falcolombardi wrote:to change the topic a bit away from jordan vs lebron
what does everyone else feel about hakeem or shaq placing above kareem?
agree or disagree?
All three are actually quite close in terms of peak impact and very different players as well. I can see a case for each of them as the GOAT big man peak and possibly Wilt as well who wasn't featured in the series.
Kareem has the fewest weaknesses and it's a gut feel but I think he was the most difficult to stop on offense. For example people sometimes forget that Shaq got stymied against the Blazers (very pedestrian in key Game 6 and 7 in 2000; small detail but with such small margins to begin with it feels justified to say that he wasn't great in those two huge games) and also against the Spurs in several years he looked more ordinary. He wasn't always the unstoppable diesel as people claim. Hakeem got stymied by the Sonics a few times and Knicks in 94, his efficiency was generally hit and miss and his passing was always somewhere between somewhat and quite limited. Kareem even if we extend to surrounding years like 1974 and 1980 always gave you super efficient scoring with very good passing and despite his slow decline by the late 70's still really good rebounding. The Per 75 stats also underrate Kareem slightly because he always played more minutes something that I wouldn't penalize him for and is independent of pace. Compared to Shaq, Kareem was also clearly a better defender and the skyhook made him capable of getting baskets on demand.
At the end I can see Shaq over Kareem due to his offensive dominance, physicality (fouling out entire frontcourts shouldn't be underestimated), and offensive rebounding which added a ton of value. His gravity pulling defenders inside was something else which led to really efficient offenses. Both he and Hakeem had plenty of shooters but Shaq's offenses were much better.
With Hakeem his case is a tougher sell IMO. Yes he was the best of the three defensively but offensively I don't even find him in the same ballpark. I think the stats don't tell the whole story. Worst efficiency, worst offensive rebounder, and worst passer of the three by a solid margin. His teams were also never dominant offensively the way some of the teams built around Kareem and Shaq were but conversely the defenses around Kareem and Shaq were almost as good and in the case of Kareem perhaps even better (1971 to 1973 Bucks) than on Hakeem's teams. When it comes down to it, I think a focused Kareem could be in the same ballpark as Hakeem as a defender... getting tons of blocks, intimidating guys from driving in the lane, good man defender but Hakeem couldn't touch Kareem offensively due to passing deficiencies and quite frankly missing a skyhook.
50% of me thinks Kareem is the best, 40% of me thinks Shaq and 10% of me thinks Hakeem.
Playoff Stats Per Game
77-79 Kareem: 31.4 ppg, 15.3 rpg, 4.3 apg, 1.3 spg, 3.8 bpg on 62.6 %TS (+10.8 rTS) with 3.9 topg in 44.0 mpg
00-01 Shaq: 30.6 ppg, 15.4 rpg, 3.1 apg, 0.5 spg, 2.4 bpg on 55.9 %TS (+3.9 rTS) with 2.9 topg in 43.0 mpg
93-95 Hakeem: 29.8 ppg, 11.4 rpg, 4.4 apg, 1.5 spg, 3.7 bpg on 56.4 %TS (+2.8 rTS) with 3.5 topg in 42.7 mpg
Playoff Stats Per 75 Possessions
77-79 Kareem: 25.2 ppg, 12.3 rpg, 3.4 apg, 1.1 spg, 3.0 bpg on 62.6 %TS (+10.8 rTS) with 3.0 topg
00-01 Shaq: 28.2 ppg, 14.3 rpg, 2.9 apg, 0.5 spg, 2.2 bpg on 55.9 %TS (+3.9 rTS) with 2.7 topg
93-95 Hakeem: 27.6 ppg, 10.6 rpg, 4.1 apg, 1.4 spg, 3.4 bpg on 56.4 %TS (+2.8 rTS) with 3.2 topg