- 92,691
- 128,896
Steve Smith and Bonzi Wells gave Kobe trouble back then. Smith would post up and shoot over him and Wells would just back him down and power the ball through.
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Originally Posted by DT43
Wait, what is the point of this "if you switch Kobe with ____" argument again?
Originally Posted by DT43
Wait, what is the point of this "if you switch Kobe with ____" argument again?
One thing about Stockton, though, that I just saw on bball-reference and thought was a typo, is that he missed 54 games out of 1004.. he played sixteen FULL 82 game seasons (including 5 straight, and 7 straight, then ended with 4 straight)that's unheard of in today's game and should be acknowledged.
You're forgetting '99 was a lockout year. He only missed 22 games total. He played the maximum amount of games in 17 out of 19 seasons.
And led the league in assist % in 15 out of 19 seasons. Made it to the playoffs all 19 years. Had a PER over 20 at age 40. Only player in history to ever do that.
Stockton had the Groundhog Day of NBA careers.
One thing about Stockton, though, that I just saw on bball-reference and thought was a typo, is that he missed 54 games out of 1004.. he played sixteen FULL 82 game seasons (including 5 straight, and 7 straight, then ended with 4 straight)that's unheard of in today's game and should be acknowledged.
You're forgetting '99 was a lockout year. He only missed 22 games total. He played the maximum amount of games in 17 out of 19 seasons.
And led the league in assist % in 15 out of 19 seasons. Made it to the playoffs all 19 years. Had a PER over 20 at age 40. Only player in history to ever do that.
Stockton had the Groundhog Day of NBA careers.
Awesome post.Originally Posted by JD617
Paul Pierce is one of those guys who's had an old man game since the time he came into the league. One of the craftiest scorers I've seen. Only had/has average athleticism, but he's a master of getting his shot off with only an inch of space due to his array of pump fakes, jab steps, and spins. Always wants the ball with the game on the line and doesn't shy away from big moments.
He used to have some maturity issues when he was younger, and he and Doc clashed during their first season together in '04-'05. The infamous incident in Indiana in Game 6 of that year and the subsequent trade that fell through that offseason were a turning point in his career. The next year, '05-'06, he fully embraced his leadership role and had arguably his best season. Averaged 27, 7, and 5 and was one of the most complete perimeter players in the league. Scored 30+ points in 13 out of 14 games including a couple game-winning shots, a triple double, and a 50-point game on Lebron in that stretch. Played his hardest in '06 and '07 when he could've gone through the motions (*cough* Vince) even though he was stuck with a bunch of idiots like Ricky Davis, Mark Blount, Gerald Green and Sebastian Telfair. Then the Ray and KG trades happened, and the rest is history.
Everyone remembers his duel with Lebron in Game 7 in '08, but Game 5 in the best-of-5 first round against Philly in '02 might've been the best game I've seen him play. It was his first playoff series and the biggest game of his career up to that point, and he put 46 on the Sixers on 16 for 25 shooting from the field and 8 for 10 behind the arc. Ended up getting that team within 2 games of the Finals with Antoine Walker and Rodney Rogers as his 2nd and 3rd best players.
Where does he rank all-time? I think he's knocking on the door of the top 50 if not there already, and he still has a couple more decent years left.
Awesome post.Originally Posted by JD617
Paul Pierce is one of those guys who's had an old man game since the time he came into the league. One of the craftiest scorers I've seen. Only had/has average athleticism, but he's a master of getting his shot off with only an inch of space due to his array of pump fakes, jab steps, and spins. Always wants the ball with the game on the line and doesn't shy away from big moments.
He used to have some maturity issues when he was younger, and he and Doc clashed during their first season together in '04-'05. The infamous incident in Indiana in Game 6 of that year and the subsequent trade that fell through that offseason were a turning point in his career. The next year, '05-'06, he fully embraced his leadership role and had arguably his best season. Averaged 27, 7, and 5 and was one of the most complete perimeter players in the league. Scored 30+ points in 13 out of 14 games including a couple game-winning shots, a triple double, and a 50-point game on Lebron in that stretch. Played his hardest in '06 and '07 when he could've gone through the motions (*cough* Vince) even though he was stuck with a bunch of idiots like Ricky Davis, Mark Blount, Gerald Green and Sebastian Telfair. Then the Ray and KG trades happened, and the rest is history.
Everyone remembers his duel with Lebron in Game 7 in '08, but Game 5 in the best-of-5 first round against Philly in '02 might've been the best game I've seen him play. It was his first playoff series and the biggest game of his career up to that point, and he put 46 on the Sixers on 16 for 25 shooting from the field and 8 for 10 behind the arc. Ended up getting that team within 2 games of the Finals with Antoine Walker and Rodney Rogers as his 2nd and 3rd best players.
Where does he rank all-time? I think he's knocking on the door of the top 50 if not there already, and he still has a couple more decent years left.
He had to guard AIOriginally Posted by itsaboutthattime
admittedly kobe's defense is better than all of those all-star SGs, but after thinking about it..
which LA rival during those seasons really had a top flight SG that LA would have been crushed without kobe's defense?
the kings started doug christie as their SG
the spurs started bruce bowen
the blazers started steve smith
He had to guard AIOriginally Posted by itsaboutthattime
admittedly kobe's defense is better than all of those all-star SGs, but after thinking about it..
which LA rival during those seasons really had a top flight SG that LA would have been crushed without kobe's defense?
the kings started doug christie as their SG
the spurs started bruce bowen
the blazers started steve smith
GP's an interesting case, because he wasn't required to score as much until Kemp left, and then he bumped his average up a few points. To be perfectly honest, I couldn't stand Payton's offensive game. He'd just back down a defender until there was hardly any time on the shot clock, so it left it either to him to make a shot (often a turnaround or up and under) or go to exactly one option. The Sonics had a really stagnant offense, from what I remember. It was really annoying.Originally Posted by DMan14
gary payton didnt miss much games either and he wasnt even a strong guy. heard he didnt even really mess with weights. i think some of the missed games were due to suspension too, lol. 82,81,82,82,82,81,82,82,50(lockout),82,79,82,52+28(mil),82,77,81,68. they dont make them like they use to with guys like stockton, malone, and gp.
Originally Posted by atransta
He had to guard AIOriginally Posted by itsaboutthattime
admittedly kobe's defense is better than all of those all-star SGs, but after thinking about it..
which LA rival during those seasons really had a top flight SG that LA would have been crushed without kobe's defense?
the kings started doug christie as their SG
the spurs started bruce bowen
the blazers started steve smith
GP's an interesting case, because he wasn't required to score as much until Kemp left, and then he bumped his average up a few points. To be perfectly honest, I couldn't stand Payton's offensive game. He'd just back down a defender until there was hardly any time on the shot clock, so it left it either to him to make a shot (often a turnaround or up and under) or go to exactly one option. The Sonics had a really stagnant offense, from what I remember. It was really annoying.Originally Posted by DMan14
gary payton didnt miss much games either and he wasnt even a strong guy. heard he didnt even really mess with weights. i think some of the missed games were due to suspension too, lol. 82,81,82,82,82,81,82,82,50(lockout),82,79,82,52+28(mil),82,77,81,68. they dont make them like they use to with guys like stockton, malone, and gp.
Originally Posted by atransta
He had to guard AIOriginally Posted by itsaboutthattime
admittedly kobe's defense is better than all of those all-star SGs, but after thinking about it..
which LA rival during those seasons really had a top flight SG that LA would have been crushed without kobe's defense?
the kings started doug christie as their SG
the spurs started bruce bowen
the blazers started steve smith
This. I've wanted to hit on this subject when it came to PG's because I will always feel that GP hasn't gotten enough credit for how good he actually was by fans today.Originally Posted by CP1708
To be honest with ya'll, I still have Gary Payton ahead of Jason Kidd any day.
Gary's defense, and ability to score, while still getting 8 assists (or a mere couple less than Kidd) is more valuable to me than anything Kidd did. Kidd did rebound better than GP, but a lock down defender like that, at the point of my defense?Gimme that each and every time without question.
This. I've wanted to hit on this subject when it came to PG's because I will always feel that GP hasn't gotten enough credit for how good he actually was by fans today.Originally Posted by CP1708
To be honest with ya'll, I still have Gary Payton ahead of Jason Kidd any day.
Gary's defense, and ability to score, while still getting 8 assists (or a mere couple less than Kidd) is more valuable to me than anything Kidd did. Kidd did rebound better than GP, but a lock down defender like that, at the point of my defense?Gimme that each and every time without question.