Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013

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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#101 » by MyUniBroDavis » Tue May 17, 2022 11:49 am

Stalwart wrote:
70sFan wrote:Magic certainly wasn't the man, or even co-leader in 1980-83 period and Kareem certainly wasn't the man after 1985. Nobody uses 1980 ring to make the case for Magic being all-timer. Nobody does that with 1987 or 1988 for Kareem. Nobody does that for Kobe either with 2000 or 2002.


I'm pretty sure everyone does all of that


I do think the era kobe played in was probably the worst for wing scorers that didn’t primarily score off the puck and roll, and he excelled in spite of that, but using 2000 kobe to bolster him up is a bit odd here lol
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#102 » by OdomFan » Tue May 17, 2022 12:06 pm

Dutchball97 wrote:
OdomFan wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:
Did you just say Kobe was a better post player than Shaq with a straight face?

I did, and I'll say it again with a straight face. He was. Shaq was good but he was never any where near as good as Hakeem. Who did Kobe learn from? Hakeem. Yeah...Better post player. Shaq had 1 go to move more often than not. That turn around hook that even Charles Barkley and the TNT crew have pointed out. Other than that he went for Dunks more often than not by using his size to try to bulldoze his way inside to dominate.

Every once in a while he'd bust out a cool move but it wasn't as consistent as you might think it was. Kobe > Shaq in post up game.


I respect your right to your opinion but this has to be the most insane take I've read on the forum so far. Pretty impressive actually. Like everyone who ever trained post play with Hakeem is immediately a better post player than one of, if not the most, dominant inside players of all time. Also if we need to penalize players for size how is Kobe better than guys like Nash and CP3?

Well I don't think it's insane at all because Shaq simply was never that great of a shooter. Shooting in the post is what I've been talking about this entire time. Shaq had great foot work and again, would bust out cool moves here and there, but more often than not his go to offense with those moves in the paint all led to Dunks. Which is fine because it helped win the Lakers games and was entertaining as hell to watch, but my point still stands.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#103 » by LAL1947 » Tue May 17, 2022 12:23 pm

OdomFan wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:
OdomFan wrote:I did, and I'll say it again with a straight face. He was. Shaq was good but he was never any where near as good as Hakeem. Who did Kobe learn from? Hakeem. Yeah...Better post player. Shaq had 1 go to move more often than not. That turn around hook that even Charles Barkley and the TNT crew have pointed out. Other than that he went for Dunks more often than not by using his size to try to bulldoze his way inside to dominate.

Every once in a while he'd bust out a cool move but it wasn't as consistent as you might think it was. Kobe > Shaq in post up game.


I respect your right to your opinion but this has to be the most insane take I've read on the forum so far. Pretty impressive actually. Like everyone who ever trained post play with Hakeem is immediately a better post player than one of, if not the most, dominant inside players of all time. Also if we need to penalize players for size how is Kobe better than guys like Nash and CP3?

Well I don't think it's insane at all because Shaq simply was never that great of a shooter. Shooting in the post is what I've been talking about this entire time. Shaq had great foot work and again, would bust out cool moves here and there, but more often than not his go to offense with those moves in the paint all led to Dunks. Which is fine because it helped win the Lakers games and was entertaining as hell to watch, but my point still stands.

I think you'd have been right if you just said Kobe had better post-skills and stopped... but saying "post-player" is TOO far. :P Kobe was definitely more skilled in the post than Shaq and even Duncan. They are 7-footers and Shaq was a beast... just no comparison to be made in the post as players because there's more to it than just post-skills.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#104 » by HeartBreakKid » Tue May 17, 2022 12:23 pm

OdomFan wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:
OdomFan wrote:I did, and I'll say it again with a straight face. He was. Shaq was good but he was never any where near as good as Hakeem. Who did Kobe learn from? Hakeem. Yeah...Better post player. Shaq had 1 go to move more often than not. That turn around hook that even Charles Barkley and the TNT crew have pointed out. Other than that he went for Dunks more often than not by using his size to try to bulldoze his way inside to dominate.

Every once in a while he'd bust out a cool move but it wasn't as consistent as you might think it was. Kobe > Shaq in post up game.


I respect your right to your opinion but this has to be the most insane take I've read on the forum so far. Pretty impressive actually. Like everyone who ever trained post play with Hakeem is immediately a better post player than one of, if not the most, dominant inside players of all time. Also if we need to penalize players for size how is Kobe better than guys like Nash and CP3?

Well I don't think it's insane at all because Shaq simply was never that great of a shooter. Shooting in the post is what I've been talking about this entire time. Shaq had great foot work and again, would bust out cool moves here and there, but more often than not his go to offense with those moves in the paint all led to Dunks. Which is fine because it helped win the Lakers games and was entertaining as hell to watch, but my point still stands.


How does your post stand at all? You basically just said that because Shaq gets dunks (the best possible shot) in the post that means his post game is inferior to kobe bryant's.

All of Shaq's points come from the post, so even if he wasn't a better scorer than Kobe (he probably is) that would heavily infer he's a better post player.


this is a perfect example of someone picking aesthetics over effectiveness.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#105 » by Dutchball97 » Tue May 17, 2022 12:37 pm

LAL1947 wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:Why wouldn't you be able to rank Nash or Dirk ahead of Kobe in 2006 though? At that point Kobe hadn't won a title yet as the bus driver.

Why would you rank Nash or Dirk ahead of Kobe in 2006 though? What he was doing on the court as an individual was more incredible than what they were doing. I've already answered you and Jaivl in another thread, where I provided a long post of reasons why Kobe was a better individual player than both Nash and Dirk in 2005-06.

Dutchball97 wrote:At that point Kobe hadn't won a title yet as the bus driver.

At that point, did Nash or Dirk win titles as the bus driver? So why are you asking this about Kobe only?

And Nash never ever won a title (although it can be 100% rightly argued that Duncan stole one from him in 2006-07). Dirk only won one later in 2011. While Kobe reached 3 titles between 2007-08 and 2009-10, winning a back-to-back... so should this not indicate to you that our opinions of Kobe being better than Dirk and Nash in 2005-06 are probably more on the money than yours?

Dutchball97 wrote:At some point you've got to realize the only reason you keep pulling the most arbitrary criteria out is because you're not looking at it objectively, you're just throwing anything against the wall to make Kobe look better than he actually was.

Is it us doing that? Or is it you guys who are doing this to make Nash and Dirk look better than they were?

Y'all do the same with Duncan too. He was superb until 2004-05 but then he dropped off after that as others rose up, yet y'all try to make him look better than he was from 2005-06 until end of career.


You've got to look at the comment I replied to. I'm not looking to get into another who was the best in 06 discussion, we've all said our piece. Stalwart said it is impossible for LeBron to be ranked ahead of Kobe in 2010 because he hadn't won a title yet and Nash and Dirk couldn't be ranked above Kobe either in 06 because they hadn't won titles yet. That's just the most basic and useless way of looking at basketball imo and completely faulty logic especially considering Kobe wasn't even the best player on his team for any of those 3 early rings.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#106 » by LAL1947 » Tue May 17, 2022 12:44 pm

70sFan wrote:
Stalwart wrote:
70sFan wrote:Or that both underperformed for different reasons. Or that Mavs were simply damn good at stopping perimeter players.

I think it's fair to criticize James for 2011 finals (I do it as well) and Kobe's circumstances are different, but reducing everything to a mental meltdown is just creating easy answer for complicated problem. I'm surprised you don't call losing 3-1 lead in the playoffs a meltdown going by this logic. Instead, you call this performance "legendary".


However you want to phrase Lebron fell apart mentally. Thats been well documented.

Let's say you are right - is it worse than what Kobe did in 2004 finals?

Yes, it is worse. Why? Well, because the 2003-04 finals is not more about what Kobe did or did not do (he didn't "fall apart", that's for sure)... but more about what the Pistons were allowed to do. As we all know, the Pistons were constantly checking Kobe on the perimeter but without fouls being called in 2003-04. This is why the league made that specific change for the 2004-05 season, not for any other reason. They didn't just wake up one morning and decide out of the blue to remove hand-checking completely.

Now don't get me wrong, this title was a great accomplishment by the under-dog Pistons... but let's not forget about the hand-checking thing, it is a landmark in NBA history.

Ironically, I've seen people (maybe not you) call this Pistons teams "under-dogs" for 2003-04... but then call them "one of the greatest defensive teams" for 2005-06 when they want to talk about Wade's playoff run. These were not the same Pistons of 2003-04 because they couldn't hand-check as much, lol. So is this another double-standard?
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#107 » by Stalwart » Tue May 17, 2022 1:08 pm

Dutchball97 wrote:
LAL1947 wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:Why wouldn't you be able to rank Nash or Dirk ahead of Kobe in 2006 though? At that point Kobe hadn't won a title yet as the bus driver.

Why would you rank Nash or Dirk ahead of Kobe in 2006 though? What he was doing on the court as an individual was more incredible than what they were doing. I've already answered you and Jaivl in another thread, where I provided a long post of reasons why Kobe was a better individual player than both Nash and Dirk in 2005-06.

Dutchball97 wrote:At that point Kobe hadn't won a title yet as the bus driver.

At that point, did Nash or Dirk win titles as the bus driver? So why are you asking this about Kobe only?

And Nash never ever won a title (although it can be 100% rightly argued that Duncan stole one from him in 2006-07). Dirk only won one later in 2011. While Kobe reached 3 titles between 2007-08 and 2009-10, winning a back-to-back... so should this not indicate to you that our opinions of Kobe being better than Dirk and Nash in 2005-06 are probably more on the money than yours?

Dutchball97 wrote:At some point you've got to realize the only reason you keep pulling the most arbitrary criteria out is because you're not looking at it objectively, you're just throwing anything against the wall to make Kobe look better than he actually was.

Is it us doing that? Or is it you guys who are doing this to make Nash and Dirk look better than they were?

Y'all do the same with Duncan too. He was superb until 2004-05 but then he dropped off after that as others rose up, yet y'all try to make him look better than he was from 2005-06 until end of career.


You've got to look at the comment I replied to. I'm not looking to get into another who was the best in 06 discussion, we've all said our piece. Stalwart said it is impossible for LeBron to be ranked ahead of Kobe in 2010 because he hadn't won a title yet and Nash and Dirk couldn't be ranked above Kobe either in 06 because they hadn't won titles yet. That's just the most basic and useless way of looking at basketball imo and completely faulty logic especially considering Kobe wasn't even the best player on his team for any of those 3 early rings.


That's a tad bit disingenuous. I said quite a bit more than that ALL of which you ignored. You've never responded to the basis behind that perspective. You never addressed the principle of not assuming players can do things they haven't done yet. You never addressed the concept of intangibles as illustrated by Lebron's lack thereof in 2011. Lebron proved my point and you won't address it.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#108 » by 70sFan » Tue May 17, 2022 1:09 pm

Stalwart wrote:
70sFan wrote:Magic certainly wasn't the man, or even co-leader in 1980-83 period and Kareem certainly wasn't the man after 1985. Nobody uses 1980 ring to make the case for Magic being all-timer. Nobody does that with 1987 or 1988 for Kareem. Nobody does that for Kobe either with 2000 or 2002.


I'm pretty sure everyone does all of that

You do it all the time, you just know what people think, believe and how they value certian things better than them. I'm done with any discussions with you.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#109 » by Stalwart » Tue May 17, 2022 1:16 pm

70sFan wrote:
Stalwart wrote:
70sFan wrote:Magic certainly wasn't the man, or even co-leader in 1980-83 period and Kareem certainly wasn't the man after 1985. Nobody uses 1980 ring to make the case for Magic being all-timer. Nobody does that with 1987 or 1988 for Kareem. Nobody does that for Kobe either with 2000 or 2002.


I'm pretty sure everyone does all of that

You do it all the time, you just know what people think, believe and how they value certian things better than them. I'm done with any discussions with you.


Wait a minute. You just said "nobody does this and nobody does that". By making a statement like that are you presuming to know what people think, believe, and value? Or were you simply making a general statement about what you've seen and experienced as I was doing?

This tone is completely uncalled for but I accept it. You can take that approach if you like. I still enjoyed the Wilt/Russell fight you posted the other day.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#110 » by Dutchball97 » Tue May 17, 2022 1:54 pm

Stalwart wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:
LAL1947 wrote:Why would you rank Nash or Dirk ahead of Kobe in 2006 though? What he was doing on the court as an individual was more incredible than what they were doing. I've already answered you and Jaivl in another thread, where I provided a long post of reasons why Kobe was a better individual player than both Nash and Dirk in 2005-06.


At that point, did Nash or Dirk win titles as the bus driver? So why are you asking this about Kobe only?

And Nash never ever won a title (although it can be 100% rightly argued that Duncan stole one from him in 2006-07). Dirk only won one later in 2011. While Kobe reached 3 titles between 2007-08 and 2009-10, winning a back-to-back... so should this not indicate to you that our opinions of Kobe being better than Dirk and Nash in 2005-06 are probably more on the money than yours?


Is it us doing that? Or is it you guys who are doing this to make Nash and Dirk look better than they were?

Y'all do the same with Duncan too. He was superb until 2004-05 but then he dropped off after that as others rose up, yet y'all try to make him look better than he was from 2005-06 until end of career.


You've got to look at the comment I replied to. I'm not looking to get into another who was the best in 06 discussion, we've all said our piece. Stalwart said it is impossible for LeBron to be ranked ahead of Kobe in 2010 because he hadn't won a title yet and Nash and Dirk couldn't be ranked above Kobe either in 06 because they hadn't won titles yet. That's just the most basic and useless way of looking at basketball imo and completely faulty logic especially considering Kobe wasn't even the best player on his team for any of those 3 early rings.


That's a tad bit disingenuous. I said quite a bit more than that ALL of which you ignored. You've never responded to the basis behind that perspective. You never addressed the principle of not assuming players can do things they haven't done yet. You never addressed the concept of intangibles as illustrated by Lebron's lack thereof in 2011. Lebron proved my point and you won't address it.


I agree to a certain degree with the principle that we shouldn't just assume certain players would be able to do certain things they haven't shown in real time. I personally have Kobe ahead of KG as well. My problem is the certainty you use when talking about these concepts. There is no nuance in the way you look at things. While we can't just say someone like KG would have 10 rings with a decent supporting cast we still need to look at the context of things. You just kind of seem to assume since Kobe has had more team success than KG that means he was definitely better and the only reason it is that way is because Kobe was a great leader, had a high IQ etc but by that logic the reason for the Lakers being trash from 2005 till 2007 would also be Kobe suddenly being a bad leader and having low IQ. The consistency doesn't seem to be there.

I don't think your LeBron point proved anything tbh. You claim that because LeBron crumbled under pressure in the 2011 finals that Kobe was the better player than LeBron in 2010. Once again it isn't even that I disagree too much with the idea Kobe might have been better than LeBron in 2010, it's at least arguable. It's your methods that aren't legit. If your starting point is Kobe was better and you then look for anything backing that up you'll always end up with a lopsided argument. I just don't think the 2011 finals say anything substantial about 2010. Because while you're pointing at intangibles, I already explained those factors show up in the stats. It isn't like LeBron was a statistical monster in the 2011 finals, it shows that he crumbled under pressure and didn't produce at the same level as other years like for example in 2010. You can't look at these years and assume everything was exactly the same. In 2010 LeBron was still on the Cavs with no help at all, while the next year he was supposed to win it all on his handpicked superteam and that was too much at the time. By your same logic you also can't say Kobe wouldn't have crumbled in a similar situation. In 2008 Kobe was no doubt a superstar but he still hadn't been able to win a ring without Shaq and then he finally got the chance to change that when he got a strong team around him. So what happened? Kobe shot 41% in the finals and they lost. It wasn't the same level of collapse but you think Kobe faced no additional pressure there? You're so bought into the idea that Kobe was so much stronger mentally than anyone else that it becomes your go to explanation for anything the Lakers achieved during his career.

Even with all that considered the main reason I didn't reply was your outlook on the first 3-peat Kobe vs Pippen point. Your viewpoints are always right and everyone else has warped their ideas with the sole purpose of disparaging Kobe. It's just not arguing in good faith. I consider myself a Kobe fan and have defended him in plenty of discussions on this board but just because I don't let personal feelings impact my evaluation of players I'm suddenly a hater?
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#111 » by 70sFan » Tue May 17, 2022 2:01 pm

LAL1947 wrote:[
Magic was more of the man in the 1980-83 period than Tim Duncan was for the 2013-14 ring.

I agree.

How come Duncan fans still use the 2013-14 ring to make a case for Duncan's 5 rings over Kobe's 5 rings?

I am Duncan fan and I never used that to take Kobe over Duncan. Kobe was a better player in all of his title seasons than 2014 Duncan.

At least Kobe was #2 to Shaq (most dominant big man of all-time)... Duncan was #3 or #4 behind Kawhi, Parker, Manu by 2014.

Duncan was definitely more important than Manu and Kawhi (for all but one series in Kawhi's case).

It's like how you guys also ignore that 2005-07 is when Kobe was 26, 27, 28 years old... while 2003-05 is when Duncan was 26, 27, 28 years old. These are what should have been the three best years of their primes... which Duncan got to enjoy to the fullest with a quality #2 in Parker, a quality #3 in Ginobili... and excellent depth in Bruce Bowen, Stephen Jackson, Malik Rose, Brent Barry, Hedo Turkoglu, Glenn Robinson, Brent Barry, Rasho Nesterović, etc. While Kobe's were wasted with those crappy rosters after Shaq sabotaged him.

You mean rookie Manu and sophomore Parker in 2003 who weren't even above average starters?

Sure, by 2005 Duncan had great team around him, but it wasn't great in 2003 or 2004.

Y'all have so many double standards everywhere.

You create strawman and then accuse me of having double standards...
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#112 » by 70sFan » Tue May 17, 2022 2:03 pm

Stalwart wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Stalwart wrote:
I'm pretty sure everyone does all of that

You do it all the time, you just know what people think, believe and how they value certian things better than them. I'm done with any discussions with you.


Wait a minute. You just said "nobody does this and nobody does that". By making a statement like that are you presuming to know what people think, believe, and value? Or were you simply making a general statement about what you've seen and experienced as I was doing?

This tone is completely uncalled for but I accept it. You can take that approach if you like. I still enjoyed the Wilt/Russell fight you posted the other day.

Nobody used such argument in any thread I have seen in my very long history here. I am done, bye.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#113 » by Stalwart » Tue May 17, 2022 7:05 pm

Dutchball97 wrote:
Stalwart wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:
You've got to look at the comment I replied to. I'm not looking to get into another who was the best in 06 discussion, we've all said our piece. Stalwart said it is impossible for LeBron to be ranked ahead of Kobe in 2010 because he hadn't won a title yet and Nash and Dirk couldn't be ranked above Kobe either in 06 because they hadn't won titles yet. That's just the most basic and useless way of looking at basketball imo and completely faulty logic especially considering Kobe wasn't even the best player on his team for any of those 3 early rings.


That's a tad bit disingenuous. I said quite a bit more than that ALL of which you ignored. You've never responded to the basis behind that perspective. You never addressed the principle of not assuming players can do things they haven't done yet. You never addressed the concept of intangibles as illustrated by Lebron's lack thereof in 2011. Lebron proved my point and you won't address it.


I agree to a certain degree with the principle that we shouldn't just assume certain players would be able to do certain things they haven't shown in real time. I personally have Kobe ahead of KG as well. My problem is the certainty you use when talking about these concepts. There is no nuance in the way you look at things. While we can't just say someone like KG would have 10 rings with a decent supporting cast we still need to look at the context of things. You just kind of seem to assume since Kobe has had more team success than KG that means he was definitely better and the only reason it is that way is because Kobe was a great leader, had a high IQ etc but by that logic the reason for the Lakers being trash from 2005 till 2007 would also be Kobe suddenly being a bad leader and having low IQ. The consistency doesn't seem to be there.


It's not about Kobe being "better" than KG. It's about him having proven himself to a significantly greater degree when it comes to team accomplishments and being a leader. When you compare Kobe and KG skill for skill, stat for stat, accolade for accolade, peak for peak, and their longevity you are not going to find much of a difference. Same thing if you compare KG to Tim Duncan. They are all incredibly comparable. The only significant area of difference between a KG and a Kobe or a Tim Duncan is the team success. It's true that KG didn't really get a chance to prove himself as a bus driver or even a co-pilot so he was unlucky in that sense. But the principle still remains: we can't assume KG would have been a successful bus driver if given better opportunities and then rank him ahead of comparable players who actually did do it.

I'm not here arguing that Kobe Bryant was on this whole other caliber of player than KG. In fact they were so comparable that it's kind of a futile endeavor to sit here and try to parse out their skill set and impact. So yeah, KG was awesome. But Kobe was a proven winner and champion multiple times over. That's the difference between them.

I don't think your LeBron point proved anything tbh. You claim that because LeBron crumbled under pressure in the 2011 finals that Kobe was the better player than LeBron in 2010. Once again it isn't even that I disagree too much with the idea Kobe might have been better than LeBron in 2010, it's at least arguable. It's your methods that aren't legit. If your starting point is Kobe was better and you then look for anything backing that up you'll always end up with a lopsided argument. I just don't think the 2011 finals say anything substantial about 2010. Because while you're pointing at intangibles, I already explained those factors show up in the stats. It isn't like LeBron was a statistical monster in the 2011 finals, it shows that he crumbled under pressure and didn't produce at the same level as other years like for example in 2010. You can't look at these years and assume everything was exactly the same. In 2010 LeBron was still on the Cavs with no help at all, while the next year he was supposed to win it all on his handpicked superteam and that was too much at the time. By your same logic you also can't say Kobe wouldn't have crumbled in a similar situation. In 2008 Kobe was no doubt a superstar but he still hadn't been able to win a ring without Shaq and then he finally got the chance to change that when he got a strong team around him. So what happened? Kobe shot 41% in the finals and they lost. It wasn't the same level of collapse but you think Kobe faced no additional pressure there? You're so bought into the idea that Kobe was so much stronger mentally than anyone else that it becomes your go to explanation for anything the Lakers achieved during his career.


Kobe and Lebron, like Kobe and KG, were comparable in 2009 and 2010. You could make the case that Lebron was a better player on a nightly basis from a statistical perspective but the difference would be marginal. Like you said, it's arguable. The only significant area of difference between Kobe and Lebron in 09 and 10 was that Kobe had proven himself as a leader, a bus driver, and someone who could handle all the pressures, challenges, and potential scrutiny of being in that role without getting overwhelmed. Notice Im not arguing that Tim Duncan was better than Lebron was in 09 even though Duncan was a proven leader and champion. Why? Because at that time Tim and Lebron were not comparable as players. Lebron was on a different level than Tim was by 2009 and 2010.

Regarding Kobe in 2008. It is true that Kobe was still trying to prove himself as a 'Bus Driver' at that time. He had yet to accomplish that goal. However, Kobe did prove himself as a Co-Pilot is at least 2 championships already. As a Co-Pilot he was a Co-Leader. That means he had proven himself as a leader to a certain degree prior to 2008. I also wouldn't characterize Kobe's performance in the 08 finals as him crumbling or collapsing. It's true that he lost and didn't play his best but there is no indication that he shrunk under the pressure. Notice I'm not characterizing Lebron's performance in the 2007 finals as a meltdown or him crumbling as we have no indication of that. Lebron clearly shrunk under the pressure in 2011 thus proving he didn't yet have the intangibles necessary to lead a team from start to finish. If Lebron didn't have this ability in 2011 what makes you think he had that ability in 2010?

Even with all that considered the main reason I didn't reply was your outlook on the first 3-peat Kobe vs Pippen point. Your viewpoints are always right and everyone else has warped their ideas with the sole purpose of disparaging Kobe. It's just not arguing in good faith. I consider myself a Kobe fan and have defended him in plenty of discussions on this board but just because I don't let personal feelings impact my evaluation of players I'm suddenly a hater?


I didn't say that you compared Kobe to Scottie Pippen in an attempt to disparage him. Seriously, I didn't say that and I don't believe that. You assume that's where I'm coming from and then read into the things I say. I'll repeat it again...I DON'T THINK YOU HAVE AN AGENDA AGAINST KOBE. What I did do though was speculate on how an otherwise knowledgeable fan like yourself could wind up comparing a guy putting up 28/6/7 on a championship team to Scottie Pippen as that doesn't make any logical sense. The conclusion I came up with was that this was a byproduct of all the years people have spent arguing that Shaq was better than Kobe during their 3peat. It's led to an impression of Kobe being a sidekick ala Scottie Pippen rather than an Co-Pilot he actually was.

If I'm wrong about that then ok. But I'd then be curious to know how you justify comparing Kobe Bryant to Scottie Pippen if not due to some subconscious impression you picked up over the years.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#114 » by Stalwart » Tue May 17, 2022 7:06 pm

70sFan wrote:
Stalwart wrote:
70sFan wrote:You do it all the time, you just know what people think, believe and how they value certian things better than them. I'm done with any discussions with you.


Wait a minute. You just said "nobody does this and nobody does that". By making a statement like that are you presuming to know what people think, believe, and value? Or were you simply making a general statement about what you've seen and experienced as I was doing?

This tone is completely uncalled for but I accept it. You can take that approach if you like. I still enjoyed the Wilt/Russell fight you posted the other day.

Nobody used such argument in any thread I have seen in my very long history here. I am done, bye.


I don't understand what happened here...
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#115 » by 70sFan » Tue May 17, 2022 7:21 pm

Stalwart wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Stalwart wrote:
Wait a minute. You just said "nobody does this and nobody does that". By making a statement like that are you presuming to know what people think, believe, and value? Or were you simply making a general statement about what you've seen and experienced as I was doing?

This tone is completely uncalled for but I accept it. You can take that approach if you like. I still enjoyed the Wilt/Russell fight you posted the other day.

Nobody used such argument in any thread I have seen in my very long history here. I am done, bye.


I don't understand what happened here...

I answered to your post. You said that:

" You just said "nobody does this and nobody does that". By making a statement like that are you presuming to know what people think, believe, and value? Or were you simply making a general statement about what you've seen and experienced as I was doing?"

I responded that I implied that I haven't seen such arguments being used here, period.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#116 » by SashimiLover » Sat May 21, 2022 5:20 am

Blazers-1977 wrote:This is what I would say imo:

2001: 5th behind Shaq, Duncan, Iverson, Garnett
2002: 6th behind Duncan Shaq Kidd McGrady Webber
2003: 4th behind Duncan Garnett McGrady
2004: 6th behind Garnett Duncan Shaq Ben Wallace Jermaine
2005: Not even top 10(this was his worst season for him in this period by far)
2006: 1st
2007: 3 way tie for first with Nash and Duncan
2008: 1st
2009: 3rd behind LeBron and Wade
2010: 2nd behind LeBron
2011: 7th behind Dirk , Howard, Rose, Wade, LeBron, Durant
2012: 4th behind LeBron, Durant, Paul
2013: 3rd behind LeBron and Durant


I feel it may be tossup between Kobe and CP3 in 2008 in the regular season. CP3 might have overachieved more with an arguably less talented roster in New Orlean Hornets that year. He also, more or less, continued to put up brilliant performance in the postseason (averaging around 26 points & 10+ assists at some point if I remember correctly) like Kobe did...

Lebron had the numbers but not team record while KG had the team record and impact but not the numbers ("only" averaging around 18 points per game after sharing the ball with Paul Pierce and Ray Allen) in 2008.
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#117 » by ceoofkobefans » Tue May 24, 2022 4:14 pm

Going off the dome with these

2001: 3rd (Shaq Tim Duncan)
2002: 3rd (Shaq Tim Duncan)
2003: 3rd (Tim Duncan KG)
2004: 6th (KG TD Shaq Dirk TMac)
2005: 6th (TD KG Nash Dirk Shaq)
2006: 1st
2007: 1st
2008: 1st
2009: 2nd (LeBron)
2010: 2nd (LeBron)
2011: 5th (LeBron Wade Dirk KD)
2012: 5th (LeBron KD CP3 Dirk)
2013: 4th (LeBron KD CP3)

Not very confident on a good bit of these (04 05 and mainly post 2010 the most)
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Re: Where did Kobe rank each year from 2001-2013 

Post#118 » by ceoofkobefans » Tue May 24, 2022 4:14 pm

Going off the dome with these

2001: 3rd (Shaq Tim Duncan)
2002: 3rd (Shaq Tim Duncan)
2003: 3rd (Tim Duncan KG)
2004: 6th (KG TD Shaq Dirk TMac)
2005: 6th (TD KG Nash Dirk Shaq)
2006: 1st
2007: 1st
2008: 1st
2009: 2nd (LeBron)
2010: 2nd (LeBron)
2011: 5th (LeBron Wade Dirk KD)
2012: 5th (LeBron KD CP3 Dirk)
2013: 4th (LeBron KD CP3)

Not very confident on a good bit of these (04 05 and mainly post 2010 the most)

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