What about Earl Manigault the original GOAT and Rucker Park tournament legend? Sorry guys as this is outside of the NBA and probably not relevant to the discussion.
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As a lifelong Knicks fan 1973 was a triumphant year and the last time they won an NBA title. Frazier and Monroe were one of the great backcourts of not only that era but in history. I was thrilled to see Monroe make his way to New York from the then Baltimore Bullets.
Tim,
I thought I'd respond to your comments, since no one else has.
I don't know anything about Earl Manigault, except for reading about him. Great in the big city, but could he have taken his game on the road and played against the best?
Earl Monroe was the kind of player that you saw on television and tried to mimic his style, his moves. My Pop took me to a Knicks game once around the same time in 1973 or 1974, just as I was becoming engrossed in basketball. So I saw Earl Monroe and Walt Frazier play together once. The general feeling among people I knew is that Bill Bradley and Dave DeBusschere were almost as important. Bill Bradley had a very compact game, all efficiency and purpose. That team also had another brilliant mind, Phil Jackson, who made an impression coming off the bench.
By the time I saw him, Monroe's knees were shot. He was big, about 6-3, but I doubt he could dunk a ball then. My guess is he could barely touch the rim.
I would much rather have Walt Frazier leading my team than Pete Maravich. Without breaking it down into pieces, I say he was a much better player.
I feel a bit sheepish about sharing these experiences, when we would drive up to Oakland and see the Warriors play a few times a year. These days, basketball has become a luxury outing, where tickets in the lower bowl of the arena are very expensive. Back then, tickets were very reasonable. I'd guess Dad paid 8-12 dollars per ticket to see the games. Now those tickets in San Francisco are probably 300-500 apiece.