Kidd and KJ go 1 and 2, no doubt. Then who?
I'm thinking Justin Cobbs is pretty damn high up there.
I'm thinking Justin Cobbs is pretty damn high up there.
KoreAmBear;842290214 said:
1. Jason
2. KJ
3. Randle
4. Cobbs
5. Keith Smith
UrsaMajor;842290227 said:
Rusty Critchfield?
Gene Ransom?
Charlie Johnson?
Phil Chenier?
Kyle Campanelli (OK, just kidding with that one)
Really, Cal basketball didn't start in the 1980s.
bigcocoon007;842290239 said:
ewwwwwwbakkkkaaaaa
bearister;842290215 said:
And although it may not look like it these last few games, one of only a handful of guards in Cal history to have a puncher's chance at the NBA. Keith Smith was my personal favorite behind Kidd. Boy did Keith know how to finish a drive and he had a nice stop and pop too. Extremely underrated.
UrsaMajor;842290258 said:
If this is actually about all-time greats:
Critchfield was one of Cal's all-time leading scorers and a 1st team All American in his senior year.
Ransom also a top scorer and assist man.
Chenier was all-conference and the #4 overall draft pick (played 9 years w/ the Bullets)
Sorry, KAB, but all 3 of them are a lot better than Ubaka, Smith, Roberts, etc.
KoreAmBear;842290214 said:
1. Jason
2. KJ
3. Randle
4. Cobbs
5. Keith Smith
beelzebear;842290265 said:
+1 JC is underrated. Has enough size and is very strong.
UrsaMajor;842290258 said:
If this is actually about all-time greats:
Critchfield was one of Cal's all-time leading scorers and a 1st team All American in his senior year.
Ransom also a top scorer and assist man.
Chenier was all-conference and the #4 overall draft pick (played 9 years w/ the Bullets)
Sorry, KAB, but all 3 of them are a lot better than Ubaka, Smith, Roberts, etc.
bearister;842290327 said:
Chenier averaged 17 ppg in a 10 year NBA career; KJ 18 ppg in a 13 year career; and Kidd 12 ppg in a 18 year career (forward Lamond Murray averaged 11 ppg in a 12 year career)
wallyball2003;842290363 said:
Chenier would be top 5 for me. Different time and different game, but Phil was awesome.
bearister;842290327 said:
Chenier averaged 17 ppg in a 10 year NBA career; KJ 18 ppg in a 13 year career; and Kidd 12 ppg in a 18 year career (forward Lamond Murray averaged 11 ppg in a 12 year career)
gobears725;842290280 said:
id throw jorge and richard midgley into the discussion. jorge was a tweener point guard, originally recruited as a point guard.
midgley was a good but very unspectacular player
as far as history is concerned, id have to guess that pete newell coached a good point guard or two that might be better than any of our modern day suggestions.
SFCityBear;842290529 said:
.....Bernie Simpson was a reserve on the ’59 Cal NCAA Champs. He was entirely a defensive specialist. He could run the team at the point, but his value was to come in and help get stops. He was probably close to the equal of Al Buch on defense, and the full-court press with the two of them was devastating. In those days, the teams of the Midwest and East were mostly fast break teams. That is, until they played against Cal’s full court press, and Cal’s transition defense. Bernie rarely scored a point, or he might have gotten some more playing time.:gobears:
KoreAmBear;842290229 said:
Prentice McGruder? KJ Roberts? AJ Diggs? Martin Smith? Yup, Cal basketball didn't start for me until 1988.
SFCityBear;842290529 said:
Pete Newell had some good guards, but as true point guards, he had only three, Al Buch, Bobby Wendell, and Bernie Simpson. Al Buch was the best on-ball defender I have ever seen at Cal. In '59, Cal ran a two man, full-court press with Buch and Fitzpatrick for much of the game. Buch ran the Bear offense to perfection, an offense which generated wide open shots, He averaged over 9 points per game, but could score 20 when needed. He made 1st team all-conference.
The next season, Bobby Wendell took over as the point guard. Bobby was short at 5-8, and was the best ball handler I have seen at Cal. A very strong dribble, and NOBODY could steal the ball off Bobby's dribble. He was a good defender. That Cal team averaged 6 turnovers for the entire season! Wendell ran the offense, but was not a scorer. It was odd, you could watch Bobby knock down long jumpers all day in practice, but in the game, he couldn't do it. In the NCAA Finals, Ohio State left Bobby alone, much like teams did to Tyrone Wallace a lot last season, and Bobby was forced to shoot a lot and missed most of them. Newell said at the time that if had one more jump shooter, he felt the Bears could have beaten OSU and won a second title.
Bernie Simpson was a reserve on the '59 Cal NCAA Champs. He was entirely a defensive specialist. He could run the team at the point, but his value was to come in and help get stops. He was probably close to the equal of Al Buch on defense, and the full-court press with the two of them was devastating. In those days, the teams of the Midwest and East were mostly fast break teams. That is, until they played against Cal's full court press, and Cal's transition defense. Bernie rarely scored a point, or he might have gotten some more playing time.
:gobears: