Doctor MJ wrote:bastillon wrote: was TRULY a 2-way big. the debate Brand vs Sheed is about preferences. Brand put up bigger numbers on poor teams
Sheed was a guy who never scored 20 PPG and shot inefficiently, and as his career went on spent more and more time dinking around the outside. (Seriously, a big man shooting 5 3's per game who can't hit 80% of his free throws? Dirk doesn't even take that many). You've got some nerve to say that that qualifies him as a 2-way player, but Brand wasn't good enough on defense to qualify, and that's before we even get into Sheed being a total headcase that made cease to function at all unless there were sounder personalities in the locker room to keep him in line.
you can say all you want about Sheed's inefficiency but empirically his teams were considerably better with him on the floor. in his prime he was a 17-18 ppg big man with outside shot that drew defenders out of the lane. that's extremely valuable for spacing purposes. inefficiency is overblown here anyway. Sheed's ORtg was around 110 usually, because of extremely low turnover rates.
as for Brand, his early years were really ugly it had little to do with his supporting cast. playing alongside young Artest or Chandler that team couldn't have been that bad... and they improved after Brand was gone. went from -9 SRS to -8.5. minor improvement but still shows you that Brand didn't mean that much to this team. on the other hand Clippers improved by 2 SRS when they added Brand...to mediocrity.
meanwhile Sheed's aforementioned skyrocketing of 04 Pistons has to be put here in contrast. Portland meanwhile regressed by 3.6 SRS with Sheed playing half season with obvious trade talks around the league (went from 13th drtg to 22nd). then they went down to -3.5 SRS without Sheed for the whole year.
ElGee wrote:bastillon wrote:best posts ever.
I'm interested in Rasheed Wallace 2004 considering he was traded midseason. I know Detroit was amazing after that trade.
Well of course, it's one of the all-time sum-is-greater-than-the-parts examples. Basketball is a game of interaction, not linear addition. Adding Sheed shored up that defense to a level basically unheard of (capable with the rules then) and Detroit's DRtg was somewhere in the 80s the rest of the way (I calculated it recently but don't have the exact number). They gave up 77.3 points in Sheed's 22 games, and 79.0 if we count the PS. Detroit was +12.6 with Wallace down the stretch, and +9.4 if we include the PS (up from +3.4 MOV without him).
His simple number is +11.35 for just the RS, and a more down-to-earth +7.44 if we include the PS. (It should be noted of course that Detroit basically traded no one for Sheed and that he was replacing Memo Okur mostly -- Pistons were +4.5 in Memo's starts and gave up 85.5 ppg. Back in Portland, the Blazers were actually 1.8 points better without Wallace.)
Sheed made BIG impact on his teams. worse boxscore stats but I'm going with the defense he brings.