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Dame has won 4 playoff series with 1 WCF loss
Walton has won 5 playoff series (PDX) with 1 Championship & MVP
Bill Walton is the only player that has won both Sixth Man of the Year and NBA MVP and an NBA Finals MVP
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Clyde has won 9 playoff series (PDX)with 2 WCF wins and 2 Finals loss
discount it then....no biggieNot sure what Bill winning 6MOY has to do with his time in Portland...
Not even MELO could pull that off.discount it then....no biggie
Even after winning finals MVP & League MVP in his later years he wins 6th man. Only player to only do it is kind of cool.

This article is gonna look so funny when he's traded to the Lakers next off season.
This comment won't look so funny when we meet at Mt. Tabor.
Clyde I know is the all time worst Blazer tipper according to my ex wife that served the blazers for years at Oswego Point when they were on the river.
Makes since though as Clyde was a finance/accounting major.
Basketball reference lists 52 Portland Trailblazer career leader categories. Of those 52 categories,
Drexler - 19
Lillard - 6
No one else more than 3
Lillard may be more lovable, loyal and project to be the greatest, but right now, Clyde is clearly the greatest Blazer of all time

You have to be an all time great to lead in bad stats too. Jordan leads the Bulls in missed fg’s and turnovers alsoTrue, Drexler is the all-time leader in the majority of the Blazers stats categories, but a few of those 52 stats categories I wouldn't consider an indicator of the all-time greatest Blazer -
View attachment 37073
Keep in mind, Drexler played in 224 more Blazers games than Lillard has to date (34.8% more games). The key to many of these stats records is longevity. Drexler stayed relatively healthy and productive for 12 seasons. Lillard is just into his 9th season as a Blazer.
Only 7 players played 9 or more seasons as a Blazer: Drexler (12), Kersey (11), Porter (10), Lillard (9), Aldridge (9), Paxson (9), and Steele (9).
And sometimes greatness isn't measured by stats alone...
View attachment 37072

Objectively you cannot discount Clyde's success against some of the greatest players & teams assembled. Back when defenders could defend and bigs could be bigs, and a lot less emphasis on the 3 ball.
You don think that defenders back them had an advantage with being able to use arm's and hands and no zone D?IMO, the league now is better than it's ever been. Both offenses and defenses are more sophisticated than at any other time in league history, largely driven by athletes that mesh size and skill in a way that hasn't been seen before aside from maybe a few outliers. That's created versatility that's allowed for much more schematic creativity.
I liked Drexler as a player and I'm all for appreciating his game, but not on the basis that he played in a more challenging league.
You don think that defenders back them had an advantage with being able to use arm's and hands and no zone D?
Defenders now imo have a disadvantage.
Do you think and guy's like Joe Dumars, GP, Stockton would allow guys to launch three's like they do now? I think they would have pressed, hand checked and fronted them and frustrate the shooters now.No zone D was a disadvantage to defenders back then. Defenders now can use zone defense, which makes up for less hand checking. In fact, from what I've read, it more than makes up for it--being able to use zones have allowed for tougher defensive schemes. So, defense is less physical, due to limitations on hand checking, but more complex.
Do you think and guy's like Joe Dumars, GP, Stockton would allow guys to launch three's like they do now? I think they would have pressed, hand checked and fronted them and frustrate the shooters now.
All the stars today have counters to being fronted and pressed at the three point line. As I said, defenses were more physical in the 1980s, but they were also more simplistic. If you go back and watch actual 1980s basketball, the defense was not better, it was worse. There were tons of wide open layups and jumpers. There's a nostalgic mystique about how much better defense was in the 1980s and 1990s, but it really isn't accurate, IMO.
Very, very true. The fact that the post up game has virtually vanished is a great example. In the old days everything ran through the post because double teams were so much harder to execute effectively. 1999 Spurs basketball was sooooo.....fucking....borrrring.
They made a rule that was basically called the Charles Barkley Rule that you can't back a guy in the post over 5 seconds because that shit is dull. That rule still exists, and it gets called maybe twice a season on a team. Not because refs don't see it, it's because defenses just don't really allow it anymore.
I want to see the “Most Heart” category for the Blazers. Drexler has never been anywhere near that list, while Dame has led it since his rookie year. After 50 years of Blazer fan hood, Clyde makes my Top 10 but in all the categories that count, Dame is far and away #1. Dame is about Portland and the Blazers. Clyde was about Clyde.....True, Drexler is the all-time leader in the majority of the Blazers stats categories, but a few of those 52 stats categories I wouldn't consider an indicator of the all-time greatest Blazer -
View attachment 37073
Keep in mind, Drexler played in 224 more Blazers games than Lillard has to date (34.8% more games). The key to many of these stats records is longevity. Drexler stayed relatively healthy and productive for 12 seasons. Lillard is just into his 9th season as a Blazer.
Only 7 players played 9 or more seasons as a Blazer: Drexler (12), Kersey (11), Porter (10), Lillard (9), Aldridge (9), Paxson (9), and Steele (9).
And sometimes greatness isn't measured by stats alone...
View attachment 37072
Any 1980s or 1990s team, no matter how good, that was teleported forward and played the way they did in their heyday (with both hand checking and zone defenses allowed) would get crushed by the best teams of today, IMO. The game has evolved.
Any 1980s or 1990s team, no matter how good, that was teleported forward and played the way they did in their heyday (with both hand checking and zone defenses allowed) would get crushed by the best teams of today, IMO. The game has evolved.
