Basketball from a fan perspective
My
Top 10 NYC basketball players
Over the generations New
York City basketball has turned out a who’s who list of outstanding basketball
talent over the years. Once upon a time the
great majority of the city’s talent remained in the metro, they attended St.
John’s, Columbia, Iona, Rutgers, and others.
All that’s changed now in more recent years, high school talent has left
the city in droves for other programs throughout the country.
Metro NYC continues to
produce some of the best basketball talent in the nation it’s just visible
elsewhere. A recent example would be the
Knicks top 2020 pick Obi Topping, born in Brooklyn he played his basketball at
the University of Dayton. As for the
history even basketball hotbeds like Chicago, Los Angeles and others cannot
compete with this list. Keep in mind we
are discussing high school talent; we are excluding any pro career they might
have experienced.
1.Kareem Abdul Jabbar
2.Julius Erving
3.Nate ‘Tiny’ Archibald
4.Kenny Smith
5.Kenny Anderson
6.Stephon Marbury
7.Billy Cunningham
8.Roger Brown
9.Connie Hawkins
10.Bernard King
Our list is the top 10
athletes believe to represent the best of the best high school basketball
talent. There are several others who
could have been included but were omitted, it certainly wasn’t intentional your
list might contain them. We could have
included Albert King, Felipe Lopez, Lance Stephenson, Sebastian Telfair, Rafer
Alston and Ron Artest who barely missed my cut.
Although my decision was difficult I must state the names mentioned and
perhaps others were excluded due to space rather than talent in choosing my Top
10 All-Time greatest list.
We
do what we do
This is written November
24; additional player changes might have occurred by the time you read this
account. As of this date several
websites and talking heads on television have awarded grades to NBA teams
regarding the draft and free agency. Let’s
check a little closer, first I too fall into the trap as well so this should
not be considered a complete rather reality.
Awarding letter grades is the method we are accustomed; it provides us
an imaginary litmus test.
Despite the grade the
following is what a grading system fails to provide, we believe the Clippers
signing Kawhi Leonard is an A, we cannot see load management making it a C+ or
perhaps a B grade. In 2013 the Cavs made
Anthony Bennett of UNLV the top pick in that year’s draft, we later discovered
Bennett couldn’t play effectively at the NBA level. Scouting reports at the time indicated he
would be an “effective pro.” For
those old enough to remember the name one account had him rated as Larry
Johnson prior to injury.
These two examples are cited
as evidence grading systems often fail us.
Probably the best approach to make regarding the draft and free agency
is one of caution. That is the issue,
many want to be the first to say, “I told you so” is why we often
overlook potential landmines. We have no
ability to see into the future if that’s the case perhaps the Clippers and Cavs
would have taken a different course. On
the other hand, with all the information in front of them make the same
decision.
2020
deaths
As we head for the
midnight hour 2020 has been a traumatic year punctuated by the pandemic that
took full effect in March. The year
started January 1, the first day of the year came the announcement of the death
of David Stern former NBA Commissioner and the man generally given credit for
building the NBA what it is today. Stern
had fallen ill while at dinner but died in January of the year. Near the end of the month came word of the
helicopter crash killing Kobe Bryant his daughter and 7 other passengers and several
others. 2020 would see many well-known
names in the world of basketball die, the names are not in any date order. The basketball world mourned their loss,
please not the team they are most associated with is provided.
Tommy Heinsohn-Celtic player
and broadcaster
John Thompson-former Georgetown
coach
Lute Olson-former
Arizona head coach
Wes Unseld-Bullets and
former head coach
Jerry Sloan-Longtime
Jazz coach and former player
Mike Storen-ABA
Commissioner
Fred ‘Curly’ Neal-Harlem
Globetrotter
Cliff Robinson-Blazers
Naturally, this list should
not be considered complete, there are several names omitted. Our desire was to focus on the names familiar
to most with basketball history, R.I.P.