Retro POY '06-07 (Voting Complete)

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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#101 » by Gongxi » Sat May 1, 2010 12:28 am

Sedale Threatt wrote:It brings to mind Roy Smith's comment after he finally won the national championship: "I guess I'm a great coach now." Very insightful statement.


Yes! Exactly what I'm talking about.

Then again, as fickle and abitrary as some of these things are, they have to be considered.

For me, it's 100% based on the fact that Dirk played poorly, as an individual, in a huge upset. By my definitition, that is a catastrophic failure, the antithesis of raising your game and overcoming obstacles.

I did the same thing with LeBron and Kobe in the last vote. I had them 1-2, but the fact they both played below par in season-ending losses knocked them down a notch. Those sort of failures are important, and must be accounted for in my opinion.


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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#102 » by lorak » Sat May 1, 2010 12:38 am

1. Duncan
2. Nowitzki
3. LeBron
4. Bryant
5. Garnett
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#103 » by sp6r=underrated » Sat May 1, 2010 12:43 am

Gongxi wrote:Absolutely not. If you weigh playoff games just twice as much as regular season games- not crazily inordinate, but not just the same- the difference can clearly be seen. Dirk's 6 games against a team he already played poorly against is insignificant both in sample size and because it showed us what the regular season already told us: he wasn't very good against the Warriors.


I just finished evaluating their seasons using your method of weighing post-season games twice as more. This is what I found:

First Robinson/Olajuwon

Code: Select all

       PER,  WS,   WS48
DR:  27.56, 22.1, 0.247
HO:  26.27, 16.3, 0.167
Gap: 1.29,   5.8,  0.08


Now Dirk/Duncan

Code: Select all

       PER,  WS,   WS48
DN:  26.71, 17.5, 0.258
TD:  26.53, 19.9, 0.225
Gap: 0.18, -2.4,  0.033


Overall the statistical gap between DR/HO is larger than DN/TD (obviously total WS should be disregarded in DN/TD comparison because TD played a lot more games). This ignores the larger difference that exists defensively amongst TD/DN vs DR/HO. So yes, you are being inconsistent by favoring DR/HO and acting so strident in DN > TD.

A few possibilities

1. These aren't the stats you use to evaluate players. Fair enough, I would never base my player evaluations on these two stats. This is you know who style of evaluating players. Any idiot with access to B-R could do this. But based on these metrics Robinson > Olajuwon with regards to player production by a greater margin than Dirk > Duncan.

2. You weren't aware of statistical gap, and now would change your mind. Fair enough.

3. Even with this information, you still think HO > DR and DN > TD, based on your own personal evaluation that goes beyond looking at player production. That's fine, a good voter has to exercise judgment and not just mindlessly look up numbers. But if you are going to allow yourself the right to exercise judgment in evaluating players. If you are going to consider things beyond mere production, you should allow others the same right. Try to refrain from saying people are voting for players that aren't "nearly" as good as the player you favor unless it is really egregious. Because under this scenario you do deviate from just looking at player production.

Note, I like reading your posts and if my tone sounds harsh it is unintended. There are a lot of posters in this thread I wouldn't even respond to except to mock.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#104 » by RunMCR » Sat May 1, 2010 1:24 am

Why does everybody have Lebron ahead of Kobe?

Last 2 years the argument for lebron has been PER..Per, Per, Per, Per and Per. All I hear. Ok, fine. He had better stats in last 2 years, but come on...Kobe had better stats with a worse team in a tougher conference.

Playoffs? Lebron played 2 piss poor teams and one decent team on a huge decline and got embarrassed by a real team in finals. Kobe played one real team and even though he let the 3-1 lead slip away (at times it was on him, most times it was on his teammates or lack of them).

1. Duncan (championship+offense/defense)
2. Kobe (best offensive player, tied for defense with Duncan, but no playoff success)
3/4. Dirk, Lebron (not sure who to put ahead here..dirk had a better reg. season, but lebron had better playoffs, both poor defenders)
5. Nash (0 defense brings him down here)
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#105 » by Doctor MJ » Sat May 1, 2010 1:24 am

sp6r=underrated wrote:This is a preemptive strike. I know some Suns supporters are going to complain about the officiating in game 3. The officiating in game 4 was just as bad against SA.

The only grievance Suns fans have is legitimate, and it is a big one, is the suspensions in game 5.


My take on the officiating of the Spurs-Suns series:

-I consider the Horry incident the only big thing. Donaghy's corrupt but it's just not clear enough what he did for me to count a certain way.

-The big thing I care about with regards to the Horry incident is to make people understand that it's crazy to look at a series that close, with that big of an unfair helper, and think "the Suns were not capable of winning". That said I don't think the Spurs deserve any asterisk by their win. The Suns have a good claim to basically playing the series evenly with the Spurs, but I don't think they can claim they were clearly superior.

-Theoretically, blown calls could be enough for me to treat the loser as the actual winner. However, given the context of the situation, I'd never treat either of these teams like 2nd round losers. All the evidence indicates that these were the two best teams in the league - so that's how I treat them.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#106 » by Doctor MJ » Sat May 1, 2010 1:29 am

Dr Mufasa wrote:That's a good point about how the Suns should practically put on a made the Finals level because they were definitely the 2nd closest to winning it. The more I think of it the more I remember how good Nash was that year. It was probably his best season but the last 2 MVPs took away from his shot at another.


I think you can make a great case it's his best season. I think it is his best regular season - and I think any criticisms of his post-season aren't looking at the situation objectively. That's not to say I think he's the clear #1 (I've got Duncan at #1), but I think he's really strong POY candidate this year.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#107 » by Doctor MJ » Sat May 1, 2010 1:31 am

I am a bit surprised at how well Dirk is fairing in a lot of the votes. I really doubt he'd be doing so well if we'd done this after the '07 season. Not sure if that's a bad thing though. I think you've got to knock the guy hard for the loss, but I think he has proven he's a legit power in the league generally.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#108 » by sp6r=underrated » Sat May 1, 2010 1:34 am

Great points DR MJ on the 2007 series. What you said goes for many series in NBA history 2002 Sac/LA, Suns/Rockets 90s, 88 Finals, etc. I do tire of claims that there style of play couldn't have resulted in a championship.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#109 » by sp6r=underrated » Sat May 1, 2010 1:35 am

Doctor MJ wrote:I am a bit surprised at how well Dirk is fairing in a lot of the votes. I really doubt he'd be doing so well if we'd done this after the '07 season. Not sure if that's a bad thing though. I think you've got to knock the guy hard for the loss, but I think he has proven he's a legit power in the league generally.


Agreed
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#110 » by Silver Bullet » Sat May 1, 2010 2:53 am

This thing is turning into a Finals MVP...
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#111 » by Doctor MJ » Sat May 1, 2010 3:01 am

Silver Bullet wrote:This thing is turning into a Finals MVP...


First 2 years, no Finals MVP was #1. I think that diagnosis is a little harsh.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#112 » by ElGee » Sat May 1, 2010 3:45 am

bastillon wrote:I've made a decision not to include players who didn't make the playoffs in any of my rankings. whether it's KAJ, Garnett or Olajuwon - they're out when they didn't make the playoffs. it's to hard for me to evaluate them and I don't even know how they would've responded to playing in the playoffs. I'm also going to dismiss every player who missed the postseason because of various reasons.


Bastillon, just curious about why you decided to do this? Is it based on your criteria or is there something inherent about missing the postseason that makes you de-value a player?
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#113 » by ElGee » Sat May 1, 2010 3:50 am

Sedale Threatt wrote:Lamar had like a 16 PER that year, just a hair above average. A good, solid player, but prone to disappearing. If he'd gotten to play with playoff Lamar all year, then yeah, that's a huge difference. But otherwise, not a massive difference maker.


Not to start a tangent on Lamar Odom (because this is going to come up again in greater detail in 06 I imagine), but the guy is perennially underrated. He's basically been a top-40 player for a number of years and has a unique skill set that can cause major issues at times. He has some weird knock for being "inconsistent" (and he is to a degree), but it seems to me that's based on him not dropping 25 and 15 every night, as if that's a fair assessment. I'm fairly certain if they had a "pseudo all-star team" he'd be like an 8-time psuedo all-star. Seemed to work fine with Wade in Miami...so I wouldn't minimize the difference in having him as your#2 versus Mike James.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#114 » by ElGee » Sat May 1, 2010 3:57 am

Gongxi wrote:Nowitzki really helps with spacing even when his shot is off. :lol: Re-reading that makes me sound like a wacko apologist, but it is true. When his shot isn't falling he still opens things up the way few players do.


Dirk does help with spacing, but I think his offensive value is a shade behind other elite players because he doesn't create as much for his teammates. He loves that high post, and he'll start on the wing or near the block at times, but if you can defend him without sending a double, their offense becomes a little more stagnant. Bowen had this effect. So did Stephen Jackson. I've never checked his numbers against those opponents and teams, but my guess would be the Mavs ORtg is below their average.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#115 » by ElGee » Sat May 1, 2010 4:39 am

Gongxi wrote:
Sedale Threatt wrote:The postseason has to be given enough weight where a player cannot maintain a top ranking with a performance as poor as Dirk's. That was the equivalent of taking an A into your final exam and flunking. It's only one test, but your final grade is going to take a huge hit as a result.


Well, to an extent I agree. That's why he fell behind Kobe for me. But the idea that "Oh his first 82 were amazing, but he sucked in those last 4 games so let's drop him way down" is a tad silly.

That's my approach, I guess. If you don't like it, keep in mind I only have one of 20 some votes. It carries no more weight than anyone else.


Oh, it's not like that. I don't want to curse you out or anything. I just really, really want people to think about these things, and how incredibly minor things end up being very important when it comes to teams, but could've gone either way at the time. And then how we turn that team success into being very instrumental when assessing a player. A rebound instead of a tip in 2002 and maybe Chriss Webber was our Finals MVP that year. Would that make him an actual better basketball player, though? It's an exaggerated example in that most things aren't that random, but it bears thinking about at all levels. If the Mavs don't draw a team that gave them- and Nowitzki- fits all season, maybe he ends up being the Finals MVP (they did go 67-12 against the rest of the league and 2-7 against GS that year). Would he have been a better player, though? I bet lots of us would have him first.

I'm just saying when your rankings depend on those types of things, they deserve to be checked and rechecked. If Garnett doesn't get traded to the Celtics, does that mean he wouldn't have been the best player the next year? Our rankings shouldn't hinge on things like that. Or at least we should try our damnedest to mitigate that.


It seems to me that there is something unspoken in this entire discussion about valuing players, at least in how I value the regular season and postseason. My hunch is Gongxi thinks the same way (?)

I'm looking at the entire season as an indicator of who the best basketball player was that year. Regular season and playoffs are the primary data to observe...but so are previous seasons. That is separate from, although involves, who had the best regular season that year. Strictly speaking. Playoff games are more important for reasons stated earlier, but I'm never going to shift someone enormously based on playoffs (unless perhaps there were some weird lingering questions about a rookie playing against elite competition and he was absolutely horrid, and I don't know if that's ever happened).

To me, I should have a good idea of who the best players in the league are by the playoffs. The playoffs, being against tougher competition, in a series format and with more on the line, serve to iron out the ball-park assessment of the regular season.

In other words, Duncan still has it. Or he doesn't.

Dirk can't win against x style. Or he can.

LeBron can take over games (or a series). Or he can't yet.

Nash's style and influence can take a quality team to a title. (And my answer in 07? It can.)

The playoffs are a small sample, so we judge accordingly. But it isn't some steadfast formula applied year in and year out to players evenly. That's exactly the type of thinking that gets us locked into "Dirk would be No. 1 if they won they title" or "Nash would be No.1 if Horry didn't hip check him." I'm trying to evaluate who the best player is over the entire season by how well they play. Period.

Not sure if others think this way, but I think to do otherwise leads to traps where suddenly variables that have nothing to do with how good an individual is end up determining where people place him (teammates, opposition, someone else's health, a certain matchup, a Derek Fisher miracle, etc. For 07, why worry about how weak the East was for LeBron, or conversely how far he went in the playoffs, and instead just focus on his play? )
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#116 » by drza » Sat May 1, 2010 5:49 am

Sedale Threatt wrote:
drza wrote:Kobe was great, but to whoever said that Kobe's cast wasn't 10 games better than the Wolves...I don't know. To me Kobe's cast when Odom was hurt was pretty similar to KG's cast for the season, but Kobe got to play with Odom for 50 games...I'm not sure there's not 10 games difference there. Plus, you've got to factor in that the Wolves front office literally needed for them to lose down the stretch so that they could keep their 1st round pick (it was owed to the Clippers if the team finished better than 10th from the bottom of the league). That's why KG sat out most of the last weeks of the season, all of which were Wolves losses.


Lamar had like a 16 PER that year, just a hair above average. A good, solid player, but prone to disappearing. If he'd gotten to play with playoff Lamar all year, then yeah, that's a huge difference. But otherwise, not a massive difference maker.


Silver Bullet wrote:Re: Kobe

Some people have Garnett on thier list - that to me makes no sense. Even if his SC was historically bad, he still only won 32 games ? And he's a big, he's suppossed to have a bigger impact on offense and defense.

Kobe's supporting cast: Odom, Luke Walton, Smush Parker, Kwame Brown, Brian Cook ? How is that any better than KG's cast... and even if it is better - Kobe's a wing, KG's a big - That's at most a 32 win team, even with Kobe on it. That's his MVP case. Taking a group of nobodies to the playoffs in the toughest conference of all time.


I'm going to give my explanation for the horror that was the '07 Wolves. What I'm weighing out is, what is the best way to go about it? I could point out facts like the 4 non-KG starters went on to become either short-term rotation level players on a 15-win team or 11th men on poor teams (I did that in the '08 thread) while KG went on to become the best player on a champion the next year. But that doesn't tell the whole story.

I could point out that the front office for the Wolves was so screwed up that in both 2006 and 2007 the team was actively TRYING to lose by the start of April so that they could keep their draft pick (which they'd have lost if they finished better than 10th from the bottom), and both years they sat KG for the last weeks of the year to that end. But that's not enough.

I could point out that the Wolves were 20 - 20 through the first half of the year when their coach (young Dwyane Casey) was fired in order to bring in Randy Wittman, who IIRC has one of the five worst win percentages in NBA history among coaches that have coached at least 100 games (something like a .31 win percentage). After Wittman's arrival, the team finished 12 - 30. But that's not enough.

In order to convey how bad that team was from top to bottom and to illustrate why I think Kobe's cast was solidly better, I need to take your into what that team was really like at both ends of the floor. I could attempt to do that with numbers, like for instance Dave Berri's calculation that the other Wolves besides KG were good for fewer than 11 wins that season ( http://www.wagesofwins.com/GarnettDuncan.html ) while Kobe's was good for almost 26 wins (http://www.wagesofwins.com/Lakers0507.html ) . But then it can become a war of stats where each side pulls out their stat of choice, and between throwing PER and Win Shares and APM around we lose track of the meaning behind those numbers.

So instead, I'm going to describe exactly what Mark Blount, Ricky Davis, Trenton Hassell and Mike James brought to the table and only use stats sparingly to support my descriptions. This will be the interpretation of an admitted Garnett fan so you'll have to judge the bias. But this will also be the interpretation of someone that watched more than 90% of those Wolves games and also at least 15 or 20 Lakers games, so you'll be getting more than just numbers.

2007 Wolves defense: Mark Blount, Ricky Davis and Mike James were all really, really bad defensive players in Minnesota. Blount was an extremely soft defensive big man, unwilling or unable to deny easy post position nor stop his man once the ball was received. Neither Davis nor James were able to prevent consistent dribble penetration from their position. Hassell had earned a reputation as a "defensive stopper" in 2004 when what he really was was an energy defender, someone that would work hard and annoy his opponent without having the actual athletic ability to truly shut someone down, but with a great interior defense behind him he was able to be more aggressive. But in 2005 Hassell lost his starting job to Wally Szczerbiak, and from then on seemed to form the opinion that he needed to spend more energy on his fledgling offense if he wanted to play. By 2007 he was no longer the energy defender that he once was, but he also wasn't as awful as the other 3 starters. Also, all four of those players were poor rebounders for their positions. The end result was that the Wolves' defense couldn't hope to stop anyone, unless Garnett was able to get there in time to help (possible with Hassell, less likely with the others who simply got beaten too quickly for help defense). Moreover, the Wolves couldn't hope to get a reasonable level of defensive rebounds unless Garnett was the one to do it. I've seen posters like ElGee point out that offense is more important than defense because one man can't defend five, but for those Wolves Garnett was asked to come awfully close. (This was a common theme in Minnesota during the 2000s, but 2007 may have been the most glaring year for it.)

Wolves offense: In theory this is the side of the ball with more talent, as Davis was a 17 and 5 guy on reasonable efficiency from a wing while Blount was a 12 ppg center that shot over 50%. What actually played out on offense, though, was that it was being run by James, who was not really a PG (3.6 apg) and was really more of a low-efficiency chucker. Earlier in the decade in situations like this the Wolves ran their offense more through Garnett, letting him be the main decision maker so guys like James could just shoot (leading to a slew of high-efficiency offenses even with guys like Troy Hudson playing "PG"). But Coach Casey and later Coach Wittman wanted Garnett more off the ball, so after James the offense ran through Ricky Davis (team-high 4.8 apg). The problem with that, was, Davis was a graduate of the Iverson/Marbury "I'm going to try my best to get my shot, and if I can't then I'll kick it to someone and you better shoot" school of getting assists. Blount was purely a shooter, and Hassell wanted to be a shooter but just wasn't that talented. The end result was a unit where the only player that could consistently get his own offense was Garnett, the only player that was setting up teammates for easier shots was Garnett, and when the Wolves needed offense late the opponents would absolutely swarm/deny Garnett and nobody else could score.

I give you those descriptions as a back-drop so that the on-court/off-court +/- numbers from 82games make more intuitive sense ( http://www.82games.com/0607/0607MIN.HTM ). Garnett tied with Duncan for the NBA lead in on-court/off-court net +/- in 2007 with a mark of +15 per 48 minutes. But if you follow that link, you'll see that each of the other four starters (who played the majority of their minutes with Garnett) all had net +/- marks of 0 or less. If you look closer, you see that Garnett's +15 came from the team playing their opponents to a standstill with Garnett on the court...but they were -15 when he went to the bench. Now, put that in context with what I wrote above. The Wolves talent and scheme were so bad, such a net negative, that only the presence of KG could make them competitive at either end. If he was off the court for any reason everything disintegrated...rapidly. He was really the only thing that stood against the Wolves challenging the Sixers' record of 9 wins.

Now, to the Lakers. Lamar Odom, Smush Parker, Luke Walton and young Andrew Bynum is a poor cast. There's nothing to write home about, there. But defensively they were not the individual sieves that the Wolves players were, and they could at least rebound their position. Offensively there wasn't much there, though Odom could contribute at that end at least marginally and on the whole just tends to be underrated overall. And Phil Jackson's system put the players in position to compete. Now again, don't get me wrong, on the whole that Laker's cast was a net zero. It was Bryant's brilliance that got them anywhere near .500, let alone to the playoffs. The difference to me is that while the Lakers cast was a net zero, the Wolves' cast and coach were actually a net negative.

You know what that Lakers cast reminded me of? They were like a pro-proven, more experienced version of the Minnesota Kids. The only glimmer of a ray of hope for a Wolves fan to hang onto in 2007 was what we called the "KG and the Kids line-up", that consisted of KG, rookie Randy Foye, rookie Craig Smith, 2nd year Rashad McCants and Marko Jaric. That line-up got limited run, way too little for convincing statistical analysis, but just watching them you could visibly see the difference. Now mind you, that crew wasn't just young, they were also pretty grossly undertalented. Foye was the prize rookie at the time, but he just proved even as a 4th year player unable to hold a job for the Wizards. Smith is a 6-6 center that is playing back-up for the Clippers, and both McCants (at age 26) and Jaric are currently out of the NBA. But when they played next to Garnett, they worked. They made their man work to get past them, long enough that Garnett could actually get there to help. They relied solely upon KG to facillitate the offense, with only Foye and sometimes Smith acting as secondary scorers. And in their short time together as a unit, they were by-far the most successful that the '07 Wolves had and both posters like me and professional bloggers like Brit Robson screamed for that line-up to play together more often, but to no avail. But when they did play, essentially the Kids played as about a net zero that allowed Garnett's brilliance to make the unit a success.

That's what I think the '07 Lakers did for Kobe, and the actual starters on the '07 Wolves failed spectacularly to do for Garnett. That Wolves team was like a science experiment...what would happen if you took the best player in the league and surrounded him with the absolute worst of every possible member of an organization from the front office on down. Well, the result of that experiment will likely keep Garnett out of the top 5 in this year. And again, I can understand it. But as I relived that year in my mind while re-writing this post, I'm struck again by just how unfair it was to Garnett's legacy (and just how great that championship run the following year felt in contrast).
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#117 » by ElGee » Sat May 1, 2010 8:04 am

^^^This is a great read. I'm going to be using this line in future posts, if you don't mind:

He went to the Iverson/Marbury "I'm going to try my best to get my shot, and if I can't then I'll kick it to someone and you better shoot" school of getting assists.


drza - was there a Garnett leg injury he played through ~2006-2007? I know he had a quad injury at the end of 2007 but I remember rumors that he had something wrong before that. Assuming as a local you might know this...

My guess is Garnett will be the most under-appreciated player in this project simply because of his situation. Ahhh...what would everyone think if he had played in San Antonio with Robinson, Ginobili, Parker...?
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#118 » by mysticbb » Sat May 1, 2010 10:29 am

ElGee wrote:Dirk does help with spacing, but I think his offensive value is a shade behind other elite players because he doesn't create as much for his teammates.


Nowitzki off the ball creates more for his temmates than most other elite offensive players. Why? Because of his ability to set screens very effectively. He creates open shots via spacing and screens. The high pick&roll by Nowitzki and Terry was probably the most efficient play down the stretch in recent history. Whenever the game was close the Mavericks went to that two-men-game and were able to close out games. Especially in 2007, when Nowitzki had the highest +/- per 48 minutes in clutch situations, he scored 46.1 pp48 on 61 ts%, he was more efficient in clutch situations than in average that season, he literally never turned the ball over (3.2 turnover rate!) in clutch situations. That is incredible. His team outscored the opponents in average by 29.6 points in those kind of late game situations. That was the main reason the Mavericks were able to win 67 games despite the fact that their average scoring margin would have indicated "only" 61 wins. A similar thing happened in this season (2009/10).

To say that Nowitzi can't create for his teammates when his scoring is off, is one of the biggest myth about Nowitzki (next to: he is a weak rebounder).

ElGee wrote:He loves that high post, and he'll start on the wing or near the block at times, but if you can defend him without sending a double, their offense becomes a little more stagnant. Bowen had this effect. So did Stephen Jackson. I've never checked his numbers against those opponents and teams, but my guess would be the Mavs ORtg is below their average.


Well, you should have probably checked that before, because that would have not let you fall into the trap. It is a myth that Jackson can defend Nowitzki 1on1, he never done that effectively. In that playoffs series Nowitzki was not defended 1on1, but with double and triple teams. Watch those games and then compare the defensive structure with that of the Pistons in the late 80's against Jordan, it is nearly the same. One defender was ALWAYS on Nowitzki and a 2nd defender was always close for the double. When Nowitzki got the ball the 2nd defender came over so quickly, that there were nearly no 1on1 situations. Now every player of the Warriors had their eyes on Nowitzki, when Nowitzki put the ball on the floor the closest defender came over for the triple team. They completely collapsed on him when he was close to the paint with the ball in his hand. They forced the ball out of his hand or forced turnovers. Nowitzki still had a reasonable turnover rate of 9.7, well above his usually average, but still better than the league average of 11.8. When Nowitzki was on the floor the Mavericks Offense had a 108.9 ORtg during that series, when he was off it was 95.7. Seriously, it wasn't because of Nowitzki's lack of scoring or not that efficient game why the Mavericks lost. They lost that series, because even with that kind of coverage on Nowitzki the rest of the Mavericks weren't able to create enough offense AND, a more important point, their perimeter and transition defense sucked bad time. Watch how many open 3's the Warriors are taking in transition or with easy moves on the perimeter. Josh Howard's direct opponent had an average of 22.1 PER (played mostly against Jackson, Barnes or Richardson), Devin Harris had a 29.6 OppPER. A team can't win when your perimeter defense and transistion defense is so bad. Now you can come up with the claim that is Nowitzki's fault, because he isn't a defensive anchor, well the Warriors didn't beat the Mavericks inside, in fact Nowitzki's opponent had a 11.9 PER, but from the outside.

I checked the games Nowitzki vs. Bowen and Nowitzki vs. Jackson (numvers are per 36 minutes):

Bowen: 21.5/8.5/2.4 on 56 ts% and 7.1 turnover rate, the Mavs had an average ORtg of 107.1 in those games. If you combine the Mavericks average ORtg and the opponents DRtg (mostly for the San Antonio Spurs), you will expect a 105.4 ORtg for the Mavericks. Going by the record you would expect 16 wins in those 33 games, but the Mavericks came up with 17. Nowitzki's average numbers for that timespan: 23.2/8.7/2.7 on 58 ts% and 7.7 turnover rate. Thus Nowitzki scored indeed less and less efficient. But his team was still able to get their offense going, and had a higher win% and higher ORtg than expected.

Jackson: 25.6/7.7/2.2 on 60 ts% and 7.9 turnover rate, the Mavs had an average ORtg of 112.7. Combine the ORtg and the DRtg again and you expect 108.3. By record the expected amount of wins were 10, the Mavs won 13. Nowitzki's average numbers: 23.2/8.5/2.7 on 58 ts% and 7.6 turnover rate. Thus Nowitzki scored more than his average against Jackson on a better efficiency, and the Mavs usually trashed Jackson's teams on offense.

Hopefully those numbers are showing that Stephen Jackson never was a good defender against Nowitzki. Bowen alone was also not that great, when he constantly had to defend Nowitzki alone, but he did obviously a better job than Stephen Jackson. If someone wants to see a great defensive job by an individual defender, he should watch the playoffs series 2005 between the Rockets and the Mavericks. Tracy McGrady done an awesome job on Nowitzki, better than anybody else for a similar stretch.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#119 » by bastillon » Sat May 1, 2010 11:09 am

some great posts in this thread. thank you guys.

re: Elgee
I think players who didn't make the playoffs are too hard for me to evaluate. I still believe KG was the best player of 2007 (as he was better than in '08 and we've seen what he can do with competent teammates), so I acknowledge that as somewhat hurting and unfair for him. still, most of the time it's gonna work and it'll save me a lot of time in doing my ranking.

re: Mavs defense
what I remember from that series is that Warriors were scoring tons of points in transition and once they were in the halfcourt, they played 3-ball-only-basketball. it's not as much Devin's or Howard's fault as it is Avery's. he should prepare this team to fast-paced offense the Warriors were using.

re: Nowitzki on offense
108 ORtg doesn't justify Dirk here. it's just ok and you'd expect Dirk to lift them to 110-113 level on offense... especially against the opponent not recognized for his defense. his value is obviously visibly greater on offense and I doubt he'd bring so much defensively that you could consider him a game-changer in either way. if Dirk was on his normal game (i.e. not missing shots he normally makes), the Mavs would've been on that 110-113 ORtg level and would've most likely won that series. I just don't think defensive attention can be an excuse here when his teammates played great and he was the one unable to deliver.

I'm still wondering about James and Bryant. I'm leaning towards Kobe right now, because his impact was more visible. Cavs won with their defense where LeBron didn't contribute that much. Lakers were an awful defensive team, but pretty good offensively (where Kobe obviously was great). unless I see some compelling evidence for LeBron, I'll go with Kobe.
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Re: Retro POY '06-07 

Post#120 » by mysticbb » Sat May 1, 2010 11:26 am

bastillon wrote:re: Mavs defense
what I remember from that series is that Warriors were scoring tons of points in transition and once they were in the halfcourt, they played 3-ball-only-basketball. it's not as much Devin's or Howard's fault as it is Avery's. he should prepare this team to fast-paced offense the Warriors were using.


Actually the transition defense was bad due to Howard and Harris, Howard had stretches were he still was on the offensive side when the Warriors already scored.

And yes, it is on Johnson who has to make the adjustments, he didn't. And that was the main reason the Mavericks lost in that series, not Nowitzki's lack of scoring. The Mavericks had a 112.8 DRtg mainly due to their bad transition and perimeter defense.

bastillon wrote:re: Nowitzki on offense
108 ORtg doesn't justify Dirk here. it's just ok and you'd expect Dirk to lift them to 110-113 level on offense... especially against the opponent not recognized for his defense. his value is obviously visibly greater on offense and I doubt he'd bring so much defensively that you could consider him a game-changer in either way. if Dirk was on his normal game (i.e. not missing shots he normally makes), the Mavs would've been on that 110-113 ORtg level and would've most likely won that series.


No, they still would have lost, because without Nowitzki they had a 95.7 ORtg. Even if you assume that Nowitzki can push that to 113, Nowitzki would have needed to play around 99.4% of the time to overcome the defensive failures on the perimeter and in transition.

bastillon wrote:I just don't think defensive attention can be an excuse here when his teammates played great and he was the one unable to deliver.


His teammates played great? In which series? I wouldn't call 52.8 ts% and 12.2 turnover rate great. Basically they were as efficient as Nowitzki, if you put the scoring efficiency and the turnover rate together. And that without any real defensive pressure on them. The league average in that season in the playoffs was 53 ts% and 11.8 turnover rate. Nowitzki's teammates played slightly less efficient on offense than the average, that is what they usually done in all those seasons, being average, not great.

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