First place: Ray Allen
Ray Allen was named to the NBA All-Star Team 10 times in his career, was named to the NBA All-NBA Third Team in 2001, won the NBA Sportsmanship Award in 2003, and was named to the NBA All-NBA Second Team in 2005. In 2000, he joined the American Dream Team, helping the team win gold at the Sydney Olympic Games. In 2001, he won the NBA All-Star Three-Point Contest Championship. In 2008, he helped the Boston Celtics win the NBA championship, and in 2013, he helped the Heat win the NBA championship. He is also a member of the NBA's All-Star Advisory Board, Captain Honor of the Connecticut Century, and one of the Jordan Shoe Spokespeople approved by AJ (Michael Jordan).

Second place: Gary Payton
Gary Payton was drafted by the Seattle SuperSonics (now the Oklahoma City Thunder) in the 1st round of the 1990 NBA Draft, and played for the Seattle SuperSonics, Milwaukee Bucks, Los Angeles Lakers, Boston Celtics and Miami Heat in 2006, won the NBA championship with the Heat in 2006, was named to the NBA All-Star Team nine times, and was named to the NBA All-Star Team nine times (2 first-team, 5 second-team, 2-time third-team). He has been named to the league's best defensive team for 9 consecutive times. In the 1995–96 season, Gary Payton was named NBA Defensive Player of the Year and NBA Steals King, becoming the only point guard in NBA history to be named The Best Defensive Player.
Third place: Manu Ginobili
Manu Ginobili was selected by the San Antonio Spurs with the 57th pick in the second round of the 1999 NBA Draft, officially joined the NBA in 2002, then won four NBA championships with the Spurs (2003, 2005, 2007, 2014), was named the NBA's Best Sixth Man in 2008, was named to the NBA All-Star Team twice in 2005 and 2011, and became the Spurs' all-time steal king in 2018.
Fourth place: Maurice Lucas
Selected by the Chicago Bulls in the 1974 NBA Draft, Maurice Lucas was drafted by the Chicago Bulls in the 1st round of the 1974 NBA Draft, where he played for the ABA Victory Louis Spirits and Kentucky Colonels, and was named to the ABA All-Star Team in 1976. He joined the NBA in 1976, won the NBA championship with the Trail Blazers in 1977, and was selected four Times as an All-Star, once to the All-Team and twice to the Defensive Team.
Fifth place: Alain Houston
Nicknamed the King of Shooting, Alan Houston has played for the Detroit Pistons and New York Knicks in his career, and has been named to the NBA All-Star Team twice. Playing clean, shooting posture pleasing to the eye, rhythm, three threats and other outside players' basic skills are very solid, there is a certain ability to hold the ball to break through, so that the defenders dare not prevent the shooting, the passing level and awareness are not good, but certainly above the average level of the league, not sticky ball, have the ability to end the game!
Sixth place: Gordon Hayward
Gordon Hayward entered the NBA through the draft in 2010, playing for the Jazz and Celtics before being named to the All-Star Western Conference bench in 2017. Gordon Hayward is a typical forward swinger with skilled scoring, possession, passing and rebounding skills, and his style is unusually tough.
Seventh place: Timoffy Mozgov
Timofey Mozgov entered the NBA as a non-draft player in 2010, playing for the Knicks, Nuggets, Cavaliers, Lakers and Nets, and won the NBA championship with the Cavaliers in 2015-16. Timofey Mozgov is impactful, athletic, likes to block and protect the basket, although not yet at the level of the All-Star, but the defensive efficiency on the inside is extremely high.
Eighth place: Josh Jackson
Josh Jackson is an offensive and defensive player with a very good overall range of players, a high basketball IQ, good athleticism, and he can play in the second or third position, as well as in the fourth position in a small lineup.
Ninth place: Justis Winslow
Justis Winslow is a left-handed player with elite-level speed and athleticism, a wealth of offensive skills, capable of dribbling and jump shots, dunking under the basket and making physical contact to complete the score. In addition to offense, Winslow is a tough defensive player, physically strong, fast-moving, and adept at putting pressure on ball-handling players.
Tenth place: Donatas Motelunas
Donatas Motelunas is physically strong, shot stability needs to be improved, is a left-handed player, has solid low-post technique, and can shoot with both hands. His downside is that the defensive end is too weak!