As an MJ fan, I've always respected the Kobe Bryant fans and Kobe. There's no "plumbers and firemen" slander or "Scottie Pippen did it" narrative. They respect MJ and his accomplishments and MJ bros respect Kobe and what he accomplished. MJ and Kobe were made of the same material, both extremely competitive and ready to leave it all on the court to win.
We don’t respect Mj because he matched up with Bryon Russell and Nate McMillan for 3 Finals. You can’t justify either of those men being good players. They were plumbers and firemen 5 and 7 ppg for a career while never being Allstars All nba or all Defense. Y’all just don’t like the truth
@@yungesjosef And yet those "plumbers" made the Finals. The truth is Bronsexuals need to try and diminish MJ's accomplishments to make their case. We don't respect Bron because he got smoked with the Cavs and had to crawl on his hands and knees to Miami. He had to make superteams to run a weak Eastern Conference and STILL came up short 6 times out of 10.
@@countkilroygraf8816 Jordan Clarkson, Kyle Korver, Patrick Mccaw, Norris Cole.. A million people have made the FINALS!! The difference is those bums were specifically matched up with Jordan!
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchGreat Take!! I feel like after 06 iverson career was on the downhill and Kobe went up a couple notch’s more, when ai wasn’t the first option in Denver it diminished his game because he was so ball dominant
He always gets more than he deserves tbh ever since he died, kobe fans has been riding on his meat like heck.. dude was the most overrated player until he passed away lol
@@cheezezlayer493 all the way to 2010, Detroit was a probably the best defensive team of all time 04 the Spurs were great 05 07 and Boston was great defensively 08 then Dwight in 09 Lakers were great defensively throughout those years as well!!
THANK YOU for explaining Kobe's FG/efficiency. Kobe played in the most defensive minded era in the late 90's and early 2000's.. I cannot take people who bring up Kobe's efficiency as a way to knock him seriously.
😂 Lebron played in the kobe era . In his prime kobe averaged 35.4 point on 27 shot and 45% Lebron in his 3 year , Average 31.4 point on 23 shot and 48% . Like i dont know yall argument , era is bullshit if ur great u can dominate in any era
Kobe was a pure jump shooter who could dive and dunk on you. Jump shooters hitting 45 percent per 10 jump shots is incredible. Jordan was a 49 percent shooter but no one bashes MJ. Those 2009 and 2010 league MVPs belong to Kobe his team won the titles. Kobe came out the toughest conference. The hate for Kobe was real.
@@skap_attack Skap, you are being disingenuous and I think you know it. The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchI hear you with AI but despite AI being a better scorer during that era, Kobe was still the better and more accomolished player overall by the time he got old enough (don't forget that he came straight out of high school at 18 so his numbers from 96-99 are of course worse than 3-year older AI). And he also was a more efficient scorer also during that time.
@@nikosofidemporas Read my comment or shut up. I already accounted for what Kobe scored IN HIS PRIME from 1999 to 2006, which are the prime years he spent during the 10 slowest recorded paces. Just say you like the player and stop being disingenuous. Kobe fans spend all day trying to explain efficiency and now you’re using it to discredit AI? Fam, did you forget Kobe was playing with Shaquille O’Neal for the majority of that stretch? And then, Iverson’s size is MORE THAN a valid explanation for a slightly below league average effective FG%. Compiled with his team’s lower than average pace and the fact that he had no offensive weapons around him. 2005, when he had Webber, Korver, and Iggy, he was above league average. Never again did he shoot below 45% in his prime (2004-2010). People just want to go off what they feel benefits their FAVORITE PLAYER and I don’t mind, but just say THAT. Stop trying to act like you’re being objective when objectively, Kobe DID NOT dominate the toughest 10-year decade of basketball. It’s not a fact, it’s a theory. It’s a fanfic.
@@officialconch nice try, but..... *NOPE* - Who was Iverson's Shaq?? Who did he have to share the ball with? - Your argument also shifted the context to assume that in 1996 a 17-18yr old Kobe could somehow be a 1st option on an NBA team, which is both a) plainly absurd and b) factually false. You could have honestly compared 18yr Kobe to 18yr old AI, not 22+ yr old AI. _You didn't do that_
Why do y’all keep posting that Luka quote without the context? His reason was because the players are better in the NBA. You have to guard everyone and you can’t sag off guys like you can in euro league and there’s no 3 seconds rule so big guys can just stay in the paint the whole game,
Kobe played in the toughest defensive decade without nearly as much spacing If peak Kobe played the last decade he'd be so dominant they'd change the rules to limit scoring again
Skap you’ve really hit your stride with these videos. Excellent pacing, epic background music, engaging narration, and most importantly you’re speaking pure facts. Love how you use analytics sparingly and only when necessary to efficiently prove your points. Otherwise, it’d feel like I was taking stats again 😵💫
Thank you! Always love seeing you on these comments. I appreciate you 🙏❤️. And what I don’t appreciate it advanced analytics lol. So I try to incorporate those as little as possible. I might do a video about how I hate analytics 😂
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@officialconch A.I. was great man but you need to account for rings. Sure he didn't have the same team in Philadelphia as the lakers did, but he certainly did with the nuggets.
@@C0Y0TE3 What does that have to do with anything I said? Am I arguing about rings or who the greater all time player is? No. So, you’re insecurity as a Kobe fan shows.
Excellent, exhaustive argument. I really think we should look at how players measured up against their contemporaries and own era, rather than just looking at stats across decades. As this video argues, a bucket in 2002 is not the same as a bucket in 2020.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchverson was a scoring beast but the difference between him and Kobe is that Kobe was also an elite defender. Also Kobe was much more efficient at scoring And Iverson led the league in mpg in 5 out of the 10 seasons between 96 and 2006.
@@officialconch Allen Iverson had freedom Kobe didn’t have at that time in the nba. No I don’t agree with your premise. The real dead ball era in the NBA actually lasted from around 94-2011. Basically Kobe’s entire career as he ruptured his Achilles I believe in 2012. But Iverson had freedoms Kobe didn’t have as a young player. Kobe wasn’t even starting in his first two seasons because the lakers had Eddie jones and nick van Exel. It’s not an applicable comparison. Also the “inefficient” claims that dog Kobe is actually a real conversation with Iverson. From 1996-2006, Iverson may have averaged 28 points per game but he was also attempting 23.3 shots per game while shooting 42.1% and had an effective fg percentage of 44.8%. Kobe “only” averaged 24 points per game during that span but he also only attempted 18.3 shots per game. He shot 45.1% during the time with an effective fg percentage of 48.2%. Give Kobe the freedom to shoot 23 times a game from his rookie year and he would have outscored AI during this span. Iverson didn’t have to worry about coming off the bench early or sharing the ball with a player like Shaquille O’Neal. The hand checking wasn’t the thing that freed Kobe. Getting his own team without O’Neal did. Iverson was a great player but no where near Kobe’s level imo. ALSO Kobe had the burden of defending great players on the other end. Something Iverson never did. Kobe has 43 more 40 point games than Iverson. He has doubled Iverson in 50 point games. Iverson is fourth in career fg attempts per game behind only Elgin Baylor, Michael Jordan and wilt chamberlain. Old selfish ball hog Kobe was 15th below Lebron James!!!! Imagine if Kobe REALLY was selfish and didn’t have to worry about winning and defense. He would be the all time leading scorer in nba history. I mean no disrespect to Iverson but Jordan still owned 96-99. And Kobe easily had the 2000s. He was a great small player and he does have 4 scoring crowns. But this is a laughable premise.
Thank you for keeping Kobe's legacy alive and loud. I saw this other video talking about Kobe being overrated and it pissed me off seeing how many people agreed with them. Then when the lone commenters posted facts about how great Kobe was, many of those lemmings would shift goal posts to keep supporting their narrative.
With today's age of brainwashed, uneducated fans they'll agree with anything. There's actual LeBron fanboys who actually agree with Scottie Pippen's take that "Jordan was a horrible player".... they'll agree with any whack garbage that diminishes other greats to prop up their beloved LeBron
Used to hate Kobe back in the 90's. Thought he tried too hard to be like MJ. But during the late 2000's and 2010's, he earned my respect. Didn't see anybody else play with the sort of mentality I used to see back in the day.
I will never stop trying to do my small part to keep the legacy of the GREAT Kobe Bryant alive. He is talked about far too little when discussing the all time greats. I saw the athletics top 75 list a while back that had him 10, I think. Pathetic and laughable. How do these “journalists” even get credentials. Anyone who is old enough to have watched his entire prime should know damn well there’s no more than a small handful of guys you can make the case for above him. Hell I’m in my late 30s and I’ve been watching basketball since 1994. He’s one of the two best players my own eyes has ever seen. Many thanks for watching and repping Kobe 🙏❤️🐍
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchyou should also mention iverson averaged more mpg both seasons for only a 20 point difference? iverson is great and is severely underrated, but scoring GOAT? I’d take Kobe all day, let alone the GOAT himself.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Since 2008 Some TeamUSA players just want it that way in the NBA. KG, Allen, Pierce + DPOY Allen, perennial all-star Rondo -> KG and Shaq told LeBron he should leave (Shaq thought he was coming with LeBron back to Miami) and LeBron got so many TeamUSA players to join Wade, Bosh, Allen, Lewis, Battier, Miller -> then it was a bunch of Team USA Durant, Steph, Klay, Dray, Finals MVP Iggy (Steph never played for Team USA ever ever ever ever ever ever, he denied TeamUSA 6 times)
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Dude Kobe played with Shaq, Boston made a Big 3, even AI tried to play with Melo 🤷🏻♂️ only the Spurs constantly had a great team they ‘built themselves’
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchKobe had a huge disadvantage during that span you listed, first off he didn't start his first two years and wasn't handed the keys and given free reign until 2005. Iverson had that luxury from day one. And then the big elephant in the room Kobe shared the court with the most dominant player of the modern era and was the second option offensively. Context matters also it's a lot cleaner to breakdown era decade wise but I do get what you mean if you want to be literal.
@@officialconchIverson couldn’t even shoot above league average efficiency most years, just stop. Iverson doesn’t even have a scoring season better than 03 Tmac.
Love your work sir! Thank you! I was just talking about how major media in sports had LeBron James leapfrog over both Kobe Bryant and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Also pass Magic Johnson. Simply preposterous!
That was me 2 man spurs were my team Ginobli gets no respect lol dats ok we kno how great he was jus like Kobe Kobe was it plain n simple love these videos miss the man. I always comment on these videos cuz he meant dat much even tho nvr knew him whatsoever didn't even get 2 go watch him play live it's jus pure admiration end of the day he balled his heart out those were some great nailbiting games back then from tip off 2 end of regulation huh
I miss the big Fundamental. When the Lakers beat the Spus it meant something. Two great teams. The real championships happened between them. The East was just an after thought.
That's another reason the 90s are considered the golden era by so many basketball fans. It was tough defense yet satisfying scoring. It was a very rich era in terms of individual and team playing styles, with different schools collide. Very exciting to follow. Let's hope the next years will bring a similar hype.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
We can hope and with channels like yours we can also influence things. I'll be glad to collaborate, as I'm a writer and I also plan to follow a course of basketball performance analysis after this summer. This channel could be the beginning of something important for basketball fans who have had enough of superteams, cowards, and rude ignorants.
@@officialconch I think this comment is on the video and not on my comment. Anyway, AI is great and he should get much more respect, but please don't fall on the same Lebronlike mistake to talk about "goats" all the time. Four scoring titles is amazing, ten is out of this world. However, your analysis is correct when you say that the slow pace game began already in the mid-90s. Just look at the Bulls finals scores: not a single 100 point game in their two series against Utah. Or the FIBA/NCAA scores of the Spurs-Knicks finals. Yes, in another era Iverson would average more ppg, as Kobe would.
@@sotiriosdrokalos ultimately this channel just began as a demoralized fan of the nba for many decades who became sick of the current trending. It seemed like a more useful expenditure of time than trolling around social media platforms arguing with teenagers for a couple hours at a time. I’m still ultimately getting my bearings under me for content. Essentially I’ve just been telling the stories of making the cases that are important to me. I’m pleasantly surprised that others are sharing in my interests here.
@@skap_attack You clearly never played the game at a high level. A guy with 1 MVP in 20 years is not in the GOAT conversation, neither is someone who rode Shaq's coattails for 3/5 titles while Shaq had all 3 FMVP. Super casual and disingenuous video at best.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Sir, I have been watching for the last 25 years. And I must say this is a winning take. Kobe is the best player of this century, post 2000. In my humble opinion, it’s not even close.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconch All day, I clicked the vid immediately cause I saw Kobe's photo and "hardest era" which I agree it's the hardest era the 2000s, but disagree with Kobe being the king of the mountain of scorers.
Facttttttts I always said that when everyone was at their best Kobe was the best the league was at Its toughest ever and he was the best by far put some respect on bean name 🙏🏽💯🐐
@@dparks2856 with Smush Parker, Kwame Brown, and Chris Mihm, and he only missed the playoffs ONCE (before the torn Achilles). LeBron missed the playoffs twice since coming to the Lakers.
@@dparks2856 He missed the playoffs only once and just like ya'll make excuse about LeBron being injured in 2019 and 2022 for missing playoffs, Kobe was injured and missed bunch of games that year. Kobe had a trash roster around him in a super stacked western conference. LeBron got swept by the spurs in 2007, that same spurs team had really competitive series with the Suns who beat Kobe in round 1, you act like he faced a bad team or something
The thing about the offense and defense in previous eras vs today's era is that defense back then we're allowed to make more "mistakes". A little swat on the offensive player wouldn't necessarily get a call. Nowadays, it's the opposite. Offensive players are the ones allowed to make more mistakes. A gather here, a carry there--adding up to a damn journey sometimes... Add a healthy dose of moving screens... No calls. "break the rules" on offense to your hearts content. And with basketball always being primarily about shooting the ball, it has become a lot easier for players.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconch AI was great those years. But to call him the scoring GOAT is too much. You also have to recognize the Spurs for being dominant during that stretch. They always get dismissed, downplayed, or simply forgotten just because they're the Spurs.
@@officialconch Have you read my comments? Did i say anything about Kobe in particular? I wouldn’t say Kobe is the scoring GOAT either. That wasn’t the point of my comment. I merely highlighted the stark difference between eras. You assumed i was a Kobe stan (questioned, rather), but it looks to me you’re an AI fanboy.
@@kookurikapooh You passively sided with the premise of this video with your original comment. So why is Iverson a stretch but Kobe isn’t? But since you’re not saying it’s Kobe- idk what you want me to say. I’m just pointing out how Iverson actually scored the most points in the toughest era and 43% isn’t bad at all considering his size and the other players who shot worse than him. I could list a page worth…
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
His 2008-2010 Finals run was straight up madness. 2008 and 2010 had his no. 1 seeded Lakers take on 50-win 8th seeds. It’s straight up blasphemy when these ignorant media members and hormonal teens try to rank Kobe as a fringe top-10 player all-time or even say that Curry is better than Kobe all-time.
Finally, someone put the realizes Kobe was just from another world. You took the game very seriously and he took no prisoners. If you were describing Kobe as the basketball player offensively and defensively domination...🐍💛💜 Awesome video
Someone publicly telling the whole truth about KOBE shouldn’t be as RARE as it is!!! Thank you! Those who watched Kobe knows. He is the second best to Jordan and that’s only because they refused to give Kobe help after 2011. Denied CP3 trade and still Kobe ruptured his Achilles carrying the Lakers.
And when you see random no names like Cam Thomas at age 21 drop 40+ 3 straight times (something even LeBron never did at age 21 or younger) and dudes like Siddique Bey have a 50+ point game
Exactly right. When you see guys like steph and Lebron who are scoring the same or more in their mid to upper 30s than they were in their 20s, you know something is suspicious. Same can be said of the NFL. I’m a huge fan of Brady. I happen to think he’s the GOAT easily of that sport. BUT, when my guy was throwing got 3,500-4,000 yards in his late 20s to mid 30s then put up 5300 yards in his mid 40s, we know the game is weakening.
@@skap_attack Tom is the GOAT of this era of "Not hitting the QB". If Brady played under the rules of the 1970's, 80's and 90's where defenders could literally hit the QB after he threw the ball, He would have 2 rings at best and would have retired by age 32-35...Meanwhile Brady has won 4 Super Bowls AFTER the age of 35. Imagine if they could hit Joe Montana or John Elway and they played until 45? They would have way more rings All modern sports is trash, compared to previous generations. Modern players benefit in the Statistics more from the rule changes. Plus players are literally stat padding
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
The refs no longer call traveling, carrying or 3 seconds. Im sure there's many more examples but when the league doesn't enforce those basic rules, then the advantage is for offensive players. Keep blending the old with the new SKAP 👍👍
the stupidest new rule change is "a defender who _touches_ a player driving to the basket constitutes an *automatic foul* ..." what do you do to stop a player driving to the basket if you cant touch them? *YOU FLOP* hence why modern nba is plagued with an epidemic of flopping modern nba is only era where flopping is NOT laughed at as a cheap tactic. instead you cant be considered a good defensive player if you refuse to flop because its not "smart basketball"
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@ronmexico9066 I got a question why so much older guys hate on the new player? Is it cause the rules? I don’t understand it because the older gen path the way, they changed it cause of the older gen
I was born in Almonte, Ontario home of Dr. Naismith. People who agree Lebron is the GOAT is like a litmus test to know if your dealing with someone who lacks thought and reason. These videos are a delight to watch, you’ve really done your home work.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Thank YOU. Kobe was my generation, and I'LL NEVER forget Kobe domination. Youre giving me goosebumps. Kobe was GLOBAL and was fluent in different languages AND PLAYED HELLISH DEFENSE while being A SOLO VILLAIN only FEW understood. This generation just doesn't get it! You sir, have a sub!
I really appreciate You and a few other guys who are Spreading the truth of how good Kobe was and stopping this slander that has been going on. .I always tell people stats are important, but they don't always tell the whole truth. Sometimes you have to look deeper into them and look at them within context.
Omg this is exquisite video game piece. This is journalism at its highest. More people needs to be aware of this recap. This can't exist in only, no offense, a mere "some dude's UA-cam channel"
Love these videos. Brilliant content 👌. The fact that they have the audacity to talk about playing against plummers is still more challenging than playing against no defense at all.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@official Nope it all started in 2000s don't know what league you were watchinh. And it continued untill 2011. Sorry to dis appoint you I know the scores. Defensive teams thrive in 2000s not in 90s. 2000s is the time when NBa finals both game 7 of 2005 and 2010 the s 81-74 and 83-79. Games of NJ, SA. Lakers, Rockets, Kings, Pistons, Heat that thrives in that decade will be always in the 80s to mid 90s score. Game 5 of 04 wC semis 74-73 game 6 88-76. Finals of Lakers pistons game 1 87-75, game 2 99-91, 88-68, 88-80 100-87. 2008 still in that pace. In 2010 NBa finals game 3 91-84, 92-86, game 6 89-67 game 7 83-79. Top defensive teams wins the titles. So you're Ai rebutt is false.
@@kaksmirknight5318 Go look at pace by season and tell me what the 10 slowest paces were. Now you’re just living outside of reality to fit your own narrative. This very video explains how pace affected FG%/ how defense affects pace. Stop lying just to fit your own narrative. You think it just magically started in 2000 and you really think it was still going post 2006? Just stop.
Absolutely and so much all time talent in that decade alone. Dirk, Melo, Tmac, Nash, Iverson, Kobe, Wade, Shaq, Duncan, Yao, LeBron, Pierce, KG, Howard, Wallace, Carter
Ehh I guess its subjective. I was born in the the mid-80s and my biased brain is going 90s all the way for the golden age. Hell, I'll take Pac, Iron Mike, MJ, PrimeTime/Neon Deion, and ANY 90s sports car over what we got today. Throw in the SNES too!
Your content gives me hope for humanity once again. Thank you my good man. Carry on with the excellent, exceptional, educational work. You are a basketball Saint. Good day.
Great content as always. NBA went downhill really fast post 2010. The so called King can’t even raise viewer ratings even if he was Adam Silver’s favorite poster child.
@@Ace-fe8gcno nba is at its lowest viewership since the 70s. the Golden Age of basketball regularly drew 25 million viewers. nba Finals in 2020s draw 3 million viewers _did you watch all five games of Nuggets Heat Finals or did you just watch highlights and the sports shows like everybody else?_ the game today is so ugly (no fundamentals, no defense, everybody travelling, just two teams running up and down the floor exchanging threes...) that nobody wants to spend three hours watching boring basketball the essence of sports is competition and fans dont see that anymore. superteams killed basketball
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
You are making a Video so with so much work and details, and there are still People who disagree because they are blinded fanboys of LeBron or they are blinded haters of Kobe. Keep up the great work ❤
Thank you for explaining eras to these idiots that dont take it into account. 2000s was the lowest scoring era and Kobe still put up those numbers and a bunch of scoring achievements.
Yep. I tried my best to make this as simple as possible. Yet those “idiots” you refer to are still having trouble understanding. I’ll talk slower next time 😂
@@skap_attack Keep the content coming. What about one where its measured by defending the championship (which is how Phil Jackson describes how he sees it in his books) AS BOTH an offensive + defensive captain + closer MODERN ERA Jordan 4 times defending the championship, 6 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer Kobe 3 times defending the championship, 5 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer LeBron 1 time defending the championship, 4 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer (*1 lock out season win 2012, super team ups) Hakeem 1 time defending the championship, 2 total 4 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer Duncan 0 times defending the championship, 5 total as BOTH as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer (*1 lock out season win 1999, poor free throws adversely effected some closing ability) Bird 0 times defending the championship, 3 total as BOTH as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer There is a champion every single year. Dominance is defending the title. The league goes not only did this player win a championship, they defended the championship. By age 31 no player had a better start than Kobe did with Kobe 3 times defending the championship, 5 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconch100% agreed, kobe got a pretty sh1t team so his numbers became inflated in the years post hand checking and zone removal, by that tim Iverson finally got some small offensive help so his ppg went down a bit, but AI was the top scorer and never gets respect for real.
Kobe played at a time when there had been a cycle of "defensive inflation" and so there were teams loaded up with defense-oriented players. That's what put a premium on volume shooters: the lack of offensive options. Kobe's scoring was necessary given the supporting casts available at the time. And he was fairly efficient for a volume shooter. What made him special, in my opinion, was his ability to play elite defense while handling so much of the offensive load. This makes him comparable to MJ.
As a supporter of your channel and work. Please, keep your integrity! You have a lot talent for this. Remember this, integrity can't be taken, but only given away. The process of your videos and the editing is sublime. The mainstream can't touch you and channels like your's.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
There was a full team defensive approach against Kobe. And, again, DIFFERENT era and different time. No one shot particularly well in those series. The lakers were very solid defensively as well.
@@skap_attackso you admit your bias. I could tell when you pointed out Kobe averaged 1 point more during his best ten years without factoring in fg%, rebs, assists, player efficiency or the fact kobe shot 41% in the nba finals. Let's talk defense shall we? Lebron finished top 5 in DPOY voting FIVE times during those 10 years, finishing SECOND twice. We also went going to pretend like Tony Allen wasn't robbed of first team defense from 07-11.
@@jasonwood8023 nope not biased. I’m just an intelligent and educated adult who watched the entirety of both their careers. Perhaps you didn’t understand the video. Statistics were depreciated in Kobe’s era. Also Kobe’s BEST 10 years weren’t in 2000-2010. He was aged 22-31. I gave Lebron his BEST ten years. Kobe was at the very least equivalent to Lebron defensively. Kobe is a substantially better offensive player. Kobe’s skill set is arguably the best of anyone in nba history. I’d give Lebron the check mark at passing.
@@skap_attack Lebrons best 10 years are his career averages going into year TWENTY ONE lol. You can split his career in half and bang w kobe's best 10 year. No moving the goal posts either. First 10 27.6 /7.3/ 6.9 on 49% Last 10 26.8 /7.8 /7.8 on 52% Playoffs Lebron 28.5 / 9/ 7.2 on 49% career Kobe (98-99 on) 27/5/5 on 44% Finals Lebron 28.4 / 10/ 7.8 on 48% Kobe 25.3 / 5.7/ 5 on 41%, kobe shot 43% or less in 6 of his 7 finals appearances. That's not even touching on advanced stats/metric/pers. Man dies and y'all boost him into relms he doesn't belong. When you shoot 44% in the regular season, 41% in the finals, that matters. Especially when your trying to put them over efficiency monsters like MJ and Lebron. MJ is my GOAT btw. Head to head (16-6 Lebron) Lebron 28/7/7 Kobe 24/5/5 Lebron was 8-3 vs Kobe from 07-08 till 12-13 when Kobe had good team's.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Mj is far better than kobe he is better at everything i dont of this bullshit passing the torch the fact is there Mj first and then lebron and then kareem . Kobe have to be better than magic which he isnt with the fact .
@@SamyHasnaoui-ol6ok you know what’s bullshit, is ignorant fans who think Lebron is 2 and Kobe “didn’t get close” to MJ. In reality, no one ever got close to MJ. But Kobe got as close as anyone. And a hell of a lot closer than Lebron.
I'm speechless...this video was so amazingly informative! THIS is REAL journalism! I appreciate you, for putting Kobe Bryant's TRUE greatness into full context! What you did in this brilliant video...is what the mainstream media REFUSES to do! BIG Salute to you! Thank you!
Wow. Many thanks for the very kind words. I appreciate YOU 🙏❤️ for watching and mostly for repping the late, great Kobe 🙏❤️🐍. Thank you. I’m glad you like enjoyed the video. I have a few more you might enjoy on here. Check out “The Last Alpha” from a few weeks ago if you get the chance.
To put it in perspective, arguably the greatest PF of all time played in the same era and conference. Yet he comes up in the conversation after Kobe, and thats not only now but also when they were playing. If the Lakers weren’t winning the title then it was the Spurs
What I find ironic is LeBron is seen as this savant of the game, but if his initial sets break down, he quits on the play. Whereas Kobe was patient, calculated, and strategic, looking for the next play when option A was broken.
whoa...OK. Kobe's my favorite player, too. And he's definitely the streakiest and possibly the most versatile and all-around skilled **scorer** of all time. AND a phenomenal champion of the highest order.... but no MJ, no Kobe. Among his 500+ other mind-blowing feats, '87 MJ was MVP _and_ DPOYT _and_ he won the scoring title @ 35 ppg...nobody else has had a single season quite _that severe_ before or since. And it's like an afterthought compared to all the other winning. Just ponder what that means for a moment.
If this is true. Kobes' stats on playing and shooting would be a lot better. He holds records for failed shots and losing games all by himself based on ball hogging, not listening to plays from coaches and team members, not liking him.
That’s the funny thing is when people bring up eras, I tell them that “if you want to bring up eras you better start considering Kobe then” and then they go silent.
I don't even have to think that hard to remember the high flying dunks of VC, pre Splash Brothers era 3 point snipers like Reggie Miller and TMac, and the versatile offensive bag of Kobe. Steph in recent years (away from his crazy 3 point barrages) and Jokic are recapturing some of that magic I loved in the late 90s and 2000s (except that Lakers vs Pistons finals, that was tough to watch).
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Nick wright and Colin cowherd are the main reason why new age NBA fans hate Kobe. They brainwashed these fans thinking he was never the best player in the league or not even top 10 all time
Despite countless injuries to every major joint of his body. he still pulled off an insane career with 5 rings and a 3peat without shaq or any top75 player in arguably the toughest era proving everyone wrong. Now just imagine if he'd never been seriously injured.. yea there would be no debate. he's still my goat and not ashamed to admit that one bit. the most skilled basketball player to ever play, hardest working and had the deepest bag in nba history. Thanks for the great informative video!
Thanks bro for nothing but facts. We're living in an where looking the part is more important than being the part. This is the age of smoke and mirrors!
The Seeing-Eye Test Told Me ALL of this!…But Most people don’t UnderStand the Game Enough & are Biased, so they See what they Want to See, Imagine & Create their Reality, then Spread the Lies when Ever they Discuss NBA Topics!…Kobe has ALWAYS & Will ForEver B’ My Favourite Player!…
My favorite athlete of all time. BUT I still view him through an appropriate lens. I’m just trying to magnify the lens that I see him through so that others can understand how undervalued he has become. I’m glad you enjoyed the video. Many thanks for watching and for repping Kobe 🙏❤️🐍
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Bro the fact that you made this video I was talking about this earlier today. Kobe the most robust scorer in history, its just crazy we have this modern era now that he's gone. He would go crazy in this Era.
Kobe would obliterate this era. With the spacing and the free flowing nature of the game now. It’s not hyperbole to say he would average 37-40 ppg for years straight if he wanted to.
@@skap_attack You talk like Kobe was in his prime in the 90's or in the early 2000's. He retired in 2016 that wasn't that long ago bozo he was part of this "era"
@@skap_attack It’s getting annoying to hear him basically forgotten by NBA pundits. It makes me wonder if people never want to admit his mentality inspired many players today!
Its so strange... I always hear about kobe's inefficiency, but having watched him myself, he did not seem inefficient at all. He looked like he got buckets. They say all sorts of stats to make him seem worse and my brain was like, "i don't know how i know this is wrong but Its definitely wrong". Thanks for this video, it clears up everything. It really boils down to 3 things: -Pace (only era were game totals were not in the triple digits) -defense (especially in the west) -people not accounting for era (kobes efficiency was good for his era)
You can certainly make the case. But I think we can agree, around 94-2011 was the true hardest era. I just broke it down by decade. But if we extend outside of decade range, I’d say that 15 year span was THE DEADBALL ERA in the NBA.
This was one of the more interesting and informative videos I’ve seen on the differences in the eras. I personally have Kobe at #2 all time and it blows my mind to see all the bronites out here shit on his name because their guy is a media hype inflated stats during a weak era flopper. It is truly sad that not only the eye test but actual facts and stats prove them wrong and they just cry and call names
The 2000s era is the most difficult era in the NBA history while the following decade is the most easiest one because that era are the eras of superteam and 3 pts shooting that makes today's NBA are becoming a comedy show worst than WWE. 🤑
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest. The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season. Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace. What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever. If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
As an MJ fan, I've always respected the Kobe Bryant fans and Kobe. There's no "plumbers and firemen" slander or "Scottie Pippen did it" narrative. They respect MJ and his accomplishments and MJ bros respect Kobe and what he accomplished. MJ and Kobe were made of the same material, both extremely competitive and ready to leave it all on the court to win.
We don’t respect Mj because he matched up with Bryon Russell and Nate McMillan for 3 Finals. You can’t justify either of those men being good players. They were plumbers and firemen 5 and 7 ppg for a career while never being Allstars All nba or all Defense. Y’all just don’t like the truth
@@yungesjosef And yet those "plumbers" made the Finals. The truth is Bronsexuals need to try and diminish MJ's accomplishments to make their case. We don't respect Bron because he got smoked with the Cavs and had to crawl on his hands and knees to Miami. He had to make superteams to run a weak Eastern Conference and STILL came up short 6 times out of 10.
All these none drafted players playing today.
True Kobe fans never disrespect Kobe’s big brother MJ
@@countkilroygraf8816 Jordan Clarkson, Kyle Korver, Patrick Mccaw, Norris Cole.. A million people have made the FINALS!! The difference is those bums were specifically matched up with Jordan!
Glad to see KOBE getting the respect he deserves.
Thanks for watching 🙏❤️🐍
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Everything in the dark will definitely shed light I promise you
@@officialconchGreat Take!! I feel like after 06 iverson career was on the downhill and Kobe went up a couple notch’s more, when ai wasn’t the first option in Denver it diminished his game because he was so ball dominant
He always gets more than he deserves tbh ever since he died, kobe fans has been riding on his meat like heck.. dude was the most overrated player until he passed away lol
Thanks Skap, keep Kobe legacy alive with the 100% truth!! 💯💯
Absolutely!!! And thank you for watching and repping Kobe 🙏❤️🐍
its true the most hardest era was in th 90s up to 2003 those were the days defense and offense was balance
@@cheezezlayer493 all the way to 2010, Detroit was a probably the best defensive team of all time 04 the Spurs were great 05 07 and Boston was great defensively 08 then Dwight in 09 Lakers were great defensively throughout those years as well!!
@@rbtheballer yes totally agree
@@rbtheballer yes sir I agree
Kobe has 11 Top 5 MVP finishes but only 1 MVP. Damn shame
Media hated Kobe
@@diegochavez6203 I know, Kobe the most disrespected great of all time
He had to average 37 ppg to win his MVP. It was ridiculous
@@BallCDOBasketball wise or sports in general?
@@drewmorrison But he still didn't win even then, was an atrocity
THANK YOU for explaining Kobe's FG/efficiency. Kobe played in the most defensive minded era in the late 90's and early 2000's.. I cannot take people who bring up Kobe's efficiency as a way to knock him seriously.
😂 Lebron played in the kobe era . In his prime kobe averaged 35.4 point on 27 shot and 45%
Lebron in his 3 year , Average 31.4 point on 23 shot and 48% . Like i dont know yall argument , era is bullshit if ur great u can dominate in any era
@@SamyHasnaoui-ol6oknobody brought up Lebron lmao
Kobe was a pure jump shooter who could dive and dunk on you. Jump shooters hitting 45 percent per 10 jump shots is incredible. Jordan was a 49 percent shooter but no one bashes MJ. Those 2009 and 2010 league MVPs belong to Kobe his team won the titles. Kobe came out the toughest conference. The hate for Kobe was real.
@@SamyHasnaoui-ol6okrun and dunking is not impressive
@@duckboy5725think Giannis might disagree
Thank you Sir. It's painful to watch Kobe Bryant's legacy every day being tarnished by pundits from these big media corps.
I agree. And I’m not here for it. I’m going to continue to do my small part to push back against the lies 🙏
@@skap_attack Skap, you are being disingenuous and I think you know it. The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchI hear you with AI but despite AI being a better scorer during that era, Kobe was still the better and more accomolished player overall by the time he got old enough (don't forget that he came straight out of high school at 18 so his numbers from 96-99 are of course worse than 3-year older AI).
And he also was a more efficient scorer also during that time.
@@nikosofidemporas Read my comment or shut up. I already accounted for what Kobe scored IN HIS PRIME from 1999 to 2006, which are the prime years he spent during the 10 slowest recorded paces. Just say you like the player and stop being disingenuous. Kobe fans spend all day trying to explain efficiency and now you’re using it to discredit AI? Fam, did you forget Kobe was playing with Shaquille O’Neal for the majority of that stretch? And then, Iverson’s size is MORE THAN a valid explanation for a slightly below league average effective FG%. Compiled with his team’s lower than average pace and the fact that he had no offensive weapons around him. 2005, when he had Webber, Korver, and Iggy, he was above league average. Never again did he shoot below 45% in his prime (2004-2010).
People just want to go off what they feel benefits their FAVORITE PLAYER and I don’t mind, but just say THAT. Stop trying to act like you’re being objective when objectively, Kobe DID NOT dominate the toughest 10-year decade of basketball. It’s not a fact, it’s a theory. It’s a fanfic.
@@officialconch nice try, but..... *NOPE*
- Who was Iverson's Shaq?? Who did he have to share the ball with?
- Your argument also shifted the context to assume that in 1996 a 17-18yr old Kobe could somehow be a 1st option on an NBA team, which is both a) plainly absurd and b) factually false.
You could have honestly compared 18yr Kobe to 18yr old AI, not 22+ yr old AI. _You didn't do that_
I believe it was Luka Doncic who said scoring was harder in Euroleague than in NBA nowadays. I miss the 90s and 2000s basketball.
Why do y’all keep posting that Luka quote without the context? His reason was because the players are better in the NBA. You have to guard everyone and you can’t sag off guys like you can in euro league and there’s no 3 seconds rule so big guys can just stay in the paint the whole game,
Kobe played in the toughest defensive decade without nearly as much spacing
If peak Kobe played the last decade he'd be so dominant they'd change the rules to limit scoring again
Skap you’ve really hit your stride with these videos. Excellent pacing, epic background music, engaging narration, and most importantly you’re speaking pure facts. Love how you use analytics sparingly and only when necessary to efficiently prove your points. Otherwise, it’d feel like I was taking stats again 😵💫
Thank you! Always love seeing you on these comments. I appreciate you 🙏❤️. And what I don’t appreciate it advanced analytics lol. So I try to incorporate those as little as possible. I might do a video about how I hate analytics 😂
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@officialconch A.I. was great man but you need to account for rings. Sure he didn't have the same team in Philadelphia as the lakers did, but he certainly did with the nuggets.
@@C0Y0TE3 What does that have to do with anything I said? Am I arguing about rings or who the greater all time player is? No. So, you’re insecurity as a Kobe fan shows.
Excellent, exhaustive argument. I really think we should look at how players measured up against their contemporaries and own era, rather than just looking at stats across decades. As this video argues, a bucket in 2002 is not the same as a bucket in 2020.
🙏❤️
yes sir totally agree
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchverson was a scoring beast but the difference between him and Kobe is that Kobe was also an elite defender.
Also Kobe was much more efficient at scoring
And Iverson led the league in mpg in 5 out of the 10 seasons between 96 and 2006.
@@officialconch Allen Iverson had freedom Kobe didn’t have at that time in the nba. No I don’t agree with your premise. The real dead ball era in the NBA actually lasted from around 94-2011. Basically Kobe’s entire career as he ruptured his Achilles I believe in 2012. But Iverson had freedoms Kobe didn’t have as a young player. Kobe wasn’t even starting in his first two seasons because the lakers had Eddie jones and nick van Exel. It’s not an applicable comparison. Also the “inefficient” claims that dog Kobe is actually a real conversation with Iverson. From 1996-2006, Iverson may have averaged 28 points per game but he was also attempting 23.3 shots per game while shooting 42.1% and had an effective fg percentage of 44.8%. Kobe “only” averaged 24 points per game during that span but he also only attempted 18.3 shots per game. He shot 45.1% during the time with an effective fg percentage of 48.2%. Give Kobe the freedom to shoot 23 times a game from his rookie year and he would have outscored AI during this span. Iverson didn’t have to worry about coming off the bench early or sharing the ball with a player like Shaquille O’Neal. The hand checking wasn’t the thing that freed Kobe. Getting his own team without O’Neal did. Iverson was a great player but no where near Kobe’s level imo. ALSO Kobe had the burden of defending great players on the other end. Something Iverson never did. Kobe has 43 more 40 point games than Iverson. He has doubled Iverson in 50 point games. Iverson is fourth in career fg attempts per game behind only Elgin Baylor, Michael Jordan and wilt chamberlain. Old selfish ball hog Kobe was 15th below Lebron James!!!! Imagine if Kobe REALLY was selfish and didn’t have to worry about winning and defense. He would be the all time leading scorer in nba history. I mean no disrespect to Iverson but Jordan still owned 96-99. And Kobe easily had the 2000s. He was a great small player and he does have 4 scoring crowns. But this is a laughable premise.
Thank you for keeping Kobe's legacy alive and loud. I saw this other video talking about Kobe being overrated and it pissed me off seeing how many people agreed with them. Then when the lone commenters posted facts about how great Kobe was, many of those lemmings would shift goal posts to keep supporting their narrative.
With today's age of brainwashed, uneducated fans they'll agree with anything. There's actual LeBron fanboys who actually agree with Scottie Pippen's take that "Jordan was a horrible player".... they'll agree with any whack garbage that diminishes other greats to prop up their beloved LeBron
Used to hate Kobe back in the 90's. Thought he tried too hard to be like MJ. But during the late 2000's and 2010's, he earned my respect. Didn't see anybody else play with the sort of mentality I used to see back in the day.
I will never stop trying to do my small part to keep the legacy of the GREAT Kobe Bryant alive. He is talked about far too little when discussing the all time greats. I saw the athletics top 75 list a while back that had him 10, I think. Pathetic and laughable. How do these “journalists” even get credentials. Anyone who is old enough to have watched his entire prime should know damn well there’s no more than a small handful of guys you can make the case for above him. Hell I’m in my late 30s and I’ve been watching basketball since 1994. He’s one of the two best players my own eyes has ever seen. Many thanks for watching and repping Kobe 🙏❤️🐍
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchyou should also mention iverson averaged more mpg both seasons for only a 20 point difference? iverson is great and is severely underrated, but scoring GOAT? I’d take Kobe all day, let alone the GOAT himself.
Thank you again for the amazing content Skap, keep it coming
My absolute pleasure. And I greatly appreciate you continuing to tune in 🙏
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
A 40 year old Tim Duncan beat PRIME LeQueen 💀
Since 2010 it has been the era of playing with the best instead of against the best
Proper basketball era ended when Pachulia injured Leonard. It's all teams chucking 3s and little defense since then.
Since 2008 Some TeamUSA players just want it that way in the NBA. KG, Allen, Pierce + DPOY Allen, perennial all-star Rondo -> KG and Shaq told LeBron he should leave (Shaq thought he was coming with LeBron back to Miami) and LeBron got so many TeamUSA players to join Wade, Bosh, Allen, Lewis, Battier, Miller -> then it was a bunch of Team USA Durant, Steph, Klay, Dray, Finals MVP Iggy (Steph never played for Team USA ever ever ever ever ever ever, he denied TeamUSA 6 times)
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Idk the nuggets and bucks would differ. Same thing for 2018 bron
Dude Kobe played with Shaq, Boston made a Big 3, even AI tried to play with Melo 🤷🏻♂️ only the Spurs constantly had a great team they ‘built themselves’
This video needs to be distributed worldwide on a daily basis
🙏❤️🐍
I agree 🥰🙏
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchKobe had a huge disadvantage during that span you listed, first off he didn't start his first two years and wasn't handed the keys and given free reign until 2005. Iverson had that luxury from day one. And then the big elephant in the room Kobe shared the court with the most dominant player of the modern era and was the second option offensively.
Context matters also it's a lot cleaner to breakdown era decade wise but I do get what you mean if you want to be literal.
@@officialconchIverson couldn’t even shoot above league average efficiency most years, just stop. Iverson doesn’t even have a scoring season better than 03 Tmac.
Love your work sir! Thank you! I was just talking about how major media in sports had LeBron James leapfrog over both Kobe Bryant and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Also pass Magic Johnson. Simply preposterous!
Thank you for watching 🙏❤️
I'll never miss it!🙏
@@seanswinton6242 My man!
Tbh Lebron is not better than Bird and I don't think it's close.
also Russell, Duncan, Hakeem, Wilt, Curry, Zeke and The Logo > LeCon Blames
_and I can prove it_ [h.m. @ KG, Mikan and Pistol]
As a solid Spurs fan, I miss Kobe Bryant. I just wish He had more time with His Family.
That was me 2 man spurs were my team Ginobli gets no respect lol dats ok we kno how great he was jus like Kobe Kobe was it plain n simple love these videos miss the man. I always comment on these videos cuz he meant dat much even tho nvr knew him whatsoever didn't even get 2 go watch him play live it's jus pure admiration end of the day he balled his heart out those were some great nailbiting games back then from tip off 2 end of regulation huh
I miss the big Fundamental. When the Lakers beat the Spus it meant something. Two great teams. The real championships happened between them. The East was just an after thought.
That's another reason the 90s are considered the golden era by so many basketball fans. It was tough defense yet satisfying scoring. It was a very rich era in terms of individual and team playing styles, with different schools collide. Very exciting to follow. Let's hope the next years will bring a similar hype.
We can only hope. I’m a fan of Jokic and Giannis. Never thought I would be a “fan” of anyone again.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
We can hope and with channels like yours we can also influence things. I'll be glad to collaborate, as I'm a writer and I also plan to follow a course of basketball performance analysis after this summer. This channel could be the beginning of something important for basketball fans who have had enough of superteams, cowards, and rude ignorants.
@@officialconch I think this comment is on the video and not on my comment. Anyway, AI is great and he should get much more respect, but please don't fall on the same Lebronlike mistake to talk about "goats" all the time. Four scoring titles is amazing, ten is out of this world. However, your analysis is correct when you say that the slow pace game began already in the mid-90s. Just look at the Bulls finals scores: not a single 100 point game in their two series against Utah. Or the FIBA/NCAA scores of the Spurs-Knicks finals. Yes, in another era Iverson would average more ppg, as Kobe would.
@@sotiriosdrokalos ultimately this channel just began as a demoralized fan of the nba for many decades who became sick of the current trending. It seemed like a more useful expenditure of time than trolling around social media platforms arguing with teenagers for a couple hours at a time. I’m still ultimately getting my bearings under me for content. Essentially I’ve just been telling the stories of making the cases that are important to me. I’m pleasantly surprised that others are sharing in my interests here.
to think I still waste my breath on people calling me crazy when I say ill take Kobe in a heartbeat over Lebron any day.
It’s not crazy. Anyone who knows, knows. Kobe easily clears Lebron and he always will.
They ignore the fact with this bullshit of toughness and mentality .
@@SamyHasnaoui-ol6ok “bullshit toughness mentality” otherwise known as, everything it takes to be a winner. And everything Lebron has always lacked.
@@skap_attack You clearly never played the game at a high level. A guy with 1 MVP in 20 years is not in the GOAT conversation, neither is someone who rode Shaq's coattails for 3/5 titles while Shaq had all 3 FMVP. Super casual and disingenuous video at best.
You crazy
and this is why i like this channel: explains points with facts and numbers.
and also, dunking on lebron.
😏😉😂🙏❤️
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Another Reason to Love and Appreciate Kobe. Thank you 🙏
🙏❤️🐍
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡
Not trying to knock AI I was one of his fans growing up but unlike Kobe AI had no one around him so he had to score that much kobe didn’t
@@keonhobgood1551 does not debunk anything I said
Guys like Shaq, Tim Duncan and Kobe Bryant are criminally underrated.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
And lebron is vastly over rated
@@officialconch Yerp
@@JohnEcho744 Not as overrated as the guys named above
Kobe is the best I’ve seen in the last 25 years
Sir, I have been watching for the last 25 years. And I must say this is a winning take. Kobe is the best player of this century, post 2000. In my humble opinion, it’s not even close.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconchthey seem incapable of ever giving Iverson his just do just because of bs rings
@@gangstagummybear3432 We meet again brother 🫡
@@officialconch All day, I clicked the vid immediately cause I saw Kobe's photo and "hardest era" which I agree it's the hardest era the 2000s, but disagree with Kobe being the king of the mountain of scorers.
Facttttttts I always said that when everyone was at their best Kobe was the best the league was at Its toughest ever and he was the best by far put some respect on bean name 🙏🏽💯🐐
Man stop! He was missing the playoffs and blew a 3 to 1 lead
@@dparks2856 with Smush Parker, Kwame Brown, and Chris Mihm, and he only missed the playoffs ONCE (before the torn Achilles).
LeBron missed the playoffs twice since coming to the Lakers.
@J23LA24
Kobe was in his prime. Lebron missed playoffs in year 16 and 19. Kobe did too. Kobe missed the playoffs his last 3 years also
Lost four times as the title favorite, never won a single series as an under dog, and never even made the playoffs without an all-star teammate.
@@dparks2856 He missed the playoffs only once and just like ya'll make excuse about LeBron being injured in 2019 and 2022 for missing playoffs, Kobe was injured and missed bunch of games that year. Kobe had a trash roster around him in a super stacked western conference. LeBron got swept by the spurs in 2007, that same spurs team had really competitive series with the Suns who beat Kobe in round 1, you act like he faced a bad team or something
The thing about the offense and defense in previous eras vs today's era is that defense back then we're allowed to make more "mistakes". A little swat on the offensive player wouldn't necessarily get a call.
Nowadays, it's the opposite. Offensive players are the ones allowed to make more mistakes. A gather here, a carry there--adding up to a damn journey sometimes... Add a healthy dose of moving screens... No calls. "break the rules" on offense to your hearts content.
And with basketball always being primarily about shooting the ball, it has become a lot easier for players.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconch
AI was great those years. But to call him the scoring GOAT is too much.
You also have to recognize the Spurs for being dominant during that stretch. They always get dismissed, downplayed, or simply forgotten just because they're the Spurs.
@@kookurikapooh It’s not a stretch to call Kobe the scoring GOAT but it is for AI? Why?
@@officialconch
Have you read my comments?
Did i say anything about Kobe in particular?
I wouldn’t say Kobe is the scoring GOAT either. That wasn’t the point of my comment.
I merely highlighted the stark difference between eras.
You assumed i was a Kobe stan (questioned, rather), but it looks to me you’re an AI fanboy.
@@kookurikapooh You passively sided with the premise of this video with your original comment. So why is Iverson a stretch but Kobe isn’t? But since you’re not saying it’s Kobe- idk what you want me to say. I’m just pointing out how Iverson actually scored the most points in the toughest era and 43% isn’t bad at all considering his size and the other players who shot worse than him. I could list a page worth…
One of the best videos I've seen giving Kobe his well deserved flowers 🐍 💯
Thanks for watching 🙏❤️🐍
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
His 2008-2010 Finals run was straight up madness. 2008 and 2010 had his no. 1 seeded Lakers take on 50-win 8th seeds. It’s straight up blasphemy when these ignorant media members and hormonal teens try to rank Kobe as a fringe top-10 player all-time or even say that Curry is better than Kobe all-time.
lebron kareem mj magic td shaq hakeem curry then kobe
Finally, someone put the realizes Kobe was just from another world.
You took the game very seriously and he took no prisoners. If you were describing Kobe as the basketball player offensively and defensively domination...🐍💛💜 Awesome video
Someone publicly telling the whole truth about KOBE shouldn’t be as RARE as it is!!! Thank you! Those who watched Kobe knows. He is the second best to Jordan and that’s only because they refused to give Kobe help after 2011. Denied CP3 trade and still Kobe ruptured his Achilles carrying the Lakers.
Man stop it Kobe is top 15 and not in the top 10.
Kobe is undeniably on the NBAs Mount Rushmore. Anyone who watched his entire prime knows what it is.
@@354allday anybody you put above Kobe would tell you that Kobe is better than them. Including LeBron!
@@donaldmcneal5366 Kobe and LeBron 2 of the most overrated players especially by their fans.
@@skap_attack in ur opinion which is a stupid azz opnion if u seriously think kobe is on the mount Rushmore
when you see a 38 year old man scoring 30+ points you know the league dont have much defense anymore only scoring
And when you see random no names like Cam Thomas at age 21 drop 40+ 3 straight times (something even LeBron never did at age 21 or younger) and dudes like Siddique Bey have a 50+ point game
Exactly right. When you see guys like steph and Lebron who are scoring the same or more in their mid to upper 30s than they were in their 20s, you know something is suspicious. Same can be said of the NFL. I’m a huge fan of Brady. I happen to think he’s the GOAT easily of that sport. BUT, when my guy was throwing got 3,500-4,000 yards in his late 20s to mid 30s then put up 5300 yards in his mid 40s, we know the game is weakening.
@@skap_attack Tom is the GOAT of this era of "Not hitting the QB". If Brady played under the rules of the 1970's, 80's and 90's where defenders could literally hit the QB after he threw the ball, He would have 2 rings at best and would have retired by age 32-35...Meanwhile Brady has won 4 Super Bowls AFTER the age of 35. Imagine if they could hit Joe Montana or John Elway and they played until 45? They would have way more rings
All modern sports is trash, compared to previous generations. Modern players benefit in the Statistics more from the rule changes. Plus players are literally stat padding
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@skap_attack guys like kareem or karl malone were also coring a lot of points while being old smh
Skap as always brings an absolute banger
🙏❤️
Yes he does 💯 💯 💯
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
The refs no longer call traveling, carrying or 3 seconds. Im sure there's many more examples but when the league doesn't enforce those basic rules, then the advantage is for offensive players.
Keep blending the old with the new SKAP 👍👍
the stupidest new rule change is
"a defender who _touches_ a player driving to the basket constitutes an *automatic foul* ..."
what do you do to stop a player driving to the basket if you cant touch them?
*YOU FLOP*
hence why modern nba is plagued with an epidemic of flopping
modern nba is only era where flopping is NOT laughed at as a cheap tactic. instead you cant be considered a good defensive player if you refuse to flop because its not "smart basketball"
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Idk what nba your watching but 3 seconds is definitely still called and they stop calling travel and carry a long time ago,
@@lookatzay4813 sure they call 3 seconds.... After the offensive player been in the lane for 8 or 9 seconds
@@ronmexico9066 I got a question why so much older guys hate on the new player? Is it cause the rules? I don’t understand it because the older gen path the way, they changed it cause of the older gen
I was born in Almonte, Ontario home of Dr. Naismith. People who agree Lebron is the GOAT is like a litmus test to know if your dealing with someone who lacks thought and reason. These videos are a delight to watch, you’ve really done your home work.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconch yeah I like when the stats are laid out in a non-biased way. You raise good points and I respect that.
Thank YOU. Kobe was my generation, and I'LL NEVER forget Kobe domination. Youre giving me goosebumps. Kobe was GLOBAL and was fluent in different languages AND PLAYED HELLISH DEFENSE while being A SOLO VILLAIN only FEW understood. This generation just doesn't get it! You sir, have a sub!
I really appreciate You and a few other guys who are Spreading the truth of how good Kobe was and stopping this slander that has been going on. .I always tell people stats are important, but they don't always tell the whole truth. Sometimes you have to look deeper into them and look at them within context.
Your channel is one of if not the best sports channel I've come across. Keep up the videos bro, your channel should/will explode in subs.
Omg this is exquisite video game piece. This is journalism at its highest. More people needs to be aware of this recap. This can't exist in only, no offense, a mere "some dude's UA-cam channel"
3:21 Curry slipped and then put up an airball😂 I've never seen that game, but that posession got me cracking up 😆
Love these videos. Brilliant content 👌. The fact that they have the audacity to talk about playing against plummers is still more challenging than playing against no defense at all.
@@Kevin-dl6nf EXACTLY. Plumbers giving effort and competing is better than the layup lines and shoot around buckets players get today.
No hand checking is absolutely ridiculous
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@official
Nope it all started in 2000s don't know what league you were watchinh. And it continued untill 2011. Sorry to dis appoint you I know the scores. Defensive teams thrive in 2000s not in 90s. 2000s is the time when NBa finals both game 7 of 2005 and 2010 the s 81-74 and 83-79. Games of NJ, SA. Lakers, Rockets, Kings, Pistons, Heat that thrives in that decade will be always in the 80s to mid 90s score. Game 5 of 04 wC semis 74-73 game 6 88-76. Finals of Lakers pistons game 1 87-75, game 2 99-91, 88-68, 88-80 100-87. 2008 still in that pace. In 2010 NBa finals game 3 91-84, 92-86, game 6 89-67 game 7 83-79. Top defensive teams wins the titles. So you're Ai rebutt is false.
@@kaksmirknight5318 Go look at pace by season and tell me what the 10 slowest paces were. Now you’re just living outside of reality to fit your own narrative. This very video explains how pace affected FG%/ how defense affects pace. Stop lying just to fit your own narrative. You think it just magically started in 2000 and you really think it was still going post 2006? Just stop.
2000s nba was undoubtedly the golden age of the nba.
Absolutely and so much all time talent in that decade alone. Dirk, Melo, Tmac, Nash, Iverson, Kobe, Wade, Shaq, Duncan, Yao, LeBron, Pierce, KG, Howard, Wallace, Carter
yea i grew up watching early 2000s team. Imo 80s and 2000s are the most stacked era for nba.
Ehh I guess its subjective. I was born in the the mid-80s and my biased brain is going 90s all the way for the golden age. Hell, I'll take Pac, Iron Mike, MJ, PrimeTime/Neon Deion, and ANY 90s sports car over what we got today. Throw in the SNES too!
Your content gives me hope for humanity once again. Thank you my good man. Carry on with the excellent, exceptional, educational work. You are a basketball Saint. Good day.
His content shows that he doesn't know shit about basketball
Wow. Many thanks for the very lofty praise. I really appreciate it. And I appreciate you tuning into the channel 🙏❤️
Great content as always. NBA went downhill really fast post 2010. The so called King can’t even raise viewer ratings even if he was Adam Silver’s favorite poster child.
🛎️💯
And thanks for watching 🙏
The nba today is more popular and lucrative than ever before. Just look at the contracts.
@@Ace-fe8gcno
nba is at its lowest viewership since the 70s. the Golden Age of basketball regularly drew 25 million viewers. nba Finals in 2020s draw 3 million viewers
_did you watch all five games of Nuggets Heat Finals or did you just watch highlights and the sports shows like everybody else?_
the game today is so ugly (no fundamentals, no defense, everybody travelling, just two teams running up and down the floor exchanging threes...) that nobody wants to spend three hours watching boring basketball
the essence of sports is competition and fans dont see that anymore. superteams killed basketball
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
You are making a Video so with so much work and details, and there are still People who disagree because they are blinded fanboys of LeBron or they are blinded haters of Kobe.
Keep up the great work ❤
If you look closely, you can see Lebron traveled.
if you're a blind old man looking through a tinted out window you can see lebron travelling
Lebron needs 3 steps to finish, he is the KING of traveling.
Lolol yeaaaa you don’t have to look that closely 😂
2k kid: "It's called a zero step boomer!"
Yeah, it's an extra step counted zero times lol
Thank you for explaining eras to these idiots that dont take it into account. 2000s was the lowest scoring era and Kobe still put up those numbers and a bunch of scoring achievements.
Yep. I tried my best to make this as simple as possible. Yet those “idiots” you refer to are still having trouble understanding. I’ll talk slower next time 😂
@@skap_attack Keep the content coming. What about one where its measured by defending the championship (which is how Phil Jackson describes how he sees it in his books) AS BOTH an offensive + defensive captain + closer
MODERN ERA
Jordan 4 times defending the championship, 6 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer
Kobe 3 times defending the championship, 5 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer
LeBron 1 time defending the championship, 4 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer (*1 lock out season win 2012, super team ups)
Hakeem 1 time defending the championship, 2 total 4 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer
Duncan 0 times defending the championship, 5 total as BOTH as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer (*1 lock out season win 1999, poor free throws adversely effected some closing ability)
Bird 0 times defending the championship, 3 total as BOTH as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer
There is a champion every single year. Dominance is defending the title. The league goes not only did this player win a championship, they defended the championship.
By age 31 no player had a better start than Kobe did with Kobe 3 times defending the championship, 5 total as BOTH a captain on offense + defense + closer
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
@@officialconch100% agreed, kobe got a pretty sh1t team so his numbers became inflated in the years post hand checking and zone removal, by that tim Iverson finally got some small offensive help so his ppg went down a bit, but AI was the top scorer and never gets respect for real.
Y’all do realize that Lebron played in the same 2000s era and averaged 27 for his sophomore year in 2005.
Kobe played at a time when there had been a cycle of "defensive inflation" and so there were teams loaded up with defense-oriented players. That's what put a premium on volume shooters: the lack of offensive options. Kobe's scoring was necessary given the supporting casts available at the time. And he was fairly efficient for a volume shooter. What made him special, in my opinion, was his ability to play elite defense while handling so much of the offensive load. This makes him comparable to MJ.
Completely agree with this. And he did while not being a defensive liability himself. Also very rarified air.
PREACH SKAP!! DON'T STOP!! LOVE THESE VIDEOS BRO.
Awesome!
Best NBA analysis on UA-cam
Many thanks for the kind words and for tuning in 🙏❤️
These analysis videos are MAGNIFICENT, you're the best in the bizz
I greatly appreciate the kind words. Thank you so much and thanks for watching! 🙏❤️
Your videos are getting better and better! The last video you did was my favorite until this one dropped, lol!
Haha well I keep making it more and more challenging to top myself. But I’ll keep trying. And many thanks to you for watching 🙏❤️
As a supporter of your channel and work. Please, keep your integrity! You have a lot talent for this. Remember this, integrity can't be taken, but only given away. The process of your videos and the editing is sublime. The mainstream can't touch you and channels like your's.
@@itznotdatserious99 🙏❤️🙏
Mr. Kobe Bean Bryant. Thank you and miss you.
RESPECT LEVEL EQUALS INFINITY
Gone but never forgotten. Legends are forever 🙏❤️🐍
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Lets not pretend Tony Allen wasnt robbed of 1st team defense during that 07-10 run. Man locked kobe down twice inthe finals, shot 40% in both series.
There was a full team defensive approach against Kobe. And, again, DIFFERENT era and different time. No one shot particularly well in those series. The lakers were very solid defensively as well.
No one’s pretending. Allen wasn’t robbed.
@jason
Robbed? Maybe Kobe's 40% shot came when the score was tied 64 all in game 7 of 2010 finals to give the Lakers 68-64 lead.
@@kaksmirknight5318 yes robbed, Kobe coasted on his early 2000s reputation for about half of those defensive selections.
@@TeezyfolKKz ua-cam.com/video/EUkqBGOkuOk/v-deo.html
This is why you can’t go off stats without context to justify who was the best players
While in college @ KU, I found out James Naismith was buried in Lawrence, so I went and visited him. He has a very impressive headstone.
That’s incredible! I would love to visit that myself. I’ll have to add that to my cross country tour queue
@@skap_attack Be sure to visit during the season so you can also see a game at the Phog.
The real voice in UA-cam. Thanks for your work....
Dude you killed it again. Keep on telling the truth. Salute!
My absolute pleasure. Many thanks for being here and tuning in 🙏
Another wonderful video for the books! One of the realest channels out there! Thank you for the video!
My absolute pleasure. Thank you for watching and for repping Kobe 🙏❤️🐍
Can't find any other channel that is so dedicated on hating LeBron yet so truthful.🤣 I love this guy.
lol I’ll take that as compliment 😉 😂
@@skap_attackso you admit your bias. I could tell when you pointed out Kobe averaged 1 point more during his best ten years without factoring in fg%, rebs, assists, player efficiency or the fact kobe shot 41% in the nba finals. Let's talk defense shall we? Lebron finished top 5 in DPOY voting FIVE times during those 10 years, finishing SECOND twice. We also went going to pretend like Tony Allen wasn't robbed of first team defense from 07-11.
@@jasonwood8023 How many times did he win DPOY?
@@jasonwood8023 nope not biased. I’m just an intelligent and educated adult who watched the entirety of both their careers. Perhaps you didn’t understand the video. Statistics were depreciated in Kobe’s era. Also Kobe’s BEST 10 years weren’t in 2000-2010. He was aged 22-31. I gave Lebron his BEST ten years. Kobe was at the very least equivalent to Lebron defensively. Kobe is a substantially better offensive player. Kobe’s skill set is arguably the best of anyone in nba history. I’d give Lebron the check mark at passing.
@@skap_attack Lebrons best 10 years are his career averages going into year TWENTY ONE lol. You can split his career in half and bang w kobe's best 10 year. No moving the goal posts either.
First 10 27.6 /7.3/ 6.9 on 49%
Last 10 26.8 /7.8 /7.8 on 52%
Playoffs
Lebron 28.5 / 9/ 7.2 on 49% career
Kobe (98-99 on) 27/5/5 on 44%
Finals
Lebron 28.4 / 10/ 7.8 on 48%
Kobe 25.3 / 5.7/ 5 on 41%, kobe shot 43% or less in 6 of his 7 finals appearances.
That's not even touching on advanced stats/metric/pers.
Man dies and y'all boost him into relms he doesn't belong. When you shoot 44% in the regular season, 41% in the finals, that matters. Especially when your trying to put them over efficiency monsters like MJ and Lebron.
MJ is my GOAT btw.
Head to head (16-6 Lebron)
Lebron 28/7/7
Kobe 24/5/5
Lebron was 8-3 vs Kobe from 07-08 till 12-13 when Kobe had good team's.
Kudos, my friend.
This is God's Own Medicine vs the ESPeePee-Problem Klutz-Sportz NiTwitterati Oblivionism that is all too common today .
I love these videos. Please continue to do what you do.
My pleasure. I’ll keep putting them out if you keep watching 🙏❤️
Can’t rlly argue for the most part Kobe will always be my fave player of all time
🙏❤️
Me too.
You’re really coming at topics from an original and nuanced angle.
Keep it up bro, ESPN can only dream of producing content of this quality.
Scapp attack Thank you for your Oscar worthy Documentaries You are definitely a basketball savant. You always keep it a💯🔥🔥🔥🔥👏👏👏👏👏🎯
My man!! I appreciate you. And I love seeing you here in the comments. Thanks for continuing to come back for more 🙏❤️
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Thank you for spreading the truth my brother. You got my subscription
Thank you. MJ, Kobe, and everyone else.
PREACH 👏🙏❤️🐍
Lol
Mj is far better than kobe he is better at everything i dont of this bullshit passing the torch the fact is there Mj first and then lebron and then kareem . Kobe have to be better than magic which he isnt with the fact .
@@SamyHasnaoui-ol6ok you know what’s bullshit, is ignorant fans who think Lebron is 2 and Kobe “didn’t get close” to MJ. In reality, no one ever got close to MJ. But Kobe got as close as anyone. And a hell of a lot closer than Lebron.
I'm speechless...this video was so amazingly informative! THIS is REAL journalism! I appreciate you, for putting Kobe Bryant's TRUE greatness into full context! What you did in this brilliant video...is what the mainstream media REFUSES to do! BIG Salute to you! Thank you!
Wow. Many thanks for the very kind words. I appreciate YOU 🙏❤️ for watching and mostly for repping the late, great Kobe 🙏❤️🐍. Thank you. I’m glad you like enjoyed the video. I have a few more you might enjoy on here. Check out “The Last Alpha” from a few weeks ago if you get the chance.
Kobe - The Most Underappreciated Player of All Time
Lebron - The Most Overrated Player of All Time
Jordan - The Greatest Player of All Time
Kobe is the same as jordan...he could be the goat
Thank you from the bottom of my heart for this video. This videos provides context to numbers without which they are just numbers. KOBE Forever.
i always know that 2000 is the best era in basketball.
To put it in perspective, arguably the greatest PF of all time played in the same era and conference. Yet he comes up in the conversation after Kobe, and thats not only now but also when they were playing. If the Lakers weren’t winning the title then it was the Spurs
But yet some believe Kobe was NEVER the best player in the game at any point of his career tho 🤦🏾♂️
He wasn't
What I find ironic is LeBron is seen as this savant of the game, but if his initial sets break down, he quits on the play. Whereas Kobe was patient, calculated, and strategic, looking for the next play when option A was broken.
If we talking straight skill no accolades KOBE BEAN BRYANT IS THE GREATEST HOOPER TO EVER LIVED
Ummm….
whoa...OK. Kobe's my favorite player, too.
And he's definitely the streakiest and possibly the most versatile and all-around skilled **scorer** of all time.
AND a phenomenal champion of the highest order....
but no MJ, no Kobe.
Among his 500+ other mind-blowing feats, '87 MJ was MVP _and_ DPOYT _and_ he won the scoring title @ 35 ppg...nobody else has had a single season quite _that severe_ before or since.
And it's like an afterthought compared to all the other winning. Just ponder what that means for a moment.
Kobe is my favorite I watched his whole career while living 15 minutes from staples center, but Jordan is the goat.
Slow down buddy. The man he designed his entire game around is that dude. Kobe def better than Bron but that's where it ends.
If this is true. Kobes' stats on playing and shooting would be a lot better. He holds records for failed shots and losing games all by himself based on ball hogging, not listening to plays from coaches and team members, not liking him.
That’s the funny thing is when people bring up eras, I tell them that “if you want to bring up eras you better start considering Kobe then” and then they go silent.
Thanks for speaking the truth 🙏🏾
My pleasure. Thanks for watching 🙏❤️
I don't even have to think that hard to remember the high flying dunks of VC, pre Splash Brothers era 3 point snipers like Reggie Miller and TMac, and the versatile offensive bag of Kobe. Steph in recent years (away from his crazy 3 point barrages) and Jokic are recapturing some of that magic I loved in the late 90s and 2000s (except that Lakers vs Pistons finals, that was tough to watch).
I agree. Jokic and Giannis are restoring some love of the game within me. Something I lost around 2011.
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
Nick wright and Colin cowherd are the main reason why new age NBA fans hate Kobe. They brainwashed these fans thinking he was never the best player in the league or not even top 10 all time
It’s disgusting. And I won’t stand for it lol. I’m going to do whatever small part I can do to reset this narrative.
The pistons used to put jordan in headlocks 😂😂😂😂
"The Jordan Rules"
Bad boys.
Despite countless injuries to every major joint of his body. he still pulled off an insane career with 5 rings and a 3peat without shaq or any top75 player in arguably the toughest era proving everyone wrong. Now just imagine if he'd never been seriously injured.. yea there would be no debate. he's still my goat and not ashamed to admit that one bit. the most skilled basketball player to ever play, hardest working and had the deepest bag in nba history. Thanks for the great informative video!
Somebody give mah niqqa a show on ESPN already
ESPN would never
They can't afford him.
@@bryank971 facts
@@phillipcummings3518 you a Bronsexual?
Great history & stats. Appreciate it.
My pleasure. And I appreciate you watching! 🙏❤️
Thanks bro for nothing but facts. We're living in an where looking the part is more important than being the part.
This is the age of smoke and mirrors!
The Seeing-Eye Test Told Me ALL of this!…But Most people don’t UnderStand the Game Enough & are Biased, so they See what they Want to See, Imagine & Create their Reality, then Spread the Lies when Ever they Discuss NBA Topics!…Kobe has ALWAYS & Will ForEver B’ My Favourite Player!…
lebron's highlight just him dunking or spinning no signature move kobe man so beautiful and acrobatic so many difficult shots made
Most skilled kobe bryant
@@shiningking hell yeah brother
Kobe Bryant is my all time favorite NBA player. Thanks for keeping his legacy alive. ❤❤❤❤
My favorite athlete of all time. BUT I still view him through an appropriate lens. I’m just trying to magnify the lens that I see him through so that others can understand how undervalued he has become. I’m glad you enjoyed the video. Many thanks for watching and for repping Kobe 🙏❤️🐍
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐
“His name is on a list even shorter than you care to admit.” #PowerfulStatement #Truth
Im gonna miss Lebron when he finally retires in 2038!!
😂😂😂
Bro the fact that you made this video I was talking about this earlier today. Kobe the most robust scorer in history, its just crazy we have this modern era now that he's gone. He would go crazy in this Era.
Kobe would obliterate this era. With the spacing and the free flowing nature of the game now. It’s not hyperbole to say he would average 37-40 ppg for years straight if he wanted to.
@@skap_attack You talk like Kobe was in his prime in the 90's or in the early 2000's. He retired in 2016 that wasn't that long ago bozo he was part of this "era"
@@blablablabla2572He was injured and older after 2012
@@franagustin3094 They still shared the same era during more than 10 years.The last year of Kobe’s prime was 2013
@@blablablabla2572 Kobe after 2012 was not in his prime anymore. Also he has a trash team and scoring went up after 2015
LeBron is a microcosm of our society
Im so glad you made this!!!!
My favorite player ever RIP.
Mine too. Gone bet never forgotten 🙏❤️🐍
Skap back with the truth! This new era is younger and faster but Kobe’s era was definitely difficult. Great video!
Kobe will eventually get the respect he deserves, as more of his fans come out of the shadows and defend his legacy
I hope so. I’m trying to lead the charge!
@@skap_attack It’s getting annoying to hear him basically forgotten by NBA pundits. It makes me wonder if people never want to admit his mentality inspired many players today!
Its so strange... I always hear about kobe's inefficiency, but having watched him myself, he did not seem inefficient at all. He looked like he got buckets. They say all sorts of stats to make him seem worse and my brain was like, "i don't know how i know this is wrong but Its definitely wrong". Thanks for this video, it clears up everything. It really boils down to 3 things:
-Pace (only era were game totals were not in the triple digits)
-defense (especially in the west)
-people not accounting for era (kobes efficiency was good for his era)
i think the 90's was the most difficult era. it was more physical and had hand checking.
You can certainly make the case. But I think we can agree, around 94-2011 was the true hardest era. I just broke it down by decade. But if we extend outside of decade range, I’d say that 15 year span was THE DEADBALL ERA in the NBA.
Truly Extremely accurate & well put together artwork!!! #BRAVO
THANK YOU 🙏❤️
It will always be mj then Kobe and a wide margin to everyone else
I like where your heads at 🙏❤️🐍
I'm glad I never did crack
If you think Kobe is better than Lebron then that’s your opinion but to say there is a wide margin between Lebron and Kobe is crazy.
Bad take
Love your videos. On point. The truth can be so poetic,, practically Shakespearian.
This was one of the more interesting and informative videos I’ve seen on the differences in the eras. I personally have Kobe at #2 all time and it blows my mind to see all the bronites out here shit on his name because their guy is a media hype inflated stats during a weak era flopper. It is truly sad that not only the eye test but actual facts and stats prove them wrong and they just cry and call names
Thank you for presenting a unique visual to the public.❤❤❤
The 2000s era is the most difficult era in the NBA history while the following decade is the most easiest one because that era are the eras of superteam and 3 pts shooting that makes today's NBA are becoming a comedy show worst than WWE. 🤑
Bruh NBA might as well be WWE lmao a lot of it looks very scripted, NBA couldn't afford both of the teams they wanted in the Finals to get swept
The staunch “2000s era” wasn’t actually 1999-2009. It was 1996-2006. The reasoning is that the NBA had 9 of its 10 slowest paced seasons between that stretch (1996-97 through 2005-06). The only outlier was 1999-00, which is currently the 19th slowest.
The player who actually dominated scoring in _this_ era was none other than ALLEN IVERSON. He scored the most points of any active player between 1996-2006 and won FOUR scoring titles in that span compared to Kobe’s one. Furthermore, Kobe didn’t actually win any scoring titles until the handchecking ban. Still, his 2005-06 scoring peak (post-handchecking) was only 2 PPG more than Iverson’s 33 PPG that same season.
Iverson totaled 19,115 points by the end of this 10-year stretch. Kobe was second with 16,866. But even if you argue that Kobe was on limited minutes, from just the 1999-00 season through 2005-06, Kobe and Iverson were both north of 14k points, with Iverson having the edge (14,286 > 14,111). Even if you argue that Kobe was the second option, from just between 2004-05 and 2005-06, Iverson outscored Kobe 4,679 > 4,651. I can’t include any further seasons because they don’t meet the criteria for a bottom 10 pace.
What’s more impressive about Iverson’s scoring is the 76ers played at an even slower pace than most other teams during his scoring title years. 1998-99 (10th slowest pace), 2000-01 (11th slowest pace), 2001-02 (5th slowest pace… and an explanation for the sub 40% FG percentage), and finally, in 2005, they were the 2nd fastest pace and wallah, Iverson averaged 33 PPG on 45% shooting from the field. All-in-all, he won all of his scoring titles during 4 of the 9 slowest paced seasons ever, including _the_ slowest season ever.
If you’re truly a fan of appreciating greatness and not just a Kobe stan, you need to recognize this. Iverson, _not Kobe_ , dominated SCORING WISE in the toughest defensive era. Throw in the fact he was 6ft tall. AI is the scoring GOAT!!!!! 🐐