JordansBulls wrote:Joao Saraiva wrote:1st vote - Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
According to the formula I use KAJ is #1. (not in that thread since I haven't put it all there, because I'm updating as much as I can on my free time for the top 100 players project) viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1457603#start_here
Now, I understand the formula has some problems when ranking players below 1980 especially, but it goes a bit both ways: more RPG, higher pace, but I don't adjust ts% and it's not the most efficient era of the NBA.
KAJ has a tremendously extended prime, from 1970 to 1986.
That's 17 seasons of great produtction. If you think about it, MJ has 11 full seasons of those. (one injured in Chicago and in 95 he didn't play the entire season)
KAJ is the leading scorer in the history of the NBA and many people know him as a scorer, but he's way more than that.
Excellent passer when doubled in the post, very good passer in transition (he didn't have to look for a short pass for the PG, he could initiate transition with his own passes, and long ones - if you think about it that's really useful for a guy that got so many defensive rebounds over his career and played on teams that liked to run like showtime lakers).
Very good help defender and shot blocker.
He covers more ground than the traditional C. I'm not talking about KG levels here, but he sure was good at it. In the last thread we saw a lot of votes that way.
Basically he had very good impact on both ends of the court during a long long time.
I see his peak and prime a little lower than MJ's and LeBron's, but not by large margins. And so far LeBron has had great seasons since 2006 (12 great seasons) but I still need a bit more from him to overtake KAJ (at least 14/15 seasons of LBJ's prime).
KAJ also proved himself as both a floor raiser and as a guy who could play his role on high ceiling teams (both as the man and later as a 2nd best).
He won 6 MVPs (most in NBA history), he won 6 rings, 2 finals MVPs, and I think he was clearly the man in 3 of his rings, co-best player in another and a very important complementary piece in his last two.
What separates KAJ from Bill Russell? (since I think he will be the other main candidate along LeBron and I've already discussed LBJ)
- Floor raising. I don't believe you can put a bad cast with Russell and have nearly the same success as you can have with KAJ. Of course I'm not talking about championships with garbage casts, but I think the average cast KAJ needs to contend is much lower than the one from Russell; (I see a good case for LeBron here)
- Offensive impact. Sure Russell has the edge on D, but I don't feel it's gigantic. Clear one. On the other end of the floor, I think Russell doesn't even belong in the same page as KAJ. I can understand the defensive argument for Russell against players who don't come near him in defensive impact like Magic or Bird, but not against KAJ; (I see a good case for LeBron here)
- Longevity. I can even see someone discussing peak and prime for Russell (I don't see it, I think KAJ is definitely above - and prime is if you define it as 5 years or something). However, longevity goes a long way for KAJ. He has more prime seasons than the entire Russell career. (I still think it's too much for LBJ to overtake).
2nd vote - LeBron James
I don't think it is about seasons it is what you do in those seasons especially when you have legit championship squads. For most of his prime the teams underachieved from 1975-1979 (Except maybe 1977) missing the playoffs twice in his prime in a divided league when you had a one man show who led a team to the title one of those years and very poor to average teams won it all in 1978 and 1979. Playing longer doesn't do it for me unless the player is collecting MVP's, Titles, etc as the best player on the squad especially when the player that played less won as much or more as the clear cut and has as many accolades as well if not more.Spoiler:
Sorry can't understand the comparison with football, I don't follow football.
The sports I watch the most are basketball, soccer (the real football xD), and cycling. I also like 5x5 soccer, but don't follow it as much.
However I look at it as adding value. For example, if KAJ is worth in his prime 0.9 of MJ's prime, longevity then covers up that 0.1 difference easily.
Prime for prime (5 years prime) I still have MJ ahead.
Prime for prime, given the margin is not that big, KAJ overtakes that difference.
I see a contending team with KAJ having a much bigger window to win it all than with MJ. So if some bad luck strikes, if in some years there is a better team, KAJ still has more time to cover all that up. Maybe it doesn't make sense to you, but that's how I see it.
























