That is strictly an opinion by the way so I will not pass that off as fact. Magic did have 5 titles before Jordan had one. And if Magic wanted to put up 30 plus points a night he could have. But he didn't need to. And he truly made every other player on the team better and plus he could play anywhere on the court if he wanted to.So, you smoke a lot of crack, do ya?
That is strictly an opinion by the way so I will not pass that off as fact. Magic did have 5 titles before Jordan had one. And if Magic wanted to put up 30 plus points a night he could have. But he didn't need to. And he truly made every other player on the team better and plus he could play anywhere on the court if he wanted to.
I guess Larry Bird must have been smoking crack too huh?
To be honest, it's hard for me to consider any player in today's league among the greatest, because the rules are so different now. The rules favor offense and discourage hard defense. I can only imagine how many points Jordan would score in the current game where simply touching him would draw a foul.
Top 30 players all time in no particular order:
Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Larry Bird, Lebron James, Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Oscar Robertson, Isiah Thomas, Steph Curry, Kobe Bryant, Hakeem Olajuwon, Jerry West, Bob Cousy, Bill Russell, John Havlicek, Kevin Durant, Kevin Garnett, Clyde Drexler, Charles Barkley, Dirk Nowitzki, Karl Malone, John Stockton, Shaquille O Neal, Julius Erving, Moses Malone, Gary Payton, Jason Kidd, Russell Westbrook, Tim Duncan, Dwyane Wade.
Of course many others could make the list and its always debatable who belongs in the top ten.
And here is a fun fact. The only RB to gain 1,000 rushing yards in a season while playing with Dan Marino was Karim Abdul Jabbar.
Sure he has the body for it. Lot of current NBA players have the body for it. But they've been taught to play soft. How many could transition to that mindset? I'm not sure a lot could. NBA is a microcosm of the world around us.LeBron has the body for that era, only his mindset could prevent him from being one of the stars back then.
I think NBA players from the past could transition to today's game easier than today's players could transition to the NBA of the past.
I do think guys like Draymond and Giannis could hang with Laimbeer and Rodman.Bill Laimbeer and Dennis Rodman would make LeBron cry. I mean literally cry.
To be honest, it's hard for me to consider any player in today's league among the greatest, because the rules are so different now. The rules favor offense and discourage hard defense. I can only imagine how many points Jordan would score in the current game where simply touching him would draw a foul.
shoulda been called Will VanderbiltI do think guys like Draymond and Giannis could hang with Laimbeer and Rodman.
I believe Laimbeer or one of those guys that used to play for the Pistons back in the day said that one of their main jobs back then was to protect Isiah. And notice how Jordan did not win his titles with the Bulls until Phil Jackson came along and they got some big men of their own to match up against the Pistons big men. Players like Horace Grant, Bill Cartwright, Cliff Levingston, and Will Perdue. They needed them to match up against Laimbeer, Rodman, James Edwards and John Salley. Cartwright and Grant were just as physical as Rodman and Laimbeer.
Athletes of today don't seem to have the same competitive fire as athletes of the past. Now, it's all about money.
There were big men that could shoot the ball back in the day. Sam Perkins and Laimbeer come to mind. The game was just different back then and players like Hakeem and Ewing first priority was to get points in the post, get rebounds and play the best defense they possibly could. There are highlights of both of them handling the ball very well.Jordan would average over 50 points a game if he was coming out of college now.. The main difference I see with current big men compared to the past is skill set, athleticism, and the ability to shoot the ball from deep. The mentality of current greats is different though. As good as Durant is, he is a horrible leader for someone that will go down as one of the best.
