HeartBreakKid wrote:70sFan wrote:Max123 wrote:Ben released a podcast on the greatest peaks series where he was asked to rank the 10 best offensive players from the series. Iirc Hakeem was left off the list while Garnett and Duncan shared 10. This basically confirms your suspicion that he must feel that Hakeem was the best defender in the series, by a relatively big margin too.
Edit:
The full list looked something like this with some players being closer to each other than others: (e.g. MJ and Curry; Lebron, Bird and Shaq)
10. Duncan/Garnett (coinflip)
9. Kareem
8. Durant
7. Kobe
6. Shaq
5. Bird
4. Lebron
3. Magic
2. Jordan
1. Curry
*The spaces reflect somewhat what could be called his tiers*
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I don't understand the gap between Shaq and Kareem on offense. I'm also confused by lack of Hakeem here - does it mean that Ben views Hakeem's defense as much superior to Garnett's? If so, I can't agree with him because of chosen years - 1995 Hakeem was clearly a step below peak Olajuwon on defense and even his 1994 season wasn't nearly as good as 1993 (and some earlier years).
We've talked about this a few times in the past few pages, and yes.
It doesn't make much sense to me then, Hakeem peaked defensively in 1989-93 period and he regressed significantly in 1995.
Even in 1994 he wasn't at his defensive peak anymore - KJ torched him on P&Rs during 1994 Suns WCSF, which wouldn't happen with younger Hakeem. He was visibly more athletic and had higher motor before 1994 and he simply wasn't great P&R defender in terms of positioning and reading guard decisions - Hakeem relied heavily on athleticism and quickness to guard two-man actions. That's why he was far better in 1993 when Rockets used different defensive strategy and Hakeem switched on guards instead of using show or drop coverages.
I remember trex talking about Hakeem (relatively) underwhelming P&R defense compared to other great centers. When I started trakcing Hakeem from 1992/93 season, I thought "What? He looks amazing against P&Rs..." but then I started watching 1993/94 games as well and Olajuwon didn't look that great there and then I got trex points. Hakeem was perfect center to switch onto perimeter defenders, but once he lost some of his quickness and overall motor, his P&R defense also declined. It doesn't mean that it was huge weakness, but the difference between younger Hakeem switching onto guards and shutting them down and older Hakeem playing conservative (and often mediocre) show coverages is pretty significant in my opinion.
Of course he was still amazing defender in these years, but if his defense is what drives his overall impact so much, then I don't agree with Ben's choices about his peak.