Do you agree that Garbajosa is equal to Horry and Diamantidis to Bowen?
I don't have any idea. I know there are good European players, and sure, probably dozens or hundreds are as good as Horry, whose only claim to fame was a knack for being in the right place at the right time. But as JoRain pointed out, Garbajosa is a good example of a Euro whose game didn't translate to the NBA.
You're all bent out of shape because I've said that I don't think Splitter in a Spurs uniform is anything to get excited about. That's how this all started. You keep telling me that Splitter is a good Euroleague player. I know that. Then you tell me that there are players who grew up in Europe and had good NBA careers. I know that too. Then you tell me that there are other Euro players who could play in the NBA but choose not to. Sure, that's fairly obvious.
This isn't about the quality of Euroball. I imagine it's quite high. It's about how well the skills transfer from that setting to the NBA. You seem to think that the only differences are the continent on which games are played and Americans' smug insistence that the NBA is intrinsically superior. But the differences are more than that, as Americans keep discovering when they struggle in FIBA tournaments.
If you want to win this argument, all you have to do is place your bet with Splitter and tell me, "Wait and see." If he comes through for you, I'll admit that he's one of the very few exceptions of an established Euroball talent who could have an impact in the NBA. We'll know in a few months. Until then, all your name-calling isn't going to do anything except dig you a bigger hole for when Splitter flops.
I'm not afraid of seeing how Splitter is going to turn out. Why are you?
I'll let you have the last word now with another semicoherent grunt about how "stupid" or "ignorant" I am.