dhsilv2 wrote:With Carter the fact that he was such a problem in his best years seems rough. Now I admit a part of me feels he got a bum rap. For example, what do we think about him attending his graduation between playoff games? He made it to the game, I can't recall the game....which is why I think people who love to talk about "seeing it live" are being silly because I know I did watch that game live and recall all the talk about it. Anyway the point is he was not seen at his apex as being serious about basketball, and I don't think that is an incorrect opinion.
From my post in the criteria thread: Players with unfulfilled potential don't get extra value for having more upside or penalized for not putting in more effort to maximize their career.
Carter at his peak averaged 27.6 / 5.5 / 3.9 on 55% TS with a +12 net on/off. Whether he reached that level by putting in 80% or 110% effort is irrelevant to me. As viewers, we know very little about how much effort each player invested on a game to game basis anyway and to judge them off what is mostly narrative-driven arguments is unfair in my opinion. There are some players (Vince Carter, Rasheed Wallace, Baron Davis, Lamar Odom for examle) who are labeled as underachievers yet rate out very well in the impact stats we have.
If however games played is a key driver for you, Kevin Willis, Clifford Robinson, and Jasson Terry are still on the board. Hayes is as well if you value minutes over games, and Hayes is the guy I think is best to argue as being closest if not better than Carter if anyone is debating Carter here. hayes has the better resume, more all nba, more allstars, more defensive team (made a defensive team), and a title. They have nearly identical career WS numbers. 121 vs 122. Nearly identical number of playoff games. Of course hayes was around for a bit different playoff format. Hayes does come out ahead of playoff WS 11.7 vs 7.4. This gap btw is enough to take their WS playoff + regular season from a mild Carter edge to a mild Hayes edge. This is wider of course if you think playoffs > regular season.
It's the quality of play combined with longevity that matters for me, not just the total number of games played. I haven't ranked Willis, Uncle Cliffy or Terry yet but I doubt any of them will make my top 100. Not voting for Hayes just yet because his intangibles is probably the worst of all time and his offensive impact is questionable despite his massive box score production. I have him as a borderline top 10 defensive player of all time though.