SDChargers#1 wrote:
The point is that Oscar and West were clearly above their peers, it was clear who the best was.
The fact you are even comparing Garnett's contemporaries proves this point. Webber, O'Neal, McGrady. Guy who aren't even top 50 players ever. The fact is that Garnett was simply not far above his peers.
How was he not? None of those players are nowhere close in MVP win-shares, where Garnett ranks 14th for his entire career (including Oscar and Jerry). A process that's regarded higher than All-NBA Teams.
No it is just the most valid statistic for measure efficiency, which Garnett was not great at, and the fact that he is a big man hurts that case even more. People throw out the word "volume" scorer like it is a bad word around here. Putting up more points is better than putting up less points, period. If you are putting up more points on better efficiency, it crushes the argument.
You're not getting my point, Garnett's style and game isn't built around scoring a large volume of points, that's my point exactly. And if you're going to discredit Garnett so harshly on efficiency, than why not do the same for Tim Duncan? You can make arguments that he's even less efficient compared to Garnett. Why not just throw him too behind Moses the great. I know TS% is the most valid statistic to measure efficiency, however you're stating as it's the ONLY statistic that matters offensively. When in reality, it really isn't the case, considering facilitating an offense is just as dominant of a force, check '04.
Versatility matters when you are comparable scoring wise. However, when the gap is as big as it is in this comparison it doesn't matter much (Shaq is as non versatile as they come, yet no one argues about Garnett being a better scorer than him).
I'm stating that Garnett's game was versatile to where he had many minutes where he played SF. My point being, he wasn't classified as being a true post big-man his entire career. But that point is moot, considering Duncan, the greatest PF of all-time is going to be voted before Moses Malone, and his efficiency is worse than Garnett.
Oh and just for comparison, why are we arguing about efficiency with Moses v Garnett, considering the separation isn't that significant, except for Moses' first two as a basketball player.
Garnett is a great passer, and I credited that to him in my original post. The problem is you are comparing him to Oscar and West (obviously greater passers, position or not) and Karl Malone (who absolutely throttles KG in comparison to scoring, and isn't a bad passer himself). So his argument when it comes to offense is against Moses because Moses was a bad passer. So the question becomes does an extra 4 assists make up for 8 points per game and 3% TS.
But then on the other hand you don't discredit the defense of Moses and Karl, but you absolutely discredit Garnett on defense, stating it isn't a valid force in comparison? What I'm trying to state is that if you're going to knock Garnett's offensive abilities in comparison to Karl and Moses, the same can be said defensive abilities, where Garnett blossoms.
I disagree.
Moses Peak: 31 ppg / 15 rpg / 2 apg with 58% TS
Garnett Peak: 24 ppg / 14 rpg / 5 apg with 55% TS
So the 3 apg makes it not even close? Besides I think 3 MVP vs 1 MVP should put to rest the whole not even close during peak argument.
Oh, it's not just 3 APG, it's value is MUCH more than that.
AST% KG: 24.4
AST% Moses: 6.9
KG: PER: 29.4
Moses PER: 26.8
And then you add in the case defensively, and thats' where it's a blow out IMO.
As for longevity.
Moses contributed as franchise type player for 13 seasons (not including ABA years)
Where did you count that? Because if you've read over his history, the Philly meltdown in '84 looked very good at all, and after that it was more the downfall of the 76ers, trying to focus more around Barkley, than Malone, who got traded. He wasn't a franchise player with the Bullets, and not anywhere close with the Hawks, considering 'Nique in the midst of his prime was playing there.
Garnett for 11 seasons.
And yes Garnett is still having an impact, but it is once again being overrated. Averaging 15 / 8 over the past 3 season and averaging 65 games played is not franchise level impact.
Umm, averaging 15/8 has really nothing to do with it. Statistically speaking, defensively the Celtics have a critical drop when Garnett isn't on the floor. And in terms of +/- he blows everyone out of the water on defense, still at the age of 34, his abilities as a defender have been strictly very impactful.
Results are what happened on the floor. The Wolves were simply never a great defensive team. +/- stats are horribly flawed and I take them with a grain of salt. Results, aka, what the team produced matter much more to me. Garnett has gotten results with the Celtics, but it has come at a price. His offense. It is always much easier to make an impact on defense when you don't have to focus on offense (hell just look at Kobe in Beijing in '08, he was the best defensive player on that team and a big reason why was because he didn't have to focus on offense at all (not a perfect example, but you see what I am saying))
Not in '08, he had it rolling from all angles. He's still a solid passer, and I think it's more of a matter of just watching him on the floor, the defensive is clearly more stagnant, look at the differences in the playoff runs between '09 and '10. With him on the floor they clearly looked a more scarier, and took down some pretty good teams in the eastern conference, led by three of the top five players in the league.
As for who was the best on the '08 team. Yes Garnett was the best player, but it is much closer than you are giving credit for. Pierce was scoring more points on higher efficiency and was getting more assists. Garnett was clearly the defensive anchor. Then in the playoffs Garnett was the best player through the first 3 series and then Pierce was the best in the Finals. It was close, much more so than most would like to admit.
Regular season:
Garnett: 19/9/3 59% TS
Pierce: 20/5/5 60% TS
Post season:
Garnett: 20/11/3 54% TS
Pierce: 20/5/5 57%
Yeah, but then let's look more in depth, since you love to use accolades:
MVP RANK
Pierce: 14th
Garnett: 3rd
All-NBA Teams
Garnett: All-NBA First/Defense
Pierce: All-NBA Third
PER KG: 25.3
PER Pierce: 19.6
While also consider that in the finals, the Lakers had literally no depth guarding Pierce, using Walton to Vlad, which worked out horribly. Garnett was faced by Gasol who limited Martin to 44%, Boozer for 38%, and Duncan to 42% throughout his fantastic playoff stretch, without Bynum.
Compare that to Moses title run.
Regular season:
Moses: 25/15/1 (he really was a bad passer) 58% TS
Erving: 21/7/4 57%
Post season:
Moses: 26/16/1.5 59% TS
Erving: 18/8/3.4 55% TS
Moses was absolutely dominate in his title run (his team also had a record of 12-1). Garnett not so much, and yes I agree he was the best player on his team. But it was certainly close, MUCH closer than you are giving credit for.
How so? You do know that Moses Malone was coming onto a team where Erving was a top 5-6 player in the league correct? Removed two seasons prior to his MVP season, while also again lets go to the accolades too.
MVP RANK
Moses: 1st
Erving: 5th
All-NBA Teams:
Moses: All-NBA First
Erving: All-NBA First
It's actually the other way around, considering Pierce never in his career has had the same kind of impact, level of play, or superstardom of Erving.