Like father, like son?
Yeah. We're holding back someone as good as Julius Erving was because our team is so deep.HoopDreams said:
Like father, like son?
concordtom said:
One has to think if he couldn't get minutes these last two seasons he must not be very good.
Not sure why b/c he shows well enough on the tape.
I appreciate you giving some unexpected respect to an older player like Dr. J, who was indeed a fabulous basketball player.concordtom said:
So he ranks Dr. as the #3 Small Forward behind:
Lebron
Bird
-Dr. J
KD
Kawai
Pippen
Elgin
Kwame who? He was a good high school player. I think he averaged 10 points in the NBA one season. And last I looked, he was not in today's game any more.GBear4Life said:
In today's game he'd be carrying jock straps, perhaps in the G-League. Kwame Brown would own him.
Sixers won the title in 82-83 season--they swept the Lakers in the finals. Sixers Championship SeasonSFCityBear said:I appreciate you giving some unexpected respect to an older player like Dr. J, who was indeed a fabulous basketball player.concordtom said:
So he ranks Dr. as the #3 Small Forward behind:
Lebron
Bird
-Dr. J
KD
Kawai
Pippen
Elgin
However, any list of the all-time greatest small forwards that does not include Rick Barry has no credibility.
My own list runs like this:
Lebron
Bird
Baylor and Barry (tied)
Durant
Erving
Lebron and Bird have the best overall stats and both led their teams to 3 NBA titles each. Both played alongside great players, which helped. It also helped Lebron that the Warriors were banged up in one of those title runs. Stuff happens.
Baylor was the best small forward to never win an NBA title. He is the best rebounder on the list, and if you did not guard him well, he could drop 60 on you. Barry had great stats and he also could drop 60 on you, but he was the best leader and passer, IMO, on the list. He took a team of very average players to the NBA title, beating the heavily favored Bullets in the final, 4-0.
Durant is the best SF around today.
Erving had good stats, but could not win a title, even playing along side George McGinnis. He was more of an individual star, and would not likely have won an NBA title had not Moses Malone come along.
I would not include Leonard on the list. He's a good defender, but does not have comparable stats to the rest on the list . I don't think he wins his ring if KD was healthy.
Pippin was a good defender, but again, his stats are not comparable to any on the list of all-time great small forwards. He won 6 rings, I think, but I don't think he wins them without being on Jordan's team.
Sorry, I could have worded that a lot better.MSaviolives said:Sixers won the title in 82-83 season--they swept the Lakers in the finals. Sixers Championship SeasonSFCityBear said:I appreciate you giving some unexpected respect to an older player like Dr. J, who was indeed a fabulous basketball player.concordtom said:
So he ranks Dr. as the #3 Small Forward behind:
Lebron
Bird
-Dr. J
KD
Kawai
Pippen
Elgin
However, any list of the all-time greatest small forwards that does not include Rick Barry has no credibility.
My own list runs like this:
Lebron
Bird
Baylor and Barry (tied)
Durant
Erving
Lebron and Bird have the best overall stats and both led their teams to 3 NBA titles each. Both played alongside great players, which helped. It also helped Lebron that the Warriors were banged up in one of those title runs. Stuff happens.
Baylor was the best small forward to never win an NBA title. He is the best rebounder on the list, and if you did not guard him well, he could drop 60 on you. Barry had great stats and he also could drop 60 on you, but he was the best leader and passer, IMO, on the list. He took a team of very average players to the NBA title, beating the heavily favored Bullets in the final, 4-0.
Durant is the best SF around today.
Erving had good stats, but could not win a title, even playing along side George McGinnis. He was more of an individual star, and would not likely have won an NBA title had not Moses Malone come along.
I would not include Leonard on the list. He's a good defender, but does not have comparable stats to the rest on the list . I don't think he wins his ring if KD was healthy.
Pippin was a good defender, but again, his stats are not comparable to any on the list of all-time great small forwards. He won 6 rings, I think, but I don't think he wins them without being on Jordan's team.
Edit--just noticed you said couldn't win a title with McGinnis, but acknowledge he won with Malone... so,in the words of Emily Litella, never mind...
Irving is actually one of the few whose talent and skill could translate to being serviceable in today's era. But there aren't many. And I'm not being facetious.SFCityBear said:Kwame who? He was a good high school player. I think he averaged 10 points in the NBA one season. And last I looked, he was not in today's game any more.GBear4Life said:
In today's game he'd be carrying jock straps, perhaps in the G-League. Kwame Brown would own him.
As Dr. J said in an interview a couple years ago at the PAC12 Tournament, when asked how the players of today would compare to the players of his day, "Oh, they're athletic, but they do a lot of things now that we were not allowed to do."
Oh. you're just funnin' us. I got to see Kwame up close.....his best moments were picking upGBear4Life said:
In today's game he'd be carrying jock straps, perhaps in the G-League. Kwame Brown would own him.
lol...I know he was bad. I use Kwame to illuminate just how bad players of yesteryear were. Kwame's size and athletic ability would be enough to dominate 98% of the big men 60 years ago.BEARUPINDC said:Oh. you're just funnin' us. I got to see Kwame up close.....his best moments were picking upGBear4Life said:
In today's game he'd be carrying jock straps, perhaps in the G-League. Kwame Brown would own him.
two quick fouls and being sent to the bench.
SFCityBear said:I appreciate you giving some unexpected respect to an older player like Dr. J, who was indeed a fabulous basketball player.concordtom said:
So he ranks Dr. as the #3 Small Forward behind:
Lebron
Bird
-Dr. J
KD
Kawai
Pippen
Elgin
However, any list of the all-time greatest small forwards that does not include Rick Barry has no credibility.
.
ncbears said:
I saw Dr. J in the ABA (with the Nets who had to sell/give Dr. J to the Sixers for the Nets to join the NBA) and, yeah, he was that good.
It seems there is no end on the Bear Insider to those who may or may not have seen basketball as it was played many years ago, but wish to state that the players they see now are vastly superior to players of yore. Some of this is good-natured, poking fun at the older generation of fans who fondly remember the game they grew up playing, which of course is the foundation of today's game, but is hardly recognizable to many older fans as having anything much more to do with the game we played, other than the dimensions of the court, the height of the basket, and the size and weight of the ball. Some of the posts are not so good-natured, even a little mean-spirited, much like a boy disrespecting his father's abilities, as many boys do at some point in their coming of age. Some of it here on the BI is out and out trolling, designed to provoke one's elders, and can get pretty annoying. Many fans who have never seen the old game as it was played seem to think they have license to be critical of the old game and especially its players for some reason. It is one reason I began posting on the BI years ago.GBear4Life said:Irving is actually one of the few whose talent and skill could translate to being serviceable in today's era. But there aren't many. And I'm not being facetious.SFCityBear said:Kwame who? He was a good high school player. I think he averaged 10 points in the NBA one season. And last I looked, he was not in today's game any more.GBear4Life said:
In today's game he'd be carrying jock straps, perhaps in the G-League. Kwame Brown would own him.
As Dr. J said in an interview a couple years ago at the PAC12 Tournament, when asked how the players of today would compare to the players of his day, "Oh, they're athletic, but they do a lot of things now that we were not allowed to do."
Yeah, I don't see how anyone could say that Barry couldn't play today. Any NBA team today would love to have Barry in his prime.bearister said:
Rick had the musculature of the modern player. He had good handles, could shoot the three and rarely missed a free throw. He would sniff the court in the modern era, and even more so because he would be allowed to palm the ball, take 5 steps, and have less physical defense to go against.
There are other players from past eras who wouldn't fit as well today, especially slow moving big men who scored only out of the low post and played physical defense back when the refs followed a "no autopsy no foul" rule for contact in the paint.BearSD said:Yeah, I don't see how anyone could say that Barry couldn't play today. Any NBA team today would love to have Barry in his prime.bearister said:
Rick had the musculature of the modern player. He had good handles, could shoot the three and rarely missed a free throw. He would sniff the court in the modern era, and even more so because he would be allowed to palm the ball, take 5 steps, and have less physical defense to go against.
There are other players from past eras who wouldn't fit as well today, especially slow moving big men who scored only out of the low post and played physical defense back when the refs followed a "no autopsy no foul" rule for contact in the paint.
Everything's relative. There are no absolutes. You tend to talk in absolutes. Also you take this stuffGBear4Life said:
I get it. Some folks are concerned that old tymers and their accomplishments aren't "denigrated" by wide spread acknowledgement that there's no room in today's game for them.
BEARUPINDC said:There are other players from past eras who wouldn't fit as well today, especially slow moving big men who scored only out of the low post and played physical defense back when the refs followed a "no autopsy no foul" rule for contact in the paint.BearSD said:Yeah, I don't see how anyone could say that Barry couldn't play today. Any NBA team today would love to have Barry in his prime.bearister said:
Rick had the musculature of the modern player. He had good handles, could shoot the three and rarely missed a free throw. He would sniff the court in the modern era, and even more so because he would be allowed to palm the ball, take 5 steps, and have less physical defense to go against.
There are other players from past eras who wouldn't fit as well today, especially slow moving big men who scored only out of the low post and played physical defense back when the refs followed a "no autopsy no foul" rule for contact in the paint.
Wes Unseld wants you to say that to his face.