« Reply #43 on: March 05, 2013, 02:47:15 PM »
I don't like the overly personal, snarky, and childish tone the thread has taken. Next post directed personally or even implying someone's bias or lack of basketball knowledge gets the thread locked, with possible discipline to follow.
To get it back on track I'm tempted to scoff at the choice of a healthy Walton. Then I remember that NCAA finals game where he scored 42 points or so and I'm not so sure. That was one of the most dominating performances I've ever seen. Walton was something like 20-22 from the field and one of the misses was a late game offensive goaltend when he held the ball over the basked and dropped it in.
Kareem and Oscar are almost always regarded as the two greatest college players of all time and they both had far better pro careers than Walton did. That is one of the reasons I find so odd about Ryan's statement. What is also odd is that Walton was never healthy as a pro. This so called healthy Walton just doesn't exist. I mean he won the MVP in a year he played in just 58 games. The prior year when Portland won the title he played in just 65 games. His stats in those years are no where near the other all time greats and he was no where near the defender that a lot of those guys were.
It is a totally preposterous statement from Bob Ryan.
I didn't see Kareem (or Lew) or Oscar in college. It doesn't surprise me that they're regarded as the best. Walton was the best I saw. I agree that he was never healthy as a pro, but the thought of him as a healthy pro is fairly intriguing. He could have easily cracked the (arguable) top 10 list.
The thing about Walton is was never truly great at anything except probably passing. He wasn't a monster scorer and while he was a good rebounder he doesn't compare to the all timers in that category either (and I am adjusting for pace). His defense was only average. A more healthy Walton is probably a 17p/12r/4.5a/2.5b player for his career (with the natural progression and weaker starts and finishes that all greats have). Certainly a very good career, but I just don't see that as an all time great career, which is what you have to have to be in the top 10.

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