trex_8063 wrote:Although it's often overstated [hyperbolic "a league of midgets" type statements] that he played against smaller centers, it does need to be acknowledged here that the peers he was bullying were indeed smaller [on average] than the peers Moses or Shaq were bullying. There weren't as many [any??] 7-footers about, and most of those who were close were rails. Note for instance the guys near him in rpg in the years you mention:
*In '51 he's [a somewhat distant] 2nd in the league in rebounding to Dolph Schayes (who I've alternately seen listed as 6'7" or 6'8", and anywhere from 195-220 lbs; the latter/larger numbers are currently what is listed on bbref, and look more consistent with reality to my eye, at least with later career Schayes).
**In '52 he's just +0.2 rpg to Larry Foust (6'9", 215 lbs) and Mel Hutchins (listed 6'6" and 200 lbs), and just +0.79 rpg to Arnie Risen, who was 6'9" but at a rail-thin 200 lbs listed.
***In '53, Neil Johnston (6'8", 210 lbs) is within a half a rpg of him.
****In '54 he finishes 2nd to the 6'6", 210 lb Harry Gallatin (although that is by way of higher mpg; Mikan did avg more per 36 minutes, but only by 1 rebound).
All that said, I don't necessarily disagree that Mikan is likely to be stronger than Marc Gasol. Mikan has impressive size and strength for an era that even actively DIScouraged weight training for basketball players.
penbeast0 wrote: I don't see him learning Gasol's outside game if he's truly dominant growing up in the USA rather than Europe.
I don't either, although he may adapt (a la Brook Lopez, etc).
penbeast0 wrote:So more a rich man's Vucevic type than a Gasol type I would say but with stronger defense.
Yeah, Vucevic is perhaps a better offensive comparison. I went with Gasol because [as you agree] I think his defense would be better than Vucevic (although [total sidebar comment] I think Vuce is a little underrated on that side of the ball).
penbeast0 wrote:OF course, I don't think Moses would be anywhere near the player he was in his prime playing in today's league either, or pretty much any great offensive post scorer in history, even a Wilt or Shaq would be utilized far less as coaches played a 4 out with them like Orlando Dwight Howard. The league has changed too much.
To be clear, when I said "modern(ish)" I wasn't only referring to the last few years; I was more referring to roughly the 21st century thus far ("born circa-1980"), although really anything roughly 1990's and after is "modern(ish)" to me.
penbeast0 wrote:I just don't think it's relevant to a question of greatest peaks. Curry wouldn't have a top peak in a pre 3 point era either . . . so what. It's about the dominance in era with an adjustment for era strength. The question is how massive the adjustment has to be for Mikan's segregated, baseball (and maybe football) dominated era.
I don't tend to use too much era portability considerations when ranking careers in general; I mostly just consider the overall strength of that era. I'm not sure I can articulate exactly why, but era portability (are you merely a product of your era? type questions) become more important to me in peaks projects.
And I totally agree wrt Curry. If not for that consideration, I think he has a reasonable top 10 case for peak. With that consideration in mind, though, I can't see arguing him any higher than maybe about 13th (probably a fringe top-15(ish) to me, with arguments existing to push him out around 20).