RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal)

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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#161 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Oct 30, 2020 7:25 pm

DQuinn1575 wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:Why shouldn't Bird be ranked this high? Was he better than the likes of West, Kobe and Dirk? I think it's not really a question whether it's peak or prime that I'd take Bird over any of them. Taking a worse player over him, simply because that player played for a bit longer feels pedantic to me.

I already touched this in my post - was Bird really better than West? If he was, was he consistent enough to say he was better player in their primes? If so, then is the gap big enough to overcome the fact that West had much more productive career despite not being any longer?


At the time Bird was considered the best player in the game.
West in his prime was considered 4th/5th best player, behind Russell, Wilt, Oscar, (and at times Baylor)


It's worth noting that that was at the beginning of West's prime. West finished 2nd in the MVP 3 times in a row in the '70s during which none of those other guys were getting the same level of MVP respect. Now you can say that that was "post-prime" for those guys, but of course that speaks to the sneaky aspect of West's longevity.

I'll also note that in '69-70, while West finished 2nd to Reed and I'm sure the voters felt good about voting for Reed leading the best team in the league, I think it's pretty hard to look back on that year and not say the Reed over West pick screams "Winning Bias!".

Sufficed to say, I think you really can make a good argument for West having a time where he is the best player in the world in a way you cannot with Oscar or Baylor.

Now, in the RPOY project while we voted West at #1 once, we voted Bird at #1 4 times so I'm not necessarily arguing against your main point here. But I'll note that I don't think the difference there was primarily about Bird being seen as a tier above West's prime so much as West having tougher competition - along with being held back both by rules and by dumb-even-for-its-time strategy which didn't stop him from giving us some of the most impressive in/out numbers in history.

As I say all of this, I've always still tended to side with Bird over West. I think he took the league by storm right from the get-go and that matters. But even though I expect to keep siding with Bird over West, I feel iffy about it. I can definitely see the case for West.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal) 

Post#162 » by Baski » Fri Oct 30, 2020 7:29 pm

Holy **** is KG gonna make the top 10 this year? What changed?
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#163 » by DQuinn1575 » Fri Oct 30, 2020 7:58 pm

limbo wrote:
DQuinn1575 wrote:
limbo wrote:I think Bird and Dirk are pretty comparable. .


I think Bird was a much better passer.


They are comparable in All-Time rankings, not necessarily in skill sets/styles.

Bird was a better passer, but i think Dirk had bigger and more consistent impact as a scorer.

The fact that Dirk was essentially a Big man that could shoot or drive from the perimeter with ease presented teams with one of the biggest matchup nightmares we've ever seen. This guy was just way too good in way too many scenarios, against way to many defenders. He compromised opposing teams rim protection by forcing an extra defender to cover him on the perimeter and then he blew by him or shook him for jumpers all day. If they put a small dude on Dirk, he just posted him. Bird was very good on offense, but he never presented these type of matchup puzzles and gravity to other defenses, which is why has more poor offensive series than Dirk in his career, despite playing with arguably more offensive talent.


All good points - I appreciate the well thought out response!
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal) 

Post#164 » by AWGXXX » Fri Oct 30, 2020 8:05 pm

He's getting close every round but one of problems is the people that vote other players usually don't have KG on their ballot at all
Baski wrote:Holy **** is KG gonna make the top 10 this year? What changed?


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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#165 » by DQuinn1575 » Fri Oct 30, 2020 8:12 pm

Owly wrote:
DQuinn1575 wrote:
70sFan wrote:I already touched this in my post - was Bird really better than West? If he was, was he consistent enough to say he was better player in their primes? If so, then is the gap big enough to overcome the fact that West had much more productive career despite not being any longer?


At the time Bird was considered the best player in the game.
West in his prime was considered 4th/5th best player, behind Russell, Wilt, Oscar, (and at times Baylor)

Once West was at his best, he certainly wasn't behind Baylor (both him emerging and Baylor declining).
You seem to be thinking the first half of the 60s where West's prime might be say 64-73.
And in seasons he plays something close to a full slate of games he comes second in the MVP ballot 4 times and third an additional time. So a touch mean to say he was considered 4th in his prime.

And pertinently even accepting the premise those above him are for the most part in. Baylor wasn't above him in prime. Only Robertson is a legitimate block (others will argue even this). Bird has MVPs. But against an arguably pre-prime and certainly pre-primacy, pre-high productivity Magic; then next in MVP shares for the span is age 36-38 Kareem; then King - a scorer only healthy 1 2/3 of the 3 seasons; next Dominique; post-prime Moses; Isiah ...


Thanks good post - yes I was thinking more of the mid 60s, as that is when he would normally be at his peak, the first of his seconds (seems silly to say) was at the end of a streak, where he was 2nd-5th. Then break to 1970, when Russell retired and Oscar slowed; I'm not sure if he got better - it seems like the other guys got old - he probably was second best player in basketball behind Kareem from 1970-1972, but 3 years later he is out of the league. So, he still wasn't the best player in the game - and you can talk about competition, but LeBron,Jordan, Jabbar, etc. all get the same argument - who did they beat out to be best player in the game? The correct answer. btw, is everyone who was playing.

I don't know if it was you or not, but whoever talked about West's defense was right - probably robbed in the all-time rankings because he doesn't get 6-8 all-defense awards he would have won.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#166 » by DQuinn1575 » Fri Oct 30, 2020 8:31 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
DQuinn1575 wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:
A good point, thank you.

Although to get closer to the year sets in question, the census data I'm looking at puts the "NBA age" group in 1984 at ~60.0 million [estimated] vs 58.8 million for 2000: a 2% drop. Fairly negligible, and easily off-set [and then some] by the other popularity factors mentioned. The growth in player pool is still there.....just not near as large as I'd previously suggested.


I get 310 total players in NBA of 1984 and 439 in 2000, From the 439 I deduct 14 players who were not born in US and did not attend college -as there were none in 1984 (and as a side note 65 in 2020) , and get 425 players. but additionally there were only 10 non US born players who had played in college in 1984 and 39 in 2020 - deduct 29 more to be fair to get to 396- so a 28% increase in the number of non foreign players, while the population went down 2% - So you added 86 players in this time period, with a real slight population decline. The increase in popularity didn't come up with 86 players. They are guys who didn't make the league in 1984. EDITED- some are guys who left school early, i can check on that later/but the increase there is not all of the 86.
So it was tougher to make the league in the mid 80s.


source - Basketball Reference


I'm not sure this is going about it in the right way to split it up and draw the main conclusion from that, especially in looking at only ONE aspect of the domestic player pool (population size), which we've established strictly from the 20-34 yr old demographic when there are, in fact, players from outside that age-range [and perhaps especially so in '00, when coming out of highschool was more likely/common].
And I also note the population of individuals age 35-44 was larger in 2000 than in 1984.
Certainly the 20-34 age-range is the BULK of NBA players, and the most relevant group, but I'm just saying it's not the ONLY group.

Further, there's the popularity aspect to factor in. This is harder to accurately quantify. One poster posted itt that highschool participation in basketball declined from 1978-90, though he did not cite a source.
If it's true, I'm honestly a little surprised it declined all the way to 1990, though if told it declined from 1978 to 1985 or so, I'd certainly believe that.

Bottom line: you're trying to say DEFINITIVELY that the domestic player pool declined in that time period, when it's not at all a sure thing.


And by how many millions did the effective international pool increase? I don't know exactly, though the participation by international players is actually MUCH larger than the 10 to 39 difference you cited (which I concur with, btw, having looked on bbref myself).
Because we're not actually looking for place of birth, are we? What we're trying to isolate is if they were a product of the "American basketball system" or not......

Of those 10 non-US born players in '84, only 2-3 of them were actually NOT products of the American basketball system/pool: Leo Rautins and Stewart Granger (raised and played highschool ball in Canada), and maybe can sort of halfway include Mychal Thompson (born in the Bahamas, but immigrated to U.S. "as a teenager"). Can't find anything more specific about EXACTLY when Thompson immigrated; "as a teenager" was all I could find. So he could, in fact, be more a product of the U.S. pool as well; he certainly isn't ENTIRELY of a foreign market.

ALL of the other non-U.S. born players actually grew up in the United States:
*Ernie Grunfeld--->born in Romania, but immigrated at age 8.
**Dominique Wilkins---->born in Paris because his father was stationed there at the time (U.S. Air Force); moved back to United States when very young.
**Wallace Bryant, Jr.--->born in Spain to at least one American parent (Wallace Bryant, not exactly Latin sounding), but grew up in Indiana.
****Rolando Blackman--->born in Panama, but moved to U.S. (Brooklyn, NY) at age 8.
*****Kiki Vandeweghe--->born in West Germany to American parents (his father was an U.S. Air Force physician [who grew up in California] stationed in Germany at the time; his mother was actually Miss America of 1952). Kiki grew up primary in the U.S.
******Swen Nater--->born in the Netherlands to Dutch parents, but came to the U.S. at age 9.
*******James Donaldson---->born in England, but grew up and went to highschool in California.

So as you can see there's not a one of these^^^ seven players who could actually be called a product of foreign player programs or markets.


Compare that to 2000.....
As you noted, there were 39 non-US born players. Of them, about 29.5 of them (using halves, as I did for Mychal Thompson, where it's unclear how much they could be said to be a product of foreign systems) are truly from foreign player markets/programs.
The only ones who are NOT are:
*Patrick Ewing--->born in Jamaica, but immigrated to US at age 12 (and apparently took up basketball AFTER that).
**Jason Miskiri--->born in Guyana, but moved to US at age 5.
***Michael Stewart--->born in France, but grew up in the US.
****Olden Polynice--->born in Haiti, but grew up in the US.
*****Shawn Bradley---->born in West Germany (father [US military] stationed there), but was raised in Utah.
******Felipe Lopez--->born in Dominican Republic, immigrated at age 14 [at that age, could almost partially count him as a true foreign prospect, but I'm categorizing him as "American" as to which basketball system he's a product of].

There are a handful of others I'm only counting as "HALF" of a foreign market/system, such as:
*Tim Duncan--->born and raised (and took up basketball [late, at like age 15] there too) in the U.S. Virgin Islands, BUT it's the U.S. Virgin Islands, so...
**Detlef Schrempf--->born in Germany, though grew up (and played basketball) in BOTH Germany and the U.S.
***Rick Fox---->born in Canada, though grew up mostly in the Bahamas and the U.S. (playing basketball both places)
****Wally Szczerbiak--->born in Spain and spent much of his childhood in Europe, though did go to highschool in the U.S.
*****Steve Kerr--->born in Lebanon, grew up and was schooled in a variety of places: Egypt, Lebanon, and the U.S.

But the MAJORITY of those 39 are actual legit foreign prospects, and products of foreign basketball programs.
In raw figures, the number of true foreign players in 2000 is ~12x that which was present in 1984.
In terms of *proportion of players in the league: about 0.8% of the league was truly foreign in 1984, while 6.7% was foreign in 2000 (8.4x larger).
*Although, fwiw, I'm not sure comparing the respective league size in terms of # of players is totally fair. # of TEAMS seems more fair, imo. # of teams increased by 26.1%, while number of players [who played at least 1 minute] increased by 41.6%, mostly because teams began stocking larger rosters [having more "injured reserved" extras], as well as utilizing things like temporary contracts to a larger degree.
But many of these "extras" weren't playing enough to influence the average quality in the league. Note, for example, that the # of guys who played <150 total minutes in '00 was 59 (13.43% of all players in the league [almost 1 of every 7 players]); the # in '84 was just 25 (8.06% of the league [barely 1 in 12]).


Looking at the # of "true" foreign players slightly differently [rather than proportion of total players], I'll note the avg number of "true" foreign players PER ROSTER....
'00 - 1.02 players
'84 - 0.11 players

So more than a 9-fold increase [about 9.4x, to be more precise] looking at it in ^^this way.


And it's not entirely a list of nobodies, either. That 2000 foreign pool includes guys like:
Steve Nash
Dirk Nowitzki
Dikembe Mutombo
Vlade Divac
Toni Kukoc
Rik Smits
Arvydas Sabonis
Peja Stojakovic
...as well as a number of role players who had decent/serviceable [sometimes lengthy] NBA careers.


What one has to ask himself is just how big of an effective player pool does this group of foreign players represent [relative to the 1984 group]? VERY difficult to quantify how big the change is......but we can rest assured it was NOT a small change.

I said in my post how many foreign guys there are, and for college guys, I counted 10 players in 1984 in my numbers as part of the pool, and then for 2000 I deducted the number above 10, rather than look at each one. Saying that around 10 top guys were foreign born but US college around then - you get Hakeem the next year - it's an approximate number. I count playing in college as US trained, but felt unfair not to count increase as increase in pool, as there were a lot more in 2000 than 1984, and I counted that number,
There aren't very many players over the age of 35, and I dont have exact census numbers. And of course in 2000 there were a few high school guys. There are more guys under 22 in 2000 than 1984. THe original point was that the total population grew 37% or whatever, but the point is the basketball aged population didnt change a real lot, and the talent pool isnt so much larger.

Nash and Smits played college ball in US, Mychal Thompson played senior year high school ball in Florida, team of Bahama guys came in to win Florida title. Later title stripped for recruiting. Rautins was top 50 high school prospect, his older brother George played ball in the states Szerbiak's dad was US, came to play college ball, Kerr as well. People like them are in talent pool in 84 and 00. I'm counted the excess above 10 as the growth in available talent. Obivoulsy Kukoc, Nowitzki, Sabonis - Mutombo obviously played for Georgetown, and is US trained, but there are more guys like that in 2000 than 1984, which is why I took the excess.
The number of people playing high school basketball declined starting in 1979 - the last year of the baby boom was 1960, Those kids graduated high school in 1978.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#167 » by Owly » Fri Oct 30, 2020 8:50 pm

DQuinn1575 wrote:
... Bird has MVPs. But against an arguably pre-prime and certainly pre-primacy, pre-high productivity Magic; then next in MVP shares for the span is age 36-38 Kareem; then King - a scorer only healthy 1 2/3 of the 3 seasons; next Dominique; post-prime Moses; Isiah ... ...
... and you can talk about competition, but LeBron,Jordan, Jabbar, etc. all get the same argument - who did they beat out to be best player in the game? The correct answer. btw, is everyone who was playing...

Hmmm

Yes they do all get the same argument. Otherwise the dominant Mikan would be in by now. King and Nique (otoh) were in 2nd place in '84 and '86. I don't care about accolades except where they are the least worst source of information but they're indirect and generally quite poor reflections of play versus other, better tools. But insofar as one wants to say "Bird was MVP" it is pertinent to note the competition. Now "everyone who is playing"/"he can only beat what's in front of him" works as a defense for some things, to some claims. But if people want to make something of an MVP (rather than more direct measurements of play) then who it's over has to matter.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#168 » by trex_8063 » Fri Oct 30, 2020 9:11 pm

Hal14 wrote:
This notion that "more people in the world = better NBA competition needs to stop" One thing does not necessarily mean the other.

Based on your logic, every single profession in existence.....there are more high quality people at each profession...simply because an increase in the population.

Based on your logic, let's just make a blanket statement and say that player quality in the MLB in the last 10 years is the highest it's ever been. After all, higher population, better player quality.

Based on your logic, let's just make a blanket statement and say that player quality in the NFL in the last 10 years is the highest it's ever been. After all, higher population, better player quality.

Based on your logic, let's just make a blanket statement and say that the movie industry in the last 10 years is the best it's ever been. After all, higher population, more of a pool of actors and directors to choose from, so the movies must be better, right?

Based on your logic, let's just make a blanket statement and say that the print media industry in the last 10 years is the best it's ever been. After all, higher population, means more potential news reporters, means better print media, right?

Based on your logic, let's just make a blanket statement and say that music industry in the last 10 years is the best it's ever been. After all, higher population, means more potential music artists, so it must be better today, right?

Based on your logic, let's just make a blanket statement and say that coaching in the NBA is the best it's ever been. After all, higher population, that must mean a greater pool of NBA head coaches to choose from, which must mean the coaching is better.

Based on your logic, let's just make a blanket statement and say that officiating in the NBA in the last 10 years is the highest it's ever been. After all, higher population, means greater pool of refs to choose from, so surely that means we're witnessing the best refs of all time right here.

Based on your logic, let's just make a blanket statement and say that the restaurant industry in the last 10 years is the best it's ever been. After all, higher population, means more people are cooking food and opening restaurants, so that must mean the food/restaurants are better than ever.

It doesn't work that way!


I've seen you make this exact post in the past, so I'm guessing you have it saved on a google doc or something. But I think it would be best to dust it into the trash bin, because no: we shall not be making any of these blanket statements. We won't because [with the possible exception of the MLB or NFL comps] they're all either overt strawmen and/or completely inappropriate comparisons (not even apples to oranges.....more like apples to giraffes), and kinda obviously so if you stopped to think about them.

I won't speak to the NFL or MLB because there are too many other factors I don't have any idea about:
*The degree to which international player pools have or have not improved and expanded
**The degree to which the NFL or MLB taps into those pools
***The proportional domestic popularity/participation in these sports, and how it has changed over time.
****The degree to which equipment and other extrinsic factors have altered player selection, development, etc.

^^^I don't have any real idea about these things as it pertains to football and baseball in America. I mean, I suspect the domestic popularity of baseball has certainly declined [proportionally] compared to the days when baseball was the "great American game", while I think the proportional popularity of American football has increased from what it was 50-70 years ago, and has at the very least held pretty steady in recent years.
But I don't really have the least idea about the other stuff.

Basketball and the NBA, which we discuss here, is the only realm of sport I'm comfortable claiming I have enough knowledge and understanding of to render an educated opinion.


Comparing an industry like the food service/restaurant industry [or that of doctors, lawyers, teachers, janitors, construction workers, plumbers, general contractors, secretarial staff, city power/sewer workers, etc etc] are all complete strawmen: the # of people NEEDED for each of these services, essential service/support, or infrastructure jobs basically grows proportionally with the population.
If the population increases by 30%, the number of people in each of these industries probably NEEDS to grow by ~25-35% to continue to provide adequate SUPPORT for that growing population. The average quality in these fields is probably neither better nor worse than before (except where EXTRINSIC factors have better enabled them to do their jobs better [e.g. better technology and applied knowledge in the medical field]).

Obviously this isn't at all the case with the NBA: a growing population does not REQUIRE a growth in the number of NBA teams/players (this is perhaps never more appropriately illustrated than in recent years, where the domestic population has grown by almost 12% in the last 16 years while the league has not grown AT ALL).

And again, domestic population change is just ONE of the factors which have been brought up relating to expansion of player pool.


Comparing to the music industry, film industry, printed media industry are all just kinda bizarrely inappropriate. How does one measure the quality of music? I'm mostly a fan of rock, and personally feel rock may have peaked somewhere circa-1970, though had a nice resurgence in some interest genres/bands in the early-mid 90s [maybe late 80s a bit too, actually]. But that's a purely subjective opinion.
What drives the music industry (and the film industry to a degree) is the spectrum of millions of subjective opinions, as well as things like shifting demographics [as far as who the target audience is] and how the product can be "delivered" to that target audience(s). These things play a HUGE role in what direction this creative industry goes in.

Same is basically true to the "film" industry, though in film (or "film-based media") some of the same basic premise as was commented on with infrastructure/essential services and support industries (expanding to fill the "need void") has occurred in film, too.
The shear volume of film-type media has bloated in recent decades, and particularly appears gargantuan compared to 80(ish) years ago. Things like straight to DVD/Blue ray/streaming [or even VHS] and rental services obviously were not available until pretty recently, and certainly weren't an option 80 years ago. Those things have EXPANDED the capacity by which the industry can deliver product to consumers [and thus expanded the industry itself].

TV wasn't even a thing 80 years ago; and even as recently as 35-40 years ago, we basically only had 4 channels.
Now there are LITERALLY thousands of TV channels catering to all manner of niche interests, as well as dozens of competing streaming services, some of whom are their own high-quality production companies [e.g. Netflix]. So the manner and AMOUNT of television now being produced is many MANY times more than what it was 40 years ago.

Sports broadcasts are SO much larger productions than what they were 30 years ago, too.
Hell, could even touch the online porn industry (not sure I really want to know just how many people that employs).

But all this added production has REQUIRED more people work in the "film industry" in some capacity. The added population is simply filling that void created by the requirement.
The average quality of these film industry employees would again come down to an "eye of the beholder" grade (because we're largely talking about art). It would be very hard to come by an objective [and quantifiable] assessment of its quality.

And who the primary beholder is has shifted greatly over time. Circa-1940 Hollywood's target audience was mostly women roughly age 21-45 [mostly housewives], +/- [occasionally] their husbands/dates.
In the early 2000's, Hollywood's target audience was boys age 13-15. One could see how such a shift would GREATLY change what type of film product is being produced.

This again is not at all how it works with the NBA (the "apples to giraffes").

If the NBA's target audience suddenly shifted to being 60-yr-old women, that won't change AT ALL what makes a good basketball player. It would still be the various ways in which he can produce on the court and otherwise help his team win games that ultimately determines how "good" he is (and is what we try [by a lot of different methods] to analyze and measure here).



Hal14 wrote:Just because more people are doing something does not mean they are doing it better. In the 2000s we saw the amount of AAU basketball teams explode. Did this mean the players were better? Nope. Instead of AAU being for a select few, the best of the best...the best playing against the best, and therefore raising the bar...you had 1 top team full of top talent from a particular city or region and that was it.

But in the 2000s it blew up, now every kid in the US who could put a pair of sneakers on was playing for an AAU team. This watered down the talent in a huge way. Instead of every AAU game being a battle against top notch talent, it became a situation where 90% of AAU games were a joke. Not only that, but the more AAU teams that were created, all of these teams needed games to play. Teams were playing 3 to 6 games every weekend...how many practices? 1 or 2 per week, if that. There was a huge increase in AAU teams but not an increase of qualified coaches to coach these teams. Players weren't getting better. It used to be that top players would spend their summers in the gym, working on their games, practicing, working on the fundamentals, doing skill work, hitting the weight room, playing a smaller number of games and when they did play games it was always against top notch competition. Hitting the weight room. In the 2000s? They spend their summers playing in games, way too many games, many of which are against mediocre competition with AAU programs and basketball facilities making a bunch of $ while some short fat 11 year old shoots it from half court.


I touched on the "AAU issue" in my prior post pertaining to player pool changes. The context of this discussion was SPECIFICALLY 1984 compared to 2000. I noted that this AAU issue [for whatever it's relevance is today] was in the very VERY early stages at THAT time. You yourself have just ^^^described how it exploded throughout the 2000s [i.e. largely BEFORE the specific time being discussed].

As to how relevant this AAU question should be ANYWAY is something I struggle with.
For instance, we'll often comment about modern players have the "benefit" of modern training, facilities, medical care, coaching, etc etc, and how we shouldn't grade them overly generous compared to older generations of players based on what are essentially unfair [extrinsic to the player himself] advantages they have over earlier generations.

Well, should not the same apply to a potential extrinsic hindrance, such as the AAU issue?



Hal14 wrote:You also bring up the popularity of basketball leading to global expansion as a reason for 2000s basketball being more competitive. This is also a myth. Let's look at the 2019-2020 season for example, since that's the last season that has occurred so by your logic with there would be more international players than ever and better competition than ever since the population keeps growing and we have another year of basketball gaining popularity overseas. Yet, the Lakers win the title with no foreign players. The Eastern conference champs Heat? They had 1 role player from Canada, whose contributions were highly inconsistent.


My goodness. You're actually citing TWO teams [out of 30] from a single year in time, and citing like it's some sort of "check-mate" argument?

How about I note the world champion '14 Spurs, who had MOST of their minutes (particularly their best minutes) going to foreign players. Check-mate?
Hardly; neither is fully investigative.
I already did my homework on the topic of foreign influence in 2000 compared to 1984, and posted it.

You obviously have not if you're actually calling Patrick Ewing and Nique products of foreign basketball programs.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#169 » by penbeast0 » Fri Oct 30, 2020 9:45 pm

Hal14 wrote:The Eastern conference champs Heat? They had 1 role player from Canada, whose contributions were highly inconsistent.


I keep seeing this and wondering about it. Are you referring to the Heat's second leading per game scorer in the playoffs, Goran Dragic, who was born in Slovenia and played in Europe before coming to the USA? I don't think of him as Canadian but I am not an expert on his pre-NBA career.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#170 » by Hal14 » Fri Oct 30, 2020 10:32 pm

penbeast0 wrote:
Hal14 wrote:The Eastern conference champs Heat? They had 1 role player from Canada, whose contributions were highly inconsistent.


I keep seeing this and wondering about it. Are you referring to the Heat's second leading per game scorer in the playoffs, Goran Dragic, who was born in Slovenia and played in Europe before coming to the USA? I don't think of him as Canadian but I am not an expert on his pre-NBA career.


I was referring to kelly olynyk. You caught a minor oversight on my part...even counting Dragic, there was still more high impact foreign players in 89-90 than there was in 2019-2020.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#171 » by 70sFan » Fri Oct 30, 2020 10:46 pm

DQuinn1575 wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:Why shouldn't Bird be ranked this high? Was he better than the likes of West, Kobe and Dirk? I think it's not really a question whether it's peak or prime that I'd take Bird over any of them. Taking a worse player over him, simply because that player played for a bit longer feels pedantic to me.

I already touched this in my post - was Bird really better than West? If he was, was he consistent enough to say he was better player in their primes? If so, then is the gap big enough to overcome the fact that West had much more productive career despite not being any longer?


At the time Bird was considered the best player in the game.
West in his prime was considered 4th/5th best player, behind Russell, Wilt, Oscar, (and at times Baylor)

West peaked in 1966-70 period, when he was much better than Baylor and likely better than Oscar. He wasn't better than Russell and Wilt, but both were already voted in. Bird didn't peak in a league with GOAT candidate and another top 6 player ever. Only Magic was on this level, but Magic took over in 1985, before that he wasn't on this level and even then, him having Kareem on his team hurt his MVP voting.

I'd take 1985 Magic over 1985 Bird and 1986 is basically a pick who you prefer.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal) 

Post#172 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Oct 30, 2020 10:55 pm

Baski wrote:Holy **** is KG gonna make the top 10 this year? What changed?


Not necessarily. Frankly it may be just that the Top 3 voting we're doing this time is allowing people to let their freak flag fly sooner without fear of irrelevance.

What we are seeing though are some new people climbing aboard. Some of them old people changing their minds, but also new people coming in. It's been heartening for me to see some new people who say "I haven't made up my mind but the KG people seem like they are making really strong arguments", because as someone who started out on the anti-KG side, that's why I switched. Not because I wanted to be with the "smart people" but because there just happen to be great arguments that we've all underrated KG due to things like winning bias.

But yeah, I still won't be surprised if KG is at the same spot as last time or even lower. We may hit a ceiling of people who are willing to vote for KG any time soon and he'll just be stuck getting 2nd place repeatedly.

Whatever happens, I'm glad the debates are happening.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#173 » by trex_8063 » Fri Oct 30, 2020 11:10 pm

DQuinn1575 wrote:. I count playing in college as US trained,


I disagree with this method. Thinking on myself: I picked up a basketball and started "practicing" at age 8. I started competing in organized 5-on-5 basketball and had my first actual coaching in grade 7 (age 12), and took to training with some degree of seriousness and dedication shortly thereafter, continuing to compete thru school, AAU, and summer league channels all the way thru highschool.

To me, those years are extremely formative. Plus, it's whatever kind of player that each individual had turned into during those years that ATTRACTED D1 college recruiters; whatever made them coveted prospects is what happened in that foreign system [and theoretically they're of age to skip college entirely and go pro].

Besides, if we say playing college in the U.S. makes them "US trained", that makes 1984 really simple: there were ZERO foreign players in the NBA in 1984, if going by that method.

There would still be more than a handful of foreign players in 2000: Dirk, Vlade, Peja, Kukoc, Sabonis, as well as a number who had been respectable role players (e.g. Rasho Nesterovic, Vitaly Potapenko, Gheorghe Muresan, Luc Longley), and a number of other lesser players.

How do we compare that to ZERO?
Any way it's cut, basically.....


EDIT: I also noted I was marginally mistaken on one player I'd labelled "fully foreign" in 1984: Stewart Granger; he actually played at least some [if not most] of his highschool ball in New York. Have downgraded him to the "half-foreign" designation I'd been using in that prior post (which does somewhat lengthen the difference between the two years, proportionally). Leo Rautins is the only player in 1984 who actually played all the way thru highschool in another country.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal) 

Post#174 » by limbo » Fri Oct 30, 2020 11:20 pm

Bird also didn't play in a league with one/two-man bands like the 60's and only needing one series victory against the 34-win Detroit Pistons or 37-win Baltimore Bullets to get a ticket to the Finals...

the 'West competed in a league with Russell, Wilt, Kareem, Oscar GOAT candidates' POV is way too misleading, and giving the illusion that West had to grind against some unbelievable teams in his era... Does the state of the rest of the league not matter?

West never faced prime Oscar in the Playoffs, and even if he had, it's not like the Cincinnati Royals were some dominant team outside of him. They met 1972, but Oscar was 33 and averaging 9 points per game... West also never faced Wilt in the Playoffs... The best player West faced in the Playoffs outside of Bill Russel was Bob Pettit on two decent Hawks team. After that is probably Nate Thurmond...

Teams in the 80's were just significantly deeper... No, Dominique Wilkins and Sidney Moncrief aren't GOAT candidates, but those mid 80's Hawks/Bucks were tougher competition than every team West faced in the Playoffs during the 60's outside of Boston, and even Russell's Celtics would have a good chance of losing against a team like the Bucks in the mid 80's... And then you can add the Sixers and Lakers on top of that.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal) 

Post#175 » by Owly » Fri Oct 30, 2020 11:44 pm

limbo wrote:Bird also didn't play in a league with one/two-man bands like the 60's and only needing one series victory against the 34-win Detroit Pistons or 37-win Baltimore Bullets to get a ticket to the Finals...

the 'West competed in a league with Russell, Wilt, Kareem, Oscar GOAT candidates' POV is way too misleading, and giving the illusion that West had to grind against some unbelievable teams in his era... Does the state of the rest of the league not matter?

West never faced prime Oscar in the Playoffs, and even if he had, it's not like the Cincinnati Royals were some dominant team outside of him. They met 1972, but Oscar was 33 and averaging 9 points per game... West also never faced Wilt in the Playoffs... The best player West faced in the Playoffs outside of Bill Russel was Bob Pettit on two decent Hawks team. After that is probably Nate Thurmond...

Teams in the 80's were just significantly deeper... No, Dominique Wilkins and Sidney Moncrief aren't GOAT candidates, but those mid 80's Hawks/Bucks were tougher competition than every team West faced in the Playoffs during the 60's outside of Boston, and even Russell's Celtics would have a good chance of losing against a team like the Bucks in the mid 80's... And then you can add the Sixers and Lakers on top of that.

I don't think people are arguing for West based on "Russell, Wilt ..." they were arguing against a case that Bird's MVP voting necessarily made him better, without accounting for competition.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal) 

Post#176 » by limbo » Fri Oct 30, 2020 11:55 pm

Owly wrote:I don't think people are arguing for West based on "Russell, Wilt ..." they were arguing against a case that Bird's MVP voting necessarily made him better, without accounting for competition.


My bad then. I thought that people tried to argue West > Bird based on competition (specifically using Russell, Wilt, maybe Kareem/Oscar to prop up West, as three of those are seen as GOAT candidates, and Oscar a Top 15 player... While Bird's era didn't have as many GOAT candidates for as many of their prime years)

Carry on.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal) 

Post#177 » by Doctor MJ » Sat Oct 31, 2020 12:31 am

limbo wrote:Bird also didn't play in a league with one/two-man bands like the 60's and only needing one series victory against the 34-win Detroit Pistons or 37-win Baltimore Bullets to get a ticket to the Finals...

the 'West competed in a league with Russell, Wilt, Kareem, Oscar GOAT candidates' POV is way too misleading, and giving the illusion that West had to grind against some unbelievable teams in his era... Does the state of the rest of the league not matter?

West never faced prime Oscar in the Playoffs, and even if he had, it's not like the Cincinnati Royals were some dominant team outside of him. They met 1972, but Oscar was 33 and averaging 9 points per game... West also never faced Wilt in the Playoffs... The best player West faced in the Playoffs outside of Bill Russel was Bob Pettit on two decent Hawks team. After that is probably Nate Thurmond...

Teams in the 80's were just significantly deeper... No, Dominique Wilkins and Sidney Moncrief aren't GOAT candidates, but those mid 80's Hawks/Bucks were tougher competition than every team West faced in the Playoffs during the 60's outside of Boston, and even Russell's Celtics would have a good chance of losing against a team like the Bucks in the mid 80's... And then you can add the Sixers and Lakers on top of that.


I don't disagree with your point about teams becoming deeper than in the '60s. I don't have a clear cut answer for when that happened, but I don't object to you saying it had already happened by the '80s.

I was just speaking to West's stature being something less than "was the best in the world" which is a bastard with many fathers.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#178 » by DQuinn1575 » Sat Oct 31, 2020 12:39 am

70sFan wrote:
I'd take 1985 Magic over 1985 Bird and 1986 is basically a pick who you prefer.


1985 and 1986 seasons

Win Shares/BPM/VORP
Bird 31.5/8.8/17.1
Magic 24.9/6.7/11.8

playoffs
Bird 6.9/7.9/4.0
Magic 6.0/7.3/3.0

pretty much Bird in any of the stuff Basketball Reference shows. So I'm not sure the case for 85 and 86 for Magic.
Now let's look at next 2 years:

Bird 30.2/9.1/16.7
Magic 26.8/7.5/13.3

playoffs
Bird 5.6/6.5/3.8
Magic 7.7/7.9/4.1

87 and 88 Magic was better in the playoffs, Bird in the regular season. I had them even.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 

Post#179 » by DQuinn1575 » Sat Oct 31, 2020 12:56 am

trex_8063 wrote:
DQuinn1575 wrote:. I count playing in college as US trained,


I disagree with this method. Thinking on myself: I picked up a basketball and started "practicing" at age 8. I started competing in organized 5-on-5 basketball and had my first actual coaching in grade 7 (age 12), and took to training with some degree of seriousness and dedication shortly thereafter, continuing to compete thru school, AAU, and summer league channels all the way thru highschool.

To me, those years are extremely formative. Plus, it's whatever kind of player that each individual had turned into during those years that ATTRACTED D1 college recruiters; whatever made them coveted prospects is what happened in that foreign system [and theoretically they're of age to skip college entirely and go pro].

Besides, if we say playing college in the U.S. makes them "US trained", that makes 1984 really simple: there were ZERO foreign players in the NBA in 1984, if going by that method.

There would still be more than a handful of foreign players in 2000: Dirk, Vlade, Peja, Kukoc, Sabonis, as well as a number who had been respectable role players (e.g. Rasho Nesterovic, Vitaly Potapenko, Gheorghe Muresan, Luc Longley), and a number of other lesser players.

How do we compare that to ZERO?
Any way it's cut, basically.....



The years are formative yes, my original point was to try to include the increase in foreigners playing as part of the increase in the talent pool between mid 80s and 2000. There are 39 listed in 2000, but there were 10 in 1985 - the absolute change is 29, maybe the right number is 35, too lazy to pick that nit. Point is there were 115 or something more players in 2000, with a very similar population of people of NBA age. So the foreign pool is say 35, and the early entry number (more college guys and a few high schoolers) is some number - just a guess 50 ??, so still 30 more players. The original point was the population of the US was up 35% plus with foreigners that the talent pool was much much bigger in 2000, and the expansion was more than handled by that. My point is that the 35% is overstated, and that the talent pool to teams ratio in 2000 is fairly similar to 1985. Now, I would guess that the answer is different for 2020. There are changes in talent pool/population - just dont think it is 1985-2000. Probably 2000-2020 is a step up, not sure whether the others are; I plan to look at things like that during this project.

Other point, I don't think there has been any foreign player without US high school experience to go to a US college who was NBA ready when he walked on campus. I might be missing somebody, but Duncan was 9.8/9.6 as frosh, Hakeem 8.3/6.2, Ewing played high school ball in Boston. Kind of irrelevant to the main point above.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #8 (Shaquille O'Neal) 

Post#180 » by 70sFan » Sat Oct 31, 2020 8:53 am

limbo wrote:Bird also didn't play in a league with one/two-man bands like the 60's and only needing one series victory against the 34-win Detroit Pistons or 37-win Baltimore Bullets to get a ticket to the Finals...

the 'West competed in a league with Russell, Wilt, Kareem, Oscar GOAT candidates' POV is way too misleading, and giving the illusion that West had to grind against some unbelievable teams in his era... Does the state of the rest of the league not matter?

West never faced prime Oscar in the Playoffs, and even if he had, it's not like the Cincinnati Royals were some dominant team outside of him. They met 1972, but Oscar was 33 and averaging 9 points per game... West also never faced Wilt in the Playoffs... The best player West faced in the Playoffs outside of Bill Russel was Bob Pettit on two decent Hawks team. After that is probably Nate Thurmond...

Teams in the 80's were just significantly deeper... No, Dominique Wilkins and Sidney Moncrief aren't GOAT candidates, but those mid 80's Hawks/Bucks were tougher competition than every team West faced in the Playoffs during the 60's outside of Boston, and even Russell's Celtics would have a good chance of losing against a team like the Bucks in the mid 80's... And then you can add the Sixers and Lakers on top of that.

So you keep comparing raw team records from twice smaller league, even though I said you dozens of times that it doesn't work that way...

What makes Nique Hawks more deep than Pettit Hawks? Pettit was better player than Wilkins, Hagan was arguably as good as Wilkins and they also had either Wilkens/Lovelette/Foust or Wilkens/Bridges/Beaty. Nique's best teammate was probably Rivers or Willis, both worse than Hagan and Wilkens. They also added Richie Guerin (top tier guard of his era) when Hagan got older.

Pistons didn't have much success but they weren't untalented either. They were deep team with players like Shue, Howell, Ohl, Scott and Dukes. I mean, Shue was quality guard until he got old and Howell was one of the best forwards of his era. Just because they were average team doesn't mean they didn't have talent. How much do you know about players I mentioned?

1965 Bullets upset Hawks, so it was a surprise that they went this far. Still, they had a lot of talent - Bellamy, Howell, Johnson, Ohl and Loughery is very solid roster. It's a team with third best center in the league and arguably the best forward in the league with Baylor's absence. They overachieved in playoffs and West beat them without Baylor.

Then there were Hudson/Caldwell/Bridges teams - some of the finest offensive teams in the league. Again, I don't see any reason to see them as inferior to 1980s Hawks. These teams were very deep and the only thing they lacked was true superstar - Hudson was around Wilkins level basically.

1972 and 1973 Bulls teams were also very good, very deep and well coached. I'd compare them to 1980s Bucks teams, although I like 1980s Bucks offense with Marques and Moncrief a bit more. They had comparable structure though and had comparable results.

You vastly underrate 1960s and the early 1970s talent if you believe that the league had only 2 good teams. Hawks were elite team in any era, so were 1970s Bulls. Warriors were more like a second round exit level teams, but they had this one 1967 season when they were legit title contenders (had they not faced GOAT team of course). Then you have some lower level teams - Pistons and Bucks, which were talented enough to call them playoffs teams, but not enough to count on them making deep runs.

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