RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
PG: Tim Hardaway, Mark Price, and maybe Mookie Blaylock are the players I'm looking at . . . should mention Penny Hardaway though he never impressed me as much as he did the TV guys of his day.
Wings: Marques Johnson has the most impressive peak. Bailey Howell, Chet Walker, Jamaal Wilkes and Bob Dandridge had longer careers, if lower peaks, and also come to mind. Bill Sharman has been brought up too.
Bigs: Amare Stoudamire and Jerry Lucas bring great scoring and rebounding respectively but defensive questions. Bill Walton has the highest peak (though that's it for true career value -- 1 year then failed to stay healthy to the playoffs the next and 1 year as a reserve role player). Yao Ming should get a mention too.
Compare --
Hardaway, Price, and Blaylock as the top PGs;
Sharman and Hornacek as pure 2's.
Walker, Wilkes, Dandridge, and Hornacek as the top wings
Howell, Amare, Lucas, and Walt Bellamy as top scoring bigs
Yao Ming, Marques Johnson, Penny Hardaway, or Gus Williams as the top short peak player
I keep changing my mind; let's see who else gets support.
Wings: Marques Johnson has the most impressive peak. Bailey Howell, Chet Walker, Jamaal Wilkes and Bob Dandridge had longer careers, if lower peaks, and also come to mind. Bill Sharman has been brought up too.
Bigs: Amare Stoudamire and Jerry Lucas bring great scoring and rebounding respectively but defensive questions. Bill Walton has the highest peak (though that's it for true career value -- 1 year then failed to stay healthy to the playoffs the next and 1 year as a reserve role player). Yao Ming should get a mention too.
Compare --
Hardaway, Price, and Blaylock as the top PGs;
Sharman and Hornacek as pure 2's.
Walker, Wilkes, Dandridge, and Hornacek as the top wings
Howell, Amare, Lucas, and Walt Bellamy as top scoring bigs
Yao Ming, Marques Johnson, Penny Hardaway, or Gus Williams as the top short peak player
I keep changing my mind; let's see who else gets support.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
penbeast0 wrote:I keep changing my mind; let's see who else gets support.
I know what you mean. I was initially pretty set on Jerry Lucas.....then started waffling between him and Walt Bellamy......then after taking close look at Neil Johnston, felt pretty much a flip there too. I'm happy Johnston is in. As we got to these last few spots, I discovered an impending feeling of.....not panic, but a recognition that Johnston was one a handful of remaining players for whom I would have been both sad and disappointed in us if he somehow missed the cut.
With him in, I guess I'm again leaning Lucas or Bellamy, though I also feel strongly (to varying degrees) that George McGinnis, Tim Hardaway, Joe Dumars, Amar'e Stoudemire, and Bill Sharman all belong in the top 100, too. Obviously, there isn't room for all of them.

Chet Walker, Dennis Johnson, Bailey Howell, Marques Johnson, Connie Hawkins, and Spencer Haywood are all worth serious consideration as well (imo). Hmmm.....

"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Breaking it down by position, I look at the PGs (Tim Hardaway, Mark Price, Mookie Blaylock, Penny Hardaway, Gus WIlliams) and end up favoring Gus Williams for his playoff numbers.
At the SG, I am looking at Hornacek, Dumars, and Sharman and the numbers clearly say Hornacek. However, I lean Dumars slightly for the defense. (DJ isn't quite as good as Dumars with similar strengths).
At the forward, looking at Walker, Howell, Marques Johnson, and Dandridge and, taking into account playoff resume, Dandridge squeaks ahead, again for the defensive edge.
Finally in terms of bigs, Lucas, Haywood, or Amare (Yao's numbers just don't stand up, especially considering his short career). I think I would go with Amare Stoudamire despite his weak defense. Lucas and Haywood weren't guys who played good defense either and Amare is just more efficient than either and scores more than Lucas. Lucas's rebounding edge drops taking pace into account and while he's clearly the smartest and most court aware, Amare's prime was pretty impressive.
Ok, now:
Gus Williams, Dumars, Dandridge, or Amare.
In terms of offense, it's Amare, Gus, Dandridge, then Dumars; in terms of defense, it reverses.
It really doesn't resolve itself in any mental formulation very clearly.
So, tentatively, I will vote for Bob Dandridge as most versatile and guy most likely to be on a championship team. That and he was a heck of a player for the Bullets as well as the Bucks.
At the SG, I am looking at Hornacek, Dumars, and Sharman and the numbers clearly say Hornacek. However, I lean Dumars slightly for the defense. (DJ isn't quite as good as Dumars with similar strengths).
At the forward, looking at Walker, Howell, Marques Johnson, and Dandridge and, taking into account playoff resume, Dandridge squeaks ahead, again for the defensive edge.
Finally in terms of bigs, Lucas, Haywood, or Amare (Yao's numbers just don't stand up, especially considering his short career). I think I would go with Amare Stoudamire despite his weak defense. Lucas and Haywood weren't guys who played good defense either and Amare is just more efficient than either and scores more than Lucas. Lucas's rebounding edge drops taking pace into account and while he's clearly the smartest and most court aware, Amare's prime was pretty impressive.
Ok, now:
Gus Williams, Dumars, Dandridge, or Amare.
In terms of offense, it's Amare, Gus, Dandridge, then Dumars; in terms of defense, it reverses.
It really doesn't resolve itself in any mental formulation very clearly.
So, tentatively, I will vote for Bob Dandridge as most versatile and guy most likely to be on a championship team. That and he was a heck of a player for the Bullets as well as the Bucks.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Since I've name-dropped George McGinnis a couple times, figured I should maybe post a closer evaluation of him.....
Here are the year-by-year Per 100 and relative TS% numbers for his prime ('73-'79, 551 rs games), ABA where indicated:
'73: 28.8 pts, 13.0 reb, 2.6 ast, 2.0 stl, 5.1 tov @ +1.18% rts (ABA)
'74: 29.5 pts, 17.1 reb, 3.8 ast, 2.3 stl, 0.6 blk, 5.6 tov @ +0.88% rts (ABA)
'75: 33.7 pts, 16.1 reb, 7.1 ast, 2.9 stl, 0.8 blk, 6.0 tov @ -0.09% rts (ABA)
'76: 26.8 pts, 14.7 reb, 5.4 ast, 3.0 stl, 0.6 blk @ -2.15% rts
'77: 27.0 pts, 14.6 reb, 4.8 ast, 2.6 stl, 0.6 blk @ -0.75% rts
'78: 27.7 pts, 14.2 reb, 5.1 ast, 2.4 stl, 0.5 blk, 5.5 tov @ +0.65% rts
'79: 30.5 pts, 15.3 reb, 5.0 ast, 2.3 stl, 0.9 blk, 6.1 tov @ +0.32% rts
TOTAL PRIME:
Per 100 poss: 29.2 pts, 15.1 reb, 4.8 ast, 2.5 stl, 0.7 blk, 5.7 tov @ +0.04% rts
PER 21.9, .152 WS/48 in 37.4 mpg
Breakdown by league.....
ABA PRIME (241 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 30.7 pts, 15.4 reb, 4.5 ast, 2.4 stl, 0.7 blk, 5.6 tov @ +0.65% rts
PER 23.1, .162 WS/48 in 40.7 mpg
BPM in '74: +3.8. VORP in '74: +4.8
BPM in '75: +6.7. VORP in '75: +7.0.
NBA PRIME (310 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 27.9 pts, 14.7 reb, 5.1 ast, 2.6 stl, 0.6 blk, 5.8 tov @ -0.60% rts
PER 20.8, .143 WS/48 in 34.8 mpg
Avg BPM +4.1.
Cumulative VORP: +16.6.
His shooting efficiency is only OK, and turnovers are an issue. But his production is otherwise remarkable, and he shows signs of that "all-around game" (kinda like a bigger volume Draymond Green or something). Statistically, he's more than comparable to the crowd we're considering.
As career narrative and general legacy stuff:
*Was an ABA All-Star all three of those ABA years, NBA All-Star 3 of 4 years.
*Won two ABA titles alongside Mel Daniels ('72 and '73). 1 NBA finals appearance in '77, too.
*2-Time All-ABA 1st Team, 1-Time All-ABA 2nd Team.
*1-Time All-NBA 1st Team, 1-Time All-NBA 2nd Team.
*Was co-MVP of the ABA in '75, with prime (near-peak) Julius Erving; and did this alongside prime/peak Artis Gilmore and Dan Issel, too.
*Twice factored into NBA MVP voting (finishing as high as #5 in '76).
*#79 in RealGM RPoY shares.
Does he not deserve serious consideration at this point?
Here are the year-by-year Per 100 and relative TS% numbers for his prime ('73-'79, 551 rs games), ABA where indicated:
'73: 28.8 pts, 13.0 reb, 2.6 ast, 2.0 stl, 5.1 tov @ +1.18% rts (ABA)
'74: 29.5 pts, 17.1 reb, 3.8 ast, 2.3 stl, 0.6 blk, 5.6 tov @ +0.88% rts (ABA)
'75: 33.7 pts, 16.1 reb, 7.1 ast, 2.9 stl, 0.8 blk, 6.0 tov @ -0.09% rts (ABA)
'76: 26.8 pts, 14.7 reb, 5.4 ast, 3.0 stl, 0.6 blk @ -2.15% rts
'77: 27.0 pts, 14.6 reb, 4.8 ast, 2.6 stl, 0.6 blk @ -0.75% rts
'78: 27.7 pts, 14.2 reb, 5.1 ast, 2.4 stl, 0.5 blk, 5.5 tov @ +0.65% rts
'79: 30.5 pts, 15.3 reb, 5.0 ast, 2.3 stl, 0.9 blk, 6.1 tov @ +0.32% rts
TOTAL PRIME:
Per 100 poss: 29.2 pts, 15.1 reb, 4.8 ast, 2.5 stl, 0.7 blk, 5.7 tov @ +0.04% rts
PER 21.9, .152 WS/48 in 37.4 mpg
Breakdown by league.....
ABA PRIME (241 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 30.7 pts, 15.4 reb, 4.5 ast, 2.4 stl, 0.7 blk, 5.6 tov @ +0.65% rts
PER 23.1, .162 WS/48 in 40.7 mpg
BPM in '74: +3.8. VORP in '74: +4.8
BPM in '75: +6.7. VORP in '75: +7.0.
NBA PRIME (310 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 27.9 pts, 14.7 reb, 5.1 ast, 2.6 stl, 0.6 blk, 5.8 tov @ -0.60% rts
PER 20.8, .143 WS/48 in 34.8 mpg
Avg BPM +4.1.
Cumulative VORP: +16.6.
His shooting efficiency is only OK, and turnovers are an issue. But his production is otherwise remarkable, and he shows signs of that "all-around game" (kinda like a bigger volume Draymond Green or something). Statistically, he's more than comparable to the crowd we're considering.
As career narrative and general legacy stuff:
*Was an ABA All-Star all three of those ABA years, NBA All-Star 3 of 4 years.
*Won two ABA titles alongside Mel Daniels ('72 and '73). 1 NBA finals appearance in '77, too.
*2-Time All-ABA 1st Team, 1-Time All-ABA 2nd Team.
*1-Time All-NBA 1st Team, 1-Time All-NBA 2nd Team.
*Was co-MVP of the ABA in '75, with prime (near-peak) Julius Erving; and did this alongside prime/peak Artis Gilmore and Dan Issel, too.
*Twice factored into NBA MVP voting (finishing as high as #5 in '76).
*#79 in RealGM RPoY shares.
Does he not deserve serious consideration at this point?
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
I know I asked this before, but does the fact that Stoudamire only played 1.5 seasons longer than Yao really more than make up for his inferior defense?
I think I would go with Joe Dumars at this point. Dumars is also versatile, played a big role on a major championship team, and has the defense to back it up.
I think I would go with Joe Dumars at this point. Dumars is also versatile, played a big role on a major championship team, and has the defense to back it up.
But do you know what they call a fool, who's full of himself and jumps into the path of death because it's cool?
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Amare also played a lot BETTER offensively than Yao. He was a dominant force on at least that side of the ball.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
trex_8063 wrote:Since I've name-dropped George McGinnis a couple times, figured I should maybe post a closer evaluation of him.....
Here are the year-by-year Per 100 and relative TS% numbers for his prime ('73-'79, 551 rs games), ABA where indicated:
'73: 28.8 pts, 13.0 reb, 2.6 ast, 2.0 stl, 5.1 tov @ +1.18% rts (ABA)
'74: 29.5 pts, 17.1 reb, 3.8 ast, 2.3 stl, 0.6 blk, 5.6 tov @ +0.88% rts (ABA)
'75: 33.7 pts, 16.1 reb, 7.1 ast, 2.9 stl, 0.8 blk, 6.0 tov @ -0.09% rts (ABA)
'76: 26.8 pts, 14.7 reb, 5.4 ast, 3.0 stl, 0.6 blk @ -2.15% rts
'77: 27.0 pts, 14.6 reb, 4.8 ast, 2.6 stl, 0.6 blk @ -0.75% rts
'78: 27.7 pts, 14.2 reb, 5.1 ast, 2.4 stl, 0.5 blk, 5.5 tov @ +0.65% rts
'79: 30.5 pts, 15.3 reb, 5.0 ast, 2.3 stl, 0.9 blk, 6.1 tov @ +0.32% rts
TOTAL PRIME:
Per 100 poss: 29.2 pts, 15.1 reb, 4.8 ast, 2.5 stl, 0.7 blk, 5.7 tov @ +0.04% rts
PER 21.9, .152 WS/48 in 37.4 mpg
Breakdown by league.....
ABA PRIME (241 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 30.7 pts, 15.4 reb, 4.5 ast, 2.4 stl, 0.7 blk, 5.6 tov @ +0.65% rts
PER 23.1, .162 WS/48 in 40.7 mpg
BPM in '74: +3.8. VORP in '74: +4.8
BPM in '75: +6.7. VORP in '75: +7.0.
NBA PRIME (310 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 27.9 pts, 14.7 reb, 5.1 ast, 2.6 stl, 0.6 blk, 5.8 tov @ -0.60% rts
PER 20.8, .143 WS/48 in 34.8 mpg
Avg BPM +4.1.
Cumulative VORP: +16.6.
His shooting efficiency is only OK, and turnovers are an issue. But his production is otherwise remarkable, and he shows signs of that "all-around game" (kinda like a bigger volume Draymond Green or something). Statistically, he's more than comparable to the crowd we're considering.
As career narrative and general legacy stuff:
*Was an ABA All-Star all three of those ABA years, NBA All-Star 3 of 4 years.
*Won two ABA titles alongside Mel Daniels ('72 and '73). 1 NBA finals appearance in '77, too.
*2-Time All-ABA 1st Team, 1-Time All-ABA 2nd Team.
*1-Time All-NBA 1st Team, 1-Time All-NBA 2nd Team.
*Was co-MVP of the ABA in '75, with prime (near-peak) Julius Erving; and did this alongside prime/peak Artis Gilmore and Dan Issel, too.
*Twice factored into NBA MVP voting (finishing as high as #5 in '76).
*#79 in RealGM RPoY shares.
Does he not deserve serious consideration at this point?
McGoo was a fun player and I always love ABA guys. He was superathletic and a powerhouse rebounder; but . . . not a really good defender or high BBIQ guy and 5.5 to 6.0 turnovers per 100 is a pretty significant problem comparing him to someone like Jerry Lucas or Amare Stoudamire. Compare him to contemporary Spencer Haywood even and Haywood looks like he has a (not huge) edge.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
penbeast0 wrote:trex_8063 wrote:Since I've name-dropped George McGinnis a couple times, figured I should maybe post a closer evaluation of him.....
Here are the year-by-year Per 100 and relative TS% numbers for his prime ('73-'79, 551 rs games), ABA where indicated:
'73: 28.8 pts, 13.0 reb, 2.6 ast, 2.0 stl, 5.1 tov @ +1.18% rts (ABA)
'74: 29.5 pts, 17.1 reb, 3.8 ast, 2.3 stl, 0.6 blk, 5.6 tov @ +0.88% rts (ABA)
'75: 33.7 pts, 16.1 reb, 7.1 ast, 2.9 stl, 0.8 blk, 6.0 tov @ -0.09% rts (ABA)
'76: 26.8 pts, 14.7 reb, 5.4 ast, 3.0 stl, 0.6 blk @ -2.15% rts
'77: 27.0 pts, 14.6 reb, 4.8 ast, 2.6 stl, 0.6 blk @ -0.75% rts
'78: 27.7 pts, 14.2 reb, 5.1 ast, 2.4 stl, 0.5 blk, 5.5 tov @ +0.65% rts
'79: 30.5 pts, 15.3 reb, 5.0 ast, 2.3 stl, 0.9 blk, 6.1 tov @ +0.32% rts
TOTAL PRIME:
Per 100 poss: 29.2 pts, 15.1 reb, 4.8 ast, 2.5 stl, 0.7 blk, 5.7 tov @ +0.04% rts
PER 21.9, .152 WS/48 in 37.4 mpg
Breakdown by league.....
ABA PRIME (241 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 30.7 pts, 15.4 reb, 4.5 ast, 2.4 stl, 0.7 blk, 5.6 tov @ +0.65% rts
PER 23.1, .162 WS/48 in 40.7 mpg
BPM in '74: +3.8. VORP in '74: +4.8
BPM in '75: +6.7. VORP in '75: +7.0.
NBA PRIME (310 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 27.9 pts, 14.7 reb, 5.1 ast, 2.6 stl, 0.6 blk, 5.8 tov @ -0.60% rts
PER 20.8, .143 WS/48 in 34.8 mpg
Avg BPM +4.1.
Cumulative VORP: +16.6.
His shooting efficiency is only OK, and turnovers are an issue. But his production is otherwise remarkable, and he shows signs of that "all-around game" (kinda like a bigger volume Draymond Green or something). Statistically, he's more than comparable to the crowd we're considering.
As career narrative and general legacy stuff:
*Was an ABA All-Star all three of those ABA years, NBA All-Star 3 of 4 years.
*Won two ABA titles alongside Mel Daniels ('72 and '73). 1 NBA finals appearance in '77, too.
*2-Time All-ABA 1st Team, 1-Time All-ABA 2nd Team.
*1-Time All-NBA 1st Team, 1-Time All-NBA 2nd Team.
*Was co-MVP of the ABA in '75, with prime (near-peak) Julius Erving; and did this alongside prime/peak Artis Gilmore and Dan Issel, too.
*Twice factored into NBA MVP voting (finishing as high as #5 in '76).
*#79 in RealGM RPoY shares.
Does he not deserve serious consideration at this point?
McGoo was a fun player and I always love ABA guys. He was superathletic and a powerhouse rebounder; but . . . not a really good defender or high BBIQ guy and 5.5 to 6.0 turnovers per 100 is a pretty significant problem comparing him to someone like Jerry Lucas or Amare Stoudamire. Compare him to contemporary Spencer Haywood even and Haywood looks like he has a (not huge) edge.
idk....
His ABA season aside, his biggest statistical years came for some fairly poor Sonics teams (biggest fish in a little pond, perhaps); whereas McGinnis was doing the above prime stuff primarily for very good teams. If we generously call '70-'76 Haywood's prime, that gives us a 7-year period to compare to McGinnis' 7-year prime.
Haywood Per 100 poss and rts% by year......
'70: 29.5 pts, 19.2 reb, 2.2 ast, 3.0 tov @ +3.94% rts (ABA)
'71: 24.1 pts, 14.0 reb, 1.7 ast @ +0.37% rts
'72: 26.3 pts, 12.7 reb, 2.0 ast @ +2.29% rts
'73: 30.1 pts, 13.3 reb, 2.6 ast @ +3.38% rts
'74: 25.2 pts, 14.4 reb, 3.4 ast, 0.9 stl, 1.5 blk @ -0.44% rts
'75: 27.4 pts, 11.3 reb, 2.5 ast, 1.0 stl, 1.9 blk @ +0.87% rts
'76: 24.7 pts, 14.0 reb, 1.5 ast, 0.8 stl, 1.3 blk @ -0.63% rts
TOTAL PRIME (488 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 26.5-27.0 pts, 14.0-14.5 reb, 2.3 ast, 0.9 stl, 1.6 blk, (3.0 tov in ABA-only) @ +1.76% rts
PER 21.2, .150 WS/48 in 40.7 mpg
NBA PRIME (404 rs games):
Per 100 poss: 26-26.5 pts, 13.4 reb, 2.3 ast, 0.9 stl, 1.6 blk @ +1.21% rts
PER 19.6, .134 WS/48 in 39.7 mpg
Both performed similarly in the playoffs (though McGinnis has a MUCH larger sample size----like more than 3x----again, due to being a major contributor on multiple good teams).
Haywood rates similarly in accolades and ranks slightly higher in MVP award shares, though is #104 in RealGM RPoY shares (vs. #79 for McGinnis).
Careers were almost identical in length.
So idk, I certainly don't see an edge for Haywood (except for peak, maybe).
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Vote: Bob Dandridge
I like his longevity as far as being an incredibly useful wing on strong teams. He gives teams a versatile, vigorous defender on the wing who will compete each night, and he provides solid offense. Smart passer. Shouldered decent scoring volume as well.
I like his longevity as far as being an incredibly useful wing on strong teams. He gives teams a versatile, vigorous defender on the wing who will compete each night, and he provides solid offense. Smart passer. Shouldered decent scoring volume as well.
Pay no mind to the battles you've won
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Open your heart and hands, my son
Or you'll never make it over the river
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 #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Vote: Bill Sharman
Prior reasoning below in spoiler
TL;DR version
So long as you think you need players to fulfill specific roles, in this instance mobile shooters to space the floor and defend the other team's guards, there's a degree to which it makes most sense comparing a player to peers at that position. Sharman was (I believe) by a long distance the best at his position in his time therefore I believe he added substantially to his team's title chances.
Any thoughts on this reasoning, does it make sense? Too crude? Too favourable to those with weak competition? Fine as a criterion but far from exhaustive (and era and position weakness concerns outweigh the positives)? Anyhow at this point obviously it's close but by this measure Sharman stands out from the pack.
Prior reasoning below in spoiler
Spoiler:
TL;DR version
So long as you think you need players to fulfill specific roles, in this instance mobile shooters to space the floor and defend the other team's guards, there's a degree to which it makes most sense comparing a player to peers at that position. Sharman was (I believe) by a long distance the best at his position in his time therefore I believe he added substantially to his team's title chances.
Any thoughts on this reasoning, does it make sense? Too crude? Too favourable to those with weak competition? Fine as a criterion but far from exhaustive (and era and position weakness concerns outweigh the positives)? Anyhow at this point obviously it's close but by this measure Sharman stands out from the pack.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Is Sharman clearly superior to Hornacek and Dumars? I don't see it except for accolades. I don't see him as a bad comp with them either but it's not by a long distance if at all.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
penbeast0 wrote:Is Sharman clearly superior to Hornacek and Dumars? I don't see it except for accolades. I don't see him as a bad comp with them either but it's not by a long distance if at all.
Otoh I'd say what stands out is a better defender than Hornacek and a better shooter than Dumars. But I might look properly into those comps.
But what I'm getting at is what I argued for Sharman for a while ago in the spoilered body of the post which is, Sharman was the best at his position in his time (and I'd suggest by quite a distance). As a result Sharman, versus gives your team above all others a significant edge in title probability. Hornacek and Dumars are good but how much did they distance themselves from the pack. Certainly the accolades aren't favourable on this score for whatever that's worth. Now composite numbers (WS, PER) do a horrible job of capturing Dumars' D and Hornacek looks pretty impressive by WS/48. Still if Jordan is the elite first place (and obviously a freaky outlier and an unfair comparison), then you're looking how far are they behind Drexler, behind Miller? Richmond arrived a bit later and had a short peak but how much of an advantage do you have on a team with him (or Rice when he played SG). How much better are you than a team with Hawkins or Majerle. Obviously the larger the league the more competitors so whilst I can throw out a few names there are going to be a lot of teams against whom Hornacek or Dumars give you a large edge (moreso in the late 80s when the position was, otoh, thinner).
Maybe his advantage over Carl Braun seems bigger because Sharman is historically remembered and Carl Braun isn't. Maybe it's weak competition. Maybe I'm justifying an era-position "adjustment" (implicitly, like some stats position adjust) because I'm a Sharman fan. Maybe I'm reading to much into his D based on limited info. Maybe the above is too dismissive of the edge Dumars and Hornacek gave their teams (fwiw, given all the Isiah raised up when his team needed it talk, it was Dumars, over the title years, for whom a large number of shots correlated strongly with the Pistons winning; and so as I say I'm not sure PER, WS, WARP do him justice, he'd be someone for whom +/- type numbers would be interesting). It just seems to me having Sharman gave his team quite an edge.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
- Quotatious
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Vote: Bill Sharman
Best shooter of his era, one of the first jumpshooters, sort of a prototypical Reggie Miller/Ray Allen, has a pretty good defensive reputation, as well. Efficient scorer for his era (usually about +5% above league average TS% throughout his career), looks like a pretty good playoff performer, too. Decent longevity, especially by 50s standards (much longer career and much better playoff performer than Neil Johnston, for example).
It's been a while since we had the last 50s player selected (Cousy at 71), and I think the gap between Sam Jones (selected at 68) and Sharman is already too big.
Best shooter of his era, one of the first jumpshooters, sort of a prototypical Reggie Miller/Ray Allen, has a pretty good defensive reputation, as well. Efficient scorer for his era (usually about +5% above league average TS% throughout his career), looks like a pretty good playoff performer, too. Decent longevity, especially by 50s standards (much longer career and much better playoff performer than Neil Johnston, for example).
It's been a while since we had the last 50s player selected (Cousy at 71), and I think the gap between Sam Jones (selected at 68) and Sharman is already too big.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Quotatious wrote:Vote: Bill Sharman
Best shooter of his era, one of the first jumpshooters, sort of a prototypical Reggie Miller/Ray Allen, has a pretty good defensive reputation, as well. Efficient scorer for his era (usually about +5% above league average TS% throughout his career), looks like a pretty good playoff performer, too. Decent longevity, especially by 50s standards (much longer career and much better playoff performer than Neil Johnston, for example).
It's been a while since we had the last 50s player selected (Cousy at 71), and I think the gap between Sam Jones (selected at 68) and Sharman is already too big.
Except for Neil Johnston at #96.

Since Sharman and Dandridge both have a couple votes, I feel I need to just pick a side (as we don't have the turnout at this point to avoid these two individuals being in the run-off). So I'm going to hop on the Bill Sharman bandwagon. I do want to see him voted in, anyway.
Excellent efficiency moderate volume scorer for a perennial contender, scrappy perimeter defender, and as has been mentioned: pretty decent longevity for the time period. While his size and athleticism might be increasingly problematic as moved forward in time (era portability blah blah), the 3pt line can only benefit his skill-set, so.....
Not necessarily my first pick, but content enough to support him at this spot.
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"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
- Clyde Frazier
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Vote for #97 - Bill Sharman
Was back and forth between johnston, lucas and sharman in the last thread, and didn't bother voting as johnston had it locked up. Work is still crazy for me right now, so i'd like to put a tentative vote in for sharman. If I have time later today to do a little more research, I may change my vote.
Impressed with his longevity as well as efficiency relative to his era. Scoring as efficiently as he did may have been even more difficult given the celtics' gameplan of getting up as many shots as possible. Solid and consistent contributor to multiple celtics championship teams. One of the more accomplished guards of his era with 7 all NBA selections and 5th and 6th place MVP finishes.
Was back and forth between johnston, lucas and sharman in the last thread, and didn't bother voting as johnston had it locked up. Work is still crazy for me right now, so i'd like to put a tentative vote in for sharman. If I have time later today to do a little more research, I may change my vote.
Impressed with his longevity as well as efficiency relative to his era. Scoring as efficiently as he did may have been even more difficult given the celtics' gameplan of getting up as many shots as possible. Solid and consistent contributor to multiple celtics championship teams. One of the more accomplished guards of his era with 7 all NBA selections and 5th and 6th place MVP finishes.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
So, with 2 hours left it's
Sharman 3
Dandridge 2
Sharman 3
Dandridge 2
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
penbeast0 wrote:So, with 2 hours left it's
Sharman 3
Dandridge 2
You may have missed my vote (it's bolded, but within a body of text), but I jumped on the Sharman bandwagon. So that makes 4 votes for Bill Sharman (me, Quotatious, Clyde, and Owly).
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
Either way, Sharman takes this spot. Notice how as we end, with so few voters left, we are reaching consensus more and having fewer runoffs?
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
I was too busy to participate during this vote. Seeing how many votes Shaman got I doubt I could have kept him out of the top 100 by voting.
I did not think a shooting specialist who did not shoot well belonged in a all time top 100 list even if he was the best shooter of his era.
People talk about players being bigger and faster in the current era than other eras but when I compare 2014 to say 1980 what stands out most to me about the current is how good the outside shooting has become. Players are a little bigger and faster than 1980 but the improvement in shooting is even more impressive.
I like the 1980s inside scoring skills better than I like the current inside scoring skills.
The 1980s were far more advanced than the 1950s and early 1960s despite expansion.
By current standards or by 1980s standards Sharman was not a good shooter. Is Sharnan really as good a small off guard as say World B Free, Byron Scott, Fred Brown, Vinnie Johnson, Mahmoud Abdul Rauf, Otis Birdsong, Jason Terry . Hersey Hawkins, Zj J Redick or Lou Williams?
Sharman has a 42.6 career FG%. He shot well for his era but so what. He has championship rings but so does Byron Scott.
Being the best in a weaker era does not impress me as much as it impressed some other people.
I did not think a shooting specialist who did not shoot well belonged in a all time top 100 list even if he was the best shooter of his era.
People talk about players being bigger and faster in the current era than other eras but when I compare 2014 to say 1980 what stands out most to me about the current is how good the outside shooting has become. Players are a little bigger and faster than 1980 but the improvement in shooting is even more impressive.
I like the 1980s inside scoring skills better than I like the current inside scoring skills.
The 1980s were far more advanced than the 1950s and early 1960s despite expansion.
By current standards or by 1980s standards Sharman was not a good shooter. Is Sharnan really as good a small off guard as say World B Free, Byron Scott, Fred Brown, Vinnie Johnson, Mahmoud Abdul Rauf, Otis Birdsong, Jason Terry . Hersey Hawkins, Zj J Redick or Lou Williams?
Sharman has a 42.6 career FG%. He shot well for his era but so what. He has championship rings but so does Byron Scott.
Being the best in a weaker era does not impress me as much as it impressed some other people.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #97 -- Only 4 spots left

Comments to rationalize bad contracts -
1) It's less than the MLE
2) He can be traded later
3) It's only __% of the cap
4) The cap is going up
5) It's only __ years
6) He's a good mentor/locker room guy
1) It's less than the MLE
2) He can be traded later
3) It's only __% of the cap
4) The cap is going up
5) It's only __ years
6) He's a good mentor/locker room guy