He did sport a huge afro for a good majority of his career. Had to throw off accurate measurements.
Thats what his draft emasurements were; plus, he himself has stated several times that he is, in fact, 6'7".
I would guess, 6'9" with shoes. Here he is with the nearly 7'1 Darko
I guess he could have graduated to platform shoes later in his career. Its about the only way to explain the conflicting evidence.
Now that I do extra research, Rip Hamilton was drafted at 6'5"......
Regardless, my point still remains. Ben Wallace is seriously undersized as a center, yet he was arguably the best defender of his respective position our modern era of basketball has ever seen.
The guy had an enormous wingspan and probably the strongest player pound for pound in the NBA. He was a good leaper in his younger days as well.
This article is a good explanation.
https://www.82games.com/trueheight.htm
I need another hint. Like the fact that Big Ben often played alongside 6'11" Rasheed Wallace, rendering BW as effectively the nonscoring big man on the team alongside a semi-Memo-like center in 'Sheed. And that Big Ben is an even worse case of incomplete player than Dennis Rodman; at least DR had a few years in which he put up some major points. Your comparison is still apples (BW and DR as 4th or 5th scoring options) vs. oranges (Millsap, as PF on a PF-focused team with iffy wings, needing to be #2 scoring option at worst (unless Banks develops big time) AND a legit defender--something that neither Rodman or Wallace was routinely required to be).Hahahaha short players USED to be able to defend in the NBA, not anymore?? Heres a question for ya big guy: Which player of this decade was awarded the NBA Defensive Player of the Year award a record-tieing FOUR times?? Ill give you a hint, he played the center position even though he was only 6'7"(roughly Saps height, interestingly enough). And I never asked you whether Millsap "could hold his own" against Barkley, were talking about who's better and the answer is obvious despite the different eras.
I would guess, 6'9" with shoes. Here he is with the nearly 7'1 Darko
I need another hint. Like the fact that Big Ben often played alongside 6'11" Rasheed Wallace, rendering BW as effectively the nonscoring big man on the team alongside a semi-Memo-like center in 'Sheed. And that Big Ben is an even worse case of incomplete player than Dennis Rodman; at least DR had a few years in which he put up some major points. Your comparison is still apples (BW and DR as 4th or 5th scoring options) vs. oranges (Millsap, as PF on a PF-focused team with iffy wings, needing to be #2 scoring option at worst (unless Banks develops big time) AND a legit defender--something that neither Rodman or Wallace was routinely required to be).
And yes, the Big Ben era and the Mrs. Rodman era was a good decade or so ago. Since then, bigs have become increasingly athletic and possibly taller on average. You haven't moved the bar much.
Millsap has the work ethic and possibly the genes to develope himself toward the extraordinary strength (and thus defensive effectiveness) of Wallace and Rodman. But on a Jazz team really lacking a superstar (or two), more is needed from the 4 spot (or the 5 spot, for that matter) than a defensive specialist that a Jordan sidekick (or a center along a 6'11" 3-point-shooting "forward") provided. To this point, I haven't seen Millsap be nearly as physical as especially Rodman, partly because the Paperboy can't afford to get into foul trouble as much as those aforementioned defensive thugs can. While Rodman is more like a bejeweled Ron Artest, Millsap is more of a poor man's Carlos Boozer without the matador cape.
Hardly. 17.3 ppg on .578 TS, while being treated as the second or third option all season is fantastic. Millsap should have been given a lot more touches last season (and looking at the synergy sports stats for how he scored attests to his ability to score very efficiently in a variety of ways). Your statement above plus the "3rd most important player at best" comment earlier are real head-scratchers.Millsap is becoming more of a poor man's Carlos Boozer