Last thread I was deciding between Jones and Hayes, with longevity being a major factor for Hayes. However, recent discussion has me questioning whether I've been TOO longevity-oriented in my thinking (I did still side with Jones, fwiw).
Additionally, iggymcfrack might have a valid point (from the last thread):
iggymcfrack wrote:It’s kinda unfair when you’re ranking PFs because you almost have to play some minutes at the 5 to really have game-changing impact. KG had his 3 best defensive seasons in his 30s because he was playing center and that allowed him to have way more impact than he could as a true 4. Same for Duncan, he was always playing at least a large share of his minutes at center which is what allowed him to impact the game in a way that a pure 4 like Jones couldn’t. And Draymond had an unprecedented postseason impact while playing 31% of his postseason minutes at the 5 from 14/15 through 16/17. But if we’re looking at how they impacted the game, I just think they did a lot more in those years than Rodman or Jones was capable of.
The C position is the most defensively dominant position; the "bigs" in general often have greater capacity to have defensive impact because there are typically more instances in which they can effect [or end] the possession. As such, it does seem like the PF/C's who [somewhat arbitrarily] got lumped in with the PF's (Duncan, Hayes, etc) maybe have an "unfair" advantage over SF/PF's (Rodman, DeBusschere, etc) who also [somewhat arbitrarily] got lumped in with the PF's.
These two considerations have me giving greater consideration to Dennis Rodman for this spot (who I was leaning toward for right after Hayes). idk, I'll have to think about it, and will get my vote in before the deadline.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire