Pablo Novi wrote:other “Black Liberation” Movement leaders
United Slaves?
Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ
Pablo Novi wrote:other “Black Liberation” Movement leaders
Fundamentals21 wrote:Well, thought I’d post something for Nash since he strangely slipped out of real discussion.
List of Team offenses by B-R
2002: #1
2003: #1
2004: #1
2005: #1
2006: #2
2007: #1
2008: #2
2009: #2
2010: #1
2011: #9
2012: #9
Doesn’t unravel until his supporting casts get bad in ‘11. That and he finally slipped some on his overall attacking prowess, but at any rate was thought of as an offensive great. BTW, 05, 07 and 10 O Rating are off the charts and Top 10 all time type level.
Various shifts in career:
So 02-04 he’s not Steve Nash the MVP yet. He’s more of an all NBA 3rd team type of player. Nellie ball, etc. 03 Mavs were a strong title contender. Limited offensive freedom during this era and I suppose Nellie was no Nash believer - which sucks. Nash may already have been at a level to impact the O on a much higher level.
05-07 - Peak Nash. He’s a strong MVP candidate every year. Competition is good too. Shaq, LeBron, Kobe, Dirk, KG, are all having good to great years. Winning twice in this era is something special. Lost in the playoffs to injury and suspension out of his control (07 Suspensions, 06 Amare out for year, 05 Joe Johnson). He’s been thought of in a context that basically is only worthy of candidates much higher than ~Top 25 all time.
08-09 - Steve Kerr basically does some weird moves. Should’ve stuck to coaching. Dinosaur Shaq for Marion. Terry Porter, etc. By the way, Dinosaur Shaq had a good year on O with Nash, made the all star team etc. That being said lack of team success caused a drop off in Nash’s overall perception. Otherwise Nash is still Top player offensively in all O-Rating/+/- type studies.
2010 - Made a run for it, but lacked a little something. Another Top 5 year.
2011 - 2012 - Graceful decline type seasons. He was still easily All NBA material. Often had mediocre casts, etc.
2013 - Laker fiasco. How did people feel about Nash in the 50 games or so he did play with the Lakers?
Overall I am thinking you have 3 MVP type seasons, 5 All NBA type seasons, 2 Top 10 type seasons. This is pretty strong value in my eyes. His MVP award shares rank ahead of Chris Paul and Steph Curry. He beats guys to MVP’s that are significantly ahead of him all time. Peak, prime, etc. are all stellar and he has just enough seasons to have a good argument for the ~Top 21 spot.
Defense - +/- has him at +.3 in a 10 year study from 02-11. Basically he’s neutral. Why would that be the case? Teams don’t hurt with him on the floor because they can successfully hide him. So in spite of Nash’s lack of individual tools, etc. he appears to not hurt his teams as much as is believed. Looking at team construction Amare’s bad defense at the PF position would hurt the Suns more. This is why the Suns best team is in 07 with Kurt Thomas to complement Amare - there is finally a man that can body up Duncan. Otherwise, you’re in for a significant disadvantage due to Amare’s mediocre defense and rebounding. Nash’s lack of defense hurts his team as much as Tony Parker does to the Spurs in your average year - this can be covered without giving your coaching staff real trouble.
Team Construction - 06 is a great example of how Nash can do more with less. With Amare out, this team was not supposed to be nearly as great as it was. This team went on to win an unexpected 54 Games with Tim Thomas, Boris Diaw, Raja Bell, James Jones, Eddie House. Barbosa, Kurt Thomas etc. both miss significant playing time and yet Nash practically wills this team throughout the year and then the playoffs against both LA teams before finally losing in the WCF to Dallas. You can generally round off solid roleplayers across the league (some injury prone) and create a strong team. Proven this repeatedly. The only criticism is in 09 when he was once more asked to change his style for a new gameplan - oh yes, Terry Porter. Suns did fine anyway on offense, but it takes a significant amount to undo a team where Nash has free reign as your MVP. Amare slips without Nash. Marion slips without Nash. Players are resurrected with Nash. It’s no coincidence.
Eye test/General Thoughts -
- Combined spontaneous dribble creation with All Time Great shooting comparable to Reggie Miller, etc. makes it deadly. Only Curry has been able to emulate this offensive impact and we all see what’s happening on a stacked team. This is an incredibly rare skill combination.
- Don’t just list the assist stats because his passing is genuinely on another level from all other PG’s listed. His ability to run circles around the defense and consistently find the best look is unmatched. It is spontaneous and in being so extremely, extremely, difficult to game plan. This is what makes Nash deadly. He is mentally more agile than the rest of the league and his spatial awareness is truly GOAT - worthy.
- Scoring uptick. This can be expected from Nash when necessary. He has proven in the playoffs he can take it up to ~ 30 a game as necessary - see 05 vs Mavs
- Pretty much guaranteed Top O. At first it was Dirk who was at a Top 10 level, but then he pulled off something unimaginable with Marion, Diaw and injury ridden no depth type team.
- Bad Luck is pretty much only reason why he didn’t win a title. And this bad luck was completely out of his control - 03 Dirk injury, 05 Joe Johnson, 06- Amare, 07 - Suspensions. Literally something stood in the way every. Single. Time. You can even argue Nash as best player in playoffs in 07 the way he withstands the Spurs dirty tactics/hip check, etc. and still delivers stunning performances.
- PnR Magician. He can barrage ANY team with this all day. See Amare vs Spurs 05. He dropped 37 PPG on Duncan. It was the most frustrating thing to see as a SA guy.
Sooo basically we need more Nash talk but it really should’ve started at ~19 when Barkley was being discussed. Nash’s only weakness is easily hidden by any decent coach.
Doctor MJ wrote:JoeMalburg wrote:mischievous wrote:This being the best among peers reasoning doesn't make sense when your competition is pretty nonexistent. If i go to the basketball court in my town and dominate some 14 year olds at a level never seen before does that make me some sort of legend?
That example is hyperbolic but the point should be taken.
There is a huge difference which renders the point moot. There weren't better collections of basketball talent anywhere in the country than the competition George faced. You could find better comp than a group of 14 year olds in one small town.
While I don't disagree with the statement, now would be a good time for people to look up Bob Kurland.
http://www.hoophall.com/hall-of-famers/bob-kurland/
Basically these were the two top players from 1940s college ball (Kurland's team won 2 national championships, Mikan's none, and they played once for the title, Mikan went pro, Kurland instead played for the Phillips 66 Oilers, basically playing for his company's team, and his company undoubtedly giving him some cushy benefits.
Here's another article in which Kurland talkes about playing against Mikan:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1982/12/09/kurland-mikan-the-start-of-something-big/0b192110-3ed3-41e1-86c2-0da98df67e2d/?utm_term=.7ec02382a638
So yeah, in addition to the players of the day being amateurs, many top talents undoubtedly never even playing the game, and Mikan not playing very long, the other guy we know of who was considered a talent up with MIkan chose to play in a different league.
twolves97 wrote:Also Mikan should NOT go here or anywhere in the 20s. Era usually isn't a huge deal for me but the weakness of Mikan's era really shouldn't be overlooked. I just don't think he was a good basketball player. I don't think he could play D-1 basketball today. I think I'm probably a better player than he was and my best scholarship offer was from Chicago State (I didn't go there I go to Duke University go Blue Devils). I don't think that about Russell or even Petit and I just don't feel like pioneer points put him over the likes of Ewing, Curry, Nash and others being discussed here. The game outgrew him by the time he was 30. He attempted a comeback at age 31 wasn't very good and then retired again.
dhsilv2 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:JoeMalburg wrote:
There is a huge difference which renders the point moot. There weren't better collections of basketball talent anywhere in the country than the competition George faced. You could find better comp than a group of 14 year olds in one small town.
While I don't disagree with the statement, now would be a good time for people to look up Bob Kurland.
http://www.hoophall.com/hall-of-famers/bob-kurland/
Basically these were the two top players from 1940s college ball (Kurland's team won 2 national championships, Mikan's none, and they played once for the title, Mikan went pro, Kurland instead played for the Phillips 66 Oilers, basically playing for his company's team, and his company undoubtedly giving him some cushy benefits.
Here's another article in which Kurland talkes about playing against Mikan:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1982/12/09/kurland-mikan-the-start-of-something-big/0b192110-3ed3-41e1-86c2-0da98df67e2d/?utm_term=.7ec02382a638
So yeah, in addition to the players of the day being amateurs, many top talents undoubtedly never even playing the game, and Mikan not playing very long, the other guy we know of who was considered a talent up with MIkan chose to play in a different league.
I don't know if we have as many extremes, but into the 60's we had professional level players choosing to go into professional work instead of going into the league, reducing the talent of benches, and possibly we had a decent number of potential all-stars that just needed a few more years that just never happened. It seems both accurate and wrong to penalize a player for being the best of the best professional basketball players and I'm not sure when we can officially say "95% of the best college players went pro".
I think to a degree we have to value what peopel did against their peers, but I think the size of the league should be reflected in the voting (3x players played in the 90's, 2-3x more players from the 90's should make a top 100 than say the 60's).
Doctor MJ wrote:euroleague wrote:Baylor in 1961: 35ppg 20rpg
Pettit in 1961: 28/20
Apologies up front for chopping other stuff out. I don't want to pretend this is all of euroleague's argument, but clearly it in and of itself was presented as if it was an argument. Baylor scoring a bunch more than Pettit.
wojoaderge wrote:Pablo Novi wrote:other “Black Liberation” Movement leaders
United Slaves?
Dr Positivity wrote:twolves97 wrote:Also Mikan should NOT go here or anywhere in the 20s. Era usually isn't a huge deal for me but the weakness of Mikan's era really shouldn't be overlooked. I just don't think he was a good basketball player. I don't think he could play D-1 basketball today. I think I'm probably a better player than he was and my best scholarship offer was from Chicago State (I didn't go there I go to Duke University go Blue Devils). I don't think that about Russell or even Petit and I just don't feel like pioneer points put him over the likes of Ewing, Curry, Nash and others being discussed here. The game outgrew him by the time he was 30. He attempted a comeback at age 31 wasn't very good and then retired again.
To defend Mikan - he may not have played long after the shotclock, but he played against some other players who did. Cousy, Schayes, Arizin started their career in Mikan era and were still star level players in late 50s and early 60s. Some players like Johnston and Sharman had a few good seasons after shotclock as well. When he played against them Mikan was better. So I think that means something. If the league jumped 10 levels between 54 and 60 players enough to make a player of Mikan's level obsolete, his peers like Cousy, Schayes, Arizin should've suffered as much. Their careers however basically played out as you would expect them to, until they declined in their early 30s. There is an argument to be made to detract all these guys for not having integrated enough league yet though, even by late 50s and early 60s. As for his retirement/stats in his comeback year, Mikan was over 30, his body was a mess and rust would be a factor, probably even moreso than for Jordan in 95 who at least was in pro sports mode while he was gone. Mikan apparently was working hard and in shape as much as he could, they didn't pull him off the couch, but everyone knows there's a difference between regular person good shape and pro sports good shape and he may not have hit the latter in time. With all those factors working against him post comeback Mikan still wasn't a disaster, he had 17.8 PER, .098 WS/48, he was the best per minute rebounder on his team and 2nd in Pts/36....
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mischievous wrote:oldschooled wrote:Damn. Chris Paul is your 23rd greatest player of all time gents. Cant believe he leapfrogged multiple MVP winners (Mikan, Pettit, Nash and Curry) and multiple champions. Just wow.
Paul is like one of the golden boys around here. He keeps failing and getting injured and yet somehow keeps moving up the list. I feel like he's one of those guys who people take over other players because they just like him more.
Fundamentals21 wrote:I would just toss Mikan in the list, for what it's worth. It's been crazy watching Penbeast vote him in for the last 10 threads, Lol.
Frank Dux wrote:LeChosen One wrote:Doc is right. The Warriors shouldn't get any respect unless they repeat to be honest.
According to your logic, Tim Duncan doesn't deserve any respect.
trex_8063 wrote:Thru post #70:
Bob Pettit - 5 (dhsilv2, Dr Positivity, Doctor MJ, Pablo Novi, scabbarista)
George Mikan - 5 (Winsome Gerbil, wojoaderge, penbeast0, JordansBulls, Joao Saraiva)
Patrick Ewing - 3 (Clyde Frazier, Hornet Mania, trex_8063)
Kevin Durant - 2 (pandrade83, andrewww)
Stephen Curry - 1 (twolves97)
Steve Nash - 1 (micahclay)
Bob Cousy - 1 (euroleague)
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Pablo Novi wrote:wojoaderge wrote:Pablo Novi wrote:other “Black Liberation” Movement leaders
United Slaves?
A Super-Militant Demonstration In Oakland, Civil War In Mexico City
Simultaneously: Too funny yet not really off the mark.
US-national Black Organizations Go "To War" With Each Other (with FBI "help")
Actually, some of them were (important) leaders of Black Lib. organizations that didn't exactly get along at all with the Black Panthers - heck, they had a running series of armed shoot outs where several leaders of both got gunned down. (We later found out that thru the COINTELPRO FBI program, both organizations had been severely infiltrated with agents-provocateur whose main job it was was to spy and caused armed divisions - divide and conquer.
PUFO (People United to Fight Oppression) & the ALSC (African Liberation Support Committee:
I ended up being the #1 guy and representative of a coalition called, "PUFO (People United to Fight Oppression)" - we organized in the San Diego - Tijuana region: in support mostly of national-minority people (the "Camp Pendleton 14" - 14 Black soldiers who gpt set up by the military for standing up for their rights; other Black community leaders; a number of Mexican-American people; even some kids from Tijuana who got harassed (or even shot to death) by the "Migra" (INS).
We also did heavy solidarity work (including fund-raising, clothes-drives, etc) in support of the (armed) struggle in South Africa against the racist Apartheid regime (of the Afrikaners).
PUFO eventually became a chapter of the ALSC (African Liberation Support Committee) - a US-wide very-militant group of 10,000+ members. As the San Diego Chapter representative, I went to one of ALSC's National Congresses in D.C.; both participating in a march and participating in the actual Congress meetings - it was a HUGE hall, there were several hundreds of serious organizers / activists - I was one of the only white faces amongst everybody.
Black Panther Party Mass Demonstration In Oakland, California:
I also went from San Diego up to Oakland, California by invitation; to participate in, and speak at a Black Panther Party (BPP) rally.
That HAD to have been one of the 10 or so most militant demonstrations in the entire history of the US. (I count "everything" and while waiting up on the stage to give my small solidarity speech, I counted over 16,000 (almost all Black) people. The park was completely surrounded by police (armed to the teeth) but they didn't dare try to enter the park - they would have been routed.
While I was up on stage, two of the three TOP BPP leaders, Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton (the third, Eldridge Cleaver, was serving one of his stints behind bars) came up to me and actually shook my hand; thanking me and San Diego for all our work. I was so stunned, that when it was my turn to speak I had trouble, at first, getting my mouth muscles to work.
THE highlight of that rally was when, at the very end of their last speech, they screamed out, "The Only Solution To This Pollution Is Revolution!" and the crowd erupted in a ROAR that echoed in my head for weeks. Wow.
One thing that struck me as so weird about the BPP was that they simultaneously organized: Kindergartens & Food-Drives with the selling of "Chairman Mao's Little Red Book" (of quotes). What one had to do with the other I never had any idea - but they worked very hard at both. They also rode, 4 shotguns to a car, behind all the cop cars in the city - ensuring no more Blacks there would be gunned down by the cops.
A TOTALLY PEACEFUL MEXICO CITY DEMONSTRATION OF 1,000,000 PEOPLE TURNS INTO A POLICE-RIOT & THEN CIVIL WAR:
Similar things happened when I was "on tour" in Mexico. To give you-all an idea of the differences in the level of struggle between the two countries; I attended a march-rally (and leadership Conference) in Mexico City. At the Conference, there were the heads of 16 individual self-proclaimed "revolutionary" Parties - in a coalition called UNIR (Union Nacional de la Izquierda Revolucionaria - National Union of the Revolutionary Left) - a very influential and ultra-radical "United Front". Amongst the things discussed there were the next-day's march.
One million plus people showed up in the very center of Mexico City, "El Zocalo", the National Plaza. The authorities decided that there were too many people, too peaceful, too united; and physically attacked en masse. Literally civil war broke out, eventually enveloping large swathes of that city of 20+ million people. I got swept up within the crowd as the police / army and other armed forces physically drove us out of the plaza. The section of people I went with ended up in the 2nd most important place in the City and country - "La Alameda Centra" (Central Park) in front of the most important monument, "El Hemiciclo Juarez" (The (great Mexican President) Benito Juarez's Semi-circle). There, the people decided they had enough and started fighting back. Bricks, rocks, Molotov Cocktails went flying. Bodies were falling everyone on both sides. The people eventually ROUTED the police/army and chased them thru the streets up thru the night. (Attempts at reprisals turned into more pitched battles over the following months).
So, compared to that Black Panther Party rally, what happened in Mexico City was 1,000s of times more radical.
"A Day In The Life".
twolves97 wrote:Also Mikan should NOT go here or anywhere in the 20s. Era usually isn't a huge deal for me but the weakness of Mikan's era really shouldn't be overlooked. I just don't think he was a good basketball player. I don't think he could play D-1 basketball today. I think I'm probably a better player than he was and my best scholarship offer was from Chicago State (I didn't go there I go to Duke University go Blue Devils).
Pablo Novi wrote:
A thought for some time in the future? Someone else mentioned this too - perhaps our voting system should have a 3rd-place vote - so there'd be less "ghost" votes - and the results MIGHT even better reflect people's choices than our already-good current system?
trex_8063 wrote:twolves97 wrote:Also Mikan should NOT go here or anywhere in the 20s. Era usually isn't a huge deal for me but the weakness of Mikan's era really shouldn't be overlooked. I just don't think he was a good basketball player. I don't think he could play D-1 basketball today. I think I'm probably a better player than he was and my best scholarship offer was from Chicago State (I didn't go there I go to Duke University go Blue Devils).
Let’s talk skills….
You said you think you’re better, and from a modern standard of skillset, you’re likely right. But I’ll ask you: how do you think you came to be better?
Did you or did you not have exposure to modern stars (via TV, NBA TV, YouTube, etc) growing up?
Did you or did you not try to ape what those stars were doing as you were developing your game (shot mechanics, specific moves, etc)?
Were all of your peer doing the same thing, such that you had that kind of constant feedback loop, and all challenging and pushing each other in developing these aped skills?
Did you or did you not learn drills from coaches or peers to practice skills which either were not allowed or otherwise had not yet even been pioneered in Mikan’s day?
I’ve not seen you play, but I’m willing to bet you’re not an extreme outlier---in this era----in your basketball skills. There are likely thousands (or perhaps tens of thousands) of other kids and young men around the globe who are as good or better than you and basically every single basketball skill. Otherwise (and I do NOT mean this as an insult, but rather just pointing out the factoid that you shared as a means of illustrating the point) you’d have received a scholarship from something bigger Chicago State.
So, given the skills you possess are so accessible to thousands of young players today, I think it’s pure generational arrogance and vanity to assume a prior generation couldn’t also find these skills just as accessible if they were afforded all the same influences you were…..particularly one who seemed as far ahead of the basketball curve as Mikan appeared to be at the time.
And just as a suggestion that it wasn’t ONLY his size that enabled him to dominate, just going to list a few other similar sized chaps from the same era, and what kind of players they were:
smartyz456 wrote:Duncan would be a better defending jahlil okafor in todays nba