We have a major update on our Notinhalloffame Basketball Hall of Fame Monitor, where we have now divided our Top 50 Active Players into five positional categories:
Point Guards
Shooting Guards
Small Forwards
Power Forwards
Centers
In each position, we utilize the average traditional and advanced statistics of the last five players who reached the Hall of Fame, but not their induction year, but rather the last five whose Peak Period occurred. This means that no Senior induction will be part of the average.
The statistical bars we are looking at are:
Games Played
*All-NBA
All-Star
**MVP
***All-Defensive
**Defensive Player of the Year
Points per Game
****Peak Period Points per Game
Total Points
****Peak Period Total Points
Rebounds per Game
****Peak Period Rebounds per Game
Total Rebounds
****Peak Period Total Rebounds
Assists per Game
****Peak Period Assists per Game
Total Assists
****Peak Period Total Assists
Steals per Game
*****Peak Period Steals per Game
Total Steals
****Peak Period Total Steals
Blocks per Game
****Peak Period Blocks per Game
Total Blocks
****Peal Period Total Blocks
Playoff Games
PER
****Peak Period PER
Win Shares
****Peak Period Win Shares
VORP
****Peak Period VORP
Conference Championships
NBA Championships
*All-NBA have weighted points. 3 for the First Team, 2 for the Second Team, and 1 for the Third Team.
**MVP and Defensive Player of the Year have weighted points. 10 for 1st Place, 9 for 2nd Place, 8 for 3rd Place, 7 for 4th Place, 6 for 5th Place, 5 for 6th Place, 4 for 7th Place, 3 for 8th Place, 2 for 9th Place and 1 for 10th Place.
***All-Defensive have weighted points. 2 for the First Team, 1 for the Second Team.
****Peak Period is the best seven consecutive seasons by a player.
This will be updated at the end of the season.
We look forward to your input, and as always, we thank you for your support.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the top 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists and consistently look to update them when necessary and based on necessity. As such, we are delighted to present our post-2023-24 revision of our top 50 Oklahoma City Thunder.
As for all of our top 50 players in basketball, we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the National Basketball Association.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles that are not reflected in a stat sheet.
Last year, the Thunder had a nice playoff run and proved they are a young team on the rise. There was one new entrant and one significant elevation.
As always, we present our top five, which saw no changes:
1. Russell Westbrook
2. Gary Payton
3. Kevin Durant
4. Shawn Kemp
5. Jack Sikma
You can find the entire list here.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has rocketed to #8 from #27. He was a First-Team All-NBA selection and the MVP runner-up last year to Nikola Jokic, and the sky is the limit for this young Canadian.
The new entrant was Jalen Williams, who debuted at #46.
We thank you for your continued support of our lists on Notinhalloffame.com.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we here at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists out and we always consistently look to update them when we can and based on necessity. As such, we are very happy to present our post 2022/23 revision of our top 50 Oklahoma City Thunder.
As for all of our top 50 players in basketball we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the National Basketball Association.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles not reflected in a stat sheet.
Last year, OKC went as far as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander could take them, and coincidentally, he was the only jump on the list. There were no new entrants.
As always, we present our top five, which was not affected by the last season:
1. Russell Westbrook
2. Gary Payton
3. Kevin Durant
4. Shawn Kemp
5. Jack Sikma
You can find the entire list here.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, wo is arguably a top five player now, skyrocketed to #27 from #36.
We welcome your input and comments and as always, we thank you for your support.
Today the 2023-24 NBA Regular Season begins and with that we are thrilled to announce that we have updated our Notinhalloffame.com Basketball Hall of Fame Monitor of active players based on their existent accomplishments.
You can see the complete list here, but we are presenting the Pre-2023-24 Top 10 Active Players immediately!
#1. LeBron James, Los Angeles Lakers
#2. Kevin Durant, Phoenix Suns
#3. Steph Curry, Golden State Warriors
#4. Chris Paul, Golden State Warriors
#5. Giannis Antetokounmpo, Milwaukee Bucks
#6. Nikola Jokic, Denver Nuggets
#7. James Harden, Philadelphia 76ers
#8. Russell Westbrook, Los Angeles Clippers
#9. Anthony Davis, Los Angeles Lakers
#10. Joel Embiid, Philadelphia 76ers
Look for many more lists, list revisions, podcasts and more content soon!
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we here at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists out and we always consistently look to update them when we can and based on necessity. As such, we are very happy to present the first revision of our top 50 Oklahoma City Thunder of all-time.
As for all of our top 50 players in football we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the NBA.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles not reflected in a stat sheet.
Please note that this is the first update since 2016, and it does not reflect the current season. Please also note that the history of the Thunder includes that of the Seattle SuperSonics.
Remember, this is ONLY based on what a player does on that particular team and not what he accomplished elsewhere and also note that we have placed an increased importance on the first two categories, which has altered the rankings considerably.
This list is updated up until the end of the 2018-19 Season.
The complete list can be found here, but as always we announce our top five in this article. They are:
2. Gary Payton
3. Kevin Durant
4. Shawn Kemp
5. Jack Sikma
We have used a different algorithm from our initial list, and this has resulted in a few changes that are reflected on the entire list, and even in the top five.
Current Houston Rocket, Russell Westbrook, takes over at #1 from #3 three years ago. The last two seasons he had with OKC, put him over Durant and Payton. Gary Payton dropped from #1 to #2 due to Westbrook’s ascension to the top. Kevin Durant, who almost made it to number, fell from #2 to #3. With the new algorithm in use, Shawn Kemp and Jack Sikma reversed their rank at #4 and #5 respectively.
There were other significant changes. We dropped the ball by not ranking Serge Ibaka. That was a major oversight, and the Congolese Center enters at #11. Steven Adams, who has been their Center for the last few seasons, debuts at #17.
As always, we thank you for your support.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com are always looking to add new sections to our website. Last month, we uploaded our top 100 active NFL players and how their Hall of Fame resumes stack up.
We are doing the exact same thing with the NBA.
As opposed to 100 like we did in Football, we are going with only 50 in Basketball.
We liked the idea that we used in Football with a modern “Modern Positional Average”, so we are doing something similar here. With advanced analytics, we decided that we don’t have to isolate based on position so they are all on one list.
Inspired by Jay Jaffe’s JAWS statistic that looks at the best seven-year stretch of a baseball player according to bWAR, we are doing the same with current basketball players. Specifically, we compiled the average PER, Win Shares and VORP for each of the past Hall of Famers based on their best seven-year period. The additional thinking behind this is that in Basketball, there is an additional focus on periods of greatness as opposed to sports like Baseball, where compiling statistics is more glorified.
To keep everything modern, the average we used is the last 14 inductees, but only the ones who were Modern Era Inductees. This excludes Direct-Elect Candidates (contributors, Early African-American Pioneers, International and Veterans). The only exception is Vlade Divac, who was chosen via the International Committee, but has a healthy NBA career to draw upon.
As of this writing, the 14 players from the last four induction classes who we are using for the composite averages are:
Ray Allen, Maurice Cheeks, Vlade Divac, Bobby Jones, Grant Hill, Allen Iverson, Jason Kidd, Tracy McGrady, Yao Ming, Sidney Moncrief, Steve Nash, Shaquille O’Neal, Jack Sikma and Paul Westphal.
While we are not looking at traditional statistics, we are averaging out All-Star Games and All-NBA Selections. With the latter, we are looking at this in weighted fashion. In terms of Third Team All-NBA Selections, one point will be assigned, Second Team All-NBA Selections will have two points will be granted, and First Team All-NBA Selections will have three points.
Here are the averages:
Based on their elite seven-year stretch the average PER of the last 14 Modern Era Hall of Famers is 21.5.
Based on their elite seven-year stretch, the average Win Shares of the last 14 Modern Era Hall of Famers is 65.1.
Based on their elite seven-year stretch, the average VORP of the last 14 Modern Era Hall of Famers is 27.8.
With All-Star and All-NBA Selections, we look at the entire career of the player.
The average All-Star Selections of the last 14 Modern Era Hall of Famers is 7.4.
The average All-Pro Selections (based on the pointed average of one for a Third Team, two for a Second Team and three for a First Team Selection) is 9.8.
We are also adding NBA Championships. Often, players in this team sport more than any other (except for NFL Quarterbacks) are judged by the number of rings they have. Perhaps, that shouldn't be as regarded as it is, considering the average amount of titles of our last 14 Modern Era Hall of Famers is less than 1. Specifically, it is 0.79.
Wrapping this up in a bow, the six variables we are looking at Elite Period PER, Elite Period Win Shares, Elite Period VORP, All-Star Games, Weighted All-Pro Selections, NBA Championships.
This will be a regular feature on Notinhalloffame.com, and we will be updating this at the end of the season.
You can find our new section HERE.
As always, we here at Notinhalloffame.com thank all of you for your support!
Pre-2019-20 Rank: #6. Pre-2020-21 Rank: #6, Pre-2021-22 Season Rank: #6, Pre-2022-23 Season Rank: #7, Pre-2023-24 Rank: #8.
*Peak Period: 2013-14 to 2019-20.
At one time, Russell Westbrook was the master of the Triple-Double, a perennial MVP candidate (he won it in 2016-17), and proved he could lead a team deep into the playoffs. A member of the NBA 75th Anniversary Team, Westbrook was a nine-time All-NBA Selection, nine-time All-Star, two-time Scoring Champion, and three-time Assists Champion. All of that equates to the Point Guard entering the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame on his first shot, and it should erase any narrative that the last three years have given.
Bluntly, when Westbrook joined the Lakers in 2021, his shot-making skills did not follow, and his overall playmaking skills have eroded. He begins this year in Denver as a reserve player on a contending team chasing the only accolade that has eluded him: an NBA Championship.
Regardless of what happens in Los Angeles and Denver in the future, the legacy he laid out in Oklahoma City was legendary.