drza wrote:Pettit vs Baylor: what's Pettit's case?
I've seen a lot of votes for Pettit in this thread, and I've seen others say that this spot is essentially between Pettit and Ewing. I've said all along that it's really hard to do cross-era comparisons, but Pettit has a contemporary still on the board that I'm struggling to see how he beats him. Keep in mind, a lot of this stems from my last few posts where I looked harder at the box score stats (late last night) after previously looking again at Pettit's postseasons vs his regular seasons. Taken together, Baylor just looks clearly better to me. But I'm definitely willing to be educated, for those that have Pettit as clearly the guy. But this is what I see:
Regular season, 10 year primes
Bob Pettit 1956 - 1965: 27 pts (51.3% TS), 16.5 reb, 3.0 ast (TO not kept)
Elgin Baylor 1959 - 1968: 28.1 pts (49.1% TS), 14.2 reb, 4.2 ast (TO not kept)
Playoffs, 10 year primes
Bob Pettit 1956 - 1965: 25.5 pts (50.1% TS), 14.8 reb, 2.7 ast (TO not kept)
Elgin Baylor 1959 - 1968: 30.7 pts (50.3% TS), 14.1 reb, 3.9 ast (TO not kept)
First, theer's not much need for pace adjustment here because those 10-year peaks almost completely overlapped outside of Pettit's 3-year head start. So if we just go macro and look at box scores, it certainly looks to me like Baylor is pretty clearly the more impressive of the 2. Pettit had small advantages in efficiency and rebounds in the regular season (vs. Baylor's small advantages in scoring volume and assists), but in the postseason Baylor improved his volume and efficiency while Pettit slid with the end result that Baylor seems to outperform him significantly in the postseason. Am I mis-reading this?
Accolades
I hear a lot about Pettit's 2 MVPs, his First Team All NBA finishes every season, and the championship that his team won over the Celtics. But again, even a cursory look indicates that these aren't really boons in comparison to Baylor. Baylor, too, was All NBA First Team every year during his 10-year prime. Which leaves the MVPs and the championship. So let's look closer at them:
Petit's first MVP in 1956
None of Russell, Wilt, Oscar, Baylor or West are in the league yet so (in a comparison with Baylor) it's fair to question whether Pettit's '56 would have been MVP-worthy just a few years later when Baylor was peaking. Also, look at Pettit's postseason that year:
Pettit in 1956
Reg: 25.7 ppg (50.2% TS), 16.2 reb, 27.3 PER (led NBA), .236 WS/48
Post: 19.1 ppg (48.2% TS), 10.5 reb, 21.5 PER, .108 WS/48
Pettit's production went through the floor that postseason. In his peak, Baylor never had a postseason this poor. So despite Pettit's regular season MVP (on a below .500 team) (at a time in between superstar talents), I don't see this season as anything that would give him an advantage over Baylor.
Hawks Championship year 1958
The fact that Pettit's Hawks beat Russell's Celtics is used as one of the big supports for Pettit's candidacy. However, upon closer examination: Russell was injured. That's not Pettit's fault, of course, but to me it takes the "he broke up Russell's dynasty!" card away from being played too hard. The Hawks that year were an 0.82 SRS team in the season (3rd out of 8 teams, well behind the Celtics' leading 5.02 SRS mark). So perhaps the narrative could be that Pettit dragged his average cast through the postseason to meet up with those Celtics, putting them in the right position to take advantage of Russell's injury?
But no, Pettit wasn't the one stepping up in the postseason to drag the average cast. It was Cliff Hagan who did that. 1958 playoffs;
1958 playoffs
Petit: 24.2 ppg (47.2% TS), 16.5 reb, 22.6 PER, .134 WS/48
Hagan: 27.7 ppg (57.6% TS), 10.5 reb, 27.5 PER, .312 WS/48
Hagan led the NBA in the 1958 playoffs in scoring, True Shooting Percentage, PER, FG% and WS/48. Essentially, he did in that championship run what I'd have expected Petit to do, and honestly I think superficial analysis leads many to believe that Petit in 1958 DID do what Hagan did. But he really didn't.
So again, let me be clear. The Hawks won the title, and Pettit will always have that Game 7. Those are great accomplishments, and not taking them away. But if I'm comparing Pettit with an era peer like Baylor, I don't see how that title should be used as a boost to Pettit's candidacy. In his peak, Baylor's postseasons were regularly stronger than the one that Pettit turned in and he didn't get the advantage of facing a Celtics squad with an injured Russell.
Pettit's 2nd MVP year: 1959
This is the last of the major accolade seasons that a cursory accolades count might use to rank Pettit ahead of Baylor. But again, in the words of the legendary Rafiki, "Look haaarder..."
Pettit won that MVP off his outstanding regular season performance, but rookie Elgin Baylor was right there with him finishing 3rd in the MVP vote. Baylor's Lakers, who just a season before were (by-FAR) the worst team in the NBA with 19 wins and a -5.79 SRS (next worst was 33 wins and -1.47 SRS) jumped up with rookie Baylor to a playoff-worthy 33 wins and -1.42 SRS (2nd in their division behind Pettit's Hawks with their 49 wins and +2.89 SRS). So it appears that the Hawks were clearly the better team, but in the regular season Rookie-of-the-year Baylor was very competitive with MVP Pettit. They were the two forwards on the All NBA 1st Team.
In the 1959 postseason as a whole Pettit's box score numbers were better than Baylor's:
Pettit: 27.8 ppg (50.4% TS), 12.5 reb, 22.9 PER, .188 WS/48
Baylor: 25.5 ppg (46.9% TS), 12.0 reb, 19.3 PER, .104 WS/48
However, Baylor led his 33-win Lakers to defeat Pettit's 49-win Hawks 4 - 2 in the Western Division Finals before eventually getting swept by the Celtics in the Finals (led by a fully healthy Bill Russell).
Again, my point here is not to say that Pettit didn't have a great season or that he didn't deserve his MVP. But if we're comparing with Baylor, and as a rookie that season Baylor was extremely competitive with Pettit in both the regular and postseason while leading his team to an upset victory over Pettit's Hawks...I just can't see how this season should be a feather in Pettit's hat.
Conclusion
Across their 10-year primes, it certainly looks to me like Baylor was competitive with Pettit in the regular season and clearly the better post-season performer. Pettit's accolades were deserved, but upon closer examination don't appear to give him any real advantage in this comp. So I ask again, for those voting Pettit here...what's his case over Baylor?
The difference is in league norms. Pettit's RS ts% (over their careers) edge isn't nothing (1.7 "percent", ts% not really a percentage). But in '55 (Pettit's rookie year) the league ts% was 0.455315731 and in '56 it's 0.457900659
. By '68 it's 0.497823894. Those are probably the extremes (the first year of your Pettit sample and the last of Baylor's). Ideally it would be more systematic but there's a fair chasm in terms of efficiency relative to the league in the non-mutual span and that shows up in the advanced metrics (Pettit prior to Baylor's arrival: 26.5 PER, .216 WS/48; Baylor after Pettit's retirement: 19.9 PER, .121 WS/48).
It's hard to get good info on either's D, but it seems like Baylor may not have been great, particularly in terms of possibly losing some mobility after his injuries.
Those are the reasons that came to mind for me in terms of what separates them.
The playoffs might be worth a closer look but with the smaller sample, the effects of competition (particularly Boston) and team performance, I'm less confident in it (and particularly metrics) as a fair barometer.