Author Topic: Golden Season of Each Position  (Read 320 times)

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Golden Season of Each Position
« on: Today at 02:16:32 AM »

Offline slightly biased bias fan

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In your opinion, what was the best year for each position in NBA history?

An example would be that 1992-93 had an amazing depth of talent for shooting guards.

Clyde Drexler
Joe Dumars
Ron Harper
Jeff Hornacek
Michael Jordan
Reggie Lewis
Dan Majerle
Reggie Miller
Drazen Petrovic
Mitch Richmond
Byron Scott
Steve Smith
Latrell Sprewell
John Starks
« Last Edit: Today at 04:15:01 AM by slightly biased bias fan »

Re: Golden Season of Each Position
« Reply #1 on: Today at 05:26:18 AM »

Offline slightly biased bias fan

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But in my opinion the best NBA season for shooting guards would be 2003-04.

Ray Allen
Kobe Bryant
Vince Carter
Richard Hamilton
Larry Hughes
Allen Iverson
LeBron James
Joe Johnson
Tracy McGrady
Paul Pierce
Michael Redd
Jason Richardson
Dwyane Wade

Re: Golden Season of Each Position
« Reply #2 on: Today at 07:25:58 AM »

Offline ChillyWilly

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Drazen was the most efficient bucket getter I ever seen. Image what his career would have been coming into his prime. I loved his style of play was probably my favorite player at the time.
ok fine

Re: Golden Season of Each Position
« Reply #3 on: Today at 07:42:43 AM »

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  • James Naismith
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Drazen was the most efficient bucket getter I ever seen. Image what his career would have been coming into his prime. I loved his style of play was probably my favorite player at the time.

He would be amazing in today's league. There is nobody like him today. True shooter. Gunner. Quick release. Effortless looking shot.

Durant is the closest but such a different physical package at 7 feet with a 7-4 wingspan. It was fun seeing a 6-5/6-6 guy attack. And because he lacked that physical height, Drazen was taking far more long jumpers. It was a thing of beauty watching him shoot the ball.

Steph and Lillard are probably close in terms of volume of long distance jump shots more so than Durant. But both are different than Drazen as well. The three point shooting leads to more misses. Less makes. Lillard does a lot of the dribble. Steph is closer with more off-ball movement.

Re: Golden Season of Each Position
« Reply #4 on: Today at 08:11:44 AM »

Online snively

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Wally Z a forgotten swing from that early 2000s era. Listed at SF but I remember him playing a lot at the 2 (and inexplicably shutting down Ray when he was washed in 08).
2025 Draft: Chicago Bulls

PG: Chauncey Billups/Deron Williams
SG: Kobe Bryant/Eric Gordon
SF: Jimmy Butler/Danny Granger/Danilo Gallinari
PF: Al Horford/Zion Williamson
C: Yao Ming/Pau Gasol/Tyson Chandler

Re: Golden Season of Each Position
« Reply #5 on: Today at 08:28:57 AM »

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Wally Z a forgotten swing from that early 2000s era. Listed at SF but I remember him playing a lot at the 2 (and inexplicably shutting down Ray when he was washed in 08).

That was one of the weirdest things I have ever seen. I have no idea how Ray wasn't able to cook Wally. Wally couldn't cover Ray when he was in physical prime. Never mind when his body was broken down. I rewatched that series about a year ago. Shocking. I kept looking at Ray and wondering how he wasn't getting more open and why he kept missing whenever he did get open. Cleveland took him out of that series. And Wally did most of the work. 

Then they had Delonte West the following do a great job on Ray as well. After defending Rondo well in the 2008 playoffs. Then Cleveland replace Delonte (and Wally) to replace them with Anthony Parker. Good player but Ray always cooked Anthony Parker when Parker was in Toronto and he continued to cook Parker when he moved to Cleveland. Talk about not looking at how your new players matchup with your main rival.

They did the same with Jamario Moon. Another import from Toronto. He was too skinny at SF to ever cover Pierce. Pierce would overpower him easily. Another matchup advantage given to the opponent.

That 2010 Cavs team was hilarious in how badly they matched up against Boston. Also brought in Antawn Jamison who couldn't cover KG one-on-one or provide any level of team defense. They had Shaq at center who lacked the mobility to cover on help defense. Then they had Mo Williams who was one of the worst defensive PGs in the league. So Rondo had an easy one-on-one matchup + bad screen and roll defensive bigs (Shaq, Jamison) with matchup advantages for all the Big Three (A Parker, J Moon, Jamison - except for whoever LeBron was covering) and allowed Rondo to pick them apart with his dribble penetration, playmaking and floor leadership.

That was a fun series in 2010. Cleveland got everything wrong with that team. You could see what they were trying for but none of it work for them. Jamison acquired at the trade deadline hurt almost immediately (1st game for CLE?). No chemistry for the playoffs. No defensive understanding between them. And matchup disadvantages all over the floor.