Okay, so my vote is being casted for
LeBron James.
Frankly, I think that he's got a really good case for GOAT, but I haven't had much time to vote.
Looking at LeBron's career, he's been a wonderful player for quite some time now. He's had a bunch of seasons in contention for GOAT peak (2009 and 2013 being two of the more popular ones). His 2009 and 2010 regular seasons are arguably the two greatest carry jobs we've
ever seen in the regular season, and he's had some playoff runs (the past 2 years, 2009's non-finals run) that are straddling the GOAT tier, and a whole heap of others that aren't very far off at all.
He's exceeded 7.3 BPM in every playoff year he's had, and he's exceeded 10 BPM in 9 playoff seasons. His raw playoff production is consistently remarkable, save for a couple of bad series (e.g. Miami 2011). LeBron's by far the leader in playoff VORP, 3rd in PER (behind MJ and Mikan) and the leader in Win Shares. He's got some
ridiculous playoff consistency, probably exceeded only by MJ in this regard. His regular season career is arguably
better than MJ's thus far due to longevity. Quite frankly, I think that LeBron's combination of regular season + playoff career is extremely comparable to MJ's already.
LeBron has been either the best player in the league (in years like 2009, 2013, it's not even arguable), or in very legitimate contention (e.g. vs Stephen Curry for the past couple of seasons), for almost a decade now - his "#1 in the league contention" run is absolutely absurd. Only MJ and Kareem can really make the same sort of "truly elite" longevity claim that LeBron can, and they've both been voted in already.
One of the criticisms of LeBron is that he tends to marginalise other stars, or that his teams fall apart without him on the court.
The thing is... LeBron is so good, that it's almost nonsensical to run the team through anybody that isn't LeBron. Miami didn't lose a beat with Dwyane Wade starting to face injury/playing worse in general beyond 2011, and it's partially because Wade's game morphed towards a more slash-heavy game, giving LeBron further primacy. In fact... when LeBron left Miami, Wade/Bosh's efficiency actually plummeted!
He might marginalise other stars to an extent (e.g. Kevin Love isn't going to be the same interior force, obviously) but LeBron, who is arguably the best dribble drive playmaker of all time (and a wonderful interior finisher) is almost uniformly the best option to occupy the interior on a team, so it makes sense that guys like Kevin Love aren't going to be scoring at the same rate.
In fact, LeBron is not only the best floor raiser of all time (his 2009/2010 seasons were ridiculous) but he also tends to produce ridiculous top-level team offences in the playoffs. The past 7 or so years, LeBron has been at the forefront of some of the best playoff offences ever. And it shows me that for all the talk of LeBron "marginalising" other stars, he's
incredible at enhancing the effects of role players. And really, LeBron has shown that not only can he bring a ragtag bunch of misfits to 60+ wins, but that when he's paired with other stars the past 7 years (and that's used a bit loosely too - guys like 2014 Wade hardly constituted "superstars" anymore), he has literally been in the finals
every single year. Eastern conference or not, that's an amazing feat. Whether or not a team chooses to supply the team with other stars, 3 point shooters, defensive role players etc, it's actually not that hard to create a finals/championship level team around LeBron. His effect on championship odds is incredible, and that's why he's actually my pick for GOAT, and why he wins my vote in this thread.
Number 2 - Tim Duncan.
In regards to other players in contention, I don't know how I feel about Wilt just now. He seems like he was capable of doing
anything on the court whenever he felt like it, but I don't know how much he actually improved championship odds throughout his career. Would love to read a bit more on Wilt advocates.
Not that high on Russell, honestly - I don't see why a guy like Tim Duncan or Hakeem Olajuwon (rim protectors in the 3 point era) wouldn't have been able to achieve exceptional defensive results coupled with very impressive offensive results too with the absence of the 3 point line. I'm obviously really impressed with Russell's D, but I don't know if there's the same impact gap on defence between Russell and these guys as there is on offence.
I'm struggling a bit on how to tackle longevity for older players vs younger players - I'm of the current belief that the health advancements of the modern era mean that these guys are able to play for longer, but with a less congested league in the 60s, it's easier for players to be, say, top 5 players for long periods back then. Although the 60s may have been just as competitive as the modern era (i.e. the quality of the average player might be very similar to the quality today), I wonder if the much smaller pool of players meant that there are simply less "good players" to be compared against back then, so the top guys tend to be the same group of guys. A bit hard to explain, but think about this - if a guy in the 60s dropped to 80% of his "peak" level, there probably aren't as many players overtaking him ranking wise as, say, a guy in the modern era dropping to 80% of his peak. Hopefully one of the more literate guys here understands what I mean and can help explain this a bit better
