Dutchball97 wrote:RCM88x wrote:Dutchball97 wrote:In which realisty are 31 and 32 year olds considered over the hill in basketball? That's either late prime or the start of the decline. When you look at the guys listed this just has to be trolling.
32 year old John Stockton was firmly in his prime and would go on to play at a high level till he was 40. Not over the hill in the slightest. 32 year old Hakeem had won the MVP award the year before and won Finals MVP both years. If that counts as over the hill I don't know what LeBron is supposed to be right now at 35. 31 year old Karl Malone would go on to win 2 MVPs in the next 5 years and made his last All-Star appearance at 38 years old, while still averaging 22/9/4/2/1 with solid defense on top of that. 31 year old Barkley was still producing at nearly the same level as he did 2 years prior when he won MVP. 32 year old Patrick Ewing was also still in his prime and would continue to be as good for a few more years.
Writing off All-Time greats in their early 30s is a dumb thing to do. It's like saying Curry, KD, Harden, Westbrook and Butler to name a few would all be obsolete next season.
Well "over the hill" literally means late prime or declining, so you answered your own question here.
I think the argument is that late 80-90s stars all showed a particularly high level of "longevity" and play into their 30s relative to other eras, perhaps because of their era and the talent cycle of the league in the mid-late 90s.
The late 90s especially was a league dominated by old players. Is it just that these guys were special and would have done so no matter when they came up, or was it that the league in the late 90s was devoid of young talent which allowed these guys to remain at the top for longer.
That is the argument trying to be made here, which I think is fair. It really wasn't until the class of 96' came of age that the old guard was fully phased out, and by that point most of them were 35+.
Ironically of the guys you mentioned, basically all of them are on the back end of their prime, especially KD, Westbrook and Curry. Except for Harden, its quite unlikely any of those guys will contend for MVPs again. Maybe they will next season ('21) but I find it highly unlikely any will finish top 3 or even top 5.
IMO, the league was really weak from '96 till about '00. Expansion, lack of young MVP talent to push the old guard out, style of play, all sorta contributed to this. It's not a knock on any of the top players of that era, its just how the league was imo.
It sounds like such a weird argument. Like the only reason why these guys kept playing at a high level for so long was because there wasn't enough young talent. Then is the current league **** because a 35 year old LeBron is in the MVP convo? Because 34 year old CP3 made the All-NBA team? No, they're still good enough at their age and it doesn't mean the likes of Giannis, Kawhi, Jokic and AD are simply not good enough to push the old guard out.
When you have to reach this much to make an argument for LeBron, that's a pretty good argument for LeBron not being the GOAT.
Lebron is probably the 2nd best player ever and probably has the greatest longevity ever too, I don't think he's a fair representation of the league.
Did CP3 actually make the 3rd team? I didn't think they were announced yet. Regardless, that is 2 player of 15. Outside of Harden I'm pretty sure every other guy on the All-NBA teams will be 28 or younger, with a large number being 25 or younger.
Do you not believe evaluating quality of competition is a fair part of evaluating players? That has to play a pretty big role in my opinion. Personally, I believe the league was pretty weak in the 2nd half of the 90s, but I also still have Jordan as the GOAT. Both thing can be true.
Just trying to support the argument the league was weak in the late 90s, not that Jordan isn't the goat.





















