Winsome Gerbil wrote:2) MJ was the ultimate winner. Once he hit his prime, He NEVER lost,
Correction: once Pippen and Grant/(Rodman) got to their primes, he never lost. Declaring he wasn't actually in his prime until '91 seems a rather convenient arbitration put in place for no other reason than to be able to state this narrative. Personally, I have a hard time calling a season of 37.1 ppg/5.2 rpg/4.6 apg with 2.9 spg and 1.5 bpg (2nd to only peak Magic in MVP vote, fwiw) a NON-prime season. Likewise a 35.0/5.5/5.9 season while also winning DPOY (and MVP) a NON-prime season.
Fact is: MJ multiple times fell WELL short of a title
in his prime. No one gets it done without a lot of help, even the best in the world (which he was).
Unless this is one of those arguments that says the only years that "count" are the years in the finals because it hinges on the backward logic that doing worse is better (i.e. getting eliminated short of the finals is better than making it to the finals and losing----even if the only reason they got to the finals was due to amazing play in earlier rounds by player in question).
Winsome Gerbil wrote:4) there's basically no statistical measure you can find to justify flying in the face of the historical dominance and ranking. If you're going to try to gerrymander Jordan off his perch, you damn well better find SOMETHING he failed at. Some measure by which he was less dominant than LeBron.....
Come on, you know this isn't true. You can declare PER and WS/48 to be the end-all be-all of statistical measures, but that doesn't make it so. One could just as arbitrarily put all their stock in metrics like BPM (and the associated VORP). For certain circumstantial numbers, we could compare them in average performances in elimination games, or avg performance in elimination + close-out games (where Lebron holds a small but clear edge). Could look at cumulative playoff WS, etc.
With Kareem it's a somewhat different tack. His argument obviously hinges more on longevity, which I know you and I will never see eye to eye on meaningful longevity......
EDIT: And Elgee did previously itt cite multiple examples of "failed" playoff performances (by MJ).
Winsome Gerbil wrote:There's just basically no argument to be made besides this guy or that played into old manhood. But even there, isn't the old saw that the point of playing is to win titles?
idk, is it?
I don't personally feel that's the only achievement that matters. And fwiw, you're on record multiple times lauding volume stats (regardless of the team result or scaleability of imapct) in other threads.
But where titles are concerned: again, no one does it without a lot of help. So Kareem is clearly not the best player for his last two titles.....but does Magic win it in '87 if instead of '87 Kareem he's only got Greg Kite? I would wager no, that they do not get by the Celtics. Kareem's contributions at that stage of his career are still important. Being a major contributing factor on a title team is still fairly important, imo. I don't buy at all into any implication that if you're not Batman or Robin, you're no one.
"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