The 10 Biggest Wastes of Basketball Talent in the Last 20 Years
Would you include talented basketball players whose careers were cut short by injury? I didn’t. I find it difficult to call someone’s talent wasted – take Ronnie Fields or Yao Ming for instance – because of injuries. Fields, who was a high school star in Chicago, broke his neck in a car accident. Yao Ming’s feet were consistently a problem, or who knows how dominant he could have been. Duke’s Jay Williams got in a motorcycle accident, effectively ending his career. Grant Hill’s Hall of Fame career was derailed by injuries. I left all those guys off this list. When I think of wasted talent, guys from the 80s like Roy Tarpley, Chris Washburn and Len Bias (drugs, drugs, drugs) come to mind. Going back 20 years, here’s a list (no order) I came up with.
Darius Miles - He’s the one who prompted this post following arrest this week for trying to bring a loaded gun on a plane. Miles was a high-flying AAU superstar who bypassed college and was the No. 3 pick in the 2000 draft. The raw talent was there – jump out of the gym, athletic as hell for 6-foot-9 – but he never bothered to develop a jumper or work on his game and amounted to nothing in the NBA. Kids loved him, and he was a NIKE pitchman, but his game never matched his hype. He was in Portland for the classic “Jail Blazer” years and beefed with coach Maurice Cheeks. He had a drug suspension, too.
Derrick Coleman - I know, I know – how can a guy who averaged a double-double for five years still on this list? He could have done it for ten years. Attitude, alcohol, and weight issues ruined what should have been a Hall of Fame career. I loved this guy at Syracuse in the 80s, and thought he’d win a title or two in the NBA. His NBA career can be summed up thusly: “Whoop-de-damn-do.”
Tracy McGrady – I hesitate putting him on this list because A) I was a big fan and B) for awhile there, he was a superstar. But like Coleman, T-Mac should have had a Hall of Fame career. He blew up one summer on the AAU circuit and passed on college for the NBA. He struggled early in Toronto, but proceeded to flourish in Orlando and then Houston. He led the league in scoring twice. But the work ethnic was never there, which is probably why he went to the playoffs seven times and never made it out of the first round. He seemed to possess assassin capabilities, but looked like he didn’t care to utilize them. He was called out by Jeff Van Gundy about his practice habits earlier this year, and then admitted to never being a good practice player.
Rasheed Wallace – Legendary high school talent who was a star at North Carolina but will always be remembered for his bad attitude in the NBA (and leading the league in technical fouls). He should have been one of the best power forwards ever, but he let referees and opponents get under his skin and was universally viewed as a ticking time bomb. He did win a title in Detroit, but that won’t be nearly as memorable as the time he tossed a towel in a teammate’s face (that teammate is on this list), or when he threatened a referee (Tim Donaghy) on a loading dock and was suspended for seven games. Let’s close with this epic rant against referees, shall we? “All that bullshit-ass calls they had out there. With Mike [Callahan] and Kenny [Mauer] – you’ve all seen that shit. You saw them calls. The cats are flopping all over the floor and they’re calling that shit. That shit ain’t basketball out there. It’s all fucking entertainment. You all should know that shit. It’s all fucking entertainment.”
Eddie Griffin – Parade All-American Player of the Year was recruited to Seton Hall by Tommy Amaker … and once there, he punched out a teammate at halftime. In the NBA (lottery pick in 2001), he battled alcohol issues and was busted for allegedly driving drunk while masturbating to porn in 2006. He died at the age of 25 when his car was hit by a train. Police later determined he was drunk at the time of the accident.
JR Rider - 2nd team All-American from UNLV was taken 5th overall in the 1993 and looked to be off to a promising start when he averaged 20 ppg in his second year. But insubordination, an incident at a bar in which he was charged with assault and a drug bust got him shipped out of Minnesota after just three seasons. He was busted for gambling in public in Oakland. In Portland, it was marijuana. He was suspended for spitting on a heckler. Then came Atlanta, which was a debacle on multiple levels (more drugs, plus getting in trouble for parking in the spot of the Atlanta Thrashers’ head coach) at Phillips Arena. What’s a higher number – Rider’s arrests or the number of women you’ve slept with?
Baron Davis – So, so gifted. For a stretch there, he was one of my favorite players in the league. Should have been a franchise point guard. Instead, indifference on the court got him traded to five different teams in his up-and-down career. When he’s on – think Warriors, playoffs, 2007 – he’s unstoppable.
Steve Francis - Some might question his inclusion on the list since he did average 18 or more points per game five times in his career, but Francis was a knuckleheaded buffoon who constantly feuded with coaches and never realized his full potential. Coming out of Maryland, Francis was supposed to be a star, but he was drafted by Vancouver No. 2 overall and refused to go. So he was traded to Houston, where he excelled at scoring, but little else. He butted heads with Jeff Van Gundy. So he was traded to Orlando, where things were going fine until they traded his buddy, Cuttino Mobley. Francis pouted again and was suspended by the team, and then dealt to New York, and then shipped back to Houston. Francis played in five career playoff games.
Vin Baker – Four-time All-Star was one of the game’s best power forwards before eating (and drinking) himself out of the league in the late 90s.
Arvydas Sabonis – Blame the Russians. Sabonis was a teenage star in Russia and drafted by the Blazers in 1985. But Russia prevented him from going to the NBA, and then a slew of injuries while playing international ball took their toll on him, and he didn’t get to the NBA until 1995 (when he was nearly 31). You may remember him dominating at the 1988 Summer Olympics (Russia won the gold). Might have ended up being a top 10 center in NBA history if he had gotten to the NBA in his early 20s.

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43 Responses to “The 10 Biggest Wastes of Basketball Talent in the Last 20 Years”
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August 6th, 2011 at 3:41 PM
Great list. I would also include Vince Carter on this list.
August 6th, 2011 at 3:42 PM
Comments are back on for this! I thought TBL was ducking everyone. Nice list. I’m with you on T-Mac being borderline. Was great for a while, but didn’t sustain it.
August 6th, 2011 at 3:47 PM
great post. sabonis…i wanted to get angry with his inclusion on the list, but it makes sense. best passing big man of all time.
August 6th, 2011 at 3:55 PM
Karma is right. Wince needs to be on this list.
August 6th, 2011 at 3:57 PM
Good list TBL. Maybe Starbury (snickers) as well?
August 6th, 2011 at 4:24 PM
Christian Laettner.
August 6th, 2011 at 4:26 PM
len bias
boom
August 6th, 2011 at 4:27 PM
never mind. it’s in the italics
/damn!
August 6th, 2011 at 4:33 PM
Pretty solid list but Miles and Eddie Griffin don’t really belong with the other guys. All the other guys displayed, at one point in time, All Star level talent, but Miles and Griffin were really just hype that never showed anything in the NBA. I just don’t think they’re similar.
Agree on Starbury (what a joke) and think he should take Sabonis’ place.
August 6th, 2011 at 4:37 PM
Eddy McFlurry?
August 6th, 2011 at 4:58 PM
He’s not your vidis, he’s not my vidis, he’s arvidas.
August 6th, 2011 at 5:01 PM
He’s not your vidis, he’s not my vidis, he’s arvidas.
Craig Kilborn in the house!
August 6th, 2011 at 6:05 PM
Massive brick on the comments. My bad.
August 6th, 2011 at 6:51 PM
Massive brick on the comments. My bad.
you stopped me from being negative, and bringing all my bad juju to the comments, so in a way, you’re a hero.
August 6th, 2011 at 9:51 PM
Sabonis was a great passer, but I’d rank Walton ahead of him. Great list though.
August 6th, 2011 at 10:04 PM
Marbury should be on this loser list.
August 7th, 2011 at 2:20 AM
Re: DC,
Re: Rasheed,
Saying not winning a championship is a measure of success, then saying another player’s Finals win isn’t nearly as important is ridiculous. Then again, talking about personal achievement and championships in a team sport is far more ridiculous.
There’s a reason why teams weren’t called the Coleman’s nor the Wallace’s. It’s because they were one of 12 players on a “team.”
August 7th, 2011 at 2:37 AM
“when he threatened a referee (Tim Donaghy) on a loading dock and was suspended for seven games” I think everyone should remember that Rasheed was right and Donaghy was throwing games so his threatening of the referee wasn’t a self-centered tirade but instead an accurate accusation that stern and co. were unable to recognize or were turning a blind eye to. Rasheed was not the most agreeable player but he loved basketball and he didn’t like the bullsh*t the ref’s were coming up with to manipulate it, which I can image many NBA fans can agree with.
August 7th, 2011 at 10:40 AM
Miles and Griffin really don’t belong. They weren’t wasted talents at all…they were just overrated. Especially Eddie Griffin.
I’m not buying Rasheed Wallace either…he had what I would consider a very good NBA career.
My list would include Tim Thomas…twice the actual talent of either Miles or Griffin…and even less desire than either one of them.
I think the highest on my list would be Lamar Odom. He’s certainly carved out a pretty good NBA career…but, IMO, he had the potential to be a top 25 player of all time, and never put in the work to make it happen.
August 7th, 2011 at 1:03 PM
Shouldn’t Wallace be given an award for recognizing a crooked ref??? How is that a negative?
August 7th, 2011 at 1:15 PM
Chris Webber- I know that he had a very good career but he should have been dominant. He wilted in the big moments and spent a little too much time on the perimeter instead of crashing the boards and being the beast he could have been inside. Wasted some years in DC when he was on the Wizards and was a head case. Could of been one of the best PF’s ever.
I know that this name is from out of left field but I would throw out the name Jonathan Bender as an honorable mention. 6″11 and could shoot the lights out. He could never stay healthy and his body just basically betrayed him. I thought he was going to be unstoppable when he hit his mid 20′s but he never got the chance.
August 7th, 2011 at 2:58 PM
Zydrunas Ilgauskas ..averaged 14 pts and 9 boards his rookie year then suffered a broken foot, then had ankle problems, then broke his other foot, he’s got like 12 screws in his feet.
Guy was a monster right when he came into the league, throwing behind the back passes and running up and down the floor, with an elite set of post moves early in his career. It’s so sad to see him as nothing more than a 19-foot jump shooter.
August 7th, 2011 at 3:08 PM
My gosh that Olympic video makes me feel old.
Ewing. He absolutely dominated in college, but got old really quick in the NBA, yeah he had a long career but he was supposed to be Shaqish dominant and he never was.
August 7th, 2011 at 3:21 PM
Ewing as a wasted talent? I hate the Knicks but I’ll disagree with that sentiment
August 7th, 2011 at 3:27 PM
Glenn Robinson yes well. Beast at Purdue, rookie of the year, and then became more about the money then anything.
August 7th, 2011 at 3:29 PM
I feel like players who suffered from injuries (minus Tracy Mcgrady) shouldn’t be on this list; it really wasn’t their fault as injuries are a part of the game.
Speaking of which, no one’s mentioned Penny Hardaway.
August 8th, 2011 at 12:05 AM
Glad to see you include Sabonis….a victim of the Cold War pissing match. He was a god in the 88 Olympics. I would have loved to have seen him in the NBA in his prime. He would’ve been Walton-esque, I think.
August 8th, 2011 at 9:08 AM
I know this is late and will probably go unread, but that Derrick Coleman, “Whoop-de-damn-do” is the most incorrectly reported incident in the history of the NBA. He did NOT say “Whoop-de-damn-do” to Kenny Anderson missing practice.
In fact, and I know this because ESPN used to show the clip back in the day, when Coleman was asked about Kenny Anderson missing practice, he got after the reporter by saying something like “Dwayne Schintzius missed practice the other day. Why aren’t you asking me about him?”
The reporter then replied, “well, Schintzius is not the same class of player as Anderson,” and that’s when Coleman dropped his infamous and completely incorrectly reported “Whoop-de-damn-do.”
Just FYI.
August 8th, 2011 at 9:20 AM
It’s the same way people decided to run with Iverson’s “practice” press conference.
August 8th, 2011 at 11:45 AM
I’m still on the JR Rider cell phone plan. Can’t be beaten.
August 8th, 2011 at 11:47 AM
I have no idea what’s happening today. A post disappears after being alive for 30 minutes, and this one comes back from the dead, two days after it was posted.
August 8th, 2011 at 11:52 AM
If we’re bumping posts from the weekend now should always defer to Lisk stuff first
August 8th, 2011 at 11:55 AM
Really? Ewing was a “waste of talent?” Yeah he never won a title but he averaged 20/10 for his career and carried the Knicks franchise for years. Its not like the Knicks gave him much help over the years. Who was the best teammate he ever played with? Oakley? Starks?
August 8th, 2011 at 11:57 AM
Ewing. He absolutely dominated in college, but got old really quick in the NBA, yeah he had a long career but he was supposed to be Shaqish dominant and he never was.
Hard to call a Hall of Famer and Top 50 NBA player overrated. As vajayjay says, when Oakley and Starks are your best teammates, its hard to win titles.
August 8th, 2011 at 11:59 AM
Richard Dumas should be on this list.
August 8th, 2011 at 12:00 PM
i brought this back because i screwed up this wknd and forgot to turn on comments.
August 8th, 2011 at 12:10 PM
could do one of these for all major sports
August 8th, 2011 at 12:35 PM
What? I they it was reported exactly how it was.
Larry Brown said AI missed practice, to which AI said “I may have missed one practice this year”, and that people were going crazy over him missing one practice. And then he flipped him missing a practice as being him just missing a practice and not a game.
The whole reason that rant is classic is because he doesn’t think he did anything wrong by skipping practice because its “not a game”.
August 8th, 2011 at 12:37 PM
**I think
Also, let’s not forget this gem from one of the most overrated players of all time:
Sounds like something I expect to hear from Tracy McGrady.
August 8th, 2011 at 12:46 PM
One of the guards on that Russian team was named Titt.
August 8th, 2011 at 1:12 PM
Yeah it’s hard to take a 3 minute rant out of context.
However i dont think it was overly damaging to his legacy, i think most people blew it off as kinda funny.
Btw “whoop-dee-damn-doo” is still one of my favorites.
August 8th, 2011 at 1:41 PM
Karma, thank you for posting the kind of response that proves my point. The press conference took place the day after the Celtics knocked the Sixers out of the playoffs the year after they made their Finals run. Brown got outcoached in that series by Jim O’Brien, and being the Larry Brown that he is after a whole season suddenly has this complaint about Iverson supposedly missing practices. Iverson comes into his end of the year conference and the first questions aren’t about a summary of the season, the playoffs they were knocked out of,or plans for next year. You know, the shit those conferences are typically abut, but it was about practice. After a few more of those questions, he gets frustrated and bewildered at the line of questioning and THATS when he goes into the practice rant.
August 8th, 2011 at 10:32 PM
Interesting, I didn’t know it was a end of the year conference, just thought it was after a regular season game. Regardless, the only reason people remember it cause its hilarious, I don’t think anyone judges AI’s career on it. Still think he’s overrated, but not because of the practice rant.