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timvp
10-01-2008, 07:53 AM
SpursTalk's Top 50 Spurs
1. Tim Duncan
2. David Robinson
3. George Gervin
4. Gregg Popovich
5. Angelo Drossos
6. Manu Ginobili
7. Tony Parker
8. Sean Elliott
9. James Silas
10. Bruce Bowen
11. Larry Kenon
12. Avery Johnson
13. Alvin Robertson
14. Johnny Moore
15. RC Buford
16. Artis Gilmore
17. Peter Holt
18. Mike Mitchell
19. Bob Bass
20. Malik Rose
21. Robert Horry
22. Red McCombs
23. Doug Moe
24. Terry Cummings
25. Mario Elie
26. Willie Anderson
27. Billy Paultz
28. Robert McDermott
29. Stephen Jackson
30. Mark Olberding
31. Stan Albeck
32. Brent Barry
33. Mike Budenholzer
34. Swen Nater
35. Larry Brown
36. Rod Strickland
37. Michael Finley
38. Jaren Jackson
39. Hank Egan
40. PJ Carlesimo
41. Sam Presti
42. Steve Kerr
43. Rich Jones
44. Gene Banks
45. Vinny Del Negro
46. Mike Gale

------------------------------

To pass the time until the start of preseason, let's see how SpursTalk.com ranks the Top 50 Spurs. Those eligible for the list include all players, coaches and owners. I don't want to define "top" too narrowly, but I think the best way to do it would be to think of the list as a list of the 50 most influential people who have helped make the Spurs one of the most successful franchises in the history of sport.

For more information on what we are doing, check out this thread (http://spurstalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=103061).

In this thread, we will vote for spot number 47. Please place your vote. If you will, also explain in this thread why you voted how you did.

Thanks.



P.S.

Poll options listed in alphabetical order. If you want to vote for someone not on the list, post in the thread and I'll add the person.

Voting will end 2AM CST Thursday morning.

Please vote only once.

Spurminator
10-01-2008, 10:36 AM
Nazr Mohammed solidified the center position in 2005 when our other options were shit. He was an important piece of that Championship. To vote Rasho over Nazr would make no sense given that one of them directly contributed to a Championship as a replacement for the other, who was relegated to the bench.

SenorSpur
10-01-2008, 10:38 AM
Rodman

AnotherArgie
10-01-2008, 10:43 AM
Center fight! Rasho-Nazr-Oberto.

Dre_7
10-01-2008, 10:46 AM
Wow, no love for the Rifleman?

Ed Helicopter Jones
10-01-2008, 10:48 AM
I'm going for George Johnson again. Leading the league in blocks in under 24 minutes a game his two years here should earn a spot methinks.

CubanMustGo
10-01-2008, 10:50 AM
Bob Hill. 121-43 in his first two years as Spurs coach, canned during Robinson's injury year. Gotta be up there ahead of banana slug, I mean Rasho, and stone hands Nazr. Oberto? GMAFB.

Yeah, he was a jerk after he got canned, and couldn't win in the playoffs, but then again he had DRob and a bunch of spare parts.

FromWayDowntown
10-01-2008, 11:05 AM
I'm going with Rodman until he makes the list. Then I'm going with George Johnson.

Voting for Rasho in this spot is absurd; you might as well vote for Will Perdue or Steve Smith if you're going to vote for Rasho.

remingtonbo2001
10-01-2008, 11:45 AM
I'm going with Rodman until he makes the list. Then I'm going with George Johnson.

Voting for Rasho in this spot is absurd; you might as well vote for Will Perdue or Steve Smith if you're going to vote for Rasho.

Oh, well if that's the case then I'm changing my vote to Rasho.

FromWayDowntown
10-01-2008, 11:53 AM
I should say it strikes me as absurd to vote for Rasho -- for a variety of reasons.

I'm wrong to say such judgmental things about other people's opinions.

rascal
10-01-2008, 11:54 AM
Anyone who wears a dress should not be on the spurs list. Rodman wore the dress and Rasho needed a dress, his play was so soft.

rascal
10-01-2008, 12:01 PM
Bob Hill. 121-43 in his first two years as Spurs coach, canned during Robinson's injury year. Gotta be up there ahead of banana slug, I mean Rasho, and stone hands Nazr. Oberto? GMAFB.

Yeah, he was a jerk after he got canned, and couldn't win in the playoffs, but then again he had DRob and a bunch of spare parts.


Agree. Bob Hill had an impressive overall record.

remingtonbo2001
10-01-2008, 12:25 PM
I should say it strikes me as absurd to vote for Rasho -- for a variety of reasons.

I'm wrong to say such judgmental things about other people's opinions.

Rasho's rump sitting on the bench was more benefical to this team than anything Rodman ever did.

Really, Rodman...You might as well vote for Uwe Blab.

Ed Helicopter Jones
10-01-2008, 12:59 PM
Good gawd. I can't believe spot 47 is going to come down to a 7 foot pile of Slovenian worthlessness or the 6'9" Clown of Rebound.


I cast my vote already for George Johnson.

If it came down to a tie between Rodman and Rasho I'd have to request that Timvp change my vote to Rodman I'm afraid. In some ways I'd argue that Rasho was just as detrimental to the Spurs in the playoffs as Rodman by proving himself to be not even good enough to sniff the floor in the playoff games that mattered. This, in spite of his being a starter most of the regular season. People can argue all they want that the Rash had no control over his playing time, but the truth is he let his team down by being worthless. Personally, I don't think either deserves much love but at least Rodman filled the stat sheet with rebounds. Rasho was just good at taking up space......not worthy of a spot on the top 50.......at all. It's insulting to all the other players who wore the silver and black to put Rasho ahead of any of them.









Dave Corzine was twice as good of a center as Rasho and he hasn't sniffed a vote yet.

baseline bum
10-01-2008, 01:23 PM
I'm voting for Rasho from here on out, as any poll that selects Rodman as one of the 50 greatest Spurs is already a joke.

Taco
10-01-2008, 01:46 PM
I was going to say -- in this forum, wouldn't exclusion of The Coyote from the list be seen by some as particularly controversial, given The Coyote's contributions to the club's history?


IF YOU ARE INCLUDING OWNERS AND COACHES WHY NOT THE COYOTE?

HE IS AFTER ALL A HALL OF FAMER

http://www.creativecoversforgolf.com/refresh/data/210-coyote_230_070910.jpg

rascal
10-01-2008, 01:48 PM
I'm voting for Rasho from here on out, as any poll that selects Rodman as one of the 50 greatest Spurs is already a joke.

Walter Berry > Rasho

rascal
10-01-2008, 01:50 PM
I wouldn't mind seeing the coyote at spot 50. The list is getting thin now and its more who you don't want to see get in.

remingtonbo2001
10-01-2008, 01:55 PM
I wouldn't mind seeing the coyote at spot 50. The list is getting thin now and its more who you don't want to see get in.

+1 Coyote definitely deserves the #50 spot.

baseline bum
10-01-2008, 02:44 PM
Walter Berry > Rasho

Coyote > Rasho. Beer vendor > Rasho. Might as well make an absurd pick if the list is going to be a joke.

FromWayDowntown
10-01-2008, 02:53 PM
Coyote > Rasho. Beer vendor > Rasho. Might as well make an absurd pick if the list is going to be a joke.

SequSpur?

Slomo
10-01-2008, 02:57 PM
Please understand my vote more as against Rodman than for Rasho. There's a point to be made that Rasho shouldn't be on the Spurs' all time 50 list, but neither should Dennis, so I'll rather vote for someone I at least like.

xtremesteven33
10-01-2008, 03:05 PM
People who are voting for Rasho over Rodman should be banned....geesh

Anti.Hero
10-01-2008, 03:07 PM
Slydragon knows what's up. :toast

baseline bum
10-01-2008, 04:15 PM
People who are voting for Rasho over Rodman should be banned....geesh

Make a case for Rodman. Shoot down the case I made in the previous thread. Rodman was a douche who fucked this franchise over at a time they had a serious shot at a championship.

FromWayDowntown
10-01-2008, 04:18 PM
Make a case for Rodman. Shoot down the case I made in the previous thread. Rodman was a douche who fucked this franchise over at a time they had a serious shot at a championship.

I've made that case a couple of times.

baseline bum
10-01-2008, 04:26 PM
I've made that case a couple of times.

I was asking him to make a case. I've heard yours and I disagree with it because I believe two regular seasons do not at all begin to make up for quitting on the team in the playoffs in one of the only two times the Spurs had a chance to win a title in the post-Gervin/pre-Duncan era (the other being 1990). Chances to win titles don't come around often, and the 95 championship was right there for the taking by the Spurs. Rodman decided his act was more important than his team, which is unforgivable when the stakes were that high.

Kona
10-01-2008, 04:30 PM
The Big Dog

FromWayDowntown
10-01-2008, 04:39 PM
I was asking him to make a case. I've heard yours and I disagree with it because I believe two regular seasons do not at all begin to make up for quitting on the team in the playoffs in one of the only two times the Spurs had a chance to win a title in the post-Gervin/pre-Duncan era (the other being 1990). Chances to win titles don't come around often, and the 95 championship was right there for the taking by the Spurs. Rodman decided his act was more important than his team, which is unforgivable when the stakes were that high.

Fair enough. I disagree that Rodman was the sole culprit in the Spurs' loss in 1995, though I agree that he shoulders a significant amount of the blame for it. If Elliott drains free throws at the end of Game 1, the Legend of Robert Horry starts another day; if Del Negro and Person had been able to hit the broadside of a barn in any of the 4 losses, Rodman's antics would have been a minor distraction; if AJ and Doc had been able to keep Sam Cassell under 30 in Game 5, Rodman's crap might have been a humorous story to add color to the Spurs first Finals' appearance; if Bob Hill had tactically addressed the problems that Hakeem presented, his problems dealing with Rodman are probably footnotes in history as someone wonders why Rodman didn't start all 6 games in that series.

I get that you place the blame entirely (or mostly) on Rodman for that loss. I agree that he is a big part of the reason that the Spurs lost. But I also think that there are those who still hold places of lore in the history of this franchise who did things (or didn't do things) in that series that were substantially to blame for the outcome.

With that, Rodman's two-year numbers in SA were exceptional in the category that he was brought here to fill; he was recognized on a league-wide basis with honors (something that can't be said of most Spurs, ever); and the teams that he played on won a lot of games.

I think your view is understandable, but I disagree with it.

Spooky
10-01-2008, 05:04 PM
Rasho

baseline bum
10-01-2008, 05:59 PM
Fair enough. I disagree that Rodman was the sole culprit in the Spurs' loss in 1995, though I agree that he shoulders a significant amount of the blame for it. If Elliott drains free throws at the end of Game 1, the Legend of Robert Horry starts another day; if Del Negro and Person had been able to hit the broadside of a barn in any of the 4 losses, Rodman's antics would have been a minor distraction; if AJ and Doc had been able to keep Sam Cassell under 30 in Game 5, Rodman's crap might have been a humorous story to add color to the Spurs first Finals' appearance; if Bob Hill had tactically addressed the problems that Hakeem presented, his problems dealing with Rodman are probably footnotes in history as someone wonders why Rodman didn't start all 6 games in that series.

I get that you place the blame entirely (or mostly) on Rodman for that loss. I agree that he is a big part of the reason that the Spurs lost. But I also think that there are those who still hold places of lore in the history of this franchise who did things (or didn't do things) in that series that were substantially to blame for the outcome.

With that, Rodman's two-year numbers in SA were exceptional in the category that he was brought here to fill; he was recognized on a league-wide basis with honors (something that can't be said of most Spurs, ever); and the teams that he played on won a lot of games.

I think your view is understandable, but I disagree with it.

I don't put all of the blame on Rodman. Robinson got outplayed, Elliott choked, Hill lost the team with his tiff with Rodman, and Del Negro lived down to his talent... and yet, the Spurs had the series tied at 2-2 with homecourt and the upper hand in the series until Rodman decided it was more important to piss off the coach than to try to win the series. Rodman was an elite talent who said to hell with even trying. I can't be too mad at someone for being outplayed, but for not trying and for wasting the efforts of his teammates in what was until then an exceptional year for the Spurs? Absolutely. It's just an insult to everyone else on that team and every fan who supported him through all the antics until then.

timvp
10-01-2008, 06:24 PM
I had Rodman at #50 so I can't be too upset if he gets on at #47. He had some horrible moments, which is the reason why he's so low, but he also had some very good games. He played hard more than he created drama ... it is just that the drama came at the most inopportune times.

But 17+ rebounds per game over two seasons can't be denied. And surprisingly enough, he bonded with most of his teammates. I remember a story that AJ said from back then when one night on the road in the playoffs he got woken up by Rodman yelling in the middle of the night. He went to his room to tell him to STFU and when he did, he found out Rodman was actually watching game tape. And then the two stayed up the rest of the night discussing strategy. I've always thought that while Rodman was certainly a distraction, it was more hyped up by the media than it really was to the team.

And really, looking at that era of Spurs, from the '90 Portland playoff defeat until Rodman arrived, the Spurs weren't serious contenders. Rodman helped lift the team back up to being contenders. He was undoubtedly a stat whore and attention whore who at times did more harm than good, but when he was playing hard and playing smart, he was actually pretty damn good.

Right now as Spurs fans, we would all be ecstatic if the Spurs got someone who could average 17+ rebounds to put next to Duncan ... no matter what type of weird package it came in. If Oberto had to wear a dress, color his hair, date Madonna and disappear randomly to average 17+ boards, I'd be the first to sign on the dotted line.

I'll never like Rodman after his antics in the '95 playoffs but if someone like Steve Kerr can get on the list after playing all of like 30 quality minutes for the Spurs or Michael Finley can make it for being in the right place at the right time, Rodman making the end of the list due to his great stats during two very successful seasons with the Spurs isn't too much of a tragedy in my eyes.

baseline bum
10-01-2008, 06:39 PM
But 17+ rebounds per game over two seasons can't be denied. And surprisingly enough, he bonded with most of his teammates. I remember a story that AJ said from back then when one night on the road in the playoffs he got woken up by Rodman yelling in the middle of the night. He went to his room to tell him to STFU and when he did, he found out Rodman was actually watching game tape. And then the two stayed up the rest of the night discussing strategy. I've always thought that while Rodman was certainly a distraction, it was more hyped up by the media than it really was to the team.


I wish this was the attitude he took in the 95 WCF, but there is no way to spin him jacking up threes to get the hook in game 2 and playing games with Hill by showing up 35 minutes late to the game 5 practice. Maybe he was frustrated about having another year on a contract he was underpaid on. Maybe Bob Hill was acting like a giant douche (more like probably). Maybe he didn't get along with Robinson. Still, you have to be professional and not throw away a chance at a title like that. Even a baby like Shaq never did that when it was clear the Lakers would be moving away from him during the 2004 playoffs.



Right now as Spurs fans, we would all be ecstatic if the Spurs got someone who could average 17+ rebounds to put next to Duncan ... no matter what type of weird package it came in. If Oberto had to wear a dress, color his hair, date Madonna and disappear randomly to average 17+ boards, I'd be the first to sign on the dotted line.


Absolutely, if he shows up in games that matter. People cracking on Rodman for wearing dresses, changing his hair color, wearing makeup, or talking to SI about homosexual fantasies are full of shit. Rodman was loved in San Antonio until he told all of us to fuck off by his quitting act in 95.



I'll never like Rodman after his antics in the '95 playoffs but if someone like Steve Kerr can get on the list after playing all of like 30 quality minutes for the Spurs or Michael Finley can make it for being in the right place at the right time, Rodman making the end of the list due to his great stats during two very successful seasons with the Spurs isn't too much of a tragedy in my eyes.

Finley being in the right place at the right time? He was one of the main reasons the 06 Spurs were even competitive in the Dallas series. You can argue the lineup was stupid to be going 4 small against them, but that one's on Pop. I don't know how 94-95 can be considered a successful season for Rodman with how he treated the WCF like a big joke.

timvp
10-01-2008, 06:55 PM
I wish this was the attitude he took in the 95 WCF, but there is no way to spin him jacking up threes to get the hook in game 2 and playing games with Hill by showing up 35 minutes late to the game 5 practice. Maybe he was frustrated about having another year on a contract he was underpaid on. Maybe Bob Hill was acting like a giant douche (more like probably). Maybe he didn't get along with Robinson. Still, you have to be professional and not throw away a chance at a title like that. Even a baby like Shaq never did that when it was clear the Lakers would be moving away from him during the 2004 playoffs.When Shaq is upset or faces adversity he just gets swept. Like a half dozen times or whatever it has been.


Absolutely, if he shows up in games that matter. People cracking on Rodman for wearing dresses, changing his hair color, wearing makeup, or talking to SI about homosexual fantasies are full of shit. Rodman was loved in San Antonio until he told all of us to fuck off by his quitting act in 95.If Oberto only showed up to half of the games at a random interval, but when he showed up he'd average 17+ rebounds per game ... would you take it?


Finley being in the right place at the right time? He was one of the main reasons the 06 Spurs were even competitive in the Dallas series. You can argue the lineup was stupid to be going 4 small against them, but that one's on Pop. I don't know how 94-95 can be considered a successful season for Rodman with how he treated the WCF like a big joke.Trade '06-08 Finley for '93-95 Rodman and how well does that '95 team do? JR Reid starting at power forward is not something I ever want to see again. The reason the Spurs stuck with Rodman through everything was because the players behind him were worse playing at 100% than Rodman was playing at 50%.

Hypothetically, if Rodman was on his best behavior during the playoffs and the Spurs won the '95 championship, how high would you put Rodman on this list? I'm guessing he would have gone top 15 ... maybe top 12. His meltdown due to him battling and not respecting Hill (plus Pop supposedly reneging on the contract he was promised) cost him about 35 spots. That sounds decently fair to me.

baseline bum
10-01-2008, 07:19 PM
Hypothetically, if Rodman was on his best behavior during the playoffs and the Spurs won the '95 championship, how high would you put Rodman on this list? I'm guessing he would have gone top 15 ... maybe top 12. His meltdown due to him battling and not respecting Hill (plus Pop supposedly reneging on the contract he was promised) cost him about 35 spots. That sounds decently fair to me.

Top 10. That's a big hypothetical though.

T Park
10-01-2008, 07:23 PM
I'm gonna say about 40% of the problems with Rodman in 95 was on Bob Hill.

ShoogarBear
10-01-2008, 08:02 PM
Hill and Rodman should share the #50 spot.


Good gawd. I can't believe spot 47 is going to come down to a 7 foot pile of Slovenian worthlessness or the 6'9" Clown of Rebound.


I cast my vote already for George Johnson.
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.
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Dave Corzine was twice as good of a center as Rasho and he hasn't sniffed a vote yet.

The older players are getting screwed, except for oddities like . . . Rich Jones????

T Park
10-01-2008, 08:04 PM
Rasho is actually getting votes??!!?

Seriously??

Dear god.

timvp
10-01-2008, 08:12 PM
The older players are getting screwed, except for oddities like . . . Rich Jones????

Odd like an All-Star.

barbacoataco
10-01-2008, 10:16 PM
Coby Dietrick is #7 on the all time list of games played for the Spurs. That puts him in the company of the franchise greats. Of course he wasn't a great player, but I am told he was a gamer. He played a role on quite a few good teams that made playoff runs. For longetivity at least, he should be on this list.

samikeyp
10-01-2008, 10:56 PM
Hill and Rodman should share the #50 spot.



The older players are getting screwed, except for oddities like . . . Rich Jones????

Amen.

Obstructed_View
10-02-2008, 02:20 AM
BB, I don't think you remember how badly the Spurs needed a rebounder in the years before Rodman arrived. The Spurs routinely got outrebounded so badly that Larry Smith made a huge difference with his ability to get boards. Rodman's ability to secure the ball was huge for the team. There's a lot of blame to go around for '95. Unfortunately David gets most of it from the idiots of the world, and that's the biggest black mark I can put on Rodman. Doesn't change the fact that he belongs on the list somewhere in this area.

That said, I probably won't vote for Rodman, even if it means the stupid ass Rasho voters get their way. Having that fucking lump of shit on this list will forever remind us how little fans of the Slovenians know about basketball.