One_and_Done wrote:.
OK, lots to unpack here, and limited time to do it, as I’m leaving town/busy in mere hours.
I am sympathetic toward you to a degree, though more so I feel it is unfortunate in a general sense that you feel this way.
You may have a point that protecting the sensibilities of the tenured posters cultivates an environment where newcomers are required to “fit in” (or at least get along amicably), else they could be in trouble. And it’s something we’ll consider in the future.
Although, I wouldn’t say that mentality is particularly different from [almost] any other human community/ecosystem. This is somewhat a truth in a more broad sense of human societal evolution, no? One needs to learn to fit in (or at least get along) within their community (or they won’t remain part of that community for long).
And disagreeing is largely separate from “not getting along” [this is a concept many people on the internet seem to have difficulty wrapping their brains around, btw]. I’ve seen this dozens of times with people in your shoes: where a severe action has been taken against them, and they assert that it’s solely their opinions that has alienated them from our “clique”.
Certainly, relatively “hot” takes are going to get a lot of pushback, as well as demands by the community that the person making them substantiate those takes (with something OTHER than conjecture and logical fallacy). That’s generally REALLY hard to do with a hot(ish) take (that’s why they’re “hot”). And there was one broad take you were pushing that was perceived as a bit hot (I’ll get into that below).
And fwiw, this is going to be ESPECIALLY so for a newcomer, who perhaps the community doesn’t have any impression that they’ve done the work, as it were. A tenured poster with a history of in-depth analysis and data-mining, reasoning that follows a logical course, etc,, can perhaps state an unpopular take with limited explanation, and receive less pushback……because we who’ve been here for years KNOW this individual isn’t pulling an opinion like that out of the ether.
Right or wrong, a newcomer is not afforded that same benefit of the doubt; though this too I don’t think is unusual. The expression “proving ground” came into being for a reason. An unknown is going to be called to task more heavily.
But anyway……hot(ish) takes aside, it’s never the opinions themselves that cause the problem (more on that to follow, too).
On the notion that disagreement is disallowed, I certainly do not concur. There’s plenty of disagreement (with or without contrarian views from you); the disparate voting in the project should be ample enough proof of this. Though I’ll provide of few more centering on those I had myself….
I somewhat strenuously disagree with the high placement of George Mikan on the list; but it didn’t seem worth belabouring, nor would I try to tell everyone they’re wrong about it. Maybe I’m wrong. So I didn’t much voice my objection on that one.
I DID, however [also in the top 100 project, in one of the recent threads], voice considerable disagreement with a fellow [retired] mod; one whom I’ve had a number of spirited disagreements with in the past, for that matter.
I’ve had some spirited debates with the project chair Doctor MJ, too. He and I frequently do not see eye-to-eye on any number of players. Now that I’m thinking about it, I’m not sure there’s a ton he and I actually do agree on within the general hierarchy of all-time players.
And there have been times we reached a point where we both just had to walk away from the conversation a little frustrated (perhaps before it turned ugly). But I still like and have tremendous respect for Doc; I believe the forum would be a much lesser community without him.
So I’m sorry, no. I just do not agree that people are required to conform to some forum consensus or else get the boot.
As always, it comes down to the manner in which you engage.
So there is no confusion, let me see if I can make perfectly clear what it was in your manner of posting that became wearisome, and which was perceived by several to be “low calorie”.
First, to give you your due credit, your vote posts were usually reasonably solid, imo. You provided some valid talking points in support of your picks, and there’s really nothing there that I’d complain about (I’m sort of mailing it in on my vote posts this time around).
Within your other posting there were some issues…..
1) As an illustration of what was probably the most off-putting to several people, we can look at your statement here in this thread.
While I don’t doubt you feel all these things sincerely, I have to say that for someone who professes to not care at all about this outcome, the post is absolutely oozing condescension and passive-aggressiveness. You’re playing the victim and high-roading us all, casting a number of barely veiled insults at the bulk of the forum, while painting yourself as innocent of anything except having a contrarian opinion. We’re quite the pack of villains to your perfect innocence in the above: painted as a catty clique who will come down—with Draconian severity—upon the smallest disagreement with our supposed consensus opinion.
A similar condescension came up repeatedly within the top 100 project, by way of these laments over certain player rankings. These placements were repeatedly described as things that were “so unfortunate” for the project [subtext: so unfortunate that more people don’t see the obvious superiority and correctness of your opinion]. For as much as you’re casting most of us as villains for not liking your opinion, in these laments you labelled large chunks of forum as a bunch of know-nothing rubes for deigning to have a different opinion from you.
This passive-aggressive manner of insulting the opinion of a number of people occurred repeatedly; to the point that you were asked to give it a rest—because after more than a half-dozen repetitive statements to that effect, labouring the point any further was unnecessary to make your position perfectly clear to literally everyone participating.
I think you still did it once more after that.
2) You continuously engaged in pure conjecture, though always stating it in a sort of absolutist way, as though it’s an undeniable truth. This was pointed out to you (more than once). You kept doing it anyway.
2b) You disregarded Neil Johnston and Paul Arizin (and by proxy ALL of their contemporaries) by showing a photograph of them and basically saying they don’t “look like” top tier athletes.
Someone posted a photo of Steve Nash in response, asking if a 6’3” scrawny white guy looks like a top tier athlete (bringing race in because you did so yourself; he’d be even scrawnier in an era that neither facilitated or encouraged weight training, btw). I don’t recall if you replied, though I know you didn’t answer within the context of the aspersion you’d cast at Johnston/Arizin; because really, how could you? Imagine an even thinner/scrawnier version of Nash (or Kevin Love, or Alex Caruso, or pick the modern white player) with a 1950s haircut, the cheaply-tailored uniform and short shorts, and in a B&W photo……let’s not pretend any of them would look like world-class athletes to you if you didn’t KNOW who they were.
They get the benefit of the doubt only because you know them in a modern context. No one from prior gets any such benefit of the doubt; even someone like Bob Pettit, who certainly looks a better athletic/basketball specimen than any of the above.
3) Later on you continued [repeatedly] to engage in hyperbole to disparage basically ALL players from prior to ~1972; statements that don't even feel tenable.
For instance you literally implied that Bob Pettit couldn’t be any better than a low-level G-league player [if even that]. This [relating to #2 above] extreme low opinion is the broad hot(ish) take that rankled a little. And it was never substantiated or given evaluation beyond vague “not athletic enough” explanations and further conjecture.
You didn’t bother to explore a size-of-player-pool type evaluation or any other truly cogent means to justify it.
You didn’t bother to explore factors that made the game look the way it did then. You offered brief conjecture, as though the truth of it was so self-evident that nothing more was needed, and then condescended to the “unfortunate” opinions of those who disagreed.
To do some of that exploration for you….
Pettit was still the 5th-best player in the league as late as ‘64 (past his physical peak, at age 32). Even from a size-of-player-pool type evaluation, I don’t see how it’s tenable to suggest he’d barely make the G-league, based on logical means. Let’s try a speculative mathematical model based on player pool size.
First, let’s define “Player Pool”. I’m not going to define it as the number of kids that ever pick up a basketball in the world, but rather as the number of even vaguely legit pro-prospects that take up the game. That is: the number of guys who have some combination of size/athleticism/natural aptitude to give them potential toward perhaps being a professional player on some level, and who actually then do pursue that goal.
In the modern era, from that pool is drawn the ~2000 or so best players in the world: this is everyone in the modern NBA, everyone in one of the better pro leagues overseas, most of the G-league, and the 100 or so best NCAA collegiate prospects. (I think it’s around 2000, not sure).
Everyone you suggested would be better than Bob Pettit, basically. And by proxy, basically no one else from that period (even Wilt) would be better than a mid-upper level G-league player either.
To start, how big do we think the player pool in the early-mid 60s was? The league was nearly 40% black by that point; so integration is underway (part of the trend toward a more black league was cultural shift, fwiw). It was a very popular professional sport (had been popular for more than a decade), and its popularity was growing fast. Player salaries were then to a point where even the scrubs made a livable annual salary (and the stars and better starters were at least somewhat wealthy).
It’s still not an international league, however (though this was true even of the league of the early 80s).
So how big is the player pool relative to today? I mean maybe it’s as big as 20% the size of today, though I’m doubtful. Could it be as big as 10% the size of today’s? Maybe, though I’d not be shocked to find it’s lower; perhaps even less than 5%.
Counterbalancing that, however, is the fact that we’re not looking to fill ~2000 pro/semi-pro positions (as we are in the modern context). We have just 9 rosters to fill (about 110 players); obviously it’s [mostly] going to be the 110 BEST that the player pool has to offer that fills those.
So even if we’re saying the player pool of the day is super-small, like just 3-4% of the modern one; and we say that the 96-97% we’ve plucked out of the picture were plucked out at random (that is: just as likely to be the high-end prospect as one of the lower end long-shots).......that still leaves us with 60-80 players from that ~2000 best players in the world from above [to put in our league of ‘64]; leaving only 30-50 guys who couldn’t even be G-league players.
If the player pool is 5% the size of today, that leaves us with 100 of these “best players in the world” [from above] to fill our league of ‘64.
If the player pool is 10% the size of today, that leaves 200 of the “best players in the world” to fill only 110 roster spots in ‘64…….that means some of the lower end [e.g. much of the G-league contingent, perhaps] is going to be left out; and the rosters will be filled with NBA level and other Euroleague/NCAA talents.
That’s plucking out the excess [from our ~2000 best players] at random. You might try to weight your argument by saying it’s WORSE than random, because we lack the overseas talent (again, did all the way into the 80s and beyond, really), and because integration isn’t at its utmost yet.
Perhaps a valid consideration, though one also would think (this is conjecture) that the VERY BEST [American, or at least white American] prospects would be the ones more inclined to pursue this glamorous and suddenly kinda lucrative career [and thus be in the player pool]; while the lower-end “long shot” prospects are the ones more likely to give it a pass and thus fall out of the player pool.
Either way…..even if we assume the player pool is only 3% the size of today (kinda hyperbolically low, imo), AND assume some of the better end talents are disproportionately removed due to incomplete integration, etc. That STILL means roughly half the league of ‘64 are legit pro/semi-pro level [by TODAY’S standards] players. Some of them may only be G-league or Euro-league level; but they’re pro.
Yet you assert—with cocksure confidence—that even the 5th-best player [out of ~110] isn’t that good. One must assume that literally ALL of the good prospects, for some reason, simply DON’T pursue basketball to arrive at this low opinion. I don’t know how we can logically justify or account for such a phenomenon.
But it’s either that, or only one other method to arrive at the conclusion: a belief that the humans of 60 years ago are wholly and entirely incapable of the things we humans are today. In the span of just over two generations we’ve apparently evolved into some manner of super-humans, capable of feats and abilities well beyond anyone who lived at that time.
No. I’m sorry, but no; that is not the case. As someone whose field of study was in biology and biological sciences, evolution does NOT move that fast. We’re the same basic animal we were 2-3 generations ago. Only the external influences have changed.
If you want to explore why the game looks so different, it requires taking an in-depth look at those external influences, and understanding that if Steph Curry, or James Harden, or Russell Westbrook, or whoever……had been born back in that time period, they would have been exposed to, shaped by those same external influences.
Let’s look at this photo that Doc had used in his vote post:
See what Wade’s doing with the ball in both pics on the right? That is a carry anytime roughly pre-merger in the NBA. It succeeds in turning the ball over.
So does any cool crossover you saw by Allen Iverson, Steph, Paul, Nash, etc.
That lazy slow-dribble Chris Paul does when he’s walking the ball up the court (sort of scooping the ball up and then lazily pushing back toward the floor)? That also is a carry (committed like a dozen times just in the act of walking the ball up the court).
You know those explosive vertical moves toward the basket Russell Westbrook used to make? Pray tell how is he going to keep the ball with him if he cannot put his hand beside the ball to push/propell it forward to keep pace with his lightning-fast vertical speed? HOW? Because that also is a carry.
This is how the game was officiated back in the day. People today see the players spanking the top of the ball and think they look silly (“they can hardly even dribble”).
The reason they’re not doing Wade’s crossover, or Paul’s lazy dribble, or Westbrook’s explosive forward speed, is because those things were not allowed by the officiating of the time. Why WOULD they learn such skills? Why would they practice them at all, when all it achieves is a turnover? They wouldn’t and didn’t, of course.
But it doesn’t mean they can’t.
Shot mechanics certainly look less refined, yes. This is a product of conventional wisdom of the time, however. Conventional wisdom that Paul and Nash, and even Curry, would have fallen prey to, to some degree (had they been born in that era). Again: external influences SHAPING the eventual player.
Back-tracking to Westbrook’s explosive vertical speed…..
Let’s say he WOULD be allowed to push the ball forward to keep up (he wouldn’t, but just for argument’s sake).....let’s look at another photo:
See the shoes Frazier, Chamberlain, and McMillian are wearing? Now imagine the court they’re playing on isn’t the finely manicured and waxed NBA courts of today, but is rather a court were people in street shoes are nightly allowed to walk all over (more like the court in the last rec centre or highschool gym you played in). Do you still think Westbrook is going to have the same explosive first step on THOSE courts with THOSE shoes?
And even if he was allowed to push the ball forward (he wouldn’t be), and he was still able to explode forward the same (doubtful)......again, wearing THOSE shoes, while also taking into account sports medicine of the 1960s and the fact that cheap shot fouls and undercutting a guy were not flagrants in this time (also consider the congested paint).
Do you STILL think Westbrook is going to be making those warp-speed high-flying attacks at the rim? And if so, just how long do you expect his career to last?
These are all factors that merit serious consideration, before making quick judgements on the era. You did none of this.
4) You repeatedly engaged in logical fallacy.
As a specific examples, there was the sort of ridiculous “league of 4’ dwarves” argument.
Somewhat less hyperbolic and silly was the time you said speculating on how a player would do in a far-separate era was the same as speculating on how Kevin Garnett would do with a different supporting cast. I expressed the opinion this is not true, given with the Garnett example the external influences to shape his game would be basically the same (because it’s in the same era and upbringing), and would obviously still have been engineered toward the league environment/rules/game philosophy of that time period; that his quality and capability as a player within said era is a literally known quantity (because of ample eye-test and measures we have of it); and likewise his precise attributes and “player-type” is known (so it’s easier to speculate on questions of portability).
All of these things are at least partially a mystery in the other variety of speculation (thus rendering it a very different mental exercise).
To say they are the same is rather like saying an apple is the same as a pumpkin, because they have some similarities: both are plants, both are largely edible, both are roundish, both have seeds inside and a stem on top. But that’s where the similarities end, and they’re quite obviously very different things. Same as with above.
You hand-waived this complaint aside, and in so many words said I was wrong, and you were still right.
Logical fallacy as a means of argumentation came up over and over. The SPECIFIC TYPES of logical fallacy you were utilizing were pointed out to you. You largely ignored this, and kept doing it anyway.
In summary:
*Condescending remarks (made SO MANY times, even after being asked to stop) which had the tangent effect of insulting others;
**Pure conjecture stated in absolutist tone (also SO MANY times), with minimal [if any] actual evidential support provided.
***Hyperbolic “hot”(ish) take, supported by nothing but conjecture and vague superficial observations, with no nuanced deep-dive consideration being demonstrated.
****Repeated use of blatant logical fallacies, even after it was pointed out.
So ^^^there are a handful of ways in which your contributions were seen as lacking [“low calorie”] and/or irritating to others.
I don’t expect you to take any of this to heart, and I’m genuinely sorry to be so brutally candid; but I just can’t let pass this notion that the ONLY thing you did was have a contrarian opinion, nor accusations that disagreement is not allowed.
And fwiw, you seemed to insinuate that you’ve encountered trouble on internet forums and discussion groups before (perhaps getting banned, suspended, or otherwise censored?). You said, in fact, that you EXPECT to be banned eventually; as though this is an inevitable outcome on internet forums.
I would suggest to you that perhaps this is a red flag that is trying to tell you something.
Because such outcomes are NOT inevitable.

















