EL PRESIDENTE
Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2010
- Messages
- 50,346
- Likes
- 22,533
- Points
- 113
Bynum has developed into a very good player.
will he ever become a Shaq/Hakeem/D-Rob?
I doubt it.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Bynum has developed into a very good player.
will he ever become a Shaq/Hakeem/D-Rob?
I doubt it.
The eastern conference championship pitted Garnett against a backup until Bosh returned.
The western conference championship paired Duncan (who wants to be called a PF) against Perkins (who played less than 30 MPG).
Is this not counter evidence to the myth of the dominant center being necessary for eliteness?
If you go by his analysis you'd be in your best interest to leave this draft with:
-Dion Waiters
-John Henson
-Jae Crowder
Not in my opinion.
None of those 4 teams are even close to what I'd call "elite".
I think that dominant centers win championships is a myth. Wilt had his troubles, as did Kareem. They won when they became secondary options on well rounded teams. The Magic have the closest thing to a dominant center, and struggle. Shaq needed Kobe and Wade as the alpha guys.
The Bulls won 6 championships with Cartwright and Longley - neither was "dominant."
Neither of the teams in this year's finals has a dominant C.
Neither of the teams in this year's finals has a dominant C.
With the exception of a healthy Dwight Howard (and probably Oden), there is no such thing as a dominant center in today's league.
Add a star next to Dwight and they'd be legit. That's how much impact a dominant center would have.
The dominant center isn't a myth. It's just a remnant, a legend from a bygone era.
