RealGM Top 100 List #79

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RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#1 » by penbeast0 » Fri Dec 9, 2011 4:10 am

Criteria: Take into account both peak and career play, era dominance, impact on the game of basketball, and how well their style of play and skills would transcend onto different eras. To be more exact, how great they were at playing the game of basketball.

Voting Will End In 2 Days -- Please vote and nominate

Newest addition:

Bill Sharman
Image
Hall of Fame 1976
4x All-NBA 1st team
3x All-NBA 2nd team
4x NBA Champion
8x All-Star


Ben Wallace
Image
3x All-NBA 2nd team
2x All-NBA 3rd team
NBA Champion 2004
4x Defensive Player of the Year
5x All-Defense 1st team
1x All-Defense 2nd team
4x All-Star

Connie Hawkins
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Hall of Fame 1992
ABA MVP 1968
(ABL MVP 1962)
2x All-ABA 1st Team
1x All-NBA 1st Team
ABA Champion 1968
5x All-Star


Jerry Lucas
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3x All-NBA 1st team
2x All-NBA 2nd team
1 NBA Championship 1973
Rookie of the Year 1964
7x All-Star


Mark Price
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1x All-NBA 1st Team
3x All-NBA 3rd Team
4x All-Star


Shawn Kemp
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3x All-NBA 2nd team
6x All-Star


Adrian Dantley
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Hall of Fame 2008
2x All-NBA 2nd Team
Rookie of the Year 1977
6x All-Star


Chauncey Billups
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1x ALL-NBA 2nd
2x ALL-NBA 3rd
2x All-Defense 2nd
Finals MVP 1987
NBA CHampion
5x All-STar
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#2 » by penbeast0 » Fri Dec 9, 2011 4:16 am

VOTE:

Ben Wallace, Shawn Kemp and Jerry Lucas were big F/Cs. Wallace was great defensively but one of the worst offensive players ever. Kemp was athletic and active defensively although foul prone and immature; Lucas was a great rebounder with outstanding shooting range who the voters of his day put into the HOF over Willis Reed among others; not strong defensively and numbers obsessed.

Connie Hawkins was, with Elgin Baylor, the Dr.J/Michael Jordan of the 60s. Though limited to only about 2 and a half peak years by a gambling scandal and knee injuries, he was a great player who electrified everyone who saw him -- he's the Bill Walton of the ABA. Adrian Dantley was one of the greatest scorers ever. High volume at efficiency only approached by the Charles Barkley/Reggie Miller's of the world. That's it though, as his defense and team ethos were frequently questioned.

At guard, Bill Sharman was the prototype spot up shooter, Chauncey Billups one of the most efficient guards of the last decade with his 3 point shooting, ability to draw fouls, and extremely low turnover rates, and Mark Price was another efficient shooting PG though without the defense of Greer and Billups.


Peak is Connie Hawkins but that peak was so short . . . Best numbers is Adrian Dantley who carries his own baggage . . . Wallace, Kemp, and Lucas all had major drawbacks . . . . Sharman, Price, and Billups were super solid but not dominators. I rate Lucas over Kemp, Lucas's weak defense isn't as bad as Kemp's immaturity while Lucas is the better offensive player and rebounder; Billups over Price and Sharman for 3 factors (a) more efficient scorer even relative to league, (b) clearly better defender, (c) playoff performance as primary option.

So, Hawkins's 2.5 dominant years with a few ok ones v. Billups's 8 very good years with a bonus for beating the annoying and arrogant 04 Lakers.

VOTE: Chauncey Billups
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#3 » by JordansBulls » Fri Dec 9, 2011 4:20 am

Vote: Shawn Kemp
Nominate: Brad Daugherty
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#4 » by penbeast0 » Fri Dec 9, 2011 4:23 am

Point Guards -- not seeing these guys yet, the other positions are stronger
Tim Hardaway
Lenny Wilkens
Dennis Johnson
Tony Parker?
Gus Williams?

Shooting Guards -- some solid choices here
Joe Dumars
Earl Monroe
Chris Mullin
Mitch Richmond
Paul Westphal/Walter Davis?

Shooting Forward -- Probably the deepest spot left:
Shawn Marion
Cliff Hagan
Carmelo Anthony
Bob Dandridge
Wilkes/Wise?

Power Forward -- Not sure how much to value Paul Silas/BuckWilliams/Bill Bridges types
Larry Nance
Terry Cummings
Elton Brand
Amare Stoudamire
Paul Silas/Dave DeBusschere/Maurice Lucas/Buck Williams -- the bangers

Centers: see no real argument for Brad Daugherty over Daniels, Sikma, Johnston, or even Bellamy
Mel Daniels
Jack Sikma
Neil Johnston
Walt Bellamy
Yao Ming

Looking at the candidates -- Marion and Nance give the best combination of longevity and superb 2-way play (very similar careers). For peak, Mel Daniels won TWO MVP's and 3 championships in the ABA -- yes it was an inferior league and his career wasn't that long but it was better ball than the NBA in the 50s and he was basically Alonzo Mourning as a player with better rebounding but less shotblocking -- similar offense and attitude. He'd be a stud even today though probably not a 20ppg scorer.

Love to see more analysis of THardaway v. Wilkens, Dumars v. Monroe, Hagan v. Dandridge, Nance v. Marion, TCummings v. EBrand.


Some Peak year comps:

Hagan 1959 37.5min 10.9reb 3.4ast 23.7pts .516ts% (9th in MVP) -- league 108.2pts on .457ts%
Dandridge 1979 33.7min 5.7reb 4.7ast 20.4pts .553ts% (5th in MVP) -- league 110.3pts on .530ts%
Hagan looks like the better offensive player, Dandridge the better defender though it is closer

Nance 1987 37.2min 8.7reb 3.4ast 22.5pts .591ts% (no MVP votes) -- league 109.9pts on .538ts%
Marion 2006 40.3min 11.8reb 1.8ast 21.8pts .607ts% (.001 MVP votes) -- league 97.0pts on .537ts%
I'm tempted to use 01 or 03 for Marion since they are nearly as good and without Nash but 06 was the year he carried the team with Amare injured. Marion is clearly better this year.

Cummings 1985 34.5min 9.1reb 2.9ast 23.6pts .536ts% (5th in MVP) -- league 110.8pts on .543ts%
E. Brand 2006 39.4min 10.0reb 2.6ast 24.7pts on .580ts% (7th in MVP) -- league 97.0pts on .537ts%
Brand looks better here but Cummings peak was longer.

I go back and forth among several candidates -- Dumars, Hagan, Marion, Nance, and Daniels being the top of my list. For now, I will tentatively go for Shawn Marion -- people see only his lack of handles and forget just how great he was at everything else. Basically LeBron without the handles and with better rebounding but willing to go for any of the 5 plus willing to listen to cases for other players.

NOMINATE Shawn Marion
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#5 » by Dr Positivity » Fri Dec 9, 2011 4:55 am

Vote Price

Nominate Deron Williams
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#6 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Dec 9, 2011 5:39 am

Vote: Connie Hawkins

I've said a lot already so I'm not sure what else to say. One thing I will talk about is my use of Win Shares. I got called out on the last thread in a way that made me think people felt like I was ranking players simply by WS. Of course that's not at all the case, and my rankings don't look much like a WS leaderboard, but let me clarify.

I respect WS as a solid "rough sketch" of what a player accomplished in a particular season. Whereas PER is trying to determine who is the best player when he plays, WS is just trying to say what actually went down. I'll also say that the fact that a player gets credit with a fraction of the team's team success is something I like. It's not perfect, but I do think it makes the stat correlate with actual team impact more than stats that don't do this.

On a seasonal basis, I by no means consider this my bible, but labeling seasons above X to mean a certain thing seems to me to be such an obvious thing to do as an approximation, I really don't understand vehement objections.

On a career basis, there is one glaring problem: It vastly overrates longevity simply because there's nothing close to a VORP-adjustment to it.

So when I look at a guy known for his lack of longevity, and this longevity-heavy stat says he's up there with plenty of other people considered, it makes me think people need to check themselves. That and the association with Walton as if Connie only had a year or two worth anything just makes it clear: People have not thought this through.

Now, Mark Price is getting some buzz right now, and I don't object. Damn fine player, and I don't at all think his longevity is that big of an issue at this point in the project. But look,

Career WS: Hawkins 76.7, Price 71.1.

Deron Williams also might get nominated this time around, he's sitting down at 47.3 WS.

I can't for the life of me justify knocking Hawkins on longevity relative to guys like this. If you're not sold on his peak, I at least get that. But if a longevity-heavy stat has Connie a bit above Price, and you think Connie had the better peak, then I don't know what the heck you're doing siding with Price.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#7 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Dec 9, 2011 6:00 am

btw, I really want to throw a name out there for the nomination so I don't forget before the deadline, but I really just can't seem to decide.

Something I'd be interested to see from people is their ranking of current players not yet nominated.

I know I've got Elton Brand at the top of that list. Last time I made the list he was followed by Bosh, Parker, Amare, Marion, and Yao.

I'm still pretty torn on the Bosh to Marion group. Yao keeps slipping as I think about him more. Durant keeps coming up in my mind. Hard to judge someone that young, but I'm increasingly feeling like he'll make my Top 100.

So what do y'all think?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#8 » by therealbig3 » Fri Dec 9, 2011 6:30 am

Vote: Price
Nominate: Nance
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#9 » by lorak » Fri Dec 9, 2011 9:46 am

vote: Connie
nominate: Eaton! One of the best defender in history, in terms of impact he was better defeder than Mutombo, Big Ben or even Thurmond.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#10 » by Laimbeer » Fri Dec 9, 2011 3:52 pm

Vote - Lucas
Nominate - Daniels
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#11 » by penbeast0 » Fri Dec 9, 2011 5:13 pm

To Doc -- obviously I feel Marion's value is the highest -- 2006 he was Amare level offensively and of course the defensive difference is huge -- and he's got excellent longevity and as a SF, is a top level rebounder, shotblocker, and high in steals as well (stats which in his case do translate into defensive impact I believe -- think of all those years he spent covering for Amare and Nash, the two other main PHO minutes guys, no wonder he is all over the stat board defensively). Then I go with Brand despite the injuries. I think Amare is more dominant than Bosh but Bosh has a more versatile game, they are pretty close value wise though I'd rather have Amare as a main man. Not sure how to rate a big v. Parker, or even Parker v. Jason Terry or Deron Williams. Have to think about them.

DavidStern, Eaton was Mutombo level and a shotblocker extraordinaire but he isn't as mobile and we have seen how much mobility means. I'd be surprised if he's as good defensively as Wallace or Thurmond.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#12 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Dec 9, 2011 5:26 pm

I appreciate the response beast. I'll be thinking more on Marion. Perhaps we just have a philosophy difference here, and I'll admit to taking his off-court whining more seriously than most others do. I just keep thinking: If I'm looking to acquire this guy on my team to fill the role he peaked with, and I acquire the other talent he'll fit with, he's going to then be unhappy and do things that undermine the locker room. That's a real problem for me.

It's kind of like Artest (though not as extreme): He'll only have star potential when he's young, but until he gets older he'll so mentally unstable you can't afford to rely on him, so the reality is you never acquire the guy to be a star.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#13 » by bastillon » Fri Dec 9, 2011 6:52 pm

if Ben Wallace is on the list, Rasheed should be as well. Sheed was a better player by every metric and measures out as a superstar in decade APM. he is a guy who spaces the floor and brings great defense. unlike Wallace, he's not utterly useless on offese and doesn't make negative impact on that end. Pistons supremacy didn't start until Sheed joined them.

I'd like to see arguments against Pressey as well, as my last post went unnoticed. 14/7/5/2/1 on 56%, great in/out stats, his team improved from 30 win pace when he missed games to 50 win pace when he played, Bucks improved upon making him a starter by 2.7 SRS (85) and when he went back to the bench they regressed by 5.1 SRS (90). when healthy he made 2 all-defensive 1st teams, finishing 3rd in 85 DPOY voting. 5 years of really great play. if Moncrief was voted in long time ago, I don't see why Pressey wouldn't be when he was more important to the Bucks scheme in particular (which is empirically provable).

DeBusschere should get serious consideration as well. basically, early 70s Knicks were being built like 00s Pistons. first they brought Reed, then Frazier, then Bradley, but they really exploded only after adding DeBusschere. his trade in '69 made similar impact to Sheed's. they lost to the Celtics in '69 and then went to the finals 3 times and winning 2 titles. he was also first player-coach, before Russell did it. needless to say his previous team fell off a cliff after he went to the Knicks.

Dandridge and Nance are another guys I would into. Dandridge was a good all around player who contributed to one of the GOAT teams (early 70s Bucks) and two-time finalists on the Bullets. being a part of one of the GOAT teams should be valued. he was what Worthy meant to the Lakers or what Rodman meant to the Bulls. Nance made good impact on both Suns and Cavs and was a great defender in his own way. I'd be interested in Horace Grant as well. first he played on early 90s Bulls, then made big impact on Magic being a crucial part in their 95 run, then was injured year later as Magic fell apart without him and even contributed to another one-of-the-GOAT teams on 01 Lakers. one of the most efficient finishers ever, great passer and someone who Phil Jackson valued the most as a triangle big.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#14 » by therealbig3 » Fri Dec 9, 2011 7:03 pm

I only go up to 97 on my list as of right now, and the guys on my list to not be nominated yet:

Nance
Brand
Dandridge
Dumars
Sikma
Hardaway
Daniels
Deron
Melo
Amare
Bosh
Marion
DeBusschere

That plus 6 of the guys on the board round out my remaining 19 players (I don't have Billups or Dantley in my top 100).

So I have 3 spots left in my personal top 100 (1 here), and I don't know where to put guys like Pressey, Sheed, and Grant.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#15 » by bastillon » Fri Dec 9, 2011 7:24 pm

realbig3, good list. if I was voting I would nominate Sheed ahead of all of the guys you mentioned. decade APM, consistently ranking among top players in with/without, a member of the best teams of the decade (Blazers, Pistons, Celtics) always making significant contributions to his teams. in his prime (00-06) he put up 17 ppg on 54% TS, 7.5 rpg, 2 apg, 1.5 blks and 1 stl. he also shot 34% from 3pt range always drawing bigs away from the hoop. offensively, he was a threat both with the ball and without. defensively, top of the league. I see Rasheed as someone who is a lot better than Ben. sure, Ben was a DPOY but Sheed wasn't THAT much worse as a defender, while offensively it's a blowout because Sheed is valuable contributor and Ben is a big time liability.

he played 15 seasons in the NBA and is somewhat underrated now but I always loved him as a player and the way he ended his career should always be remembered. a true warrior. just remembering the mid 00s, I don't think there was a guy who thought Sheed was worse than Marion. both offensively and defensively, Sheed was a better player.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#16 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Dec 9, 2011 7:45 pm

bastillon wrote:if Ben Wallace is on the list, Rasheed should be as well. Sheed was a better player by every metric and measures out as a superstar in decade APM. he is a guy who spaces the floor and brings great defense. unlike Wallace, he's not utterly useless on offese and doesn't make negative impact on that end. Pistons supremacy didn't start until Sheed joined them.


Okay, so you're letting your opinion be swayed way too much by Wayne Winston I think. Winston had Sheed in the top 10 for last decade with his version of APM, which as far as I know, he's never released his methods for.

Here's a 10-year RAPM study from '01-02 to '10-11:

http://stats-for-the-nba.appspot.com/ranking

Sheed ranks 27th there. Still ahead of Ben mind you, but behind guys like Artist, Nene, and Battier, and with a score that's less than 1/3rd of the #1 (LeBron)

Also in Ilardi's 6-year study from '03 to '09, he ranks 32nd.

Sheed's typically in +/- territory where you say "very good but not megastar". When you then factor in his tendency to disrupt his own teams, he's not someone really on my radar here.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#17 » by Dr Positivity » Fri Dec 9, 2011 7:56 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:Vote: Connie Hawkins

I've said a lot already so I'm not sure what else to say. One thing I will talk about is my use of Win Shares. I got called out on the last thread in a way that made me think people felt like I was ranking players simply by WS. Of course that's not at all the case, and my rankings don't look much like a WS leaderboard, but let me clarify.

I respect WS as a solid "rough sketch" of what a player accomplished in a particular season. Whereas PER is trying to determine who is the best player when he plays, WS is just trying to say what actually went down. I'll also say that the fact that a player gets credit with a fraction of the team's team success is something I like. It's not perfect, but I do think it makes the stat correlate with actual team impact more than stats that don't do this.

On a seasonal basis, I by no means consider this my bible, but labeling seasons above X to mean a certain thing seems to me to be such an obvious thing to do as an approximation, I really don't understand vehement objections.

On a career basis, there is one glaring problem: It vastly overrates longevity simply because there's nothing close to a VORP-adjustment to it.

So when I look at a guy known for his lack of longevity, and this longevity-heavy stat says he's up there with plenty of other people considered, it makes me think people need to check themselves. That and the association with Walton as if Connie only had a year or two worth anything just makes it clear: People have not thought this through.

Now, Mark Price is getting some buzz right now, and I don't object. Damn fine player, and I don't at all think his longevity is that big of an issue at this point in the project. But look,

Career WS: Hawkins 76.7, Price 71.1.

Deron Williams also might get nominated this time around, he's sitting down at 47.3 WS.

I can't for the life of me justify knocking Hawkins on longevity relative to guys like this. If you're not sold on his peak, I at least get that. But if a longevity-heavy stat has Connie a bit above Price, and you think Connie had the better peak, then I don't know what the heck you're doing siding with Price.


My take on WS: I do think it's a nice ballpark stat - But I can also see reasons why it'd lead to misleading results. As far as I can tell, the point of OWS is to take the amount of wins the team has offensively, then look at how had what ratio of role of the offense as best they can by the boxscore stats, and divide it up like a pie.

But this method clearly fails at times. A really, really good example is Chris Paul vs Deron Williams in 2009. The Jazz have 25.5 total OWS, the Hornets 24.6. This is the year where Carlos Boozer plays 37 Gs and puts up a 16/10 .52 TS% when he plays, so Deron has to make lemonade with Millsap at PF instead. Paul has 13.3 OWS this year for 54% of his team's, while Deron Williams has 6.5 for 25.5%. Even if you take into account Deron playing 87% of the games Paul did (68 instead of 78), 87% of that 54% number is still 47% - Which means at 25%, Deron's "share" of the offense in a year without Boozer is still WAYYYYYYYYYYYY too much below Chris Paul's. There is simply no way to argue Paul's importance to his offense was twice as important as Deron's to a Jazz team without Boozer in 09. 10% more, maybe. Not 88% more.

If you gave Deron 50% of his team's OWS that year you'd be looking at a 12 OWS season and a 14+ one overall. Obviously it could be debated that's too high, but is the grounds for calling Deron a 10-12 OWS player in 09 really any less solid than saying he's really a 6.5 OWS guy that year? In both cases it's shaky ground.

Carmelo is another example. In 2010, his best regular season, the Nuggets had the 3rd best offense for 30.6 total OWS, and they give Carmelo 5.6, which is 18%. 2010 Kevin Durant puts up a 11.1 OWS out of 25.3 total for 44% of his team's offense. If Melo was given 40% of his team's offense that year he's looking at 12 OWS. So again it's a case where the method of "ORTG + who had the biggest share of the pie" goes IMO, horribly wrong. Because I see Melo's importance to the Nuggets as slightly lower than Durant's to the Thunder, at best, personally. Like I could accept 35% vs 44% there. Durant being twice as important to his team's offense via OWS makes me think "yeah, that stat is missing something"

So in the case of both of those players, I just don't trust what OWS is punching out. I think they're legit 10-13 WS players in their best years based on other players I consider them to be similar to in caliber of play, which for their respective longevity, is enough for me to give them this vote
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#18 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Dec 9, 2011 8:24 pm

Dr Mufasa wrote:My take on WS: I do think it's a nice ballpark stat - But I can also see reasons why it'd lead to misleading results. As far as I can tell, the point of OWS is to take the amount of wins the team has offensively, then look at how had what ratio of role of the offense as best they can by the boxscore stats, and divide it up like a pie.

But this method clearly fails at times. A really, really good example is Chris Paul vs Deron Williams in 2009. The Jazz have 25.5 total OWS, the Hornets 24.6. This is the year where Carlos Boozer plays 37 Gs and puts up a 16/10 .52 TS% when he plays, so Deron has to make lemonade with Millsap at PF instead. Paul has 13.3 OWS this year for 54% of his team's, while Deron Williams has 6.5 for 25.5%. Even if you take into account Deron playing 87% of the games Paul did (68 instead of 78), 87% of that 54% number is still 47% - Which means at 25%, Deron's "share" of the offense in a year without Boozer is still WAYYYYYYYYYYYY too much below Chris Paul's. There is simply no way to argue Paul's importance to his offense was twice as important as Deron's to a Jazz team without Boozer in 09. 10% more, maybe. Not 88% more.

If you gave Deron 50% of his team's OWS that year you'd be looking at a 12 OWS season and a 14+ one overall. Obviously it could be debated that's too high, but is the grounds for calling Deron a 10-12 OWS player in 09 really any less solid than saying he's really a 6.5 OWS guy that year? In both cases it's shaky ground.

Carmelo is another example. In 2010, his best regular season, the Nuggets had the 3rd best offense for 30.6 total OWS, and they give Carmelo 5.6, which is 18%. 2010 Kevin Durant puts up a 11.1 OWS out of 25.3 total for 44% of his team's offense. If Melo was given 40% of his team's offense that year he's looking at 12 OWS. So again it's a case where the method of "ORTG + who had the biggest share of the pie" goes IMO, horribly wrong. Because I see Melo's importance to the Nuggets as slightly lower than Durant's to the Thunder, at best, personally. Like I could accept 35% vs 44% there. Durant being twice as important to his team's offense via OWS makes me think "yeah, that stat is missing something"

So in the case of both of those players, I just don't trust what OWS is punching out. I think they're legit 10-13 WS players in their best years based on other players I consider them to be similar to in caliber of play, which for their respective longevity, is enough for me to give them this vote


Well, let's be clear though: The situations you describe don't have WS standing out ridiculously compared to other advanced stats.

In '08-09, Deron had a PER of 21.1 while Paul had 30.0 and played more minutes. Meanwhile basketball-value puts Deron's APM at roughly 1/3rd of Chris Paul's. No one should be looking at the various stats we have and think "Why does WS hate Deron so much!".

And Melo, well you know where I am on Melo, but it's more of the same. All advanced metrics say he's contributing a lot less than Durant, so you should be asking yourself what is it that you are letting have such a big influence on your that makes you reject what you see in these stats?

To be honest, it sounds like it might be as simple as you putting a lot of credence in primacy. And by that I mean: If you're letting a guy be the focal point of your offense, and he's putting up big numbers, and the offense is doing well generally, then that guy must be doing something really right.

I use the same rationale myself up to a point, but among modern players when we've got all this data I'm more comfortable with concluding that certain players are simply generating a lot more team lift than others despite not playing a necessarily bigger role or a fundamentally more successful team.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#19 » by Dr Positivity » Fri Dec 9, 2011 8:38 pm

I noticed Chris Bosh got brought up. I could see him sneaking into the top 100, but I have a few concerns with him having watched most of his games in his prime

- The difference between this TOR scoring rate and his MIA one, is that in Toronto he had a signature... ballstopping ISO move. He'd get it from 10-15 feet and if the defender was playing too close, use his elite first step to get the rim or FT line. I believe this move, and ballstopping/ISOs in general, are bound to fit more with a player who's the best player on a bad team, than with a 2nd/3rd option on a great one - which explains its complete disappearance in the Miami offense and the resulting drop in Bosh's scoring numbers and FTA. Also, in the rare occasions Bosh played in the PS, having an entire offensive game centered around an ISO 15 ft or a midrange jumpshot from that area, made him pretty easy to shut down (and he had a pathetic record taking game winning shots in 4th quarters for the same reason, although I consider that stuff fairly irrelevant, in this case it's a good barometer via predictability of the problems a Bosh in more playoff games as a #1 may have faced). I think something like Pau Gasol and Kevin McHale's skillsets and Amare's offensively were much better fit beside a star wing than Bosh's would've been even beside a single star wing a la Wade. Beside a single star wing I still think Bosh would've looked like the "more athletic David West who can iso occasionally" type player he was last year, while Gasol and McHale do awesome work off the ball/in the post to compliment the wing

- I don't particularly like his style of rebounding. He's pretty frail in terms of boxing out opponents - it's more the length and leaping that gets him rebounds. I think there's a big difference between the way a Dirk or Tim Duncan rebounds and the way Bosh does. Bosh gets rebounds but I think he's mediocore to weak at preventing the man on him from getting offensive rebounds. It's an undeveloped area but I do believe there's emptier and more meaningful rebounding numbers just as there is for scoring, and someone like Bosh fits the model of a guy who might have less. I also never felt like the team got killed whenever he was replaced by Bargnani/Rasho, which should've been a huge dropoff. The team's DRB ranking was almost exactly the same in 2011 as in 2010 on that note. Also for the record, 08-09 is an interesting test case to me because the team ranked 30th in DRB with Jermaine O'Neal halfway through the year and were 1st after replacing him with Marion. That actually happened. What a year like that somewhat indicates to me other than O'Neal being a rebounding apocalypse (I've seen anyone care less about blocking out to try and to jack up BLK numbers instead) is that Bosh being there all year and the DRB swinging that much, indicates he perhaps wasn't as responsible for either number as his stats suggested

Defensively in Toronto he shyed away from fouls obviously from the coach's instruction, but overall is probably underrated on that end because having an athletic/quick PF is valuable in a help defense scheme. For that reason I think his Mia impact was probably underrated. He meant a lot to their rotation heavy defense.

I'd definitely put him below Amare because I feel Stoudemire's offense as a secondary player is just on a completley different level, while Bosh may be as strong a 1st option, but I'm not sure you want that guy anyways. With Brand it probably comes down to Brand's shotblocking to me for why I'd prefer him.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #79 

Post#20 » by bastillon » Fri Dec 9, 2011 8:50 pm

Doc I got different results: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc ... l=en#gid=0

Sheed posted 4.49 APM, 1.72 on offense, 2.77 on defense. close to Kidd, Gasol and Billups. he performed well consistently among +/- stats year-to-year. look at 82 games for details. I think you didn't consider the years you're looking at. of course in any study containing 07-11 data Sheed is gonna be a lot worse than in his prime. I mean you realise that's including player's 32-37 age years. Sheed still measures out miraculously well and I'm trusting that data not because I love Wayne Winston, but because it's consistent with my eye test. I think Sheed is a valuable 2-way player and there are only handful of players who can make visible impact on both ends of the court.

I can't imagine how much worse on defense Sheed would have to be so that Ben Wallace would've been a better player considering they're ocean's apart on offense. Sheed put up 17-18 ppg on decent efficiency while taking opposing big men out of the paint. Ben Wallace put up less than 10 pts on horrible efficiency while letting opposing big men leave him often unguarded. that's a gap so huge Sheed would have to be like Amare defensively to make up for it. I don't like Ben Wallace on this list at all, I absolutely love him as a player, but his offensive shortcomings are hurting his team too much to select him right now. I also consider Sheed top5 defender of his generation, behind Garnett, Duncan, Ben Wallace and Artest.
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