Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time

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Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time

Larry Bird
65
42%
Lebron James
88
58%
 
Total votes: 153

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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#161 » by colts18 » Fri Feb 14, 2014 9:47 pm

Gideon wrote:Barkley's comment (from a few years ago) was given in the specific context that he was asked about Bird's comment that Bird was insulted when the other team assigned a white guy to guard him -- it was an off-the-cuff humorous response by Barkley, who is described as "tickled" in the article (http://www.utsandiego.com/uniontrib/200 ... allry.html), and it's completely unclear how serious it was meant to be. Maybe Barkley believed exactly what he said, or maybe he was just ribbing Bird? After all, Bird had just said he was insulted when white guys guarded him, so, since Bird himself is white, it was a pretty good opportunity for a crack. Unless Barkley was asked a follow-up or similar question in a more serious context (which I'm not aware of) there's no way to really tell.



note, I was lucky enough over a decade ago to have the opportunity to spend time around some of the world's top athletes in another sport for a couple of years. While a few were very interested in the sport itself, including thoughtful analysis and evaluation, others voiced opinions about their peers (and about overall strategy) that were quite odd and/or even seemingly illogical a surprising percentage of the time. If a stranger had repeated many of those opinions on a board like this, posters would have thought it was a trolljob. These guys were excellent athletes, and some of their comments about the sport were, of course, the sort of perceptive stuff that only really top guys would notice... but other comments were just bizarre (and sometimes even factually wrong). A guy who many peole literally considered #1 in the world in this sport at the time actually clearly stated more than once that he ranked a specific guy with a below-average rep and resume over another specific guy (who was near the top of the sport) and didn't even seem to realize this was a particularly odd opinion. His logic was that the below-average guy was "well-rounded" while the top guy had a less complete skillset (despite being indisputably excellent in certain important aspects of the sport). I think it's quite interesting and often valuable to hear what top players think about their fellow athletes, but I also think it's a big mistake to just take it as gospel. And, if none of that was convincing, just check out the 1969 MVP vote :D . (The award was voted on by the players at that time.)


It wasn't a fluke comment.

" As long as [Larry] Bird is around I will only be the second-worst defensive player in basketball."
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#162 » by wigglestrue » Fri Feb 14, 2014 10:04 pm

Why care? It's not like we're talking about a mysterious player for whom we have limited access to reliable stats and quality game footage, and must rely on eyewitness testimony for precious information. We have his entire career on tape and we have access to all the stats. We can see how he was on defense for ourselves. We can look up the wealth of objective information on a stats database. You're talking about what one other player who is notorious for holding unusual opinions said. WHY?
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#163 » by JordansBulls » Sat Feb 15, 2014 4:35 am

ushvinder88 wrote:
JordansBulls wrote:
ushvinder88 wrote:Lebron has eclipsed him, only nostalgia will continue to make bird comparable to lebron, when he isn't.

Wait what?

How in the world is Bird not comparable to Lebron?

Because lebron is the better player under any objective metric, but of course mj fans will try their best to downplay lebron's peak considering that he is going to be the guy that is going to challenge for MJ's spot at #1, while bird is no threat to mj.

Better defender, better playoff performer, more mvps, and longevity will now be on his side once this season is over. Not to mention every advanced metric favours lebron by a noticeable margin.

So how is saying how Bird is comparable to Lebron mean someone has an agenda? It seems that someone who says that they are not comparable is the person who has an agenda. If the topic was a no brainer there would be no need of the thread.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#164 » by DEEP3CL » Sat Feb 15, 2014 5:23 am

Colbinii wrote:
GSP wrote:Larrys def the better offensive player. Lebrons better overall since he can be an anchor for ur D. I have Larry ahead but Lebron will prolly be there in 2yrs. It took Lebron until his 3rd yr to reach the level of rookie Larry. I have 10 and 13 Lebron ahead of peak Larry

Well, Larry was 23 for most of his rookie campaign with 3 years of College under his belt, while Lebron was 18 as a rookie.

LeBron's second year in the NBA he was putting up 27/7/7, arguable better than anything Larry Bird did in any of his first 5 seasons.

I think LeBron is already a tier ahead of Larry Bird.
Numbers to a certain point are misleading, Bird played on better teams his "first 5 season" which is a direct correlation to his numbers not being on par with Lebron's.
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SmartWentCrazy wrote:It's extremely unlikely that they end up in the top 3.They're probably better off trying to win and giving Philly the 8th pick than tanking and giving them the 4th.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#165 » by rich316 » Sun Feb 16, 2014 12:05 am

Wiggles, I want to respond here because I really like where you've taken this thread. I've been with the uninformed majority who believed Bird was a below-average defender for a while, but you've shown pretty convincingly here that he was at least above-average. I think you're off when you claim he has an argument for top-20 all time defensive forward, though.

wigglestrue wrote:Is it usually a good sign for a Player Comparisons thesis when you can keep diving into bkref and keep finding new angles to demonstrate how much you're right? :)

Question: Who are the greatest defensive forwards of all time? This is actually a pretty easy question to answer objectively, as long as we tinker with a few heuristics. There are only so many reliable ways for us to measure defensive greatness, anyhow.

Objective

· All-Defensive Team selections (nothing pre-1969)
· Defensive Player of the Year voting (nothing pre-1983)
· Defensive Win Shares (fairly reliable in the shot-clock era)
· Defensive Rating (fairly reliable in the shot-clock era)
· Steals (nothing pre-1974)
· Blocks (nothing pre-1974)
· Defensive Rebounds (not separated out until 1974)


I think your methodology here is a little weak. All-D selections are notoriously prone to favoritism of big names and players with all-around reputations, not necessarily the best defenders. Did Kobe in 2011 contribute more defensive value than, say, Thabo Sefalosha? Most would say not, but the All-D team says yes. I'm skeptical that the basketball media of the 1980's was any less vulnerable to this kind of bias than their contemporaries.

DPOY voting tends to more accurately reflect reality, but it is not immune to the same issues. I was unable to find data on Bird's placement in any DPOY votes, I'd be curious to see how he did there.

Dws and Drtg are your best arguments here. Bird rates very high indeed in these metrics. I'm not sure that they are really giving us an accurate picture, though. I believe that good stats mostly confirm what we already know through the eye test, and reveal a few things that cognitive biases may have obscured. By the "eye test," I mean a comprehensive viewing of a large body of a player's work on the court, not a compilation of youtube highlights. Pippen, Jordan, Lebron, and Artest all rank lower than Bird in Drtg. Does the eye test tell us that those guys are lesser perimeter defenders than Bird? I definitely don't think so. Bird is ranked 26th in Dws, and Andre Iguodala is ranked 138th. Is Larry Bird that much better of a defender than Iguodala? I don't think so. Something is going on here that's throwing in significant statistical noise in favor of Bird. It could be the fact that most of Bird's defensive value derived from his massive edge in IQ, where as most truly elite defenders use their athleticism along with IQ to frustrate offenses. IQ doesn't go away with age and injury, so it was always there throughout Bird's career. Pippen, Jordan, and Artest are being hurt because their defense fell off from their elite peaks as age slowed them down. Lebron is being hurt because he just wasn't good at defense in his early years. Bird should get credit for his consistency, but I believe that it means his peak was nowhere near an elite level.

I think you have a point with steals and blocks. Bird was able to make amazing plays because he had such great intelligence for the game. The phrase "playing chess while everybody else was playing checkers" applies here. He could predict with a high rate of success when the ball was going to swing to his man from the other side of the floor, or when a posting big man was going to use his drop-step. His ability to make highly intelligent gambles means that his box-score defensive stats are probably more valuable than from a guy like Iverson, who clearly lost as many gambles as he won.

wigglestrue wrote:Subjective

· Game footage
· Intuitive reasoning

Anyone want to sort those objective categories by number of selections/votes and amount of black/grey ink, weigh the various things reasonably against each other, and then sort whatever descending list of players you happen to come up with by position, either the traditional five positions or a more generalized positional breakdown? If no one feels like doing that, I will. I'll enjoy going one-by-one, forward-by-forward, deciding on the objective merits and a little well-reasoned qualitative analysis. But hey, off the top of my head, let's see how many forwards or small forwards would right now almost certainly be assumed (perhaps mistakenly, in some cases) to be a more valuable overall defensive presence than Bird. (Power forwards in italics. Players who were variously SF/PF a la Bird in half-and-half.)

· Tim Duncan (unless you view him as a misnamed center)
· Ron Artest
· LeBron James (if Bird is Top 25-50, LeBron is already Top 10-20, right?)
· Michael Cooper
· Dennis Rodman
· John Havlicek (except for when he was a SG)
· Kevin Garnett
· Bobby Jones
· Scottie Pippen
· Shawn Marion
· Julius Erving
· Dave DeBusschere
· Larry Nance
· Josh Smith
· Kevin McHale
· Gerald Wallace
· Andrei Kirilenko
· Bruce Bowen
· Dan Roundfield (my pick for Most Underrated Player Ever, perhaps)

· ...and...then who else? Karl Malone? Paul Silas? Tayshaun Prince? Horace Grant? Role players like Satch Sanders? Bird has a case against those guys, going by the only ways we can judge defense halfway-accurately.

That's about a dozen small forwards. About 20 forwards overall. So, no, okay, let's just dispense with figuring out if he's Top 25 overall on D for now, forget that rarified air. Let's just focus on Bird's place among forwards as an defender. It looks like Top 20 Defensive Forward is right there for him to lay claim to, no? That'd necessarily mean he was a great defender, right? Top 20 Defensive Forward?


Whoa, now I'm starting to get very skeptical. You've convinced me that Bird is comfortably an above-average defender, but top 20 defensive forward? Some other forwards from today's league that I take before Bird on defense:

Andre Iguodala
Paul George
Kevin Durant
Kawhi Leonard
Shane Battier (prime)
Anthony Davis (listed as PF on espn.com)
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist

And that's just from today's league. There are many, many other guys (Rasheed Wallace, Kenyon Martin) that have retired or I just haven't seen that are at that level. What do these players all have in common? Elite athleticism, elite hustle, and (mostly) elite IQ. Bird had elite hustle and IQ, but not athleticism. That's what firmly keeps him out of any "top 20 defensive forward" or "top 50 defender" conversation. It's also what makes his defense a definite minus in any comparison to prime Lebron James, one of the most versatile, athletic, and intelligent defenders the league has ever seen. Bird made many spectacular, game-saving plays due to his intelligence, but he didn't have the athleticism to really frustrate offenses and opposing scorers on a play-by-play basis.

I realize that my dismissal of advanced stats is the weak point in my argument, so I'd be interested to hear more about why you think Bird's high rankings there point to actual high-level defensive performance.

Thanks for making this thread into a great discussion. I think one could easily change the title to "Larry Bird vs. Lebron James - greatest forward of all time." Those are the stakes, so it's worthwhile to delve into the nitty-gritty.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#166 » by Gideon » Sun Feb 16, 2014 2:12 am

Bird was exceptionally athletic in a very important way. Hand-eye coordination is an aspect of athleticism. We're generally biased to think that athleticism = speed/hops (often showcased in a flashy way) and then further biased to think those qualities almost automatically = defensive impact. What we're finding as we look deeper at defensive impact is a different story. Who's to say that Bird's elite hand-eye coordination, BBIQ, and never-take-a-second-off hustle combined with mid-level (for a pro) speed/hops (Bird's vert measured the same as is exactly avg for today's NBA players according to online sources) didn't = a stronger overall package than somebody who "fits" our idea of a top defender better but isn't on Bird's level in certain other ways? Each player is a unique total package as far as impact and there's just no way to "add up" different qualities like speed, strength, hops, hustle, etc. and tell who was a better defender. Also, as I wrote before about the advanced metrics... they may be flawed, but why would their flaws benefit Bird so specifically? It seems much more likely to me that the perception about his D held by many has been off the mark than that the advanced metrics are not only poor indicators but ALSO just happen to favor Bird more than just about anybody else ever.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#167 » by wigglestrue » Sun Feb 16, 2014 3:11 am

rich316 wrote:Wiggles, I want to respond here because I really like where you've taken this thread. I've been with the uninformed majority who believed Bird was a below-average defender for a while, but you've shown pretty convincingly here that he was at least above-average. I think you're off when you claim he has an argument for top-20 all time defensive forward, though.

wigglestrue wrote:Is it usually a good sign for a Player Comparisons thesis when you can keep diving into bkref and keep finding new angles to demonstrate how much you're right? :)

Question: Who are the greatest defensive forwards of all time? This is actually a pretty easy question to answer objectively, as long as we tinker with a few heuristics. There are only so many reliable ways for us to measure defensive greatness, anyhow.

Objective

· All-Defensive Team selections (nothing pre-1969)
· Defensive Player of the Year voting (nothing pre-1983)
· Defensive Win Shares (fairly reliable in the shot-clock era)
· Defensive Rating (fairly reliable in the shot-clock era)
· Steals (nothing pre-1974)
· Blocks (nothing pre-1974)
· Defensive Rebounds (not separated out until 1974)


I think your methodology here is a little weak. All-D selections are notoriously prone to favoritism of big names and players with all-around reputations, not necessarily the best defenders. Did Kobe in 2011 contribute more defensive value than, say, Thabo Sefalosha? Most would say not, but the All-D team says yes. I'm skeptical that the basketball media of the 1980's was any less vulnerable to this kind of bias than their contemporaries.


Yes, but now, couldn't they have been biased against Bird after some time precisely because he was well-known, since what his defense became reknowned (inaccurately) as was "subpar"? Once that "common wisdom" took hold, he stopped being named to the team. (Danny Vranes was a better defender than Bird in 1985?) Bird deserved more not fewer selections, in all likelihood.

DPOY voting tends to more accurately reflect reality, but it is not immune to the same issues. I was unable to find data on Bird's placement in any DPOY votes, I'd be curious to see how he did there.

Dws and Drtg are your best arguments here. Bird rates very high indeed in these metrics. I'm not sure that they are really giving us an accurate picture, though. I believe that good stats mostly confirm what we already know through the eye test, and reveal a few things that cognitive biases may have obscured. By the "eye test," I mean a comprehensive viewing of a large body of a player's work on the court, not a compilation of youtube highlights. Pippen, Jordan, Lebron, and Artest all rank lower than Bird in Drtg. Does the eye test tell us that those guys are lesser perimeter defenders than Bird? I definitely don't think so. Bird is ranked 26th in Dws, and Andre Iguodala is ranked 138th. Is Larry Bird that much better of a defender than Iguodala? I don't think so. Something is going on here that's throwing in significant statistical noise in favor of Bird. It could be the fact that most of Bird's defensive value derived from his massive edge in IQ, where as most truly elite defenders use their athleticism along with IQ to frustrate offenses. IQ doesn't go away with age and injury, so it was always there throughout Bird's career. Pippen, Jordan, and Artest are being hurt because their defense fell off from their elite peaks as age slowed them down. Lebron is being hurt because he just wasn't good at defense in his early years. Bird should get credit for his consistency, but I believe that it means his peak was nowhere near an elite level.


"Lesser perimeter defenders" is not the right standard. The right standard should be overall defensive value, no? Overall defense, anyway, not just one aspect of defense. Again, it is commonly assumed that to be a truly great point guard a player should be a good enough dribbler to be able to beat a good defender off the dribble and should have some measure of three-point range. And yet, few would dispute that Magic is an all-time great PG -- the absolute best ever, in fact! Same thing with Bird. It doesn't actually matter if he was a mediocre or merely decent one-on-one defender, as long as the offensive possession is disrupted enough to make the other team miss or turn the ball over often enough. That's literally all that matters on defense, ultimately, right? Just like the only real goal on offense is putting the ball in the hoop at a rate that will win you the game, the only real goal on defense is keeping the ball out of the hoop and back into your hands at a rate that will win you the game. Bird helped do that, better than everyone who's ever played except for about 25-50 other players. That's what the advanced stats say, that's what his accolades suggest, and that's what my eye test confirms. His team defense is out-of-this-world good. It is capital-G Great. The question is then not, "Does lacking in this or that aspect of What We Think Of As Good Defense somehow disqualify him from greatness if there are other players who were far better at that aspect?" That'd be like ranking Mark Price ahead of Magic because Price was a consummate shooter "as a point guard should be", no? A guard or a defender doesn't have to do any one particular thing very well to be great. But hey, Bird is great, as we can see, at a lot of what constitutes the act of playing defense in basketball. Not just the intellectual side of things. He is even quite athletic, his athleticism belied by his not necessarily needing to exercise much of it to get the job done, and his athleticism actually being on display in aspects of the concept overlooked in favor of the less subtle ones, i.e., his quickness (regardless of whether it depended more on mental acuity or physical reflexes) was extraordinary. He might have had the Quickest Hands in Basketball History, and his hand-eye coordination was also extraordinary, even for a pro basketball player, and this is not merely a "skill" this is a part of his physis, he was born with some of it, and it belongs under the domain of athleticism, and his was also perhaps the Best Hand-Eye Coordination in Basketball History. And those two athletic traits matter a metric ****load to playing defense. He could harass opponents and "gamble" better than most because of those two traits, he was quicker than his opponents, he was far more able to reach for a steal or block without fouling, and he could do this without exerting himself to the max. Sometimes he only looks unathletic because he simply doesn't have to try that hard to get the job done (doesn't take much athleticism to just extend an arm and rip) and what he was tasked to do on defense didn't usually require max athleticism. Ted Williams doesn't need to have been a racehorse on the basepaths to be an all-time great batter. Tom Brady doesn't need to run as well as a halfback or throw bombs accurately in order to be an all-time great QB. Larry Bird doesn't need great or even good lateral or vertical explosiveness to be a great defender.

I think you have a point with steals and blocks. Bird was able to make amazing plays because he had such great intelligence for the game. The phrase "playing chess while everybody else was playing checkers" applies here. He could predict with a high rate of success when the ball was going to swing to his man from the other side of the floor, or when a posting big man was going to use his drop-step. His ability to make highly intelligent gambles means that his box-score defensive stats are probably more valuable than from a guy like Iverson, who clearly lost as many gambles as he won.

wigglestrue wrote:Subjective

· Game footage
· Intuitive reasoning

Anyone want to sort those objective categories by number of selections/votes and amount of black/grey ink, weigh the various things reasonably against each other, and then sort whatever descending list of players you happen to come up with by position, either the traditional five positions or a more generalized positional breakdown? If no one feels like doing that, I will. I'll enjoy going one-by-one, forward-by-forward, deciding on the objective merits and a little well-reasoned qualitative analysis. But hey, off the top of my head, let's see how many forwards or small forwards would right now almost certainly be assumed (perhaps mistakenly, in some cases) to be a more valuable overall defensive presence than Bird. (Power forwards in italics. Players who were variously SF/PF a la Bird in half-and-half.)

· Tim Duncan (unless you view him as a misnamed center)
· Ron Artest
· LeBron James (if Bird is Top 25-50, LeBron is already Top 10-20, right?)
· Michael Cooper
· Dennis Rodman
· John Havlicek (except for when he was a SG)
· Kevin Garnett
· Bobby Jones
· Scottie Pippen
· Shawn Marion
· Julius Erving
· Dave DeBusschere
· Larry Nance
· Josh Smith
· Kevin McHale
· Gerald Wallace
· Andrei Kirilenko
· Bruce Bowen
· Dan Roundfield (my pick for Most Underrated Player Ever, perhaps)

· ...and...then who else? Karl Malone? Paul Silas? Tayshaun Prince? Horace Grant? Role players like Satch Sanders? Bird has a case against those guys, going by the only ways we can judge defense halfway-accurately.

That's about a dozen small forwards. About 20 forwards overall. So, no, okay, let's just dispense with figuring out if he's Top 25 overall on D for now, forget that rarified air. Let's just focus on Bird's place among forwards as an defender. It looks like Top 20 Defensive Forward is right there for him to lay claim to, no? That'd necessarily mean he was a great defender, right? Top 20 Defensive Forward?


Whoa, now I'm starting to get very skeptical. You've convinced me that Bird is comfortably an above-average defender, but top 20 defensive forward? Some other forwards from today's league that I take before Bird on defense:

Andre Iguodala
Paul George
Kevin Durant
Kawhi Leonard
Shane Battier (prime)
Anthony Davis (listed as PF on espn.com)
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist


George, probably, eventually. But not yet, if we're doing all-time ranking. Nobody else, though. I mean, why? Let's put a showcase of Bird's defensive best against any other defender's. What exactly do the other players do that make them not only more effective on defense (as already mentioned, effectiveness does not require elite athleticism) but even more impressive. How did Bird's lack of elite overall athleticism actually hinder his defensive value or even diminish the impressiveness of his defense as it actually was?

And that's just from today's league. There are many, many other guys (Rasheed Wallace, Kenyon Martin) that have retired or I just haven't seen that are at that level. What do these players all have in common? Elite athleticism, elite hustle, and (mostly) elite IQ. Bird had elite hustle and IQ, but not athleticism. That's what firmly keeps him out of any "top 20 defensive forward" or "top 50 defender" conversation. It's also what makes his defense a definite minus in any comparison to prime Lebron James, one of the most versatile, athletic, and intelligent defenders the league has ever seen. Bird made many spectacular, game-saving plays due to his intelligence, but he didn't have the athleticism to really frustrate offenses and opposing scorers on a play-by-play basis.


I respectfully call BS, frustrating offenses and opposing scorers does not require the athleticism you're positing as integral to defensive greatness. Again: Assume nothing. "Well, naturally, Rick Mahorn or Tayshaun Prince or [insert player] was a better defender than Bird..." Not so fast, is my advice.

I realize that my dismissal of advanced stats is the weak point in my argument, so I'd be interested to hear more about why you think Bird's high rankings there point to actual high-level defensive performance.


Simply put: It's the pudding, and where else are you going to find proof? :) More specifically, I think Bird's defensive greatness could maybe be explained best by some Moneyball-ish re-arranging of priorities re: What We Value About Defense. Just like Battier's profile has rightfully been raised by a deeper appreciation for What Really Matters. Just like baseball hitters who walked a lot went underappreciated. There will be some Gladwellian "Ahhh...ha!" answer to Why Bird Is So Overrated By Advanced Defensive Metrics, and it will involve Bird-not-actually-being-overrated-by-those-stats and us-not-quite-fully-appreciating-what-constitutes-great-defense.

Thanks for making this thread into a great discussion. I think one could easily change the title to "Larry Bird vs. Lebron James - greatest forward of all time." Those are the stakes, so it's worthwhile to delve into the nitty-gritty.


Man, thank you. I don't get treated too often to your level of understanding and appreciation. It means a lot to me.

I agree about the stakes, and I'm wedded permanently to the goal of figuring this comparison out, rating Bird's defense accurately one way or another...and helping to maybe re-define what we prize in a defender, too, lol? I love this thread.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#168 » by rich316 » Sun Feb 16, 2014 3:20 am

Gideon wrote:Bird was exceptionally athletic in a very important way. Hand-eye coordination is an aspect of athleticism. We're generally biased to think that athleticism = speed/hops (often showcased in a flashy way) and then further biased to think those qualities almost automatically = defensive impact. What we're finding as we look deeper at defensive impact is a different story. Who's to say that Bird's elite hand-eye coordination, BBIQ, and never-take-a-second-off hustle combined with mid-level (for a pro) speed/hops (Bird's vert measured the same as is exactly avg for today's NBA players according to online sources) didn't = a stronger overall package than somebody who "fits" our idea of a top defender better but isn't on Bird's level in certain other ways? Each player is a unique total package as far as impact and there's just no way to "add up" different qualities like speed, strength, hops, hustle, etc. and tell who was a better defender. Also, as I wrote before about the advanced metrics... they may be flawed, but why would their flaws benefit Bird so specifically? It seems much more likely to me that the perception about his D held by many has been off the mark than that the advanced metrics are not only poor indicators but ALSO just happen to favor Bird more than just about anybody else ever.


I like this point a lot. It made me think of a guy who might be the most recent analogy to Bird's defensive style - Jason Kidd. Both guys had maybe the highest B-Ball intuition of their generation, and they both always seemed to be in the right place at the right time in key moments. Dws loves Kidd - he's 12th all time. He's not so high in Drtg at #96, but still ahead of some other respected names. In his prime he was regarded as the best defensive point guard in the league, although he was a bit more athletic for his position than Bird was. He had more quickness, but his other strengths were similar to Bird's - hustle and lower-body strength. He also was a master of stripping the ball from unsuspecting big men and igniting the fast break. Still, he never wowed as man defender - his value was as a help guy and a tone-setter. He routinely got abused by guys like Tony Parker and Stephon Marbury off the dribble. In his later career, he often took small forwards on defense so he wouldn't have to worry about getting destroyed by smaller, quicker guards.

I'm comfortable with thinking of defensive Bird as a slightly-less-good forward version of Jason Kidd. Which is very decent. I'm not sure I would call it top 20 forward good, but still good. I think I would still rather have a guy who can consistently force his man into bad shots with elite quickness and hops like an Iguodala or Kenyon Martin.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#169 » by wigglestrue » Sun Feb 23, 2014 1:29 pm

Hypo: What would you rather have, 1) a great one-on-one defender whose team defense is weak or 2) a great team defender whose one-on-one defense is weak? My instinct is to take the second. And I wonder if team defense in general is an underrated component in these comparisons which hinge on players' defensive value. The first hypothetical player may not even exist...has there ever been such a defender in history? If so, he could only be counted on to guard a single player. The second hypothetical player, who has definitely existed in the NBA, here in the form of Bird, winds up semi-guarding everybody. So, no, Bird was not typically assigned to individually guard the superstar primary option SF or PF, let alone center. But he did wind up defending them, after they beat or lost their man, or on a "mismatch". Let's go to the tape, once again:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3H76dsMqo3s

Erving, Wilkins, Barkley, Jordan, Olajuwon, Moses, King, Pippen, Kareem, Worthy, Isiah, Magic...these are just some of the players Bird wound up guarding in that free safety role, as part of a team defense, but also in an individual sense. I mean, what does it matter, what difference does it really make, if a scorer is thwarted by a single individual one-on-one defender in man-to-man defense or by a team of great team defenders? It doesn't actually matter, does it? Does it matter where an opponent is forced into a wasted possession (whether it's one-on-one versus a superstar on the perimeter or sneakily at the other end of the court as the ball's being taken out of bounds, etc.) or how (whether it's in-your-face stifling lateral quickness or an alert swipe of the hand from behind)? Nerds, ye almighty guardians of objective reality, correct me if I'm wrong, but...all that matters in defense is keeping the ball from going in your hoop and getting the ball back, right? So, according to the quantitative POV, should it actually matter at all if Bird wasn't all that good a one-on-one defender? In a qualitative sense, perhaps. And one would prefer to have a lockdown defender in end-of-game situations, or to try to put out an opponent who's on fire. But other than that? Is it not just all about the bottom line of making the opponent score less than you, robbing them of as many possessions as possible, making them miss as many shots as possible, however that gets done?
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#170 » by wigglestrue » Sun Feb 23, 2014 6:32 pm

Apparently nobody has compiled a career highlight reel of LeBron's defensive highlights yet, but such a thing is guaranteed to be jaw-dropping, especially his technique and instincts for those signature blocks, beautiful in a Federer-perfection kind of way plus the acrobatic freakishness of a Jordan or Russell. LeBron may yet be the one and only GOAT, someday. He has a long, long way to go, but, if he so chooses, it could be there. I said it on the General board 10+ years ago, LeBron will be able to adjust his game long into his 30's, he could emphasize his below-the-rim game, deemphasize his scoring, lead the league in assists, and perhaps rebounds in the same year if he set his sights on that feat, develop an even better post game, perfect his three point and free throw shooting, whatever he wants. Now, granted, a few other players like Jordan, Wilt, and Bird could have chosen to do this, too, and Wilt did lead the league in total assists once. But with LeBron, he could just decide one year, on a dime, to turn into Magic Johnson, and probably have as quintessentially-Magic a statline that year PLUS ferocious defense, lmfao. And there are many more teams he could join, many other stars for him to possibly team up with from now until retirement. Hey, what happens if LeBron and Durant are ever, like, "Yo, let's put this **** to sleep and win the next five or six titles in a row", who could stop them? "Hey, Rondo, wanna help? Guys, which team shall we happen to bless with our decision to dominate? Should we go old school with LA or Boston? Maybe a sleeper like Atlanta? ROFL, no not the Knicks, stop clowning. Or we could probably twist Silver's arm and get ourselves a new franchise in Seattle to write history for, I've seen some beautiful island properties there", etc. He's gonna wind up, maybe, conservatively perhaps, with as many rings as Jordan*, as many MVPs as Russell, and more other accolades than you can shake a stick at. He will not, unless he really renews himself to the art of it, ever be as sublime a passer as Bird, and could only ever match Bird as a shooter in an absolute best case scenario. But, otherwise, LeBron may become the most complete, maybe the only complete player, in NBA history. No weaknesses. All strengths of varying magnitude.

*If he contends for another ten championships, including this postseason, and if the rest of the league can hold him to winning just four out of those ten, that would count as a good job of containing him in my book, lol.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#171 » by colts18 » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:03 pm

wigglestrue wrote:Apparently nobody has compiled a career highlight reel of LeBron's defensive highlights yet, but such a thing is guaranteed to be jaw-dropping, especially his technique and instincts for those signature blocks, beautiful in a Federer-perfection kind of way plus the acrobatic freakishness of a Jordan or Russell.

Here is a highlight video of LeBron's 2011 season defense

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBcZbKvVknI[/youtube]

If you fast forward the video below to 0:47 seconds, you can see LeBron make an impressive block on Dwight Howard. Very few perimeter guys can make that play. Fast forward to 4:00 in that video and you will see LeBron making an even more impressive block on Howard. I think you can probably count on your hands how many guys in history can come up from behind Howard and make that block.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dshwrkS3Ig8[/youtube]
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#172 » by The Infamous1 » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:05 pm

If you put prime lebron in the 80's it would be a joke
We can get paper longer than Pippens arms
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#173 » by kabstah » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:06 pm

wigglestrue wrote:Hypo: What would you rather have, 1) a great one-on-one defender whose team defense is weak or 2) a great team defender whose one-on-one defense is weak? My instinct is to take the second. And I wonder if team defense in general is an underrated component in these comparisons which hinge on players' defensive value. The first hypothetical player may not even exist...has there ever been such a defender in history?

Kobe, when he's being lazy. He's always been good or better as an ISO, on the ball defender but he has a tendency to ball watch and let his man slip away from him.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#174 » by wigglestrue » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:09 pm

The Infamous1 wrote:If you put prime lebron in the 80's it would be a joke


No, it would not. I smell a block...yup, here comes Larry Nance roaring up behind you and swatting your profile into foe-ville. Goodbye! :wave:
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#175 » by SinceGatlingWasARookie » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:30 pm

LeBron is not the GOAT. The GOAT is either Jordan or a Center. LeBron or a Center is number 2 now though Magic is still in the discussion for number 2.

Bird is the greatest Power Forward of all time. Bird is in the top 10 maybe top 4 greatest players of all time. Yes I know that Center Duncan and PF Karl Malone may have better stats than Bird but if my fantasy team already has a decent defensive center then I would rather have Bird at power Forward than Duncan or Malone at Power Forward.

Bird, Maxwell and McHale were all power forwards and were 3 of the best power forwards playing at that time. One of them would usually have to defend small forwards. Bird was the least able to defend small forwards out of the 3 of them so Maxwell and later McHale defended the small forwards.

Some people don't believe McHale defended the small forwards. Watch the film. I lived in Boston and watched the Bird Celtics regularly. Bird was assigned to defend the power forward 80 + percent of the time.

The idea that Bird was a bad defender primarily comes from the 20% of the time in which Bird tried unsuccessfully to defend small forwards.

Hypothetically add Bird to any team from the mid 1970s to now and see which players would lose minutes to Bird. It would be the power forwards losing minutes to Bird. Add Bird to the Karl Malone Jazz and you probably end up with Karl Malone playing center while Bird plays power forward. Put Bird on a 1960s team and Bird might play Center.

People say but Bird Shoots from the outside and passes and creates so he can't be a power forward. Bird did a lot of inside scoring with physicality like a power forward. Just because Bird had some point guard and off guard skills does not mean he was not a power forward.

Dirk Nowitzki has some shooting guard skills and nobody tries to call Dirk a small forward.

Bird played Power Forward and Center in college.

The main reason Bird is called a small forward is because he was listed as a small forward his rookie year because the Celtics best returning player from the year before Bird arrived was their starting power forward Cedric Maxwell. Maxwell had crazy twisting turning inside scoring moves and was referred to by Celtics radio announcer Johnny Most as the "Rubber Band Man" because Maxwell was springy and contorted his body in so many ways it was as if Maxwell did not have any bones limiting in which way his body could move. Bird was bigger and more solidly built than Maxwell. By the end of Bird's rookie year the Celtics coach Bill Fitch had figured out that Bird really couldn't defend small forwards and that Cedric Maxwell could defend small forwards.

The main reason people call Bird a small forward is because everybody says he was a small forward but everybody is wrong. People think correctly that McHale is not a small forward and then assume therefore Bird must be a small forward. That is faulty logic.

One ESPN classic game I saw last spring was young Jordan's high scoring game in losing to the Celtics in the playoffs in 1986. McHale defends number 2 bulls scorer small forward Orlando Woolridge while Bird defends Oakley and cheats off of Oakley to strip the ball from Corzine or give help defense in other places.

McHale regularly gurded the small forwards because Bird could not guard them; but Bird was not a bad one on one defender as long as bird was defending the power forwards. Bird did just fine defending power forwards.

Grumble, Grumble, Bird is one of the 10 greatest off all time and fans who can quote obscure advanced stats about players who played before Bird don't even know what position Bird played. Fans my age who saw Bird don't know what position Bird played.

Bird was a power forward! McHale was a power forward. Parish was a center. When they played together one of them had to play out of position. It was McHale playing out of position on defense.

Bird was a power forward. Bird was a power forward. Bird was a power forward.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#176 » by wigglestrue » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:51 pm

Those are all great points.

The title of this thread really should be "Greatest Forward of All Time"...

So, seen as a power forward, Bird's defense gets greater, even more underrated, yes?
He did everything a power forward could've been expected to do on D, and more.

However you categorize his role on defense, it was great, not just good.
So says every indicator we have to judge defense by.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#177 » by RayBan-Sematra » Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:56 pm

At this point it is close.
I have Bird in that 8-10 range and Lebron is arguably at or close to the point where I could reasonably put him in that class.

At this exact moment though I would still rank Bird higher.
Let us see how Lebron finishes off this year.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#178 » by wigglestrue » Sun Feb 23, 2014 8:01 pm

I have to correct you, though, I was not saying LeBron may right now be the GOAT, except in retrospect from a future perspective where he has done a massive amount of more work to earn that title. Hell, right now I only have him at #6-7, tops. And the next player for him to leapfrog is Magic, imo, who rates behind Jordan, Russell, Wilt, Kareem, and now Bird (upon the reappraisal of Bird's defense) -- what limits Magic in my book is his seemingly average defensive impact and average at best range. But could LeBron become the GOAT? Sure. He's in the position ARod was in about 10 years ago, more or less, with no Babe Ruth qualitatively blocking his way, and with more team success. He could possibly win five or six of the next ten championships, he is that valuable of a presence on the court for whichever team he plays for. Let's see where he goes from here.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#179 » by RayBan-Sematra » Sun Feb 23, 2014 8:06 pm

wigglestrue wrote:Hell, right now I only have him at #6-7, tops. And the next player for him to leapfrog is Magic, imo, who rates behind Jordan, Russell, Wilt, Kareem, and now Bird (upon the reappraisal of Bird's defense)

You have Lebron ahead of Shaq?

Lebron through these 11 years has 4 playoff runs with a 28+ PER and one good Finals performance.
Shaq through his first 11 years had 7 playoff runs with a 28+ PER with 4 GOAT level Finals performances.

Shaq in his first 11 years was a far better overall playoffs performer then Lebron has been and he had multiple GOAT level Championship runs & Finals performances along with 2-3 excellent years after that.

Lebron is a far way off from matching let alone surpassing Shaq's career.
He'll need another 3-5 dominant years after this one just to get into that discussion.
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Re: Larry Bird vs Lebron James - Greatest SF of all Time 

Post#180 » by wigglestrue » Sun Feb 23, 2014 8:16 pm

RayBan-Sematra wrote:
wigglestrue wrote:Hell, right now I only have him at #6-7, tops. And the next player for him to leapfrog is Magic, imo, who rates behind Jordan, Russell, Wilt, Kareem, and now Bird (upon the reappraisal of Bird's defense)

You have Lebron ahead of Shaq?

Lebron through these 11 years has 4 playoff runs with a 28+ PER and one good Finals performance.
Shaq through his first 11 years had 7 playoff runs with a 28+ PER with 4 GOAT level Finals performances.

Shaq in his first 11 years was a far better overall playoffs performer then Lebron was and had multiple GOAT level Championship runs & Finals performances and he still had 2-3 excellent years after that.

Lebron is a far way off from matching let alone surpassing Shaq's career.


Hmmm. Good point. Honestly, my 7-15 is malleable. Shaq, Duncan, LeBron, Hakeem, Kobe...Oscar, Julius, Jerry, Moses...any given day, I could be persuaded to agree with any one of a hundred different ways to order those players. Weighing overall impact in regular seasons, I'd put LeBron ahead, but yeah, maybe I should weigh playoff performances more.
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