Team Spycam1:
PG - Chauncey Billups / Rajon Rondo
SG - Dwyane Wade / Dale Ellis / Andre Iguodala
SF - Larry Bird / Glen Rice
PF - Dennis Rodman / Blake Griffin
C - Hakeem Olajuwon / Mark Eaton / Joakim Noah
Team White Chocolate:
PG - John Stockton / Bob Cousy
SG - Pete Maravich / Elgin Baylor
SF - Ron Artest / Rashard Lewis / Antoine Walker
PF - Julius Erving / Amar'e Stoudemire
C - Bill Walton / Willis Reed / Wes Unseld
Spycam1's Case:
n/a
White Chocolate's Case:
Positionless Basketball
The best statistical season for each of my starting-five:
John Stockton - 17.2 PPG, 14.5 APG, 2.7 SPG, 2.6 RPG, 41.6% from three.
Pete Maravich - 31.1 PPG, 5.4 APG, 5.1 RPG, 1.2 SPG, 84% from the line.
Ron Artest - 20.5 PPG, 5.8 RPG, 3.5 APG, 2.3 SPG, 38% from three.
Julius Erving - 31.9 PPG, 12.2 RPG, 4.2 APG, 2.5 SPG, 1.8 BPG, 49.7% from field.
Bill Walton - 18.6 PPG, 14.4 RPG, 3.8 APG, 3.2 BPG, 52.8% from field.
From Dr. J's autobiography:
John Stockton - 5× NBA All-Defensive Second Team (1989, 1991–1992, 1995, 1997)
Ron Artest - NBA Defensive Player of the Year (2004), 2× All-Defensive First Team (2004, 2006), 2× All-Defensive Second Team (2003, 2009)
Julius Erving - ABA All-Defensive First Team (1976)
Bill Walton - 2× NBA All-Defensive First Team (1977–1978)
John Stockton would guard Chauncey Billups.
Ron Artest would guard Larry Bird.
Julius Erving would guard Dwyane Wade.
Bill Walton and Pete Maravich would regularly double-team Hakeem Olajuwon.
We're going to make Dennis Rodman beat us on the offensive end.
My team will have enough spacing on the offensive end, whoever Rodman guards will be out on the perimeter limiting his rebounding.
John Stockton's career best from three is 44.9% on 227 attempts, Ron Artest's is 40% on 383 attempts, and Pete Maravich's is 66.7% on 15 attempts (small sample size, but can you imagine?).
John Stockton - Pete Maravich - Julius Erving running the break would be something truly beautiful to watch.
Lastly, my bench is superior to Spy's. Two scoring machines in Elgin Baylor and Amar'e Stoudemire off the bench and two MVP's of the league in Reed and Unseld also waiting on the bench, w/ Cousy tying it all together being the distributor of the second unit. Thank you for taking the time to read my write-up and vote for who you think would win this matchup.
PG - Chauncey Billups / Rajon Rondo
SG - Dwyane Wade / Dale Ellis / Andre Iguodala
SF - Larry Bird / Glen Rice
PF - Dennis Rodman / Blake Griffin
C - Hakeem Olajuwon / Mark Eaton / Joakim Noah
Team White Chocolate:
PG - John Stockton / Bob Cousy
SG - Pete Maravich / Elgin Baylor
SF - Ron Artest / Rashard Lewis / Antoine Walker
PF - Julius Erving / Amar'e Stoudemire
C - Bill Walton / Willis Reed / Wes Unseld
Spycam1's Case:
n/a
White Chocolate's Case:
Positionless Basketball
"We don’t want to define positions," Quin Snyder said. "We think basketball should be positionless. We want to have great shots each time down the floor."

The best statistical season for each of my starting-five:
John Stockton - 17.2 PPG, 14.5 APG, 2.7 SPG, 2.6 RPG, 41.6% from three.
Pete Maravich - 31.1 PPG, 5.4 APG, 5.1 RPG, 1.2 SPG, 84% from the line.
Ron Artest - 20.5 PPG, 5.8 RPG, 3.5 APG, 2.3 SPG, 38% from three.
Julius Erving - 31.9 PPG, 12.2 RPG, 4.2 APG, 2.5 SPG, 1.8 BPG, 49.7% from field.
Bill Walton - 18.6 PPG, 14.4 RPG, 3.8 APG, 3.2 BPG, 52.8% from field.
From Dr. J's autobiography:
From the first day of training camp, Pete and I hit it off. He's a soft-spoken guy, sort of like me, and a little bit in his own world, but then sometimes I can seem that way too. I'm not aloof, but when I'm playing, I get so focused that I almost seem to lose intensity when I'm actually just totally into the game. Pete is the same way.
But when you're playing with Pete, you realize that his game, which on TV looks like a flashier version of what I was familiar with from watching the Globetrotters, is actually much faster than anyone who is doing that kind of dribble, cross-over, snap-pass, no-look stuff. Pete has all of the Globetrotters moves, but he can do them at unimaginable speeds. He's one of the fastest players I've ever played with.
Bob Ryan from the Boston Globe:Pete Maravich is the most skilled basketball player I've ever seen.
If Planet Earth were involved in a winner-take-all one-game basketball playoff against an alien invader, the loser to go into servitude for all eternity, my first pick of anyone who has ever played basketball in our known world would be a healthy Bill Walton. He was the most complete center ever, the perfect control tower through which to run both your offense and your defense.
John Stockton - 5× NBA All-Defensive Second Team (1989, 1991–1992, 1995, 1997)
Ron Artest - NBA Defensive Player of the Year (2004), 2× All-Defensive First Team (2004, 2006), 2× All-Defensive Second Team (2003, 2009)
Julius Erving - ABA All-Defensive First Team (1976)
Bill Walton - 2× NBA All-Defensive First Team (1977–1978)
John Stockton would guard Chauncey Billups.
Ron Artest would guard Larry Bird.
Julius Erving would guard Dwyane Wade.
Bill Walton and Pete Maravich would regularly double-team Hakeem Olajuwon.
We're going to make Dennis Rodman beat us on the offensive end.
My team will have enough spacing on the offensive end, whoever Rodman guards will be out on the perimeter limiting his rebounding.
John Stockton's career best from three is 44.9% on 227 attempts, Ron Artest's is 40% on 383 attempts, and Pete Maravich's is 66.7% on 15 attempts (small sample size, but can you imagine?).
John Stockton - Pete Maravich - Julius Erving running the break would be something truly beautiful to watch.
Lastly, my bench is superior to Spy's. Two scoring machines in Elgin Baylor and Amar'e Stoudemire off the bench and two MVP's of the league in Reed and Unseld also waiting on the bench, w/ Cousy tying it all together being the distributor of the second unit. Thank you for taking the time to read my write-up and vote for who you think would win this matchup.