On Malone, a couple of things.
It's important to note how often people assume that longevity -- a really long peak -- matters. Or, rather, doesn't. Longevity can be, if not always then very, very often, tied to greatness. Malone's absolute peak may not have been as high as Hakeem's, but he was a machine in such a way that very few players in history, including Hakeem, can match.
His peak was quite high -- talking about an arguable top five player for something like 13-14 years straight (note: I said arguable) -- and it shows through in his career stats, either cumulative or per game.
As an example, Malone averaged 25 and ten for his career. Hakeem superseded or matched those numbers in four seasons out of 19.
Stats guys love Malone, and many would still take him over Hakeem. The "Inner Circle" listing at bball-reference would be one example -- Malone is seen as second only to Jordan in the 90s.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/blog/?p=4323Further, the idea that Malone was clearly beneath Hakeem was not the meme or general tone when the two were playing. I remember quite clearly that Malone would win polls that asked people to rank Jordan's closest rival, or the second best player of the Jordan era.
As recently as the early 00s Malone was still considered either as good as Hakeem, or better. All-time.
It's only with retrospect that this has changed, rightly or wrongly.
In my estimation, people left a slot open for Malone...if he won a title. Now that it's clear that this cannot open (well, temporal reset?), the opinions have shifted.
Perhaps an accident of history -- switch Malone's best teams (mid-90s, broken down or no Jordan) with Hakeem's, and the perception would be that Malone was a top ten player, while Hakeem was in some grey area -- or just harsh reality, but Hakeem's stock is rising and Malone's continues to drift downward or plummet with a great many people, who now act as if Malone's name doesn't belong in the same breath when talking about Dream.
Of the great careers harmed by Jordan, it's likely that no one player was as much a victim of the Jordan Effect as Malone. Consider, in the (admittedly questionable, as is inherent in what-ifs) zero-sum shift of everything's-the-same-except-no-Mike vantage, Malone wins 7 scoring titles, three straight MVPs and two world championships.
Under that standard, I don't know if people would be so down on Karl.
Since childhood, I'd watched Malone. And Dream. Charles, DRob, Ewing. There was always a sense of maybe two-three guys as the absolute best post-players by year, in a decade or era that was dominated, if not defined (Michael), by post-play. Every year -- every damned year -- Malone was one of those players. The other guys, as great as they were, would drift in and out of that circle, until Malone was something akin to Brett (and perhaps as hated). Malone was then being compared to guys like Timmy, Shaq and KG -- the best of their generation.
To me that was and is amazing.
Anyway, my perspective, and a bit of a warning: I may start sifting through the missed threads (a lot, a lot) and throwing in my opinions year to year. I've been busy, and sidetracked with analysis of stuff like Magic's worth and the mid-80s' Lakers strength relative to basketball history; whether that's where my heart lies, it certainly is where my family tree resides, so I may post some of that in the POY threads at some point.
In other words, perhaps Doc will want to close the threads now.