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Cool NBA challenge. what say you guys?

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    [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 11,453
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    dhdawg said:

    image
    6 players, 1 coach, 20 dollars

    I think you gotta start with Durant($4), Lebron($5) and Pop($2) so that leaves me with $9 for four players.

    Will go Tony Parker for $2, Noah for $2, I'll go with Harden($3) and Aldridge($2)

    Damn that's a sick roster don't see how they would lose.
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    dncdnc Member Posts: 56,614
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    dhdawg said:

    image
    6 players, 1 coach, 20 dollars

    Parker 2
    Johnson 1
    James 5
    Duncan 3
    Noah 2
    Durant 4
    Pop 2

    I'm starting Parker at the 1, James at the 2, Durant at the 3, Duncan 4, Noah 5 with Johnson coming off the bench. Defense, rebounding, unselfish.
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    CuntWaffleCuntWaffle Member Posts: 22,493
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    Uhhh is that Kobe in his prime for $5 or now?
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    dncdnc Member Posts: 56,614
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    Uhhh is that Kobe in his prime for $5 or now?

    Has to be somewhat current, no way prime Dirk goes for $1.

    I'm guessing it was maybe last year before the achilles?
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    RoadDawg55RoadDawg55 Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 30,123
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    Swaye's Wigwam
    edited May 2014
    Tequilla said:

    Curry, Johnson, LBJ, Durant, Aldridge, Noah, and Pop

    Let LBJ play with the ball in his hand ... surround him with shooters ... Aldridge can play the 5 in a small ball lineup ... Noah gives a strong defensive force in the middle.

    This is the team. No one's fucking with them. I might take Dirk over Aldridge. Tough call though.
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    [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 11,453
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    Tequilla said:

    Curry, Johnson, LBJ, Durant, Aldridge, Noah, and Pop

    Let LBJ play with the ball in his hand ... surround him with shooters ... Aldridge can play the 5 in a small ball lineup ... Noah gives a strong defensive force in the middle.

    This is the team. No one's fucking with them.
    We have basically the same team only he has Curry/Johnson combo over Harden/Parker. His combo is better shooters. Mine is more slashers although with Lebron that seems redundant.

    I give Tequilla slight edge.

    I think any team that doesn't have Lebron-Durant-Pop is going to be shit.
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    CuntWaffleCuntWaffle Member Posts: 22,493
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    Tequilla said:

    Curry, Johnson, LBJ, Durant, Aldridge, Noah, and Pop

    Let LBJ play with the ball in his hand ... surround him with shooters ... Aldridge can play the 5 in a small ball lineup ... Noah gives a strong defensive force in the middle.

    This is the team. No one's fucking with them. I might take Dirk over Aldridge. Tough call though.
    I would take Dirk. He is the guy who stopped the Miami dynasty happening earlier than it was suppose to.
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    TequillaTequilla Member Posts: 19,815
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    Tequilla said:

    As for Lebron-Bird. For offense yes they are comparable but when you factor in defense Lebron has surpassed him IMO.

    There was nobody better than Bird from 1981-1986 problem is he broke down after 1987 and was never the same.

    I would say he was the best '83-'84 to '87-'88 before he broke down. You could argue his best year in the league was '88 when he averaged 29.9 points per game.

    No question that LBJ was the superior on ball defender. I do think that Bird is often under appreciated as a defensive player. 4 times he led the league in defensive win shares.

    LBJ has probably passed Bird for 5th all time at this point. I don't think he's passed Magic yet. Still a long way to go to get to Kareem.
    I wasn't trying to say Bird was a bad defender. Just with Lebron's versatility defensively that puts him above anyone when it comes to defense talk among wing players/forwards.

    Anyways sounds like we have similar top 6.

    Mine is

    1A. Jordan
    1B. Russell
    1C. Kareem
    4. Magic
    5. Lebron
    6. Bird
    7. Wilt
    8. Duncan(has a big finals this year with a title I might put him ahead of Wilt)
    9. Shaq
    10. Kobe
    I agree that Jordan/Russell is really a 1A/1B kind of thing ... they are the only 2 acceptable answers to me when it comes to greatest players of all time. I put Kareem 3rd back a bit from Jordan/Russell and ahead of the next group. Magic, Bird, and LBJ form the next pack.

    Wilt and Oscar are probably 2 of the toughest guys for me to rank because they put up huge numbers, didn't really win titles, but how much of that was due to them versus the Celtics/Russell being such a great power?

    I would probably move Duncan over Wilt at this point given Duncan's longevity.

    I'd include Jerry West right behind Kobe.

    I have a really hard time separating Shaq, Hakeem, and Moses Malone (who I think always gets slighted when talking about the greats).

    I think that there's a big drop from the Top 14 back to guys like Hondo, Baylor, Dr. J (who probably gets a bit of a bad rap at times).
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    [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 11,453
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    edited June 2014

    Tequilla said:

    As for Lebron-Bird. For offense yes they are comparable but when you factor in defense Lebron has surpassed him IMO.

    There was nobody better than Bird from 1981-1986 problem is he broke down after 1987 and was never the same.

    I would say he was the best '83-'84 to '87-'88 before he broke down. You could argue his best year in the league was '88 when he averaged 29.9 points per game.

    No question that LBJ was the superior on ball defender. I do think that Bird is often under appreciated as a defensive player. 4 times he led the league in defensive win shares.

    LBJ has probably passed Bird for 5th all time at this point. I don't think he's passed Magic yet. Still a long way to go to get to Kareem.
    I wasn't trying to say Bird was a bad defender. Just with Lebron's versatility defensively that puts him above anyone when it comes to defense talk among wing players/forwards.

    Anyways sounds like we have similar top 6.

    Mine is

    1A. Jordan
    1B. Russell
    1C. Kareem
    4. Magic
    5. Lebron
    6. Bird
    7. Wilt
    8. Duncan(has a big finals this year with a title I might put him ahead of Wilt)
    9. Shaq
    10. Kobe
    Hey @DNC sorry that I didn't "Nut up" and post my top 10 rankings. Oh wait I did...........
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    dncdnc Member Posts: 56,614
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    Tequilla said:

    As for Lebron-Bird. For offense yes they are comparable but when you factor in defense Lebron has surpassed him IMO.

    There was nobody better than Bird from 1981-1986 problem is he broke down after 1987 and was never the same.

    I would say he was the best '83-'84 to '87-'88 before he broke down. You could argue his best year in the league was '88 when he averaged 29.9 points per game.

    No question that LBJ was the superior on ball defender. I do think that Bird is often under appreciated as a defensive player. 4 times he led the league in defensive win shares.

    LBJ has probably passed Bird for 5th all time at this point. I don't think he's passed Magic yet. Still a long way to go to get to Kareem.
    I wasn't trying to say Bird was a bad defender. Just with Lebron's versatility defensively that puts him above anyone when it comes to defense talk among wing players/forwards.

    Anyways sounds like we have similar top 6.

    Mine is

    1A. Jordan
    1B. Russell
    1C. Kareem
    4. Magic
    5. Lebron
    6. Bird
    7. Wilt
    8. Duncan(has a big finals this year with a title I might put him ahead of Wilt)
    9. Shaq
    10. Kobe
    Hey @DNC sorry that I didn't "Nut up" and post my top 10 rankings. Oh wait I did...........
    When I said "would love to see your top 10" the first time you could have just said "look in the NBA challenge thread" instead of ignoring. I don't memorize everything everyone poasts here.

    Interesting ranks. I don't disagree much other than I think you have Bron where he'll eventually end up as opposed to where he deserves to be on acocomplishments thus far. Why do you hate the Big O?
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    [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 11,453
    5 Up Votes 5 Awesomes First Comment blah
    dnc said:

    Tequilla said:

    As for Lebron-Bird. For offense yes they are comparable but when you factor in defense Lebron has surpassed him IMO.

    There was nobody better than Bird from 1981-1986 problem is he broke down after 1987 and was never the same.

    I would say he was the best '83-'84 to '87-'88 before he broke down. You could argue his best year in the league was '88 when he averaged 29.9 points per game.

    No question that LBJ was the superior on ball defender. I do think that Bird is often under appreciated as a defensive player. 4 times he led the league in defensive win shares.

    LBJ has probably passed Bird for 5th all time at this point. I don't think he's passed Magic yet. Still a long way to go to get to Kareem.
    I wasn't trying to say Bird was a bad defender. Just with Lebron's versatility defensively that puts him above anyone when it comes to defense talk among wing players/forwards.

    Anyways sounds like we have similar top 6.

    Mine is

    1A. Jordan
    1B. Russell
    1C. Kareem
    4. Magic
    5. Lebron
    6. Bird
    7. Wilt
    8. Duncan(has a big finals this year with a title I might put him ahead of Wilt)
    9. Shaq
    10. Kobe
    Hey @DNC sorry that I didn't "Nut up" and post my top 10 rankings. Oh wait I did...........
    When I said "would love to see your top 10" the first time you could have just said "look in the NBA challenge thread" instead of ignoring. I don't memorize everything everyone poasts here.

    Interesting ranks. I don't disagree much other than I think you have Bron where he'll eventually end up as opposed to where he deserves to be on acocomplishments thus far. Why do you hate the Big O?
    Truthfully I don't know anything about him. Unlike Russell and Wilt who I never saw play at least I feel like I've seen enough highlights of them to sort of form an opinion.

    All I know about the Big O is one year he averaged a triple double. That's it. Don't even know what number he wore, what hand he shot with.

    So I tend to leave him out as I don't really have much to rank him. I don't know if he was a stat compiler or had those stats so his teams could win.

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    dncdnc Member Posts: 56,614
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    dnc said:

    Tequilla said:

    As for Lebron-Bird. For offense yes they are comparable but when you factor in defense Lebron has surpassed him IMO.

    There was nobody better than Bird from 1981-1986 problem is he broke down after 1987 and was never the same.

    I would say he was the best '83-'84 to '87-'88 before he broke down. You could argue his best year in the league was '88 when he averaged 29.9 points per game.

    No question that LBJ was the superior on ball defender. I do think that Bird is often under appreciated as a defensive player. 4 times he led the league in defensive win shares.

    LBJ has probably passed Bird for 5th all time at this point. I don't think he's passed Magic yet. Still a long way to go to get to Kareem.
    I wasn't trying to say Bird was a bad defender. Just with Lebron's versatility defensively that puts him above anyone when it comes to defense talk among wing players/forwards.

    Anyways sounds like we have similar top 6.

    Mine is

    1A. Jordan
    1B. Russell
    1C. Kareem
    4. Magic
    5. Lebron
    6. Bird
    7. Wilt
    8. Duncan(has a big finals this year with a title I might put him ahead of Wilt)
    9. Shaq
    10. Kobe
    Hey @DNC sorry that I didn't "Nut up" and post my top 10 rankings. Oh wait I did...........
    When I said "would love to see your top 10" the first time you could have just said "look in the NBA challenge thread" instead of ignoring. I don't memorize everything everyone poasts here.

    Interesting ranks. I don't disagree much other than I think you have Bron where he'll eventually end up as opposed to where he deserves to be on acocomplishments thus far. Why do you hate the Big O?
    Truthfully I don't know anything about him. Unlike Russell and Wilt who I never saw play at least I feel like I've seen enough highlights of them to sort of form an opinion.

    All I know about the Big O is one year he averaged a triple double. That's it. Don't even know what number he wore, what hand he shot with.

    So I tend to leave him out as I don't really have much to rank him. I don't know if he was a stat compiler or had those stats so his teams could win.

    That's fair, I don't know a whole ton either. I know that one of the CBB POY trophies is named after him and that he was on the 60 Olympic team so I assume he was a hell of a player in college as well. His accolades match up pretty well with the rest of these guys: 9 time All NBA, 12 time All Star. Only one MVP and one ring though. Maybe I do have him a bit too high.

    FWIW, ESPN had him as the 7th basketball player on their list of top athletes of the 20th century, behind MJ, Wilt, Magic, Russell, Kareem and Bird. Considering Duncan, Kobe and Lebron weren't eligible (and Shaq's best work came right after the century turn) he's probably a fringe top 10 guy at this point. My point guard bias probably overranked him.

    I do remember reading someone (probably Simmons) say that the triple double year the whole league was played at a ridiculously high pace and plenty of players racked up crazy high stats that year. Still impressive, of course, but probably not as insane of a year as it sounds.
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    [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 11,453
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    Oscar from that era wasn't even my hardest snub. I think Jerry West and Baylor were to me.

    Those two just played in the wrong era far as lack of rings. Perhaps Durant-Westbrook might be this generations West-Baylor or Stockton-Malone. Time will tell with those two.

    Baylor averaged 27.4 PPG and 13.5 RPG with 4.3 APG for an entire career. That's an amazing season. He did that for a career.

    Although his PER is only 22.7 which tells me he compiled a lot. I think in general that era is hard to look at stats. Something was going on back then for every great guy to have ridiculous high numbers. Obviously the league was at a high pace like you alluded to.

    Why I go by PER a lot because it really regulates the era's well and stat inflation. It's not a perfect system by any means as no stat is but I think it's a good way to judge great players.
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    TequillaTequilla Member Posts: 19,815
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    The late 50's and early 60's was a time of learning and experimentation for the game of basketball. The influence of a big like Mikan in the 50s (who probably is one of the hardest guys to judge in the history of the game regarding his place in the game) changed the game with the advent of the shot clock. With the shot clock led to Cousy, Russell, and the Celtics revolutionizing the art of the fast break. Many of that era began to have the mentality that you beat teams through out scoring them and that pace was the key to the game (definitely made the game more exciting). As time passed you started merging the pace of the game with defense and the game generally evolved into what we had today as players began harnessing the skill of the game with athleticism.

    To me, the older players you have to look at with a grain of salt as you mentioned given that their stats were at higher levels. However, so many of them grew the game, revolutionized it, and laid the foundation for the next generation to take to the next level. I don't think that it's that many of those players couldn't evolve into today's game but instead that they'd have benefited from learning about what was possible and incorporating into today's modern game.
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