bobbyjoe is just a hater....
When you give him the info that he's too lazy to look up for himself he spins it around to say what he wants it to say. When you corner him with the data, he's all, "but wait there's this other angle".... He continually leaves out key factors, and has countered his own arguments on at least three occasions. He has ignored the statistics at his convenience and has formulated his arguments on an entirely subjective basis. His best statistical argument has been to use the
opinions of 20 ESPN analysts as his trumping 'wild card'...
--
David Robinson is on the same level as Hakeem Olojuwon. No matter what
bobbyjoe, or any of these other haters who never saw David play before 1996 say. It's sad that Spurs fans continually undermine David's talent, skillset, level and ultimately his legacy. If you all never saw him play - stay out of the discussion.
-- David's playoff supporting casts sucked. Period. This is
huge!!!. No matter how you spin it, no matter who ignores it, David would not have been able to win Championships with his supporting casts. And yet this is used as the primary argument to suggest that he was an inferior player.
-- Every great playoff run in the last 18 years has required at least one series swinging 3pt dagger, or jumper from someone other than the teams' star players.
Jordan was surrounded by: B.J. Armstrong, Craig Hodges, and John Paxon during his first three championship runs. And Steve Kerr, Toni Kukoc and Ron Harper during his last three. Not to be forgotten was the fact that he had Scottie Pippen, a deadly 3pt shooter in his own right, for all 6 championship runs.
They all made series changing, game winning shots for him.
Hakeem was surrounded by: Sam Cassell, Robert Horry, Mario Elie, Kenny Smith and Clyde Drexler during his championship runs.
They all made series changing, game winning shots for him. An abnormal amount actually.
Shaquille was surrounded by: Robert Horry, Derek Fisher, Glen Rice, Rick Fox, Brian Shaw, Derek Harper, and Jason Kapono during his championship runs. Not to mention Shaq had guys like Kobe Bryant, Penny Hardaway, and Dwayne Wade complementing his inside presence.
They all made series changing, game winning shots for him.
Duncan was surrounded by: Steve Kerr, an unlikely hero in Jaren Jackson, a more mature Sean Eliott, Mario Elie, Stephen Jackson, Manu Ginobili, and Robert Horry.
They all made series changing, game winning shots for him.
Last years Celtics were a three-headed all-star cast.
While this generation's Pistons have proven to be one of the most balanced teams ever. One greater than the sum of it's parts. Aside from Ben Wallace
They all made series changing, game winning shots.
No matter how 'great' anyone tries to pass off Robinson's playoff supporting casts. None of his teammates ever made series changing, or game winning shots for him. Eliott and AJ, spared no self-criticism in suggesting this very truth back in 2003 (I'm trying to find the article).
Unfortunately the media has a lazy habit of defining players' legacies by their post-season accomplishments. Unfairly or not, their arguments mold and shape the nation's perception of athletes to the tune of their own viewpoints. To Robinson's detriment, he could never pull off the ultimate miracle and attain the coveted 'ship without an adequate supporting cast. After the series against the Rockets in 1995, the media threw Robinson under the bus, called him "soft", and hypocritically ignored the obvious: that the Spurs were a one-man team.
Their subjective arguments have unfairly shaped the viewpoints of every casual fan who never saw Robinson play in his heyday, even new generation Spurs fans. Robinson was a beast. He was feared; his 'guns' were huge. He was big, ripped, fast, athletic, versatile, could jump out of the gym, could score from anywhere and recover with the best of them. How he went from 'this' to being perceived as 'soft' just because of his teams' playoff failures is just wrong. Especially when his teams got farther than they ever should have to begin with.
One event that unfairly contributed to this perception was Robinson's reaction to Karl Malone's thuggish elbow (the one that knocked him unconscious); Robinson literally 'turned the other cheek' and publically 'forgave' Malone for it by downplaying his intent. In a world where rash, impulsive, egocentric players let their emotions get the best of them the Admiral did something worthy of admiration but was
criticized for it. Unbelievable! The casual fan is ignorant. They prefer to praise crass players rather than one who defines class.
Anyway, not a single NBA champion since 1980 has had less than one star. Not one*. The only exception was Hakeem's first Championship team with the Rockets, but Hakeem was surrounded by the deadliest, clutchest, 3-pt ensemble ever. Not surprisingly, they also met up against one of the weakest finalists ever (statistically speaking) - the '94 Knicks.