RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#21 » by mikejames23 » Wed Aug 23, 2017 4:36 pm

andrewww wrote:Does anyone feel that players like Grant Hill, Penny Hardaway, Tracy McGrady, or Bill Walton deserve some traction now as many of them arguably peaked higher than some of the candidates being thrown around right now?


I like T-Mac in top 50 all time, and he certainly has a strong prime. He has around 7 seasons of Superstar play and was releveant in MVP award shares a total of 6 times which does indicate he has a strong prime. 7 time all NBA player. Didn't get past first round would be relevant but I don't think he had enough shots with good teams to get it done relevant to competition. If he couldn't get past the first round with that 03 peak, it indicates just bad timing with his peak and the roleplayers he was surrounded by. I don't consider the first round reasoning as a black mark on him.

Great read about Tracy McGrady here:

viewtopic.php?t=1561093

The injuries and lack of work ethic once he made superstardom is an issue, though. I would pick a peer like Paul Pierce over him even with worse peak. I see Pierce as being significantly more reliable than T-Mac - but both are clearly Top 50.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#22 » by Outside » Wed Aug 23, 2017 8:28 pm

Fundamentals21 wrote:
andrewww wrote:Does anyone feel that players like Grant Hill, Penny Hardaway, Tracy McGrady, or Bill Walton deserve some traction now as many of them arguably peaked higher than some of the candidates being thrown around right now?


I like T-Mac in top 50 all time, and he certainly has a strong prime. He has around 7 seasons of Superstar play and was releveant in MVP award shares a total of 6 times which does indicate he has a strong prime. 7 time all NBA player. Didn't get past first round would be relevant but I don't think he had enough shots with good teams to get it done relevant to competition. If he couldn't get past the first round with that 03 peak, it indicates just bad timing with his peak and the roleplayers he was surrounded by. I don't consider the first round reasoning as a black mark on him.

Great read about Tracy McGrady here:

viewtopic.php?t=1561093

The injuries and lack of work ethic once he made superstardom is an issue, though. I would pick a peer like Paul Pierce over him even with worse peak. I see Pierce as being significantly more reliable than T-Mac - but both are clearly Top 50.

Of those guys, I have Grant Hill highest. I don't have him for a while yet, but I'm open to moving him up. He was really, really good in every area of the game, and he had enough longevity after his injuries to move him up the list

Walton had the highest peak, but the longevity issue makes him difficult to rank in this project. Someone argued that there is a separate peaks project and that Walton deserves greater consideration there, but that he might not make many people's list here. I've still got him on the list, but he's pretty low. How do you compare his career, with his really high peak but really poor longevity, with a guy like Mutumbo, a limited player who had great longevity? It seems like longevity is the trump card here, but I resist rewarding longevity filled with good but not remarkable play or else Kevin Willis will be the poster boy for the project.

I'm not on the T-Mac train. Longevity is an issue -- he has fewer games and minutes than Grant Hill (938 games /30,658 minutes vs 1,026 / 34,776 for Hill).

And postseason performance is particularly important for me. His teams were rarely favored in the PS during his prime, but he had several winnable series:

-- In 2001-02, 44-38 Orlando played 44-38 Charlotte, but Charlotte beat them easily, 3-1.

-- In 2002-03, 42-40 Orlando played 50-32 Detroit. Although Orlando was only the 8th seed, they got a 3-1 lead in the series. When asked how he felt after winning game 4, McGrady famously said, “It feels good to get in the second round.” Detroit won the next three games to take the series, one of only 10 teams in NBA history to come back from a 3-1 deficit.

-- In 2004-05, 50-32 Houston had the misfortune of drawing 58-24 Dallas in the first round. However, Houston won the first two games in Dallas, but proceeded to lose the next two games at home. The series went to a game 7, where Houston lost by 40.

-- In 2006-07, 52-30 Houston played 49-33 Utah. Houston lost game 7 at home.

-- In 2007-08, 55-27 Houston played 54-28 Utah. Houston lost the first two games at home on their way to losing the series, 4-2.

I just can't ignore that he was a number one guy, a two-time scoring champ, and never won a single series over the course of his career. There are a lot of players more deserving before I get to McGrady.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#23 » by Hornet Mania » Wed Aug 23, 2017 8:55 pm

Sorry about being absent the last couple of threads, I've been traveling.

33. Clyde Drexler
Alt vote: Jason Kidd


Kidd/Payton is tough for me because I always considered Payton a (slightly) superior player at their peaks yet Kidd had almost two decades as a useful NBA rotation player. In the end I have to side with the longevity, so Kidd it is.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#24 » by mikejames23 » Wed Aug 23, 2017 9:19 pm

Outside wrote:Of those guys, I have Grant Hill highest. I don't have him for a while yet, but I'm open to moving him up. He was really, really good in every area of the game, and he had enough longevity after his injuries to move him up the list

Walton had the highest peak, but the longevity issue makes him difficult to rank in this project. Someone argued that there is a separate peaks project and that Walton deserves greater consideration there, but that he might not make many people's list here. I've still got him on the list, but he's pretty low. How do you compare his career, with his really high peak but really poor longevity, with a guy like Mutumbo, a limited player who had great longevity? It seems like longevity is the trump card here, but I resist rewarding longevity filled with good but not remarkable play or else Kevin Willis will be the poster boy for the project.

I'm not on the T-Mac train. Longevity is an issue -- he has fewer games and minutes than Grant Hill (938 games /30,658 minutes vs 1,026 / 34,776 for Hill).

And postseason performance is particularly important for me. His teams were rarely favored in the PS during his prime, but he had several winnable series:

-- In 2001-02, 44-38 Orlando played 44-38 Charlotte, but Charlotte beat them easily, 3-1.

-- In 2002-03, 42-40 Orlando played 50-32 Detroit. Although Orlando was only the 8th seed, they got a 3-1 lead in the series. When asked how he felt after winning game 4, McGrady famously said, “It feels good to get in the second round.” Detroit won the next three games to take the series, one of only 10 teams in NBA history to come back from a 3-1 deficit.

-- In 2004-05, 50-32 Houston had the misfortune of drawing 58-24 Dallas in the first round. However, Houston won the first two games in Dallas, but proceeded to lose the next two games at home. The series went to a game 7, where Houston lost by 40.

-- In 2006-07, 52-30 Houston played 49-33 Utah. Houston lost game 7 at home.

-- In 2007-08, 55-27 Houston played 54-28 Utah. Houston lost the first two games at home on their way to losing the series, 4-2.

I just can't ignore that he was a number one guy, a two-time scoring champ, and never won a single series over the course of his career. There are a lot of players more deserving before I get to McGrady.


Perhaps. I think he only had 2 chances in the playoffs - namely 2002 vs Charlotte or 2007 vs Utah. The rest of the times, the teams he faced were better. 2003 is the type of series that Kobe had vs Suns in 2006, and for a good portion of his prime T-Mac appeared to be a slightly worse version of what Kobe was doing.

2002 series : 30/6/5 @ 55 TS% type performance.
2003 series: 30/6/4 @ 56 TS% type performance.
2005 series: 30/6/7 @ 55 TS% type performance.

So he was remarkably consistent doing what he was during the 01-05 type timespan and there really isn't any evidence he was legitimately having playoff issues. With the 2002 series, his roleplaying supporting cast was not as strong as Baron Davis- led cast (who actually is a strong playoff performer himself). The culprit in 2002 is the infamous Troy Hudson - guy who's ineptitude Drza has spoken of numerous times in his various KG chronicles.

2003 tells me T-Mac was basically Kobe for his peak year. Drew Gooden was his 2nd best scorer? Really? LeBron is pretty much the only one who handled Drew Gooden on his team. Goodens' a notorious +/- suck.

2005 was a strange, strange series. Somehow Dirk shot poorly and the Mavs won. Terry did play out of his mind, but watching this closely everyone did have a relatively high opinion of T-Mac's overall play.

There is nothing you can say about his game hurting his team in the playoffs up till 2005. Post up? Isolation? Transition? Spacing? Honestly he was well on pace to being Top 20 all time. No doubt.

Now the part you can criticize somewhat.

The Jazz. He really should've gotten past them in 2007 I felt - esp with HCA. It was Yao Ming, T-Mac and role players who weren't to be counted upon in the playoffs. It was a Stockton-Malone type of issue. With 2008 they were literally in the playoffs because of the roleplayers, and once that ran out, the better record became meaningless. T-Mac was viewed not Top 5 but all-NBA type of guy during this era. He generally still demonstrated the capacity of very good team ball leading performances and outstanding play. The injuries had started affecting him so I don't feel he was athletically there in the 2nd half of his prime, but he was still a guy most would pick up for his overall feel of the game and ability to deliver the volume numbers necessary to get a team somewhere.

So at worst you'd say AHHH, it ends too early. Not enough healthy games. That's fine for where he can be placed, I think. He exhibits performances that give you a serious luxury of having him on your team in the first half of his prime. The skillset of being a superstar do-it-all type player is just not happening anymore in this list, and that's his case over everyone else.

I am trying to figure out if his longevity marks him down. But it really appears to be a Dwyane Wade case at worst - where Wade would still be at an All-NBA level but not putting up his 06-11 type numbers. So yes longevity hurts him. No the first round exits aren't an issue. There is no real evidence of his game running into trouble during the playoffs.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#25 » by dhsilv2 » Wed Aug 23, 2017 10:46 pm

Darn, really haven't had time to think about this one.

Guards – Cousy, Thomas, Payton, Kidd, Frazier
Shoot Guard – Sam Jones, Iverson, Gervin, Drexler
Small Forwards – Barry
Power Forwards – McHale
Center – Reed, Cowens

MVP's not on the list yet (no order)
Bill Walton
Have Cowens
Willis Reed
Wes Unseld
Allen Iverson
Derrick Rose
Russel Westbrook

Sadly didn't vote last round, mistake I thought I had. Anyway baylor would have been my pick so glad he's in.

From the MVP list Reed and Cowens are up there for me, but their careers were pretty short. I'm struggling with if Reed or Frazier should get more credit for the knicks. I would love some thoughts on that one or more thoughts as they've been discussed.

Anyway the pick I think here is Barry. I don't value ABA much so it's a struggle, but I also don't dismiss it if I see quality NBA play. His 75 season really is impressive as hell. He was a top level player in the NBA before he went to the ABA and clearly he lit the ABA up. I still struggle with his career not being as long as a few players and the lack of MVP level. Still at this point it's all a compromise.

The next pick is between Reed, Cowens and Frazier. I think Reed might have peaked higher, but Frazier just as a more complete resume. I think he was as good a defender as Kidd and pretty close to Payton. Offensively he was special in an era of big men.

Pick Barry
Alt Frazier
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#26 » by Outside » Thu Aug 24, 2017 12:59 am

Fundamentals21 wrote:
Outside wrote:Of those guys, I have Grant Hill highest. I don't have him for a while yet, but I'm open to moving him up. He was really, really good in every area of the game, and he had enough longevity after his injuries to move him up the list

Walton had the highest peak, but the longevity issue makes him difficult to rank in this project. Someone argued that there is a separate peaks project and that Walton deserves greater consideration there, but that he might not make many people's list here. I've still got him on the list, but he's pretty low. How do you compare his career, with his really high peak but really poor longevity, with a guy like Mutumbo, a limited player who had great longevity? It seems like longevity is the trump card here, but I resist rewarding longevity filled with good but not remarkable play or else Kevin Willis will be the poster boy for the project.

I'm not on the T-Mac train. Longevity is an issue -- he has fewer games and minutes than Grant Hill (938 games /30,658 minutes vs 1,026 / 34,776 for Hill).

And postseason performance is particularly important for me. His teams were rarely favored in the PS during his prime, but he had several winnable series:

-- In 2001-02, 44-38 Orlando played 44-38 Charlotte, but Charlotte beat them easily, 3-1.

-- In 2002-03, 42-40 Orlando played 50-32 Detroit. Although Orlando was only the 8th seed, they got a 3-1 lead in the series. When asked how he felt after winning game 4, McGrady famously said, “It feels good to get in the second round.” Detroit won the next three games to take the series, one of only 10 teams in NBA history to come back from a 3-1 deficit.

-- In 2004-05, 50-32 Houston had the misfortune of drawing 58-24 Dallas in the first round. However, Houston won the first two games in Dallas, but proceeded to lose the next two games at home. The series went to a game 7, where Houston lost by 40.

-- In 2006-07, 52-30 Houston played 49-33 Utah. Houston lost game 7 at home.

-- In 2007-08, 55-27 Houston played 54-28 Utah. Houston lost the first two games at home on their way to losing the series, 4-2.

I just can't ignore that he was a number one guy, a two-time scoring champ, and never won a single series over the course of his career. There are a lot of players more deserving before I get to McGrady.


Perhaps. I think he only had 2 chances in the playoffs - namely 2002 vs Charlotte or 2007 vs Utah. The rest of the times, the teams he faced were better. 2003 is the type of series that Kobe had vs Suns in 2006, and for a good portion of his prime T-Mac appeared to be a slightly worse version of what Kobe was doing.

2002 series : 30/6/5 @ 55 TS% type performance.
2003 series: 30/6/4 @ 56 TS% type performance.
2005 series: 30/6/7 @ 55 TS% type performance.

So he was remarkably consistent doing what he was during the 01-05 type timespan and there really isn't any evidence he was legitimately having playoff issues. With the 2002 series, his roleplaying supporting cast was not as strong as Baron Davis- led cast (who actually is a strong playoff performer himself). The culprit in 2002 is the infamous Troy Hudson - guy who's ineptitude Drza has spoken of numerous times in his various KG chronicles.

2003 tells me T-Mac was basically Kobe for his peak year. Drew Gooden was his 2nd best scorer? Really? LeBron is pretty much the only one who handled Drew Gooden on his team. Goodens' a notorious +/- suck.

2005 was a strange, strange series. Somehow Dirk shot poorly and the Mavs won. Terry did play out of his mind, but watching this closely everyone did have a relatively high opinion of T-Mac's overall play.

There is nothing you can say about his game hurting his team in the playoffs up till 2005. Post up? Isolation? Transition? Spacing? Honestly he was well on pace to being Top 20 all time. No doubt.

Now the part you can criticize somewhat.

The Jazz. He really should've gotten past them in 2007 I felt - esp with HCA. It was Yao Ming, T-Mac and role players who weren't to be counted upon in the playoffs. It was a Stockton-Malone type of issue. With 2008 they were literally in the playoffs because of the roleplayers, and once that ran out, the better record became meaningless. T-Mac was viewed not Top 5 but all-NBA type of guy during this era. He generally still demonstrated the capacity of very good team ball leading performances and outstanding play. The injuries had started affecting him so I don't feel he was athletically there in the 2nd half of his prime, but he was still a guy most would pick up for his overall feel of the game and ability to deliver the volume numbers necessary to get a team somewhere.

So at worst you'd say AHHH, it ends too early. Not enough healthy games. That's fine for where he can be placed, I think. He exhibits performances that give you a serious luxury of having him on your team in the first half of his prime. The skillset of being a superstar do-it-all type player is just not happening anymore in this list, and that's his case over everyone else.

I am trying to figure out if his longevity marks him down. But it really appears to be a Dwyane Wade case at worst - where Wade would still be at an All-NBA level but not putting up his 06-11 type numbers. So yes longevity hurts him. No the first round exits aren't an issue. There is no real evidence of his game running into trouble during the playoffs.

It's just too hard for me to make a case for McGrady when so many other guys have better resumes. We've recently discussed how Barry gets a bump for taking an otherwise unremarkable team to a championship. That's what great players are supposed to do. LeBron carried lousy Cleveland teams to multiple series wins and even one finals. Patrick Ewing was on Knick teams with similar records and won playoff series. Dominique Wilkins and Chris Paul get criticism for not getting past the conference semis.

T-Mac had nice averages in the series you cited, but that's SSS.

2002 series : 30/6/5 @ 55 TS% -- 4 games
2003 series: 30/6/4 @ 56 TS% -- 7 games
2005 series: 30/6/7 @ 55 TS% -- 7 games

That's a total of 18 games where he had very good production on good, but not great, efficiency. In every other postseason, his TS% was under 50. His career PS TS% is 51.2. By comparison, Walt Frazier had only one postseason under 50 TS% and has a career 55.7 PS TS% in 93 games, all without the benefit of the 3-pt shot.

Let's eliminate McGrady's last two seasons with Atlanta and the Spurs when he played a grand total of 121 minutes in 12 games. That leaves McGrady with only 38 total playoff games.

Are those 18 games you cite above enough to put McGrady above all the other players not voted in yet? Not just the names mentioned so far -- like Drexler, Payton, Barry, Gilmore -- but guys we haven't begun to mention yet, like Lenny Wilkins, Sam Jones, Joe Dumars, and Ray Allen?

The playoffs are the games that really count. Game 7s are when the greats show up. The finals are where legends are made. Winning matters. We have far too many players who were great in both the RS and PS to put McGrady ahead of them.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#27 » by Outside » Thu Aug 24, 2017 1:33 am

Pick: Barry
Alternate: Thurmond

HM: Frazier

Barry was a great scorer and passer, and while not a great defender, he had a great BBIQ that helped him get steals (averaged 2.0 steals for the second half of his career; steals weren't recorded for his first seven seasons).

RS averages of 24.0 pts / 6.7 reb / 4.9 ast / 52.5 TS% (1,020 games)
PS averages of 27.3 pts / 6.4 reb / 4.3 ast / 51.8 TS% (105 games)

During the Warriors' title run in the 1975 PS, Barry averaged 28.2 pts / 5.5 reb / 6.1 ast / 2.9 steals. He was an unstoppable force. In the finals, the Bullets resorted to having Mike Riordan club Barry from behind, trying to instigate a fight to get Barry thrown out, but coach Al Attles went after Riordan so that he'd get thrown out instead of Barry. Golden State won in the most improbable sweep in NBA history. The Bullets at 60-22 had tied for the best record in the league and had Wes Unseld, Elvin Hayes, and Phil Chenier, while the Warriors were only 48-34 that season.

I want to introduce Thurmond as someone deserving of traction soon, and I'll post more about him later.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#28 » by andrewww » Thu Aug 24, 2017 3:31 am

Vote: Clyde Drexler
Alternate: Gary Payton


Drexler was underrated defensively, and is the superior talent over the PG contingent at hand right now. Though I must say, The Glove's ability to D up MJ in the 96 Finals and him peaking in 2000 actually doesn't do his legacy enough justice.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#29 » by mikejames23 » Thu Aug 24, 2017 4:49 pm

Outside wrote:

Let's eliminate McGrady's last two seasons with Atlanta and the Spurs when he played a grand total of 121 minutes in 12 games. That leaves McGrady with only 38 total playoff games.

Are those 18 games you cite above enough to put McGrady above all the other players not voted in yet? Not just the names mentioned so far -- like Drexler, Payton, Barry, Gilmore -- but guys we haven't begun to mention yet, like Lenny Wilkins, Sam Jones, Joe Dumars, and Ray Allen?

The playoffs are the games that really count. Game 7s are when the greats show up. The finals are where legends are made. Winning matters. We have far too many players who were great in both the RS and PS to put McGrady ahead of them.


I feel there's a fundamental difference between the way you and I view things. To me T-Mac has a superior prime to everyone listed, but his durability and questionable 2nd half of prime drop him against comparisons to Drexler. It doesn't however drop him against players clearly not on his level. Sam Jones or Joe Dumars, for example. Both of whom have a similar number of star years and aren't expected to do anything like T-Mac is? It's like talking about Tony Parker's success relative to Chris Paul.

T-Mac seems to have six playoff chances where he was viewed as being relevant and I would only blame him for 2 of them. So his overall lack of playoff games is more of a design issue you would have with the NBA - there simply aren't enough important games played for players like T-Mac to really prove himself. Even a great like Dwyane Wade missed the 2nd round from 2007 to 2010. A timespan of 4 years, before LeBron James joined the Heat.

I don't feel he has a case on Drexler, Barry types. Once you get closer to ~ 40 his case starts being stronger.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#30 » by Outside » Thu Aug 24, 2017 8:57 pm

Fundamentals21 wrote:
Outside wrote:

Let's eliminate McGrady's last two seasons with Atlanta and the Spurs when he played a grand total of 121 minutes in 12 games. That leaves McGrady with only 38 total playoff games.

Are those 18 games you cite above enough to put McGrady above all the other players not voted in yet? Not just the names mentioned so far -- like Drexler, Payton, Barry, Gilmore -- but guys we haven't begun to mention yet, like Lenny Wilkins, Sam Jones, Joe Dumars, and Ray Allen?

The playoffs are the games that really count. Game 7s are when the greats show up. The finals are where legends are made. Winning matters. We have far too many players who were great in both the RS and PS to put McGrady ahead of them.


I feel there's a fundamental difference between the way you and I view things. To me T-Mac has a superior prime to everyone listed, but his durability and questionable 2nd half of prime drop him against comparisons to Drexler. It doesn't however drop him against players clearly not on his level. Sam Jones or Joe Dumars, for example. Both of whom have a similar number of star years and aren't expected to do anything like T-Mac is? It's like talking about Tony Parker's success relative to Chris Paul.

T-Mac seems to have six playoff chances where he was viewed as being relevant and I would only blame him for 2 of them. So his overall lack of playoff games is more of a design issue you would have with the NBA - there simply aren't enough important games played for players like T-Mac to really prove himself. Even a great like Dwyane Wade missed the 2nd round from 2007 to 2010. A timespan of 4 years, before LeBron James joined the Heat.

I don't feel he has a case on Drexler, Barry types. Once you get closer to ~ 40 his case starts being stronger.

That's fine -- I don't expect us to view things the same way. The divergence of criteria and opinions building to a consensus is how the process works and what makes it interesting. You've stated your views, I've stated mine, and others can be swayed by our arguments or present their own. My guess is that McGrady will go in higher than I have him, but hopefully not anytime soon.

Regarding your statement: To me T-Mac has a superior prime to everyone listed, but his durability and questionable 2nd half of prime drop him against comparisons to Drexler.

This is where we diverge most significantly, not in what you include in that statement, which I agree with, but in what you omit, which is the postseason. Regular season achievements definitely need to be recognized, like McGrady's peak where he scored, rebounded, and assisted and a high level, but for me, postseason performance is worth as much as RS performance. To dismiss McGrady's overall lack of success in the PS -- and particularly his failures in evenly matched series, in game sevens, and when his team had series leads -- is like saying someone should get an A in a college course because they did well on the homework assignments even though they did poorly on the midterm and final.

I also think you sell guys like Sam Jones and Joe Dumars short. They were excellent all-around players who carried their teams in playoff games and in the finals. Joe Dumars is a finals MVP, his bucket-for-bucket battle with James Worthy in the 1989 finals was epic, and he was a great defender. Sam Jones led Celtics title teams in scoring four times in the regular season, three times in the postseason, and three times in the finals. Those are significant achievements on the highest stage.

I'm not ready to vote Sam Jones and Joe Dumars in yet, but I'll be strong advocates for them once we get to that point.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#31 » by Pablo Novi » Thu Aug 24, 2017 11:07 pm

Outside wrote:Pick: Barry
Alternate: Thurmond

HM: Frazier

Barry was a great scorer and passer, and while not a great defender, he had a great BBIQ that helped him get steals (averaged 2.0 steals for the second half of his career; steals weren't recorded for his first seven seasons).

RS averages of 24.0 pts / 6.7 reb / 4.9 ast / 52.5 TS% (1,020 games)
PS averages of 27.3 pts / 6.4 reb / 4.3 ast / 51.8 TS% (105 games)

During the Warriors' title run in the 1975 PS, Barry averaged 28.2 pts / 5.5 reb / 6.1 ast / 2.9 steals. He was an unstoppable force. In the finals, the Bullets resorted to having Mike Riordan club Barry from behind, trying to instigate a fight to get Barry thrown out, but coach Al Attles went after Riordan so that he'd get thrown out instead of Barry. Golden State won in the most improbable sweep in NBA history. The Bullets at 60-22 had tied for the best record in the league and had Wes Unseld, Elvin Hayes, and Phil Chenier, while the Warriors were only 48-34 that season.

I want to introduce Thurmond as someone deserving of traction soon, and I'll post more about him later.

VOTE: Rick Barry (of the non-selected players so far, only Cousy had more "Great Seasons" (as defined by ALL-League 1st-Team plus 2nd-Team selections).

ALT: Cousy:
10 1st-Team ALL-NBA selections plus 2 2nd-Team. No other remaining player comes close to Cousy's dominance of their position during their era.

In my GOAT list, Cousy ranks higher than Barry; but Cousy is getting less traction so far - thus my voting order here.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#32 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Aug 24, 2017 11:54 pm

Vote: Barry
Alt: Gilmore

I have mixed feelings about Barry because he begins his career so clearly as the kind of sociopathic volume shooter I'm reticent to trust, but he played at a time when it was less clear the right way to play, and to me there's no denying how capably he handled a role with more team nuance in the 70s.

In the end I cut a lot of slack to guys who show signs that they were capable of learning while still in their prime.


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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#33 » by Outside » Fri Aug 25, 2017 12:10 am

Pablo Novi wrote:In my GOAT list, Cousy ranks higher than Barry; but Cousy is getting less traction so far - thus my voting order here.

I'm torn on where to put Cousy. I originally had him higher than I do now (39), but I was persuaded by some arguments made in other threads that his impact wasn't as great as I was giving him credit for. His relatively poor shooting also bothers me. However I could be persuaded to bring him back up, so while I appreciate the move of voting for Barry to make your vote count, I'd encourage you to start building the case for Cousy, much as I will be doing for Thurmond. Planting seeds.
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McHale Time 

Post#34 » by euroleague » Fri Aug 25, 2017 1:18 am

I had typed up a long response about my voting, but apparently it got lost. I'll sum it up here, and perhaps add another post later in more depth.

Vote: Cousy
Alt: Isiah Thomas
HM: Rick Barry
HM2: McHale

Already discussed Cousy and Isiah Thomas. Rick Barry was a player who spent some of his prime in the ABA, and put up ridiculous numbers there, then came back to the NBA and won a championship playing hero ball as one of the only players ever to do so.

The warriors team was set to be a dynasty, but things didn't go right the following years. Barry was a killer mid-range shooter who used outside of the box techniques, including in FTs, to optimize his shooting and was well ahead of his time in his form.

McHale is possibly the greatest m2m PF defender in NBA history, and one of the greatest individual scorers in the post in NBA history. His playstyle is similar to Hakeem for most of Hakeem's career in terms of scoring and man2man defense, except McHale may be the superior post scorer and the superior man 2 man defender. He was, however, even worse at passing (basically a black hole on offense) and not a rim protector so these two aspects give Hakeem the edge on both ends in the end. But, McHale's scoring is getting very underrated.

McHale averaged 26ppg on 65% TS in 1987. He had a 24 PER, 10rpg and 2.2 bpg. His ws/48 was .232 and he played more minutes than Larry Bird, resulting in 14.8 WS.

To compare with MJ that year, MJ had a league leading 16.9 WS and a 29.8 PER.

Larry Bird led the league in PER in 85 and 86 with 26.5 and 25.8.

McHale was 5th in the league in PER, behind only MJ/Bird/Barkley/maybe Magic didn't look. He was 4th in WS and WS/48. He was top 10 in VORP/BPM, but didn't have the same impact coming off the court as he would have if he was the team captain (obviously) because Bird was the leader of the team, so these numbers are lessened. As a 6th man, getting these numbers (since you enter when the starters leave) can also be harder.

His PER/WS/WS/48 were all ahead of Hakeem, Moses, Drexler, Dominique Wilkins, and many other stars in their heyday.

PER Era Rant:

PER is a stat that was lower in the 80s, because PER is a stat based on league avg, and the league average was better before the 88/89 expansion. Many people don't understand PER, so they give huge value to players like CP3 and Wade because of their "awesome PER" in a league with many more teams that allows for more deviations from the average. PERs in the post-expansion era can be much higher, much more easily. No, Larry Bird's and MJ's PER didn't go up by 2 whole points because they magically improved the season of the expansion draft in 1988. The league quality diminished during the regular season. With a bunch of weak expansion teams, and the PER calculation based on averages, stars received a huge bonus.

The 80s wasn't good because there were so many more good players. The 80s was good because there were much fewer teams. Just like if we cut out all the tanking teams in todays league, and all the best players went to middle of the road teams, the league would be a lot better.

OK, I'm done.

McHale is often underrated because in advanced advanced stats, he wasn't the team leader. Still one of the GOAT second options.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#35 » by Joao Saraiva » Fri Aug 25, 2017 3:01 am

Been on vacation sorry guys.
I'll go again on Saturday but I'll try to contribute till then.

Guys I considered for this spot:
Gary Payton, Jason Kidd, Artis, Frazier, Billups, Barry, Clyde Drexler...

I know this is not gonna be too useful right now but:

1st vote - Chauncey Billups - Hell yeah I'm voting for him.

This guy was a great PG. He was a great closer, he was the 1st option on those Pistons teams that were very successfull - several conference finals appearence, a tittle in 04 and another finals presence in 05 (and he did very well against the Spurs).

Billups was a very good scorer: didn't put up gigantic volume but he did put great efficiency. Constantly flirting with 60ts%.

He was also a very good playmaker: his ast/to ratio was very good. Usually made the right play. Not among the greatest gamblers of all time, but he certainly did make the right play and did make it happen.

Now this is something that doesn't show up on stat sheets. Billups was a great pace controller, and a great decision maker on when to go for the score himself or when to distribute. I think his pace control was essential on those Pistons teams, and it's not surprise for me that Detroit fell apart after he left and Denver (and Carmelo) did great with Billups on the squad.

Also he was not an exploitable guard on defense. He had the size to switch more than most guards and he was a good one on one defender too. Again, not much of a gambler but he had very good movement of his feet and stayed in the right spots.

With his size he also was smart to read mismatches. Put a smaller guard on him and he'll definitely take it to the post and be effective.

I know his stat sheet is not that impressive compared to others, but just like Kidd I think Billups bring up something special to the table. I like him more than Kidd because during his prime he was a great shooter, and I feel he was more able to take matters by himself when it mattered than Jason.

I'd also like to add the fact that he usually played very well in the playoffs. The way I see it he has 6 really relevant long playoff runs. Feel confident with him over Payton, since I believe Billups was a better playoff performer.

Alternate vote: Walt Frazier
“These guys have been criticized the last few years for not getting to where we’re going, but I’ve always said that the most important thing in sports is to keep trying. Let this be an example of what it means to say it’s never over.” - Jerry Sloan
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#36 » by penbeast0 » Fri Aug 25, 2017 5:46 am

eminence wrote:.

penbeast0 wrote:.

PaulieWal wrote:.

Colbinii wrote:.

Texas Chuck wrote:.

drza wrote:.

Dr Spaceman wrote:.

fpliii wrote:.

euroleague wrote:.

pandrade83 wrote:.

Hornet Mania wrote:.

Eddy_JukeZ wrote:.

SactoKingsFan wrote:.

Blackmill wrote:.

JordansBulls wrote:.

RSCS3_ wrote:.

BasketballFan7 wrote:.

micahclay wrote:.

ardee wrote:.

RCM88x wrote:.

Tesla wrote:.

Joao Saraiva wrote:.

LA Bird wrote:.

MyUniBroDavis wrote:.

kayess wrote:.

2klegend wrote:.

MisterHibachi wrote:.

70sFan wrote:.

mischievous wrote:.

Doctor MJ wrote:.

Dr Positivity wrote:.

Jaivl wrote:.

Bad Gatorade wrote:.

andrewww wrote:.

colts18 wrote:.

Moonbeam wrote:.

Cyrusman122000 wrote:.

Winsome Gerbil wrote:.

Narigo wrote:.

wojoaderge wrote:.

TrueLAfan wrote:.

90sAllDecade wrote:.

Outside wrote:.

scabbarista wrote:.

janmagn wrote:.

Arman_tanzarian wrote:.

oldschooled wrote:.

Pablo Novi wrote:.

john248 wrote:.

mdonnelly1989 wrote:.

Senior wrote:.

twolves97 wrote:.

CodeBreaker wrote:.

JoeMalburg wrote:.

dhsilv2 wrote:.


A little late but first chance I've had. A few people are starting to skip or seriously truncate the discussion; please don't. The discussion is more fun than worrying about a spot or two on the list; especially at this point. That said

Barry 5
Drexler 4
Payton 3
Thomas1
Frazier 1
Kidd 1
Cousy 1
Billups 1

The alternate votes on the 5 solos are Hayes, Drexler, Gilmore, Thomas, and Frazier so the new count is:
Barry 5
Drexler 5
Payton 3

The alternate votes for Payton are Gilmore, Thomas, and Drexler which means that Clyde Drexler passes Rick Barry and becomes the next member of our list.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#37 » by euroleague » Fri Aug 25, 2017 5:53 am

penbeast0 wrote:
eminence wrote:.

penbeast0 wrote:.

PaulieWal wrote:.

Colbinii wrote:.

Texas Chuck wrote:.

drza wrote:.

Dr Spaceman wrote:.

fpliii wrote:.

euroleague wrote:.

pandrade83 wrote:.

Hornet Mania wrote:.

Eddy_JukeZ wrote:.

SactoKingsFan wrote:.

Blackmill wrote:.

JordansBulls wrote:.

RSCS3_ wrote:.

BasketballFan7 wrote:.

micahclay wrote:.

ardee wrote:.

RCM88x wrote:.

Tesla wrote:.

Joao Saraiva wrote:.

LA Bird wrote:.

MyUniBroDavis wrote:.

kayess wrote:.

2klegend wrote:.

MisterHibachi wrote:.

70sFan wrote:.

mischievous wrote:.

Doctor MJ wrote:.

Dr Positivity wrote:.

Jaivl wrote:.

Bad Gatorade wrote:.

andrewww wrote:.

colts18 wrote:.

Moonbeam wrote:.

Cyrusman122000 wrote:.

Winsome Gerbil wrote:.

Narigo wrote:.

wojoaderge wrote:.

TrueLAfan wrote:.

90sAllDecade wrote:.

Outside wrote:.

scabbarista wrote:.

janmagn wrote:.

Arman_tanzarian wrote:.

oldschooled wrote:.

Pablo Novi wrote:.

john248 wrote:.

mdonnelly1989 wrote:.

Senior wrote:.

twolves97 wrote:.

CodeBreaker wrote:.

JoeMalburg wrote:.

dhsilv2 wrote:.


A little late but first chance I've had. A few people are starting to skip or seriously truncate the discussion; please don't. The discussion is more fun than worrying about a spot or two on the list; especially at this point. That said

Barry 5
Drexler 4
Payton 3
Thomas1
Frazier 1
Kidd 1
Cousy 1
Billups 1

The alternate votes on the 5 solos are Hayes, Drexler, Gilmore, Thomas, and Frazier so the new count is:
Barry 5
Drexler 5
Payton 3

The alternate votes for Payton are Gilmore, Thomas, and Drexler which means that Clyde Drexler passes Rick Barry and becomes the next member of our list.


You actually didn't quote us correctly in the start of this thread. At least, I received no notification. Perhaps you could extend this to give some more people time to vote.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#38 » by penbeast0 » Fri Aug 25, 2017 6:01 am

euroleague wrote:
You actually didn't quote us correctly in the start of this thread. At least, I received no notification. Perhaps you could extend this to give some more people time to vote.


Not sure why you didn't see a notification; you are clearly on the list and I copied and pasted the starter list for the final voting post which hopefully you did see. I'm not going to reopen this one; but we do have the next spot open and I would like to see your vote and opinion in it.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#39 » by dhsilv2 » Fri Aug 25, 2017 11:36 am

andrewww wrote:Does anyone feel that players like Grant Hill, Penny Hardaway, Tracy McGrady, or Bill Walton deserve some traction now as many of them arguably peaked higher than some of the candidates being thrown around right now?


I don't think Penny or Hill peaked higher than Frazier, Cowens, Reed, Barry, or a lot of others in this area. I'd say they were comparable to say Drexler without longevity.

Walton for me didn't have a long enough career as a quality guy to make the list at all. Tmac is interesting. I think this is too early for him though.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #33 

Post#40 » by Pablo Novi » Fri Aug 25, 2017 11:06 pm

Outside wrote:
Pablo Novi wrote:In my GOAT list, Cousy ranks higher than Barry; but Cousy is getting less traction so far - thus my voting order here.

I'm torn on where to put Cousy. I originally had him higher than I do now (39), but I was persuaded by some arguments made in other threads that his impact wasn't as great as I was giving him credit for. His relatively poor shooting also bothers me. However I could be persuaded to bring him back up, so while I appreciate the move of voting for Barry to make your vote count, I'd encourage you to start building the case for Cousy, much as I will be doing for Thurmond. Planting seeds.

Thanx for your thoughts & suggestions.

In this particular thread, I feel I've said the mininum necessary amount on Bob Cousy's behalf, if you will.

My basic orientation for building a GOAT list is thru comparing how each individual player dominated (or didn't) HIS position during HIS era. No player can do much more than that; and the greater number of years they did that; for me, the higher up my GOAT list they go. My basic CRITERIA is ALL-League selections. (While before the 1960s I "award" lower values given the decidedly lower level of play), since then I "award" 5 "Points" for ALL-League 1st-Team selections; with 2nd-Team selections rising over the decades up to 3 "Points" (60% of 1st-Team "Points"; and 3rd-Team selections rising over the decades to 1.8 "Points" (60% of 2nd-Team "Points").

The INITIAL GOAT list this produces, imo, beats any other GOAT list I've ever seen. This doesn't surprise me at all because who'd be better to judge the comparative level of player of all the players each year than the very set of people whose job it is to report on that.

(After calculating that out; I allow myself a quite limited range for "adjustments" based on all other factors).

How this relates to Cousy: with his TEN 1st-Team selections and TWO additional 2nd-Team selections (and despite serious discounts for his mostly pre-60's career) - he ends up with more "Points" than any other Point Guard not named: Magic or "O" (btw, I treat Jerry West as a SG; but he "out-points" Cousy by a big amount regardless of what position he is "assigned".). In other words, Bob Cousy is my 3rd highest ranked PG.

My GOAT list system includes one player per position in each descending set of 5 GOAT spots. So that'd put Cousy in the GOAT range of spots: #11-15. Compared to the other players I have in that range (Shaq, Jerry West, Larry Bird, Bob Pettit - in that order); Cousy is last (by "Points" and by my "eye test" and by most other measures) ... so I have Cousy as my GOAT #15 - way above where we are now in OUR selection process.

As to Cousy's low shooting percent - it wasn't unusually low for HIS position in HIS era. As for his team's lack of Play-Off success (prior to Bill Russell and others joining the team); I treat the Post-Season as less significant than most other GOAT - list builders do (mostly because the sample size is less than 10% of the Regular Season - but also because, particularly in the Post Season, which TEAM advances is less individual player-dependent due to: injuries, match-ups, length & difficulty of previous series, etc.)

In sum, Bob Cousy DOMINATED HIS position during HIS era, more than any other Point Guard except Magic & the Big "O" - which is basically all one can ask / require of an individual player.

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