I don't envy Adams. I've managed to keep backpacking in the mountains forty years longer with big cameras than he did it, and did it on my own terms in relative solitude, without dealing with accompanying crowds on organized convoys. I can realistically state I've had more opportunities to enjoy the light without distraction, which is what it's really all about. I haven't had to pander to either art gurus or tourists. I could pick and choose where to be shown, back when I sought that kind of thing. Just a rite of passage as far as I'm concerned. I make prints for myself and not for the market, although I've certainly had my share of admirers who bought them.
AA deserves his place in history as a kinda combined pioneering figure bringing together both photography as an accepted art medium in tandem with the National Parks movement. None of us can ever repeat that. I can print better than him any day of the week. That doesn't give me bragging rights, however, because people like him and his teaching of photographic method are part of our present heritage and suite of advantages, just like improved lenses, cameras, and film. Breaking ground does count.
But people forget just how much AA himself was influenced by great landscape photographers prior to him, and there were a number of them. And how the hell can anyone state they know that the collected work of any of us is diminished by comparison - just cause they've never seen it doesn't mean it doesn't exist. Myopia. Sacred cow worshipping. Is that determined by auction prices? - if so, there are baseball cards worth even more. And I certainly didn't play second fiddle the one time I was exhibited side to side with him, except on the ad itself. Didn't need to compete either; different styles entirely. In that respect, there is no one "best". There's room for a lot of variety. Big fish in the photographic pond were once common around here, and many people wouldn't put AA at the head of that list, including myself. I can appreciate what he did far better than most, because I grew up in that kind of light; but there are many ways of interpreting it.
Another vote for what Matt already stated above. Enjoy the hunt, because in many ways, it's more important than the kill itself.