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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=kuniva_dAMiGhTy]All NBA analysts: "[I]Nobody knows Kobe/MJ better than Phil.[/I]" That settles it doesn't it? Phil completely WRECKED Kobe. :oldlol: The quotes never get old either and the fanbois HATE it.[/QUOTE]
Everyone knows MJ is better than Kobe.. By a good amount.
The thing being talked about here is how MJ would have coexisted with an already established shaq on the Lakers as a rook. Do you have an opinion on that?
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]Everyone knows MJ is better than Kobe.. By a good amount.
The thing being talked about here is how MJ would have coexisted with an already established shaq on the Lakers as a rook. Do you have an opinion on that?[/QUOTE]
How would Shaq have coexisted with an already established MJ? MJ isn't Kobe. Get that through your heads. As Phil said, their leadership and personalities were [B]completely different[/B].
The two combined would have more than 3 titles..that's for damn sure.
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Re: #apples2oranges
The problem in this thread is that people think MJ and Kobe have the same mentality when they don't. Just because Kobe and Shaq collided doesn't automatically mean MJ and Shaq would've. THEY ARE NOT THE SAME.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=kuniva_dAMiGhTy]How would Shaq have coexisted with an already established MJ? MJ isn't Kobe. Get that through your heads. As Phil said, their leadership and personalities were [B]completely different[/B].
The two combined would have more than 3 titles..that's for damn sure.[/QUOTE]
Your boy andgar just said MJ was shy coming into the league.. That he wasn't the vocal leader he became when he first entered the NBA.
Do you not believe losing to the pistons and Celtics over and over with much less help didn't build his hunger, his role, and his leadership abilities?
You think if you just handed him peak Shaq he'd have ever faced that type of adversity and developed his personality and leadership style in the same way?
You think his ultra competitiveness that he developed as a child would never come out and clash with Shaqs similar level of competitiveness and desire to be the best?
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Re: #apples2oranges
Shaq was always deferential to MJ. They wouldn't have had the same problems he did with Kobe because MJ was an established vet and a legend already.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]Because peak Shaq>young Jordan.. I don't think anyone would disagree with this.[/QUOTE]
Even if one was to agree, all it would prove is that Shaq carried Bean.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=Young X]The problem in this thread is that people think MJ and Kobe have the same mentality when they don't. Just because Kobe and Shaq collided doesn't automatically mean MJ and Shaq would've. THEY ARE NOT THE SAME.[/QUOTE]
Exactly.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=Young X]The problem in this thread is that people think MJ and Kobe have the same mentality when they don't. Just because Kobe and Shaq collided doesn't automatically mean MJ and Shaq would've. THEY ARE NOT THE SAME.[/QUOTE]
If Kobe and Shaq had trouble because of their "egos" imagine Jordan with Shaq. I actually remember reading before Jordan telling Kobe something like if he was in Kobe's shoes he wouldn't be able to play with Shaq either back in '04.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=andgar923]Even if one was to agree, all it would prove is that Shaq carried Bean.[/QUOTE]
And that's alright..
But don't go on about MJ's leadership in this hypothetical when you know damn well he developed that leadership within his own circumstances during his early tenure on the Bulls.
Would not have been the same if he got it all handed to him from the start like a spoiled kid.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]Your boy andgar just said MJ was shy coming into the league.. That he wasn't the vocal leader he became when he first entered the NBA.
Do you not believe losing to the pistons and Celtics over and over with much less help didn't build his hunger, his role, and his leadership abilities?
You think if you just handed him peak Shaq he'd have ever faced that type of adversity and developed his personality and leadership style in the same way?
You think his ultra competitiveness that he developed as a child would never come out and clash with Shaqs similar level of competitiveness and desire to be the best?[/QUOTE]
That was in regards to being respectful. He led by example and was considered the leader at UNC.
MJ talked about his frustrations with his teammates as a rookie but didnt out of respect.
He was always a leader one way or another.
Shaq's main issues with Shaq were due to Kobe's selfish egotistical and arrogant personality.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]And that's alright..
But don't go on about MJ's leadership in this hypothetical when you know damn well he developed that leadership within his own circumstances during his early tenure on the Bulls.
Would not have been the same if he got it all handed to him from the start like a spoiled kid.[/QUOTE]
MJ was always a leader because we wanted to WIN. He simply didnt have teammates to win. He tried to lead by example early in his career but failed. He modified his approach as a leader no doubt but he was inherently a natural leader which is what Phil is basically saying.
Phil also gives us a glimpse at what a Shaq and MJ duo may have been like.
In short:
Pure dominance
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]And that's alright..
But don't go on about MJ's leadership in this hypothetical when you know damn well he developed that leadership within his own circumstances during his early tenure on the Bulls.
Would not have been the same if he got it all handed to him from the start like a spoiled kid.[/QUOTE]
As to MJ's circumstances....
What they did was simply add more fuel to his fire. He always wanted to win, the struggles only added more fuel.
If he had won early, his ultimate goal would've been Bill's ring count.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=andgar923]MJ was always a leader because we wanted to WIN. He simply didnt have teammates to win. He tried to lead by example early in his career but failed. He modified his approach as a leader no doubt [/QUOTE]
So you're admitting he modified his leadership style and approach based on his early failures.. Funny how he became the true legend everyone knows today after dealing with those specific circumstances.
MJ wasn't known as the leader he became in the 80s. He was actually seen as a player that was too individually focused in comparison to the legends before him Larry and magic. He changed dude. And it was under the adversity he faced. Pressure either shapes or breaks.
The reason it is apples and oranges is because MJ.. Wouldn't have been the same MJ with totally opposite circumstances.
You keep saying MJ only wanted to win.. When there's mountains of evidence contradicting that saying he wanted to be the BEST and win as the MAN.
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Re: #apples2oranges
What stupid hypotheticals. Really is incredible how much you people can speculate beyond the realms of logic and sanity.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=andgar923]
If he had won early, his ultimate goal would've been Bill's ring count.[/QUOTE]
If it was about ring count he wouldn't have retired to play baseball after winning three straight..
MJ just wanted to be the best.. That's it. And he would've done anything to get to the top.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=andgar923]MJ was always a leader because we wanted to WIN. He simply didnt have teammates to win. He tried to lead by example early in his career but failed. He modified his approach as a leader no doubt but he was inherently a natural leader which is what Phil is basically saying.
[/QUOTE]
Exactly, people always hear stories about how hard MJ was on his teammates without realizing he was hard on them because they were LOSING. Who wouldn't be mad at teammates who shoot a combined 24% in a game 7 after seeing them joking around in practice?
[QUOTE=Ne 1]If Kobe and Shaq had trouble because of their "egos" imagine Jordan with Shaq. I actually remember reading before Jordan telling Kobe something like if he was in Kobe's shoes he wouldn't be able to play with Shaq either back in '04.[/QUOTE]
MJ wouldn't be in Kobe's shoes tho, he was BETTER than Shaq. Even if he wasn't better than Shaq, I have a hard time believing MJ would rather lose with Bill Cartwright than win championships with Shaq. :kobe:
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]If it was about ring count he wouldn't have retired to play baseball after winning three straight..
MJ just wanted to be the best.. That's it. And he would've done anything to get to the top.[/QUOTE]
He retired due to gambling investigation, the being bored was a good cover. Don't you think he would've aimed at beating Magic's rings? He and Magic were jawing at each other during the Olympics.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]So you're admitting he modified his leadership style and approach based on his early failures.. Funny how he became the true legend everyone knows today after dealing with those specific circumstances.
MJ wasn't known as the leader he became in the 80s. He was actually seen as a player that was too individually focused in comparison to the legends before him Larry and magic. He changed dude. And it was under the adversity he faced. Pressure either shapes or breaks.
The reason it is apples and oranges is because MJ.. Wouldn't have been the same MJ with totally opposite circumstances.
You keep saying MJ only wanted to win.. When there's mountains of evidence contradicting that saying he wanted to be the BEST and win as the MAN.[/QUOTE]
Main difference was addressed by Phil.
MJ did whatever it took to win. Kobe did whatever it took to get his.
HUGE difference
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=andgar923]Main difference was addressed by Phil.
MJ did whatever it took to win. Kobe did whatever it took to get his.
HUGE difference[/QUOTE]
That's just not true. They both did whatever it took to get theirs.
The difference is that MJ was better, and him getting his lead to winning more so than it did for Kobe.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=Doranku]That's just not true. They both did whatever it took to get theirs.
The difference is that MJ was better, and him getting his lead to winning more so than it did for Kobe.[/QUOTE]
That's not what Phil alluded to.
MJ did other things to win if he wasn't shooting well, MJ's leadership was inherently superior all according to Phil.
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Re: #apples2oranges
Yes, Kobe was blessed to play with Shaq, but on the flip-side looking at it there's certain things you learn and develop quicker when you are the #1 guy. In Kobe's case it would be his intelligence, passing (or rather willingness to do it), leadership, creativity (would definitely have to create more for others), skill, all of which improved rapidly when he was given the team. If he had this privilege since around 2001ish...one can only wonder how many 33+ ppg seasons we could have seen. He also would have had the chance to wait and have a championship contending team built around him so years like 2006 and 2007 (ages at which Jordan won rings...and prime ages for most players) wouldn't be completely wasted.
Ideal situation for maximizing your legacy is getting a chance to put up mind blowing stats early on in your career as you wait for your team to improve. If you lose in the playoffs, it's because of the lack of supporting cast so you're excused. Then as you get around 26-27 years old, management should have put nice pieces around you (unless they fu*ck up) and you are on a contender for your prime and late-prime years (as #1 option, which is key). Helps even more if the competition at the top of the league wanes as your team gets better. This gives you all those early individual accomplishments and then later on the team ones as well.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]So you're admitting he modified his leadership style and approach based on his early failures.. Funny how he became the true legend everyone knows today after dealing with those specific circumstances.
[B]MJ wasn't known as the leader he became in the 80s. He was actually seen as a player that was too individually focused[/B] in comparison to the legends before him Larry and magic. He changed dude. And it was under the adversity he faced. Pressure either shapes or breaks.
The reason it is apples and oranges is because MJ.. Wouldn't have been the same MJ with totally opposite circumstances.
You keep saying MJ only wanted to win.. When there's mountains of evidence contradicting that saying he wanted to be the BEST and win as the MAN.[/QUOTE]
This.....early on MJ was viewed a ballhogg who was not going to win playing a selfish style.
The whole..." I just want to win.....but my teammates aren't good enough"....schtick is great for revisionist history and selling books...
Jordan was selfish and wanted to score or be viewed as the "man"....Phil Jackson helped him become more of a facilitator...
- Championship Jordan played through his team early and picked his spots....then took over in crunchtime.....
- the same role championship Kobe had...both had similar results.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=Mr. Jabbar]Both are fruits? :confusedshrug: [/QUOTE]
:lol
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Re: #apples2oranges
[IMG]http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/18nyp3ub1e4ilgif/k-bigpic.gif[/IMG]
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=Ne 1]Yes, Kobe was blessed to play with Shaq, but on the flip-side looking at it there's certain things you learn and develop quicker when you are the #1 guy. In Kobe's case it would be his intelligence, passing (or rather willingness to do it), leadership, creativity (would definitely have to create more for others), skill, all of which improved rapidly when he was given the team. [/QUOTE]
Intelligence - You would think playing with great teammates from the beginning of his career would help him become a much greater decision maker ala Magic and Bird right? Who both played with great players there whole career and as a result, never really had a problem with balance.
Passing (willingness to do it) - WTF, this is absolutely ridiculous. Playing with great teammates from the beginning of your career should make a player MORE WILLING to pass. What sense does that make? If a player is playing with crap from the beginning of his career and for a long time, how would that make a player a more willing passer?
Leadership - Sure, Kobe didn't get as much opportunity to experience that as much as someone like Jordan or Lebron. However, its ridiculous to act like the guy got no experience at all. During the time with Shaq, Shaq missed a total of 110 games. That's alot of time. Now much of that is from Kobe's early years, but its nobody's fault Kobe just wasn't that good his first few years. On top of that during much of that time, Kobe was the man in the 4th quarter that was carrying his teams to victories because Shaq was such a liability. And because of the great teams around him and Shaq's liabilities, he experienced many deep playoff runs where he got the opportunity to lead these teams in close games. Seriously, the whole "leadership" argument is overexaggerated.
Creativity (would definitly have to create more for others) - Umm, wasn't Kobe considered the "primary facilitator" for these Laker teams? So wasn't he the guy that had the greatest responsibility in "creating for others"?
Skill - :oldlol: seriously this is getting ridiculous. So Kobe didn't get to work on his game as much cause of Shaq? Just because he might've not been able to showcase his skills as much doesn't mean he didn't have the opportunity to develop his skill.
[QUOTE=Ne 1]
If he had this privilege since around 2001ish...one can only wonder how many 33+ ppg seasons we could have seen. [/QUOTE]
Well in the 9 seasons he's had since playing with Shaq, he's done it once, and thats when he was in his "prime ages" that you referred to. So going by those rates, probably about 0-1.
[QUOTE=Ne 1]
He also would have had the chance to wait and have a championship contending team built around him so years like 2006 and 2007 (ages at which Jordan won rings...and prime ages for most players) wouldn't be completely wasted.[/QUOTE]
Jordan was greater then Kobe ever was by arguably 24, at least 25 which was the beginning of his prime. From the beginning of his career till about 27 (1990), his all-time great basketball ability was wasted with crap teammates. Its completely ridiculous to bring up Kobe's "wasted" years and compare it to Jordan.
[QUOTE=Ne 1]
Ideal situation for maximizing your legacy is getting a chance to put up mind blowing stats early on in your career as you wait for your team to improve. If you lose in the playoffs, it's because of the lack of supporting cast so you're excused. Then as you get around 26-27 years old, management should have put nice pieces around you (unless they fu*ck up) and you are on a contender for your prime and late-prime years (as #1 option, which is key).
[/QUOTE]
:oldlol: thats funny cause Jordan was putting up mind blowing stats even when he was playing on championship teams. During the first three peat he put up statlines of 32/6/6 on 54 FG%, 30/6/6 on 52 FG%, and 33/7/6 on 50 FG%. Sure, its not as great as his previous 4 years, but you really think it was more ideal for him to put up mindblowing stats while getting nowhere with his crap teams instead of winning championships/seriously contending with great teams while putting up a little less mindblowing stats? Seriously, when has it ever been a good thing for someone to spend half of his career with teams that sucked?
[QUOTE=Ne 1]
Helps even more if the competition at the top of the league wanes as your team gets better. [/QUOTE]
It helped Bird and Magic that Jordan had nowhere near a good team to contend with them. For 8 years, it helped that Kobe didn't have to be another ringless player in the way of one of the most dominating players ever, and instead got to win rings with him and propell himself to a reputation that he probably wouldn't be at right now (2 titles vs. 5 titles). After those 8 years, it helped Kobe that a trio like KG/Pierce/Allen didn't get together sooner at younger ages, and that Lebron and Wade didn't have contending teams for most of that time. In other words, this is a stupid observation.
[QUOTE=Ne 1]
This gives you all those early individual accomplishments and then later on the team ones as well.[/QUOTE]
Doesn't sound like it was ever a problem a with Magic and Bird. Both of those guys were putting up mindblowing stats with all-time great teams. The same can be said about Jordan. How come you don't say Kareem had an ideal situation? He got all the opportunity to put up mindblowing stats on bad teams and then he had about the same amount of teams to contend for titles.
Anyway, its completely ridiculous to act like Kobe hasn't had a fair shot at enhancing his legacy. At this point, he's had 14 out of 17 seasons where he had help around him good enough to contend, so he literally may have had the greatest opportunity out of everyone in history to enhance his legacy.
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Re: #apples2oranges
a lot of speculation and hypothetical situations going on in this thread
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Re: #apples2oranges
Kobe is insecure as shit to write this. He's clearly holding on to that reason in any comparison to Jordan. Its funny because what Phil said in those quotes at least HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH SHAQ or career achievements. Phil doesn't say anything like "if Kobe got to lead his own team from the beginning he would've been a better player and accomplished more i.e. like Jordan." To basically steer the argument in a different direction reeks of insecurity.
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Re: #apples2oranges
Any pre Wizards version of MJ with Shaq for 8 years? At minimum 5 titles.
So if the situations were reversed Kobe
You would have 2 or 3 titles.
MJ would have 8 to 10 titles.
The gap would be even bigger than it currently is.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=DMAVS41]Any pre Wizards version of MJ with Shaq for 8 years? At minimum 5 titles.
So if the situations were reversed Kobe
You would have 2 or 3 titles.
MJ would have 8 to 10 titles.
The gap would be even bigger than it currently is.[/QUOTE]
Can't believe we have idiots trying to spin this in a way to say that Shaq was a negative for Kobe's legacy :facepalm
[QUOTE]Ideal situation for maximizing your legacy is getting a chance to put up mind blowing stats early on in your career as you wait for your team to improve. If you lose in the playoffs, it's because of the lack of supporting cast so you're excused. Then as you get around 26-27 years old, management should have put nice pieces around you (unless they fu*ck up) and you are on a contender for your prime and late-prime years (as #1 option, which is key).
Read more at [url]http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=300302&page=8#4VYCkIJbMDFQ3tI3.99[/url] [/QUOTE]
:roll: :roll: :roll:
So you think being drafted to a crap team for the first 7 years of your career is better for your legacy than being put in a position to win championships from the get go? Trust me, when all is said and done, people mostly care about rings. Those extra rings you got early on are going to boost your legacy waaaay more than those extra 1-2 ppg on 1-2% less FG% will.
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Re: #apples2oranges
Damn Kobe so insecure. Anyways, I'll take MJ + Shaq any day of the week. Kobe and Scottie would be a joke and I love Scottie's defense. Scottie loved draining 3's on fast break which is kind of dumb after a nice steal then you get Kobe chucking :facepalm and his overated D.
I would have loved to see MJ+Shaq vs Kobe+Scottie two on two. Shaq dunking on Scottie and his strong post game with MJ's classic high percentage fadeaway -- both high percentage players.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=LongLiveTheKing]Kobe acts like playing with Shaq was a burden on him?
Bitch he carried you for 3 titles.[/QUOTE]
Kobe would have won 5 Finals MVP's by now bitchaz ni99a
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=ispin69]Damn Kobe so insecure. Anyways, I'll take MJ + Shaq any day of the week.[B] Kobe and Scottie would be a joke and I love Scottie's defense.[/B] Scottie loved draining 3's on fast break which is kind of dumb after a nice steal then you get Kobe chucking :facepalm and his overated D.
I would have loved to see MJ+Shaq vs Kobe+Scottie two on two. Shaq dunking on Scottie and his strong post game with MJ's classic high percentage fadeaway -- both high percentage players.[/QUOTE]
lol:oldlol:
No basketball knowledge
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=LongLiveTheKing]Kobe acts like playing with Shaq was a burden on him?
Bitch he carried you for 3 titles.[/QUOTE]
Kobe has always been an ungrateful bitch, what's new.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=DMAVS41]Any pre Wizards version of MJ with Shaq for 8 years? At minimum 5 titles.
So if the situations were reversed Kobe
You would have 2 or 3 titles.
MJ would have 8 to 10 titles.
The gap would be even bigger than it currently is.[/QUOTE]
Im sorry, but this post is way, way too simplistic and doesnt have its roots grounded in reality.
First off you have to use context of what would happen in this scenario.
Rookie MJ would join the Lakers in the late 90s and be a promising young player alongside a very dominant Shaquille Oneal. We all know the offense wouldve still ran through Shaq, and MJ wouldnt have been given full reign to ball out like he did in his first year with the Bulls. Shaq wouldve been the undisputed man.
We all know MJ was a firery competitor and always wanted to be the best. Thats was his goal. To be the best. We all know MJ had a great work ethic, and we also know that he had a hard time trusting his teammates up until 6+ years into his career when Phil reigned him in and made him develop a trust in the system. He was very much seen as an individual type talent and not a true team player ala the greats before him Magic and Larry. That was the main knock on early MJ.
Now, you give a guy who wants to be the best to ever do it, who is insanely competitive and pushes others around him to work as hard as he did, a dominant entering his prime SHAQ and what happens?
They win 2-3 titles within the first 4-5 years easy.. and who gets the credit? Obviously Shaq. He would still feast on the subpar frontlines in th EAST and would still win FMVPs and be seen as the 'man' on those teams.
How does MJ respond to that?
Possessing many of the same traits Kobe does but to a larger than life degree(the real version-competitiveness, the ultimate dick, workaholic, physcotic confidence) MJ wouldve likely tried to get his share of the glory himself and wouldve gunned for FMVPs and to be the featured weapon etc.
Except MJ wouldve done it BETTER than Kobe and he wouldve actually won some of those awards over Shaq because he was actually that good. So say they win 2-3 titles with Shaq getting the glory and then they win their first one with MJ getting the FMVP and large share of the credit?
How does Shaq respond to that? The same Shaq that fueded with Penny.. and Kobe.. and Wade isnt going to fued with perhaps the most demanding and dickheaded player of all time stealing his thunder in the dead middle of his prime ? What?
Guarantee that relationship goes sour well before 5 titles, much less 8 or 10. Thats a joke because we SAW MJ get bored after winning three straight and retire to play baseball. But hes not going to get bored cakewalking to multiple chips with Shaq? MJ always wanted a challenge.
Not only that, but according to andgar, MJ left the league after his three chips because of a giant gambling conspiracy. And were going to act like that type of shit wouldnt affect his ability to stack titles? Having to leave the league under a guise in the middle of his prime because his competitive nature backfired on him(extreme addiction to gambling)?
Not only that but if you look at MJ's leadership.. it was largely built under his tenure with the Bulls where he had to fight it out with undermanned squads against legendary opponents like the C's and Bad Boy Pistons. He built that character and hunger to win through adversity and failing time and time again.. getting nailed in the me3dia for being too selfish and not being good enough. He BUILT that leadership.
It would not have been the same if he got it handed to him from the start. He wouldnt have learned and grown the same way as a player.
This stuff is delicate. It s not a video game where you add up imaginary numbers.
As far as Kobe? Well never know because Pippen developed under MJ.. and so did Kobe actually lol.. Well never know. He literally couldve been a journeyman. You cant just transpose players onto teams without looking at their circumstances. And since Kobe patterned his game from MJ, we would have to assume hed pattern his game off Dr. J or some other great from before him in this hypothetical. Its too messy at that point though.
And sorry for the pauk style essay lol
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=tpols]Im sorry, but this post is way, way too simplistic and doesnt have its roots grounded in reality.
First off you have to use context of what would happen in this scenario.
Rookie MJ would join the Lakers in the late 90s and be a promising young player alongside a very dominant Shaquille Oneal. We all know the offense wouldve still ran through Shaq, and MJ wouldnt have been given full reign to ball out like he did in his first year with the Bulls. Shaq wouldve been the undisputed man.
We all know MJ was a firery competitor and always wanted to be the best. Thats was his goal. To be the best. We all know MJ had a great work ethic, and we also know that he had a hard time trusting his teammates up until 6+ years into his career when Phil reigned him in and made him develop a trust in the system. He was very much seen as an individual type talent and not a true team player ala the greats before him Magic and Larry. That was the main knock on early MJ.
Now, you give a guy who wants to be the best to ever do it, who is insanely competitive and pushes others around him to work as hard as he did, a dominant entering his prime SHAQ and what happens?
They win 2-3 titles within the first 4-5 years easy.. and who gets the credit? Obviously Shaq. He would still feast on the subpar frontlines in th EAST and would still win FMVPs and be seen as the 'man' on those teams.
How does MJ respond to that?
Possessing many of the same traits Kobe does but to a larger than life degree(the real version-competitiveness, the ultimate dick, workaholic, physcotic confidence) MJ wouldve likely tried to get his share of the glory himself and wouldve gunned for FMVPs and to be the featured weapon etc.
Except MJ wouldve done it BETTER than Kobe and he wouldve actually won some of those awards over Shaq because he was actually that good. So say they win 2-3 titles with Shaq getting the glory and then they win their first one with MJ getting the FMVP and large share of the credit?
How does Shaq respond to that? The same Shaq that fueded with Penny.. and Kobe.. and Wade isnt going to fued with perhaps the most demanding and dickheaded player of all time? What?
Guarantee that relationship goes sour well before 5 titles, much less 8 or 10. Thats a joke because we SAW MJ get bored after winning three straight and retire to play baseball. But hes not going to get bored cakewalking to multiple chips with Shaq? MJ always wanted a challenge.
Not only that, but according to andgar, MJ left the league after his three chips because of a giant gambling conspiracy. And were going to act like that type of shit wouldnt affect his ability to stack titles? Having to leave the league under a guise in the middle of his prime because his competitive nature backfired on him(extreme addiction to gambling)?
Not only that but if you look at MJ's leadership.. it was largely built under his tenure with the Bulls where he had to fight it out with undermanned squads against legendary opponents like the C's and Bad Boy Pistons. He built that character and hunger to win through adversity and failing time and time again.. getting nailed in the me3dia for being too selfish and not being good enough. He BUILT that leadership.
It would not have been the same if he got it handed to him from the start. He wouldnt have learned and grown the same way as a player.
This stuff is delicate. It s not a video game where you add up imaginary numbers.
As far as Kobe? Well never know because Pippen developed under MJ.. and so did Kobe actually lol.. Well never know. He literally couldve been a journeyman. You cant just transpose players onto teams without looking at their circumstances. And since Kobe patterned his game from MJ, we would have to assume hed pattern his game off Dr. J or some other great from before him in this hypothetical. Its too messy at that point though.
And sorry for the pauk style essay lol[/QUOTE]
^^^
This is what happens when people let the personal bias cloud their judgement.
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=Poochymama]^^^
This is what happens when people let the personal bias cloud their judgement.[/QUOTE]
Care to explain where you disagree?
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=Poochymama]^^^
This is what happens when people let the personal bias cloud their judgement.[/QUOTE]
This. My god tpols, you REALLY love Kobe man. :oldlol:
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=kuniva_dAMiGhTy]This. My god tpols, you REALLY love Kobe man. :oldlol:[/QUOTE]
Apparently a "Nets fan" too ... very similar to Heavincent. East coast people who defend Kobe like the fiercest of LA stans (YMF, AlphaWolf24, eliteballer, etc)
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Re: #apples2oranges
[QUOTE=Deuce Bigalow]Maybe you were born in 01 or 02 so you probably don't know about the playoff series verses the Spurs those years.[/QUOTE]
In 02, the refs won that title for you?
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Re: #apples2oranges
Damn.. and I didnt even defend Kobe there.
You guys think Jordans too untouchable.
Honestly Im all ears to anything you disagree on, since youre probably more knowledgeable on the character traits and abilities and career paths of early shaq and early MJ.
Enlighten me if Im that off base.