Kobe and Wade are clearly better. Joe Johnson is better, and so is Brandon Roy.
After that, there's a huge group of guys who are arguable. Monta Ellis, Stephen Jackson, O.J. Mayo, Andre Iguodala, Vince Carter, Manu Ginobili, Jason Richardson, Jason Terry, Kevin Martin.
From that group, I'd take Ray over any of them, I think, especially for this team.
Spot on analysis, but I disagree on your conclusion. I would take OJ Mayo over Ray whether for a single season or over the next few years.
They are similar in a lot of ways on offense: 3rd or 4th option, snipers, good passers, similar efficiency.
On the defensive end, I think Mayo seperates himself.
I think Ray is actually a better defender, when he plays like he currently is. He had some rough months in the regular season (the whole team did) but he's recently ramped it up.
The difference between the two, I think, is Ray's maturity and dedication. O.J. just doesn't seem to have the same level of professionalism that Ray has, and Ray is more of a leader in the locker room.
Just to add to that, Ray has more of an impact on the game when he's not scoring. He's always a threat from the outside so you have to cover him even when he's in a slump.
He's also more effecient than most other two guards. Ray can go 5-8 and have a huge impact on a game. Mayo seems to need the ball to be effective.
Both of you make strong and accurate points in favor of Ray - maturity, leadership and efficiency - but I am not sure I agree with your Mayo analysis.
The perception with Mayo, partly stemming from one incident at the end of his senior year in high school, is that he immature and needs the ball. In two seasons in the league he has proved anything but - no complaints about Memphis, no complaints about his role as the third/fourth option and no trouble with the law. Conley is a mediocre point, and Gay/Randolph are one-on-one players, forcing Mayo to play off the ball almost all the time in a less than ideal situation. Put him on this team and his efficiency skyrockets.
Mayo is at the point of inflexion where his athletic advantage is beginning to overcome his savy disadvantage compared to Ray. He is unlikely to achieve as much in his career as Ray, but I thik he is better now. However, I could be convinced that it is still a year away.
LB 3533 pretty much summed up Ray's defense vs Mayo's defense - it is a product of team and system as much as anything else. Ray was percieved to be a sieve in Seattle, but he is considered a solid defender in Boston.