Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever?

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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#61 » by bledredwine » Tue Oct 9, 2018 10:53 pm

Missing Rings wrote:
bledredwine wrote:I prefer players who have a mixture of - winners, outliers who changed the rules and the way the game is played, offensive and defensive impact/beasts, players who won all of their matchups, won/stepped up in important moments, championships, pioneers of moves/style, accolades and so on.


1. Jordan
2. Kareem
3. Russell
4. Wilt
5. Magic
6. Lebron
7. Hakeem
8. Bird
9. Shaq
10. Duncan

Something like that.

So basically you curated your desires so Jordan would always be first since you jump through more hoops than a 3rd grade gym class.

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(Long reply ahead, but this type of reply fascinates me). I see your screen name and I see why you replied this way.

Take a look at what you just said. I listed pioneers of the game, dominance, playing both sides of the court, achievements/accolades, winning (and championships), winning matchups as part of my criteria. Are those not important when considering GOAT players of any sport? Babe Ruth’s, Gretzky’s yes Jordan, and so on? Did I not nearly cover everything important to a legacy and the possibility of being on Rushmore?

Here’s something I’ve learned posting here-
It says something about Lebron’s career that it’s so easy to trigger his fans (97% of offended replies to my posts are fans of his). It shows that he has many Achilles heels, faults, and no right to be considered GOAT...... Why? I can make any comment where I’m not even saying anything offensive/rude and these insecurities pop up, indicating that I’m hating on him (due to his obviously not fulfilling some criteria/categories... and yeah, like a couple in my list, he doesn’t.).

I sincerely enjoy talking Jordan and without the replies/mentions, I wouldn’t have that avenue to discuss how great he was and why he’s consensus GOAT among actual professional NBA players. That said, If you’d really like to continue this discussion, how about giving me some logical reasons why my post isn’t right instead of making a pointless accusation?

This is what you’re essentially doing - many prioritize “longetivity” for example, then state accolades or whatever and put Kareem. You don’t see me bashing them for cherry picking. Those who prioritize longetivity are doing so to demote Jordan or promote Kareem, Duncan or Lebron. You don’t see me making irrational accusations because I’d think he’s entitled to be at the top. They can have their opinion because it’s valid. If you don’t think my criteria valid, go ahead and tell me why, because I basically covered all bases of achievements and dominance in my criteria. Otherwise? You can move on and accept that my top ten is my top ten ;)
:o LeBron is 0-7 in game winning/tying FGs in the finals. And is 20/116 or 17% in game winning/tying FGs in the 4th/OT for his career. That's historically bad :o
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#62 » by Cavsfansince84 » Wed Oct 10, 2018 1:00 am

bledredwine wrote:
Take a look at what you just said. I listed pioneers of the game, dominance, playing both sides of the court, achievements/accolades, winning (and championships), winning matchups as part of my criteria. Are those not important when considering GOAT players of any sport? Babe Ruth’s, Gretzky’s yes Jordan, and so on? Did I not nearly cover everything important to a legacy and the possibility of being on Rushmore?

Here’s something I’ve learned posting here-
It says something about Lebron’s career that it’s so easy to trigger his fans (97% of offended replies to my posts are fans of his). It shows that he has many Achilles heels, faults, and no right to be considered GOAT...... Why? I can make any comment where I’m not even saying anything offensive/rude and these insecurities pop up, indicating that I’m hating on him (due to his obviously not fulfilling some criteria/categories... and yeah, like a couple in my list, he doesn’t.).

I sincerely enjoy talking Jordan and without the replies/mentions, I wouldn’t have that avenue to discuss how great he was and why he’s consensus GOAT among actual professional NBA players. That said, If you’d really like to continue this discussion, how about giving me some logical reasons why my post isn’t right instead of making a pointless accusation?

This is what you’re essentially doing - many prioritize “longetivity” for example, then state accolades or whatever and put Kareem. You don’t see me bashing them for cherry picking. Those who prioritize longetivity are doing so to demote Jordan or promote Kareem, Duncan or Lebron. You don’t see me making irrational accusations because I’d think he’s entitled to be at the top. They can have their opinion because it’s valid. If you don’t think my criteria valid, go ahead and tell me why, because I basically covered all bases of achievements and dominance in my criteria. Otherwise? You can move on and accept that my top ten is my top ten ;)


Valuing longevity isn't always about promoting Kareem, Duncan or LeBron. Some people simply value it more than you seem to and so the obvious correlation would be to put Kareem and Duncan very high on their lists. I think you see everyone who values longevity as just wanting to hate on MJ when that isn't always the case. I generally very rarely hate on MJ but I also value longevity but even so I still usually have MJ at #1. Having said that, I also think LeBron still has the potential to overtake him if he's still an mvp caliber player as he nears 40 and wins another ring with the Lakers.
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#63 » by bledredwine » Wed Oct 10, 2018 1:53 am

Cavsfansince84 wrote:
bledredwine wrote:
Take a look at what you just said. I listed pioneers of the game, dominance, playing both sides of the court, achievements/accolades, winning (and championships), winning matchups as part of my criteria. Are those not important when considering GOAT players of any sport? Babe Ruth’s, Gretzky’s yes Jordan, and so on? Did I not nearly cover everything important to a legacy and the possibility of being on Rushmore?

Here’s something I’ve learned posting here-
It says something about Lebron’s career that it’s so easy to trigger his fans (97% of offended replies to my posts are fans of his). It shows that he has many Achilles heels, faults, and no right to be considered GOAT...... Why? I can make any comment where I’m not even saying anything offensive/rude and these insecurities pop up, indicating that I’m hating on him (due to his obviously not fulfilling some criteria/categories... and yeah, like a couple in my list, he doesn’t.).

I sincerely enjoy talking Jordan and without the replies/mentions, I wouldn’t have that avenue to discuss how great he was and why he’s consensus GOAT among actual professional NBA players. That said, If you’d really like to continue this discussion, how about giving me some logical reasons why my post isn’t right instead of making a pointless accusation?

This is what you’re essentially doing - many prioritize “longetivity” for example, then state accolades or whatever and put Kareem. You don’t see me bashing them for cherry picking. Those who prioritize longetivity are doing so to demote Jordan or promote Kareem, Duncan or Lebron. You don’t see me making irrational accusations because I’d think he’s entitled to be at the top. They can have their opinion because it’s valid. If you don’t think my criteria valid, go ahead and tell me why, because I basically covered all bases of achievements and dominance in my criteria. Otherwise? You can move on and accept that my top ten is my top ten ;)


Valuing longevity isn't always about promoting Kareem, Duncan or LeBron. Some people simply value it more than you seem to and so the obvious correlation would be to put Kareem and Duncan very high on their lists. I think you see everyone who values longevity as just wanting to hate on MJ when that isn't always the case. I generally very rarely hate on MJ but I also value longevity but even so I still usually have MJ at #1. Having said that, I also LeBron still has the potential to overtake him if he's still an mvp caliber player as he nears 40 and wins another ring with the Lakers.


I disagree on Lebron having a shot, especially given all of his vulnerabilities, woes, and comparing achievements. From what I’ve seen, he’s just not as good, especially as a scorer, closer, and man-to-man defender. He’s too close to other players in the league. Jordan was clearly on another tier from the other stars. However, we are both entitled to our opinions.

As for the other topic, I think that you may have misunderstood what I was saying. I said that I don’t hold it against people for valuing longetivity because I think that it’s a valid argument. However, it is without a doubt true that some are Duncan, Lebron, or Kareem fans who specifically state longetivity to support their favorite player. Once again, I have no problem with that. I do have a problem with those who put down Jordan with myths, orthose that have issues with me having my own well-supported opinions. Yes- I think that Jordan is much better. It’s my opinion and there’s plenty of good reasons if I state them. Sensitive replies are unwarranted.

I see posters with Kareem/lakers or Duncan screen names posting about longetivity. Let’s not hold a double standard here just because I’m a Jordan fan. Let’s not act like Jordan doesn’t have nearly all bases covered. We all know that he does and why he’s the comparison pretty much all of the time. Posters may hate it, but I’m here to verify, help us all remember and post the stats. Look at how often he is still mentioned in these topic titles alone. I won’t allow false representation.
:o LeBron is 0-7 in game winning/tying FGs in the finals. And is 20/116 or 17% in game winning/tying FGs in the 4th/OT for his career. That's historically bad :o
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#64 » by SinceGatlingWasARookie » Fri Oct 12, 2018 3:41 am

trex_8063 wrote:
SinceGatlingWasARookie wrote:
Wilt had more offensive impact than anybody.


I feel like this statement needs some qualifying. Unless we're conflating offensive production with offensive impact. If you're using the terms interchangeably, then I semantically disagree but otherwise would not argue against you. But if you indeed mean "impact" as most of us interpret the word, then I just don't see it (or even close to it).


In '60, with the addition of rookie (MVP) Wilt Chamberlain, the Warriors's rORTG improves by only a modest +1.1 (from -3.5 to a still pretty poor -2.4--->ranked 7th of 8 teams). They had basically the exact same roster as in '59, except that Wilt was added. And on paper, the offensive supporting cast doesn't appear awful. I mean, they were still allowing a fair number of minutes and shots to Woody Sauldsberry (who was horrid offensively), but they otherwise had Paul Arizin, Tom Gola, and Guy Rodgers (admittedly, I'm not near as high on Guy Rodgers as some appear to be, but just putting his name out there). If we're truly talking about the single greatest offensive impact player that basketball has EVER seen, how on Earth is he not able to lead an average offense (or even particularly close to it) with this cast? And why do they improve only a small amount by adding him?

In '61 they manage to improve by +1.5, to a still somewhat poor -0.9 rORTG. They'd gotten rid of Woody Sauldsberry (which might have a lot to do with the improvement, frankly); still have Arizin, Gola, and Rodgers (and no one as sapping of offense effectiveness as Sauldsberry was).......still a below average offense (ranked 6th of 8).
'
In ‘62, with Paul Arizin (aging, final season), Guy Rodgers, Tom Gola (a little banged up this year), 2nd-year Al Attles, and rookie Tom Mescherry, they go heavily to Wilt (his 50 ppgf season) and they finally manage an offense that is above average [barely] at +0.9 rORTG (4th of 9 teams).

In ‘63, Arizin has retired and Gola misses much of the year. They have a fair bit of roster shake-up as a result, adding in rookie Wayne Hightower, a half-season of Willie Naulls, a new bench wings in Gary Phillips and George Lee, and also some limited minutes from the offensively gifted forward Kenny Sears. And they still have Guy Rodgers, Al Attles, and Tom Mescherry as consistent big-minute players carried over from the previous year. The team rORTG again dips below average at -0.7 (5th of 9).

In ‘64 they have the same roster as in ‘63 except that Gola is now gone (he’d missed most of ‘63 anyway), and they’ve obtained rookie Nate Thurmond. The team does very well this year, but NOT on account of its offense (the basis of our discussion here). No, in fact, the offense was [again] a rather poor -1.6 rORTG (7th of 9 teams).

In ‘65, with largely the same roster, the quality of their play goes down the toilet, especially on offense. For the year, they were a -5.9 rORTG (dead last in the league). Now, Wilt was only around for half of that season, though it should be noted they were 11-33 in the 44 games before the trade (on pace for 20 wins), 10-28 in the 38 games he actually played in a Warriors uniform that year (on pace for 21 wins). They did average +4.9 ppg before the trade, though.
The Sixers, who Wilt was traded to mid-season, were 21-21 before the trade, 19-19 after the trade. They averaged 112.2 ppg before obtaining Wilt, 112.9 ppg after. The Sixers overall were a +0.5 rORTG (5th of 9 teams).

In ‘66---with a supporting cast of Hal Greer, Chet Walker, rookie Billy Cunningham, as well as minutes from passable offensive players such as Luke Jackson and Dave Gambee----Wilt led a barely above average +0.4 rORTG (though ranked just 6th of 9 teams).

****We’re now halfway thru his entire career, and yet to see any evidence that he is even a potential top 10 all-time in offensive impact, much less the GOAT in this respect.*****

In ‘67, with much the same supporting cast as in ‘66 (except they added some limited bench minutes from savvy veteran Larry Costello), we FINALLY see a legit elite Wilt-led offense: +5.4 rORTG. So it’s elite, and arguably even in an all-time sense: although it doesn’t even crack top 25 all-time, as measured by rORTG, it is the highest rORTG seen in the league prior to ‘71). Although it’s the first time we’ve seen something historic or elite offensively around Wilt, and with a pretty darn good offensive supporting cast, too (Greer/Walker/Cunningham is a heck of a trio for being #2-4 on the team).

The same basic cast would manage only a +1.3 rORTG in ‘68.

In ‘69, the Sixers trade Wilt away, getting Archie Clark and Darrall Imhoff in return…..and their rORTG improves by +1.3 (to +2.6, 4th of 14 teams). It would remain just marginally better than their ‘68 rORTG for the following two seasons as well.
The Lakers were the team that received Wilt in ‘69 (again, trading away Archie Clark and Darrall Imhoff for him); they also got rid of Gail Goodrich, and obtained Keith Erickson and Johnny Egan that year. Perhaps also worth noting that they got 61 games out of Jerry West in ‘69, vs just 51 in ‘68. Their offense gets worse by -1.9 (dropping from +4.9 to +3.0); given all the player turnover, I’m not exactly sure how to interpret that. I will say it doesn’t even remotely suggest all-time great level offensive impact for Wilt.

In ‘70 Wilt misses most of the year. They obtained Happy Hairston this year (most of the season, too), and a rookies Dick Garrett and Rick Roberson also got serious playing time. It does reflect well on Wilt that their offense fell to a +0.1 rORTG (not reflective of anywhere near all-time greatest offensive impact, but still good).

In ‘71 Wilt is back for the full season (yes, I know we’re not really talking about truly prime-level Wilt anymore). An aging Baylor misses the whole year, but on the flip-side Gail Goodrich is back with the team. Roster is otherwise same as ‘70, except for limited minutes for rookie Jim McMillan. Their offense improves to +1.6 rORTG.

In ‘72 they have the same roster as in ‘71, except a somewhat improved 2nd-year McMillan is playing mroe. We again (for the 2nd and final time in Wilt’s career) see an elite-level offense (though not exactly one that is “led by” Wilt: he’s only 4th on the team in ppg and 3rd in apg [despite being first in mpg]).

And in his final season they’d be a +2.6 rORTG.


So certainly there’s [usually] indication of positive impact on offense (occasionally even substantially so); just nothing remotely close to GOAT offensive impact player.


When the league is shooting 42% a high volume 50% scorer has got to be a tremendous asset to the offense. Do we Blame Wilt for his teamates poor shooting?

In 1964-65 when the Warriors are bad I guess we can blame Wilt for ruining the team chemistry. Somebody ruined the team chemistry but it might not have been Wilt. Then Wilt is traded to the 76ers and they don't emediately get good.

Wilt's offense is great. Maybe Bad Wilt and his teamates don't play defense.

Guy Rogers impressed me with his ability to beat people off the dribble but then Rogers can't hit his shots and he also isn't a great passer.

Arizon declined Wilt's rookie year. Did Wilt cause that?

The year before Wilt the Warriors shot 38%. The Warriors other than Wilt shoot 39% Wilt's rookie year. The Warriors team including shoots 41% Wilt's rrokie year because Wilt's 46% lifted the team average.

In Wilt's 3rd year Wilt's teamates shoot 40% The team including Wilt shoots 44%. The league shoots 42.5%. The e worst team in the league shot 41%. Maybe Wilt's teamates were very bad offensively.
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#65 » by The High Cyde » Fri Oct 12, 2018 5:47 pm

1. LeBron
2. Kareem
3. Jordan
4. Duncan
5. Shaq
6. Magic
7. Wilt
8. Hakeem
9. Bird
10. Russell

Subject to change if necessary, of course :D
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#66 » by _Game7_ » Sat Oct 13, 2018 2:15 am

Changes all the time, but as of today.

Lebron
Jordan
Russell
Kareem
Magic
Bird
Wilt
Duncan
Shaq
Kobe
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#67 » by Kurosawa0 » Sat Oct 13, 2018 5:37 pm

1. Michael Jordan
2. LeBron James
3. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
4. Magic Johnson
5. Bill Russell
6. Tim Duncan
7. Kobe Bryant
8. Shaquille O'Neal
9. Larry Bird
10. Wilt Chamberlain
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#68 » by Chanel Bomber » Sat Oct 13, 2018 10:08 pm

01. MJ
02. LeBron
03. Curry
04. Kareem
05. Magic
06. Russell
07. Duncan
08. Bird
09. Shaq
10. Wilt

Ready for the hate.
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#69 » by Colbinii » Sun Oct 14, 2018 2:54 am

Chanel Bomber wrote:01. MJ
02. LeBron
03. Curry
04. Kareem
05. Magic
06. Russell
07. Duncan
08. Bird
09. Shaq
10. Wilt

Ready for the hate.


You clearly value offense a lot while longevity takes a back seat, but shouldn't that translate into Shaq being ahead of Russell and Duncan?
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#70 » by SpreeS » Sun Oct 14, 2018 11:40 am

MJ/KAJ/LJB/Bill/Magic/Wilt/Bird/TD/O'Neal/Dream
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#71 » by No-more-rings » Sun Oct 14, 2018 7:49 pm

Chanel Bomber wrote:01. MJ
02. LeBron
03. Curry
04. Kareem
05. Magic
06. Russell
07. Duncan
08. Bird
09. Shaq
10. Wilt

Ready for the hate.

Curry 3rd? :lol: :lol: :lol: :crazy:

Yeah, no bias there.
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#72 » by Chanel Bomber » Sun Oct 14, 2018 11:41 pm

Colbinii wrote:
Chanel Bomber wrote:01. MJ
02. LeBron
03. Curry
04. Kareem
05. Magic
06. Russell
07. Duncan
08. Bird
09. Shaq
10. Wilt

Ready for the hate.


You clearly value offense a lot while longevity takes a back seat, but shouldn't that translate into Shaq being ahead of Russell and Duncan?

I appreciate your answer.

I do value offense a lot. History has proven that it is far easier to build a great defense around a player who is not necessarily a great defender (except for centers) than it is to replace the impact and the gravitational pull of a great offensive player. I have no problem putting Magic and Curry over Duncan and Russell, and that's the primary reason why I rank Dirk comfortably ahead of KG. I feel very confident saying this.

You make an excellent point about prime, and you're making me question my rankings when it comes to Duncan vs Shaq.

I do value prime over longevity, but I also factor longevity and other factors into the equation, including rings, stats, awards, character, skill level, translatable skills etc. I witnessed Shaq's prime and it seems we have all forgotten just how dominant he was. It wasn't a debate back in the day who was the most dominant player in the league. However, I think Shaq would be exposed defensively in today's NBA, and what made him great in his day would be his Achilles' heel in this era (one could argue that Russell and Kareem would have the same problem in today's NBA, but their resumes overwhelmingly surpass Shaq's). Duncan would be more a more valuable player today because of his defensive versatility and mobility, even if Shaq were at his best. Shaq was not the easiest teammate either and he came with baggage. Duncan was someone around whom you could build an entire culture. I believe those factors (at least partially) explain why Duncan has more rings than Shaq. However, since I do value prime, maybe I should rank Shaq ahead of Duncan. You might be right. Yet I'm not convinced because of the reasons I mentioned (particularly the defense argument).

It's an endless debate and it all depends on the criteria (or their order of priority) upon which our evaluations are made. The biggest question to me is, are we judging players based on what they did in their respective eras or are we judging them based on an imaginary draft that would be held today? And if we're doing the latter, should we judge these players based on the skillsets that they had when they were playing or do we assume their skillsets would improve and adapt to any era because of their natural talent and inherent greatness (classic case: Michael Jordan shooting 3s)? I try to do a little bit of both but it's hard to find the right balance. Because I probably wouldn't have Russell in the top 50 if we were judging players based solely on their skill level and regardless of the era they played in, and yet that sounds ludicrous.

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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#73 » by udfa » Mon Oct 15, 2018 3:26 pm

1. MJ
2. Bron
3. Magic
4. Russell
5. Kareem
6. Duncan
7. Wilt
8. Shaq
9. Kobe
10. Curry
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#74 » by Run DLC » Mon Oct 15, 2018 8:13 pm

Where do you guys think Durant will rank? Some people are saying he will surpass LeBron if he ties him by winning another title this year.
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#75 » by Colbinii » Mon Oct 15, 2018 8:14 pm

Run DLC wrote:Where do you guys think Durant will rank? Some people are saying he will surpass LeBron if he ties him by winning another title this year.


Durant could win the next 5 scoring titles and MVP's and not pass LeBron.

I see him finishing between Jerry West and John Stockton. Likely right around Wade, and depending on how long his prime lasts he could surpass Wade and get closer to CP3.
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#76 » by magicman1978 » Mon Oct 15, 2018 8:50 pm

Run DLC wrote:Where do you guys think Durant will rank? Some people are saying he will surpass LeBron if he ties him by winning another title this year.


Unless he becomes a much better player than he's ever been and plays at that level for 5+ years, he won't ever pass LeBron.
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#77 » by ThaRegul8r » Mon Oct 15, 2018 9:37 pm

Run DLC wrote:Some people are saying he will surpass LeBron if he ties him by winning another title this year.


There are over 7 billion people in the world. At this point in time, many of them are on the internet. So you will always be able to find "some people" expressing any opinion it's possible to have. For instance, "some people" have said Allen Iverson is the greatest NBA player of all time.

And it seems like it's popular on internet basketball forums to not care how a player plays. They just have some checklist of accolades they mark. For a while you've had people talk about hypothetical rankings by changing awards and accolades while not saying anything at all about a player's play changing. Actual performance takes a back seat to things that have nothing to do with how a player played (awards and accolades are separate from performance, as a player's performance is what it is whether they get an award for it or not).

I always use this example. Mitch Richmond "won a title." So people who just mark boxes will use that as ammo against another player. The fact that he only played four minutes that postseason and his actual play didn't have anything to do with his team's championship that year doesn't matter, the only thing that matters is that he checks the box "Did he win a title?"
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters


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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#78 » by Blazers-1977 » Mon Oct 15, 2018 9:53 pm

1. Jordan
2. Kareem
3. Magic
4. Russell
5. Lebron
6. Shaq
7. Duncan
8. Bird
9. Kobe
10. Wilt
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#79 » by Drylick » Tue Oct 16, 2018 2:32 pm

1. Jordan
2. Russell
3. Wilt
4. Kareem
5. LeBron
6. Bird
7. Magic
8. Duncan
9. Hakeem
10. Shaq
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Re: Who Are Your Current Top 10 Players Ever? 

Post#80 » by DavidSterned » Tue Oct 16, 2018 5:29 pm

1. MJ
2. Kareem
3. Lebron
4. Wilt
5. Russell
6. Magic
7. Bird
8. Duncan
9. Shaq
10. Hakeem

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