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Fresh Kid
08-01-2013, 08:41 AM
discuss...

kNicKz
08-01-2013, 10:04 AM
2004 UConn Men

Emeka Okafor, Charlie Villanueva, Josh Boone, Hilton Armstrong, Ben Gordon, Marcus Williams,

Front court and back court both stacked with NBA players :eek:

Thorpesaurous
08-01-2013, 11:21 AM
2004 UConn Men

Emeka Okafor, Charlie Villanueva, Josh Boone, Hilton Armstrong, Ben Gordon, Marcus Williams,

Front court and back court both stacked with NBA players :eek:


Reportedly Ajou Ajou Deng was the best player on that roster and would've been drafted ahead of all these guys had he come out without ever playing at UConn. That didn't pan out though.

Fresh Kid
08-01-2013, 01:10 PM
2004 Uconn
2005 North Carolina
2000 Michigan
1992 duke

Burgz V2
08-01-2013, 03:01 PM
1982 UNC team is pretty good.

Jailblazers7
08-01-2013, 03:25 PM
The Walton UCLA teams and Kareem UCLA teams are obviously up there. 1996 Kentucky was a great team and the UNLV teams of the early 90s were great too. Not sure I could do a top 5 tho.

kNicKz
08-01-2013, 05:18 PM
Reportedly Ajou Ajou Deng was the best player on that roster and would've been drafted ahead of all these guys had he come out without ever playing at UConn. That didn't pan out though.

:roll: :roll:

Good ol' days man. It's crazy though. That team had NBA players coming off the bench

God I miss the dominant days. 2011 was the sweetest though, coming out of nowhere

ukfan22
08-01-2013, 10:45 PM
Since I've been watching

96 Kentucky
07 Florida
05 UNC
01 Duke
12 Kentucky

kNicKz
08-02-2013, 10:54 AM
Since I've been watching

96 Kentucky
07 Florida
05 UNC
01 Duke
12 Kentucky

2004 UConn would rape 2007 Florida

ukfan22
08-03-2013, 11:34 PM
2004 UConn would rape 2007 Florida

nah

kNicKz
08-04-2013, 01:03 AM
http://www.ryanfors.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/SLAM_UCONN.jpg

Throw in a little

http://sportsmedia.ign.com/sports/image/article/772/772542/josh-boone-interview-20070313032529805-000.jpg

20+ point victory

ukfan22
08-04-2013, 10:49 PM
oh no Josh Boone

kNicKz
08-04-2013, 11:48 PM
Shit dude Corey Brewer

KG215
08-05-2013, 01:01 AM
If I'm going to go by teams I can actually remember in detail, my list would be almost identical to ukfan's. I'd probably replace '12 Kentucky with '09 UNC, but that's somewhat the UNC fan in me coming out. '04 UConn, and '08 Kansas are up there, too.

As for all-time teams:

- Whatever UCLA team was Kareem's best

- Whatever UCLA team was Walton's best

- 1996 Kentucky

- 1990 UNLV (1991 team was probably better, though)

- 1992 Duke

- 1982 UNC

- 1970-something Indiana team that went undefeated. Think it was '74 or '75.

- Whatever year it was Ohio State had Havlicek and Jerry Lucas and won it all...sometime in the 60's.

- NC State had a really good national championship team (sometime in the mid-70's) with David Thompson and Tom Burleson.


Hard to narrow it down to just five.

LAZERUSS
08-05-2013, 06:47 AM
1. 71-72 UCLA. Undefeated (30-0) and had a scoring differential of +30.3 ppg. Outshot their opponents by a .504 to .382 margin. Featured Bill Walton, Keith Wilkes (Jamaal Wilkes), Henry Bibby, and even had Swen Nater on the bench (go ahead and look up his ABA-NBA career.)

2. 67-68 UCLA. 29-1. +26.2 ppg differential. Outshot their opponents by a .500 to .384 margin. Lost to #2 (at the time) Houston in the Astrodome game, 71-69. Beat #1 Houston (at the time) in a rematch in the NCAA semi's, 101-69 (and led by 44 points at one point), then beat Dean Smith's NC team, 78-55 (despite supposedly "sleep-walking" after their rout of the Cougars.) Featured Lew Alcindor (Kareem), and Lucuis Allen.

3. 66-67 UCLA. 30-0. +25.9 ppg differential. Outshot their opponents by a .519 to .392 margin. Featured Alcindor (29.0 ppg, 15.5 rpg, .667 FG%), and Lucius Allen. Started four sophs. Incidently, as freshman, they beat the #1 ranked UCLA varsity (ranked #1 at the time) in a pre-season scrimmage.

4. 68-69 UCLA. 29-1. Lost late season game to USC, 46-44. +20.9 ppg differential. Outshot their opposition by a .514 to .374 margin. Perhaps the most loaded roster in NCAA history. Alcindor, Curtis Rowe, John Vallely, and Sidney Wicks (look up his NBA career...and BTW, he wiped the floor with 7-2 Artis Gilmore in the '70 NCAA Finals.)

5. 72-73 NC ST. 27-0 (ineligible for NCAA tourney.) +21.8 ppg differential. Outshot their opponents by a .520 to .437 margin. Featured David Thom,pson and 7-3 Tommy Burleson.

6. 73-74 NC ST. 30-1. +16.7 ppg differential. Outshot their opps by a .499 to .435 margin. Lost early season game against UCLA, 84-66. Came back to beat them in double OT in the NCAA semis, 80-77. Featured Thompson and Burleson.

Honorable mention... 73-74 UCLA. +19.4 ppg differential. .507 to .414 FG% differential. Had their 88 game winning streak snapped at Notre Dame, 71-70 (and lost after leading 70-59 with three minutes to go.) Came back to rout the #1 Irish a couple of weeks later, 94-75 (and led by 28 points at one time.). Beat the eventual National Champion Wolfpack, 84-66 early in the year (and lost to them in double OT in the semis, after blowing a seven point lead in the first OT.) Probably the greatest frontcourt in NCAA history, featuring Walton, Wilkes, Marques Johnson, Dave Meyers, and Richard Washington.

kNicKz
08-05-2013, 12:20 PM
1999 Duke is the best team that they have ever had. 1992 Close second.

Obviously the UCLA dynasty is amazing but the field of recruiting and competition was incredibly lopsided back then

KG215
08-05-2013, 12:35 PM
1. 71-72 UCLA. Undefeated (30-0) and had a scoring differential of +30.3 ppg. Outshot their opponents by a .504 to .382 margin. Featured Bill Walton, Keith Wilkes (Jamaal Wilkes), Henry Bibby, and even had Swen Nater on the bench (go ahead and look up his ABA-NBA career.)

2. 67-68 UCLA. 29-1. +26.2 ppg differential. Outshot their opponents by a .500 to .384 margin. Lost to #2 (at the time) Houston in the Astrodome game, 71-69. Beat #1 Houston (at the time) in a rematch in the NCAA semi's, 101-69 (and led by 44 points at one point), then beat Dean Smith's NC team, 78-55 (despite supposedly "sleep-walking" after their rout of the Cougars.) Featured Lew Alcindor (Kareem), and Lucuis Allen.

3. 66-67 UCLA. 30-0. +25.9 ppg differential. Outshot their opponents by a .519 to .392 margin. Featured Alcindor (29.0 ppg, 15.5 rpg, .667 FG%), and Lucius Allen. Started four sophs. Incidently, as freshman, they beat the #1 ranked UCLA varsity (ranked #1 at the time) in a pre-season scrimmage.

4. 68-69 UCLA. 29-1. Lost late season game to USC, 46-44. +20.9 ppg differential. Outshot their opposition by a .514 to .374 margin. Perhaps the most loaded roster in NCAA history. Alcindor, Curtis Rowe, John Vallely, and Sidney Wicks (look up his NBA career...and BTW, he wiped the floor with 7-2 Artis Gilmore in the '70 NCAA Finals.)

5. 72-73 NC ST. 27-0 (ineligible for NCAA tourney.) +21.8 ppg differential. Outshot their opponents by a .520 to .437 margin. Featured David Thom,pson and 7-3 Tommy Burleson.

6. 73-74 NC ST. 30-1. +16.7 ppg differential. Outshot their opps by a .499 to .435 margin. Lost early season game against UCLA, 84-66. Came back to beat them in double OT in the NCAA semis, 80-77. Featured Thompson and Burleson.

Honorable mention... 73-74 UCLA. +19.4 ppg differential. .507 to .414 FG% differential. Had their 88 game winning streak snapped at Notre Dame, 71-70 (and lost after leading 70-59 with three minutes to go.) Came back to rout the #1 Irish a couple of weeks later, 94-75 (and led by 28 points at one time.). Beat the eventual National Champion Wolfpack, 84-66 early in the year (and lost to them in double OT in the semis, after blowing a seven point lead in the first OT.) Probably the greatest frontcourt in NCAA history, featuring Walton, Wilkes, Marques Johnson, Dave Meyers, and Richard Washington.
Interesting. So no '96 Kentucky, '82 UNC, '90 UNLV, etc.? Your top 6 teams ever, which is basically just 3 teams, are from a short 8 year window?

LAZERUSS
08-05-2013, 04:44 PM
Interesting. So no '96 Kentucky, '82 UNC, '90 UNLV, etc.? Your top 6 teams ever, which is basically just 3 teams, are from a short 8 year window?

You're right...I forgot about the 72-73 Bruins, who also went 30-0. They had a +21.3 ppg differential, and outshot their opponents by a .519 to .396 margin. And who can forget Walton's NCAA Finals game, in which he scored 44 points on 21-22 shooting.

'90 UNLV deserves a vote, as do the '82 Tar Hills, (who may have the most talented team in college history (Worthy, MJ, and Perkins.) Still, despite a 32-2 record, and a NC, they only outscored their opponents by +11.3 ppg, and outshot them .537 to .466.

KG215
08-05-2013, 07:12 PM
You're right...I forgot about the 72-73 Bruins, who also went 30-0. They had a +21.3 ppg differential, and outshot their opponents by a .519 to .396 margin. And who can forget Walton's NCAA Finals game, in which he scored 44 points on 21-22 shooting.

'90 UNLV deserves a vote, as do the '82 Tar Hills, (who may have the most talented team in college history (Worthy, MJ, and Perkins.) Still, despite a 32-2 record, and a NC, they only outscored their opponents by +11.3 ppg, and outshot them .537 to .466.
Ok, so let me get this straight before I attempt to get into an argument with you, because doing so is usually tiresome and pointless because you're very stubborn and fixed into your biases...

Adding the '72-'73 Bruins, 7 of the 10 best college basketball teams of all-time are all from the same 8 year stretch?

Burgz V2
08-05-2013, 07:34 PM
You're right...I forgot about the 72-73 Bruins, who also went 30-0. They had a +21.3 ppg differential, and outshot their opponents by a .519 to .396 margin. And who can forget Walton's NCAA Finals game, in which he scored 44 points on 21-22 shooting.

'90 UNLV deserves a vote, as do the '82 Tar Hills, (who may have the most talented team in college history (Worthy, MJ, and Perkins.) Still, despite a 32-2 record, and a NC, they only outscored their opponents by +11.3 ppg, and outshot them .537 to .466.

if you are going to use point differential as the be all end all factor in GOAT team you should at least address the major weakness in that argument. The strength of schedule is not uniform from year to year, therefore that stat is meaningless without context.

KG215
08-05-2013, 07:43 PM
if you are going to use point differential as the be all end all factor in GOAT team you should at least address the major weakness in that argument. The strength of schedule is not uniform from year to year, therefore that stat is meaningless without context.
Not to mention how much recruiting has evolved since the 60's and 70's.

Burgz V2
08-05-2013, 07:55 PM
Not to mention how much recruiting has evolved since the 60's and 70's.

True. All around talent level has drastically increased as well. One can make the argument that the top talents are comparable, but as far as a full roster, no comparison.

LAZERUSS
08-06-2013, 11:04 PM
True. All around talent level has drastically increased as well. One can make the argument that the top talents are comparable, but as far as a full roster, no comparison.

Take a look at UCLA's roster in 1974 (and they did not even win the NC.) Bill Walton Keith (Jamaal) Wilkes, Dave Meyers, Richard Washington, and Marques Johnson.

How about their backup center in 1973 who averaged 3.2 ppg and 3.3 rpg? None other than Swen Nater, and whom Walton called the toughest center he faced while in college. Go ahead and look up Nater's professional stats.

Alcindor's (Kareem's) 1969 Bruins fielded Sidney Wicks (who would absolutely destroy the 7-2 Artis Gilmore in the '70 Finals), Curtis Rowe, and Steve Patterson...all of whom had pro careers...as well as quality college players like Lynn Shackleford and John Vallely.


And I'm sorry, but most historians list Alcindor and Walton among the top-5 ollege players of all-time. In fact, Alcindor would probably be a unnanimous #1. And given the fact that Walton was a major factor in UCLA's 88 game winning streak, and had arguably the greatest game in an NCAA Finals..in college history...I just don't think there is an argument for ANY other teams over the Alcindor and Walton title teams.

The only college team that could possibly be listed anywhere near as talented, in terms of pro talent, would have to be the '82 Tar Heels (Worthy, Perkins, and MJ), and they went 32-2 had were nowhere near as dominant against their peers. Hell, the '84 Tar Heels, with MJ, Perkins, and Brad Daughtery went 28-3 and lost in the second round against tgemple for cryingoutloud.

And in terms of complete domination, the '69 Bruins, who lost 71-69 to a team that would go 31-2, in a "regular season" game...and then just annihilate them by a 101-69, in a game that was nowhere indicative of the final score (the Bruins led by 44 points early in the 2nd half)...and then "sleep-walked" their way to a 78-55 win against a very loaded North Carolina team in the Finals....well, quite simply, the most dominant college team of all-time.

The only other team that could compare in terms of pro talent, and that won a national championship, was the 1990 UNLV Running Rebs. And they "only" went 35-5, with much less dominant ppg and FG% differentials.

Now, you could make an argument that the 90-91 Running Rebs were one of the greatest college teams of all-time..going 34-1, outscoring their opps by a whopping +28.4 ppg, and outshooting them by a staggering .538 to .396 margin..but alas...that one defeat came in the NCAA Finals...to a team that they destroyed a year earlier in the Finals by a 102-72 margin. What cold have been...

As for 75-76 Indiana? I was never really impressed with them. They did go 32-0, and they did have some pro talent (Buckner was probably the best pro, while May, Benson, Wilkerson, and Abernathy all played for a while.) However, their ppg differential was only +17.4. And they struggled to beat both Marquette and Alabama in the tourney. In fact, they easily could have lost to a Tide team that went 23-5 and finished sixth.

If you factor in record, differentials, post-season domination, and overall talent, the Alcindor and Walton Bruin teams were the greatest ever.

LAZERUSS
08-06-2013, 11:49 PM
True. All around talent level has drastically increased as well. One can make the argument that the top talents are comparable, but as far as a full roster, no comparison.

You're kidding right? You mean college rosters where the team's best player averages 11-8 and jumps to the NBA in his next season, and where you know that if plyer is still playing by his junior season, he has no pro talent whatsoever? Where a stumblebum like 6-9 Tyler Hanbrough, who looked like he couldn't dribble or shoot at all in this year's NBA playoffs, wins College POY? C'mon...the talent levels of the college teams today is FAR behind those of the 60's and 70's. Hell, in 1968, Wes Unseld, Elvin Hayes, Pete Maravich, and Kareem were still playing, and dominating, in college. Hayes would go on to lead the NBA in scoring the very next season, while Unseld would win both ROY and MVP. And we all know what Kareem did in his NBA rookie season, and then for years to come. He was shelling the likes of Hakeem and Ewing at age 39.

BTW, Alcindor's teams went 88-2 in his three years there, and those losses were by margins of 71-69 (and he was playing blind in that game), and a meaningless 46-44 loss to USC in his senior season. He won the NCAA Tourney MVP all three seasons, as well. I mentioned Walton's 44 point game in the '73 Finals, but Alcindor's '69 title game was nearly as equally impressive... 37 points on 15-20 from the field, and 7-9 from the line, with 20 rebounds...in a 92-72 romp.

Furthermore, I would argue that had Alcindor been able to play as a freshman, that he likely would have won four titles in row (which would have given Wooden a streak of TEN in a row, instead of "only" seven.) First of all, his soph team started four sophs, and waltzed to a 30-0 record and a dominating title. Secondly, the varsity team that he was ineligible for, was ranked #1 early on...and in a pre-season scrimmage, Alcindor's freshmen team beat them. That varsity team could "only" go 18-8 though, and didn't make the NCAA's. One can only wonder what Alcindor and his freshmen team could have added to that team.

But, if you are going to use this ridiculous argument that the talent is better today, than 20-30-40-50 years ago...well, let's just proclaim '13 Louisville as the greatest team ever.

LAZERUSS
08-07-2013, 12:44 AM
1999 Duke is the best team that they have ever had. 1992 Close second.

Obviously the UCLA dynasty is amazing but the field of recruiting and competition was incredibly lopsided back then

It may have been, but Wooden was able to win with his talent, while Dean Smith had loaded rosters nearly every year, and only won twice.

KG215
08-07-2013, 01:15 PM
It may have been, but Wooden was able to win with his talent, while Dean Smith had loaded rosters nearly every year, and only won twice.
Guess that part of level of competition flew right over your head. No one had as much talent as Wooden's UCLA teams when he was stockpiling future NBA players. Dean Smith was loading up on talent in an era when recruiting was much more evolved and a lot of the other top tier programs had similar depth and talent.

LAZERUSS
08-07-2013, 09:49 PM
Guess that part of level of competition flew right over your head. No one had as much talent as Wooden's UCLA teams when he was stockpiling future NBA players. Dean Smith was loading up on talent in an era when recruiting was much more evolved and a lot of the other top tier programs had similar depth and talent.

Smith was coaching North Carolina when Wooden won his first two National Championships in 63-64 and 64-65, the second of which was with Gail Goodrich, a cast of no-names, and no starter over 6-5.

Smith was coaching NC in 64-65 when his heavily favored Tar Heels lost to a lousy Wake Forest team...and after which he was hung in effigy.

Smith was coaching a team of Charley Scott, Larry Miller, and Bill Bunting that was crushed by Wooden's 67-68 Bruins in the Finals, 78-55 (BTW, accounts of that game claimed that UCLA actually "sleep-walked" their way thru that win, on the heels of the absolute demolishing of 31-0 and #1 ranked Houston the game before.)

A year later (68-69), Smith took the bulk of that same roster (Scott, Bunting, Rusty Clark, and Dick Gruber) and his #2 Tar Heels down in flames in the NCAA semis against Purdue, 92-65...a team that Wooden's Bruins would slaughter in the Finals, 92-72.

His 69-70 Tar Heels, again with Scott, Dennis Wuycik, Bill Chamberlain, and Lee Dedmon, to an 18-9 record. And keep in mind that Wooden had now won his 6th title in 7 sevens at the time.

And by 71-72, Smith had a team with Bob McAdoo, Bobby Jones, George Karl, Wuycik, and Bill Chamberlain...that would go 26-5, and not even make it to the NCAA Finals. Of course, Wooden was going 30-0 and winning his 8th title in 9 seasons.

In 72-73 Smith's Tar Heels, with a roster of Bobby Jones, George Karl and Mitch Kupchak couldn't even make the NCAA tournament, losing to a 12-15 Wake Forest team.

How about Smith's 74-75 Tar Heel team? They had a roster of Phil Ford, Walter Davis, Kupchak, and Tommy LaGarde...and could only go 23-8 and not even make the NCAA tournament. BTW, those four players would go to be on the 1976 USA Olympic Basketball team. Oh, and BTW, in that 74-75 season, Wooden won his 10th title in 12 seasons, and retired.

Smith's 75-76 team, loaded with those same players,...blown out by Alabama in the NCAAs 79-64.

The 76-77 Tar Heels, with a roster of Davis, Ford, LaGarde, and Mike O'Koren...beaten by a 24-7 Marquette team that came into the NCAA tourney ranked 16th.

Disappointment-after-disappointment. Losing to lessor rosters and early in the NCAA tournament.

And how about MJ's three years in North Carolina? They finally win a National Championship in Jordan's first year, going 32-2. But every win in the NCAA tournament was close, including edging unranked James Madison, 52-50 in the first round. How does a team with James Worthy, Same Perkins, and Jordan...barely beat a Madison team that had virtually no NBA talent whatsoever?

Ok, Worthy goes to the pros. And a team of Jordan, Perkins, and now Brad Daughtery...goes 28-8, and loses to a 23-10 Georgia team with Vern Fleming in the NCAAs.

In their 83-84 season, the Tar Heels now have Jordan, Perkins, Daughtery, and Kenny Smith. They go 28-3 and lose to 21-9 Indiana in the East Regional Semis.

I could go on-and-on. Smith had the most loaded rosters in college history, going all the way back to the beginning of Wooden's sensational streak...and only two titles. Meanwhile, Wooden was not only winning 10 titles in 12 years, he was going 38-1 in the NCAA tournament in those years (and that one loss was in double OT to a 30-1 NC State team.) Not only that, but Wooden's Bruins were just blowing teams away in the NCAA tournaments. They were seldom even challenged.

Here again, my point was that Wooden, even with a plethora of talent...was WINNING with it. Smith, with as loaded rosters in the history of college basketball, won TWICE in 26 years, and in between had many disappointing seasons, and shocking losses.

Wooden could win a title with Goodrich, and very little else (and very little also being with as small a team as has ever won a title)...while Smith couldn't beat far lessor teams with MJ, Perkins, Daughtery, and Kenny Smith.

I'm sorry...but Smith was playing with a loaded deck as far back as the 60's, and certainly in the 70's and 80's. To say that the game became more competitive is not fair to a Wooden who was winning titles in a dominating fashion, in years in which Smith had comparable rosters.

Burgz V2
08-07-2013, 10:02 PM
Smith was coaching North Carolina when Wooden won his first two National Championships in 63-64 and 64-65, the second of which was with Gail Goodrich, a cast of no-names, and no starter over 6-5.

Smith was coaching NC in 64-65 when his heavily favored Tar Heels lost to a lousy Wake Forest team...and after which he was hung in effigy.

Smith was coaching a team of Charley Scott, Larry Miller, and Bill Bunting that was crushed by Wooden's 67-68 Bruins in the Finals, 78-55 (BTW, accounts of that game claimed that UCLA actually "sleep-walked" their way thru that win, on the heels of the absolute demolishing of 31-0 and #1 ranked Houston the game before.)

A year later (68-69), Smith took the bulk of that same roster (Scott, Bunting, Rusty Clark, and Dick Gruber) and his #2 Tar Heels down in flames in the NCAA semis against Purdue, 92-65...a team that Wooden's Bruins would slaughter in the Finals, 92-72.

His 69-70 Tar Heels, again with Scott, Dennis Wuycik, Bill Chamberlain, and Lee Dedmon, to an 18-9 record. And keep in mind that Wooden had now won his 6th title in 7 sevens at the time.

And by 71-72, Smith had a team with Bob McAdoo, Bobby Jones, George Karl, Wuycik, and Bill Chamberlain...that would go 26-5, and not even make it to the NCAA Finals. Of course, Wooden was going 30-0 and winning his 8th title in 9 seasons.

In 72-73 Smith's Tar Heels, with a roster of Bobby Jones, George Karl and Mitch Kupchak couldn't even make the NCAA tournament, losing to a 12-15 Wake Forest team.

How about Smith's 74-75 Tar Heel team? They had a roster of Phil Ford, Walter Davis, Kupchak, and Tommy LaGarde...and could only go 23-8 and not even make the NCAA tournament. BTW, those four players would go to be on the 1976 USA Olympic Basketball team. Oh, and BTW, in that 74-75 season, Wooden won his 10th title in 12 seasons, and retired.

Smith's 75-76 team, loaded with those same players,...blown out by Alabama in the NCAAs 79-64.

The 76-77 Tar Heels, with a roster of Davis, Ford, LaGarde, and Mike O'Koren...beaten by a 24-7 Marquette team that came into the NCAA tourney ranked 16th.

Disappointment-after-disappointment. Losing to lessor rosters and early in the NCAA tournament.

And how about MJ's three years in North Carolina? They finally win a National Championship in Jordan's first year, going 32-2. But every win in the NCAA tournament was close, including edging unranked James Madison, 52-50 in the first round. How does a team with James Worthy, Same Perkins, and Jordan...barely beat a Madison team that had virtually no NBA talent whatsoever?

Ok, Worthy goes to the pros. And a team of Jordan, Perkins, and now Brad Daughtery...goes 28-8, and loses to a 23-10 Georgia team with Vern Fleming in the NCAAs.

In their 83-84 season, the Tar Heels now have Jordan, Perkins, Daughtery, and Kenny Smith. They go 28-3 and lose to 21-9 Indiana in the East Regional Semis.

I could go on-and-on. Smith had the most loaded rosters in college history, going all the way back to the beginning of Wooden's sensational streak...and only two titles. Meanwhile, Wooden was not only winning 10 titles in 12 years, he was going 38-1 in the NCAA tournament in those years (and that one loss was in double OT to a 30-1 NC State team.) Not only that, but Wooden's Bruins were just blowing teams away in the NCAA tournaments. They were seldom even challenged.

Here again, my point was that Wooden, even with a plethora of talent...was WINNING with it. Smith, with as loaded rosters in the history of college basketball, won TWICE in 26 years, and in between had many disappointing seasons, and shocking losses.

Wooden could win a title with Goodrich, and very little else (and very little also being with as small a team as has ever won a title)...while Smith couldn't beat far lessor teams with MJ, Perkins, Daughtery, and Kenny Smith.

I'm sorry...but Smith was playing with a loaded deck as far back as the 60's, and certainly in the 70's and 80's. To say that the game became more competitive is not fair to a Wooden who was winning titles in a dominating fashion, in years in which Smith had comparable rosters.

all you're doing is rambling and regurgitating, yet, nothing you say actually addresses our point. You are addressing all of these teams in isolation of the context they played in. So what if Dean Smith's later teams were stacked? That was a time that their were many other teams that were just as talented. Every team you mentioned had far and away the best talent in the country. FAR FAR and away.

LAZERUSS
08-07-2013, 10:15 PM
all you're doing is rambling and regurgitating, yet, nothing you say actually addresses our point. You are addressing all of these teams in isolation of the context they played in. So what if Dean Smith's later teams were stacked? That was a time that their were many other teams that were just as talented. Every team you mentioned had far and away the best talent in the country. FAR FAR and away.

I just completely refuted this point. How does a Carolina team with MJ, Worthy, and Perkins, barely beat a James Madison team with no NBA talent whatsoever. Or a team with MJ, Perkins, and Brad Daughtery lose to a team with Vern Fleming (as well as only going 28-8)?

Those "other teams" had nowhere near the talent that Smith's Tar Heels had in the 70's an 80's. Hell, he couldn't even get some of his teams into the NCAA tourney, and there were times when he did, that they shocked by far lessor teams.

BUT, if you are claiming that these teams had "far and away the best talent" in the country...you were right. How come they couldn't win titles going away like Wooden's Bruins?

Furthermore...are you still claiming the college teams of THIS era are deeper and more talented? When freshmen average an 11-8 and jump to the NBA? When you already know that if a player is playing in his junior year, he has no NBA talent at all? Or a player like Tyler Hanbrough, who can't dribble or shoot, wins the College Player of the Year?

C'mon...use some common sense here. The great teams of 20-30-40 and even 50 years ago, were considerably more dominant than these "watered down" rosters of unknowns who play together for one year and disband.

I'm sorry, but I saw enough of players like an Alcindor, at age 39, just waxing the likes of Hakeem and Ewing...to know that the players and teams of the 60's were just as great as the best of the 80's and 90's.

And once again, if you honestly believe that the more modern era of college basketball is of a higher quality...than let's just forget the players and teams of 10-20-30-40- and 50 years ago. After all, we have seen a ton of Shaq's and Jordans in college and the pros in the last 10 years, right? Same with Kareem' and Chamberlain's...players who were 7-2 barefoot, and with far more skills than the 6-10 Anthony Davis's of this era.

KG215
08-08-2013, 01:21 PM
I just completely refuted this point. How does a Carolina team with MJ, Worthy, and Perkins, barely beat a James Madison team with no NBA talent whatsoever. Or a team with MJ, Perkins, and Brad Daughtery lose to a team with Vern Fleming (as well as only going 28-8)?
You bring-up two games and expect me to take you seriously? I'm not going to go through the trouble (right now) but I'm guessing if I went and looked up the scores from those UCLA tournament runs, I could find some single digit wins against no-name, far inferior teams, and try and make a point too. But it'd be pretty damn ignorant of me.



Those "other teams" had nowhere near the talent that Smith's Tar Heels had in the 70's an 80's. Hell, he couldn't even get some of his teams into the NCAA tourney, and there were times when he did, that they shocked by far lessor teams.
You mean at a time when the ACC was loaded and very top heavy, and only one team from the conference made the NCAA Tournament? Yeah....what a shame.


Furthermore...are you still claiming the college teams of THIS era are deeper and more talented? When freshmen average an 11-8 and jump to the NBA? When you already know that if a player is playing in his junior year, he has no NBA talent at all?
No, this is one of the weakest eras in college basketball history. I just think it's hilarious that you think 7 or 8 of the 10 best teams EVER all came one right after the other in an 8 year window.



Or a player like Tyler Hanbrough, who can't dribble or shoot, wins the College Player of the Year?
I'm not even sure if I should address this since it's unbelievably ignorant, but why not...

Can't dribble or shoot? I mean what in the f**k does that even have to do with anything? He was a frontcourt player, so why did he need to be able to shoot and dribble at a high level? I mean I could list all the records he broke, but that would pointless, because it's obvious you have no clue what you're talking about here.



And once again, if you honestly believe that the more modern era of college basketball is of a higher quality...than let's just forget the players and teams of 10-20-30-40- and 50 years ago. After all, we have seen a ton of Shaq's and Jordans in college and the pros in the last 10 years, right? Same with Kareem' and Chamberlain's...players who were 7-2 barefoot, and with far more skills than the 6-10 Anthony Davis's of this era.
I think you repeated yourself and said basically the same thing 3 or 4 times in that one post alone. I don't know who it's directed at, but I don't think myself or Burgz have said anything about teams specifically from the last 5-10 years.

I respect your knowledge of past eras, but you're hands down one of the worst and most infuriating posters on here because you aren't even a little bit open-minded.

LAZERUSS
08-08-2013, 11:44 PM
You bring-up two games and expect me to take you seriously? I'm not going to go through the trouble (right now) but I'm guessing if I went and looked up the scores from those UCLA tournament runs, I could find some single digit wins against no-name, far inferior teams, and try and make a point too. But it'd be pretty damn ignorant of me.



You mean at a time when the ACC was loaded and very top heavy, and only one team from the conference made the NCAA Tournament? Yeah....what a shame.


No, this is one of the weakest eras in college basketball history. I just think it's hilarious that you think 7 or 8 of the 10 best teams EVER all came one right after the other in an 8 year window.



I'm not even sure if I should address this since it's unbelievably ignorant, but why not...

Can't dribble or shoot? I mean what in the f**k does that even have to do with anything? He was a frontcourt player, so why did he need to be able to shoot and dribble at a high level? I mean I could list all the records he broke, but that would pointless, because it's obvious you have no clue what you're talking about here.



I think you repeated yourself and said basically the same thing 3 or 4 times in that one post alone. I don't know who it's directed at, but I don't think myself or Burgz have said anything about teams specifically from the last 5-10 years.

I respect your knowledge of past eras, but you're hands down one of the worst and most infuriating posters on here because you aren't even a little bit open-minded.

Look, the topic was about the greatest college teams of all-time. I gave you a list of teams, the bulk of which played from '67 thru '74, that were the most dominant in colleg basketball history.

The numbers don't lie. The worst teams of the lot went 29-1, 29-1, and 30-1 (although I did give honorable mention to UCLA's 73-74 team, which could "only" go 26-4, and didn't win a title.) They were crushing teams by 20+ ppg, too.

And how often have you seen a regular season matchup like the '67-68 Houston Cougars and UCLA Bruins? Or the '73-74 NC St. Wolfpack and UCLA Bruins? Or the '73-74 Irish and Bruins...who had TWO regular season battles? All of those epic matchups were considered monumental at the time.

And I didn't list the 70-71 Bruins, who "only" went 28-2, and struggled thru the NCAA tourney, either. But even that was fascinating for the "ACC argument." The USC Trojans, with Paul Westphal and Mo Layton, put up a 24-2 record that season, and failed to make the NCAA tourney. Why? Because, their two losses were conference losses against... UCLA.

BTW, I always thought the ACC post-season tournament was ridiculous, but even so, there were times when Carolina was losing to teams with a 12-15 record.

If you want me to list my greatest baseball teams of all-time, I would have teams as far back as the '27 Yanks, and as recent as the '98 Yanks (and even "losers" like the '53 Dodgers, and '01 Mariners.) Incidently, the Yankee teams from '36 thur '39 were phenomenal BTW. Pro Football? The '62 Packers, the '66 Packers, the '72 and '73 Dolphins, the '78 Steelers, the '84 Niners, the '85 Bears, '91 Skins, '99 Rams, etc., a well as "losers" like the '68 and '69 Raiders, the '01 Rams, and the '07 Pats. College Football? As far back as the '66 Irish, '71 Huskers (and Sooners), '72 Trojans, '84 Huskers (aother team that lost it's last game), '95 Huskers, '96 Florida, '01 Miami, '04 USC, and '05 Texas. NBA? '67 Sixers, '71 Bucks, '72 Lakers, '80 Lakers, '83 Sixers, '85 Lakers, '86 Celts, '87 Lakers, '91 Bulls, '96 and '97 Bulls, '00 and '01 Lakers, and the '08 Celts.

But, in college basketball, the absolute most dominant teams played in a span of eight seasons. True, there were other "great" college basketball teams, and I acknowledged them. Such as the '82 Tar Heels, and the '90 and '91 Running Rebs. But it is very difficult to argue with Bruin teams that were putting up 47, and 88 game winning streaks. Or a Wolfpack team that went 57-1 over the course of two straight seasons, and knocked off the defending champion Bruins for a title. Hell, I didn't bring up the 63-64 and 64-65 Bruins on my list, despite going 58-2 and winning two straight titles. Or the '70 and '71 Bruins who went 57-3 and won two titles. Why? Because those teams were just not nearly as dominant as the '67, '68, '69, '72 and '73 Bruins teams.

As for "the two games" argument...you obviously didn't read my entire take on Dean Smith's career. He lost far more than "two games." He had loaded teams that lost to panzies. No one is debating his career achievements of assembling a plethora of talent nearly every season he coached at NC, nor the fact that he did manage to win two championships. But, his overall record, with rosters that rivaled the best Wooden had to offer, pales in comparison to Wooden's.

Once again, of all of the many staggering achievements that Wooden accomplished, his 38-1 NCAA tourney record from '64 thru his last game in '75, is just unfathomable (and that one loss was a double OT loss BTW.) And most of those 38 tournament wins were romps.

And keep in mind that Wooden's 10 titles in 12 years (and it surely would have been 11 in 12 had freshmen been allowed to play back then), came in an era where a team had to win it's conference; there was no shot-clock; and no 3pt shot to aid in comebacks. Contrast that with the "later years" in which you guys claim was "more competitive" but where a SIXTH place conference team could go on to win a National Championship. And here again, when Wooden was coaching, a conference loss was damn near the equivalent of a tournament loss (just ask the '71 USC Trojans.)

You can claim "more competitive" all you want, but 25-10 National Championship teams is what we have had since the expansion of the tournament. And, as I have mentioned many times...the DILUTION in talent at the college level has been getting considerably worse since the advent of under-classmen jumping ship. That was not the case in the bulk of the Wooden era.

Now, go ahead and post your list of teams, and give me a reason why any of them were greater than those that I presented. I am willing to learn.

KG215
08-09-2013, 12:14 AM
I've already listed and mentioned teams back on the 1st or 2nd page. I don't disagree with the notion that those Walton and Kareem/Alcindor UCLA teams wren't some of the best ever. I just disagree with the notion that other teams, 10-20 years later, weren't just as good.

The thing I actually took the most offense to was the ridiculous statement you made about Tyler Hansbrough. Can't dribble or shoot (the latter of which isn't true) like it's some huge knock on a 6'9" frontcourt player who set a niumbers of NCAA, ACC, and UNC records. If you're going to use a recent NPOY to disparage the current/recent state of college basketball, there were plenty of better options.

LAZERUSS
08-09-2013, 10:16 PM
I've already listed and mentioned teams back on the 1st or 2nd page. I don't disagree with the notion that those Walton and Kareem/Alcindor UCLA teams wren't some of the best ever. I just disagree with the notion that other teams, 10-20 years later, weren't just as good.

The thing I actually took the most offense to was the ridiculous statement you made about Tyler Hansbrough. Can't dribble or shoot (the latter of which isn't true) like it's some huge knock on a 6'9" frontcourt player who set a niumbers of NCAA, ACC, and UNC records. If you're going to use a recent NPOY to disparage the current/recent state of college basketball, there were plenty of better options.

Maye I am being hardsh with Hansbrough. I will be the first to admit that I watched very little of him in college. In fact, I have seldomed watched any college basketball in the last 20 years. Every once in a while something comes along that piques my interest. For instance, a few years back I kept reading and hearing about a guy named Oden. He was supposedly the next great college player, and a sure-fire professional star.

So I decided to do some research, and this seven foot "beast" (actually, he measured 6-11) was a 16-12 guy in high school. In HIGH SCHOOL. I doubt Wilt or KAJ ever had that BAD of a game in their high school careers. Hell, I gew up a few miles from Bill Cartwright (a true seven-footer), and his high school numbers dwarfed Oden's.

In any case, I watched a few of Oden's college games (of course he was injured), and I didn't see anything special. He did have a very good NCAA Finals, but one game does not a career make. As for his pro career...well, we are still waiting for even one halfway decent season...much less a Kareem-like season.

As I mentioned, I was turned off by college basketball back in the 90's. It has been pretty much, "one-and-done", since then, and even before that, the very best potential greats, were leaving before ever going to college. Tim Duncan was a rare one. And aside from Duncan, probably the last truly great college player I can recall, was Shaq.

Back to Hansbrough. Like I said, I watched very little of him in college. However, I watched most all of this year's Eastern Conference Finals, and I mean it when I say it...Hansbrough looked AWFUL in them. He stumbled around whenever his teammates were dumb enough to pass him the ball, and the result was either a turnover, or a horrible shot that would have made Stevie Wonder look like Steve Kerr. I saw NO skills whatsoever.

Which was my point. For those that can somehow claim that today's college basketbal players are superior to those of 20-30-40- and even 50 years ago...I give you Tyler Hansbrough. I honestly believe that Hansbrough would hve been a benchwarmer, at best, on the Alcindor or Walton teams.


And that brings me back to my original question, which you side-stepped in your last reply. What college teams would you rank over the Bruin teams of '67, '68, '69 '72, and '73? Or the NC St. teams of '73 and '74?

In terms of pure pro talent, the only college team(s) that I can think of that would have given the great Bruin teams a run, would have been the Carolina teams of '82-'84, maybe the Houston teams of '83 and '84, and perhaps the '90 and '91 UNLV Runnin Rebs. But ALL of those teams had losses, and the only chanpions of that group were the '82 Tar Heels, and the '90 Rebels (although I still consider the '91 Rebels among the greatest ever.)

And if you are going strictly by resume...none of the above can really compare with the great Bruin and Wolfpack teams I listed. The one team of that group that COULD have, was the '91 Rebels. They were 34-0 going into the Semis, and with a ppg differential of nearly 30 ppg in those games. Furthermore, they had routed that same Duke team by 30 points in the Finals just the year before. But alas, they were shocked, and finished 34-1 and were not a champion.

So, until someone convines me of otherwise, I stand by take of the top-seven college teams of at least the post-1960 era, all coming from the period between '66-67 thru '73-74. I know it seems absurd on the surface, but the "proof is in the pudding."

millwad
08-11-2013, 10:04 AM
I've already listed and mentioned teams back on the 1st or 2nd page. I don't disagree with the notion that those Walton and Kareem/Alcindor UCLA teams wren't some of the best ever. I just disagree with the notion that other teams, 10-20 years later, weren't just as good.

The thing I actually took the most offense to was the ridiculous statement you made about Tyler Hansbrough. Can't dribble or shoot (the latter of which isn't true) like it's some huge knock on a 6'9" frontcourt player who set a niumbers of NCAA, ACC, and UNC records. If you're going to use a recent NPOY to disparage the current/recent state of college basketball, there were plenty of better options.

Haven't you learned?

Modern era basketball is way worse compared to old school basketball according to Jlauber.

LAZERUSS
08-11-2013, 12:41 PM
Haven't you learned?

Modern era basketball is way worse compared to old school basketball according to Jlauber.

Nothing could be more true. Thanks for pointing it out. Today's college basketball is a second rate product with second rate talent. Compare that with even the MJ Carolina teams...Jordan, Perkins, Worthy, and later Daughtery. The best college teams of today, using NBA rules, would get destroyed by that group.

Same with the Walton-Wilkes, Marques Johnson-Washington-Meyers teams of the early 70's. Or the Alcindor-Wicks-Rowe-Bibby teams of the late 60's. No contest.

millwad
08-11-2013, 05:43 PM
Nothing could be more true. Thanks for pointing it out. Today's college basketball is a second rate product with second rate talent. Compare that with even the MJ Carolina teams...Jordan, Perkins, Worthy, and later Daughtery. The best college teams of today, using NBA rules, would get destroyed by that group.

Same with the Walton-Wilkes, Marques Johnson-Washington-Meyers teams of the early 70's. Or the Alcindor-Wicks-Rowe-Bibby teams of the late 60's. No contest.

Such a clown.

Where do you think the players from the draft come from?

LAZERUSS
08-11-2013, 11:56 PM
Such a clown.

Where do you think the players from the draft come from?

Ok, give me a list of all of these great college players, and their team records, that played college ball in the last 20 years (basically post-Shaq). And that leaves out Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant, and A'Mare Stoudemire...all of whom didn't even bother attending college.

And then we will compare then we will compare them, and their surrounding talent, with the '82-84 Tar Heels, the '73-74 Wolfpack, and the great Bruins teams from '67-69, and '72-'74.

My god...a Houston team with Michael Young, Clyde Drexler, and Hakeem couldn't even beat a 26-10 team in the title game. And a year later they were thumped by a Georgetown team with Patrick Ewing. All of that was 30 years ago...