dhsilv2 wrote:liamliam1234 wrote:Are you people serious with these Robinson/Hakeem takes? Hakeem has the advantage even if we ignore the postseason entirely.
https://www.landofbasketball.com/player_comparison/hakeem_olajuwon_vs_david_robinson.htm... And then you compare their postseasons.
It is not even a competition. David Robinson wins five series without Duncan and gets carried to two titles, while Hakeem carried his own mediocre roster to two. Suggesting they are on the same level and that it is solely dependent on Hakeem embarrassing Robinson in their playoff series is one of the more profoundly ignorant takes I have seen here (Kobe stans aside).
Didn't see anything I'd really use that closely in there.
Career
VORP 80.9 77.1 Robinson
WS 178.7 162.8 Robinson
PER 26.2 23.6 Robinson
So in all the major stats Robinson has a career lead despite less playing game. So if we're going on regular season alone, it's David pretty easily.
Hakeem never lead the league in PER, WS, WS/48, BPM, or VORP. Mean while Robinson lead the league in all of them. More impressively he lead the league in all of them 3 straight seasons.
So should we throw Anthony Davis into the top 10 pretty soon then? Doesn't he show up really well in the individual advanced stats?
27.4 career PER for AD. Higher than Robinsons'!
Except this is not usually how we rate players all time. Don't you think accomplishments like league MVP, Finals' MVP, Defensive player of the year, first team All NBA, All Star selections, being the best player on a championship team, etc. should be primary factors?
We can find a lot of guys with great career VORP, WS, PER that don't belong anywhere near the top 25 All Time.
Or do you really think we should put AD in the top 10 when he retires, even if he never leads a team to a Title?