SWedd523 wrote:Don't know much about Vinnie, was he a 1 or 2?
A 2 who would come off screens and hit 15-footers off Isiah's passes. He had a great mid-range game and could really heat up hence the nickname.
Moderators: BigSlam, yosemiteben, fatlever, JDR720, Diop
SWedd523 wrote:Don't know much about Vinnie, was he a 1 or 2?

amcoolio wrote:Well I can't believe this player hasn't been taken yet, I've read over the rules and fatlever's rule clarification 100 times and the players taken list and can't see anything wrong with it, so..... I'm taking 1982-1983 Adrian Dantley as my Journeyman and moving him into the starting lineup and sending Reggie to the bench.

amcoolio wrote:Just for clarification when all this is over and we are judging teams we are using single years and not career longevity, right? Thats the whole point of the pick a year thing? Because there are some flash in the pan-type players who had incredible years but fizzled out.


LamarMatic7 wrote:I just hope that we'll also notice the impact of the player's season. There's a difference between putting up good stats on a finals team and the Clippers, per example. You can find plenty of 20pts per game guys in the Clippers history and that's the exact reason why they were flash in the pan-type players. Someone like Horace Grant is more valuable than Shareef Abdur-Rahim, in my book.


LamarMatic7 wrote:Well, I think that the whole point of the pick a year thing is taking a player in a particular stage of his career, since there are players who have multiple peaks or who played differently when they were young and athletic, however stayed effective when older.
However, I suppose that you don't undermine a team that has players with a shorter career. Well, you can point out that there are too many druggies on somebody's team, but that's about it I guess.

SWedd523 wrote:LamarMatic7 wrote:I just hope that we'll also notice the impact of the player's season. There's a difference between putting up good stats on a finals team and the Clippers, per example. You can find plenty of 20pts per game guys in the Clippers history and that's the exact reason why they were flash in the pan-type players. Someone like Horace Grant is more valuable than Shareef Abdur-Rahim, in my book.
I think that's a dangerous mindset. Some guys didn't have great team success because they simply didn't have a good team.
I picked Dominique, and I stated then (and will repeat now) that people will hold against him that he didn't have a ton of playoff success. But is it really his fault that he had the worst supporting cast of any 80s star? Is it really his fault he couldn't take a team full trash through the Bird Celtics?
Taking that a step further, and this is just me, but I'm looking at how they'll fit in our fictional teams' lineups, not the ones they were on at the time. If we took players specifically based on how they did that year and not how we think they'd fit as a team then there's no point to bother picking guys to fit certain positions.
For example, if a guy ended up with Magic/Nique/Rodman/Ben Wallace/Bill Laimbeer, you wouldn't say, "wow you picked a lot of guys who had very successful teams those specific years so that must be a good lineup"
You'd say, "pack the paint and that team is really ineffective"

Sachmo wrote:LamarMatic7 wrote:Well, I think that the whole point of the pick a year thing is taking a player in a particular stage of his career, since there are players who have multiple peaks or who played differently when they were young and athletic, however stayed effective when older.
However, I suppose that you don't undermine a team that has players with a shorter career. Well, you can point out that there are too many druggies on somebody's team, but that's about it I guess.
I hadn't thought about some of the druggies, there has definitely been some wasted talent that put out a decent season or 2


amcoolio wrote:
PG: Steve Nash (18.6 PPG, 11.6 APG, 53% FG, 45% 3PT, 90% FT)
SG: Adrian Dantley (30.7 PPG, 6.4 RPG, 4.8 APG, 58% FG, 85% FT)
SF: Scottie Pippen (22.0 PPG, 8.7 RPG, 5.6 APG, 2.9 SPG, 50% FG)
PF: Charles Barkley (25.6 PPG, 12.2 RPG, 5.1 APG, 1.6 SPG, 52% FG)
C: Ming Yao (22.0 PPG, 10.8 RPG, 2.0 BPG, 50% FG, 85% FT, Really Tall)
Bench:
G: Reggie Miller (24.6 PPG, 3.8 APG, 3.6 RPG, 51% FG, 42% 3PT, 86% FT)
Also this was not who I was planning to pick Sweed

Takuya Kimura wrote:09-10 Pau Gasol with ALL-NBA
&
96/97 Glen Rice with Journeyman(Heat,Hornets,Lakers,Knicks,Clippers,Rockets)
fatlever wrote:amcoolio wrote:
PG: Steve Nash (18.6 PPG, 11.6 APG, 53% FG, 45% 3PT, 90% FT)
SG: Adrian Dantley (30.7 PPG, 6.4 RPG, 4.8 APG, 58% FG, 85% FT)
SF: Scottie Pippen (22.0 PPG, 8.7 RPG, 5.6 APG, 2.9 SPG, 50% FG)
PF: Charles Barkley (25.6 PPG, 12.2 RPG, 5.1 APG, 1.6 SPG, 52% FG)
C: Ming Yao (22.0 PPG, 10.8 RPG, 2.0 BPG, 50% FG, 85% FT, Really Tall)
Bench:
G: Reggie Miller (24.6 PPG, 3.8 APG, 3.6 RPG, 51% FG, 42% 3PT, 86% FT)
Also this was not who I was planning to pick Sweed
why did you move reggie to the bench? he was a good fit for your starting lineup. dantley was a 6'3" power forward/small forward. definitely not a guard. you'd be better playing pippen at guard if this was your lineup. his entire game was low post, get to ft line. similar to barkley on offense, minus the hops.
fatlever wrote:Takuya Kimura wrote:09-10 Pau Gasol with ALL-NBA
&
96/97 Glen Rice with Journeyman(Heat,Hornets,Lakers,Knicks,Clippers,Rockets)
glen rice is a perfect example of getting a player in his best year vs his career average. rice had a solid career, but in 96-97 he was amazing. he had one of the best shooting years of any player ever.

fatlever wrote:amcoolio wrote:
PG: Steve Nash (18.6 PPG, 11.6 APG, 53% FG, 45% 3PT, 90% FT)
SG: Adrian Dantley (30.7 PPG, 6.4 RPG, 4.8 APG, 58% FG, 85% FT)
SF: Scottie Pippen (22.0 PPG, 8.7 RPG, 5.6 APG, 2.9 SPG, 50% FG)
PF: Charles Barkley (25.6 PPG, 12.2 RPG, 5.1 APG, 1.6 SPG, 52% FG)
C: Ming Yao (22.0 PPG, 10.8 RPG, 2.0 BPG, 50% FG, 85% FT, Really Tall)
Bench:
G: Reggie Miller (24.6 PPG, 3.8 APG, 3.6 RPG, 51% FG, 42% 3PT, 86% FT)
Also this was not who I was planning to pick Sweed
why did you move reggie to the bench? he was a good fit for your starting lineup. dantley was a 6'3" power forward/small forward. definitely not a guard. you'd be better playing pippen at guard if this was your lineup. his entire game was low post, get to ft line. similar to barkley on offense, minus the hops.


fatlever wrote:but he definitely was not a guard. that much i know.

LamarMatic7 wrote:fatlever wrote:but he definitely was not a guard. that much i know.
well, he's a player that you can't describe with any of the five classic basketball positions. If people like to call some players "point forwards", then Dantley would be a "power guard". The announcing crew might say that Isiah and Dantley are Detroit's starting back-court and hypothetically they might not be wrong, but it's just that Dantley played nothing like a guard. He would receive the ball in the post and work his way further from there.
