Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

Talk about anything here.
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Sudanese Sensation
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Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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http://www.backpicks.com/2017/12/11/the ... a-history/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;


Interesting stuff.
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Bush4Ever35
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Welcome! :D
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Bush4Ever35 wrote:Welcome! :D

Shaq is definitely going to be in his top eight along with Russell and Kareem, and of course, LeBron.

Wilt, especially in his early career, approached basketball like it was baseball where your success is more independent of your teammate's success than football and basketball, and their successes too.
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Sudanese Sensation wrote:
Bush4Ever35 wrote:Welcome! :D

Shaq is definitely going to be in his top eight along with Russell and Kareem, and of course, LeBron.

Wilt, especially in his early career, approached basketball like it was baseball where your success is more independent of your teammate's success than football and basketball, and their successes too.
IIRC, he's extremely-extremely high on KG and Hakeem, far past the point of where those guys are normally ranked by fans.

But yes, Wilt is a good example on the bad side of individual offense vs. global/team offense, where individual excellence doesn't really lead to a bettering of performance on the part of his teammates. Someone like Magic, Curry, or Bird would be on the happy side of that idea, where their individual offense was perhaps a touch more modest, but their game amplified the performance of their teammates much more than Wilt, leading to a better result on the team front.
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Bush4Ever35 wrote:
Sudanese Sensation wrote:
Bush4Ever35 wrote:Welcome! :D

Shaq is definitely going to be in his top eight along with Russell and Kareem, and of course, LeBron.

Wilt, especially in his early career, approached basketball like it was baseball where your success is more independent of your teammate's success than football and basketball, and their successes too.
IIRC, he's extremely-extremely high on KG and Hakeem, far past the point of where those guys are normally ranked by fans.

But yes, Wilt is a good example on the bad side of individual offense vs. global/team offense, where individual excellence doesn't really lead to a bettering of performance on the part of his teammates. Someone like Magic, Curry, or Bird would be on the happy side of that idea, where their individual offense was perhaps a touch more modest, but their game amplified the performance of their teammates much more than Wilt, leading to a better result on the team front.
I didn't notice that.

Shaq, Kareem, Russell, LeBron, KG, Jordan , Duncan, ???? = his top eight.
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Sudanese Sensation wrote: I didn't notice that.

Shaq, Kareem, Russell, LeBron, KG, Jordan , Duncan, ???? = his top eight.
I would guess Hakeem for he 8th spot, knowing what I know.

I'm particularly interested in seeing how the 1-3 spots fall out. I know he's very big on longevity (relative to pure peak performance), and Jordan isn't amazingly strong on that front, so there might be a shakeup of sorts at the very top.
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Bush4Ever35 wrote:
Sudanese Sensation wrote: I didn't notice that.

Shaq, Kareem, Russell, LeBron, KG, Jordan , Duncan, ???? = his top eight.
I would guess Hakeem for he 8th spot, knowing what I know.

I'm particularly interested in seeing how the 1-3 spots fall out. I know he's very big on longevity (relative to pure peak performance), and Jordan isn't amazingly strong on that front, so there might be a shakeup of sorts at the very top.
Who fills the eight spots ? I came up with seven.
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Sudanese Sensation wrote:
Bush4Ever35 wrote:
Sudanese Sensation wrote: I didn't notice that.

Shaq, Kareem, Russell, LeBron, KG, Jordan , Duncan, ???? = his top eight.
I would guess Hakeem for he 8th spot, knowing what I know.

I'm particularly interested in seeing how the 1-3 spots fall out. I know he's very big on longevity (relative to pure peak performance), and Jordan isn't amazingly strong on that front, so there might be a shakeup of sorts at the very top.
Who fills the eight spots ? I came up with seven.
The guys you listed plus Hakeem.

I just took another look at the list and forgot he had already done the 20s, so it has to be Hakeem plus the 7 you mentioned.
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

Post by Sudanese Sensation »

Bush4Ever35 wrote:
Sudanese Sensation wrote:
Bush4Ever35 wrote:
I would guess Hakeem for he 8th spot, knowing what I know.

I'm particularly interested in seeing how the 1-3 spots fall out. I know he's very big on longevity (relative to pure peak performance), and Jordan isn't amazingly strong on that front, so there might be a shakeup of sorts at the very top.
Who fills the eight spots ? I came up with seven.
The guys you listed plus Hakeem.

I just took another look at the list and forgot he had already done the 20s, so it has to be Hakeem plus the 7 you mentioned.
For a guy that can't dribble with his left hand Jerry West gets rated relatively high.
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Sudanese Sensation wrote:
For a guy that can't dribble with his left hand Jerry West gets rated relatively high.
This isn't really a list of who the best players would be if you time-machined everyone to a common era.

It ranks players on the basis of provided the largest increase in the odds of a team winning championships over the course of their careers.

IIRC, West gets a strong bump for being extremely efficient compared to the league at the time, raising his game in the playoffs (unlike most superstars), and stat-stuffing while having good portability.
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Re: Yo, Bush, thanks for referencing this site

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Bush4Ever35 wrote:
Sudanese Sensation wrote:
For a guy that can't dribble with his left hand Jerry West gets rated relatively high.
This isn't really a list of who the best players would be if you time-machined everyone to a common era.

It ranks players on the basis of provided the largest increase in the odds of a team winning championships over the course of their careers.

IIRC, West gets a strong bump for being extremely efficient compared to the league at the time, raising his game in the playoffs (unlike most superstars), and stat-stuffing while having good portability.
I was being facetious about the dribbling and I have been informed by some of the loudest voices on this board that The Logo was a perennial big game loser, i.e. a choker.
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