After 11 years, we can conclude the 1996 draft class has certainly made the most noise from top to bottom. So I'm sticking with them for the time being as the best overall class in history.
Led by Iverson, Bryant, Nash, Ray Allen, Peja Stojakovic and Jermaine O'Neal, the class has dominated this era with style points, pure shooting and six different players with 11 championship rings for bragging rights. And that's not to mention outstanding players such as Marcus Camby, Shareef Abdur-Rahim and Stephon Marbury and solid starting centers from the past two NBA Finals — Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Erick Dampier.
Indeed, the class of 2007 has a long way to go to top that. Heck, so do the guys from 2003, which is why I'm not ready to jump on their bandwagon just yet.
After all, who can possibly say they will do more in the NBA than the 1984 crew of Hakeem Olajuwon, Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley and John Stockton? That's eight championships out of the first two players, along with the most unique player of our time in Barkley, and Stockton is the all-time leader in assists and steals.
Heck, the 1974 draftees paced by Bill Walton, Bobby Jones, Maurice Lucas and Jamaal Wilkes, and the 1970 group of Bob Lanier, Rudy Tomjanovich, Pete Maravich, Dave Cowens and Geoff Petrie will be tough to top.
to sum up kahn's points- i'm tired of hearing about the 2007 draft class, because there have already been some really great drafts in the league's history. what?
As always, these guys haven't proven they can take their game to the next level...
and how would they go about doing so?
Of course, Durant is a special offensive player — the first freshman ever to be the NCAA player of the year — and Oden leading Ohio State to the championship game was no fluke because of his extraordinary defensive presence.
But they have yet to prove it against the best players in the world, and even if they do, it will require more than skill.
booooooooooooooooooooo.
The draft is always exciting and unpredictable, and it's crucial for the NBA to retain that mystique heading into the fall. But you never know when the next "draft superstar" will land with the thud of a 3-pointer hurled by the illustrious Antoine Walker, class of '96.
that's the last sentence in the article. are you kidding me? you go 1,000ish words trying to point out that you're sick of the hype surrounding this year's draft class without bringing up a single overhyped player who "busted" from a past draft... and when you finally try to go in that direction... you choose ANTOINE WALKER? dude. you're killing me.
this might be the worst article that's ever been ripped apart on this site
ReplyDeletei say that only based on the sections you quoted
also this passage cracked me up:
ReplyDeleteOden's lifetime friend and teammate Mike Conley Jr. didn't even consider coming out after his freshman year until it became apparent that the lithe son of Olympian Mike Conley Sr. (the agent for both players not coincidentally) would have essentially no competition to be the first point guard taken in the draft.
quoted for empahsis:
the lithe son
just when i thought sportswriting couldn't get any more homoerotic...just a completely superfluousd comment about conley's supple flexibility. wonderful
Was this guy even trying to make sense?
ReplyDeletelithe is a word that should only be used to describe women. and michael flatley.
ReplyDelete