SkyHookFTW wrote:Styrian wrote:I voted for Dirk. Thinking about it, question is basically "who would you rather draft as a rookie" and I prefer Nowitzki for career. Beside intangibles, Wilt was too mediocre on offense and too inconsistent on defense, but it is close either way.
Can you explain to me how a player who averaged 30 ppg. on 54% shooting for his career, leading the league nine times in FG% is mediocre on offense?
Again, the argument would be based upon his impact on the team's fortunes. It's hard to be very granular in terms of separating player from team back then, but the first pass results would show that during Wilt's biggest volume scoring years, his teams were routinely finishing among the bottom of the league in offense.
One line of logic that has been permeating the boards of late is that individual offense is more important than individual defense because a great offensive player can supposedly lead to a great team offensive rating by himself, regardless of teammate quality, whereas a great individual defender can't have as much effect. I find that line of logic to be garbage, by the way, but it is a prevailing opinion among a growing group of posters. So, for those that believe this, Wilt leading consistent average/poor offenses would be evidence that he couldn't be all that dominant in his offensive impact.
Also, getting more granular, we can look in WOWY-type analysis for some of Wilt's seasons, especially 1965, when his absence/presence for half of the season on two different teams didn't seem to make as much difference in their regular season production as you would expect from a mega star. And since he averaged 35 points on 51% FG in that season, if those are the markers of greatness then he SHOULD have been making more difference.
I've seen references made to teammate accounts from those volume Wilt years saying that they had to subsume their games and run the entire offense based on Wilt's preferences so that he could get his points. If true, this could help account for how he could put up huge numbers but not be making the expected impact
Then, there's the notion that interior big men historically rarely have the offensive impact of a superstar. Generally, perimeter players can have more impact on offense and big men more impact on defense. There are some exceptions, but they're relatively rare. Perhaps Wilt wasn't one of those scoring/impact exceptions in the middle, despite the gaudy numbers
Just some food for thought