Veeshik_ya wrote:If an obscure basement tinkerer fired up the test tubes and developed a cure for cancer then was never heard from again would he warrant inclusion as one of the greatest doctors/scientists of all time?
I get the premise, and agree if you're making a point, but it's not apples to apples (obviously) ...
It continues to be odd to me how much stock is placed on "seasons played", if you accomplish everything there is to accomplish in 7 seasons it's somehow not long enough, but if you added 3 meaningless seasons to the total most people would fly off the handles saying "he played 10 years, he was great!" Which all comes back to people using largely irrelevant, compiled stats.
On the other end of that is playing "too long", on the old forums - and on other football related forums - one of the main arguments made against Tingelhoff was that he didn't have any all-pros or pro bowls the last 8 (or however many, don't care to look it up) years of his career, as if that erased what he accomplished before that. Without directly saying it, it was punishing him for how many seasons he played, which is no coincidence that he played a position with no stats. So he wasn't a RB getting a fairly meaningless 300-600 yards a year down the stretch of his career which is nothing special except that it's tacked on to career totals and people eat that up ("he's Xth all-time in (meaningless stat)!") ... Essentially if you take it further - than the flawed argument people were making - they were saying that if he had retired after 10 years he would have been more impressive (again, the proverbial "they" only use this argument on a player with no stats to add to.)
It's almost like there's a 'sweet spot' of seasons played for people, 7 isn't enough, 17 is too many (at least if it doesn't pad stats) and so on.
I don't get it. I always say I don't care about how many years a player played, I care about what the player did when he played. Not sure why that isn't the standard but it's clearly not. Seasons played are nothing more than more chances to accomplish something but they are not an (HOF worthy) accomplishment in itself. Hypothetically if Player A and Player B had the same resume but Player A played 7 years and it took Player B 13 years to match, somehow most people would consider Player B "better" or "more deserving", which of course defies logic.
There does seemingly have to be a minimum, however. Which is where curing cancer is a hard comparison to make. Since in football there's been plenty of players who were one season wonders, in theory a rookie QB could dominate, win MVP, SB MVP, all-pro and so on then do nothing after that.
I always use 3-season minimum, to be "in the discussion", since I think anyone can do something once, doing it twice is "proving it", while doing it a 3rd time is where you reach so-called 'greatness' ... So anyone who wasn't the best or close enough to the best at their position at least 3 seasons doesn't make my cut 99% of the time. For how many seasons total, I don't care, 3 "HOF seasons" (for lack of a better phrase) in 8 years or 3 "HOF seasons" in 12 years, the former is what matters to me, not the latter. Though if I did have to pick one or the other I'd be opposite of the majority and think two players with equal accomplishments, the one that took less time to accomplish it would be more impressive - though that's not a 'criteria' with my personal HOF criteria.