RealGM Top 100 List #16
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RealGM Top 100 List #16
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RealGM Top 100 List #16
Again, breaking it down by position
CENTERS
David Robinson to me is the best left in terms of peak. Moses has great longevity though and the third possibility is George Mikan who is the only player left that was the undisputed best player in basketball for a reasonably long stretch of time (5 years +). I rate Robinson higher at the moment because Moses's defense is solid on ball but he isn't a defensive anchor and defensive anchors like the Admiral (anchor, Admiral, oh never mind) tend to have an impact out of proportion to their numbers. I think you win more titles with DRob than with Moses despite Moses's longevity advantage.
FORWARDS
Karl Malone is the obvious choice in terms of numbers, durability, everything but postseason success; although I have seen Dirk, Pettit, Barkley, and even Rodman rated over him by various posters.
GUARDS
Wade or Frazier. Wade is the most explosive scorer and plays excellent defense, Frazier didn't score as much but was an even better defender and playmaker, and even more known for stepping up and dominating 2 NBA finals. This one is very close; I lean Frazier over West but willing to be convinced. I see Clyde as a step up over Nash and Stockton for his ability to take over games with both his scoring and defense, over Payton, Kidd, or Isiah for his scoring efficiency and superior all around game. Both Wade and Frazier do suffer a little from short or injury riddled primes.
Right now, I am leaning to Karl Malone from all the debate but willing to change.
CENTERS
David Robinson to me is the best left in terms of peak. Moses has great longevity though and the third possibility is George Mikan who is the only player left that was the undisputed best player in basketball for a reasonably long stretch of time (5 years +). I rate Robinson higher at the moment because Moses's defense is solid on ball but he isn't a defensive anchor and defensive anchors like the Admiral (anchor, Admiral, oh never mind) tend to have an impact out of proportion to their numbers. I think you win more titles with DRob than with Moses despite Moses's longevity advantage.
FORWARDS
Karl Malone is the obvious choice in terms of numbers, durability, everything but postseason success; although I have seen Dirk, Pettit, Barkley, and even Rodman rated over him by various posters.
GUARDS
Wade or Frazier. Wade is the most explosive scorer and plays excellent defense, Frazier didn't score as much but was an even better defender and playmaker, and even more known for stepping up and dominating 2 NBA finals. This one is very close; I lean Frazier over West but willing to be convinced. I see Clyde as a step up over Nash and Stockton for his ability to take over games with both his scoring and defense, over Payton, Kidd, or Isiah for his scoring efficiency and superior all around game. Both Wade and Frazier do suffer a little from short or injury riddled primes.
Right now, I am leaning to Karl Malone from all the debate but willing to change.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
Vote: Karl Malone
I'm voting for Karl Malone because he gives me the best chance to win over the course of his career. He gives you many options as far as how to build your team because he's above average or strong in many areas. You've got many great years with him as either a top-tier superstar or an ultra-portable role player. In his prime, he can take on an enormous usage — as high as some of our finest offensive wings — and drive strong offenses, even against formidable defenses in the playoffs.
Karl Malone has also faced the GOAT competition of pretty much anybody ever. He's faced every great PF except for Bob Pettit. Nowitzki, Garnett, Barkley, Duncan, McHale, Rodman, Webber, Brand, O'Neal, Wallace, and Kemp. Getting into the next-tier PFs of his prime era like Horace Grant, Otis Thorpe, Buck Williams, Charles Oakley, Larry Nance, Cliff Robinson, and Antonio McDyess. He faced them all. Pretty impressive in my opinion.
I'm voting for Karl Malone because he gives me the best chance to win over the course of his career. He gives you many options as far as how to build your team because he's above average or strong in many areas. You've got many great years with him as either a top-tier superstar or an ultra-portable role player. In his prime, he can take on an enormous usage — as high as some of our finest offensive wings — and drive strong offenses, even against formidable defenses in the playoffs.
Karl Malone has also faced the GOAT competition of pretty much anybody ever. He's faced every great PF except for Bob Pettit. Nowitzki, Garnett, Barkley, Duncan, McHale, Rodman, Webber, Brand, O'Neal, Wallace, and Kemp. Getting into the next-tier PFs of his prime era like Horace Grant, Otis Thorpe, Buck Williams, Charles Oakley, Larry Nance, Cliff Robinson, and Antonio McDyess. He faced them all. Pretty impressive in my opinion.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
penbeast0 wrote:Again, breaking it down by position
CENTERS
David Robinson to me is the best left in terms of peak. Moses has great longevity though and the third possibility is George Mikan who is the only player left that was the undisputed best player in basketball for a reasonably long stretch of time (5 years +). I rate Robinson higher at the moment because Moses's defense is solid on ball but he isn't a defensive anchor and defensive anchors like the Admiral (anchor, Admiral, oh never mind) tend to have an impact out of proportion to their numbers. I think you win more titles with DRob than with Moses despite Moses's longevity advantage.
FORWARDS
Karl Malone is the obvious choice in terms of numbers, durability, everything but postseason success; although I have seen Dirk, Pettit, Barkley, and even Rodman rated over him by various posters.
GUARDS
Wade or Frazier. Wade is the most explosive scorer and plays excellent defense, Frazier didn't score as much but was an even better defender and playmaker, and even more known for stepping up and dominating 2 NBA finals. This one is very close; I lean Frazier over West but willing to be convinced. I see Clyde as a step up over Nash and Stockton for his ability to take over games with both his scoring and defense, over Payton, Kidd, or Isiah for his scoring efficiency and superior all around game. Both Wade and Frazier do suffer a little from short or injury riddled primes.
Right now, I am leaning to Karl Malone from all the debate but willing to change.
In what Way is Frazier a more dominant finals performer than prime Wade?
For a start, Frazier dominated 2 finals, Wade only dominated 1. Also, in addition to dominating offensively, Frazier shut down Jerry West defensively; just a super dominant performance at both ends (by a player I hated at the time; bloody Knicks).
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
Vote for #16: Karl Malone.
Reasons......
Analytic interpretation:
A look at the common playoff narrative, broken down by Elgee:
There's this.....
Player POY Shares
1. Bill Russell 10.956
2. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 10.221
3. Michael Jordan 9.578
4. Wilt Chamberlain 7.818
5. Magic Johnson 7.114
6. LeBron James 6.652
7. Tim Duncan 6.248
8. Larry Bird 6.147
9. Shaquille O'Neal 5.910
10. Julius Erving 5.046
11. Karl Malone 4.649
12. Bob Pettit 4.466
13. Oscar Robertson 4.413
14. Kobe Bryant 4.380
15. Hakeem Olajuwon 4.380
16. Jerry West 3.795
17. Kevin Garnett 3.571
18. Moses Malone 3.478
19. Dwyane Wade 2.601
20. David Robinson 2.431
Some other statistical footprint stuff (I like to glance over this kind of stuff, as it's basically the product of quality * time * durability):
Players with 30,000+ pts
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (voted in at #2)
Michael Jordan (voted in at #1)
Kobe Bryant (voted in at #13)
Wilt Chamberlain (voted in at #4)
Karl Malone (yet to be voted in)
Players with 30,000+ pts and 10,000+ reb
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Wilt Chamberlain (#4)
Karl Malone (?)
Players with 30,000+ pts, 10,000+ reb, and 5,000+ ast
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Karl Malone (?)
Players with 30,000+ pts, 10,000+ reb, 5,000+ ast, and 2,000+ stl
Karl Malone (?)
Reasons......
Analytic interpretation:
Spoiler:
A look at the common playoff narrative, broken down by Elgee:
Spoiler:
There's this.....
Player POY Shares
1. Bill Russell 10.956
2. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 10.221
3. Michael Jordan 9.578
4. Wilt Chamberlain 7.818
5. Magic Johnson 7.114
6. LeBron James 6.652
7. Tim Duncan 6.248
8. Larry Bird 6.147
9. Shaquille O'Neal 5.910
10. Julius Erving 5.046
11. Karl Malone 4.649
12. Bob Pettit 4.466
13. Oscar Robertson 4.413
14. Kobe Bryant 4.380
15. Hakeem Olajuwon 4.380
16. Jerry West 3.795
17. Kevin Garnett 3.571
18. Moses Malone 3.478
19. Dwyane Wade 2.601
20. David Robinson 2.431
Some other statistical footprint stuff (I like to glance over this kind of stuff, as it's basically the product of quality * time * durability):
Players with 30,000+ pts
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (voted in at #2)
Michael Jordan (voted in at #1)
Kobe Bryant (voted in at #13)
Wilt Chamberlain (voted in at #4)
Karl Malone (yet to be voted in)
Players with 30,000+ pts and 10,000+ reb
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Wilt Chamberlain (#4)
Karl Malone (?)
Players with 30,000+ pts, 10,000+ reb, and 5,000+ ast
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Karl Malone (?)
Players with 30,000+ pts, 10,000+ reb, 5,000+ ast, and 2,000+ stl
Karl Malone (?)
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
Glad the logo got in.
For me this is Karl vs Dirk.
Unless someone can convince me Dirk offensive advantage is more impactful than Karl's combined offense and defense at PF, he's my likely pick.
Moses is so unorthodox and his defense hurt his team in Houston, but I'm not sure if his offensive rebounding made his teams from terrible to average in record and Ortg. He might be the opposite of a defensive center.
I also wonder if he's a better man defender than Karl, neither were defensive anchors but since he's a better shot blocker (he really improved his BLK% in Philly, perhaps it was a better defensive culture there?) I wonder if he's a better defensive player overall?
He's a wild card for me right now. If his defense is better and his offense wasn't enhanced by a PG of Stockton's caliber or a HOF coach's system I might vote him.
For me this is Karl vs Dirk.
Unless someone can convince me Dirk offensive advantage is more impactful than Karl's combined offense and defense at PF, he's my likely pick.
Moses is so unorthodox and his defense hurt his team in Houston, but I'm not sure if his offensive rebounding made his teams from terrible to average in record and Ortg. He might be the opposite of a defensive center.
I also wonder if he's a better man defender than Karl, neither were defensive anchors but since he's a better shot blocker (he really improved his BLK% in Philly, perhaps it was a better defensive culture there?) I wonder if he's a better defensive player overall?
He's a wild card for me right now. If his defense is better and his offense wasn't enhanced by a PG of Stockton's caliber or a HOF coach's system I might vote him.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
trex_8063 wrote:Some other statistical footprint stuff (I like to glance over this kind of stuff, as it's basically the product of quality * time * durability):
Players with 30,000+ pts
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (voted in at #2)
Michael Jordan (voted in at #1)
Kobe Bryant (voted in at #13)
Wilt Chamberlain (voted in at #4)
Karl Malone (yet to be voted in)
Players with 30,000+ pts and 10,000+ reb
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Wilt Chamberlain (#4)
Karl Malone (?)
Players with 30,000+ pts, 10,000+ reb, and 5,000+ ast
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Karl Malone (?)
Players with 30,000+ pts, 10,000+ reb, 5,000+ ast, and 2,000+ stl
Karl Malone (?)
Also......
Players with 4,500+ pts in the playoffs
Michael Jordan (#1)
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Kobe Bryant (#13)
Shaquille O'Neal (#6)
Tim Duncan (#5)
Karl Malone (?)
*Julius Erving (#14; *can include him if we include ABA stats, though still slightly behind Malone, despite faster avg pace)
Players with 4,500+ pts and 2,000+ reb in the playoffs
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Tim Duncan (#5)
Shaquille O'Neal (#6)
Karl Malone (?)
Players with 4,500+ pts, 2,000+ reb, and 600+ ast in the playoffs
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (#2)
Tim Duncan (#5)
Karl Malone (?)
Players with 4,500+ pts, 2,000+ reb, 600+ ast, and 250+ stl in the playoffs
Karl Malone (?)
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
From last thread:
As far as Robinson and Moses, the fact that Robinson was a great defender and Moses wasn't is a plus in his favor. He was also able to conplement Duncan when he arrived without any ego over not being "The Man" anymore, which is also a plus. If that's what's needed of him, he showed he has no problem deferring. I just have to decide how much his inability to effectively utilize what he brought to the table to help his team win in the postseason during his prime should hurt him against his competition.
ThaRegul8r wrote:Looking at Malone and Dirk, and looking at the relevant criteria, fatal9 had this to say about Malone:Spoiler:
I posted this about Durant:ThaRegul8r wrote:“One thing I criticize about Kevin Durant’s game, he still hasn’t learned to post up the little guys that guard him,” Charles Barkley said during the Sprint Halftime Report of Game 6 of the Western Conference Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs. “My criticism of Durant has always been the same,” Barkley said on the postgame show. “He lets little guys guard him.”
Which was also true of Dirk at one point, that players smaller than him were able to guard him, which hindered his ability to effectively employ what he brings to the table to help his team win, but he rectified the point, which helped his team win.Spoiler:
So that's a plus for Dirk. I looked at ElGee's thread about superstars against good and bad defenses in the regular and postseason again, and the data shows that Dirk doesn't care what defense he faces, while Malone falls off.
These criteria:3. The possession of the rational self-interest to put ego aside in order to do #1 and #2, disregarding the opinions of irrelevant others who are not on the team and thus have no effect on the team’s success.
4. The ability to block out distractions and anything irrelevant to the maximization of the team’s chances of victory.
A player focusing on anything other than helping his team will receive a lower evaluation. A player’s job is to help bring his team wins. Nothing else matters or is relevant. Basketball players are grown men who make choices. They have the right to make whatever choice they want, but with action comes consequence. That choice they make will be honored and they will be evaluated on the basis of that choice, whether it’s beneficial or detrimental to the team’s chances of winning.
don't seem to be applicable here, as neither of them really had a problem with that.ThaRegull8r wrote:5. The ability to rise to the occasion during big games and crucial moments in order to bring about the ultimate objective of winning, and the mental fortitude to do so.
Dirk has the edge on this criterion. As I said earlier:ThaRegul8r wrote:This criterion is relevant in that I want to know if a player is able to effectively employ whatever it is he brings to the table in important moments in his team's quest for a title. Can he still do whatever it is that he does in big games? Players who can, that is a positive in my evaluation, causing them to move up in my rankings. If, for whatever reason, they cannot, that devalues them in my eyes. Whatever it is they bring to the table won't be of much use if they can't do it—whatever "it" is—when his team needs it most. This is what I'm getting at if when I want to know how a given player performs in the postseason. How well did he employ what he brings to the table in the postseason?
To that effect, being able to employ whatever it is that he brings in varying situations and against varying opponents is relevant. He needs to be able to do what he does against whatever opponent his team may face. Every player may have particular bad matchups, but a player who has less of these is more valuable to his team. I'm going to call it "matchup independence." The degree to which the ability of a player to employ whatever he bring to the table to help his team win isn't diminished by particular matchups.
Thus far, I'm leaning Dirk over Malone. I want to know how effectively they can utilize what they bring to the table to help their team win, and Dirk and Malone were both scorers, and the fact that Dirk was "fantastic," able to continue scoring against whatever defense he faced while Malone's "impressive scoring efficiency disappears" puts him over on my list based on my criteria. Fatal said Malone's drop off could "be naturally expected from him given his skills as a scorer," and he never rectified this, while Dirk did what he needed to do in order that his ability to employ what he brought to the table to help his team win wouldn't be hindered.ThaRegul8r wrote:2. The ability to both identify what the team needs at any given moment in order to realize the ultimate object of winning and provide it.
I care about improvement when it enables the player to better be able to help his team win when not improving hinders his ability to help his team win. Dirk saw what he needed to do to help his team win and did it. That improvement made him more effective as noted by his peers above. The things that worked against him before were rendered ineffective. It made him better able to help his team win, which he did.
As far as Robinson and Moses, the fact that Robinson was a great defender and Moses wasn't is a plus in his favor. He was also able to conplement Duncan when he arrived without any ego over not being "The Man" anymore, which is also a plus. If that's what's needed of him, he showed he has no problem deferring. I just have to decide how much his inability to effectively utilize what he brought to the table to help his team win in the postseason during his prime should hurt him against his competition.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
I just have to decide how much his inability to effectively utilize what he brought to the table to help his team win in the postseason during his prime should hurt him against his competition.
Considering Dirk still hasn't been voted in, it's a pretty HUGE deal actually (IMO).
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
D Nice wrote:I just have to decide how much his inability to effectively utilize what he brought to the table to help his team win in the postseason during his prime should hurt him against his competition.
Considering Dirk still hasn't been voted in, it's a pretty HUGE deal actually (IMO).
No, in that we both agree. As I posted, as I was looking at the criteria of what I value and considering how the current candidates meet them, I have Dirk as my leading choice among those currently eligible, and thus above Robinson.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
D Nice wrote:I just have to decide how much his inability to effectively utilize what he brought to the table to help his team win in the postseason during his prime should hurt him against his competition.
Considering Dirk still hasn't been voted in, it's a pretty HUGE deal actually (IMO).
I think its fair to look at the Mavs' postseason results in the Dirk era and question them a little bit. A title, another Finals trip, and a WCF appearance is good but hardly overwhelming team success. The question then becomes did Dirk personally do all that he could in the series in which the Mavs were eliminated and to maybe look at the teams the Mavs lost to.
Mavs' series in which they were eliminated:
01 Spurs -- no shame in losing to the better team and in Dirk's 2nd ever PS series puts up a respectable 23/9 on 56%TS. Finley, Nash, and Juwan all have awful series.
02 Kings -- no shame in losing to top seeded Kings. Dirk 26/12, but struggled with efficiency 51%TS. Finley and Nash have pretty good series offensively. Dirk could have done a little better here.
03 Spurs -- no shame again especially as Dirk gets hurt 25/11 56%TS in 3 games he did play. Hard to tell how that series plays out if he doesnt get hurt
04 Kings-- this was a 4/5 matchup with Kings having HCA. Dirk puts up 27/12 on 56%TS. Literally every other player on the Mavs is awful. Bibby destroys Nash which really hurts.
05 Suns -- no shame as Suns are top seed and Nash is motivated and destroys the Mavs. Dirk 27/12 54%TS Howard and JET pretty good. Finley and Stack pretty terrible.
06 Heat -- This one stings a lot. Up 2-0 with big lead in game 3. Dirk misses crucial FT. Dirk 23/11 53%TS JET is good, Damp does good job on Shaq(with help), JHo terrible. Wade goes bananas.
07 GSW -- Ouch! 67 wins and losing to an 8 seed. Dirk 20/11 51%TS and 2/6 games are absolutely dreadful for Dirk. One of his worst series of all-time(05 Rockets 1st round and 14 Spurs 1st round are worse imo)
08 -- Hornets(now Pelicans) No shame for Mavs in losing to #2 seed. Dirk 27/12 59%TS Not much more he could do here
09 --Nuggets again for Mavs losing as 6 seed to #2 seed. No shame. Dirk 35/12/4 66%TS Nothing more Dirk could do here either
10 -- Mavs upset by 7 seeded Spurs(these teams always close as seen this year) Dirk 27/8 64%TS Rebounding is way down for him, but hard to fault him for this. Outside of Butler gets little help
11-- Champion
12-- Thunder, no shame for team losing to #2 seed. Dirk 27/6 56%TS Again rebounding is way down for Dirk, but he did his part. Just too much talent to overcome
13-- failed to make PS
14-- Spurs. No shame for team as they were the only ones to even put up a fight against the champs. Dirk has a terrible series. 19/8 48%TS
So you can look at the data and decide for yourselves how to judge Dirk in regards to Mavs playoff success and lack thereof.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
Basketballefan wrote:PCProductions wrote:Vote: Dirk Nowitzki
I like Dirk here because he's got the longevity of Malone with proven playoff success. In fact, he was rarely a letdown in the postseason barring the catastrophic 2007 first round exit after a 69 win season, but that was a fluke and ran into a team that both got hot at the right time and knew how to play them because of having their old coach.
And he's still going.
In what Way is Dirk's longevity on par with Karl Malone's? That's reaching imo.
This is a good thing to analyze. Let's forget about who has better longevity, and just look at some things that would help us look at how big of an edge Malone has.
First thing to come to mind to me is All-NBA selections since they both play forward. Total:
Malone 14
Dirk 12
What about number of seasons with a PER north of 20?
Malone 16
Dirk 13
So I look at that, and I'm fine giving Malone some longevity edge, but how much? How often would anyone think to choose between two guys based on his edge in their respective 13th/14th best years?
Then there's the peak/prime levels. I posted All-NBA before so it's only fair to look at 1st teams:
Malone 11
Dirk 4
That right there makes it pretty understandable picking Malone without looking at longevity really.
But then there's also the playoffs. That same PER comparison I did before but in the playoffs:
Malone 10
Dirk 12
And of course there's the Win Shares stuff I was looking at before relating to West. Years north of 0.18?
Malone 4
Dirk 8
Oh and if you disliked me cherry picking 0.18, and wanted a rounder number like 0.2, well:
Malone 2
Dirk 6
All of this has me thinking: If longevity is truly the deciding factor at this point for Malone, how much further would Dirk have to go to win the battle?
ftr, I'm really debating between Malone, Dirk, as well as Robinson right now. The tough thing for me is that I've felt the Malone > Robinson arguments have been very compelling, but Robinson > Dirk and Dirk > Malone also make sense. I'm a bit in one of those circular ranking things.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
Dirk vs. Karl by per 100 and advanced stats; rs only, comparing equal number of seasons:
Dirk (career whole--16 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
32.8 pts, 11.8 reb, 3.8 ast, 1.3 stl, 1.3 blk, 2.7 tov on .582 TS%
PER 23.5, .208 WS/48 in 35.9 mpg, 117 ORtg, 104 DRtg
Karl ('88-'03--16 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
35.8 pts, 14.0 reb, 5.0 ast, 2.0 stl, 1.1 blk, 4.2 tov on .583 TS%
PER 24.9, .221 WS/48 in 37.9 mpg, 114 ORtg, 101 DRtg
Also note that due to his extreme durability, Malone played 1271 rs games in this stretch, compared to Dirk's 1188 total career games. So Malone played nearly one extra season worth of games relative to Dirk in this stretch (and overall his rs numbers are superior anyway).
Then further consider that while that is Dirk's entire career, Karl had THREE other seasons (one at borderline All-Star level, the other two at "valuable role player" level).
Alternately, could look at Karl's first 16 seasons (to compare to Dirk's "first" 16):
Karl ('86-'01)
Per 100 Possessions
35.2 pts, 14.2 reb, 4.7 ast, 1.9 stl, 1.1 blk, 4.2 tov on .582 TS%
PER 24.4, .212 WS/48 in 37.3 mpg, 113 ORtg, 101 DRtg
Again, Malone plays nearly one extra season worth of games in this stretch, and statistically looks marginally superior besides. And with using these 16 seasons, the THREE additional seasons he has on Dirk include one legit All-Star caliber year, another at least borderline AS year, and one solid role player year.
For a tighter look at just semi-extended prime....
Dirk ('01-'14---14 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
33.7 pts, 12.0 reb, 3.9 ast, 1.3 stl, 1.4 blk, 2.7 tov on .585 TS%
PER 24.2, .218 WS/48 in 36.6 mpg, 118 ORtg, 104 DRtg
Karl ('88-'01---14 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
36.5 pts, 14.3 reb, 4.8 ast, 1.9 stl, 1.1 blk, 4.2 tov on .589 TS%
PER 25.4, .228 WS/48 in 38.0 mpg, 115 ORtg, 101 DRtg
Karl played about 1/2 of a season more games during this stretch, too, and once again clearly has a small statistical edge.
In the playoffs.....
Dirk (career whole-->all game occurred in '01-'14 prime)
Per 100 Possessions
33.0 pts, 13.1 reb, 3.3 ast, 1.4 stl, 1.2 blk, 3.0 tov on .579 TS%
PER 24.2, .196 WS/48 in 41.1 mpg, 117 ORtg, 107 DRtg
Karl ('88-'01--14 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
35.1 pts, 14.7 reb, 4.1 ast, 1.7 stl, 1.0 blk, 3.8 tov on .532 TS%
PER 22.7 PER, .157 WS/48 in 41.6 mpg, 108 ORtg, 103 DRtg
Overall, Dirk clearly the better playoff performer, Malone was clearly the better rs performer. And then Malone's got the three additional seasons on him (none of which could be classified irrelevant, imo), plus about one additional season worth of games played due to his durability--->this is very relevant, that the team can so reliably count on their star being there at tip-off time. As a for instance: Dirk missing 29 games in '13 basically cost the Mavs a playoff berth. The Jazz never had to worry about anything like that from Malone, not once in 18 seasons.
Dirk's the better offensive player: of an elite class on offense.
Malone is probably sub-elite on offense......but not by all that much. Still a very very formidable offensive weapon. His defense can pretty fairly be declared superior to Dirk's (consistently noted in rs DRtg, ps DRtg, accolades, and the eye-test).
Malone also the better rebounder, pretty substantially if measured by TRebs per 100. But even if one wants to disregard ORebs (where Malone has quite a large edge) as part of the offensive comparison, and focus only on DReb:
Karl in rs '88-'01
avg 10.9 DReb per 100
Peak season 11.9 DReb per 100
avg 23.9% DReb%
peak season 27.2% DReb%
Dirk in rs '01-'14
avg 10.4 DReb per 100
peak season 11.8 DReb per 100
avg 22.4% DReb%
peak season 25.1% DReb%
In the playoffs.....
Karl in ps '88-'01
avg 11.0 DReb per 100
peak season 12.7 DReb per 100
avg 24.0% DReb%
peak season 35.0% DReb%
Dirk in ps '01-'14
avg 11.1 DReb per 100
peak season 12.9 DReb per 100
avg 24.6% DReb%
peak season 28.0% DReb%
Malone's got the significant edge across the board in the rs (the much larger sample size, fwiw), and just barely behind in the ps numbers.
Overall, I rate peak Dirk as the better player, but not by much of a margin. The gap offensively (which is not that large, imo, and the above numbers---collectively; i.e. not just singling out one or two---stand testament to that; fwiw, I'd also made an evaluation on prior thread which may suggest Malone faced elite level team defenses and good to elite level defensive PF's in the playoffs at a slightly higher rate of occurrence than Dirk) is partially made up for on defense and rebounding. For whole primes, I think one can make a decent statistical case in Malone's favor.
And then there's the THREE additional relevant seasons Malone has to his credit as well as ~1 season gained simply on durability.
Anyway.....for your consideration......
Dirk (career whole--16 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
32.8 pts, 11.8 reb, 3.8 ast, 1.3 stl, 1.3 blk, 2.7 tov on .582 TS%
PER 23.5, .208 WS/48 in 35.9 mpg, 117 ORtg, 104 DRtg
Karl ('88-'03--16 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
35.8 pts, 14.0 reb, 5.0 ast, 2.0 stl, 1.1 blk, 4.2 tov on .583 TS%
PER 24.9, .221 WS/48 in 37.9 mpg, 114 ORtg, 101 DRtg
Also note that due to his extreme durability, Malone played 1271 rs games in this stretch, compared to Dirk's 1188 total career games. So Malone played nearly one extra season worth of games relative to Dirk in this stretch (and overall his rs numbers are superior anyway).
Then further consider that while that is Dirk's entire career, Karl had THREE other seasons (one at borderline All-Star level, the other two at "valuable role player" level).
Alternately, could look at Karl's first 16 seasons (to compare to Dirk's "first" 16):
Karl ('86-'01)
Per 100 Possessions
35.2 pts, 14.2 reb, 4.7 ast, 1.9 stl, 1.1 blk, 4.2 tov on .582 TS%
PER 24.4, .212 WS/48 in 37.3 mpg, 113 ORtg, 101 DRtg
Again, Malone plays nearly one extra season worth of games in this stretch, and statistically looks marginally superior besides. And with using these 16 seasons, the THREE additional seasons he has on Dirk include one legit All-Star caliber year, another at least borderline AS year, and one solid role player year.
For a tighter look at just semi-extended prime....
Dirk ('01-'14---14 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
33.7 pts, 12.0 reb, 3.9 ast, 1.3 stl, 1.4 blk, 2.7 tov on .585 TS%
PER 24.2, .218 WS/48 in 36.6 mpg, 118 ORtg, 104 DRtg
Karl ('88-'01---14 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
36.5 pts, 14.3 reb, 4.8 ast, 1.9 stl, 1.1 blk, 4.2 tov on .589 TS%
PER 25.4, .228 WS/48 in 38.0 mpg, 115 ORtg, 101 DRtg
Karl played about 1/2 of a season more games during this stretch, too, and once again clearly has a small statistical edge.
In the playoffs.....
Dirk (career whole-->all game occurred in '01-'14 prime)
Per 100 Possessions
33.0 pts, 13.1 reb, 3.3 ast, 1.4 stl, 1.2 blk, 3.0 tov on .579 TS%
PER 24.2, .196 WS/48 in 41.1 mpg, 117 ORtg, 107 DRtg
Karl ('88-'01--14 seasons)
Per 100 Possessions
35.1 pts, 14.7 reb, 4.1 ast, 1.7 stl, 1.0 blk, 3.8 tov on .532 TS%
PER 22.7 PER, .157 WS/48 in 41.6 mpg, 108 ORtg, 103 DRtg
Overall, Dirk clearly the better playoff performer, Malone was clearly the better rs performer. And then Malone's got the three additional seasons on him (none of which could be classified irrelevant, imo), plus about one additional season worth of games played due to his durability--->this is very relevant, that the team can so reliably count on their star being there at tip-off time. As a for instance: Dirk missing 29 games in '13 basically cost the Mavs a playoff berth. The Jazz never had to worry about anything like that from Malone, not once in 18 seasons.
Dirk's the better offensive player: of an elite class on offense.
Malone is probably sub-elite on offense......but not by all that much. Still a very very formidable offensive weapon. His defense can pretty fairly be declared superior to Dirk's (consistently noted in rs DRtg, ps DRtg, accolades, and the eye-test).
Malone also the better rebounder, pretty substantially if measured by TRebs per 100. But even if one wants to disregard ORebs (where Malone has quite a large edge) as part of the offensive comparison, and focus only on DReb:
Karl in rs '88-'01
avg 10.9 DReb per 100
Peak season 11.9 DReb per 100
avg 23.9% DReb%
peak season 27.2% DReb%
Dirk in rs '01-'14
avg 10.4 DReb per 100
peak season 11.8 DReb per 100
avg 22.4% DReb%
peak season 25.1% DReb%
In the playoffs.....
Karl in ps '88-'01
avg 11.0 DReb per 100
peak season 12.7 DReb per 100
avg 24.0% DReb%
peak season 35.0% DReb%
Dirk in ps '01-'14
avg 11.1 DReb per 100
peak season 12.9 DReb per 100
avg 24.6% DReb%
peak season 28.0% DReb%
Malone's got the significant edge across the board in the rs (the much larger sample size, fwiw), and just barely behind in the ps numbers.
Overall, I rate peak Dirk as the better player, but not by much of a margin. The gap offensively (which is not that large, imo, and the above numbers---collectively; i.e. not just singling out one or two---stand testament to that; fwiw, I'd also made an evaluation on prior thread which may suggest Malone faced elite level team defenses and good to elite level defensive PF's in the playoffs at a slightly higher rate of occurrence than Dirk) is partially made up for on defense and rebounding. For whole primes, I think one can make a decent statistical case in Malone's favor.
And then there's the THREE additional relevant seasons Malone has to his credit as well as ~1 season gained simply on durability.
Anyway.....for your consideration......
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
ThaRegul8r wrote:As far as Robinson and Moses, the fact that Robinson was a great defender and Moses wasn't is a plus in his favor. He was also able to conplement Duncan when he arrived without any ego over not being "The Man" anymore, which is also a plus. If that's what's needed of him, he showed he has no problem deferring. I just have to decide how much his inability to effectively utilize what he brought to the table to help his team win in the postseason during his prime should hurt him against his competition.
Yes, Robinson has a clear advantage on the defensive end. How big that gap is I still am not sure, but there is a gap in DRob's favor.
But a plus to DR for playing second fiddle to Duncan (I agree, is a plus) should also mean a plus MM; he went to an already successful, good team, became THE man on that team and didn't screw up chemistry or success but actually helped push them over the top.
Just as I argued for Oscar in regards to his move to Milwaukee being more a validation for what he had done in Cincinnati, this, in my mind, is validation for Moses and therefore a plus that he was able to step into that 76ers Team, be the man and not hold the team back in any way.
My vote again goes to Moses. But I will say that my vote can be swayed for DRob- it was close in the last thread. I will try and do some more research regarding Moses' defense in order to get a better grasp on Robinson's advantage at that end.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
Basketballefan wrote:penbeast0 wrote:Again, breaking it down by position
CENTERS
David Robinson to me is the best left in terms of peak. Moses has great longevity though and the third possibility is George Mikan who is the only player left that was the undisputed best player in basketball for a reasonably long stretch of time (5 years +). I rate Robinson higher at the moment because Moses's defense is solid on ball but he isn't a defensive anchor and defensive anchors like the Admiral (anchor, Admiral, oh never mind) tend to have an impact out of proportion to their numbers. I think you win more titles with DRob than with Moses despite Moses's longevity advantage.
FORWARDS
Karl Malone is the obvious choice in terms of numbers, durability, everything but postseason success; although I have seen Dirk, Pettit, Barkley, and even Rodman rated over him by various posters.
GUARDS
Wade or Frazier. Wade is the most explosive scorer and plays excellent defense, Frazier didn't score as much but was an even better defender and playmaker, and even more known for stepping up and dominating 2 NBA finals. This one is very close; I lean Frazier over West but willing to be convinced. I see Clyde as a step up over Nash and Stockton for his ability to take over games with both his scoring and defense, over Payton, Kidd, or Isiah for his scoring efficiency and superior all around game. Both Wade and Frazier do suffer a little from short or injury riddled primes.
Right now, I am leaning to Karl Malone from all the debate but willing to change.
In what Way is Frazier a more dominant finals performer than prime Wade?
For a start, Frazier dominated 2 finals, Wade only dominated 1. Also, in addition to dominating offensively, Frazier shut down Jerry West defensively; just a super dominant performance at both ends (by a player I hated at the time; bloody Knicks).
Wade was dominant in 2011 Finals despits the loss. 27 7 5 on 62% ts should be considered dominant. But since neither are a legitimate canidate for this spot i wont go into further detail.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
Vote: Moses Malone
We are talking about the only player on the list currently with 3+ MVP's that has not been voted in yet. Also won a title as the man, only one of a handful of players to have won league mvp and title or league mvp, finals mvp (when it existed) and title the same year. When Moses parted the Red Sea he was 1st in WS Per 48 minutes in the season and playoffs, 1st in Win Shares in the season and playoffs and 1st in PER in the season and playoffs and led one of the top 5 teams all time in the process.
Players who won league mvp and title the same year.
We are talking about the only player on the list currently with 3+ MVP's that has not been voted in yet. Also won a title as the man, only one of a handful of players to have won league mvp and title or league mvp, finals mvp (when it existed) and title the same year. When Moses parted the Red Sea he was 1st in WS Per 48 minutes in the season and playoffs, 1st in Win Shares in the season and playoffs and 1st in PER in the season and playoffs and led one of the top 5 teams all time in the process.
Players who won league mvp and title the same year.
Spoiler:

"Talent wins games, but teamwork and intelligence wins championships."
- Michael Jordan
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
DannyNoonan1221 wrote:ThaRegul8r wrote:As far as Robinson and Moses, the fact that Robinson was a great defender and Moses wasn't is a plus in his favor. He was also able to conplement Duncan when he arrived without any ego over not being "The Man" anymore, which is also a plus. If that's what's needed of him, he showed he has no problem deferring. I just have to decide how much his inability to effectively utilize what he brought to the table to help his team win in the postseason during his prime should hurt him against his competition.
Yes, Robinson has a clear advantage on the defensive end. How big that gap is I still am not sure, but there is a gap in DRob's favor.
Robinson was an elite defender and Moses was not. Furthermore, Robinson was one of the greatest defenders at his position ever. Attempting to minimize this wouldn't be convincing for me.
DannyNoonan1221 wrote:But a plus to DR for playing second fiddle to Duncan (I agree, is a plus) should also mean a plus MM; he went to an already successful, good team, became THE man on that team and didn't screw up chemistry or success but actually helped push them over the top.
Just as I argued for Oscar in regards to his move to Milwaukee being more a validation for what he had done in Cincinnati, this, in my mind, is validation for Moses and therefore a plus that he was able to step into that 76ers Team, be the man and not hold the team back in any way.
Now THIS is your advantage and the area you should emphasize, speaking solely for myself. In my criteria, I don't care what a player brings to the table in order to help his team win, I just want him to use it to help his team win. While Moses wasn't the defender Robinson was, he was able to use what he had going for him to help his team win during his prime, unlike Robinson, and is a plus for him. Also a plus, as you said, he didn't screw up team chemistry. As a matter of fact, he continually showed respect to Erving, who'd already been there and had led the 76ers to multiple Finals and said that it was still Doc's show, he was just to help make it a better show. He didn't step on Erving's toes and continually said it was Erving's team that season. That's another plus for him, helping the team get over the hump while not making the guy already there who'd led the team to three Finals feel marginalized.
Speaking solely for myself, that's what you should be emphasizing. My not liking that Moses wasn't the defender others at his position is irrelevant if one can show that despite this Moses was better able to utilize his respective strengths more effectively to help his team win than Robinson. That's the whole point of me crystalizing explicitly-defined criteria. So long as (in this case) Moses better meets them than Robinson, then he gets ranked higher. Period. That way "feelings" are completely removed from the equation. In my criteria I state that no one way of helping one's team win is valued more highly than another. I just care that they use it--whatever "it" is--to help their team win, which is the first and foremost criterion on my list.
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
I don't think I can vote since I'm new here but this list intrigues me.
Making an argument for D-Wade -
His most impressive performances include -
1. Averaging 30.2/5.0/7.5/2.2/1.3 on 57.4 TS% over an entire season. Nobody else has ever averaged 30/5/7/2/1 on 57 TS%. Only three players have ever been close - Michael Jordan, Oscar Robertson, and LeBron James.
2. Averaging 33.2/5.6/6.8/1.6/1.6 on 63.2 eFG% in a playoff series against the Boston Celtics (50-32/5th defensive rating). Again, he is the only person to ever average this. Only Michael Jordan and Tracy McGrady have ever been close.
3. Averaging 24.3/5.0/6.0/1.8/1.0 on 49.2 FG%/50.6 eFG%/56.8 TS% over his career (as of this season). Only LeBron James has averaged better so far.
4. Leading the Heat to success each year as the best player until LeBron James arrived.
03-04 - 42-40 - Advanced past Hornets in the first round and averaged 21.0/4.0/5.7 on 56.7 TS% versus the Pacers.
04-05 - 59-23 - Advanced past Nets, Wizards, and played Pistons to a 7 game series despite injuries to their best players. Wade missed Game 6 but still averaged 25.8/4.5/4.3/1.7/1.0 on 51.9 TS% against them. Overall, he was the best player that postseason, averaging 27.4/5.7/6.6/1.6/1/1 on 56.1 TS% while Shaq averaged 19.4/7.8/1.9/0.4/1.5 on 55.8 FG%.
05-06 - 52-30 - Won the championship averaging 34.7/7.8/3.8/2.7/1.0 on 57 TS% in the Finals.
06-07 - 44-38 - Swept by the Bulls even though Wade averaged 23.5/4.8/6.3 against the trio of Luol Deng, Ben Gordon, and Ben Wallace. He could have been more efficient (48.7 TS%) and played better.
07-08 - 15-67 - Their worst record as a franchise, but Wade was injured for more than 30 games, and still managed to average 24.6/4.2/6.9 on 54.9 TS%. When he played, his team was 10-41. Without him, they were 5-26 in the regular season.
08-09 - 43-39 - Took the Hawks to 7 game series while averaging 29.1/5.0/5.3 on 56.5 TS%. Emphasizing his lack of help, his next best players were Michael Beasley (12.1/7.3 on 44.5 TS%) and a past-prime Jermaine O' Neal (13.3/4.5).
09-10 - 47-35 - With essentially the same roster, Wade put up on the greatest losing individual performances in history. Averaging 65 TS% and a 40% assist ratio with a roster where nobody (except Joel Anthony) averaged above a 46.2 FG%, Wade's lowest TS% in the entire series was 54.6% while his highest was when he scored 46 points on a 77.1 eFG%.
I personally think Wade has a great case for #16. That's just me though.
Making an argument for D-Wade -
His most impressive performances include -
1. Averaging 30.2/5.0/7.5/2.2/1.3 on 57.4 TS% over an entire season. Nobody else has ever averaged 30/5/7/2/1 on 57 TS%. Only three players have ever been close - Michael Jordan, Oscar Robertson, and LeBron James.
2. Averaging 33.2/5.6/6.8/1.6/1.6 on 63.2 eFG% in a playoff series against the Boston Celtics (50-32/5th defensive rating). Again, he is the only person to ever average this. Only Michael Jordan and Tracy McGrady have ever been close.
3. Averaging 24.3/5.0/6.0/1.8/1.0 on 49.2 FG%/50.6 eFG%/56.8 TS% over his career (as of this season). Only LeBron James has averaged better so far.
4. Leading the Heat to success each year as the best player until LeBron James arrived.
03-04 - 42-40 - Advanced past Hornets in the first round and averaged 21.0/4.0/5.7 on 56.7 TS% versus the Pacers.
04-05 - 59-23 - Advanced past Nets, Wizards, and played Pistons to a 7 game series despite injuries to their best players. Wade missed Game 6 but still averaged 25.8/4.5/4.3/1.7/1.0 on 51.9 TS% against them. Overall, he was the best player that postseason, averaging 27.4/5.7/6.6/1.6/1/1 on 56.1 TS% while Shaq averaged 19.4/7.8/1.9/0.4/1.5 on 55.8 FG%.
05-06 - 52-30 - Won the championship averaging 34.7/7.8/3.8/2.7/1.0 on 57 TS% in the Finals.
06-07 - 44-38 - Swept by the Bulls even though Wade averaged 23.5/4.8/6.3 against the trio of Luol Deng, Ben Gordon, and Ben Wallace. He could have been more efficient (48.7 TS%) and played better.
07-08 - 15-67 - Their worst record as a franchise, but Wade was injured for more than 30 games, and still managed to average 24.6/4.2/6.9 on 54.9 TS%. When he played, his team was 10-41. Without him, they were 5-26 in the regular season.
08-09 - 43-39 - Took the Hawks to 7 game series while averaging 29.1/5.0/5.3 on 56.5 TS%. Emphasizing his lack of help, his next best players were Michael Beasley (12.1/7.3 on 44.5 TS%) and a past-prime Jermaine O' Neal (13.3/4.5).
09-10 - 47-35 - With essentially the same roster, Wade put up on the greatest losing individual performances in history. Averaging 65 TS% and a 40% assist ratio with a roster where nobody (except Joel Anthony) averaged above a 46.2 FG%, Wade's lowest TS% in the entire series was 54.6% while his highest was when he scored 46 points on a 77.1 eFG%.
I personally think Wade has a great case for #16. That's just me though.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
This was written after last year's season:
Spoiler:
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
Alright, West is in. It seems like the roster for this spot consists of all big men: Robinson, Dirk, Karl and Moses have been the discussion so far. Looking at that list, it just seems only right that Charles Barkley should be the 5th under consideration, right? He's the other PF that joins Dirk and Karl in the modern top-5 PFs list; he came into the league on a team starring Moses (who he calls his daddy), and he was a peer that had multiple battles with Robinson. Plus, I'm not really convinced that Barkley wasn't better than at least some of these folks. So, I'm adding him to my list to discuss.
Box Score stats:
Moses Malone (1979 - 88): 31.5 pts (57.2% TS), 17.4 reb, 2 asts, 4.4 TO
Charles Barkley (1987 - 1996): 32.4 pts (62.2% TS), 15.5 reb, 5.5 asts, 4.3 TO
Karl Malone (1990 - 1999): 36.8 pts (59.3% TS), 14.5 reb, 5 ast, 4 TO
David Robinson (90 - 2000): 33.3 pts (58.8% TS), 15.9 reb, 4 ast, 3.9 TO
Dirk Nowitzki (2002 - 2011): 34.5 pts (58.4% TS), 12.3 reb, 4 ast, 2.8 TO
Playoffs, 10 year primes per 100 possessions
Moses Malone (1979 - 88): 28.9 pts (54.5%), 16.8 reb, 2 asts, 3.4 TO
Charles Barkley (1987 - 1996): 32 pts (58.2%), 16.3 reb, 5.3 asts, 3.3 TO
Karl Malone (1990 - 1999): 35 pts (52.9%), 15 reb, 4.4 asts, 3.7 TO
David Robinson (90 - 2000): 30 pts (54.6%), 16.1 reb, 3.8 ast, 3.7 TO
Dirk Nowitzki (2002 - 2011): 33.4 pts (58.5%), 13.5 reb, 3.5 ast, 3.0 TO
Some thoughts. Barkley's the new guy on this list, but his stats absolutely fit right in and might even shoot to the front of the class. Offensively, Chuck is the deal. He's right there in scoring volume, but his scoring efficiency is nuts in the regular season and only challenged by Dirk in the postseason. Not only that, but he also averages more assists than any of the other competitors which reflects how his ball-handling and passing skills allowed him to initiate his team's offense. Offensively, which is primarily what is measured by the box scores, Barkley is very likely the best player on this list across both the regular and postseason with Dirk as his only real competition.
Stylistics
Again, the style makes the fight. I feel that of the five, Moses has the most limited skill set. This isn't the worst sin, but unlike Shaq, Moses' limited skillset wasn't demonstrably more dominant than the others under consideration here. I start off this thread with Moses still at the bottom among those under consideration.
If I'm looking at offense, as mentioned above, I feel like this is a two-horse race between Barkley and Dirk. Similar scoring volumes, and while Barkley has the efficiency advantage in the regular season Dirk matches him their in the postseason. Barkley's game evolved over time. In his "Round Mound of Rebound" youth, Barkley was this unlikely athletic beast on the blocks. He looked fat, but he could get position and finish on anyone. He also could get out and run, sometimes as a one-man fast-break, handling the ball coast-to-coast for the finish. As he got older, Barkley was still strong in the post but he also developed a stronger face-up game with shooting range out to the 3-point line. He could run an offense, not just from the high-post, but really almost like a wing from the perimeter. Barkley's added range and initiation abilities seemingly play very well in two of the areas that generally lead to great non-boxscore impacts on offense. Put that with his video game box score stats, and Barkley is on the short list of GOAT offensive players.
Dirk's case over Barkley offensively would focus around him matching his volume and efficiency in the postseason, while being able to operate even more-so as a perimeter finisher and mid-post threat. Also...for some reason I don't remember a lot of pick-and-roll/pop from Barkley. This could be oversight on my part, and if so withdraw this section, but I know Dirk is absolutely deadly at the perimeter pick-and-roll/pop game since the defense can never afford to give him an inch from that range. This is a scoring approach that works even in the postseason, and this contributed to a lot of open shots for teammates like Jason Terry. It would seem like Barkley and KJ should have been good pick partners, so maybe this isn't something exclusive to Dirk. But I think his jumper makes him the best at it of this list.
On the other side of the ball, of course, on the other side of the ball, Robinson is clearly the man by a huge margin over any of the others under consideration. Moses, Dirk and Karl all fall on a continuum from about average to above average but not dominant on defense. And of course, defense is likely Barkley's biggest weakness here. His lack of height was already a natural barrier to his defensive upside, but his self-stated lack of interest in that side of the ball made it worse. Barkley had the athleticism to be a defensive pest, especially as a thief, but on the whole this is the part of his game where he gives back some of his offensive gains.
Non-box-score individual quantification (Barkley added to what was written previously)
We only have full databall data for (just about) the complete career of Dirk. We have +/- data from 1998 on for Robinson, Barkley and Karl. For the older players we have WOWY data and/or team transition data. Because of the different scales, we can only get so quantitative with the comparisons of this data. But a few notes:
*Moses' WOWY and junction numbers weren't very impressive. Mainly from memory from previous projects, but I recall Moses' non-boxscore estimated impacts to be far more pedestrian than the other players on this list and not very impressive for a super-duper star.
*Dirk measured out as elite in the +/- studies. In Doc MJ's 1998 - 2012 spreadsheet, he was essentially tied with Tim Duncan for the 4th/5th slots in both 3-year (+10.2) and 5-year (+9.1) peak behind Shaq/LeBron/KG. And Dirk's prime was very long. As I pointed out in the Dirk vs Kobe post, he was posting high +/- scores on pretty much a yearly basis from 2003 on.
*I'll post the Karl and Robinson +/- section from the comparison post I did on them, and add Barkley:
Malone
98: 9.0 (+8.8 ORAPM; 0.2 DRAPM)
99: 5.8 (+6.4 ORAPM; -.6 DRAPM)
00: 5.5 (+6.9 ORAPM; -1.4 DRAPM)
Robinson
98:7.4 (+1.2 ORAPM; +6.2 DRAPM)
99: 8.9 (+2.3 ORAPM; +6.6 DRAPM)
00: 8.3 (+2.7 ORAPM; +5.6 DRAPM)
Barkley
98 5.7 (+8.7 ORAPM; -3.0 DRAPM)
99: 4.5 (+7.8 ORAPM; -3.4 DRAPM)
00: 3.6 (+5.9 ORAPM; -2.3 DRAPM)
For those that don't know, this data came from Doc MJ's normalized PI RAPM spreadsheet from 1998 - 2012. I only did 1998 - 2000 for all three players, because we don't have +/- data in 2001 and only partial for 2002, and by 2003 all were either done or on their last legs. I found these numbers revealing for a few reasons. Malone's value in these years was almost all offense, while Robinson's value was primarily defense. Barkley's value was mega on offense, but hugely negative on defense.
*For those that believe 1998 to be in Karl's peak, it is interesting that his +9.0 normalized RAPM score from 1998 is almost exactly the same as Dirk's 5-year peak (+9.1) but noticeably lower than Dirk's 3-year (+10.2) and single-season (+11.5) peaks.
*Similarly, '98 Karl and '99 Robinson both had almost the exact same overall normalized RAPM score, though as mentioned Karl's was almost all offensive and Robinson's was primarily defensive.
*These seasons marked the end of the road for Barkley, when injuries had sapped him of much of his athleticism and kept him off the court for major swatches of games. That said, his offensive impact was still remarkable and as good or better per ORAPM as anything we ever saw from Shaq (best ORAPM +8.6), Kobe (+7.9), or Dirk (+7.8). In fact, Barkley's ORAPM in 1998 and 1999 was almost a carbon-copy to what we saw from Karl Malone in those same years. The difference came on defense, where late 90s Malone measured out to a net neutral on defense, while Barkley measured out as a huge defensive negative. As I said, some of that is likely due to injuries weakening him so I wouldn't project those numbers backwards for Barkley. That said, the expectation even in his healthy youth was that defense was a negative for him.
Pole positions entering this thread
I've still got Robinson and Dirk as my two to beat in this thread. Barkley flashes brilliance on offense, but doesn't separate himself from Dirk there while I suspect that his defense may have been enough worse for Dirk to edge the comp. I wrote last thread about my vote dilemma between Dirk and Robinson, and at the moment that's still where I am as I prepare for this vote.
Box Score stats:
Moses Malone (1979 - 88): 31.5 pts (57.2% TS), 17.4 reb, 2 asts, 4.4 TO
Charles Barkley (1987 - 1996): 32.4 pts (62.2% TS), 15.5 reb, 5.5 asts, 4.3 TO
Karl Malone (1990 - 1999): 36.8 pts (59.3% TS), 14.5 reb, 5 ast, 4 TO
David Robinson (90 - 2000): 33.3 pts (58.8% TS), 15.9 reb, 4 ast, 3.9 TO
Dirk Nowitzki (2002 - 2011): 34.5 pts (58.4% TS), 12.3 reb, 4 ast, 2.8 TO
Playoffs, 10 year primes per 100 possessions
Moses Malone (1979 - 88): 28.9 pts (54.5%), 16.8 reb, 2 asts, 3.4 TO
Charles Barkley (1987 - 1996): 32 pts (58.2%), 16.3 reb, 5.3 asts, 3.3 TO
Karl Malone (1990 - 1999): 35 pts (52.9%), 15 reb, 4.4 asts, 3.7 TO
David Robinson (90 - 2000): 30 pts (54.6%), 16.1 reb, 3.8 ast, 3.7 TO
Dirk Nowitzki (2002 - 2011): 33.4 pts (58.5%), 13.5 reb, 3.5 ast, 3.0 TO
Some thoughts. Barkley's the new guy on this list, but his stats absolutely fit right in and might even shoot to the front of the class. Offensively, Chuck is the deal. He's right there in scoring volume, but his scoring efficiency is nuts in the regular season and only challenged by Dirk in the postseason. Not only that, but he also averages more assists than any of the other competitors which reflects how his ball-handling and passing skills allowed him to initiate his team's offense. Offensively, which is primarily what is measured by the box scores, Barkley is very likely the best player on this list across both the regular and postseason with Dirk as his only real competition.
Stylistics
Again, the style makes the fight. I feel that of the five, Moses has the most limited skill set. This isn't the worst sin, but unlike Shaq, Moses' limited skillset wasn't demonstrably more dominant than the others under consideration here. I start off this thread with Moses still at the bottom among those under consideration.
If I'm looking at offense, as mentioned above, I feel like this is a two-horse race between Barkley and Dirk. Similar scoring volumes, and while Barkley has the efficiency advantage in the regular season Dirk matches him their in the postseason. Barkley's game evolved over time. In his "Round Mound of Rebound" youth, Barkley was this unlikely athletic beast on the blocks. He looked fat, but he could get position and finish on anyone. He also could get out and run, sometimes as a one-man fast-break, handling the ball coast-to-coast for the finish. As he got older, Barkley was still strong in the post but he also developed a stronger face-up game with shooting range out to the 3-point line. He could run an offense, not just from the high-post, but really almost like a wing from the perimeter. Barkley's added range and initiation abilities seemingly play very well in two of the areas that generally lead to great non-boxscore impacts on offense. Put that with his video game box score stats, and Barkley is on the short list of GOAT offensive players.
Dirk's case over Barkley offensively would focus around him matching his volume and efficiency in the postseason, while being able to operate even more-so as a perimeter finisher and mid-post threat. Also...for some reason I don't remember a lot of pick-and-roll/pop from Barkley. This could be oversight on my part, and if so withdraw this section, but I know Dirk is absolutely deadly at the perimeter pick-and-roll/pop game since the defense can never afford to give him an inch from that range. This is a scoring approach that works even in the postseason, and this contributed to a lot of open shots for teammates like Jason Terry. It would seem like Barkley and KJ should have been good pick partners, so maybe this isn't something exclusive to Dirk. But I think his jumper makes him the best at it of this list.
On the other side of the ball, of course, on the other side of the ball, Robinson is clearly the man by a huge margin over any of the others under consideration. Moses, Dirk and Karl all fall on a continuum from about average to above average but not dominant on defense. And of course, defense is likely Barkley's biggest weakness here. His lack of height was already a natural barrier to his defensive upside, but his self-stated lack of interest in that side of the ball made it worse. Barkley had the athleticism to be a defensive pest, especially as a thief, but on the whole this is the part of his game where he gives back some of his offensive gains.
Non-box-score individual quantification (Barkley added to what was written previously)
We only have full databall data for (just about) the complete career of Dirk. We have +/- data from 1998 on for Robinson, Barkley and Karl. For the older players we have WOWY data and/or team transition data. Because of the different scales, we can only get so quantitative with the comparisons of this data. But a few notes:
*Moses' WOWY and junction numbers weren't very impressive. Mainly from memory from previous projects, but I recall Moses' non-boxscore estimated impacts to be far more pedestrian than the other players on this list and not very impressive for a super-duper star.
*Dirk measured out as elite in the +/- studies. In Doc MJ's 1998 - 2012 spreadsheet, he was essentially tied with Tim Duncan for the 4th/5th slots in both 3-year (+10.2) and 5-year (+9.1) peak behind Shaq/LeBron/KG. And Dirk's prime was very long. As I pointed out in the Dirk vs Kobe post, he was posting high +/- scores on pretty much a yearly basis from 2003 on.
*I'll post the Karl and Robinson +/- section from the comparison post I did on them, and add Barkley:
Malone
98: 9.0 (+8.8 ORAPM; 0.2 DRAPM)
99: 5.8 (+6.4 ORAPM; -.6 DRAPM)
00: 5.5 (+6.9 ORAPM; -1.4 DRAPM)
Robinson
98:7.4 (+1.2 ORAPM; +6.2 DRAPM)
99: 8.9 (+2.3 ORAPM; +6.6 DRAPM)
00: 8.3 (+2.7 ORAPM; +5.6 DRAPM)
Barkley
98 5.7 (+8.7 ORAPM; -3.0 DRAPM)
99: 4.5 (+7.8 ORAPM; -3.4 DRAPM)
00: 3.6 (+5.9 ORAPM; -2.3 DRAPM)
For those that don't know, this data came from Doc MJ's normalized PI RAPM spreadsheet from 1998 - 2012. I only did 1998 - 2000 for all three players, because we don't have +/- data in 2001 and only partial for 2002, and by 2003 all were either done or on their last legs. I found these numbers revealing for a few reasons. Malone's value in these years was almost all offense, while Robinson's value was primarily defense. Barkley's value was mega on offense, but hugely negative on defense.
*For those that believe 1998 to be in Karl's peak, it is interesting that his +9.0 normalized RAPM score from 1998 is almost exactly the same as Dirk's 5-year peak (+9.1) but noticeably lower than Dirk's 3-year (+10.2) and single-season (+11.5) peaks.
*Similarly, '98 Karl and '99 Robinson both had almost the exact same overall normalized RAPM score, though as mentioned Karl's was almost all offensive and Robinson's was primarily defensive.
*These seasons marked the end of the road for Barkley, when injuries had sapped him of much of his athleticism and kept him off the court for major swatches of games. That said, his offensive impact was still remarkable and as good or better per ORAPM as anything we ever saw from Shaq (best ORAPM +8.6), Kobe (+7.9), or Dirk (+7.8). In fact, Barkley's ORAPM in 1998 and 1999 was almost a carbon-copy to what we saw from Karl Malone in those same years. The difference came on defense, where late 90s Malone measured out to a net neutral on defense, while Barkley measured out as a huge defensive negative. As I said, some of that is likely due to injuries weakening him so I wouldn't project those numbers backwards for Barkley. That said, the expectation even in his healthy youth was that defense was a negative for him.
Pole positions entering this thread
I've still got Robinson and Dirk as my two to beat in this thread. Barkley flashes brilliance on offense, but doesn't separate himself from Dirk there while I suspect that his defense may have been enough worse for Dirk to edge the comp. I wrote last thread about my vote dilemma between Dirk and Robinson, and at the moment that's still where I am as I prepare for this vote.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
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- Ballboy
- Posts: 16
- And1: 2
- Joined: Aug 07, 2014
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #16
ThaRegul8r wrote:This was written after last year's season:Spoiler:
I always thought of Dirk as a borderline top three power forward every year, no matter the postseason results. I've wanted to ask when Dirk has been indisputably the best power forward in the league? Even in his MVP season, even though he averaged 24.6/8.9/3.4 on 50.2/40.6/90.4, which is nothing short of incredible, he had a terrible shooting performance (50.9 TS%) against the 8th seeded Warriors, who weren't anything resembling elite on offense (11th) or defense (19th). Meanwhile Stoudemire averaged 20.4/9.6 on 57.5 FG%, then averaged 25.3/12.1 on 52.3 FG% in the playoffs, where the Suns would have likely knocked off the Spurs if Stoudemire hadn't been suspended for the series-clinching game 5.
There were always players like Elton Brand, Chris Webber, and even Chris Bosh, who had incredible peaks, that were better than Dirk at certain points in their career. Then there was Duncan and Garnett, both with incredible longevity and consistency (until lately), dominating most of the decade as not only the top power forwards in the league, but the best players as well. What I'm wondering is when has Dirk clearly been the best power forward in the league, like Duncan in 02-03 or Garnett in 03-04, where they also had postseason success.