Monday, September 20th, 2010 at 11:34 am  |  90 responses

Straight To The Point

SLAMonline regular Allenp ranks the 90′s best point guards.

by Allen Powell

Everybody keeps saying this an amazing time for guard play in the NBA.

Everybody can shut the hell up.

Don’t get me wrong, these young cats can play, but how many of them have the well-rounded games needed to dominate for a decade?

The 1990s had a glut of amazing point guards, the kind of players whose names still roll off the tongue with ease. Gary Payton, John Stockton and Jason Kidd all plied their trade with skill and panache, but who is the best of the best? Let’s get to the list.

John Stockton

If a basketball player wears short shorts for his entire career despite the changes in fashion, is he:
A. An out of touch bumpkin with no sense of style
B. A maverick, unconcerned with style over substance
C. The best point guard of the 1990s

Stockton wasn’t a scorer, but he could score on damn near anyone. He set borderline illegal screens and was the most clutch point guard of his decade.

Where Stockton became an icon was with the ball in his hand looking to make a teammate better. Some point guards understood angles, pace and tempo as well as Stockton, none did it better.

Stockton saw his best assist averages in late 1980s, but even in the 1990s dropping 10 assists was a down year. And on defense he was a terror. Stockton ruled the 90s like Magic ruled the 80s, who cares what he was wearing?

Gary Payton

Oakland’s Finest was the perfect blend of hood and Hickory High. His swagger and fundamentals could make your daddy’s daddy and the grandson bouncing on his knee take notice.

Sadly, Payton’s mouth sometimes distracts people from his ridiculous numbers. By the mid-90s, a stat line of 20 points, 8 assists and 4 boards, with a minimum of two steals was just a day at the office for Payton. Don’t forget the nine selections to the All-Defensive team and the fact that he’s the only point guard ever named Defensive Player of the Year.

Who knows, maybe if George Karl had realized a little earlier its sound strategy to have your best defender guard the best scorer on the opposing team Payton might have made Jordan’s first comeback a little less sweet… On second thought, not even the Glove had that kind of stopping power.

Tim Hardaway

Right now, some folks are shaking their heads at Tim Hardaway beating out Jason Kidd for the number three spot on this list

Check the tape suckers. Kidd never dropped 22.9 points, 9.7 assists and 2.6 steals on 47 percent shooting in his SECOND year in the league. Nah that was the creator of the infamous U-TEP two-step.

Before Iverson unveiled The Crossover 2.0, Hardaway was rupturing ACLs and ligaments league wide. As a member of Run TMC in Golden State, Hardaway managed to get his, and keep Chris Mullin and Mitch Richmond fed.

Even when he moved to Miami, Hardaway was still dropping 18 and 8 for a Heat team where defense and overall goonery were paramount. (Sorry E-boy.)

Hardaway’s overall career doesn’t compare to Kidd’s, but in the 90s it would have made sense to take Tim six days a week and twice on Sundays… Pause. Mavericks Kings Basketball

Jason Kidd

Jason Kidd is a lot like Kobe Bryant.

It’s easy to appreciate the mastery, but remain unmoved by the man. There are no real reasons to dislike Kidd. His greatness is undeniable. Yet, “fanhood” seems harder to find.

Regardless, any list of the best point guards of the 90s that didn’t include Jason Kidd would lack credibility.

No-looks, lobs and bounce passes, oh my! The fast break was Kidd’s yellow brick road, and defenders got squashed like the Wicked Witch of the East.

Kenyon Martin, Richard Jefferson and Kerry Kittles all eventually found out that life without Kidd’s passes was as drab as black-and-white.

It’s a shame that Kidd doesn’t have at least one MVP award when a certain Canadian has two, but the world is full of injustices. Then again, Kidd regularly failed to crack 40 percent from the field, so that’s an issue. But, if ask any player who filled a lane in the 1990s which player they’d want in the middle with the rock, it has to be Jason Kidd. Word to munchkins and flying monkeys. No Imus.

Kevin “KJ” Johnson

I know what you’re thinking because I’m thinking it too.

K.J is pretty damn low on this list. But, sadly, Johnson was a frail dude in the 90s, and despite being capable of dropping 22 points, 11 assists and 2 steals on 50 percent shooting he couldn’t seem to stay on the freaking court.

Ankle breaking? He had that in spades. Mid-ranges in the grill? He had them too. And if the job calls for being able to dunk, one-handed on the best shot blocker of the modern era, well K.J would like to apply. He can start immediately.

Before injuries shut him down, K.J. was putting up Earvin Johnson numbers without ever developing a three-point shot. Maybe if the Suns had realized that having Dan Majerle guard Michael Jordan was a grave mistake they might have taken the 1993 Finals from the Bulls.

But, people in Arizona be tripping, you know?

Mark Price

Mark Price is at number 6 on this list and Penny Hardaway, Mark Jackson and Kenny Anderson haven’t had their names called?

Absurd. Ludicrous. Unconscionable.

No it’s not. Price is where he is because he knew how to run a team and get his numbers. The only weaknesses in his game were those put there by God. No matter how hard Price hit the gym, he wasn’t going to overcome being short with no hops and bad knees. Sorry.

But, check out Price’s numbers from the 1989-90 seasons where he dropped 19 and 9. He followed that up with 17 and 10 with 2.6 steals the next year.
If Price didn’t give his opponents at least 17 points and 7 assists while making them shake their heads at the range on his pull-up, well they considered themselves lucky.

The Price is, well you know the rest.

Anfernee “Penny” Hardaway

Is it better to have loved and lost than to have never loved at all? Is it better to have a career that rises like booming fireworks and ends with a disappointing fizzle, or to have a career that shines steadily like a dependable streetlight?

When considering where to rank Penny a decision had to be made. Should tantalizing potential or tangible productivity be rewarded? Potential won.

Penny Hardaway was The Man in the 1990s. His combination of size, strength, speed, court vision and hops was sickening. What he lacked in killer instinct, he made up for in pure, unadulterated talent. It’s impossible to overstate just how often his game made people say “Damn…”

Penny and Shaq were supposed to be Mickey Mouse’s version of Magic and Kareem, but personality conflicts and injuries ended that dream. Penny’s planned rebirth in Phoenix was mostly a dud.

But, when Penny was forcing Gary Payton, John Stockton and Clyde Drexler off the All-NBA first team and taking the manhood of sundry Indiana Pacers players, he was The Man. End of discussion.

Mark “Action” Jackson

Mark Jackson’s stats, particularly after his first two years, aren’t really “great.” Game film shows an obvious lack of hops or speed. There was a reason they called him “Turtle.”

But, slow and steady doesn’t just win races, it wins games. Mark Jackson played for teams that won games. In his 17 years in the league, he only missed the playoffs twice.

Jackson rarely averaged fewer than 8 assists a season, and despite never being known as a shooter, he actually shot 40 percent from three several times. Plus, who doesn’t remember him killing little guards with a jump hook that was as ugly as it was effective.

Yes, the shimmy was annoying. Yes, Scottie Pippen exposed all of his weaknesses in the playoffs. But, despite all of his handicaps, Mark Jackson succeeded where a variety of more talented “rabbits” failed.

Now if he could just get some new catchphrases. kennyanderson

Kenny Anderson

Kenny Anderson was putting Queens on the map when Ron Artest was still playing hide-and-seek. (Just playing, don’t kill me Ron.)

His high-school career in Gotham City is the stuff of legend, and after making a cameo in “Lethal Weapon 3” at Georgia Tech, Anderson decided to take his talents to New Jersey. No Lebron.

But, by his third year, Anderson was putting up 18 and 9, while making high-schooler ballers all over America wish they had a left-handed handle and a tuck move in the lane.

Anderson and Derrick Coleman were supposed to be hip-hop’s answer to the country and western flavor of “Stockton to Malone” but sadly, it never happened. They both made the All-Star Team in 1994, but that would be the pinnacle of Anderson’s NBA career.

His production steadily declined, and his otherworldly handle wasn’t enough to prevent his jumpshot from making him a journeyman.

Anderson was NYC to the fullest, but, honestly, he could have been so much more.

Terrell Brandon

Number 10 could have been number one to me…

Actually, Terrell Brandon should never hold the top spot of any list of point guards in the 1990s. But, the illustrious Sports Illustrated magazine did once rank Brandon as the best point guard in the NBA during that same decade.

Go figure.

Brandon gets the final spot on this list mainly because it was difficult to put another player ahead of him.

Iverson and Marbury were too young. Rod Strickland just didn’t seem to fit. Sam Cassell, while a better overall player, was too much of a chucker in his heyday to be considered a top point guard. And Mookie Blaylock isn’t even the most famous Mookie in America. Word to Rosie Perez.

Brandon, in one word, was solid. Before injuries to his knees, he could stick a midrange, penetrate the lane with ease and distribute the rock. Plus, he played well with others.

Besides, if Sports Illustrated wrote it, it must be true. Right?

Allen Powell is a New Orleans-based journalist.

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  • http://www.stonesthrow.com Michael NZ

    AllenP
    I’d really like to see the 90s centers done.

  • http://slamonline.com Krishan

    IMO do 90s small forwards next. It’d be interesting after pippen and grant hill.

  • http://sfjklf.com Jukai

    Allenp: centers would be ridiculously fun to do.
    What would it be, something like Hakeem, Robinson, Shaq, Ewing, Mutombo, Alanzo, Divac, Smits, Campbell, and uh…. ah jeez I’m having trouble with this one.

  • http://www.clutchfans.com/ Blue

    Excellent article, homie! I think Mugsy Bogues deserved an Honerable mention though…dude was exciting, though his outside shot was suspect (to put it mildly)…

  • http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/olybb/news/story?id=5493184 Jackie Moon

    Terrell Brandon was a fantasy basketball GIANT.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    @Jukai – Sabonis for sure

  • http://twitter.com/HarryByrdMan44 LA Huey

    Nice work. I especially liked the placement of Stock, Price, and Penny (my all-time favorite).

  • http://slamonline.com Krishan

    Brad daugherty was pretty good, jukai

  • http://brimartin13@gmail.com Brion

    I agree w/ this list. Good job.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Centers, two guards and small forwards would all be bananas.
    But, I was thinking about looking at power forwards next, which is a difficult list to consider because of hte time frame. Obviously, Charles and Karl dominated the 90s, but after them there is a lot jockeying. The players with the two best careers, Duncan and Garnett, got started faily late. Rodman is a dark horse, Manning, Daughterty. I think that would be an interesting list, and one that would force me to examine players I don’t normally think about.

  • The Philosopher

    Allenp:
    Very nice.
    Very, very nice.
    Another reason why SLAM is the pinnacle of the basketball world.
    I do not blame you for not originally asking to do this.
    I’m sure it was an honor to do it.
    There isn’t a better forum to express the knowledge and the love of the game than on SLAM.
    You all’s knowledge of subject makes me feel proud to be able to go back and forth, and not feel out of place.
    Much respect, brethren. Everyone.

  • http://dsfjlkf.com Jukai

    Ohhh Sabonis and Daugherty are certainly options. They only played about half of the 90s though, correct? Feels odd to put players who really didn’t have a full impact but I can’t think of anyone better.

  • http://dsfjlkf.com Jukai

    I honestly don’t think I could do justice to a 90s Power Forward list.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Well Sabonis only played the second half of the 90′s in the US. ANd Daughtery only the first half, but you kind of have to take half’s for centers. THeir average career is only like 4 years

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Malone, Barkley, Kemp, Anthony Mason, Larry Johnson, Horace Grant, Derek Coleman, Dennis Rodman, Clifford Robinson, Charles Oakley/Danny Manning (who’d I miss?)

  • http://www.dontevenreply.com total scrotal implosion

    Malone barkley cwebb! Kg maybe timmy(only a couple seeasons in 90s, but instant dominance and a ring) kemp …….

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    cwebb good call. also juwan howard might fall on that list ahead of danny manning and oakley. IDK about Anthony Mason either homeboy played a lotta 3

  • logues

    this was very nice, AllenP should become a member of the SLAM staff! the only part i dont agree with is the if thunder dan didnt guard mj part. cmon now, nobody was gonna stop mj

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Richard Dumas was the original one tasked with Guarding the GOAT. Couldn’t do it, so they settled for Jordan scoring a thousand (with Majerle on him) while trying to keep everyone else quiet by rebounding and keeping away from doubling jordan outside 12 feet. Which kind of worked for a second until some phoenix sun forgot that John Paxson was Sooper Whap and Sooper Open.

  • tavoris

    nice one Allenp…i’m on the bandwagon wit this order 100%

  • http://dsfjlkf.com Jukai

    In FAIRNESS to everyone talk about KJ not guarding Jordan in that series… KJ played so awful the first three games of that series, he was benched half the time. He choked pretty embarrassingly. As a Phoenix fan, trust me on this one. He was having enough trouble without guarding the best player of all time.

  • MikeC.

    Best 4s of the 90s would be tough. There are so many that were hybrid 3s/4s or 4s/5s. Young KG was very much a 3 for the first couple years of his career until he got some heft. I’d have to start with Webber, Kemp, Mailman, Sir Charles, Oak-Tree, Derrick Coleman, LJ, Worm, Uncle Cliffy (first to excel as a hybrid 3/4), and Kevin Willis’ underrated Tyrannosaurus Rex arms. LJ might get the bump in favor of Danny Manning, but that Clippers-curse has a stink to it that won’t wash off. I took a look at Michael Cage based entirely on his jheri-curl, but Oak bumped him. Clippers-stink again.

  • http://myspace.com/emarosa Bryan

    I’d have to go Rod Strick. (why didn’t the Knicks keep him?) I remember the sports illustrated article you mentioned and remember thinking WTF as I was reading it. I also remember an NBA preview issue ranking him fairly high too, it was all “adjusted for pace” back then too.

  • http://www.dontevenreply.com total scrotal implosion

    Wait one second! Allenp, you left off the greatest pg of this generation, steven fitzgerald nash!!! He was an allnba mvp player his whole career. Dont let anyone tell you differently. I mean, its not like he sucked terribly for the first 3rd of his nba career, did pretty well middle 3rd, and became extremely overrated at the end due to his teammates shooting immediately after receiving a pass not matter the situation thus leading to inflated numbers and media overinfatuation. That cant be it. Nash has dominated since 96, best pg ever

  • tim

    we need more lists on the 90s. my favorite decade

  • JTaylor21

    @AllenP is this the only one you’re doing or are there more to come? This seems to bring out everyone’s best arguments. You should tackle either best centers or best SFs.

  • Papa Smurf

    Props to AllenP for the post and to Slam for posting it. The list is solid. Stockton’s screens weren’t “borderline illegal” – they were damn near criminal . . . but he was awesome and deserving of #1. Strickland had the talent, but he was too unreliable, to make this list. I think I remember reading that he forgot to bring his hoops shoes to 3 straight games! Are you serious?!

  • spock

    where’s van exel? and come on stop hating on steve nash man… the guy deserved his mvp’s

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    Nice job, Allenp! Great points, everything is pretty much inarguable, except for maybe Mark Price over Hardaway and the number 10 spot. But yeah, keep it coming!

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    Also, I feel Kevin Johnson got kind of shafted.. But you backed it up.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    tsi: YOU MAD?! Nash deserved at least 1 MVP, that’s all I’m gonna say. Obviously being a ’96 rookie he doesn’t deserve to make a ’90s list but the 2000′s? Oh yeah. Top 2 probably.

  • http://www.dontevenreply.com total scrotal implosion

    Nah im not mad. Its funny to me. The only thing I dont like is the nashfandom can make people forget about how truly great kidds career was/is. But steve has always been kinda funny to me lil goofy floppy canadian, he fit with dirk ‘terrorist from die hard’ nowitski. And step brothers with baron …….stop lookn at my ass steve nash!!!!!!

  • jufu

    you can count me as a captain kidd fan, my favorite player of ALL TIME (first Net i ever knew as a jerseyan). bullcrap he was below gary payton and freaking utep whatever. nobody really takes into account what jkidd really did. every team he came onboard was transformed from a loser into a winner. he made kittles and jefferson and kmart. he was a winner. stockton couldnt win with the dude that made HIM: malone. gary payton couldnt win either, and where the hell is the two step now? jkidd is the best of the 90s hands down.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    haha just playing, holmes.

  • http://www.dontevenreply.com total scrotal implosion

    Yea I know, senor dong

  • http://dsfjklf.com Jukai

    Nash did not deserve his MVP in 2004 and 2005.
    He deserved a damn MVP in 2006 over Dirk though.
    jufu: Look up the year Jason Kidd made Kittles and JEfferson and KMart. Look up the year this is talking about. Bang your head against a f*cking wall please.
    This list is looking at Jason Kidd’s career ENDING when he still played in Phoenix.
    Man, is this concept so damn hard?

  • http://hibachi20.blogspot.com Moose

    Nash didn’t deserve his MVPs, but there really wasn’t anyone who he straight-up stole it from. Nobody ELSE really deserved it then, except for maybe Dirk.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    The myth that Kidd transforms teams is funny.
    When he was drafted, the Mavs were bad, and they stayed pretty bad. When he went to the Suns, they had just lost Barkley and KJ was hurt, so that exmplains why they were .500. The next year they got McDyess and Cliff Robinson (both of whom will be featured on my all-decade power forwards list) and KJ was healthy. Kidd was important, but there was a lot more going on. And that team eventually floundered with Kidd at the helm which contributed to him being traded.
    In fact, the only place where he had a massive turnaround was in New Jersey, and that was overhyped because people hated Marbury (who also took that Phoenxi team that Kidd left to the playoffs and scared the Spurs) and because the Nets finally got healthy right when they got Kidd.
    Finally, the Nets had a decent run, but then they sucked with Kidd after he got a massive contract. And now he’s in Dallas again, and they aren’t exactly burning the league up.
    So, where are all these magical turnarounds?

  • JTaylor21

    @Moose uhm Kobe, TD, Bron all deserved those MVPs than Steve “I can’t stay in front of my shadow” Nash.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    MVP is a regular season award. Nash did have phoenix as a what 1 or 2 seed without amar’e? that season he pretty much deserved it. The first one should have gone to Shaq though

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