#1: Jason Kidd


So here we are, we’ve finally reached number one on our Top 44 Nets of All-Time project and the number one spot belongs to none other than Jason Kidd. The Captain. When trying to think about what it was that Kidd brought to the Nets, I kept coming back to one word: belief.

In the 2001 the Nets traded Stephon Marbury, Johnny Newman and Soumaila Samake to the Phoenix Suns for Kidd and Dudley, and on that day, the franchise was forever changed.

Kidd’s first act as a Net? Declare that he thought the Nets could win 40 games in his first season. (gasp!)

“Hopefully, I haven’t put too much pressure on Rod Thorn and Byron Scott,” Jason Kidd said.

Turns out Kidd set his sights too low.

After all, the Nets were a team that the season before won just 26 games and, as chronicled at length on this site before, besides short pockets of success were generally considered losers amongst NBA fans. So for Kidd to come in and think we could win at least 40 games, he must’ve known something that we didn’t and he believed. And, once he stepped on the court, he slowly convinced everyone else too.

Let’s look at what made Kidd so great.

Intuition/Instincts

Looking back, that 40-win prediction by Kidd isn’t so crazy after all. Isn’t intuition part of what makes Kidd so great anyway? An ability to be one step (if not two or three) ahead of his competition at all times.

One of the most thrilling visuals was of a long jump-shot going up and Kidd breaking on the rebound while nine others were statues. Kidd had a radar-like sense for the ball, a bloodhound sense to sniff out where rebounds would land, where passes would be thrown, or most importantly where his teammates would be and how the defense would react to one of his fakes.

He was able to predict, with certainty, that if he threw a pass off the backboard, Kenyon Martin was sure to be there to slam it home. He knew that if he caught a rebound and fired an outlet pass up court without looking, that Richard Jefferson or Kerry Kittles would be there to run on to it.

Kidd’s instincts took a great player and made him a legendary one.

Creativity

The other thing that made Kidd so unique as a player was his creativity. “Nothing ventured, nothing gained,” is a quote that could describe the way JKidd played. Jason Kidd had a Brett Favreian approach to point guard, but there is a line between reckless and creative and nobody toed that line better than JKidd.

A Kidd-led fast break could result in literally anything; a fake pass to one side and a behind the back pass to the trailer, a one-handed bounce pass in perfect stride to a streaking teammate, a no look alley-oop lob to a cutter, faking to the trailer before shot-faking and leaving off to another teammate… the list goes on and on.

Bottom line, Kidd was always up to something, always looking for ways to set up his teammates, and for that, he was the ultimate point guard. Just look at Kidd’s teammates on the Nets: guys like Kenyon Martin, Richard Jefferson, Mikki Moore, Kerry Kittles, Keith Van Horn. Guys who played their best basketball of their career with Kidd. Kidd turned a cast of characters that won 26 games without him into a juggernaut.

Physical Dominance

Besides the intangibles, he had a bundle of tangible gifts that’s made him an all-time great. At 6’4″ and 210 lbs., Kidd was physically bigger than all of his counterparts at point guard; yet, despite his sheer size, during his time with the Nets Kidd was often the quickest player. Adding Kidd’s instinctual brain to his massive body was like equipping a Ferrari with a MacBook.

This anomaly posed dilemmas for opposing coaches and often led to cross-matches, which again were advantage Nets. Kidd possessed a handle not so much of the move-you-shake-you Allen Iverson type, but his own of speed and efficiency. He wasn’t a change-of-pace player, the way Steve Nash can lull you to sleep before exploding; instead, Kidd managed to play at his top speed, all the time. His ability to change direction at top speed left backpedaling defenders merciless.

His passing and offensive exploits are well-documented with the Nets, but Kidd was a lockdown defender then too, even more so than he is today. Need help chasing Reggie Miller around screens? Kidd can do it. Kobe Bryant’s starting to get warm? Have Jason slow him down. Pick-and-roll coverage with Kidd was easy because if caught on a switch, Kidd gave up nothing, no matter what the size difference. (I can’t tell you the amount of times I’ve seen post players think they could just bully Kidd into an easy bucket, but before getting their shot up, Jason had stripped them of the ball.)

Sheer Production

Ultimately, it’s hard to quantify the impact that Kidd had on the franchise in words. He took a team, considered a universal punchline, and turned into the beasts of the East, and did so in such a way that he galvanized a fan base and created a legend.

But since words don’t do the man justice, let’s dive into the numbers and production. He’s far and away the Nets leader in assists, three pointers, and steals. He’s top 5 in games, minutes played, total rebounds, points, and win shares.

He’s third all-time in NBA history in triple-doubles, with a majority of those coming as a Net. (This does not include the number of games in which Kidd missed a triple-double by only one rebound, one assist or one point.)

Kidd became a winner with the Nets too. He dragged a team that had virtually no other All-Star on it to back-to-back NBA Finals. He made All-Stars out of his counterparts. The Nets’ only Eastern Conference Championships came with Jason at the helm.

Jason Kidd came into a hopeless situation and made us believe that winning was possible. He did so in such a way and with such style that captured a franchise and state’s imagination. At his best, Kidd inspired. He inspired not only us as fans, but also his teammates to a higher level of play than they were capable of without him. There may be players that achieve more in a Nets uniform, but it’ll be hard to find a greater player than the captain.

Here’s the genius of Jason Kidd, in video.

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ArthurLandry 5 pts

Until he won last year, i would put his career behind Maurice Cheeks and about equal to Terry Porter. A coach killer, a bad guy, a non shooter who is the king of the cheap triple doubles. His championship will put him in the hall of fame- to put him ahead of Erving and Barry is luncay

Yankees91919191 5 pts

 ArthurLandry there's no such thing as a cheap triple double

If you had experienced Dr. J as a Net, then you would have ranked Jason Kidd a very worthy No. 2.

Fun, well-done series on the whole. Congratulations on putting it together. But there is no Net greater than Julius Erving.

Calling all toasters- ViC-

The beginning of the NETS relevancy

ABA stats as follows

2 time ABA (Nets) Champ 74-76
2 time ABA Playoff MVP (Nets)
3 time ABA (Nets) MVP
4 time All ABA first team
2 time ABA second team
5 time ABA All Star

You can say what you want about the man and when he played, the league that he played in etc. etc. This is the beginning and the best era of your franchise! WINNING! People can argue the ABA vs NBA all day, as long as your not a NETS fan! The greatest Net is Julius Erving period! His stats speak for itself and if you know anything about sports its that statistics only tell part of the story. Hall of Fame coaches Hubie Brown and Larry Brown had a NO Dunks for Doc Rule! Meaning, when the Nets were playing away games if Doc got a dunk on Hubie and Larry's home floor, the home fans would turn against them and start rooting for the Doc and the NETS! Incredible! Kidd never did never will have that impact on the game, fans, or league!

This list is called the 44 greatest Nets..not the 44 greatest NBA Nets..big difference!
I may have to give the nod to Jason IF THAT WAS THE TITLE,BUT ITS NOT!

I grew up a Sixers fan and Julius is my Favorite Sixer, but even I know Wilt Chamberlain is the greatest Sixer! I didn't see Wilt play either but ...Its not who you favorite Sixer or Net player is, its the GREATEST!

..and for those that think that Julius's NBA career was shabby ..please, allow me!

NBA Champ 83
NBA MVP 81
2 time NBA All Star MVP
11 time NBA All Star (every year in the league)
5 time NBA First Team
2 time NBA Second Team
NBA 35th Anniversary Team
NBA 50th Anniversary Team

Hell! Ill put Docs NBA stats up against Jason's right now! This is all after playing 6 glorious ABA seasons! You also forget Doc led his teams to the playoffs every year he played in the ABA or NBA. Took his teams to the Finals 4 out of 6 years and finally getting over the hump in 83 without playing with one Hall of Famer except Moses..and then they won. Name another Hall of Famer? There is none! He played offense and defended against the toughest position in the 80's :Small forward...let me rattle off a few names for you..Bernard King,Adrian Dantley,Alex English, Larry Bird, Jamaal Wilkes etc. Dr.J guarded his position.

Yes his numbers went down his first year! Do you know who he had on his team?
George McGinnis, World B Free, Doug Collins and Darryl Dawkins..Dont give me that! He still led them to the Finals averaging 34.7 points per game in the playoffs and Finals vs Portland in a losing effort.

Did the NBA have better players? yes, but mostly because the Doc you saw in the NBA is like the Kobe you see now (slowing down a little).The ABA doc was in his pri

Happiest I've been watching the NBA in a awhile was finally watching Kidd get that ring this past finals. Soo much justice watching him get it over Lebron and Co. Would have loved to see him win it as a Net, but still happy nonetheless. Great way to finish the rankings.

Haha gotta agree with Calling All Toasters, Jason Kidd made the Nets interesting and exciting but he definitely didn't make them any more relevant!

But C.A.T., I disagree with your assertion that the Nets would have been so obviously bounced from the second round by Western Conference teams. They wouldn't have had such an easy path to the Finals but the team was tops in defense so I think they could have held their own with almost any other team.

One correction-- he didn't choose the Nets. He did choose the ABA over the NBA, which is entirely different.

Vic--
"Julius accomplished all those things in the ABA not in the NBA... Something tells me the “championships” he won weren’t exactly world championships."
In their first year in the NBA, the Nuggets, Spurs, and Pacers only won 19 fewer games than they had the previous year in the it-doesn't-count ABA. The Nuggets had 50 wins, which was basically what the Kidd Nets had in their best two years. Four of 10 All-NBA players were from the ABA.
"He left, however"
Not of his own volition, unlike Kidd. Oh, and he chose to come to the Nets, too (possibly because he was from Long Island). Also unlike Kidd. And, of course, his leaving gave the Nets enough money to stay in business.
"and even though he may have been responsible for the Nets joining the NBA (though I’m pretty sure being near NY had something to do with it)"
New York already had an NBA franchise, a rich and powerful one, that fought tooth and nail against the Nets' entry.
"the Nets were left to dry and became a joke in the league."
Um, doesn't that argue for him being an essential Net? That they won 33 fewer games in the first year he was gone? This is like arguing LeBron wasn't the greatest Cav because the team fell apart when he left. Meanwhile, the first year without Kidd the Nets dropped by zero victories.
"J-Kidd was so much more important to the Nets as an NBA franchise. He made Jersey basektball relevant, interesting, and formidalbe in a league that truly was the world’s best."
Well, putting aside the absurdity that a player can do something more important than saving the franchise... I don't think the rest of the NBA fan world views those Nets teams as so formidable. If they had to go through Western Conference teams to advance in the playoffs they would have almost certainly been eliminated in the first or second round-- and everybody knows it. As for "interesting," well, I found it interesting, exciting, and a beautiful style of basketball, but the attendance numbers speak for themselves.

I get it, really I do. It's all about reliving those magic moments when the NAS staff (and a lot of the readers) first got excited about basketball. That's why Petrovic is #3 while Rick Barry is in the mid-teens, why Kidd rates over Erving, why Kevin Loughery is absent from the list. You should just change the name of this list to "our 44 favorite Nets" and all will be well.

Kidd over Dr. J is fair. Kidd and the Nets both had a great run during the early 2000's. Kidd was a triple double threat and the Nets were playing great and went to 2 NBA Finals. However, Dr. J would have been #1 if his Championship wasn't in the ABA and if the Nets didn't sell him.

@Vic

Yes, in the ABA Julius was A NET.

Lloyd Free took over for Fred Carter.

Last time I checked, Julius accomplished all those things in the ABA not in the NBA. When Julius came into the NBA, he went from averaging 29.3 ppg to 21.6 ppg. He also declined in rebounds (11 to 8.5) and assits (5 to 3.5). Only a one year difference, yet there were substantial declines. Something tells me the "championships" he won weren't exactly world championships.

If Julius accomplished these things as a Net in the NBA, then he would unquestionably be number one. He left, however, and even though he may have been responsible for the Nets joining the NBA (though I'm pretty sure being near NY had something to do with it), the Nets were left to dry and became a joke in the league.

J-Kidd was so much more important to the Nets as an NBA franchise. He made Jersey basektball relevant, interesting, and formidalbe in a league that truly was the world's best. I for one am not only a Nets fan but a SPORTS fan because of Kidd. Being only 10 years old, I didn't know Jersey had a team, until I caught one of the Nets-Celtics Eastern Conference Finals games on tv. From then on I was not only a fan of the Nets, but of Kidd since he was different then the great scorers like Iverson that I had heard about. He truly was a team captain as he made his teammates better. (Seroisuly would K-Mart rank 6th among players if it weren't for J-Kidd).

I only regret J-Kidd being put number one since now we have people complaining instead of celebrating the G.N.O.A.T. (Greatest Net Of All Time)!

One other interesting token of information: the year Doc joined the Sixers (and the NBA), he essentially replaced Fred Carter, improving the Sixers' record by nine games.... and lost in the NBA Finals. Not unlike what Kidd did, just in Philadelphia.

I'm not particularly interested in a straw man argument, because I don't see ranking someone as the second greatest figure in franchise history as a massive slight. I see it as recognition of his astounding accomplishment.

And if that makes you feel like you're on acid, then trip to your heart's content.

I feel like I’m on acid reading some of this nonsense. For the 3 years Dr. J was with the Nets he was one of the two best players on the planet, one of the two most famous, and undoubtedly the coolest. For three years he never finished out of the top ten in games, minutes, FG, FGA, FG%, FT, FTA, RB, ORB, DRB, assists, steals, blocks, points, PPG, and usage %. He was All-Defensive first team every year. He was MVP every single year. He led the Nets to their only two championships in franchise history.

And (as Aki pointed out) *he is probably personally responsible for the Nets still existing.* But Jason Kidd (who forced the Nets to trade him) “was a greater Net” or some other meaningless formulation? I guess that's what you say when you have nothing.

The historical short-sightedness of this choice is astounding.

I never saw Dr. J play so I won't argue with 1 and 2.

Kidd made the Nets exciting, despite the lack of attendance. When we think about those Nets in 02 and 03, we think of fast-breaks and alley oops. The funny thing is, the Nets offense in those two seasons was 17th and 18th on offense, and 1st and 1st on defense.

The Princeton system is offense through defense. Jason Kidd was born to run it, just like Bob Cousy, and if only he had had a Bill Russell to play with he would have won more than just one championship.

Great piece, Justin! You make a strong case for Jason!

I agree with the rankings. There is no doubt that Dr. J is a better player then Jason Kidd, but the question is the greatest NET. I think to be considered the greatest Net you have to play on them longer then 3 years. If Dr. J even played 5 or 6 years with them then I agree he would be considered but only 3 isnt enough.

I don't know man. Julius is the #2 best ever SF behind Larry Bird, ahead of Scottie, Nique, etc. Kidd is a top 10 PG ever, but it's not really equal. I was too young to see the Doc play, but I KNOW he was better than Kidd. Even if Kidd was one of my favorite players of the last 15 years.

It's not fair to list the people that doc has influenced yet, b/c kidd isn't old enough yet t have a list that long. I'm sure CP3, DWill, and Rondo would say they learned a lot from him but it still isn't a fair comparison. Time is a factor. Maybe in 20 years we look back at Kidd as the catalyst for the ERA OF THE POINT GUARD that we're living in now.

Overall, though in 2011 I say: Dr J = #1, JKidd = #2

Aki-- that was a splendid and totally on-target rant. Kidd over Doc is like Jeter over the Babe, Rose over Jordan, the latest rushing leader over Jim Brown: it would be a blasphemy if such a thing still existed.

I'd say it's more like choosing Ted Williams over Ruth, actually.

No one is arguing that Kidd is a better player and had a better overall career. But that's not the point of this list.

Your just too young to have seen the Doctor! How is anyone that is compared to Michael Jordan or "The Jordan of the NBA before Jordan" so often, going to be ranked # 2. It makes no sense! Every kid and teenager on the planet wanted to be Dr. J on the playground. It sometimes would cause arguments amongst friends (I may of been in the middle of a couple of those) on the court. I didn't hear a lot of Jason Kidd being called out on the blacktop even in his prime,we heard more A.I. The impact that Julius Erving had on the sport of basketball is ridiculous. We are not watching the same game if it wasn't for Julius Erving. He sparked the creativity and exploration of doing things outside of the norm with a basketball. For god sake the Nets wouldn't even be an NBA team if it wasn't for him. "The merger happened because the NBA wanted Dr. J. period" in the words of Peter Vecsey. Thank Dr.J that you even have a franchise to write about today or this website! You can ask fans of the Kentucky Colonels or any of the other teams that were not part of the merger.Why were the Nets part of the merger? I ask again why were the Nets chosen to be part of the merger? Oh I know why, because the jerseys matched the ball!! In closing lets rattle off a few names of players that Dr. J has inspired and introduced into the Hall of Fame: Cheryl Miller(hands down the greatest woman's basketball player of all time). Dominique Wilkins, Clyde Drexler,Moses Malone, Artis Gilmore, David Thompson and the list goes on. How many great players when Jason Kidd is in the Hall of Fame will he be asked to sponsor into the Hall? We will have to wait on that one. The impact that Jason Kidd had on the game of basketball is infantile compared to this man. This listing is BLASPHEMOUS to the basketball Gods I'm sure! Number 2 on the NETS list! The NETS list! Great Job writer and editor!

I remember exactly what I was doing when I found out about the trade. I was 7 or 8 at the time and during family dinner my dad told me the Nets and i specifically remember his words "made a big trade to day." At the time my favorite player was Jim McIlvaine only because his name was James and being 7 and a pro havent your name I thought was awesome. I also remember when I got into 5th I was in arguments daily about who was better Kidd or Iverson.

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