Damian Lillard is the Better Version of Allen Iverson

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Today since we are at the start of the playoffs, and the Trailblazers are playing in prime time, I want to talk about Damian Lillard.

Yesterday I said he is the modern day Allen Iverson, and I want to expand on that a bit more. Lillard is built like him, he’s an offensive force like him, he doesn’t care who’s in front trying to guard him, he’s ended playoff series, and if he wasn’t on a team in the West, he’d be a perennial MVP candidate. Lillard is the best scorer in the game right now. Take all the players in the league, even the injured guys, and I’d take Lillard if I needed one shot. He’s proven he can do that multiple times. He did it to the Rockets a few years back in a playoff series. He did it to the Thunder, with Paul George guarding him last year. He gets buckets and comes up big in the biggest moments. That all reminds me of AI. Iverson and Lillard are built the same too. They’re both barely 6 feet tall. Both strong, but skinny. Both point guards. And both are fearless. And just like Lillard, Iverson was the best pound for pound scorer when he was at his peak. He carried the 76ers teams he was on to Finals. He won a game over the vaunted Kobe and Shaq led Lakers in Staples Center. This is all akin to what Lillard is doing right now.

Now, what I say next might be sacrilege, or bring a prisoner of the moment, but I actually think, overall, Lillard is a better basketball player. He does all the things that AI did, albeit in a softer NBA geared towards scorers, but he is lethal from outside. AI had the crossover and the ability to get to the rim with shocking ease, but his jumper was never the one thing the defense worried about. Lillard is the second best shooter in the league behind only Steph Curry. You have to guard Lillard the moment he steps across half court because he’s liable to pull up from the logo and drain it. That’s no offense to AI either, but he never had that in his game. Lillard is also as good at getting to the basket and getting free throws. He has the full arsenal. And while Iverson was a rocket to the hoop, had the crossover and played with reckless abandon, he never had the jumper that Lillard has. Lillard also attempts to play defense. He may not be the best, he may get hunted in pick and rolls, but he still goes on that end. He’s good at getting steaks and strips too. Iverson had to assert himself so much offensively, he didn’t always have the energy to play defense to the best of his ability. Lillard at least attempts to. And this isn’t to knock Iverson. He’s one of my all time favorite players. I grew up cheering for him as if he played for the Sonics. I love AI. He is one of the greats. But for me, for my money, if you’re asking me who is a better overall player, I’d take Lillard. It’s close. But the fact that he tries on defense, and that he has incredible range gives him the nod for me. AI is great, a hall of fame player, and well deserved. But in the end, when Lillard is done playing, I think he goes down as the better overall guy.

That’s just my opinion.

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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Some Thoughts on the Dumb NBA Awards Show, and the Awesome Big 3

The NBA finally handed out their regular season awards last night because who doesn't want to know who the MVP, Rookie of the Year, Coach of the Year, Sixth Man of the Year and Most Improved Player are a couple of weeks after the season has already ended. The whole ceremony was stupid and pointless, and I didn't watch a single second of it. Whenever an award was announced, my phone buzzed and told me who the winner was. I didn't have to sit through any monotonous Drake monologues or sketches to find out that Eric Gordon was going to win 6th man of the Year. In fact, the only thing I watched, which I watched this morning, was Russell Westbrook's MVP acceptance speech. That was the only good thing about the whole proceedings last night. Go watch his speech because it is remarkable.

But, as I said, the awards went as everyone thought. Of course Eric Gordon was going to win 6th man. He was great all year off the bench for Houston. Of course D'Antoni was going to win Coach of the Year. Sure, his team faltered in the playoffs, but these are regular season awards, and the Rockets were great inhe regular season. Giannis was definitely Most Improved. The dude has gotten better every season, and now, he is on the precipice of being an MVP caliber player. I could argue Kawhi over Draymond for Defensive Player of the Year, but honestly, Draymond was incredible on defense this year. He truly did guard all five positions, and at a very high rate.

The MVP, god damn right is was Russ. He deserved it more than anyone else that was up for the award. He had the least amount of talent around him, lost Serge Ibaka and KD, averaged a triple double and led a very undermanned team to 45 wins. He was far and away the best player, and the most fun, to watch this season.

I also did not care about any of the new awards. That was a lame attempt at making this stupid awards show 2 hours long. Who cares about best dunk game winner or fashion moment? It was a complete waste of time. So, no, the NBA awards show is not what I want to talk about today.

I was getting my daughter ready for bed last night and RD texted me to ask if I was watching the Big 3. I had totally spaced out and forgot that it was on. So after my daughter had her PJ's on and her teeth brushed, I immediately turned it to Fox Sports 1 and watched the Big 3. It was sloppy. The guys looked winded. No one was trying the 4 point shot. Most of the players looked their age. They looked gassed playing only half court. And Jason Williams, AKA "white Chocolate", might be done playing basketball forever after his gruesome injury.

All that being said, I loved every second that I watched. It was so awesome to see former NBA players playing 3 on 3 basketball like I do almost every week. I wrote a couple weeks back about how excited I am for the 2020 Olympics because they will have 3 on 3 basketball. Last night was a glimpse into the future for me, and I have to say, it was tremendous. Yeah it was sloppy, but, when the guys did make a play, it brought me back to what made them so much fun to watch when they were in the NBA. White Chocolate, before his injury, had this great hesitation move to beat a bigger man to the hoop and I was flooded with memories of him doing that to great defensive NBA guys in his heyday. Kwame Brown, never a star but had a decent career, could barely get above the rim, but he was grabbing rebounds and swatting smaller guys shots with ease. Rashard Lewis looked best of the early games I saw. He was creating shots, making jumpers and playing some decent defense. He looked like he could still be a bench player for someone in the NBA. It was also oddly comforting to see a guy like Ricky Davis shoot 4 of 14. He was always a spotty shooter but kept shooting, and last night was no different. Mike Bibby looked a bit bigger than I remember, but he was fighting for rebounds and dropping some dimes here and there. Hell, even DeShawn Stevenson hit a game winner, and I was excited to see that outcome. I know Allen Iverson didn't play much in his first game, but it was still fantastic to see AI playing basketball with 15,000 people watching him. He was still rocking the cornrows, the shooting sleeve and the headband. Yeah he wasn't driving to the hoop as much, but he was making jumpers. I can't wait to see Kenyon Martin when I get the chance to watch this again. There are so many other players I want to watch.

The game I got to see the most of was the team that had White Chocolate and Rashard Lewis playing the Ricky David "led" team. And I will say it again, it was a total blast. I didn't see too many 4 point shot attempts, but as the season goes on, I'm sure more guys will start to try it. I also loved that they play to 60, counting by 2's, 3's and sometimes a 4 pointer here and there, and that halftime is when one of the teams gets to 30. The Big 3 has potential to be enormous. The stadium, for what the event was, was packed. I know that RD and I were watching, but I also know that a lot of people I play basketball with and coach with were watching too. I'm sure a lot of other people tuned in out of pure curiosity. We also got Michael Rappaport as the sideline reporter and Gus Johnson as the play by play guy.

Look everything started out wonderfully. I just hope it keeps up because I want the Big 3 to stay. This is the perfect thing to fill that sports void for me right now. Baseball is boring, I don't watch tennis or soccer, the NBA is done, Summer League is right around the corner though, and football is still a few months away. The Big 3 filled that need for watching sports that I had last night. I hope the Big 3 continues to grow and continues to get better. This could be the next big thing.

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. 

Follow Ty on instagram and twitter.

SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.

The NBA Hall of Fame Just Added Three of the Best Players Ever

I want to take my time today to point out how great this most recent NBA hall of fame class truly is. The three players that were enshrined last week are three of the biggest influences on me, growing up as a huge basketball fan and player. The class included Yao Ming, Shaquille O'Neal and Allen Iverson. I'm going to tell you why each one of these players were important for me. Some are much more important, thus they will get more words, but I truly think and believe that all three of these guys absolutely belong in the hall of fame.

First off, lets look at Yao Ming. I remember hearing about Ming when I was in high school. I heard that there was a 7 foot 6 inch guy that was coming to the NBA from China. I had never seen anyone that big before. I know Manute Bol was either 7'7 or 7'8, but he was a beanpole. Not only was Ming tall, but he was thick. I remember seeing him on draft day, and I could not believe how big he actually was. He was towering over his parents, and I just simply could not believe he was real. I thought that he would barely last in the NBA, as Bol had a very short career, because tall guys break down so easily. But, Ming had a pretty productive, and quite frankly, a great career. His body did break down, but it wasn't until the very end. When Ming was a rookie, he was already a beast. Another player I will talk about shortly, Shaq, said he was going to go straight at him, which he did, but Ming did not back down, blocking his first shot attempt. Ming immediately won my respect. From then on, Ming was a great rim protector, an excellent rebounder, a beast on the low block and a double digit career scorer. Ming was a very good, very underrated pro. He was a multiple all star, made the Rockets relevant again, and brought the NBA to China. Ming was a huge influence on many young big men that are playing in China now. I'm a big Yao Ming fan, and I'm very happy he is a hall of famer.

Next, we have Shaquille O'Neal. I remember hearing about Shaq when I was a pre teen. I was very heavily into college basketball, and Shaq was one of the best players in the mid 90's. He made me want to watch LSU basketball. He dominated in college, and he did much of the same in the NBA. When he was first in the league, he made the Magic relevant. He was the main piece of the puzzle that led that team to its one of only 2 NBA finals appearances. That whole team was built around Shaq. O'Neal was so good in the low post. He was basically unstoppable. The one thing I liked most about the Orlando Magic version of Shaq was how many times he broke the rims. He would dunk with such ferocity that the whole rim would come down, or the backboard would shatter. He was like a bigger version of Daryl Dawkins. After he left Orlando and signed with LA, I was mad, but I understood. The Magic went as far as they could, and Shaq wanted titles. When he was a Laker, that was when he became the most dominant player in the league. Shaq could not be stopped. He got bigger, yet his quick feet remained. He got stronger, but he was not much slower. Shaq could do everything, except shoot free throws. The whole hack a whoever, that started with Shaq. Teams could not stop him, unless they fouled him. He was one of the most battered stars of all time, but that did not stop him from dominating. He would still put up 30 points, grab 10 rebounds, block 5 shots and win. He was the reason the Lakers became great in the early 2000's, not Kobe Bryant. Even after he left LA, Shaq won another title, this time with the Heat. He wasn't the same, but he still commanded the respect and attention of opposing defenses. Shaq was a big part in helping Dwayne Wade win his first title. He bounced around to a few other teams, but Shaq got into the hall for his time with the Lakers and the Magic. Shaq was a monster of a player, he redefined rules and bent what a traditional big man could do. Shaq may be the second greatest center of all time, behind only Bill Russell. Shaq was a sure fire hall of famer. This was more than due and deserved.

The last, but most important person that got inducted, at least to me, was Allen Iverson. I mean, Iverson is the best pound for pound player to ever play the game of basketball. He did things that no one his size should have been able to do against high level NBA competition. Iverson would go into the trees and come out with points. I didn't know how he did it, I don't think his opponents knew how he did it, hell, I bet Iverson was even shocked, but he could score in the paint against any big man that was out there trying to defend him. But, he was also a wizard of the crossover dribble. He perfected it in college, and it only got better when he was a pro. He crossed up so many great defenders, but the time he crossed Jordan, as a rookie, that was the best. Michael Jordan, who is the greatest player of all time, was also an otherworldly defender, and Iverson shook him out of his shorts. It's still incredible to watch to this day. Iverson also made the 76ers relevant again. They were nothing for about a decade until they drafted him. He never really got the supporting cast he needed, but he had that team in the playoffs constantly, and thy even made the finals once, even stealing one game in LA, against the Shaq led Lakers. Allen Iverson was incredible on the court. He was also very influential off the court. He made the NBA hip. He was to the NBA in the early 21st century what the Fab five was to college basketball in the 90's. He was so cool, brash, in your face, did not care what others thought of him and he owned all this. He would say what was on his mind, and then some. This made me respect him even more than I already did. He was the coolest dude, playing the coolest sport when he was in his prime. He had a few forgettable seasons in Denver and Memphis, but he was electric when he was the man in Philadelphia. So many young players owe the way they play to Allen Iverson. He was the first to come and truly be the person he wanted to be. He did not answer to anyone. He did his thing, and he did it exceptionally. Allen Iverson is one of my personal favorite players, and he is one of the ten best players to ever play the game of basketball. Iverson was a beast, and him being in the hall of fame makes me very, very happy. Almost no one deserves it more than him. Go check out his hall of fame induction speech, it is incredible

This class was a great class and I feel like the NBA hall of fame ceremony, at least for the next couple of decades, is going to feature some truly great players that I got to watch when they were in their primes. This was just the beginning of much more greatness to come.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Podcast. The head editor wanted to practice some podcasts, but Ty said he is not talking about practice. Follow him on twitter @tykulik.