 through 77-78) with what seem to be not much else before or after, Scottie had 9 quality years in Chicago and 4 more years as a leader in Houston and Portland
I don't know if the longevity advantage is enough to offset the proven record succeeding as the number one option on a contender. Samurai noted in the other thread:Samurai wrote:Reed hinself once said about that team: "it was Clyde's ball; he just let us play with it once in a while." In his prime, Frazier was a player that essentially did not have a weakness; offensively he could hit the midrange jumper, post up and drive to the basket. He was a very good distributor (4 top five finishes in assists/game in a 6 year period). He was an elite defender and an excellent rebounder for a guard.
Obviously Scottie (while he could do all three of those as well at a solid level, and was incredible in the break) played alongside perhaps the best ever perimeter scoring option (albeit a guy that Tex and Phil didn't want to chase scoring titles) during the majority of his prime, and throughout his career did pretty much everything at a very high level.
Something that's a bit of a concern for me is the question of how effective defensively both guys are. Scottie was more versatile (ability to play some post defense), and I can't say how his game would translate in today's league. Scottie also developed some range throughout his career, after from my understanding coming into the league with a reputation as an inconsistent shooter. Frazier obviously didn't have a three during his career, and while he did have a great midrange j, I haven't heard anything to convince me he had that kind of range.
Leaning Frazier, but I don't know if I can vote for him until I hear more about (1) his shooting range and (2) how others think his defense would translate to the present NBA.
Now that's the difference between first and last place.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Question regarding John Havlicek (I'll probably ask in the #28 thread, didn't want to forget now):
How was his defense against Dr. J in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals? Bob Ryan wrote:
"(Havlicek's) defensive job on a much younger and friskier Julius Erving in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals against Philadelphia was nothing short of spellbinding."
Is that Ryan just advocating for a Celtic legend, or did older Hondo slow down a Julius Erving one year removed from arguably the GOAT playoff performance in professional basketball history?
How was his defense against Dr. J in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals? Bob Ryan wrote:
"(Havlicek's) defensive job on a much younger and friskier Julius Erving in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals against Philadelphia was nothing short of spellbinding."
Is that Ryan just advocating for a Celtic legend, or did older Hondo slow down a Julius Erving one year removed from arguably the GOAT playoff performance in professional basketball history?
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It'll take a lot more than rage and muscle
Open your heart and hands, my son
Or you'll never make it over the river
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Vote for Frazier
In the end it gets down to leading a team to victory - Clyde led the way in Game 7, and played well in the clutch all the time.
Scottie goes to the migraine game and the 1.2 second Kukoc shot.
Maybe not a lot to go on, but the two are pretty close, and I think Clyde came through when it counted, and Scottie didn't.
In the end it gets down to leading a team to victory - Clyde led the way in Game 7, and played well in the clutch all the time.
Scottie goes to the migraine game and the 1.2 second Kukoc shot.
Maybe not a lot to go on, but the two are pretty close, and I think Clyde came through when it counted, and Scottie didn't.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Results since penbeast's last count (post #82):
Walt Frazier (13) - penbeast0, GC Pantalones, Moonbeam, Quotatious, batmana, JordansBulls, RSCD3_, tsherkin, RayBan-Sematra, Jim Naismith, lorak, fpliii, DQuinn1575
Scottie Pippen (13) - Chuck Texas, trex_8063, Doctor MJ, Clyde Frazier, SactoKingsFan, magicmerl, Basketballefan, Notanoob, colts18, ronnymac2, FJS, Jaivl, Ryoga Hibiki
Still dead-even, lol.
I guess drza would vote for Pippen, too, considering that he said: "All told, I'd have to say that I take Pippen in this particular comparison." to sum up his post (#21)? I won't count his vote yet though, not before he casts an official vote.
Also, Narigo and Owly, who posted in this thread, still haven't voted.
Walt Frazier (13) - penbeast0, GC Pantalones, Moonbeam, Quotatious, batmana, JordansBulls, RSCD3_, tsherkin, RayBan-Sematra, Jim Naismith, lorak, fpliii, DQuinn1575
Scottie Pippen (13) - Chuck Texas, trex_8063, Doctor MJ, Clyde Frazier, SactoKingsFan, magicmerl, Basketballefan, Notanoob, colts18, ronnymac2, FJS, Jaivl, Ryoga Hibiki
Still dead-even, lol.
I guess drza would vote for Pippen, too, considering that he said: "All told, I'd have to say that I take Pippen in this particular comparison." to sum up his post (#21)? I won't count his vote yet though, not before he casts an official vote.
Also, Narigo and Owly, who posted in this thread, still haven't voted.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
ronnymac2 wrote:Question regarding John Havlicek (I'll probably ask in the #28 thread, didn't want to forget now):
How was his defense against Dr. J in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals? Bob Ryan wrote:
"(Havlicek's) defensive job on a much younger and friskier Julius Erving in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals against Philadelphia was nothing short of spellbinding."
Is that Ryan just advocating for a Celtic legend, or did older Hondo slow down a Julius Erving one year removed from arguably the GOAT playoff performance in professional basketball history?
I don't know about that but some contextual info (or assertions) from Bill Simmons, on Erving
Obviously there's an issue with the dating of NBA prime (perhaps it should have been his prime but ...The Book of Basketball wrote:lost five straight playoff series in his NBA prime in which he barely outplayed Bob Gross (1977), got outplayed by Bob Dandridge (’78), played Larry Kenon to a draw (’79), played Jamaal Wilkes to a draw (’80) and got severely outplayed by Larry Bird (’81)
For instance the Gross in '77 per 36 production (obviously note that Gross is in foul trouble and couldn't play 36 minutes unless you don't care about him fouling out)
Gross points 22.55421687; rebounds 7.373493976; assists 4.554216867; steals 2.819277108; blocks 0.43373494; personal fouls 5.638554217; fg% 0.667; ts% 0.691857371
Erving points 26.41935484; rebounds 5.951612903; assists 4.35483871; steals 2.322580645; blocks 1.016129032; personal fouls 2.467741935, fg% 0.543; ts% 0.604410202.
The value of those two performances obviously depends what you're getting from your backup (166 minutes for Gross, 248 for Erving; or 27.7 mpg to 41.3.
Haven't got time to search out if there's full numbers for '79 Spurs versus 76ers (not that I'd necessarily know the best place to go anyhow), but Erving outscored Kenon and Kenon's TS% is awful for that playoffs (.468).
Anyway big picture point '77 Erving isn't the same as '76 Erving. But on the specifics of Erving's performances (somewhat moot unless anyone's putting big emphasis on versus Erving performance) it might be interesting to find out more if Erving was being outplayed (fuller numbers, at the time perceptions etc).
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Owly wrote:ronnymac2 wrote:Question regarding John Havlicek (I'll probably ask in the #28 thread, didn't want to forget now):
How was his defense against Dr. J in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals? Bob Ryan wrote:
"(Havlicek's) defensive job on a much younger and friskier Julius Erving in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals against Philadelphia was nothing short of spellbinding."
Is that Ryan just advocating for a Celtic legend, or did older Hondo slow down a Julius Erving one year removed from arguably the GOAT playoff performance in professional basketball history?
I don't know about that but some contextual info (or assertions) from Bill Simmons, on ErvingObviously there's an issue with the dating of NBA prime (perhaps it should have been his prime but ...The Book of Basketball wrote:lost five straight playoff series in his NBA prime in which he barely outplayed Bob Gross (1977), got outplayed by Bob Dandridge (’78), played Larry Kenon to a draw (’79), played Jamaal Wilkes to a draw (’80) and got severely outplayed by Larry Bird (’81)
For instance the Gross in '77 per 36 production (obviously note that Gross is in foul trouble and couldn't play 36 minutes unless you don't care about him fouling out)
Gross points 22.55421687; rebounds 7.373493976; assists 4.554216867; steals 2.819277108; blocks 0.43373494; personal fouls 5.638554217; fg% 0.667; ts% 0.691857371
Erving points 26.41935484; rebounds 5.951612903; assists 4.35483871; steals 2.322580645; blocks 1.016129032; personal fouls 2.467741935, fg% 0.543; ts% 0.604410202.
The value of those two performances obviously depends what you're getting from your backup (166 minutes for Gross, 248 for Erving; or 27.7 mpg to 41.3.
Haven't got time to search out if there's full numbers for '79 Spurs versus 76ers (not that I'd necessarily know the best place to go anyhow), but Erving outscored Kenon and Kenon's TS% is awful for that playoffs (.468).
Anyway big picture point '77 Erving isn't the same as '76 Erving. But on the specifics of Erving's performances (somewhat moot unless anyone's putting big emphasis on versus Erving performance) it might be interesting to find out more if Erving was being outplayed (fuller numbers, at the time perceptions etc).
...I can't take anything Ryan or Simmons say celtics-related that seriously. It can be truly grating at times.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Owly wrote:
Gross points 22.55421687; rebounds 7.373493976; assists 4.554216867; steals 2.819277108; blocks 0.43373494; personal fouls 5.638554217; fg% 0.667; ts% 0.691857371
Erving points 26.41935484; rebounds 5.951612903; assists 4.35483871; steals 2.322580645; blocks 1.016129032; personal fouls 2.467741935, fg% 0.543; ts% 0.604410202.
Helpful tip: You should round your numbers up to only 1 decimal place. 10 is excessive
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27
I'll vote Scottie Pippen. My reasoning was laid out in post 21 of this thread, which I repost in spoilers below. Bear with me on my access...I'm in the Detroit area that got hit by storm going into the weekend so my internet access has been spotty. I know someone replied to my initial post, pointing out (among other things) that Frazier played under 100 possessions/game, which is a good thing to point out. But that doesn't materially change my conclusions.
Essentially, I think Pippen's size and versatility makes him the more valuable contributor.
Essentially, I think Pippen's size and versatility makes him the more valuable contributor.
Spoiler:
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
DQuinn1575 wrote:Vote for Frazier
In the end it gets down to leading a team to victory - Clyde led the way in Game 7, and played well in the clutch all the time.
Scottie goes to the migraine game and the 1.2 second Kukoc shot.
Maybe not a lot to go on, but the two are pretty close, and I think Clyde came through when it counted, and Scottie didn't.
I've always bashed Scottie Pippen for quitting in that game 3 of the 1994 ECF but he actually played a pretty good game up until 1.2 left in regulation.
Code: Select all
<PRE>
Basi
Starters MP FG FGA FG% 3P 3PA 3P% FT FTA FT% ORB DRB TRB AST STL BLK TOV PF PTS
Scottie Pippen 40:00 10 20 .500 2 4 .500 3 3 1.000 0 7 7 4 2 1 2 3 25
</PRE>
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Clyde Frazier wrote:Owly wrote:ronnymac2 wrote:Question regarding John Havlicek (I'll probably ask in the #28 thread, didn't want to forget now):
How was his defense against Dr. J in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals? Bob Ryan wrote:
"(Havlicek's) defensive job on a much younger and friskier Julius Erving in the 1977 Eastern Conference Finals against Philadelphia was nothing short of spellbinding."
Is that Ryan just advocating for a Celtic legend, or did older Hondo slow down a Julius Erving one year removed from arguably the GOAT playoff performance in professional basketball history?
I don't know about that but some contextual info (or assertions) from Bill Simmons, on ErvingObviously there's an issue with the dating of NBA prime (perhaps it should have been his prime but ...The Book of Basketball wrote:lost five straight playoff series in his NBA prime in which he barely outplayed Bob Gross (1977), got outplayed by Bob Dandridge (’78), played Larry Kenon to a draw (’79), played Jamaal Wilkes to a draw (’80) and got severely outplayed by Larry Bird (’81)
For instance the Gross in '77 per 36 production (obviously note that Gross is in foul trouble and couldn't play 36 minutes unless you don't care about him fouling out)
Gross points 22.55421687; rebounds 7.373493976; assists 4.554216867; steals 2.819277108; blocks 0.43373494; personal fouls 5.638554217; fg% 0.667; ts% 0.691857371
Erving points 26.41935484; rebounds 5.951612903; assists 4.35483871; steals 2.322580645; blocks 1.016129032; personal fouls 2.467741935, fg% 0.543; ts% 0.604410202.
The value of those two performances obviously depends what you're getting from your backup (166 minutes for Gross, 248 for Erving; or 27.7 mpg to 41.3.
Haven't got time to search out if there's full numbers for '79 Spurs versus 76ers (not that I'd necessarily know the best place to go anyhow), but Erving outscored Kenon and Kenon's TS% is awful for that playoffs (.468).
Anyway big picture point '77 Erving isn't the same as '76 Erving. But on the specifics of Erving's performances (somewhat moot unless anyone's putting big emphasis on versus Erving performance) it might be interesting to find out more if Erving was being outplayed (fuller numbers, at the time perceptions etc).
...I can't take anything Ryan or Simmons say celtics-related that seriously. It can be truly grating at times.
Fair enough, I'm certainly not advocating taking Simmons as gospel (indeed see the phrasing above - assertions). Or saying that Simmons' emphasis here on performance in elimination series, is particularly helpful generally. But I recalled he had something relevent to the idea of Havlicek outplaying Erving and whether it's true and if it means anything. FWIW here Simmons isn't talking about Boston, though he is talking about a big rival.
colts18 wrote:Owly wrote:Gross points 22.55421687; rebounds 7.373493976; assists 4.554216867; steals 2.819277108; blocks 0.43373494; personal fouls 5.638554217; fg% 0.667; ts% 0.691857371
Erving points 26.41935484; rebounds 5.951612903; assists 4.35483871; steals 2.322580645; blocks 1.016129032; personal fouls 2.467741935, fg% 0.543; ts% 0.604410202.
Helpful tip: You should round your numbers up to only 1 decimal place. 10 is excessive
To be clear I'm not rounding for 3 reasons, 2 general and a third context specific:
1) I want numbers to be reusable. If someone wants to do other calculations with numbers it makes them less accurate if they've already been rounded.
e.g. I don't like rounding on things like Bkb-Ref where it (don't know if this is still the case, and whether it happened in many categories) doesn't even round it just shows you the digits as if you could see all the following digit (e.g. 6.99 could be shown as 6.9).
2) It's accurate and not open to agenda. Some people on message boards round very dubiously. Here you get the full number, and if there's a screwup it's because I did the maths wrong, rather than trying to screw around with it.
e.g. Someone told me that Tim Duncan and Shareef Abdur Rahim were both the same by the boxscore. The reasoning given "both are 20-10 guys".
3) It's quicker and I have increasingly less time available for this project. If you think it is useful and would be helpful in gleaning info quicker, feel free to repost the numbers rounded.
My leaning would be Frazier because (to oversimplify) I think he's more capable of being the best player on a champ albeit both probably need at least an ensemble cast to have a fairly good chance. Both have some mixed bag reviews on intangiables (Pip has been covered, Frazier took some heat for resigning as captain and for his last two years in New York, though this probably isn't as big as the possible Pippen issues). But I'm not sure I'm confident enough to vote it. Plus the tie being broken I don't particularly want to re-tie it at this point. I'd go Frazier if it were still tied.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Vote: Walt Frazier
On defense, they are extremely close, but on offense, Frazier is a better scorer than Pippen was. He was able to lead the Knicks to a title as no.1 option when Reed was no longer capable of being a scoring threat. I also believe that Frazier had a better peak and prime than Pippen
On defense, they are extremely close, but on offense, Frazier is a better scorer than Pippen was. He was able to lead the Knicks to a title as no.1 option when Reed was no longer capable of being a scoring threat. I also believe that Frazier had a better peak and prime than Pippen
Narigo's Fantasy Team
PG: Damian Lillard
SG: Sidney Moncrief
SF:
PF: James Worthy
C: Tim Duncan
BE: Robert Horry
BE:
BE:
PG: Damian Lillard
SG: Sidney Moncrief
SF:
PF: James Worthy
C: Tim Duncan
BE: Robert Horry
BE:
BE:
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Owly wrote:My leaning would be Frazier because (to oversimplify) I think he's more capable of being the best player on a champ albeit both probably need at least an ensemble cast to have a fairly good chance. Both have some mixed bag reviews on intangiables (Pip has been covered, Frazier took some heat for resigning as captain and for his last two years in New York, though this probably isn't as big as the possible Pippen issues). But I'm not sure I'm confident enough to vote it. Plus the tie being broken I don't particularly want to re-tie it at this point. I'd go Frazier if it were still tied.
That seems to be the case right now.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen
Owly wrote:Clyde Frazier wrote:...I can't take anything Ryan or Simmons say celtics-related that seriously. It can be truly grating at times.
Fair enough, I'm certainly not advocating taking Simmons as gospel (indeed see the phrasing above - assertions). Or saying that Simmons' emphasis here on performance in elimination series, is particularly helpful generally. But I recalled he had something relevent to the idea of Havlicek outplaying Erving and whether it's true and if it means anything. FWIW here Simmons isn't talking about Boston, though he is talking about a big rival.
Got it. Meant to add a thanks for exploring his claims with the #s.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen -- SUDDEN DEA
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen -- SUDDEN DEA
Vote: Scottie Pippen
I like his longevity a lot better and he just looks better at everything besides scoring efficiency. Scottie also was the de facto 2nd option for a 6 title run and was an MVP candidate when Jordan was away; it is clear that he was capable of leading a team when throughout most of his career was not asked to. His skillset is as versatile as anybody who has every played and is among the GOAT perimeter defenders. Frazier doesn't have enough "stuff" nor quality years compared to Pippen, if you ask me.
I like his longevity a lot better and he just looks better at everything besides scoring efficiency. Scottie also was the de facto 2nd option for a 6 title run and was an MVP candidate when Jordan was away; it is clear that he was capable of leading a team when throughout most of his career was not asked to. His skillset is as versatile as anybody who has every played and is among the GOAT perimeter defenders. Frazier doesn't have enough "stuff" nor quality years compared to Pippen, if you ask me.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen -- SUDDEN DEA
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen -- SUDDEN DEA
THERE IT IS
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen -- SUDDEN DEA
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27--Frazier v. Pippen -- SUDDEN DEA
I don't mind the result either way, but did Owly vote? If so, we're still in a sudden death (since he and PCP cancel out), otherwise PCP's vote gives it to Scottie. 

Now that's the difference between first and last place.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #27
I didn't count Owly as a vote or Frazier would have won since I had "SUDDEN DEATH" posted and was checking in every 20 minutes or so.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.