TheWhackMamba
The Coli's Drop Bear
top 10
1. Jordan
2. Kareem ( my personal GOAT )
3. Wilt
4. Magic
5. Bird
6. Shaq
7. Kobe
8. Hakeem
9. Lebron
10. Oscar
No Duncan?
top 10
1. Jordan
2. Kareem ( my personal GOAT )
3. Wilt
4. Magic
5. Bird
6. Shaq
7. Kobe
8. Hakeem
9. Lebron
10. Oscar
No Duncan?
Yea...I think so. You're just thinking offense. I'm thinking total impact: Lebron impacts a team on offense and defense more than any non-center in the game today and the most since Jordan. See the thing about the NBA is that, 95% of the NBA champions had at least an all star caliber big-man. Because height and skill are so hard to come by, the recipe to win was a big man with offensive and/or defensive talent being the centerpiece of most NBA champions:
60's Celtics had Bill Russell,
70's lakers had Wilt Chamberlain,
80's Lakers had Abdul-Jabbar,
Bill Walton with the Trailblazers in 77,
Wes Unseld and the Bullets in '78,
Bucks in 71 with Alcindor
Wills Reed and the Knicks in '70 & '73.
Moses Malone and the 76ers in '83.
Spurs with Tim Duncan
Rockets with Olajuwon
Pistons in '04 Don't win without Ben Wallace being dominant defensively in the paint.
As great as Larry Bird was, he had a Hall of Fame Center in Kevin McHale.
As great as Kobe was, he had Shaq (HOF) and Pau Gasol (who, if you look at his stats, should go into the Hall of Fame himself).
Yes there are exception to the rule: The '75 Warriors with Rick Barry, The 78 supersonics with Dennis Johnson, 89-90 Pistons (we can argue Laimbeer if you want).
But that's what they are, exceptions. There just aren't many players like Lebron, like Jordan, who can win titles and consistently go to NBA finals without a Big man who was dominant in the paint either on the offensive or defensive end, (keep it real Chris Bosh is not that kind of dude). Jordan needed Pippen, but he wasn't a big man. Lebron needed Wade & Bosh (not dominant big men). Might as well add Steph curry to the list as well.
Final point: Lebron has better career averages than Kobe all around. Not only that, but Lebron has more total rebounds and total assists than Kobe despite playing in 359 fewer games. The choice is clear brehs.
Wow,I see people having Kobe not even in the top 10,is that legit?
Let me see:
Mike
Magic
Kareem
Duncan
And IMO that's the only people right now that clearly rank ahead of Kobe on an all time great list,and Lebron will be there once he's done,but other than that,Kobe is top 5 all time IMO
This is where your argument breaks down, if you are claiming "hood rules" and then putting 100 on Bron, I dont know what to say to your soon to be broke ass. Bron is the most mentally fragile of your top 5 and would crawl into a shell against the all time greats. Bron needed to find an alpha (Wade) to get those two championship rings. I am not going to put someone in my top 5 who has displayed the level of bytchassness that Lebron has, it just wouldnt be fair. A man that is as comscious of his stats as Lebron is has managed to make his case on inflated numbers. The only argument I can see for Bron is that he took bad teams to the finals in the weak east 5-10 years ago but i am not letting him fool me off the super team championships. If he wins now with the Cavs then he jumps up a few spots in my book, until then enjoy this 8 seed.
Is Duncan clearly ahead of Kobe though?
Considering he hasn't played anywhere close to 34 minutes a game in nearly 10 years? I mean if we are talking about legendary players and where they stand in terms of all time greats...shouldn't the criteria be dominance or close to it?
Please don't jump on me coli heads....I'm just opening up the debate...is Duncan heads and shoulders above Kobe? in terms of all time great placement?
Duncan was 3rd-team All-NBA last year at the age of 38 and 1st-team All-NBA two years earlier at the age of 36. Who cares that he did it in only 30 minutes/game? He was still the best player on a championship team during that time and the focal point of both their offense and defense. Would it be better if he were Kobe, playing 35 minutes/game but getting hurt every season since he was 34?
Duncan has 15 All-NBA selections, including 9 1st-team selections is an era loaded with great forwards (Lebron, Garnett, Dirk, Malone, McGrady, Durant). And he didn't even start until 22 because he was busy getting named to 3 straight All-American teams - don't claim he couldn't have made another couple All-NBA teams at the age of 20-21. To criticize him based on a supposed lack of longevity is ridiculous.
These are all fair points, but it's also fair to point out that Duncan hasn't dominated, in the truest sense of the word, in quite a while...I'm not saying he's not effective.
Injuries are a part of the game, should have Kobe dialed it down and adapted to the rigors of age? Certainly....but if you scale it down and don't lift as much weight so to speak, then that should take away the argument that you dominated. Duncan has been more effective than Kobe as of late, but that's more due to age, mileage, and the style of game Duncan plays.

I'm talking about sheer dominance, I think you can make the argument that Duncan is above Kobe in terms of all time greats, but you can also make the argument in Kobe's favor as well. It isn't as clear cut as you think, especially since Kobe was straight up killing San Antonio in his and Duncan's prime.

If Lebron isn't "as good" as Kobe was in his 30s, you think that it'll be excused with, "Well, that's just due to age, mileage, and the style game Lebron plays"???
The fact that Duncan could adjust his offensive and defensive game to continue to be a championship contender well into his late 30s is one of the very reasons why his career comes out as better than Bryant's.
Duncan was on MVP ballots as recently as last year and was #7 in MVP voting just 3 years ago. That, coincidentally, was the last time Kobe showed up on an MVP ballot at all (he was #5). I'd say that MVP votes are as objective a measure of "dominance" as you can get...and they both fell off the upper rung of that ballot at the same time. But Duncan still made an all-NBA team TWO years after Kobe's last one, and Duncan was making All-NBA 1st Team FOUR years before Kobe ever did. So I'm just not seeing how you can make up longevity as a knock against him.
And if we go by team success instead of individual accolades...Kobe has won ONE 2nd-round playoff game since 2010 when he was 31. In 2012 at age 35, Duncan was the best player on a team that swept the first two rounds and took OKC to 6 in a close WCF. Then in 2013 he was the best player on a team that was 1 play from winning the championship, and would have been the clear Finals MVP if SAS got one more rebound. And in 2014 he was still the best player on the Spurs when they won the championship (and the only all-star on the team that year).
If you're really "dominant", that needs to translate into something beyond 1st-round playoff wins. Duncan out there winning rings as the only all-star even in his late 30s. Kobe had solid talent and great coaching around him 2011-2013, and wasn't doing crap.
Oh, this myth again.
Kobe's playoff averages against Duncan were 28-6-5 with a steal a game.
Duncan's playoff averages against Kobe were 25-14-4 with a steal and 2 blocks a game.
Kobe was never "straight up killing San Antonio". Duncan and Shaq were ALWAYS the focus on the offense and defense for both teams. You think Pop went into games scheming about how to stop Kobe, or about how to stop Shaq? Kobe took a ton of shots against the Spurs (averaged 24 shots/game) because he was the one Pop wanted taking shots over Shaq. Meanwhile, Duncan didn't have a Shaq to keep the pressure off of him - most of those years the Spurs only had 1 all-star on the team besides Duncan...must less the best player in the league.
Duncan won four championships right through the middle of Kobe's prime: 1999, 2003, 2005, and 2007. Kobe was age 20-28 during that run. If he was such a Spurs-killer, then he should have been able to stop them a few more times...but he didn't win his 1st championship as the main guy until Duncan was 32 years old.
If Lebron isn't "as good" as Kobe was in his 30s, you think that it'll be excused with, "Well, that's just due to age, mileage, and the style game Lebron plays"???
The fact that Duncan could adjust his offensive and defensive game to continue to be a championship contender well into his late 30s is one of the very reasons why his career comes out as better than Bryant's.
Duncan was on MVP ballots as recently as last year and was #7 in MVP voting just 3 years ago. That, coincidentally, was the last time Kobe showed up on an MVP ballot at all (he was #5). I'd say that MVP votes are as objective a measure of "dominance" as you can get...and they both fell off the upper rung of that ballot at the same time. But Duncan still made an all-NBA team TWO years after Kobe's last one, and Duncan was making All-NBA 1st Team FOUR years before Kobe ever did. So I'm just not seeing how you can make up longevity as a knock against him.
And if we go by team success instead of individual accolades...Kobe has won ONE 2nd-round playoff game since 2010 when he was 31. In 2012 at age 35, Duncan was the best player on a team that swept the first two rounds and took OKC to 6 in a close WCF. Then in 2013 he was the best player on a team that was 1 play from winning the championship, and would have been the clear Finals MVP if SAS got one more rebound. And in 2014 he was still the best player on the Spurs when they won the championship.
If you're really "dominant", that needs to translate into something beyond 1st-round playoff wins. Duncan out there winning rings as the team leader even in his late 30s. Kobe had solid talent and great coaching around him 2011-2013, and wasn't doing crap.
Oh, this myth again.
Kobe's playoff averages against Duncan were 28-6-5 with a steal a game.
Duncan's playoff averages against Kobe were 25-14-4 with a steal and 2 blocks a game.
Kobe was never "straight up killing San Antonio". Duncan and Shaq were ALWAYS the focus on the offense and defense for both teams. You think Pop went into games scheming about how to stop Kobe, or about how to stop Shaq? Kobe took a ton of shots against the Spurs (averaged 24 shots/game) because he was the one Pop wanted taking shots over Shaq. Meanwhile, Duncan didn't have a Shaq to keep the pressure off of him - most of those years the Spurs only had 1 all-star on the team besides Duncan...must less the best player in the league.
Duncan won four championships right through the middle of Kobe's prime: 1999, 2003, 2005, and 2007. Kobe was age 20-28 during that run. If he was such a Spurs-killer, then he should have been able to stop them a few more times...but he didn't win his 1st championship as the main guy until Duncan was 32 years old.
Edit: Here's a bit of data about Duncan's championships that most people don't realize.
1999: Duncan was the only all-star on the Spurs that year.
2003: Duncan was the only all-star on the Spurs that year.
2005: Duncan and Ginobli were the only all-stars on the Spurs that year. Only Duncan All-NBA.
2007: Duncan and Parker were the only all-stars on the Spurs that year. Only Duncan All-NBA.
2014: Duncan and Parker were the only all-stars on the Spurs that year.
Damn homie I just looked at your avi and it explains your post also pertaining to your avi Jordan never won without pippen and during kobe's 3 peat he was not the big dog on kobe's second championship run he had a top 20 player in gasol and talent wise and state wise when healthy a top 3 center in bynum in lebron's run he also had a top 20 player in bosh and a not so healthy wade and this lame as alpha shyt you speak of do you remember wade's prior 2 seasons before bron came through and bosh's I believe in those 2 seasons I think lebron had mvp season or two
