Friday, October 22nd, 2010 at 2:46 pm  |  53 responses

Shooting Stars

We all know who the best 2-guard was in the 1990s, but who else made the list?

by Allen Powell II

The 1990s were a great time for shooting guards. We all know the big names like Jordan, Drexler and Miller, but there are some forgotten souls who also made noise. Let’s take a ride in the wayback machine and see who dominated the decade.

Michael Jordan

What more can be said?

No one needs to be reminded of Jordan’s feats because the public has never been allowed to forget them. Entire marketing campaigns have been dedicated to fostering and strengthening the “Jordan” aura. Hell, sports gamers are currently enthralled by a video game built around Money’s dominance. The game invites fans to finally realize the dream first given voice in Gatorade’s most famous commercial: Be Like Mike.

A detailed explanation for Jordan’s position on this list is unnecessary because placing any other shooting guard in the top spot would have been basketball blasphemy.

That’s actually the most amazing thing about Jordan’s dominance of the ’90s, well besides the fact that he took a nearly two-season hiatus and didn’t lose a beat. The chasm between Jordan and players like Clyde Drexler, Joe Dumars, Mitch Richmond and Reggie Miller makes the Grand Canyon look like a hairline fracture.

There was never any question about who was the top dog. There were no challengers to his throne then, just as there are no challengers to his throne now.

Clyde “The Glide” Drexler

Clyde Drexler wore his “cool” the same way a pimp wears a fur coat.

Effortlessly.

Drexler’s nickname was related to the way he moved in the air, but it also described his every movement on the court. Not even his decision to sport George Jefferson’s hairline and John Stockton’s shorts could dampen Clyde’s glide.

The man just played smooth.

But, it wasn’t all style, Drexler had substance too. Throughout the early and mid-’90s Drexler was good for 20 ppg, 6+ rebounds and 5 assists. Even without the world’s greatest handle, Drexler lived in the lane, and was a terror on the wing. Clyde’s Portland squads were legit contenders in the West, and even though he couldn’t match up to Mike in the Finals, who could?

Drexler was confident, but never arrogant. He was willing to take a backseat to The Dream to get his only championship ring, and was clutch for that Houston team. Whether it was ramming home a one-handed tomahawk or shooting that jumper with the high leg kick, Clyde’s game was a thing of refined beauty.

Smoother than ice.

Mitch Richmond

“Mitch Richmond is ranked higher than Reggie Miller? Are you high?”

The Rock raises up.

Let me tell you a story.

Once upon a time, there were two fellows named Emmitt and Barry. Emmitt was a complete running back; he was powerful, shifty and speedy with toughness to spare. Blessed with a top notch offensive line, astute coaching and quality teammates, Emmitt wracked up accolades, records and championships.

Then there was Barry. Barry didn’t win any championships, in fact, his teams rarely made the playoffs. He posted ridiculous numbers, but didn’t set any all-time records. But, when Barry ran the rock, it was like watching imagination in the flesh. Turn your head for a second and regret it forever.

Reggie had the team success, but The Rock was the better player. A slasher when he entered the league on Run TMC, Richmond built himself into a pure shooter and all around terror anywhere on the floor. Pull-ups, dribble drives, or on the block, Richmond could score with the best of them. He put up 22 ppg his first decade in the league, and tossed in four boards and four assists for good measure.

Matching up against names like Payton, Jordan, Drexler, Kidd, Stockton, and Hardaway, Richmond was second team All-NBA three times, and third team twice. Think about that, and then ask Reggie who was the second toughest player he ever had to guard.

Rock steady.

Reggie Miller

He was a fiend.

Not in the diabolical sense, although Reggie did have a flare for the dramatic. No, Miller was a fiend because he seemed to mainline hate. He reveled in it, he lived for it, and it was his ambrosia. There has never been a player who loved being the villain more than Reggie Miller, and given the Charmin-soft mentality of many of today’s players, there probably never will be.

His numbers are solid, not gaudy. His game wasn’t terribly well-rounded. But, outside of Michael Jordan, there was not a single player in the 1990s more feared with the game on the line. Nut-cutting time was Miller Time, and nobody ever doubted it. Just consider the jump in his playoff stats compared to his regular season numbers when Reggie would go from averaging 20 ppg to something like 25-29 ppg. That’s insane.

Knicks and Sixers fans can testify that even though the stats say that Miller’s shooting percentage dropped in the playoffs, when things got tight, it seemed like he never missed a freaking shot. There have only been so many killers in the league, but Reggie definitely is on the list.

Cheers to the bad guy.

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  • http://palehour.com Pale

    Your ignoring of one named Thurman in your football analogy is upsetting.

  • BE.water

    Thurman Thomas was a beast but emmitt and barry is a more recognizable comparison. Good write up. I remember all of these players. The exclusion of eddie jones for Hersey hawkins is kinda waqck though. Hersey had game but Eddie > Choco.

  • larrylegend

    Good read, good allen! but…john starks and abdul-rauf i am missing in the top 10!?

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

    Another great piece, Allen.
    But yeah, where is John Starks?!

  • http://www.need4sheed.com Tarzan Cooper

    Great stuff. …….. .. . Gus johnson telling spike lee pause is amazing.

  • http://Www.slamonline.com Negative kreep

    Starks…Hornacek..Sprewell!

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Great Allen, that was a great read. Totally agree with Mitch Richmond over Reggie Miller.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    What about Latrell Sprewell? Terry Porter? Allen Iverson? Or you only use guys that played well the majority of the decade?

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    But Joe Dumars should undoubtedly be on this list IMO

  • http://www.slamonline.com Wayno

    Some people clearly did not read this entire list…

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    oh ahaha wow missed page 2 completely. my fault

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    damn allen that was the best write up so far. i can’t think of anyone you missed or put out of order.

  • A.

    @nbk: Uhm… There’s a page 2. You should maybe take a look.

  • A.

    @nbk: Never mind.

  • http://Www.slamonline.com Negative kreep

    Great stuff Allen, loved the Sanders refrence.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Sorry about it being two pages. Got a little verbose, I guess.
    I considered AI, but he played the one his first two years, then switched to the two for only two years in the decade. I couldn’t put him on the list. Ray was nice, but his time was too short, in my opinion.
    Starks was a good role player on a great team, but he wans’t in the same class with any of the guys on the list.
    Like I said, I had Eddie Jones on the list, but my homie convinced me I was overlooking Hawkins, and when I went back and considered it, I had to agree.

  • http://www.hoopsvibe.com/nba/features/overdribbling chiqo

    can’t rank richmond that high without some more playoff appearances.

  • ramn

    Nice list! I remember when I was a kid that I used to think that Spree was an angrier,meaner Micheal Jordan. The innocence of youth…

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Chiqo
    How many?
    He went twice with Golden State, got out of the first round. Then he went once in Sactown. Check that roster in Sactown and consider the coaching. They had some decent, but not really good role players, while Reggie’s teams had very good role players and very good coaching.
    But, I will admit that nobody else agreed with me about putting Richmond over Miller. Nobody.

  • http://www.springbored.net letsmotor

    great article, Allen. it’s easy to forget all these great SG’s, since they’re all somewhat in the shadow of a certain someone.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Reggie was just a scorer. Mitch did everything. I would take him in every situation with more then 18 seconds on the clock.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    NBK
    that was my argument. Nobody believes Reggie was the more skilled or better player. But they all say that given his overall playoff success, the deserves to be ranked higher.
    Thus, the story about Barry and Emmitt.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    i’m with you though, you can’t punish a guy because he had bad luck. (team wise)

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

    @ Allenp: Not in the same class? I’d take Starks over Jeff Hornacek any day. Starks was one of the best guards in the league during the few years when the Knicks were at their peak.
    I’d also pick Miller over Richmond.

  • LD

    Michael Jordan was definately one of the top 10 shooting guards from the 90′s. I completely agree with that.

  • http://Egotastic.com Michael

    The 90s quietly sucked.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    @Teddy what was Jeff Hornacek? He was the main piece in Phx’s trade for Barkley – He was the 3rd best player on Utah for a few years, making 2 finals appearances. And he was relevant throughout almost the entire decade. Starks was good for what 4 years?

  • http://www.slamonline.com Wayno

    I’ll take Richmond during the regular season all day, but come playoff time, Reggie was money. Not the most skilled player, but clutch as hell and could get under opposing teams skin better than anyone.

  • BBaller

    Vinny Del Negro

  • BBaller

    @Michael You must be hard to impress or didn’t see it

  • http://twitter.com/smileyoufckers Bryan

    Richmond over Reggie 11 out of 10 times. I love Starks as a Knick fan, but one season of 19 and 6 doesn’t put him on this list. I might have taken Eddie over Hawkins though.

  • http://deathrowtull.com dY

    I was one of those rare Hersey Hawkins fans. He’s one of my favorite Sixers ever. I even had his Fila kicks. Used mad sharpies & whiteout to keep them things looking “new.”

  • http://ohlaglambam.blogspot.com Zabba

    Hornacek did guard Jordan during the Finals.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Only when Bryon Russel was on the bench

  • http://slamonline.com tealish

    Hawkins! I love it! Dude had the best serious face as he was knowing down 3 after 3.

  • http://slamonline.com tealish

    knocking*

  • http://dsjfklf.com Jukai

    Starks wasn’t THAT great. Hornacek was better.
    I’d actually probably put Reggie over Richmond, and this is from a guy who thinks Reggie is vastly overrated.

  • tavoris

    Allenp-thanks for giving Mitch Richmond some love on Slam. They ignored the hell outta him in the FOTS series.
    @Jukai-as much as I love Reggie, Mitch was that dude. If he hadn’t wasted away so much of his prime in Sac-Town with elite players like Bobby Hurley and Billy Owens at his side, he woulda been held in MUCH higher regard.
    That’s the dude that Eric Gordon reminds me of the most too.

  • http://google c_cantrell

    reggie should be over richmond

  • reald

    all the people saying the 90s sucked have SF and PG on their mind

  • The Philosopher

    Reggie Miller is the 3rd best shooting guard of all time.

  • http://google c_cantrell

    ^the philosopher..
    now i wouldnt go as far as to say that.. u cant forget about clyde the glide, kobe, and dwade who have all had better careers than miller and who all are much better than miller

  • http://www.threadsandkicks.com.au/ Eduardo

    ANFERNEE “PENNY” HARDAWAY????

  • http://Egotastic.com Michael

    Lets be real. None of these guys outside of Jordan are legit superstars. This decade you’ve had Kobe, Wade, Mcgrady in his prime, Ray Allen.

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

    @ Eduardo: Penny was ranked as a point guard (check previous posts).

  • http://crohoops.com Tomislav

    Honorable mention: Drazen Petrovic. He belongs on the list but he spent only 4 seasons in the NBA. But nonetheless, he deserved to be mentioned in this article.

  • http://crohoops.com Marjan

    Nets sharpshooter Drazen Petrovic not even mentioned in the “Honorable mention” part?
    #7 Steve Smith was a monster guard, but I think his Heat teammate Glen Rice was a much better pure shooter, even though he played SF.

  • http://www.need4sheed.com Tarzan Cooper

    ^^^^best comment

  • L

    What about JR Rider? He deserved some props as well! L

  • http://hoopistani.blogspot.com hoopistani

    Reggie Miller is not second best. Are you high?

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