limbo wrote:I think Bird and Dirk are pretty comparable. .
I think Bird was a much better passer.
Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ
limbo wrote:I think Bird and Dirk are pretty comparable. .
70sFan wrote:Dutchball97 wrote:Why shouldn't Bird be ranked this high? Was he better than the likes of West, Kobe and Dirk? I think it's not really a question whether it's peak or prime that I'd take Bird over any of them. Taking a worse player over him, simply because that player played for a bit longer feels pedantic to me.
I already touched this in my post - was Bird really better than West? If he was, was he consistent enough to say he was better player in their primes? If so, then is the gap big enough to overcome the fact that West had much more productive career despite not being any longer?
penbeast0 wrote:Hal14 wrote:...
Other than Luka Doncic, Nikola Jokic and Kristaps Porzingis, how many other true high impact international guys are there?
Compare that to 89-90. You had Hakeem, Ewing, Sarunas Marčiulionis, Drazen Petrovic, Detlef Schrempf, Vlade Divac, Dominique Wilkins, Rik Smits, et. for international players.
You are using Rik Smits and ignoring Gobert and Joel Embiid? Heck, Sabonis, Horford, Vucevic, and maybe even Marc Gasol, Clint Capela, and Steven Adams are playing at or above the level Smits did during 1990. I didn't even bother to compare other positions or look things up.
drza wrote:Vote:
1) Kevin Garnett (biggest impact of generation; one of (if not the) most portable, scaleable and scarce skillsets in NBA history)
2) Shaquille O'Neal (Dominant peak and prime, by every eye test and analytics approach there is)
3)Olajuwon or Bird is tough, but for now I'll go Olajuwon. One of the elite defenders & post scorers in NBA history, magical 93-96 peak
limbo wrote:Kareem was definitely siphoning lots of votes away from Magic during the first half of the 80's, because he was still (rightfully) considered the better player.
Bird didn't have anyone that was considered a Top 3 player in the league on his team from the jump, that's why more of the MVP votes for Boston's success funneled to him, despite not necessarily being better than Magic in his first three seasons. Bird's seperation from Magic happened from 1984 to 1988, where you can indeed argue he played more consistently on a higher level during the RS than Magic. But after that, Bird is donezo, while Magic still put up 3 MVP level seasons...
Also, a big stake in Magic > Bird actually comes from Magic more consistently delivering in the Playoffs, which is irrelevant to how the MVP voting is done. So even if someone thought Magic was better than Bird by the end of 1988, Bird gets to be the MVP because he had the better RS.
It's kind of like somebody from 2050 looked back in history and saw Giannis winning MVPS in 2019 and 2020 and concluding that the thought of that time was that Giannis was the best player in the league, when we know Playoffs is a different landscape.
DQuinn1575 wrote:70sFan wrote:Dutchball97 wrote:Why shouldn't Bird be ranked this high? Was he better than the likes of West, Kobe and Dirk? I think it's not really a question whether it's peak or prime that I'd take Bird over any of them. Taking a worse player over him, simply because that player played for a bit longer feels pedantic to me.
I already touched this in my post - was Bird really better than West? If he was, was he consistent enough to say he was better player in their primes? If so, then is the gap big enough to overcome the fact that West had much more productive career despite not being any longer?
At the time Bird was considered the best player in the game.
West in his prime was considered 4th/5th best player, behind Russell, Wilt, Oscar, (and at times Baylor)
DQuinn1575 wrote:limbo wrote:I think Bird and Dirk are pretty comparable. .
I think Bird was a much better passer.
'limbo wrote:Kareem was definitely siphoning lots of votes away from Magic during the first half of the 80's, because he was still (rightfully) considered the better player.
Bird didn't have anyone that was considered a Top 3 player in the league on his team from the jump, that's why more of the MVP votes for Boston's success funneled to him, despite not necessarily being better than Magic in his first three seasons. Bird's seperation from Magic happened from 1984 to 1988, where you can indeed argue he played more consistently on a higher level during the RS than Magic. But after that, Bird is donezo, while Magic still put up 3 MVP level seasons...
Also, a big stake in Magic > Bird actually comes from Magic more consistently delivering in the Playoffs, which is irrelevant to how the MVP voting is done. So even if someone thought Magic was better than Bird by the end of 1988, Bird gets to be the MVP because he had the better RS.
It's kind of like somebody from 2050 looked back in history and saw Giannis winning MVPS in 2019 and 2020 and concluding that the thought of that time was that Giannis was the best player in the league, when we know Playoffs is a different landscape.
Dutchball97 wrote:the best player in the league, when we know Playoffs is a different landscape.
Comparing Giannis with D-Rob makes sense as they are both regular season monsters that were a bit more limited in the play-offs. In his 3 MVP seasons, Bird won 2 titles and made another final in those years. His 84 and 86 runs are some of the best play-off runs ever. It's misleading to say that since Bird won the MVP 3 times in a row he was somehow a regular season hero who couldn't get it done in the post-season.
Dutchball97 wrote:So now the mid 80s is suddenly a weak era? Looks like we can discount half of Kareem and MJ's MVPs because they came in the weak late 70s and late 90s respectively.
limbo wrote:Dutchball97 wrote:So now the mid 80s is suddenly a weak era? Looks like we can discount half of Kareem and MJ's MVPs because they came in the weak late 70s and late 90s respectively.
Suddenly?
Man... look at the competition the Lakers had from 1981 to 1988 in the Playoffs... And even then they managed to lose to a massive underdog Rockets team twice somehow.
Look at 1987...
1st round: Denver Nuggets: -1.14 SRS (15/23)
2nd round: Golden State Warriors: -2.54 SRS (16/23)
3rd round: Seattle Supersonics: 0.08 SRS (11/23)
...how are these teams even in the Playoffs. Two teams that were below league average during the RS.
Contrast that to Bird:
1st round: Chicago Bulls: 1.26 SRS (8/23)
2nd round: Milwaukee Bucks: 4.04 SRS (5/23)
3rd round: Detroit Pistons: 3.51 SRS (6/23)
From 1980 to 1988, the only time you could argue the Celtics had an easier path to the Finals than the Lakers was in 1980.
DQuinn1575 wrote:trex_8063 wrote:DQuinn1575 wrote:
People on this board dont seem to understand population it's not the total population, but those of basketball playing age- the population of people 20-34 (roughly NBA age) went from 63.0 million in 1986 to 57.1 million in 1997 (Census Report 1960-1997) - the baby boomers were a real thing - about a 9% drop.
A good point, thank you.
Although to get closer to the year sets in question, the census data I'm looking at puts the "NBA age" group in 1984 at ~60.0 million [estimated] vs 58.8 million for 2000: a 2% drop. Fairly negligible, and easily off-set [and then some] by the other popularity factors mentioned. The growth in player pool is still there.....just not near as large as I'd previously suggested.
I get 310 total players in NBA of 1984 and 439 in 2000, From the 439 I deduct 14 players who were not born in US and did not attend college -as there were none in 1984 (and as a side note 65 in 2020) , and get 425 players. but additionally there were only 10 non US born players who had played in college in 1984 and 39 in 2020 - deduct 29 more to be fair to get to 396- so a 28% increase in the number of non foreign players, while the population went down 2% - So you added 86 players in this time period, with a real slight population decline. The increase in popularity didn't come up with 86 players. They are guys who didn't make the league in 1984. EDITED- some are guys who left school early, i can check on that later/but the increase there is not all of the 86.
So it was tougher to make the league in the mid 80s.
source - Basketball Reference
DQuinn1575 wrote:drza wrote:Vote:
1) Kevin Garnett (biggest impact of generation; one of (if not the) most portable, scaleable and scarce skillsets in NBA history)
2) Shaquille O'Neal (Dominant peak and prime, by every eye test and analytics approach there is)
3)Olajuwon or Bird is tough, but for now I'll go Olajuwon. One of the elite defenders & post scorers in NBA history, magical 93-96 peak
help me with Garnett a little, I dont have him as high as others - so I "think" (and I want to listen) that
Garnett is rated real high on plus/minus - Isn't David Robinson also real high - shouldn't Robinson be real high?
penbeast0 wrote:Hal14 wrote:...
Other than Luka Doncic, Nikola Jokic and Kristaps Porzingis, how many other true high impact international guys are there?
Compare that to 89-90. You had Hakeem, Ewing, Sarunas Marčiulionis, Drazen Petrovic, Detlef Schrempf, Vlade Divac, Dominique Wilkins, Rik Smits, et. for international players.
You are using Rik Smits and ignoring Gobert and Joel Embiid? Heck, Sabonis, Horford, Vucevic, and maybe even Marc Gasol, Clint Capela, and Steven Adams are playing at or above the level Smits did during 1990. I didn't even bother to compare other positions or look things up.