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Just keeping things in perspective.
Thanks, man. You're the go-to guy for perspective.

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Just keeping things in perspective.

Out of a total of 246.
The Admiral was 25 years old in his second season.
Greg Oden is 21.
And?
Just curious. Can you give us an estimate of your STFU levels? What does Oden have to average to get you to be quiet about him? I feel like you and Hank the Dwarf would say "Well...sure he's an All-Star in his second season - which should really be his third - and you know Shaq was all NBA first team by then...so...he's garbage"!I'm saying that the fact that he's only played 70 games isn't something to be excited about. It's been a negative. Not a positive.
LOL, touche'!Half empty? I'd say that glass is about 9/10ths empty.
Half empty? I'd say that glass is about 9/10ths empty.
Kareem at 22: 28.8 ppg, 14.5 rpg, blocks stats not kept
DRob's rookie year: 24.3 ppg, 12.0 rpg, 2.0 apg, 1.7 spg, 3.9 bpg after going two years without playing a single game of basketball
If he's gonna do that, he'd better get busy. His current averages are 9, 7, & 1.
Pish posh! You speak of facts and context when he clearly is interested in arbitrary cherry picking of data to prove his point about how the Center of his team sucks and will suck now and forever AMEN.Well just remember that orthoscopic knee surgery takes 2 years to fully heal. I gave his rookie season, last year a "*" because of the surgery. In my mind, this is his real rookie season at full health. Amare, Nene and so many others having the same surgery just didn't play great trying to come back after one year.
Pish posh! You speak of facts and context when he clearly is interested in arbitrary cherry picking of data to prove his point about how the Center of his team sucks and will suck now and forever AMEN.
Not to nit pick too much, but it's microfracture surgery FYI which is far, FAR worse then arthroscopic surgery. You can also add Kenyon Martin and Zach Randolph to your list of MF guys oh and John Stockton and a few others. It takes two years to come back which is...now actually. So you're right this is his first REAL season. That's why I predict Greatness next year and flashes of superstardom this year with pretty good numbers when all is said and done. By 2010/11 though I expect uber domination.
The thing I've never bought about the argument that expansion has watered down the league is that it pretends the US population and the world popularity of basketball is stuck at 1960, and that the NBA was just as popular then as it is today.
In 1960, there were literally half as many Americans as there are today (150 mil vs 300 mil). And in that era not a lot of black kids were really even trying to make it in the NBA, so the pool was even smaller. And it was completely unheard of to expect somebody from China or Lithuania or Argentina to try join the league. The talent pool the NBA has to draw on now is probably 3 to 5 times as large as it was back in 1960. And that talent pool now has far superior training and diet. And far more financial incentive to excel.
The great centers of that era would obviously still be good in the current era. But their stats would be much more pedestrian because they'd face a much greater depth of quality.
The thing I've never bought about the argument that expansion has watered down the league is that it pretends the US population and the world popularity of basketball is stuck at 1960, and that the NBA was just as popular then as it is today.
In 1960, there were literally half as many Americans as there are today (150 mil vs 300 mil). And in that era not a lot of black kids were really even trying to make it in the NBA, so the pool was even smaller. And it was completely unheard of to expect somebody from China or Lithuania or Argentina to try join the league. The talent pool the NBA has to draw on now is probably 3 to 5 times as large as it was back in 1960. And that talent pool now has far superior training and diet. And far more financial incentive to excel.
Absolutely correct about Shaq benefitting from ZERO competition during his prime. That is one of the reasons I've always felt Shaq was over rated. I think he is HOF caliber to be sure, I just think his dominance was skewed by a lack of quality big men.But there are also 3 - 5 times as many teams in the NBA (OK, 3.75 times as many) - and professional leagues all around the world. So, many more options for tall guys who want to make a living playing basketball. With the NBA salary cap, weak dollar, etc. many top international big men are finding it to their advantage to play professionally where they can make as much, or more, money playing a much shorter season.
Also, by the early 1960s, pretty much every tall black inner city kid was being pushed into basketball as a way to escape poverty and make it big. While there was still signifiacnt racial inequality and discrimination in our country, the NBA was well on it's way to being intergrated and many of it's biggest stars (Russell, Wilt, Elgin Baylor, Oscar Robertson) were black and were the role models of every tall black kid in America.
In any case, for whatever the reason, go back and look at the 2nd and 3rd team All-NBA centers from Shaq's prime and you will see that there was a long period when the talent level at the center position in the NBA was sorely lacking (putting it mildly) - for whatever reason. There were a lot more teams, but fewer excellent centers than during Russell's era (or Kareem's era, or now, for that matter). I'm not sure what caused that void in talented centers, but whatever the cause, the fact that there were few excellent centers AND 28 - 30 team in the league meant Shaq rarely went head-to-head with another hall of fame caliber center during his prime. Wilt and Russell (or Kareem, Hakeem, David Robinson, etc.) were much more likely to be up against a great center on any given night than Shaq was in his prime. That was my point, regardless of US population and other factors.
BNM
