Why is James Harden destined to be historically underrated?

James Harden gets a lot flack. Whether it’s the beard, the rip-through maneuver that the league banned, or the Euro step that he perfected, most of it is noise. The one criticism that does have merit, and puts a hard ceiling on his place among the all-time greats, is his empty postseason trophy case. Harden, of course, has never won an NBA Championship. In fact, he’s only made the NBA Finals once, and that was way back in 2012 when he was still a 6th man for the Thunder. Steph Curry, Kevin Durant, Giannis Antetokounmpo, and Nikola Jokic are all players from Harden’s era who are safely ahead of him on the GOAT list, and it has everything to do with playoff success, or lack thereof. While that might keep Harden from cracking the top-ten, it doesn’t keep him from running neck-and-neck with Karl Malone as the greatest player to never win an NBA Championship. 

Harden’s regular season resume is among the best in the history of the league. He won the MVP in 2018, and finished second in MVP voting three times. The other players to have four top-2 finishes in MVP voting? Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, Nikola Jokic, Tim Duncan, LeBron James, Kevin Durant, Jerry West, and Bob Pettit. Company doesn’t get much more impressive than that. Harden was also named 1st Team All-NBA six times, which is more than Curry, Kevin Garnett, and Dirk Nowitzki.

Harden became a glorified cheat code after he first perfected the aforementioned Euro step, and then paired it with a historically uncanny ability to draw fouls and make three-pointers. He took the “threes or layups” mantra that has taken the NBA by storm one step further by unearthing “threes or free throws.”  Harden’s ability to score in a variety ways, and do it efficiently has resulted in a remarkable ledger of unique accomplishments:

Harden’s Achievements

1). The only player in NBA history to average at least 36 points per game in a season with a .600 True Shooting %.

2). The only player in NBA history to average at least 30 points and 7.5 assists for three consecutive seasons. 

3). The only season in NBA history with at least 750 free throws made and at least 350 3-pointers made. 

4). The only player in NBA history to score at least 23 points per game, accumulate 8,000 career assists, and hold at least a .607 True Shooting %.

5). The only player in NBA history to have led the NBA in assists and also in 3-point field goals made.

6). The only player in NBA history to lead the league in scoring 3+ times and assists 2+ times. 

7). The only player in NBA history with 8,000 career free throws made and 3,000 3-pointers made.

8). The only player in NBA history to have led the league in total points, steals, assists, and 3-pointers.

9). Led the league in scoring average for three consecutive seasons. Over the last 45+ years, only Michael Jordan and Kevin Durant have done the same.

10). Averaged at least 29 points for six consecutive seasons. The only other players in NBA history who can say the same are Michael Jordan and Wilt Chamberlain. 

11). Finished in the top-2 in scoring for six consecutive seasons. Only Jordan and Chamberlain can say the same. 

12). 4th most 60-point games in NBA history. 

13). 4th most 50-point games in NBA history.

14). One of only three players in history with a 60-point triple double. 

15). Led the NBA in Win Shares five times. Only Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain, and Michael Jordan did it more often. 

16). Led the league in free throw attempts seven times. Only Chamberlain did it more often. 

17). Led the league in 3-point field goals made for three consecutive seasons. Only Steph Curry can say the same.

18). 5th most free throws in NBA history. 

19). 8th most triple-doubles in NBA history.

20). Led the league in points scored four times. Only Michael Jordan, Wilt Chamberlain, and Kevin Durant did it more often. 

21). Averaged 36.1 points per game in 2019. Only Chamberlain and Jordan averaged more in a single season. 

22). Averaged at least 34 points per game in two different seasons. Only Chamberlain and Jordan can say the same. 

23). Led the league in Value Over Replacement Player three times. Only Jordan, LeBron James, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Larry Bird, and Nikola Jokic have done it more often.

Harden’s postseason disappointments will almost always be the headline when discussing his place in history, and that’s fair. He simply doesn’t have the postseason hardware to crack the top-ten on the all-time list. However, Harden is every bit in the conversation as the greatest player never to win an NBA Championship, and his regular season virtuoso performances put him ahead of many superstars who did win a championship. Harden also comes in ahead of the early stars of the NBA who played in the weakest era the league has ever seen. What James Harden accomplished in a fully globalized league is more impressive than anyone who dominated small leagues when racial quotas existed and segregation was still a part of the national discourse. It’s highly likely that the combination of Harden’s empty postseason trophy case along with not being a particularly popular player will keep him from ever receiving his proper due as an all-time great basketball player. Nevertheless, his historical greatness is a matter of record for anyone who cares to look.   

Why is Curt Schilling arguably the most underappreciated pitcher in baseball history?

In a lot of ways, Curt Schilling is the Manny Ramirez of pitchers. Ramirez never won a league MVP award, which is a glaring hole on any elite baseball resume, and he alienated fans and Hall-of-Fame voters with his alleged PED use. Similarly, Schilling never won a Cy Young award, which leaves a glaring hole on any elite baseball resume, and he alienated fans and Hall-of-Fame voters with ignorant rhetoric. Neither are sympathetic figures, which leaves both historically underrated strictly from a production standpoint. Now, let’s not get it twisted. Any knowledgeable baseball fan knows that Schilling was a fantastic starting pitcher. However, like Ramirez, it’s just how fantastic that seems to get lost in the noise.

The two most important traits a pitcher can have are limiting contact and avoiding walks. Schilling’s arsenal might have featured the best mix the league has ever seen. He is the only pitcher since 1920 to pitch 3,000+ innings with a K/BB ratio of at least 4.38. He led the league in strikeout-to-walk ratio five times, which is the most by any pitcher to debut since 1927. He’s the only pitcher in history with 3,000+ strikeouts and fewer than 715 walks. Schilling and Juan Marichal are the only two pitchers since 1920 with at least 215 career wins and fewer than 715 walks. What makes Schilling’s power/control mix so remarkable is that he was able to maintain it while also being one of the preeminent workhorses in Major League Baseball. He’s the last pitcher to throw back-to-back seasons of 250 innings, and he led the league in complete games four times. Since 1988, only Randy Johnson and Greg Maddux have more complete games. Perhaps most impressive is that he’s the last pitcher to have three seasons of at least 21 wins. In fact, he might be the last pitcher ever to accomplish that feat.

The comparison to Ramirez extends beyond the regular season. Schilling’s regular-season numbers are Hall of Fame-worthy on their own, but it’s the success he had in the postseason that makes him one of the most unique pitchers baseball has ever seen. In 133 and 1/3 career postseason innings, Schilling went 11-2 with a 2.23 ERA and .97 WHIP, while winning three World Series titles in four appearances. He was named the 1993 NLCS MVP and 2001 World Series MVP. He holds the record for most innings pitched in a single postseason without a loss (48 and 1/3 in 2001). His 56 strikeouts in the 2001 postseason are nine more in a single postseason than anyone else in history. He holds the record for Win Probability added in a single postseason (2.1 in 2001), and he has the highest postseason winning percentage among starting pitchers with at least 55 postseason innings. Schilling–like Ramirez–has given baseball fans and Hall-of Fame voters plenty of ammunition to look everywhere other than the back of his baseball card. Those who do will discover one of the greatest postseason pitchers in history, and one of the most accurate workhorses the league has ever seen.

Why is Manny Ramirez arguably the most underappreciated hitter in baseball history?

The usual caveats about PEDs apply here, but it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to look at Manny Ramirez’s career statistics and conclude that he was an elite hitter. Just how elite seems to fly under the radar. Part of that is likely due to the fact that he never won a regular season MVP, and the other is his connection to PEDs, which hardly makes him a sympathetic figure. However, the stats are the stats and it is a fact that Ramirez battered pitchers in a way that we literally haven’t seen since Babe Ruth and Ted Williams. Ramirez and Ruth are the only two players in history with at least 550 career home runs, a .410 career on-base percentage, and a career .310 batting average. Ramirez and Ted Williams are the only players since 1936 with at least a .310 career batting average and a career .585 slugging %. He’s 8th all-time in career slugging % (min. 5,000 plate appearances), and he has the fourth-highest slugging % since 1958. He’s 10th all-time in AB/HR, and his 165 RBIs in 1999 are the most in a single season since 1937. He tallied seven seasons of at least 120 RBIs which trails only Alex Rodriguez for the most since 1937.

Ramirez was clearly a regular season beast, but his postseason numbers are what make him arguably the most underappreciated hitter in baseball history. He led 11 teams to the postseason, winning two World Series titles in four appearances, while also being named the 2004 World Series MVP. His 29 postseason home runs are the most in history. Jose Altuve (27) is the only other player within seven of Ramirez. He’s second all-time in postseason RBIs (78), just behind Bernie Williams (80). In fact, Williams is the only player within 15 RBIs of Ramirez’s total. Ramirez is tied for the lead in postseason walks (72) and fourth all-time in postseason hits (117) and runs (67). Ramirez wasn’t a five-tool player, which does limit his ceiling on the all-time list. However, he is undoubtedly one of the greatest postseason players in history and one of the most productive hitters since the 1930s.