Do players like Gary Payton or Sam Cassell or Steve Smith who jumped on the end of a bench at the end of their careers to win a championship while playing sparingly or quite awful, really make them championship level players their entire careers?
To me a championship caliber player is an player that during their prime was an integral part of winning a championship. The greats come to mind, of course, but a player like Sean Elliott, Robert Horry, John Salley, Danny Ainge, or Kurt Rambis, in my mind, would seem to fit the designation as a championship level player before a guy who got old and decided to jump on the end of a bench to get his ring because in his prime he couldn't do it.
Just one man's opinion.
Karl Malone is a championship level player and he never won a championship. So is Charles Barkley. So is Patrick Ewing. So are the modern players that have yet to win like Dirk, Kidd, James, etc. Winning a championship is about having a team capable of winning a championship, some guys have it, some guys don't.
I mean would you rather have Robert Horry or Karl Malone? Which would you consider a championship level player? Winning a championship doesn't make you a championship level player or give you championship level talent, it just makes you a part of a team that won a championship.
For these purposes I don't consider anyone a champion unless his team won the championship in the year selected. Of course that has no bearing at all on how good I think the player is.
Yeah, I get that point to but if they were championship level talent, wouldn't they have won a championship in their prime?
BTW, this has nothing to do with this draft this is just a general observation. Sometime players, the elite players, just aren't good enough to win a championship. Barkley and Malone and Stockton are great examples. Truly Hall of Fame level talents but perhaps missing that extra something(mentally or character wise) that separates champions from great players. Allen Iverson had unreal talent...not even close to a championship level player in my book.
If KG was never traded to the Celtics, would you really be saying he wasn't a championship level player. I mean people were saying he was a top five PF ever when he was still in Minnesota. To say he wasn't a championship level talent is really quite silly.
Teams win championships not players even all time great players can't do it alone. Jordan didn't even win a playoff series until he had Pippen. In fact, Jordan was a stellar 1-9 in his first three playoffs (all without Pippen). Next year with Pippen (as a rookie mind you) 4-6 in the post season beating the Cavs and losing to the Pistons. Pippen much better in his second year and they make the conference finals again losing to the eventual champion Pistons, but going 9-8 in the playoffs. Third year, they really push the eventual champion Pistons losing in 7 in the conference finals and improve the playoff record to 10-6. After that is the first three-peat.
Now perhaps Jordan would have won a title eventually and he certainly would have won a playoff series at some point, but it would be a hard sell to say he would have done it as quickly without Scottie Pippen. Teams win, not players.