@KOBE
Forgot to add this too.
Bobby Knight said he was the "best passer in college basketball" at the time, and that he was "as good a passer as has ever played college basketball". His passing ability has only got better over the last eight years he's been in the league.
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Show me where I've contradicted myself on certain stats/metrics. Give me ONE example.Watching @Gil Scott-Heroin rely on certain stats and metrics and then contradict himself and disregard those very same metrics when they don't fit his agenda is hilarious.![]()
Good to see @Gravity still alive, was worried about him because of the shooting in Orlando.
The context is the video - it's right there for you to see for yourself in all its glory. Did you even bother to watch it?
Your point is what exactly?
You still don't get it.
He was a combo guard - I wouldn't say he wasn't a PG. Especially before Dumars was drafted when the Pistons needed a player to run the point (when Zeke was on the bench), Vinnie was that guy. You're failing to see the point in which I'm bringing up Vinnie helping run the offense and acting as a playmaker.
- He had good touch on the inside whether it was a basic hook shot or working the baseline for a layup (he wasn't breaking down players with counters but he knew how to get his shot off if needed to down low)
- He could score on OREB when the defense has already recovered to contest his shot after putting the ball on the floor (he wasn't on his Reggie Evans shyt)
- He could put the ball on the floor in the low post and create space for himself to get off a jumpshot (one of his go-to actions)
- He had great ball control, BBIQ, and awareness - he knew how to go straight to work after sealing off his defender and getting the ball
Like I said he was no McHale (by any stretch of the imagination) but he had the shooting touch, IQ and finishing ability to create his own.
I never once argued against this.
Again, I never once argued this either. Stop being dense. I simply highlighted the roles in which they had on offense - Zeke wasn't doing everything by himself nor was he the only player the defense focused on (like @Newzz was insinuating).
I'm correlating the margins in which match their skillsets (for their respective eras) - not just their roles on the team. You're having a hard time comprehending this.
Curry is the table setter and Draymond is the go-between man. Curry is the main cog in the machine. See now this is the problem and why I've been trying to normalize both Zeke and Curry here, because there seems to be this misconception that Curry is only good as he is because he's not running the offense the same as Zeke did. He did that shyt under Jackson, where as now the scheme is fundamentally better because of the constant ball movement. Which is why it's important to look at his skillset and not the direct role he has in the offense (specifically playmaking).
SMH.
There's no reasoning with some of y'all cats.
That was his primary role on offense - yet he could still create for himself (even on jumpshots - he wasn't constantly just getting set shot after set shot).Bruh how are you going to attempt to tell me about the team I grew up watching. Bill laimbeer was not doing no fukking hook shots and creating no type of space with a dribble or none of that. He was a jumpshooter.
Isiah was the 2nd best pg of the era. He was often referred to as the best little man to ever play in the nba. But he wasn't the focal point of opposing defenses oh yeah they was worried about laimbeer in the post and Tripuka because you looked at his stats and said he's like Klay.
Zeke is primarily 80's, so what 90's ball got to do with his prime?Why are you nikkas acting like comparing Curry to Zeke is some form of blasphemy?
You 90s ball stans are fukking disgusting man. You fakkits won't ever admit that today's players are better than the ones you grew up with. You'll ignore all the facts and evidence all because you're blinded by nostalgia. Bunch of delusional washed up bytch nikkas.
Admittedly I was paying more attention to his finals performance, he averaged 28/5/7 on 63ts% which I'd put over either one of Curry's finals performances thus far. Best postseason performance I'll now give Curry the nod for last season although not this season. What I meant about Isiah's postseason dominance is he typically raised his game in the playoffs, especially when he was in his prime.I'm guessing you're speaking about their respective peaks in the PS? Curry has the best postseason performance ('14'/15) out of the two.
How close do you think the gap is between the two?
article said:Thomas appeared via telephone on Mike & Mike this morning and Greenberg flat out asked him if Curry would be as effective if he played during the late '80s and early '90s.
“The game has changed, “ Thomas said. “You can’t really apply the rules of my era to this one. We have to appreciate what Steph is doing under the rules he’s playing under and he’s the best player under the circumstances.”
Like Oscar, Thomas did rip current NBA defenses and coaching.
“This is the worst perimeter defense I’ve ever seen in the NBA,” said Thomas...“Coaches let guys guard people way off the ball.”
Thomas added that the success of small-ball can be attributed to the rules changes that have totally eliminated the effectiveness of the bigs.
“The way the rules are now,” Thomas said, “it severely hampers the big man. The rules really favor smalls right now. We’ve basically eliminated the center position. The pendulum has swung too far against the big player. Bigs are now forced to play like the small guys and stand on the wing and shoot threes. It’s the way offenses and defenses are designed now.”
Thomas says Curry is benefiting from all of this and that’s just facts. It’s not a knock on Steph.
“It’s the best time in NBA history to be a small player,” said Thomas, perhaps the greatest point guard, other than Magic Johnson, to ever step on a basketball court.