Slam Online Top 50: Rasheed Wallace No. 34
What’s Going on World?
John W. Davis here. Say this over at www.slamonline.com and wanted to give this a plug. They ranked Tayshaun as the No. 45 best NBA Player and Richard Hamilton the No. 40 Top player. Everyone favorite big man comes in at No. 34, Rasheeeeeeeeeeeeddddddddddddddddd Wallace. We all know Rasheed has the talent of a Top 25 NBA player but the problem with Rasheed is he shows that talent in spurts. If he was consistently at 15 and 10 guy there would be no doubt because his defense and outside shot is something special.
SLAMonline Top 50: Rasheed Wallace, no. 34
The definitive ranking of the best players in the NBA today…
scruffy beard and ratty headband could belong to any tough playground player in America. He plays in uptowns like cats in the hood, and he’s got highly disruptive skills that can be a difference maker in any game. He’s a solid defender who blocked 100 shots and hit 100 threes in each of the last three seasons. He filled a 6-foot-11 gap in the 2003-2004 Pistons line-up, and won Detroit it’s first title since Zeke was running things. Wallace is also the type of player that probably never fully hit his stride.Sheed has always seemed to lack a true position. Too quick to be a center and probably too big to guard most power forwards, Wallace plays an awkward-yet-effective role in the success of most every team he has been on. However, there have been times when Wallace hasn’t played to his full potential and that’s probably cost him a lot of development as a scorer and rebounder. He should probably have averaged some double-doubles and added a Defensive Player of the Year Award to his resume by now, but he hasn’t.
He averaged 13 points, nearly 8 boards and 2 blocks per game during the 2004 Playoffs. By any account, he provided the major spark that turned the Pistons from a good playoff squad into a championship team. Though Chauncey Billups was the MVP, Wallace’s efforts were accounted for and his presence is still felt.
Wallace is a guy who has the skills to make an instant impact on most teams. While his technical fouls have cost his team tons of points through the years, his winning attitude is contagious, and he knows how to play to win when the time comes. He checks into our SLAMOnline Top 50 countdown at no. 34, but he’s the type of player who had the potential to be ranked much higher.
Want more of the SLAMonline Top 50? Check out the archive.
This entry is filed under Blog Entries. Subscribe to the
Comments RSS feed.
Tags: Rasheed Wallace, Ryne Nelson, Sheed, Slam Online
2 Responses
Ryan September 20th at 9:46 pm
“…his winning attitude is contagious…”
Darn right it is.
I heard that ‘Sheed went straight home, still in his uniform, after the January 5th loss to the Celtics.
He cares about winning, that’s for sure.
He’s a great locker room presence, a great coach to others while on the bench, and a great helper to the younger players.
Coach Sheed/Player Sheed combined.
I want to see him REALLY give it his all this year.
I want him to break a rim, even though they’re supposed to be sturdy.
Break the ball in half with a block.
Bring your intensity to every game, every night — let’s go get ‘em this year.
I’m excited for getting the season started, can you tell?
John W. Davis September 21st at 1:34 am
YES I CAN!
WE NEED SHEED TO READ THIS MESSAGE!