They'd have to miss a lot of shots for Wilt to average about 23 rebounds per game...
Dell's Pointless List - Greatest NBA Centers
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Wilt played against a bunch of white guys who averaged 6'6" at the center position. If someone had Amare Stoudemire's skill today, they could do what Wilt did back then. Guys like Shaq, Olajuwon, David Robinson, and Ewing dominated the center position when that position was at its best in the history of the NBA.
Let's not also forget, at 7'1" and 275 lbs. (in his prime, he was actually around 300 when he retired) Wilt is still bigger than just about every center in the game today. A few guys are taller but only Shaq matches him in height and width (and skill). Wilt was no joke athletically, either. He was no big lumbering hulk. As a track athlete he competed in the high-jump, broad jump, shot put, ran the 440 and 880 and played pro-volleyball AFTER he retired from the NBA. I love Stoudemire and don't doubt he'd be a beast back then but saying Wilt could be no better than that now is insulting.
But, like I said we've no proof of either so I can only go on what he actually did which was dominate the game like no other player ever had.Comment
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I guess your lists don't into account the skill of players in their eras. Wilt would definitely not be number one, that would be either Kareem or Shaq.
Wilt played against a bunch of white guys who averaged 6'6" at the center position. If someone had Amare Stoudemire's skill today, they could do what Wilt did back then. Guys like Shaq, Olajuwon, David Robinson, and Ewing dominated the center position when that position was at its best in the history of the NBA.
Ewing was a productive player who had a nice NBA career, but guys like Malone, Walton, Lanier, and Gilmore were more dominant in their heydey. Even Bill Cartwright was more dominant than Ewing before he got hurt. Ewing was never really a dominant player. Robinson had a couple nice seasons, then he became merely 'good', then he became Tim Duncan's caddie. I have no idea how anyone could put Ewing and Robinson in the same paragraph as Wilt Chamberlain.Comment
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Yeah, who wouldn't have Patrick Ewing above Wilt Chamberlain? I mean, when I think of dominant players in NBA history...Patrick Ewing immediately comes to mind. He had a great all-around game....barf!
Ewing was a productive player who had a nice NBA career, but guys like Malone, Walton, Lanier, and Gilmore were more dominant in their heydey. Even Bill Cartwright was more dominant than Ewing before he got hurt. Ewing was never really a dominant player. Robinson had a couple nice seasons, then he became merely 'good', then he became Tim Duncan's caddie. I have no idea how anyone could put Ewing and Robinson in the same paragraph as Wilt Chamberlain.Comment
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You must not remember Cartwright playing on the Knicks. He was great at San Francisco, was one of the top picks of the draft, and was dominant in his first two seasons before he got hurt. He was a consistent 20-10 guy who shot 55% from the field and had a great basketball sense. He also shot nearly 80% from the line, which is great for a 7-1 player. Cartwright had a better all-around game than Ewing in his prime.Comment
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You must not remember Cartwright playing on the Knicks. He was great at San Francisco, was one of the top picks of the draft, and was dominant in his first two seasons before he got hurt. He was a consistent 20-10 guy who shot 55% from the field and had a great basketball sense. He also shot nearly 80% from the line, which is great for a 7-1 player. Cartwright had a better all-around game than Ewing in his prime.
To put it statistically, Pat's career averages are 21, 10 & 2.4 blocks. Throughout his career he was among the 3 best centers in the league and many consider him the best player in the history of the franchise. Only Cartwright's rookie season, maybe first 2 seasons, is comparable. Saying he was a consistent 20-10 is stretching it. Cartwright's five seasons before his knee injury (to the best of my knowledge, he got hurt in '84):
Code:Season PPG RPG BPG 79-80 21.7 8.9 1.2 80-81 20.1 7.5 1.0 81-82 14.4 5.8 0.9 82-83 15.7 7.2 1.5 83-84 17.0 8.4 1.3
Last edited by dell71; 03-24-2009, 06:21 PM.Comment
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Bumped cuz I'm completing the set.Comment
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I read on another thread that Scottie Pippen can play any position, so he should be on the list of greatest centers in NBA history...Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings
The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game
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Originally posted by BlazeI read something a while back that didn't believe WIlt was 7'1, their was skeptical saying that he was 7'3 or 7'4. And not to mention, how used to dunk on his free throws, off of two feet. They had to change the rules because of him, Wilt is clearly number 1.Comment
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Originally posted by nightcreeperpoor patrick ewing.... smhComment
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