Last Mondays piece, a review of long-time ESPN statistician Elliott Kalbs book "Whos Better, Whos Best in Basketball" elicited quite a response from readers of this column. Aside from commenting on the heresy that Kalb perhaps the foremost authority on NBA data in the world, foistedmany were guessing whom his greatest player in the history of basketball was.
So who is the greatest basketball player in the world, statistically and otherwise?
According to Kalb, Shaquille ONeal is the greatest player in the history of the game. To begin with, Kalb says Shaq has already outscored all but two dozen or so of the players in the history of the game. The qualifier being scoring or winning, Kalb stresses that ONeal has won more than Wilt Chamberlain, and almost as much as Bill Russell or Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in a league that has almost twice as many teams as previous eras.
On top of all that, Kalb says that Shaq entered the league with unprecedented hype such as no other player has faced before. Kalb also illustrates how the Los Angeles Lakers center has slayed the other great centers who were his main rivals: Hakeem Olajuwon, David Robinson and Patrick Ewing. Among the four of them, they have divided sixteen of the last seventeen MVP selections in the NBA.
In addition, it has only been his poor free throw shooting that has kept him from winning five or six more scoring titles. But he also points out how, in the 1994 scoring race, David Robinson was helped in his very last game by not only his San Antonio Spurs teammates and competing Los Angeles Clippers. Robinson scored 71 points in his last game to secure the scoring crown, even if it was almost 20 points more than he had ever scored in a game before or since.
ONeal has also been at or near the top in terms of field goal percentage, meaning he is virtually unstoppable. In fact, he has been the NBAs field goal percentage leader since 1998, with a full 33 percent of his field goals coming via slam dunks, as computed by Harvey Pollack, author of the annual Statistical yearbook.
Shaqs numbers also go up during the post-season, according to Kalb. In all his 19 Finals games, he has averaged 34.2 points per game, second only to Rick Barrys 36.3. And he has taken the criticism even when its his teammates who screw up in crucial games, particularly Robert Horrys disappearance in the last finals against the San Antonio Spurs.
Simply put, the book stresses that Shaquille is scoring in an era when everyone elses scoring is going down or disappearing.
So what about Michael Jordan?
Kalb says that ONeal of the early 2000s is much farther ahead of the leagues second-best player than Jordan was in the 1990s. But he adds that that was one of the main reasons why Jordan was such a treat to watch: because there was a chance he would lose. And Kalb makes it a point that Jordan also gave up five years of his career by retiring twice. That would have made all the difference in the world. In Kalbs mind, it drops Jordan to number three, behind Wilt Chamberlain and just before Bill Russell and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
What do you think?
We had already been shooting for more than two hours. He then violently yanked the plug from one of our expensive broadcast lights, and tossed it aside, causing damage to our property. And he had the temerity to do that and yell at our crew, including yours truly, even after we had said we were leaving.
I dont know what Mayor Jejomar Binays qualifications are for his venue managers, but this fellow, identified by the Makati Coliseum security guard as a certain "Ador" was incredibly rude, and will only damage the good mayors reputation. By all rights, he should be punished.
If I werent a civilized fellow, Id have punched his lights out. Then again, with those kinds of manners, he isnt worth it.
Dont worry; none of this will be on The Basketball Show today at 4 p.m. over IBC-13. We are a wholesome program.