Great all around skills but could never hold Jabbar under 35.
Saw the smiley - but some of the younger posters might not know. Bill (the healthy young one) regularly held Kareem in the 20s - That's how Portland was able to come out of the pacific and win their only NBA title with Bill. Kareem has written than Bill Walton and Nate Thurmond were the toughest defensive centers he ever faced (Nate - over the years has become the 2nd most underrated center of all time to me - next to the great Mel Daniels).
That being said, Kareem is still the Best that ever was. No one has ever been AS good as LONG as Kareem Abdul Jabbar. The guy was NBA Finals MVP at age 38. ALL NBA First team at age 39. He was an NBA All-Star at age 42.
Whenever someone asks me if I think Kareem was better than Russell or Chamberlain, I say "Yeah. 6 YEARS better than Chamberlain, 7 years better than Russell." Russ retired after 13 years, Chamberain after 14 years. AFTER his 14th season, Kareem won THREE NBA Championships. And during those first 13 years? Just had more points, rebounds and blocks than anyone in the NBA over those 14 years. Oh, and racked up 3 other NBA Championships, and 6 NBA MVP awards. His sustained excellence is unmatched in hoops history. Tho what Steve Nash is producing this year at 38 (over 12 assists a game) is pretty impressive.
And what was also remarkable was how he single took Milwaukee from cellar dwellar to champ upon joining the team
Tho credit where credit is due - that guy Oscar helped a bit, too. And there are guys in the hall of fame with WORSE numbers than Bobby Dandridge.
Championship team built from scratch in 3 years. They got the sweet shooting guard they'd need in Jon McGlocklin in the Expansion draft of 1968 from the Rockets. In that 1st regular draft that year, they picked the steady SF they'd need in Greg Smith. And traded rookie guard John Arthurs to the Suns for backup center Dick "Cement Mixer" Cunningham. Then they made themselves major contenders for 1970 by drafting Kareem and Dandrige in the '69 draft. But some GREAT front office moves after that season made them Champions in 1971. They traded backup center Charlie Paulk and point guard Flynn Robinson to Cincinnatti for Oscar Robertson. Then they traded starting PF Don Smith (Zaid Abdul-Aziz) to the Supersonics for aging PF Bob Boozer, and guard Lucius Allen (3rd pick after Alcindor and Neal Walk in the '69 draft). To lock it all up, wth a month to go in the title season, they traded their Rookie first round pick 6'9 Gary Freeman to Cleveland for an experienced solid backup PF in McCoy McLemore. They KEPT 2nd round pick guard Billy Zopf out of Duquesne. And suddenly you had a solid and deep Championship team in just 3 seasons.
Kareem with 40+ minutes at center, with grabage time by Cunningham.
Bobby Dandridge at one forward getting 18 pts and 9 boards, backed by Bob Boozer and McCoy Mclemore
Greg Smith getting 30 minutes at SF, with Dandrige sliding down when he went out.
Jon McGlocklin getting 17 pts a game shooting 54% from the field at the SG, backed by Lucius Allen
Oscar getting 19 pts a game and 9 assists at the Point, backed by Lucius and Zopf.
Kareem would stay with the Bucks for 6 seasons before forcing the trade to LA. It's a testment to how great he was that the Bucks COULDN'T recover from losing him. Because what they got for him, in todays market WOULD make, say, the Cleveland Cavaliers contenders: 7'0 Elmore Smith (best year 17 pts 15 rebs, led league in blocks, career 13/11/3), 6'9 David Meyers (best year 14pts 7 rebs, career 11/6), 6'5 Junior Bridgeman (best year 17pts 5 rebs, career 13/4), and 6'4 Brian Winters (best year 20pts 5 assists, career 16/4).