ardee wrote:scrabbarista wrote:We did it! The Top Eleven are the right eleven players!
Indeed we did.
The great injustice of 2014 has been avenged in the last thread.
Cut it out, both of you. trex
Moderators: Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal

ardee wrote:scrabbarista wrote:We did it! The Top Eleven are the right eleven players!
Indeed we did.
The great injustice of 2014 has been avenged in the last thread.

Pablo Novi wrote:
MY VOTE:
Karl Malone (GOAT #2 PF)
Dr J (GOAT #2 SF)
Big "O" (GOAT #2 PG)
Jerry West, Bird, Pettit, Cousy (in this order. GOAT #3s at their respective positions)
.
trex_8063 wrote:Pablo Novi wrote:
MY VOTE:
Karl Malone (GOAT #2 PF)
Dr J (GOAT #2 SF)
Big "O" (GOAT #2 PG)
Jerry West, Bird, Pettit, Cousy (in this order. GOAT #3s at their respective positions)
.
Can't tell if I'm to interpret this as Karl Malone is your first vote and Dr J is your second, or if you're simply listing multiple candidates you're considering. As per previous instructions, please label your picks clearly (e.g. "1st vote: XXXX, 2nd vote: XXXX") as well as bolding them within large posts.
Winsome Gerbil wrote:It remains difficult to convince me that:
A)
This player:
Garnett: 25626pts 14201reb 5306ast 18.6pts 10.3reb 3.9ast .546TS% 22.7PER 191.4WS .185WS/48 9xAllNBA 1xMVP
Is greater than this player:
Mailman: 36928pts 14968reb 5248ast 25.0pts 10.1reb 3.6ast .577TS% 23.9PER 234.6WS .205WS/48 14xAllNBA 2xMVP
VERY difficult. You have to believe in an almost magical level of defense with a fervor rarely seen.
It's not even like KG can cleanly play the playoffs card to make up the gap:
Garnett: 18.2pts 10.7reb 3.2ast .525TS% 21.1PER 16.4WS .149WS/48
Mailman: 24.7pts 10.7reb 3.2ast .526TS% 21.1PER 23.0WS .140WS/48
You can find a stat here or a stat there, but without becoming intentionally myopic you have to really bear down in the face of one of the truly massive careers the NBA has produced. Saying a PF is better than Karl "Mailman" Malone, Dream Teamer, 2nd leading scorer and 7th leading rebounder in NBA history, one half of the most famous pick and roll combination in league history, and a player nearly universally considered the greatest of all time at his position before Tim Duncan, who was half a center anyway, came along....well making that statement should require more than finding this statistical corner or that, especially in the face of a massive productivity gap. Mailman was a very important figure, and would likely have appeared even moreso had he not played in the era of Jordan (for instance 5 times he was the scoring champion runnerup to Jordan, he finished 2nd to him in MVP voting in Jordan's final year, and twice he made the Finals, and lost both times to MJ).
Winsome Gerbil wrote:...
Sakay wrote:Winsome Gerbil wrote:...
Considering defense is KG's argument over Malone and KG isn't that far off vs Malone when it comes to overall offense. How do you value Malone's with KG's massive gap in defense?
Pablo Novi wrote:mdonnelly1989 wrote:VOTE #1. Oscar Robertson
I sometimes feel like Oscar Robertson get's really downplayed because of ERA and Pacing. I'm not saying that is isn't a reason to take him over Magic as I would take Magic of all time but there is a discussion to be had that The Big O was better than Magic during their primes.
At the end of the day we will never truly know how great O was because of such the distance of ERA.
Vote #2. Jerry West
The Logo was considered one of the greatest shooters of his generation, average 25+ and 9 assists during his prime and on all time level defense.
I agree - the Big "O" was about as good a PG as was Magic. (He averaged a triple-double over the first FIVE years of his career.
I also agree about Jerry West - he was the original Curry - virtually unlimited range (if they'd have had the 3-point shot back then!). Back then we all knew about his defensive prowess. He certainly earned his nickname, "Mr Clutch".
Here's a sample from my Reg. Seas. GOAT list. Col. 1 is their Over-All GOAT rank (based on their "Points", in Col 2. Those "Points" are based on their number of selections to ALL-League 1st-Teams, 2nd-Teams, etc. A player gets 5 "Points" for each 1st-Team selection; 3 "Points" for each 2nd-Team selection.
My basic criteria for my GOAT rankings is based on the NUMBER of Great Years each player had. All these guys had at least 10 such Great Years.
..8 ! 55.. ! 3 ! West, Jerry ............ !! 2
..9 ! 54.. ! 2 ! Erving, Julius .......... !! 3
10 ! 51.. ! 1 ! Robertson, Oscar ...... !! 1
11 ! 50.. ! 2 ! Johnson, Magic ......... !! 1
Winsome Gerbil wrote:It remains difficult to convince me that:
A)
This player:
Garnett: 25626pts 14201reb 5306ast 18.6pts 10.3reb 3.9ast .546TS% 22.7PER 191.4WS .185WS/48 9xAllNBA 1xMVP
Is greater than this player:
Mailman: 36928pts 14968reb 5248ast 25.0pts 10.1reb 3.6ast .577TS% 23.9PER 234.6WS .205WS/48 14xAllNBA 2xMVP
VERY difficult. You have to believe in an almost magical level of defense with a fervor rarely seen.
It's not even like KG can cleanly play the playoffs card to make up the gap:
Garnett: 18.2pts 10.7reb 3.2ast .525TS% 21.1PER 16.4WS .149WS/48
Mailman: 24.7pts 10.7reb 3.2ast .526TS% 21.1PER 23.0WS .140WS/48
You can find a stat here or a stat there, but without becoming intentionally myopic you have to really bear down in the face of one of the truly massive careers the NBA has produced. Saying a PF is better than Karl "Mailman" Malone, Dream Teamer, 2nd leading scorer and 7th leading rebounder in NBA history, one half of the most famous pick and roll combination in league history, and a player nearly universally considered the greatest of all time at his position before Tim Duncan, who was half a center anyway, came along....well making that statement should require more than finding this statistical corner or that, especially in the face of a massive productivity gap. Mailman was a very important figure, and would likely have appeared even moreso had he not played in the era of Jordan (for instance 5 times he was the scoring champion runnerup to Jordan, he finished 2nd to him in MVP voting in Jordan's final year, and twice he made the Finals, and lost both times to MJ).

Winsome Gerbil wrote:It remains difficult to convince me that:
A)
This player:
Garnett: 25626pts 14201reb 5306ast 18.6pts 10.3reb 3.9ast .546TS% 22.7PER 191.4WS .185WS/48 9xAllNBA 1xMVP
Is greater than this player:
Mailman: 36928pts 14968reb 5248ast 25.0pts 10.1reb 3.6ast .577TS% 23.9PER 234.6WS .205WS/48 14xAllNBA 2xMVP
VERY difficult. You have to believe in an almost magical level of defense with a fervor rarely seen.
It's not even like KG can cleanly play the playoffs card to make up the gap:
Garnett: 18.2pts 10.7reb 3.2ast .525TS% 21.1PER 16.4WS .149WS/48
Mailman: 24.7pts 10.7reb 3.2ast .526TS% 21.1PER 23.0WS .140WS/48
You can find a stat here or a stat there, but without becoming intentionally myopic you have to really bear down in the face of one of the truly massive careers the NBA has produced. Saying a PF is better than Karl "Mailman" Malone, Dream Teamer, 2nd leading scorer and 7th leading rebounder in NBA history, one half of the most famous pick and roll combination in league history, and a player nearly universally considered the greatest of all time at his position before Tim Duncan, who was half a center anyway, came along....well making that statement should require more than finding this statistical corner or that, especially in the face of a massive productivity gap. Mailman was a very important figure, and would likely have appeared even moreso had he not played in the era of Jordan (for instance 5 times he was the scoring champion runnerup to Jordan, he finished 2nd to him in MVP voting in Jordan's final year, and twice he made the Finals, and lost both times to MJ).
Doctor MJ wrote:
Hmm, so some things:
1) You're using career totals to argue for Malone at spot #12. If this is how you think of the game, he should be MUCH higher than this.
I'm not even saying it's crazy to think like that. People in baseball take career totals very, very seriously. I won't claim the reasons for that are a mystery, but sufficed to say, there's plenty of precedent for using a career-total. And if you evaluate career favoring longevity to the point that you give no extra weight for prime arc, and view accomplishment largely through production stats, then I certainly expect you to have Malone over Garnett, along with most of the guys already voted in.
2) Magical level of defense. I mean, it's half the game, and Garnett is obviously on a completely different tier from Malone there. It should be no mystery why that would let one somewhat weaker scorer with plenty of other offensive advantages surpass the other guy.
3) Your last paragraph. It's beautifully written, and I mean that sincerely.
But as an argument grounded in nostalgia conjuring romance in an analytical exercise, and an argument that piggy backed off of base level stats more typically discussed in earlier eras, it to me explains our differences in opinions based on you letting certain emotions guide your reasoning more than I do.
I apologize if that's offensive. I could certainly be wrong, and even if I"m right, I don't think it's much of a sin to have basketball in your heart.


andrewww wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
Hmm, so some things:
1) You're using career totals to argue for Malone at spot #12. If this is how you think of the game, he should be MUCH higher than this.
I'm not even saying it's crazy to think like that. People in baseball take career totals very, very seriously. I won't claim the reasons for that are a mystery, but sufficed to say, there's plenty of precedent for using a career-total. And if you evaluate career favoring longevity to the point that you give no extra weight for prime arc, and view accomplishment largely through production stats, then I certainly expect you to have Malone over Garnett, along with most of the guys already voted in.
2) Magical level of defense. I mean, it's half the game, and Garnett is obviously on a completely different tier from Malone there. It should be no mystery why that would let one somewhat weaker scorer with plenty of other offensive advantages surpass the other guy.
3) Your last paragraph. It's beautifully written, and I mean that sincerely.
But as an argument grounded in nostalgia conjuring romance in an analytical exercise, and an argument that piggy backed off of base level stats more typically discussed in earlier eras, it to me explains our differences in opinions based on you letting certain emotions guide your reasoning more than I do.
I apologize if that's offensive. I could certainly be wrong, and even if I"m right, I don't think it's much of a sin to have basketball in your heart.
I dont think hes just looking at career totals or overall body of work. I think hes doing so within the context of this "next tier" of players.
I also dont think KG is on a "different tier" than Karl Malone on defense. Mailman was no slouch on that end either, and his defense on Duncan in particular in the 2004 WCF even at his advanced age should go a long way in disproving that KG was on a different level.