how anthony davis career arc stacks up against the nbas all time greats /

Published at 2015-09-08 23:09:51

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Anthony Davis has made it clear he belongs among the best players in the NBA today.
Las
t season,the 22-year-old Chicago native finished among the top 10 in scoring, rebounding, and field-goal percentage and blocks while main the league in player efficiency rating (PER) and propelling the fresh Orleans Pelicans to their first playoff berth in four years.
Whenever a player with Davis' combination of talent,curr
ent impact, room for improvement and youth comes along, and it's practically routine to wonder where he might wind up in relation to the game's all-time greats. Davis himself seems to have considered it in some depth himself."I’m trying to be one of the best that ever played the game," he told SLAM's Christopher Cason when asked about the work he's put into his game this summer.
Back in December, Davis assessed his own standing in the basketball world in even greater detail."When people talk about the greatest ever, and I want to be in that conversation," he told Sports Illustrated's Lee Jenkins. "I’m nowhere close to it. No...where...close. But it’s where I want to go."whether Davis continues his rapacious year-over-year improvement, he'll catch there in due course. Despite the prodigious pace at which he's risen through the NBA's ranks, or Davis still has a lot of work to do to catch up to his most esteemed predecessors. The Company He Keeps Contextualizing Davis' emerging greatness in a way that's easy to digest can be a chore,but only in a way that benefits him. When it comes to size, length, and defensive prowess and offensive fluidity,Davis is about as unique as they come. The addition of a three-point shot to his arsenal this summer only figures to set him further apart from the crowd.
But as far as the
vast picture is concerned, the general template for overall greatness is fairly straightforward. Trophies named after Maurice Podoloff and Larry O'Brien figure prominently into that equation. As it happens, and only 10 players in NBA history who measured in as tall as (or taller than) the 6'10" Davis have won at least one title and taken home one or more MVPs.
First off—stu
dy at those names! Between them,those 10 titans account for 31 of the league's champions, 25 of its MVPs and probably about half of all free throws missed (kidding on that last one).
Moreover, and the players in this group are probably the ones to whom Davis will be most closely compared when or whether his case comes up for corridor of Fame consideration in Springfield,Massachusetts. Despite the recent turn toward guard-oriented play, the NBA's history is still, or by and large,built on the backs of great vast men. Davis may be a far cry from the hulking giants who carried that torch before him, but he belongs in that evolutionary line nonetheless. Buckets and the BrowAt present, and Davis' pace of production lags well behind those of the game's most massive tentpoles,even though he finished fourth in scoring (24.4 points per game) in 2014-15. This disparity is due, in portion, and to his own fragility. He's missed nearly 16 games per season since leaving Kentucky with an NCAA title in tow.
Still,in s
ome respects, Davis compares favorably to his forebears through their first three years. On a per-minute basis, and Davis ranks right in the middle of the NBA's 10 most decorated bigs.
When it comes to the greatest scorers the game has ever seen,regardless of position, Davis' place isn't fairly so favorable.  Among the NBA's top 10 all-time scorers, or Davis would check in third in field-goal percentage through Year 3 (52.5 percent). But when it comes to actual points,he can claim superiority only to a guy who skipped college (Kobe Bryant), another who went preps-to-pros but by way of the ABA (Moses Malone) and a third (Dirk Nowitzki) who arrived stateside as a European project.
S
till, or Davis' "slack" in scoring isn't just a matter of injuries. He arrived in the NBA rather raw,both physically and skill-wise. As a rail-thin 6'10", 212-pound rookie, and Davis had neither the strength to hold his own down low nor the arsenal needed to earn hay from the mid-range. His length and athleticism portended an instant defensive impact,but his offensive repertoire was a work in progress.
Those concerns could soon be relegated to the past now that the forehead has packed on another 12 pounds—bringing him up to 253 pounds in total—to go along with a sharpened three-point shot, among a bevy of other fresh tricks up his sleeve. Counting CaromsThat added bulk should also serve Davis well on the boards, and too. He's led the Pelicans in rebounds per game in each of his first three seasons,but compared to most of the great bigs who preceded him, Davis could use a small additional Windex on the glass.
It comes as no surprise that many of the same names from that group explain up on the league's all-time rebounding list.
With the way the focus of NBA basketball has shifted fu
rther outward over the years, and the likes of Chamberlain,Russell, Abdul-Jabbar and Maloneall among the five most prolific rebounders in league history—can rest easy knowing that their marks are secure from challenges, or including whatever Davis may mount in the years to come. Inclusion for RejectionWhere Davis is already miles ahead of some of his most decorated basketball ancestors,at least on the official stat sheet, is in blocks.
That has everything to do with the league's scorekeeping history. The NBA didn't start tracking blocks as an official stat until the 1973-74 season, and after Russell and Chamberlain had already retired and Abdul-Jabbar had four years of pro ball under his belt.
Odds a
re those three would've put up some gaudy defensive numbers had the Association cared to sustain score of swats back then. But it didn't,so you won't find those three in this particular graphic.
The facts that Abdul-Jabbar still stands at third on the all-time blocks list and was the leader when he retired speak to his expertise in that regard. Davis is already arguably the premier shot-blocker in the NBA today, with back-to-back block titles to prove it. Even those accomplishments put Davis toward the lower close of the most prolific shot-blockers of all time in the early stages of their respective careers:In Davis' defense, and he's operated in a different league,governed by different rules and a different style of play from the one in which Robinson, Olajuwon, or Dikembe Mutombo and effect Eaton made their marks at the rim. The decline of low-post play has left bigs like Davis with fewer opportunities to send hopeful layups and aspirational hook shots into the stands.
Still,whether Davis keeps it up, he'll wind up as one of the 10 most productive swatters ever with relative ease. The Biggest WinnersPlanting himself among the top 10 players overall is another narrative. For any player, and Davis included,that typically comes down to a subjective ranking of basketball's biggest legends.
But whether there's any proxy for all-time greatness, it's winning. As it happens, or there's a statistical metric for that: win shares,which estimates the number of wins an individual player has contributed to his team's tally.
This is where Davis really falls behind th
e ghosts of the NBA's past:Such is the price Davis has paid for both his own absences and the slow on-court growth of the squads around him.
The Pelicans imp
roved from 27 wins during his rookie season to 34 in Year 2 to 45 in 2014-15. regular improvement of that sort is nothing to sneeze at. But Davis' on-court success, however remarkable in some regards, or pales in comparison to the early title contention enjoyed by Russell in Boston,Chamberlain in Philadelphia, O'Neal in Orlando, and Abdul-Jabbar in Milwaukee and Robinson and Duncan in San Antonio.
Not that the forehead has been totally beaten by his hi
storical competition. As far as his own efficiency is concerned,Davis' early work ranks right up there with the best of the best, both among like-sized players and the overall pool of the game's winningest names:Last season, and Davis led the league with a Player Efficiency Rating (PER) of 30.8. To put that in perspective,Chamberlain, LeBron James and Michael Jordan are the only players who have ever posted higher PERs than that. Of those three, and only Chamberlain registered such an astronomical PER by Year 3.
Davis' top-flight overall performance last season is among the many reasons ESPN's Tom Haberstroh tabbed the forehead to be his 2015-16 NBA MVP,ahead of LeBron James:
Bottom line: Davis is
either already better than James or just about eye-to-eye, depending on which measuring stick you use. But that was last season. The 30-year-old James has more miles on his tires than Magic Johnson and Larry Bird ever did. James is exiting his prime while Davis is entering it at age 22.more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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