Saturday, October 11, 2025
Submit Press Release
Got Action
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
Got Action
No Result
View All Result

The Basketball 100 podcast’s ranking of the NBA’s 100 greatest players

August 14, 2025
in NBA
0 0
0
Home NBA
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


You followed along for three-and-a-half months as we revealed our top 75 players in NBA history.

Led by veteran columnists David Aldridge and John Hollinger, and with a foreword from Hall of Famer Charles Barkley, we expanded that into a book published by Harper Collins where we wrote about those 75, and 25 more, to explore the careers of the NBA’s greatest 100 players. We also took a different look at the greatest players as well with our G.O.A.T. points metric.

Now, you can listen to the six-part podcast featuring The Athletic’s NBA staff engage in lively discussions about the top 100 players in NBA history. Check the series out on The Athletic NBA Daily wherever you get your podcasts.

The Basketball 100: Episode No. 2

Hosted by Jon Krawczynski and featuring Fred Katz and Law Murray, this episode features players Nos. 79-60 in our book. Our crew talks about the impact of Nate “Tiny” Archibald, the inclusion of Paul George and whether Tracy McGrady may be too high on our list.

The Basketball 100

The story of the greatest players in NBA history. In 100 riveting profiles, top basketball writers justify their selections and uncover the history of the NBA in the process.

The story of the greatest players in NBA history.

BuyBuy The Basketball 100

The Basketball 100: Episode No. 1

Hosted by Jared Weiss and featuring Tony Jones and Mike Vorkunov, this episode focuses on Nos. 100-80 in our book. The trio talks about which players have brought the most joy, recounts the players that people may not know well, and discusses which players are too high and too low.

The Basketball 100: Book excerpts

No. 91: Jayson Tatum by Jay King

“One of the more talented players on the planet.”

From a young age, Jayson Tatum planned not just to reach the NBA, but also to become an All-Star. He mapped out everything he would need, both on and off the court, to reach that level. He trusted his chances until he actually reached the NBA. Then he realized one variable he had overlooked throughout all of his preparation for the rigors of professional basketball.

“Everybody’s so much better than you think,” Tatum said.

Read the story

No. 81: Pete Maravich by Rustin Dodd

“He was something to see.”

The boy who changed basketball preferred the solitude of an empty gym: the syncopated rhythm of squeaking shoes, the swish of the net, the echo of dribbles against a hardwood floor, plenty of open court to try things — to build the perfect jumper, to invent a novel spin move, to run and dribble and sweat and, in his words, fool around and throw up a hook shot from 35 feet.

For Pete Maravich, an empty gymnasium meant freedom. If you gave him a basketball, he could see the future.

Read the story

No. 53: Luka Dončić by Tim Cato

“It’s LeBron James-like.”

At 8 years old, Luka Dončić was already transcendent.

His father, Saša, is a local basketball legend, twice winning the Slovenian League championship, once for Ljubljana’s most prestigious club, Olimpija. In 2007, that’s where Saša brought Luka for his first professional practice with the club’s under-9 team.

It didn’t last even a half hour. That under-9 team’s coach was Grega Brezovec, who laughed when he retold the story to The Athletic in 2019. “If I’m honest, I was his coach for only 16 minutes,” he said.

Read the story

No. 49: Allen Iverson by Marcus Thompson II

“You could never question his heart.”

Allen Iverson, in the most private of areas in the Spectrum Center, couldn’t help but get sentimental. A Charlotte resident, he went to check out a Hornets game against his former 76ers and ended up chilling with his GOAT.

Iverson and Michael Jordan. Having a drink or two. Reminiscing about their glory days.

Iverson is an icon. Still, it means something for him to be a peer of Jordan. So he was all in his feelings.

“Man, I love you, man,” he told Jordan.

Read the story

No. 45: Willis Reed by Darnell Mayberry

“He would never crack.”

Walt Frazier’s reverence for Willis Reed ran so deep that he copied his handwriting.

Penmanship, Frazier believes, reveals much about a person: their intelligence, their mood, even their ego. When Reed wrote, Frazier mostly saw consistency — the same trait he remembers defining the player affectionately nicknamed “The Captain.”

“If you saw a thousand signatures by Willis, they’re all the same: neat,” he said.

Read the story

No. 41: Joel Embiid by Rustin Dodd

“Best player we ever coach.”

One day in the spring of 2018, a Philadelphia 76ers assistant named Billy Lange looked at his phone and saw a text message from Joel Embiid: “I want to pray.”

It was a Sunday in April. The NBA playoffs were a week old. It was not the usual afternoon greeting from an NBA star, but then again, there was nothing usual about Joel Embiid.

At that point, he was just 24 years old, a 7-foot behemoth who had feet like a ballet dancer and the droll wit of a stand-up comic. He had grown up an ocean away in Cameroon, the well-to-do son of a military colonel, and he had not played the sport of basketball until he was a teenager. When he considered his life story, he sometimes believed it to be something out of a movie, a surreal Hollywood dream.

But here he was, in the middle of the NBA playoffs, wearing a clunky mask to protect a broken orbital bone near his left eye. Lange sensed he was nervous. Maybe even scared. The day before, the No. 3–seeded Sixers had defeated the Heat in Miami to take a 3–1 series lead. But Embiid had scored just 14 points. Something seemed off.

Lange tapped out a reply. Did he want to pray together?

Read the story

No. 29: John Havlicek by Jay King

“His body wasn’t normal.”

Rick Weitzman, stuck in the worst type of traffic, heard a knock on his windshield. John Havlicek wanted to grab his attention. Even Boston, usually prepared for a winter storm, was caught off guard by substantial snow in the middle of November. Cars were in gridlock. The two Celtics players, stuck on the Tobin Bridge, needed to make it to Boston Garden in time for a game. The way the roads were configured in 1967, Weitzman said, the drive would have taken about five minutes under normal traffic conditions.

“The clock (to game time) was moving,” Weitzman said. “And I wasn’t.”

Havlicek had an idea. He couldn’t risk missing the start of a contest with the San Francisco Warriors. His wife, Beth, was in their car a handful of paces behind Weitzman, but Havlicek knew he couldn’t afford to stay with her. He would find his way to the arena, which was about two miles away.

“I can’t wait,” Havlicek told Weitzman. “I’m going to run in.”

Read the story

No. 28: Nikola Jokić by John Hollinger

“He’s a basketball genius.”

Most of history’s great players have come to us with significant early hype and quick, confirmatory coronation events. A few greats have taken a more circuitous path.

Perhaps none has snuck up on us quite the way Nikola Jokić did. Forget about his origins as a pudgy second-round pick whose selection was made during a Taco Bell commercial. Even after he’d won two MVPs, much of the world wasn’t all that convinced he was a pantheon-level player. It wasn’t until after he’d led the Nuggets to a romp to the 2023 NBA title that his overdue recognition as an all-time great began.

Read the story

No. 22: Giannis Antetokounmpo by Eric Nehm

“Guys, I’m playing on Thursday.”

Khris Middleton heard Giannis Antetokounmpo’s screams.

Antetokounmpo, the two-time NBA regular-season MVP — the Milwaukee Bucks’ best player and greatest hope to win their first NBA title in half a century — was writhing in pain with 7 minutes, 14 seconds remaining in the third quarter of Game 4 of the 2021 Eastern Conference finals in Atlanta.

“I heard him yell,” Middleton said after the Game 4 loss to the Hawks. “I was looking up, so I couldn’t really see exactly what happened.”

What happened could have changed the course of NBA history. But, because of who Antetokounmpo is, he wouldn’t let it.

Read the story

No. 18: Kevin Garnett by Jon Krawczynski

“It ain’t about me. It’s about us.”

It was one of those perfect summer evenings during a family trip from Minnesota to the northeast in 1995, 65 degrees and sunny as 6-year-old me walked into Fenway Park for the first time. The Red Sox were hosting the Toronto Blue Jays and we settled into our seats near the top of a section above the third-base dugout, ready for a momentous occasion for a sports-crazy kid who begged his parents to sprinkle some games into the history and sightseeing.

As I sat down and marveled at the Green Monster in front of me, I couldn’t help but pull out a Sony Walkman, put the headphones over my ears, and start listening as intently as I was watching. It wasn’t the radio broadcast of the game but coverage of the 1995 NBA Draft.

My hometown Minnesota Timberwolves had the fifth pick, and there were so many intriguing possibilities in a class filled with household names. Jerry Stackhouse and Rasheed Wallace from North Carolina. Damon Stoudamire from Arizona. Michigan State’s Shawn Respert and UCLA’s Ed O’Bannon. All were players I watched on television at storied college programs who became well-known stars with tantalizing potential.

There was another name out there I had never seen take one dribble, but he grabbed my attention as much as any other. In the week leading up to the draft, I pulled Sports Illustrated out of the mailbox to see a skinny high school kid on the cover with the tagline “Ready or Not … ”

Read the story

No. 15: Julius Erving by David Aldridge

“Doc was so special.”

You can’t blame Michael Cooper for making one of the first recorded business decisions.

On January 5, 1983, Cooper — who would go on to become an eight-time NBA All-Defensive Team selection and the 1986-87 NBA Defensive Player of the Year — and his Los Angeles Lakers were in Philadelphia to meet the 76ers, whom they’d vanquished in the previous season’s NBA Finals. Big game, big implications. The game, as befitting two of the league’s titans, went to overtime.

In the extra session, James Worthy attempted a pass to Jamaal Wilkes, the Lakers’ silky small forward. But Philly’s Maurice Cheeks deflected the pass, and the ball bounced away from Wilkes and to Cooper near midcourt.

Except Julius Erving got to the ball first, cutting in front of Cooper. Two dribbles later, Erving was just inside the free-throw line extended. Cooper, though, was timing his steps to be able to contest a drive-by Erving. Michael Cooper, being Michael Cooper — the man Larry Bird would later say was the best defender he’d ever faced—could still get to this shot. Maybe block it. At the least, he could challenge it.

Read the story

No. 12: Steph Curry by Marcus Thompson II

“A calmness about him.”

It was a contradiction of the image he so meticulously cultivated. Yet it was an authentic glimpse of the driving force inside him. Psycho Steph Curry. The alter ego that has elevated him to unimaginable heights, landing him a seat at the table of basketball’s all-time best. And on the hallowed parquet of Boston, under the Celtics’ 17 banners, it emerged in Game 6 of the 2022 NBA Finals to punctuate his legend.

With the Warriors up 19, Draymond Green sped up the court on a fast break. Curry was trailing the play before veering left into Green’s periphery. Green bounced a pass to his left, angling it so Curry could catch it in stride. But Curry didn’t scoop up the pass and keep going toward the rim. Nor did he pass the ball to an open teammate while the Celtics’ defense was scattered. Curry was in psycho mode. So he pulled up right where he caught it.

The official NBA box score says it was 29 feet. Inside TD Garden, it felt like 50. It was so sudden. So far. So unnecessary. Curry’s momentum caused him to lean forward on the pull-up 3, giving it a shotput feel. It sliced through the anxious gasp of Celtics fans before thumping the back of the rim as it went through, putting the Warriors up 22. The net barely moved.

Read the story

No. 7: Shaquille O’Neal by Jason Jones

“Star of stars.”

He’s lovable. The 7-foot-1 teddy bear with the animated general selling auto insurance. He’s on the cover of Frosted Flakes and is a pizza pitchman with an executive role at Papa John’s. You might be able to relate to him if you treat your back pain with Icy Hot. He has gold (Gold Bond and an Olympic medal), and don’t forget about the weekly back-and-forths with Charles Barkley on TNT’s Inside the NBA.

Shaquille O’Neal may be retired from the NBA, but he is everywhere.

For a certain generation, it’s hard to imagine O’Neal as one of the greatest basketball players ever. But the playful big man was a punishing athlete who didn’t just dunk. “The Diesel” dunked through opponents, leaving bodies and broken backboards in his wake. And not just backboards, as Darryl Dawkins did, but whole stanchions. He did it while having fun and while intimidating opposing big men.

Read the story

No. 6: Wilt Chamberlain by David Aldridge

“OK, Wilt’s gonna get his 50.”

Four thousand, one hundred twenty-four.

Of all the numbers associated with Wilt Chamberlain’s eventful, incredible 63 years, that number — 4,124 — is among the most significant.

That’s the number of people who were, allegedly, at what was then the Hershey Sports Arena in Hershey, Pennsylvania, on March 2, 1962, to witness the NBA game that night between Chamberlain’s Philadelphia Warriors and the New York Knicks. It’s more likely there were far fewer people there, given the, let’s say, creative ways in which attendance for games in the still-fledgling-at-the-time NBA was often tabulated.

The game was not televised. Only a grainy recording of the fourth quarter of the radio broadcast, by WCAU’s Bill Campbell, was preserved. None of the Knicks beat writers made the trip; only a couple came from Philly, about 95 miles southeast of town, so meaningless an assignment it was believed to be. But Hershey was a regular stop on the NBA circuit in those days, as teams barnstormed nearby towns to drum up regional support.

Two hours later, Chamberlain had set the mark that best defined his lifetime of association with prodigiousness. He became the first and only player in NBA history to score 100 points in a contest.

Read the story

No. 3: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar by Jason Lloyd

“Best to ever play the game.”

The morning after one of the most miserable nights of his career, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was the first to arrive at the film session. He sat in the front row, center chair, right in front of the television. It was an odd seat selection, and not just because this 7-foot-2 giant was now blocking the view. It was an area usually left vacant during these tape studies, but Abdul-Jabbar was about to be a witness to his execution.

Los Angeles Lakers coach Pat Riley began scribbling points of emphasis on the board.

Rebound. Stop Bird. Don’t double too early.

Then Riley locked eyes with Kareem.

“I’ll never forget this. He didn’t say it to me, but I know what he was thinking: Don’t hold back on me today,” Riley said.

Read the story

(Illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic)



Source link

Tags: BasketballgreatestNBAsplayerspodcastsRanking
Previous Post

Transfer rumors, news: Man United push for Baleba, look at Wharton

Next Post

Putting Make Percentage By Handicap (Full Chart). Are You Above Or Below Average?

Related Posts

Raptors’ Collin Murray-Boyles misses practice after injury vs. Celtics
NBA

Raptors’ Collin Murray-Boyles misses practice after injury vs. Celtics

October 11, 2025
Knicks, Raptors dismiss 2023 lawsuit alleging Toronto employee took proprietary team files
NBA

Knicks, Raptors dismiss 2023 lawsuit alleging Toronto employee took proprietary team files

October 11, 2025
Fantasy Basketball 2030: Projecting the top 25 players of the future
NBA

Fantasy Basketball 2030: Projecting the top 25 players of the future

October 11, 2025
NBA 2025-26 season: Win projections for all 30 NBA teams
NBA

NBA 2025-26 season: Win projections for all 30 NBA teams

October 10, 2025
Jazz Not Currently Looking To Trade Lauri Markkanen
NBA

Jazz Not Currently Looking To Trade Lauri Markkanen

October 10, 2025
Myles Turner says Finals experience adds to motivation with Milwaukee
NBA

Myles Turner says Finals experience adds to motivation with Milwaukee

October 10, 2025
Next Post
Putting Make Percentage By Handicap (Full Chart). Are You Above Or Below Average?

Putting Make Percentage By Handicap (Full Chart). Are You Above Or Below Average?

Episode 840 – The final step

Episode 840 - The final step

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
How to Buy COTA Tickets – 2025 United States Grand Prix

How to Buy COTA Tickets – 2025 United States Grand Prix

March 12, 2025
Arthur Jones, who won a Super Bowl with the Ravens, dies at 39

Arthur Jones, who won a Super Bowl with the Ravens, dies at 39

October 4, 2025
Is Max Verstappen in the mix to win the 2025 Drivers’ title?

Is Max Verstappen in the mix to win the 2025 Drivers’ title?

September 25, 2025
Marte, Steer power Cincinnati Reds over Pittsburgh, 14-8

Marte, Steer power Cincinnati Reds over Pittsburgh, 14-8

August 10, 2025
BYU Shuts Out Houston, Advances in 2025 Big 12 Softball Tournament

BYU Shuts Out Houston, Advances in 2025 Big 12 Softball Tournament

May 8, 2025
Fans urge Miami Heat to sign former MVP after Tyler Herro surgery news, ‘he’d immediately be the best player’

Fans urge Miami Heat to sign former MVP after Tyler Herro surgery news, ‘he’d immediately be the best player’

September 19, 2025
Anthony Davis could return to Mavericks’ lineup during upcoming Eastern road trip: Report

Anthony Davis could return to Mavericks’ lineup during upcoming Eastern road trip: Report

337
Getting with the programme | Arseblog … an Arsenal blog

Getting with the programme | Arseblog … an Arsenal blog

3
The longest an NCAA bracket has ever stayed perfect

The longest an NCAA bracket has ever stayed perfect

1
Hanshin Tigers shut out Cubs, Dodgers for back-to-back wins

Hanshin Tigers shut out Cubs, Dodgers for back-to-back wins

1
Avious Griffin Highlights Boxing Insider Promotion’s Card By Stopping Jose Luis Sanchez In 9.

Avious Griffin Highlights Boxing Insider Promotion’s Card By Stopping Jose Luis Sanchez In 9.

1
Nike GT Future “Fire” FZ5590-800

Nike GT Future “Fire” FZ5590-800

0
Short-handed Seahawks likely down 3 starting DBs vs. Jaguars

Short-handed Seahawks likely down 3 starting DBs vs. Jaguars

October 11, 2025
Yankees’ Cody Bellinger plans for free agency, says source

Yankees’ Cody Bellinger plans for free agency, says source

October 11, 2025
Matthew Schaefer lauded by Patrick Roy, Isles after ‘confident’ NHL debut

Matthew Schaefer lauded by Patrick Roy, Isles after ‘confident’ NHL debut

October 11, 2025
Raptors’ Collin Murray-Boyles misses practice after injury vs. Celtics

Raptors’ Collin Murray-Boyles misses practice after injury vs. Celtics

October 11, 2025
Fans watch Salford’s defeat to Chesterfield in a crane ‘as part of unique protest’

Fans watch Salford’s defeat to Chesterfield in a crane ‘as part of unique protest’

October 11, 2025
Schauffele, Greyserman atop leaderboard of Japan PGA

Schauffele, Greyserman atop leaderboard of Japan PGA

October 11, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn TikTok Pinterest
Got Action

Stay updated with the latest sports news, highlights, and expert analysis at Got Action. From football to basketball, we cover all your favorite sports. Get your daily dose of action now!

CATEGORIES

  • Baseball
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Football
  • Formula 1
  • Golf
  • MLB
  • MMA
  • NBA
  • NCAA Baseball
  • NCAA Basketball
  • NCAA Football
  • NCAA Sport
  • NFL
  • NHL
  • Tennis
  • Uncategorized

SITEMAP

  • About us
  • Advertise with us
  • Submit Press Release
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2025 Got Action.
Got Action is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NCAA
    • NCAA Football
    • NCAA Basketball
    • NCAA Baseball
    • NCAA Sport
  • Baseball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • NHL
  • MLB
  • Formula 1
  • MMA
  • Boxing
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Sports Picks
Submit Press Release

Copyright © 2025 Got Action.
Got Action is not responsible for the content of external sites.