That said, I'm with Silky in that I do think the Ewing love is a big higher than I'd expect, particularly for defense. He was a 3x second-team all-defensive player ('88, '89, '92).
In '88, he got four votes for DPOY (tied for 5th place)
In '89, he got two votes for DPOY (6th place)
In '92 he didn't get a single vote for DPOY (while I happen to have three starters who received votes that year, heh)
Those were his only three all-defensive (second-team) seasons. If I'm calling a spade a spade, then I'll say Ewing was a good defender. Nothing more. When we're looking at him in this game compared to all-time great defenders and their best defensive seasons? He's a good defender, he can hold his own to some extent, but he's not an above average defender in this league. He's clearly a rung below at least 7/12 centers -- Hakeem (if a C), Kareem, Russell, Walton, Mutumbo, Willis Reed, and David Robinson. And is he definitely better than the others (Moses, Cowens, Shaq, Wilt) to take the claim of 8th best center in the league? He's in that mix but I wouldn't say definitively the best of that bunch.
Oh and just for fun...


Ewing was a really good defender. I don’t see any shame in being voted “only” the 5th or 6th best defender in a league of 400 players.
Context matters, though. He was competing for the all-defense team with Hakeem, Robinson and Dikembe. Some years he beat them out, others he didn’t. All four of those guys are legit all-time defenders. And, like Hakeem and Robinson, Ewing was a great offensive player.
Ewing isn’t slow, or average. He’s just the third most dominant center of his era, behind Hakeem and the Admiral.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfxGMm4NehI
Can't believe the disrespect that Shaquille O'Neal is getting on here...dude even laced em up for BOS for a while.
The above clip is his shot blocking, only...I realize that shot-blocking is only a part of defending but make no mistake he patrolled and intimidated.
Shame that folks seemed to categorize his skill as just being bigger than anyone else and don't appear to give him credit for his timing and athleticism.
This seems to be the case...to ME, at least.
I consider Ewing and Shaq to be from different eras. In terms of defense, though, I’d slot Shaq behind all four of Hakeem, Admiral, Dikembe and Ewing.
In his best years, though, Shaq would be plenty good enough to defend in this league. I don’t think his defense is a tremendous strength for you, but it’s certainly not a weakness.
I still think Russell should be considered as an all-time great defensive center, even if he did have the body of a current 3/4. There is another smallish center who was also right up there on that list too.
Shaq was a great defensive center. He would defensively and physically dominate 95% of centers to ever play. But he is just a rung below some guys on that all time ladder when it comes defense.
But as the best ever two way center, Shaq is right there right after Hakeem as I consider Kareem and Wilt much too offensive minded and Russell too defensive minded.
Russell was 6'9.75 without shoes, which is as tall as guys like Robert Williams.
But only listed at 215lbs. Naturally he was likely closer to 230 by the end of his career, and he'd definitely have no issues being strong enough in today's game, but he was quite slim for a big man when compared to today's standards.
He was such a ridiculous athlete, competitor and smart defender that it doesn't really matter
His ~220 pound days had him anchoring the best defenses of all time against 260-280 pound behemoths like Wilt though lol.
Bill is maybe the best defender of all-time.
That said, his ability to defend Wilt is really overblown.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/tiny.fcgi?id=PAGXr
Those are partial game logs of their head to head matchups.
Wilt averaged 29.9 ppg against Russ, and 28.2 rebounds in the regular season. Wilt scored 40+ on Russell 20 times, including games of 62, 53, 52 and 50 points. Wilt's record 55 rebound game was against Russell and the Celtics.
In the playoffs it was similar: 25.7 points, 28.0 rebounds, and 50.8% FG% for Wilt. Wilt had highs of 50 points and 41 rebounds in the playoffs against Russell.
Russell made Wilt work hard, but in truth, Chamberlain did his part overall. The Celtics strategy was moreso to shut everybody else down and to let Wilt struggle to get his points, and that proved effective.
But Russell was the only center who was capable of making Wilt work like that, and come out victorious. Wilt's raw numbers look incredible against Russell, but his best season's h2h stats have a scoring profile like a 2010 David Lee after adjusting for pace!
http://www.backpicks.com/2018/04/02/backpicks-goat-3-bill-russell/
This article explains how transcendent his defense really was using statistics.
If that metric finds that average 30 / 30 in the 60s is the same as David Lee averaging 20 / 12, I'm not sure that I'd agree.
Wilt averaged roughly his career average in terms of PPG against Russ, and exceeded his career RPG. Isn't the natural extension of your argument (or that article's argument) that Wilt's career equates roughly to David Lee in 2010? Because I don't buy that at all.
Yeah you've misunderstood. What I said is that Russell slowed Wilt down to a scoring profile akin to prime David Lee. You could read the link to see for yourself instead of dismissing it tbh.
I read it. I don't believe it. And, I suspect you can't explain it, because it doesn't make sense.
Wilt averaged essentially 30 points and 28 rebounds against Russell. That's not the equivalent of David Lee. However, let's assume for discussion that it is.
If 30 points / 28 rebounds = David Lee, then what do you make of Wilt's 30 points / 23 rebounds career averages? That makes him a poor man's David Lee, right? Similar offense, worse rebounding?
The same metric tells us -- according to the article -- that ****, *****, ***** and ***** were better shot-blockers than Russell. Do you agree with this?
This is what happens when somebody manipulates statistics in a way that makes no sense at all. Mark Twain is proven right on a daily basis. (I don't mean to be flippant, but I think that some of his projections are all kinds of nonsense. The math may work out, but the conclusions don't.)