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duncan228
10-17-2009, 01:07 PM
Top 50: Carmelo Anthony, no. 7 (http://www.slamonline.com/online/nba/slamonline-top-50/2009/10/top-50-carmelo-anthony-no-7/)
The definitive ranking of the NBA’s best players.
by Cub Buenning

Carmelo Anthony is largely to blame for me having any kind of job at SLAM. Six years ago, when the Denver Nuggets were taking the 19-year-old out of Syracuse University with the NBA Draft’s third pick, I was simply a Denver-area middle school teacher and coach, having just finished my seventh year in the classroom. Yes, I had started (on a whim) covering high school sports that previous fall for the local weekly papers in the western Denver suburbs, but I was in no way, a writer.

Carmelo Anthony made me one. For the past half-dozen years, I have been able to see the youngster grow from a precocious teenager, to a misunderstood burgeoning star, to now finally a seasoned veteran and a devoted father. He has, once again, made basketball in Denver relevant and with last year’s addition of local hero, Chauncey Billups, Anthony might finally have arrived as one of the world’s most complete basketball players.

No longer just content to put the ball in the basket, Melo has gone from a myopic scoring machine to an all-around contributor on both sides of the court. From a shot-chucking triggerman to someone that will rebound, defend; distribute all while still getting his requisite 20-plus a night, usually in a win. (Although, amongst all this “team-first” mumbo-jumbo, Melo tied the NBA record last December for points in a quarter when he poured in 33 in the third quarter of a win over Minnesota. Just so you know.)

Last year’s trip to the Western Conference Finals proved that “team above self” will bear the most fruit, even in a star-centric, isolation-dominate game. Anthony gave up several points in the box score in favor for playing deep into the postseason. He may be one of the few players to not make an All-Star team in the same season that he was named to an All-NBA team. (Oddly enough, a feat he also “accomplished” in 2006.)

That summer of 2003, Melo graced our magazine’s cover for the first time. His face was soft and his ‘rows were in full bloom. His words were young and naïve but focused on basic things.

“Eighty-two games, that’s a long time. It’s gonna be a long season, man.” Melo told our Khalid Salam. “I don’t know, people talk about hitting the rookie wall. I’m gonna try and do my best and pace myself.”

Four years later, the now veteran of both professional and international play was finally back glaring at us off the newsstand. This time his words sounded different, like he had moved into a different realm of focus.

“I think I can get a lot better, it’s more mental,” Anthony told our Ryan Jones. “It’s my fourth year in the League and I see what the NBA is about, what the game is about.”

And now this summer, leading into what will be his seventh season, we have been granted the Baltimore-native’s fourth cover (there was also the smiling combo cover with Allen Iverson in between). He has seen it all: from the grind of staying healthy through the regular season to prolonged first-round postseason failures to being just seconds away from advancing the professional promise-land.

“I think it gets easier each year, because your confidence builds, you get smarter, you get that experience,” Melo mentioned while speaking with Lang Whitaker. “Me, being able to do what I did in the playoffs and building off that, going up against the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals, smelling it, being just two games away from the NBA Finals. We want it now. We want it.”

And although this is truly my first ever Melo-specific assingnment and now seem to spend most of my time these days pontificating about the college game and the draft, the past six hoop seasons have all culminated with the chance to cover the NBA Playoffs and watch the best of the best, or at least in this case, the seventh of the best.

Thanks, Carmelo.

Notes

• Rankings are based solely on projected ‘09-10 performance.

• Want more of the SLAMonline Top 50? Check out the archive (http://www.slamonline.com/online/category/nba/slamonline-top-50/)

Rummpd
10-17-2009, 04:24 PM
Anthony is not a top ten player yet period and it is laughable to call him great on the defensive side.

Allanon
10-17-2009, 04:29 PM
I don't think Carmelo's anywhere great on defense but he's picked up his defense quite a bit over previous seasons.

I think what ranks him in the Top 10 in the NBA is his shooting. I don't think there's a better shooter in the NBA.

Top 5 shooters in the NBA:
1) Melo
2) Durant
3) Kobe
4) Dirk
5) Ray Allen

dirk4mvp
10-17-2009, 04:57 PM
:lol Kobe a better shooter than Dirk and Ray Allen

JamStone
10-17-2009, 04:59 PM
After Kobe, Carmelo might have the best all around offensive set of skills in the league.

Allanon
10-17-2009, 05:13 PM
:lol Kobe a better shooter than Dirk and Ray Allen

Degree of difficulty has to be factored in.

Kobe is usually guarded by a taller or bigger player and often doubled and sometimes tripled...yet he can still make what seems to be an impossible shot.

Dirk is a 7 foot shooting Big man. He's often doubled but at the same time, he's usually alot taller than his defender which gives him quite an advantage.

Ray Allen is a pure spot up shooter; usually getting multiple screens to setup and get open. Ray usually goes up against 1 defender who's battled several screens just to get to him.

Dirk is a career ~47%
Kobe is a career ~46%
Ray is a career ~45%

hitmanyr2k
10-17-2009, 06:37 PM
The article kind of lost me when it said Carmelo now plays defense. His defense was non-existent at one point so I guess any little effort he put out on the defensive end last year may have been blown out of proportion by this write-up.

Allanon
10-17-2009, 07:34 PM
Has Duncan been listed yet?

Not yet.

7. Melo
8. Durant
9. Dirk

duncan228
10-17-2009, 07:38 PM
Duncan was #3 last year.