iggymcfrack wrote:One_and_Done wrote:iggymcfrack wrote:
Nash only won MVP because he switched teams and people noticed how much better the team got when he moved. If he'd stayed on one team his whole career like Stockton, he never would have had a prayer. Stockton has 13 seasons with a higher BPM than any Nash year.
Disagree. If Dirk had gotten hurt for instance and he carried the team in his absence, people would have noticed. Stockton did not ever carry the team, and as Dr MJ points out the Jazz peaked as his role diminished.
Nor can one say Stockton was secretly having superstar impact and it was never noticed. Not when you're losing to the 86 Mavs in the 1st round, the 87 Warriors in the 1st round, the 89 Warriors in the 1st round (swept), the 90 Suns in the 1st round, the 93 Sonics in the 1st round, etc. The Jazz were only a 49.77 win team over Stockon's first 9 years with Malone, when he was aged 23 to 31. It seems clear there were not 2 superstars on this team who were secretly unseen, but delivering superstar impact. For mine the credit goes to Malone, but you can decide for yourselves which of the 2 to side with.
OK, but Dirk never got hurt and neither did Malone. How's Stockton supposed to show what he can do in Malone's absence when Malone never missed more than 2 games in a year the entire time he played in Utah? If lack of playoff success is what you're dinging Stockton for, here are the top 10 BPMs for Stockton and Malone in any given postseason:
Stockton: 12.0, 8.8, 8.7, 8.6, 8.4, 7.8, 6.7, 6.6, 6.4, 6.1
K. Malone: 7.3, 7.1, 6.5, 6.5, 6.0, 4.7, 4.7, 4.5, 4.0, 3.9
You bring up the Jazz getting swept in '89, but Stockton averaged 27/3/14/4/2 that series on 51/75/91. He was a Superman. Whatever the problem was, he wasn't it.
PJ Tucker could do that, no problem. Get that stuff out of here.