Thoughts on Chris Paul Retiring

After a long and storied career, Chris Paul will be retiring after this season. The Clippers are not a very good team right now, and the sheer fact that he doesn't see the floor much must have been the push he needed to finally hang it up. Let’s discuss.

Chris Paul will go down as one of the greatest point guards to ever play the game. He was as wily as they got at that position. For such a small guy, in NBA terms, he found a way to score and assist and irritate and frustrate his opponents and sometimes his teammates. Paul was like the principal out there on the court. Any little discrepancy or what he considered wrong doing, he would call people out on it. Chris Paul would frustrate me as a fan because I always knew he was going to pull some kind of nonsense that would drive me nuts. But then he would do something that was so incredible that I would forget all about his pettiness. I have actively rooted against him his whole career, but that's not to say that I did not recognize and appreciate how great of a player he was his entire career.

I remember first seeing him when he was in college at Wake Forest. It blew my mind that someone as small as him controlled the entire game. Wake Forest ran everything through him. He was the end all be all for that team. During his time at Wake he was an All American and ACC rookie of the year, as well as being a perennial all ACC player. His excellent college career propelled him to the fourth overall pick in the 2005 draft. The Hornets, then of New Orleans, struck gold when the Bucks, Hawks and Jazz passed on him. CP3 may have been the best, and most prepared prospect in that entire draft. He was rookie of the year and first team all rookie. He made the Hornets relevant. He turned a moribound franchise into a playoff contender. His opponents hated playing him because of his attention to detail, but also because of his play on the court.

After pushing the Lakers in round one with the Hornets, the lock out came and suddenly CP3 was available. It looked like he was all but certain to get traded to the Lakers, but David Stern vetoed the deal. I still don't know why, but it was a big deal and it changed a lot of things in the NBA. He did end up in LA, but not with the Lakers. He was a Clipper. And he helped usher in one of the more fun teams to watch and root against. I despised the "Lob City" Clippers. They drove me nuts. I like to say it was because they didn't win anything, which they didn't, but it was the hype surrounding a team that never really lived up to the hype. They had flashy names on the roster, but when it came time to really win something important, the "Lob City" Clippers always found ways to blow it. But the one constant, the one guy that showed up most of the times, he did have his bad, bad games in there, was Chris Paul. He seemed ready for the moment 99 percent of the time. The 1 percent was a spectacular disaster, but for the most part, CP3 was a clutch player. After the "Lob City" Clippers broke up, CP3 found his way to Houston where he was teamed up with James Harden. They were tailormade to beat the Warriors, but injuries and playoff debacles never allowed that team to thrive. He was on the Thunder for a hot second and he found some way to guide them to the playoffs in The Bubble. He spent a season with the Warriors, and while they made the playoffs, he was hurt for a good portion of that season. And now he is back with the Clippers, and as i mentioned before, he doesn't see the floor much. But he has had an amazing career.

I have heard some people try and place CP3 where they believe he belongs in the pantheon of NBA point guards. CP3 is an all time great, but I don't know if he is in the top five of all time for me. Magic Johnson is the greatest point guard of all time, I have a personal adoration for Gary Payton, who I also deem the best defensive point guard of all time and Oscar Robertson finalizes my top three. Robertson revolutionized the position. Outside those three, I'd take Isaiah Thomas and, if you consider him a point guard, Steph Curry before taking CP3. But he is probably the very next point guard in my opinion. I'd take him over Steve Nash and John Stockton anyday. He is a better traditional point guard than Jason Kidd. He puts Bob Cousy to shame. He's better than any current point guard, if that is even considered a position in the modern NBA anymore. For all of those reasons, and all the stuff I mentioned above, CP3 is a surefire hall of fame player who lands at the number six spot in my ranking of best point guards to ever play the game.

I'll be curious to see if he sees the court anymore during his final season, but if not, he will be remembered as one of the best to ever play point guard in the NBA, and he will always be known for being meticulous if nothing else. Congrats on a great career. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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