Thee Jazz Fan
Well-Known Member
Hard for me to leave off pistol, just such a unique player, love watching his games.
Same. I love to think about what he might have been had he played in the era of the 3 point shot with modern training techniques and such. He did so much with just what he had available to him. I think he would have nearly been a taller Steph with better handles and better moves around the basket and better play-making, which is terrifying to think about (if you are the opponent).Hard for me to leave off pistol, just such a unique player, love watching his games.
I must have missed the other post, maybe you deleted it.bump
Where is a mod to sticky this?
LogGrad98 said:
Thanks Mods for breathing new life into my thread and making it stick.
I don't know what I'd do without you guys. I won't give you any backhand compliments until tomorrow.
I didn't vote that way, but it's probably the actual top 10. I think this experiment of yours is working.40 seemed like a good number to do a recap for so far in the vote. Here is the list in current (40 votes) vote order, separated into top 10 and bottom 10, with the number of votes:
Top 10
K. Malone (39)
Stockton (38)
Rudy (38)
D Will (35)
Mitchell (34)
Pistol Pete (30)
Dantley (26)
AK47 (25)
Eaton (25)
Horny (21)
The rest
Hayward (16)
Boozer (13)
Griff (10)
Ingles (10)
Okur (8)
Millsap (7)
Big T (4)
Favors (4)
Truck (3)
J. Malone (1)
I think that top 10 could hang against some pretty good teams. Interested to see where we end up, and if we can get to over 60 voters. Kind of tells you we have about 60 people registered on JazzFanz that are active enough to at least vote. Let's keep it going folks!!
That should be next.How in the world does anyone leave Stockton and Malone off their vote? That makes zero sense, unless they are 20 years old.
I went with Dantley/Boozer/Griffith/Williams/Mitchell/Stockton/Malone/Eaton/Maravich/Gobert
I feel like the Utah Jazz wouldn't exist without Maravich. While I didn't get to watch him play, I've seen all the others (except Robinson). I picked the ones who in some way changed the team in a more positive direction, not just the players that were really good.
Now if we did a Most Loved Jazz Players of All Time List, mine would look a bit different.