Well, all I can do is apply my votes where I think they're deserved. So once again:
Vote: Wilt
Alternate: MagicRather than repeat what I and others have said for several threads in favor of Wilt, I'll summarize my reasoning for why I have him over some of the other candidates.
vs Shaq -- Wilt was the far more consistent and productive performer. Shaq played more seasons but missed many games, and Wilt has significantly more minutes played. Shaq was at his dominating best in 2001, but he took a while to get to that point and faded significantly after leaving the Lakers in 2004. Those who prefer Shaq over Wilt seem to apply his peak 2001 level across his career, which wasn't the case, and discount Wilt's sustained productivity from start to finish.
vs Magic -- Wilt was so dominating offensively, but it's essentially a tossup at that end because Magic was also so impactful offensively. Defense is a clear win for Wilt. I give Magic an edge in leadership/winning/intangibles, though I don't view that all as Magic=good, Wilt=bad as some people appear to. Overall, they're close but I give the edge to Wilt, which is why my vote is what it is.
vs. Bird -- I give Magic the edge over Bird due to overall titles and H2H titles and considering that both were on all-time great teams. Therefore, using transitive reasoning to simplify my ranking process, since Wilt > Magic and Magic > Bird, Wilt > Bird.
vs Hakeem -- Both had the misfortune of playing at the same time as all-time dynasties (a combo of Lakers/Celts, Pistons, and Bulls for Hakeem), so they're kindred spirits in that regard. Stylistically, I like Hakeem's game better, but Wilt was more dominating offensively while both were elite defensively. Hakeem's career had far less drama, so an edge for him there. I want to like Hakeem more, but every time I look at the numbers, Wilt wins out -- not just raw stats, but win shares, times leading the league in various categories, number of MVPs, and so on.
vs David Robinson -- Robinson is another great player, but to me, he's not in the same tier. From what I can tell, he's a darling of advanced analytics, but that overlooks that a) the level of stats recorded in Wilt's day was basic; and b) the basic stats are all in Wilt's favor, and I'm talking more about relative to the competition of the day than in Wilt stats vs Robinson stats. Four MVPs vs one MVP should count for something.
vs KG -- Some things are simpler than others for me. I love KG, and he's my favorite defensive player of this millennium. Fantastic defensive intelligence, intensity, and attitude, maybe second to only Russell. The thing is, Wilt was a great defender too, and he's significantly superior to KG in almost everything else (KG was a better perimeter shooter and FT shooter). I don't understand the argument in favor of KG over Wilt.
vs Dirk -- again, I don't understand this argument. Dirk is a better shooter, is a no-drama guy like Hakeem, and... that's it. He has a perceived advantage in longevity, but that's illusory because their total minutes are almost the same, and Dirk's pile of points accumulated over the years is tremendous, but he's still behind Wilt. Dirk is an excellent shooter and scorer who has hardly ever led the league in anything. He came close to averaging double-digit rebounds a few times but never did. Not exactly the swiftest of foot or most motivated on defense. I like Dirk, he's a lock for the Hall of Fame, but he doesn't come close to stacking up against Wilt. Why am I having to beat up poor Dirk?
The biggest issue is that I see arguments against Wilt that aren't applied equally. MJ scored at a higher rate adjusted for pace, but he's the GOAT while Wilt's scoring is somehow an argument against him, that he was selfish and a stat padder. Wilt wasn't a winner because he always lost to Russell's Celtics, but LeBron losing five of eight finals is brushed aside and even an argument in his favor, leading overmatched teammates valiantly against vastly superior opponents. Wilt's era was garbage so nothing that happened then counts, but Kareem is ranked number 2 despite playing in the watered down expansion 70s and Russell is ranked number 4 despite playing in largely the same era as Wilt.
Here's the Leaderboard section of Wilt's basketball-reference.com page:
All those items in
bold represent times he led the league in that category for that season. Not just raw numbers inflated for pace, but in comparison to his contemporaries.
Compare that to, say, Shaq:
Very nice, though it doesn't stack up to Wilt. Then look a little closer and realize that
Shaq's page includes 19 categories that aren't available for Wilt -- weekly awards, monthly awards, offensive rebounds, defensive rebounds, blocks, turnovers, personal fouls, blocks per game, offensive rebound percentage, defensive rebound percentage, block percentage, turnover percentage, usage rate, offensive rating, defensive rating, BPM, OBPM, DBPM, and VORP. I'd say Wilt would show up on many of those lists.
In summary, it's Wilt.
If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention.