penbeast0 wrote:Any answer to my problem with Cunningham? It seems to me that he was a high volume, low efficiency scorer which is the main category of player that was/is traditionally overrated by media and accolades -- solid rebounder, passer and defender but not that special -- it's his scoring that was his calling card and he didn't do it that well.
I hear that, and it's on my mind as well. I would say perhaps the key thing then is that I don't see his calling card as scoring, but more as a do-it-all guy with great BBIQ and energy. I mean, this is a 6'6" skinny white guy who rebounded like Karl Malone while also playing the point. That's crazy.
I look then at evidence of team impact, and it seems pretty easy to find.
In '68-69, the 76ers lost Wilt and shocked the world by how good they remained. You know this of course, but given the questioning of his scoring impact, it begs the question, what happens to the offense when Cunningham becomes the team's leading scorer? Well...
'67-68, team ORtg is 2.5 above league median (by LG's estimate in the RPOY thread)
'68-69, team ORtg is 3.6 above league median
So the team loses Wilt (24 PPG), Greer and Walker score about as much as before, and Cunningham alone among the big name players sees his scoring increase to the point where he's scoring more than anyone had done that year or the previous year...and the team's offense gets more impressive.
I'm not saying that means that if you've got Cunningham you want him shooting as much as possible, but if in replacing the hyper-efficient Wilt as lead scorer we actually see improvement, it's just hard for me to see him as a player who is wasting a ton of possessions on offense.
Then of course, he moves to the ABA and wins an MVP immediately there. Cunningham leads the team in points, rebounds, assists, and steals (blocks not recorded), the team improves its SRS by over 7 points and the team goes from 35-49 to the best record in the league. They do get "upset" in the playoffs, but actually lose to Kentucky who had almost the same record and a better SRS.
I see all this, and my cautious streak says, "On what basis do I say Cunningham was NOT a worthy MVP candidate?"
And then I can't help but contrast that with Jones, who I absolutely love, but whose limited minutes made it pretty much impossible to consider him a true MVP candidate, and Cunningham wins out.