Peaks Project #20

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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#21 » by 70sFan » Wed Oct 7, 2015 8:06 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
70sFan wrote:1st ballot - Moses Malon 1983
2nd ballot - Patrick Ewing 1990
3rd ballot - Charles Barkley/Kevin Durant


I'm undecided with my 3rd choice. Can anybody do a nice analysis of their offensive prodiction? I'm slightly biased to take Barkley, on the other hand Durant had amazing year in 2014...



Which year of Barkley are you going with for his peak?
Because as I'd gone into a bit a couple threads back, I think there's a large difference (from a pure-scoring standpoint) between '90 and '93.

I'm not sure. 1993 Barkley impress me more as a passer and overall offensive player, but younger one is more efficient and better defensively. I didn't watch Barkley as much as others, so I need more opinions and my own studies about his game
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#22 » by trex_8063 » Wed Oct 7, 2015 8:17 pm

70sFan wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:
70sFan wrote:1st ballot - Moses Malon 1983
2nd ballot - Patrick Ewing 1990
3rd ballot - Charles Barkley/Kevin Durant


I'm undecided with my 3rd choice. Can anybody do a nice analysis of their offensive prodiction? I'm slightly biased to take Barkley, on the other hand Durant had amazing year in 2014...



Which year of Barkley are you going with for his peak?
Because as I'd gone into a bit a couple threads back, I think there's a large difference (from a pure-scoring standpoint) between '90 and '93.

I'm not sure. 1993 Barkley impress me more as a passer and overall offensive player, but younger one is more efficient and better defensively. I didn't watch Barkley as much as others, so I need more opinions and my own studies about his game



Well, here's what I'd written about '90 vs. '93 in the #16 thread:

"I tend to think of Barkley's peak as '90, as opposed to '93 (or ‘91, which I think is very close, too). '90 was more the culmination of skills and physical peak to me. No doubt his playmaking was a bit improved in '93; and Spaceman mentioned his improved proficiency from the mid-range (and greater willingness to use it) by '93, and stated this as a good thing. But tbh, I'm not sure it is a good thing for Barkley.

Because the thing is: he never really reached a point where he was a legitimately "good" mid-range shooter; fair or "not bad", but not actually good (at least not at all compared to the upshot that was present when he attacked the rim). And him taking nearly 3 attempts/game from trey at 30.5% isn't what I would call a good thing either.
Few things I note in relation to this greater willingness to shoot from mid-range or long range in ‘93: he had the lowest FG% since his rookie season, the lowest eFG% of his career to that point, the lowest FTr of his entire career (both before and after ‘93; by far lower than any year prior to ‘93), and the lowest TS% of his career to that point. Basically, many of the things that led to him being at or near the top of the league in 2Pt%, eFG%, and TS% (year-after-year) vanished in '93 as result of this greater tendency to shoot far from the basket.

Perhaps it could be argued the silver lining was that this opened the floor up a little to help the team offense or some such. Pro-'93 crowd would likely wish to point out that they were the #1 offense that year (+5.3 rORTG); however, this team was +3.9 rORTG (5th in league) the year before Barkley arrived (though he wasn’t the only roster change). But point still stands: this was a talented offensive team even without Barkley.

I'm frankly more impressed with the +5.4 rORTG (2nd in league) he anchored in '90 with a supporting cast of Hersey Hawkins, Johnny Dawkins, Mike Gminski, Rick Mahorn, Ron Anderson, and Derek Smith, than I am with a +5.3 rORTG with a supporting cast of Kevin Johnson, Dan Majerle, Tom Chambers, Cedric Ceballos, Danny Ainge, Mark West, Richard Dumas, and Oliver Miller. And his individual numbers probably marginally more impressive in '90, too.

Take for instance him shooting >63% from 2pt range in THREE separate seasons ('90 was one of them); on his kind of volume, that’s insane. Seriously, who, outside of low-volume guys like Tyson Chandler or Chris Andersen ever shoots >63% from inside the arc? Even ‘67 Wilt doesn’t quite match…...you don’t even have to adjust for pace, merely adjust for minutes: if you do a search for all seasons in NBA history of >13 FGA/36 minutes, >63% 2Pt%, and >27 mpg you come up with precisely two seasons…..and BOTH of them are Barkley (‘89 and ‘90).
Honestly, in that circa-’90 era of his career he has a case as the surest two points or two FT attempts in NBA history.

So I tend to think of that time period as his offensive peak (and offense is really what you're talking about with Charles Barkley). "




And Dipper followed it up with this:
Dipper 13 wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:Honestly, in that circa-’90 era of his career he has a case as the surest two points or two FT attempts in NBA history.



Yes indeed. In the original 100 game sample of Barkley he was shooting 81.0% at the rim on 8.2 FGA. But I did not do the Synergy chart for the last 16 games. In the original 84 game sample (includes Synergy chart and Shot Chart), he was shooting 81.0% at the rim on 7.9 FGA per game. If we subtract all transition plays, the total is 467/574 for 81.3%. Even looking at half court plays only, Barkley's effectiveness is virtually unchanged at the rim.

But getting into the synergy plays, he was actually more efficient in multiple half court plays than he was on the fastbreak, which is saying something given how terrific he was in transition (1.6 PPP, 78.7% FG).

PPP is Points Per Play.


Post Up - 1.64 PPP, 76.5% FG, 3.5 FGA

Off. Rebound - 1.65 PPP, 78.2% FG, 2.1 FGA

Cut To Basket - 2.14 PPP, 100% FG, 0.9 FGA


As can be seen above, he was completely indefensible in the post, on the offensive glass, or cutting to the basket (100% FG). While he was definitely stoppable in isolation that was primarily due to him settling for the outside shot as you mentioned or if the defense could quickly close off the front of the rim and force an off balance leaning shot. Barkley was very efficient going to the basket no matter what, though he was most comfortable in the post.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6HkjByWLFU&t=1h17m3s


How do you defend this for instance, he spins out of playoff double teams so easily like a practice drill.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmjUpA3UVlA&t=3m6s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsTKc_AKSlU&t=8m5s
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#23 » by Witzig-Okashi » Wed Oct 7, 2015 8:35 pm

Chuck Texas wrote:
Witzig-Okashi wrote:
thizznation wrote:
I was trying to say if you went through and found 20 of Kobe Bryant's worst games from 2008, and then calculated new per-game averages based on the totals with the 20 bad games subtracted. He would have inflated stats. It's more difficult to sustain very high level production over a larger sample size than it is a smaller one. Playing half of a great season and then getting injured for the second half protects your per game averages. If you are already playing at your peak, trying to push that peak for 80 games is more difficult than doing it for 60. To average 30 ppg West would have to do it 60 games. Bryant would have to do it 80. Therefor it was more difficult for Kobe to sustain his per game averages because he actually had to do it 25% more often. I admit this is opinionated but that is how I see the issue.
'

I haven't been able to partake in the discussions here, but I do agree with the sentiments here. 20 games in a gap of numbers played is nothing to look over frivolously. Kind of reminds me of the high SPG Hughes obtained in 2005 when he was named to the All-Defensive team (and later received that huge contract from Cleveland during the next offseason), and he missed around 20, 21 games himself. It's highly unlikely he would have sustained those averages for an entire season. There are exceptions (Camby's high BPG in 2007 was atypical), but instances like that seem to be the exception rather than the rule.



I guess I wasn't clear enough.

missing 20 games is significant (in terms of this discussion anyway--don't want to go down the ElGee championship odds tangent). I think missing 1/4 of a season is a big deal especially when talking about players of this high caliber.

But cherry picking Kobe's worst 20 games doesn't seem like the best way of adjusting for the games West missed. A more accurate way would be to simply remove Kobe's last 21 games and then you have the same sample size without skewing the results.


Oh, I understood what you were saying. I didn't mean to come of as if I didn't. I agree with what you said, too...Taking off the 20 worst games would be a bad form of assessment, and I don't think I was necessarily advocating that in my post, or at least that wasn't my intent...
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#24 » by urnoggin » Wed Oct 7, 2015 10:57 pm

1st ballot: 2008 Kobe Bryant
2nd ballot: 2008 Chris Paul
3rd ballot: 2014 Kevin Durant


Voting for Durant at 3rd because he had an all-time great scoring season which included that ridiculous ~40 ish games straight of 25+ points. Numbers dropped off a bit in the playoffs although they were still competent, just not at the level that he had been producing at in the RS. Plus defender, good rebounder and playmaker for his position which is a testament to how his all-around game improved compared to previous seasons.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#25 » by eminence » Wed Oct 7, 2015 11:19 pm

Copying most of this from the last thread:

1st Ballot: Chris Paul 07-08: Why '08 over '15? I think the defensive gap between the two seasons is a bit overstated, Paul was still a 2nd team all defense player that year and one of the most disruptive PGs in the league, was great at turning other teams over. Offensively I think he was more explosive and that led to more direct results. Played excellently in the playoffs (led the league in PER, WS/48, and BPM). Was a bit more capable of carrying the scoring load in his younger years as a direct result of his superior athleticism.

2nd Ballot: Kobe Bryant 07-08: Moved Kobe in here over KD, not sure whether to go with '08 or '09 as his peak either. Step below KD as a scorer, but bit better play maker in my eyes. On average their defense was close, but felt like Kobe had that next level he could kick it up to (maybe letting the legend talk there).

3rd Ballot: Kevin Durant 13-14: Someone (forgot who) showed some defensive things on KD that caused me to bump him up a bit. I don't believe he's quite as good as those numbers indicated, but there is something to them as well. Playoff "struggles" drop him a bit too. One of the best scoring seasons of all time, combined with great gravity on offense. His individual play making leaves something to be desired when I compare him to other wings who've gotten in so far though (eg Wade).

HM: Ewing, Moses, McGrady in some order
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#26 » by trex_8063 » Thu Oct 8, 2015 12:54 am

1st ballot: Kevin Durant '14
Info recently posted by MyUniBroDavis suggestive that Durant is a better defender than I've given him credit for. He's also very good to elite as both a rebounder and playmaker for a SF. And then GOAT-level pure scorer: 41.8 pts/100 possessions @ 63.5% TS :o . fwiw, I'd also constructed formula founded on Moonbeam's Score+ rating (I called mine "Modified Score+").......'14 Durant is the 2nd-highest MS+ rating on record (just barely behind '88 Barkley, and just barely ahead of '83 Dantley).
He couldn't quite maintain that in the playoffs, but still......35.9 pts/100 poss @ 57.0% TS while playing 42.9 mpg; that's still very elite level scoring, and---collectively with the rs numbers---has him in contention for greatest ever pure scoring season. And bear in mind the defense he was facing in the '14 playoffs:
1st round: -2.1 rDRTG (ranked 7th of 30; being guarded primarily by Tony Allen, who I think is arguably the greatest perimeter man-defender of this generation)
2nd round: -1.9 rDRTG (9th of 30)
3rd round: -4.3 rDRTG (3rd of 30; being guarded by Kawhi Leonard)

fwiw, where portability is concerned, although obviously it's very speculative, I suspect Durant's is reasonably high, as he's primarily an off-ball player (takes less of the table), and---at least in the modern setting---provides a ton of floor spacing, which is quite important. I mean, his defender literally has to be glued to him even 25-26 ft from the hoop, and is basically taken out of help defense entirely.


2nd ballot: Tracy McGrady '03
It feels a little weird voting TMac this high, but '03 was a heck of an outlier year for him. Hard to deny this season. Amazing box and advanced metrics during the rs, numbers that easily put him in contention here (near-historic rs PER, fwiw), as he lifted a pretty mediocre (poor, actually) cast to a top-10 offense (he had the 2nd-highest OPRAM---behind only Shaq---that year) and a playoff berth. Went for 31.7/6.7/4.7 on 56.1% TS (27.0 PER, .181 WS/48, +9.3 BPM) against a top-5 defense in the playoffs, while taking the #1 seed to 7 games.


3rd ballot: Chris Paul '15
Kinda went thru Paul a bit in post 15 of the #19 thread. Basically he's someone I don't put too far behind Nash as an offensive engine, and obviously better defensively (a clear net positive defensively by all available impact indicators, who also received All-D 1st team this year, fwiw). Am waffling a little wrt what year to call his peak ('08 is obviously phenomenal, too). I might consider putting him ahead of TMac for #2, also.

HM's: Charles Barkley is really the only HM still on the table who is giving me pause. Moses, Mailman, Kobe, Nash are all close behind, though.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#27 » by drza » Thu Oct 8, 2015 2:00 am

Vote:
1990 Patrick Ewing
2008 Kobe Bryant
2003 Tracy McGrady


With Ewing, if I'm convinced that he's near the peak of his defensive powers here, he should be reasonably in the +5 to +6 range on defense (using Doc MJ's normalized RAPM scale as a base; for reference Duncan (+6.78), Robinson post '97 (+6.78), Ben Wallace (+6.8) and Zo Mouning post 97 (~+7) all peaked on defense around +7 on that scale, so peak Ewing should at least be within shouting distance of that). Meanwhile, high-volume/efficiency scoring bigs that aren't big assist men (using Dwight Howard and Amare Stoudemire as estimate models) tended to peak around + 3 to +4. Thus, I think +8 to +9 is a reasonable estimate for peak Ewing on this scale. Peak Kobe was +8.1 for a couple of seasons in a row. McGrady is a bit harder to gauge because Englemann's RAPm from 2002 was incomplete and 2003 was referenced to 2003, but his raw net on/off and his old-school 2002-2004 APM were both very strong so he's probably in the same range as Kobe on that scale. As far as Kobe vs Kevin Durant...

Repost: Kevin Durant vs. Kobe Bryant

I've been seeing more votes for Durant lately, but I just don't think he's as good as some of the others still left on the board, starting with Kobe. I made a Durant '14 vs Kobe post back in April of 2014, before we knew that his playoffs that season were going to be less than impressive (relatively speaking). I emphasize that, because my arguments were that Durant after the regular season alone wasn't as good as peak Kobe. And after the postseason, if anything, that feeling got stronger.

No, Durant hasn't surpassed Kobe yet. The fact that such a consensus believes that he has, IMO, is a symptom of how over-reliant we have become on individual scoring efficiency as a measure of player performance. Individual scoring efficiency is important, and to be as absurdly efficient as Durant at such a high volume is more impressive still. But there are other aspects to the game, and I don't think they're given enough weight in many of the discussions on this board.

Part of the reason that individual scoring efficiency is so focused upon is that every "advanced" box score metric relies heavily on it. But since they have different names, people often site them as if they are giving different results. For example, Durant's advantages in TS%, PER, Offensive Rating and Win Shares all tie strongly to Durant's scoring efficiency advantage. Thus, citing each of them individually doesn't strengthen the case much IMO, since it's repetitive.

So if we stipulate that Durant is more efficient as a scorer, what does the rest of the comparison look like? I'd say that peak Kobe was still more gifted at initiating and running the team offense, that he could act as the lead guard and offensive focal point to a larger degree than Durant. I'd say that Kobe was the more gifted passer (when he chose to do so), and the better floor general. I'd also say that Kobe was the better 1-on-1 defender, and that his relative weaknesses as a team defender were less negatively impactful from the SG slot than Durant's lack of defensive impact from the 3/4 position on his team.

So, where does that leave us? If I believe that, as someone said earlier in the thread, essentially Durant is the more efficient volume scorer (by a solid margin) but that Kobe might be better at most everything else...how would that translate to who has the bigger impact?

Well, to date, the best measures that we have for impact are the +/- stats. You can't directly compare RAPM values from one season to another, but there are ways to try to normalize the data. The most basic approximation is just to look at the rank order within a given year, but DoctorMJ has come up with a better method that involves normalizing based on how far a player's RAPM value is from the mean (e.g. using standard deviation). DocMJ hasn't calculated for 2014, but I did using the GotBuckets 2014 RAPM list.

If I did it correctly, 2014 Durant's RAPM was 2.44 standard deviations fro mthe mean. This value would put him among the top-50 highest peak seasons measured in this way since 1997, and is a solid score for a first-team All NBA and MVP candidate type performance.

Kobe, on the other hand, had a RAPM value right around that level in 2007. But from 2008 - 2010, Kobe peaked higher with a three-year run right around 2.7 standard deviations from the mean. This time period is often cited now as Kobe's peak (obviously, his peak years could be debated). It includes his MVP and both of his Finals MVP years, and 2008 is the year that was chosen as Kobe's peak in the last RealGM Top 50 peaks project.

Conclusion: If I compare Durant and Kobe by skill sets and across-the-board abilities, I'd say that Durant is clearly the more efficient scorer but Kobe has advantages in other areas. If I try to quantify which had more impact, it appears that Kobe's is still slightly higher than what Durant has accomplished to date. So to this thread, I'd argue that no, Kevin Durant has not yet peaked as high as peak Kobe Bryant.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#28 » by Narigo » Thu Oct 8, 2015 3:04 am

1. 2014 Kevin Durant
Great volume scorer who great at driving to basket and shoot from anywhere on the floor. He improved his ballhanding and playmaking skills in 2013. With Westbrook missing some time in 2014, Durant can be effective playing the point forward role. He led the Thunder to a winning record without Westbrook who missed half the season.

2. 1997 Karl Malone
Going with 1997 Karl Malone over 1990 Charles Barkley and 2006 Kobe Bryant.
Karl Malone is one of the greatest off ball big man ever. Excellent roll man and hes really good at getting in position to score. Pretty good spot up shooter. I think he was utilized incorrectly in the playoffs which is why his playoff numbers are so low.

3. 1990 Charles Barkley

Unguardable in iso and post situations. Good Ball Handler, Passer and good in transition. I pick 1990 over 1993 because he was more athletic and efficient from the field. Shot 63% on 2 point shots in 1990.

Was considered to be as good as prime MJ and Magic Johnson in 1990. In fact, he had the most first place votes for MVP.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#29 » by giordunk » Thu Oct 8, 2015 3:20 am

Wow! Steph made it.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#30 » by RebelWithACause » Thu Oct 8, 2015 3:33 am

PG ballot:
1. Nash
2. Penny
3. Paul
4. Baron

Wing ballot:
1. Kobe
2. McGrady
3. Durant

Big men ballot:
1. Ewing
2. Barkley

That's my ballot going forward position wise.


My overall ballot going forward:

1. Kobe 2008
3. Nash 2005
3. McGrady 2003
4. Penny 1996
5. Durant 2014
6. Paul 2008 or 2015
7. Ewing 1990


Kobe is just the most well rounded and best performer of the remaining 3 top wings.
Higher resiliency than Durant.
Better offensive player, able to maximize strong and rather weak offenses to great heights.
Best defender in spurts among Durant and McGrady as well.

Nash at number 2, since he is one of my offensive GOATS and while his defense hurts him, at that position he has to come into play.
Higher offensive ceiling than Paul.

McGrady at 3, just because I think he was a tad better than Durant and Penny during his historical campaign.


Still don't have time as of now, which is really unfortunate, because I am really interested in the crop we are talking about now...
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Re: Peaks Project #2 

Post#31 » by MyUniBroDavis » Thu Oct 8, 2015 3:59 am

drza wrote:Vote:
1990 Patrick Ewing
2008 Kobe Bryant
2003 Tracy McGrady


With Ewing, if I'm convinced that he's near the peak of his defensive powers here, he should be reasonably in the +5 to +6 range on defense (using Doc MJ's normalized RAPM scale as a base; for reference Duncan (+6.78), Robinson post '97 (+6.78), Ben Wallace (+6.8) and Zo Mouning post 97 (~+7) all peaked on defense around +7 on that scale, so peak Ewing should at least be within shouting distance of that). Meanwhile, high-volume/efficiency scoring bigs that aren't big assist men (using Dwight Howard and Amare Stoudemire as estimate models) tended to peak around + 3 to +4. Thus, I think +8 to +9 is a reasonable estimate for peak Ewing on this scale. Peak Kobe was +8.1 for a couple of seasons in a row. McGrady is a bit harder to gauge because Englemann's RAPm from 2002 was incomplete and 2003 was referenced to 2003, but his raw net on/off and his old-school 2002-2004 APM were both very strong so he's probably in the same range as Kobe on that scale. As far as Kobe vs Kevin Durant...

Repost: Kevin Durant vs. Kobe Bryant

I've been seeing more votes for Durant lately, but I just don't think he's as good as some of the others still left on the board, starting with Kobe. I made a Durant '14 vs Kobe post back in April of 2014, before we knew that his playoffs that season were going to be less than impressive (relatively speaking). I emphasize that, because my arguments were that Durant after the regular season alone wasn't as good as peak Kobe. And after the postseason, if anything, that feeling got stronger.

No, Durant hasn't surpassed Kobe yet. The fact that such a consensus believes that he has, IMO, is a symptom of how over-reliant we have become on individual scoring efficiency as a measure of player performance. Individual scoring efficiency is important, and to be as absurdly efficient as Durant at such a high volume is more impressive still. But there are other aspects to the game, and I don't think they're given enough weight in many of the discussions on this board.

Part of the reason that individual scoring efficiency is so focused upon is that every "advanced" box score metric relies heavily on it. But since they have different names, people often site them as if they are giving different results. For example, Durant's advantages in TS%, PER, Offensive Rating and Win Shares all tie strongly to Durant's scoring efficiency advantage. Thus, citing each of them individually doesn't strengthen the case much IMO, since it's repetitive.

So if we stipulate that Durant is more efficient as a scorer, what does the rest of the comparison look like? I'd say that peak Kobe was still more gifted at initiating and running the team offense, that he could act as the lead guard and offensive focal point to a larger degree than Durant. I'd say that Kobe was the more gifted passer (when he chose to do so), and the better floor general. I'd also say that Kobe was the better 1-on-1 defender, and that his relative weaknesses as a team defender were less negatively impactful from the SG slot than Durant's lack of defensive impact from the 3/4 position on his team.

So, where does that leave us? If I believe that, as someone said earlier in the thread, essentially Durant is the more efficient volume scorer (by a solid margin) but that Kobe might be better at most everything else...how would that translate to who has the bigger impact?

Well, to date, the best measures that we have for impact are the +/- stats. You can't directly compare RAPM values from one season to another, but there are ways to try to normalize the data. The most basic approximation is just to look at the rank order within a given year, but DoctorMJ has come up with a better method that involves normalizing based on how far a player's RAPM value is from the mean (e.g. using standard deviation). DocMJ hasn't calculated for 2014, but I did using the GotBuckets 2014 RAPM list.

If I did it correctly, 2014 Durant's RAPM was 2.44 standard deviations fro mthe mean. This value would put him among the top-50 highest peak seasons measured in this way since 1997, and is a solid score for a first-team All NBA and MVP candidate type performance.

Kobe, on the other hand, had a RAPM value right around that level in 2007. But from 2008 - 2010, Kobe peaked higher with a three-year run right around 2.7 standard deviations from the mean. This time period is often cited now as Kobe's peak (obviously, his peak years could be debated). It includes his MVP and both of his Finals MVP years, and 2008 is the year that was chosen as Kobe's peak in the last RealGM Top 50 peaks project.

Conclusion: If I compare Durant and Kobe by skill sets and across-the-board abilities, I'd say that Durant is clearly the more efficient scorer but Kobe has advantages in other areas. If I try to quantify which had more impact, it appears that Kobe's is still slightly higher than what Durant has accomplished to date. So to this thread, I'd argue that no, Kevin Durant has not yet peaked as high as peak Kobe Bryant.



Im in class right now so I cant really type much.

I recall that Dr MJ said that


-
I think the most useful way to look at data like this is to look for the general standard a player could regularly reach, rather than trying to go by peaks, or by tallying totals.


Also, his rapm I hear is kind of skewed because of his earlier years.
Also, the rotations definately skew it a bit.
Ibaka had a +1.5 rating overall, and Nick collision (who is a underrated player) has a +7.7 overall
(ibaka was +0.6 on defense, plus being a bad thing obviously).

As an isolation defender, Durant definitely is better than Kobe. I posted stats earlier, but Durant gave up around 0.5ppp in the isolation. Kobe is an excellent isolation defender, but Durant pretty much was unplayable in that regard

Ill post what I posted before on his defense

I wouldnt really say that he had completely average defense.

He is exceptional as an isolation defender. ( I only have data up to 2/3rds into that season though)

He gave up 0.52 points per possession, good for 4th in the league, including the players who only face those possessions once or twice, meaning that he was probably the best isolation defender in the league at that point.

For comparison, He completely blows Davis, Allen, Iggy, etc out of the water.

And he is also better than people like Draymond and Paul.

He was great at defending the P and R ball handler. gave up 0.52ppp again. that ranks better than
Kawhi, Allen, Draymond, etc.

He was reasonably good at defending the post up. ranked better than Draymond and Davis (0.73 ppp)

was solid at defending the spot up as well.

the only play that he really faced regularly and had trouble defending was off-screen plays.

of the 7 "defendable" plays, he was very good at 2 of them, beyond exceptional at 2 others, and below average at 3 of them. However, the 3 plays that he wasnt good at defending, he was faced with less than 20% of the time.

so in 80% of the plays he "faced" he was solid to exceptional.

Im using a different website for these next stats, since the site I used for the stats above (other than Lebrons ppp stats) came up wierdly for some stats. the ppp for the top of the stats seemed correct though. had a strong correlation with this year, and the site I will use now.

In his seasons, lebron gave up

2010 overall = 0.840 PPP

2011 overall = 0.770 PPP

2012 overall = 0.820 PPP

2013 overall = 0.840 PPP

2014 overall = 0.870 PPP

in those seasons. (0.787 in his legendary 09 season)

in 2014, Durant gave up roughly 0.78ppp (probably rounded down since it was a biased post)

Obviously not the best way to show defense, but I wouldnt call Durant average on defense

He isnt a better defender than lebron obviously, but I feel this is enough to say he was above average.


Looking at just his net rating, it was around +9 on offense.

Consider that, in this rotation

Ibaka was +2.1 on offense, +0.6 on defense

Westbrook was +4.8 on offense, +2.9 on defense


I find westbrook overrated on defense, but I think most would agree he isnt exactly bad in that regard.
(that year at least)

Collision was +7.7 overall. he is a good player, just not that good.

his on-off numbers are skewed because of the rotation.


I think most would agree that Ibaka was an absolute beast defensively in 11-12 right?

his defensive on-off was -2.5.

thats good, but nothing special. but imo, he was special that year defensively. offensively, he wasnt exactly horrible, but his offense net was -3.7. I wouldnt suprised if it was negative, but thats too much.

The rotations skewed his stats. Im not sure of RAPM is measured, but when the rotations are so unbelievably, well, you know, then I believe that even RAPM (which I believe is just adjusting for lineups right?) will be skewed a bit.

as for being a focal point, when westbrook missed 20 something games in a row, Durant lead the thunder to having a 111.9 offensive rating, while maintaining about the same defensive rating.

While westbrook did pretty much the same thing, their defensive rating with wesbtrook was below league average.

With Westbrook and durant, it was 104.77 ish, which, while not top 10, is solid. without him, it was 105.86.

and consider with durant, they faced the warriors thrice, the pelicans twice, the clippers once, the mavs once, houstan once, atlanta once, etc.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#32 » by trex_8063 » Thu Oct 8, 2015 4:43 am

drza wrote:
Repost: Kevin Durant vs. Kobe Bryant

Spoiler:
I've been seeing more votes for Durant lately, but I just don't think he's as good as some of the others still left on the board, starting with Kobe. I made a Durant '14 vs Kobe post back in April of 2014, before we knew that his playoffs that season were going to be less than impressive (relatively speaking). I emphasize that, because my arguments were that Durant after the regular season alone wasn't as good as peak Kobe. And after the postseason, if anything, that feeling got stronger.

No, Durant hasn't surpassed Kobe yet. The fact that such a consensus believes that he has, IMO, is a symptom of how over-reliant we have become on individual scoring efficiency as a measure of player performance. Individual scoring efficiency is important, and to be as absurdly efficient as Durant at such a high volume is more impressive still. But there are other aspects to the game, and I don't think they're given enough weight in many of the discussions on this board.

Part of the reason that individual scoring efficiency is so focused upon is that every "advanced" box score metric relies heavily on it. But since they have different names, people often site them as if they are giving different results. For example, Durant's advantages in TS%, PER, Offensive Rating and Win Shares all tie strongly to Durant's scoring efficiency advantage. Thus, citing each of them individually doesn't strengthen the case much IMO, since it's repetitive.

So if we stipulate that Durant is more efficient as a scorer, what does the rest of the comparison look like? I'd say that peak Kobe was still more gifted at initiating and running the team offense, that he could act as the lead guard and offensive focal point to a larger degree than Durant. I'd say that Kobe was the more gifted passer (when he chose to do so), and the better floor general. I'd also say that Kobe was the better 1-on-1 defender, and that his relative weaknesses as a team defender were less negatively impactful from the SG slot than Durant's lack of defensive impact from the 3/4 position on his team.

So, where does that leave us? If I believe that, as someone said earlier in the thread, essentially Durant is the more efficient volume scorer (by a solid margin) but that Kobe might be better at most everything else...how would that translate to who has the bigger impact?

Well, to date, the best measures that we have for impact are the +/- stats. You can't directly compare RAPM values from one season to another, but there are ways to try to normalize the data. The most basic approximation is just to look at the rank order within a given year, but DoctorMJ has come up with a better method that involves normalizing based on how far a player's RAPM value is from the mean (e.g. using standard deviation). DocMJ hasn't calculated for 2014, but I did using the GotBuckets 2014 RAPM list.

If I did it correctly, 2014 Durant's RAPM was 2.44 standard deviations fro mthe mean. This value would put him among the top-50 highest peak seasons measured in this way since 1997, and is a solid score for a first-team All NBA and MVP candidate type performance.

Kobe, on the other hand, had a RAPM value right around that level in 2007. But from 2008 - 2010, Kobe peaked higher with a three-year run right around 2.7 standard deviations from the mean. This time period is often cited now as Kobe's peak (obviously, his peak years could be debated). It includes his MVP and both of his Finals MVP years, and 2008 is the year that was chosen as Kobe's peak in the last RealGM Top 50 peaks project.

Conclusion: If I compare Durant and Kobe by skill sets and across-the-board abilities, I'd say that Durant is clearly the more efficient scorer but Kobe has advantages in other areas. If I try to quantify which had more impact, it appears that Kobe's is still slightly higher than what Durant has accomplished to date. So to this thread, I'd argue that no, Kevin Durant has not yet peaked as high as peak Kobe Bryant.



As I'm sure you're aware, the majority of this is purely subjective (Kevin Durant hasn't peaked as high as Kobe because.....well, because you just don't think so; RAPM being the only tangible or objective thing to go on---more on that below), even if your subjective opinion has come after much consideration.

But I just want to remind everyone what the considered subjective opinion of various other pools were regarding '14 Durant. And take note that this is just one year after the slim consensus peak year of Lebron James (a player peak we voted #3), and it's not like he fell of a cliff in the next year. And yet it was Durant who won the MVP, and nobody around here really had much issue with it. We all more or less shrugged and said, "Whatever. For rs, yeah, he probably deserved it."
The playoffs rolled around and Lebron was more impressive there, which sort of shifted things back in his favor a bit overall for the year. Though not TOO much; take for instance the RPoY vote, in which Lebron had .960 shares, Durant .733, and no one else even remotely close to them. That's one of the closer #1/#2 finishes in recent years, fwiw.

Suppose '13, '09, and '12 (and '10?) never happened for Lebron; suppose '14 was his best season......what place do you think he'd have finished in this peaks project? I'm guessing he'd still be top 10 (perhaps even top 6 or 7??). And if Durant is deemed that close to him in '14 (unless you believe the collective opinion of both voting bodies to be grossly incorrect), it seems a stretch to say he doesn't even belong in the top 22.

And I disagree with the assertion that Kobe is better at "basically everything else" (outside of scoring). I don't believe he's a better rebounder, for example. Even when considered relative to positional norms/averages, I don't think it can be stated that he has any edge there.

And relative to positional norms/averages I don't know that he's definitively a better playmaker either. I mean, I believe he is.....when he wants to be. You couldn't resist inserting that touch of honesty, even within a post aimed at lauding his abilities. I mean, if someone is the greatest shooter the world has ever seen any time he shoots with his right hand, but he only chooses to shoot with his right hand once every three shots.....is he then necessarily the best shooter? Kobe's decision making (where shot selection----or even choosing to shoot at all---is concerned) is my biggest critique of him, btw.
fwiw....
*Durant had the marginally higher assist numbers (for per game, per 36 min, per 100 possessions)
**Though his Ast:TO ratio is marginally worse (1.56 vs. 1.72 for '08 Kobe), his AST%:TOV% ratio is marginally BETTER than '08 Kobe's.

So I'll give Kobe the edge in playmaking for others (mostly based on eye-test), but I don't think it's much of an edge, particularly in light of position played.

Defensively, I don't think there's a clear (or certainly not a clear sizable) edge for Kobe. A few days ago, off the cuff I'd have quickly labeled Kobe the better defender; though the isolation defense numbers that MyUniBroDavis had posted recently was---if trustworthy---fairly eye-opening. Durant is measured as a negative via PI DRAPM (-0.74), but then so is '08 Kobe (-0.39)....as well as '09 and '10 Kobe, too, fwiw. And though I cannot find a link, I want to say NPI RAPM listed Durant as a net positive defensively in '14.


The only area in which there is a clear LARGE gap is in scoring......and it's in Durant's favor.

As to his capabilities exerting a positive influence toward an elite offense.....
The '08 Lakers were a +5.5 rORTG team (ranked 3rd of 30).
Kobe had Lamar Odom, 35 games of a Andrew Bynum, a limited but good floor-spacing decent ball-control veteran PG in Fisher, some other floor spacers, a GOAT-level coach, and **Pau Gasol for the back third of the season. **And it needs to be noted that the Lakers were a +2.9 rORTG team prior to obtaining Gasol in the mid-season trade......then insane +9.9 rORTG after obtaining him.

In '14, Durant had Westbrook for 46 games (Reggie Jackson as starting PG otherwise), Serge Ibaka, then two offensive zeros in Sefolosha and Kendrick Perkins to round out the starting line-up (Perkins is downright offensive poison by this point in his career). Coach is Scott Brooks, and best help off the bench is Nick Collison and a now 6 years older version of Derek Fisher. They managed a +3.8 rORTG (6th of 30). And they were only slightly less than that in the games Westbrook missed, too, fwiw. Durant with Reggie Jackson, Serge, Sef, Perkins and that bench were managing basically the same caliber offense as Kobe with Odom, younger Fisher, few games of Bynum, and a bunch of shooters spreading the floor (with Phil coaching). I'll let you draw your own conclusions from this.

Where PI ORAPM is concerned, Durant's mark in '14 is higher than '08 Kobe ('09 is the only year of Kobe's career with a higher raw number). I don't know what that would come to in a scaled version, or in SD's from the mean, but I would guess very comparable.

Though I will once again caution about reading too much into impact stats in the first place, as impact does not = goodness. To simplify, it's more like "impact = goodness + fit + utilization".


Overall, I think there's more than enough grounds to hold the opinion that Durant peaked higher.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#33 » by theonlyclutch » Thu Oct 8, 2015 5:30 am

Given the deluge of wings already talked about in this thread (Kobe/Durant/McGrady) with mentions to guys like Penny, Harden should probably get some attention right now, absolutely elite playmaker off of ISOs/PnRs, had to work in an incredibly vanilla offense where he created damn near everything for the Rockets, very good on-offs and boxscore production that rivals the best from just about anyone..
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#34 » by Dr Spaceman » Thu Oct 8, 2015 11:41 am

1. Steve Nash 2007
2. Charles Barkley 1993
3. Kevin Durant 2014


It's time for Sir Charles to make a serious push. I really do think he's a better offensive player than Dhrant, enough to offset the defensive edge given he had a few peak wears where he actually gave a ****. I love playmaking from interior players as it has the effect of inverting the floor making the defense contort itself in unnatural ways. We might have to accept that Barkley is the GOAT at the rim after Shaq, and as a volume scorer his efficiency is so far above anything else we've seen its a joke. I don't see him leading an offensive dynasty necessarily the way Nash did but as a lead scorer you can't actually do better than Barkley for anyone still on the board.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#35 » by drza » Thu Oct 8, 2015 12:25 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
drza wrote:
Spoiler:
Repost: Kevin Durant vs. Kobe Bryant

[spoiler]I've been seeing more votes for Durant lately, but I just don't think he's as good as some of the others still left on the board, starting with Kobe. I made a Durant '14 vs Kobe post back in April of 2014, before we knew that his playoffs that season were going to be less than impressive (relatively speaking). I emphasize that, because my arguments were that Durant after the regular season alone wasn't as good as peak Kobe. And after the postseason, if anything, that feeling got stronger.

No, Durant hasn't surpassed Kobe yet. The fact that such a consensus believes that he has, IMO, is a symptom of how over-reliant we have become on individual scoring efficiency as a measure of player performance. Individual scoring efficiency is important, and to be as absurdly efficient as Durant at such a high volume is more impressive still. But there are other aspects to the game, and I don't think they're given enough weight in many of the discussions on this board.

Part of the reason that individual scoring efficiency is so focused upon is that every "advanced" box score metric relies heavily on it. But since they have different names, people often site them as if they are giving different results. For example, Durant's advantages in TS%, PER, Offensive Rating and Win Shares all tie strongly to Durant's scoring efficiency advantage. Thus, citing each of them individually doesn't strengthen the case much IMO, since it's repetitive.

So if we stipulate that Durant is more efficient as a scorer, what does the rest of the comparison look like? I'd say that peak Kobe was still more gifted at initiating and running the team offense, that he could act as the lead guard and offensive focal point to a larger degree than Durant. I'd say that Kobe was the more gifted passer (when he chose to do so), and the better floor general. I'd also say that Kobe was the better 1-on-1 defender, and that his relative weaknesses as a team defender were less negatively impactful from the SG slot than Durant's lack of defensive impact from the 3/4 position on his team.

So, where does that leave us? If I believe that, as someone said earlier in the thread, essentially Durant is the more efficient volume scorer (by a solid margin) but that Kobe might be better at most everything else...how would that translate to who has the bigger impact?

Well, to date, the best measures that we have for impact are the +/- stats. You can't directly compare RAPM values from one season to another, but there are ways to try to normalize the data. The most basic approximation is just to look at the rank order within a given year, but DoctorMJ has come up with a better method that involves normalizing based on how far a player's RAPM value is from the mean (e.g. using standard deviation). DocMJ hasn't calculated for 2014, but I did using the GotBuckets 2014 RAPM list.

If I did it correctly, 2014 Durant's RAPM was 2.44 standard deviations fro mthe mean. This value would put him among the top-50 highest peak seasons measured in this way since 1997, and is a solid score for a first-team All NBA and MVP candidate type performance.

Kobe, on the other hand, had a RAPM value right around that level in 2007. But from 2008 - 2010, Kobe peaked higher with a three-year run right around 2.7 standard deviations from the mean. This time period is often cited now as Kobe's peak (obviously, his peak years could be debated). It includes his MVP and both of his Finals MVP years, and 2008 is the year that was chosen as Kobe's peak in the last RealGM Top 50 peaks project.

Conclusion: If I compare Durant and Kobe by skill sets and across-the-board abilities, I'd say that Durant is clearly the more efficient scorer but Kobe has advantages in other areas. If I try to quantify which had more impact, it appears that Kobe's is still slightly higher than what Durant has accomplished to date. So to this thread, I'd argue that no, Kevin Durant has not yet peaked as high as peak Kobe Bryant.
[/Spoiler]



As I'm sure you're aware, the majority of this is purely subjective (Kevin Durant hasn't peaked as high as Kobe because.....well, because you just don't think so; RAPM being the only tangible or objective thing to go on---more on that below), even if your subjective opinion has come after much consideration.

But I just want to remind everyone what the considered subjective opinion of various other pools were regarding '14 Durant. And take note that this is just one year after the slim consensus peak year of Lebron James (a player peak we voted #3), and it's not like he fell of a cliff in the next year. And yet it was Durant who won the MVP, and nobody around here really had much issue with it. We all more or less shrugged and said, "Whatever. For rs, yeah, he probably deserved it."
The playoffs rolled around and Lebron was more impressive there, which sort of shifted things back in his favor a bit overall for the year. Though not TOO much; take for instance the RPoY vote, in which Lebron had .960 shares, Durant .733, and no one else even remotely close to them. That's one of the closer #1/#2 finishes in recent years, fwiw.

Suppose '13, '09, and '12 (and '10?) never happened for Lebron; suppose '14 was his best season......what place do you think he'd have finished in this peaks project? I'm guessing he'd still be top 10 (perhaps even top 6 or 7??). And if Durant is deemed that close to him in '14 (unless you believe the collective opinion of both voting bodies to be grossly incorrect), it seems a stretch to say he doesn't even belong in the top 22.

And I disagree with the assertion that Kobe is better at "basically everything else" (outside of scoring). I don't believe he's a better rebounder, for example. Even when considered relative to positional norms/averages, I don't think it can be stated that he has any edge there.

And relative to positional norms/averages I don't know that he's definitively a better playmaker either. I mean, I believe he is.....when he wants to be. You couldn't resist inserting that touch of honesty, even within a post aimed at lauding his abilities. I mean, if someone is the greatest shooter the world has ever seen any time he shoots with his right hand, but he only chooses to shoot with his right hand once every three shots.....is he then necessarily the best shooter? Kobe's decision making (where shot selection----or even choosing to shoot at all---is concerned) is my biggest critique of him, btw.
fwiw....
*Durant had the marginally higher assist numbers (for per game, per 36 min, per 100 possessions)
**Though his Ast:TO ratio is marginally worse (1.56 vs. 1.72 for '08 Kobe), his AST%:TOV% ratio is marginally BETTER than '08 Kobe's.

So I'll give Kobe the edge in playmaking for others (mostly based on eye-test), but I don't think it's much of an edge, particularly in light of position played.

Defensively, I don't think there's a clear (or certainly not a clear sizable) edge for Kobe. A few days ago, off the cuff I'd have quickly labeled Kobe the better defender; though the isolation defense numbers that MyUniBroDavis had posted recently was---if trustworthy---fairly eye-opening. Durant is measured as a negative via PI DRAPM (-0.74), but then so is '08 Kobe (-0.39)....as well as '09 and '10 Kobe, too, fwiw. And though I cannot find a link, I want to say NPI RAPM listed Durant as a net positive defensively in '14.


The only area in which there is a clear LARGE gap is in scoring......and it's in Durant's favor.

As to his capabilities exerting a positive influence toward an elite offense.....
The '08 Lakers were a +5.5 rORTG team (ranked 3rd of 30).
Kobe had Lamar Odom, 35 games of a Andrew Bynum, a limited but good floor-spacing decent ball-control veteran PG in Fisher, some other floor spacers, a GOAT-level coach, and **Pau Gasol for the back third of the season. **And it needs to be noted that the Lakers were a +2.9 rORTG team prior to obtaining Gasol in the mid-season trade......then insane +9.9 rORTG after obtaining him.

In '14, Durant had Westbrook for 46 games (Reggie Jackson as starting PG otherwise), Serge Ibaka, then two offensive zeros in Sefolosha and Kendrick Perkins to round out the starting line-up (Perkins is downright offensive poison by this point in his career). Coach is Scott Brooks, and best help off the bench is Nick Collison and a now 6 years older version of Derek Fisher. They managed a +3.8 rORTG (6th of 30). And they were only slightly less than that in the games Westbrook missed, too, fwiw. Durant with Reggie Jackson, Serge, Sef, Perkins and that bench were managing basically the same caliber offense as Kobe with Odom, younger Fisher, few games of Bynum, and a bunch of shooters spreading the floor (with Phil coaching). I'll let you draw your own conclusions from this.

Where PI ORAPM is concerned, Durant's mark in '14 is higher than '08 Kobe ('09 is the only year of Kobe's career with a higher raw number). I don't know what that would come to in a scaled version, or in SD's from the mean, but I would guess very comparable.

Though I will once again caution about reading too much into impact stats in the first place, as impact does not = goodness. To simplify, it's more like "impact = goodness + fit + utilization".


Overall, I think there's more than enough grounds to hold the opinion that Durant peaked higher.


Gotta leave for an experiment in next few, so won't be able to go in depth in response to either you or Unibro, despite both posts deserving it. I'll bullet-point a few things:

1) I'm not at all a Kobe fan. Like, in any way. I noted at some point you mentioned that I was touting his abilities, which I was, but there's such a strong emotional divide on Kobe for many that I wanted to be clear that I'm not touting from a fan POV, but just reporting what I believe I saw.

2) You noted that a lot of my post was subjective, and that was a very conscious decision. There's been a lot of push-back against the +/- stats in particular as being a crutch for people that weren't paying a lot of attention. So I've tried to be very conscious to use each individual stat as it was intended as much as possible, instead of leading with the quantitative.

3) You then went and did your own subjective version of a comparison between the two, featuring some numbers to back your opinion, which is cool. Unisbro did the same. I think that's a good thing. But my original point was that if we separated the comparison into groupings of skill sets, it would be difficult to make any type of determination on who was better. Durant's better at some things, Kobe's better at some things. My gut would have told me, of the years in question, that Kobe was a bit better. But I wouldn't have any way to quantify that based purely on individual categories of numbers. But the +/- stats, specifically, are meant to show how much a player's presence was correlated with moving his team's scoring margin. You make the point about impact being fit plus effectiveness, and I feel that, but to some extent ALL stats are based on fit and effectiveness. So I don't think that means that we ignore what the impact seems to be. And as I noted, Kobe's overall impact on scoring margin was as good as 2014 Durant's in several different seasons, and was solidly better in the 2008 - 2010 range. To me, that helps me tease out where the skill sets tell their story versus the actual impact translated to the court.

In a very brief nutshell, that's what's leading me to vote Kobe over Durant. I'm sure there's more to it, but I gotta go.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#36 » by Clyde Frazier » Thu Oct 8, 2015 4:11 pm

Ballot #1 - 90 Ewing

Spoiler:
Lending some support for Ewing here. Being at his peak athletically in 1990, Ewing was a workhorse on both ends of the floor. His combination of volume scoring on great efficiency and ability to anchor a defense should be worthy of this range. Led the 13th ranked SRS knicks to a 1st round upset of the 8th ranked SRS celtics in the first round. Would end up being eliminated by the eventual champion pistons, put still put up a valiant effort in the series, with 27.2 PPG. 9.6 RPG, 2.2 APG, .8 SPG, 2.2 BPG on 56% TS. Pistons also ranked 2nd in defense that season. If only Riley got his hands on Ewing a few years earlier...


Ballot #2 - 93 Barkley

Spoiler:
Totally see a case for 90 being his peak, but I like Barkley’s more refined game in PHX where he was still an excellent athlete (and in amazing shape), but was a little less reckless. Of course he had more talent around him, but I think that slightly toned down version helped them get as far as they did in the postseason. I’m not quite sure 90 barkley gets them there.

93 WCF game 7 against the sonics - 44 PTS / 22 REB / 1 AST / 1 STL / 1 BLK / 74.1% TS / 167 ORTG :o

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pP1MV2rSxIU[/youtube]


Ballot #3 - 03 McGrady

Have to say... looking at 03 McGrady vs. 09 Kobe vs. 2014 Durant comes off as close of a comparison as we've had in the project thus far. I see a good case for all 3, and I decided to go with the 09 Wade thinking here in picking McGrady. He carried a weak supporting cast on his back for an entire season, putting up very impressive individual #s in the process.

His 3 best teammates were arguably pat garrity, 34 yr old darrell armstrong, and mike miller for 49 games. His on/off that season was a pretty staggering +13. McGrady then nearly led the magic to a major upset of the 5th ranked SRS pistons, eventually going down in 7 games. I just like his overall package that he brought to the table slightly more than Kobe and Durant that season.

[EDIT - grant hill also appeared in 29 games, but didn't play in the playoffs, and miller was traded for drew gooden midway thru the season]
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#37 » by SideshowBob » Thu Oct 8, 2015 4:26 pm

Ballot

20. Barkley 90 +5.75 (+6.00 O/-0.25 D)

21. Paul 08 +5.75 (+5.50 O/+0.25 D)

22. Kobe 08 +5.75 (+5.50 O/+0.25 D)

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@RSCD3_: I'm working on the Kobe/Durant thing - I'm just going to discuss 08-10 Kobe and 12-14 Durant and might gives some thoughts on Harden as well, since he's being brought up.
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#38 » by trex_8063 » Thu Oct 8, 2015 4:39 pm

Thru post #37:

Kobe Bryant - 13
Patrick Ewing - 11
Kevin Durant - 10.5
Charles Barkley - 8.5
Chris Paul - 8
Tracy McGrady - 5
Steve Nash - 5
Moses Malone - 3
Karl Malone -2



Since the site was down for maintenance for awhile this morning, I'll leave the thread open just a little bit longer to see if we get more turnout.

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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#39 » by MyUniBroDavis » Thu Oct 8, 2015 5:20 pm

Only have 5 minutes before getting checked so I'll be brief
kevin Durant 14
Already made my points
Tmac 03
32-6.5-5.5, 38% from 3
Quotations already refuted the idea that he failed in the playoffs I believe.
nash 07
I talked about him before, don't have time to elaborate, but he isn't exactly going to win in this round anyway. Might change to Kobe or Berkeley,
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Re: Peaks Project #20 

Post#40 » by E-Balla » Thu Oct 8, 2015 6:58 pm

PGs:
1. 08 Chris Paul
2/3. 05 Nash/96 Penny (in order of who I'm leaning towards)
4/5. 99 Kidd/85 IT

Wings:
1 03 T-Mac
2. 06 Kobe Bryant
3. 14 Kevin Durant
4. 61 Elgin Baylor
5. 97 Grant Hill

Bigs:
1/2. 90 Pat/83 Moses (in order of who I'm leaning towards)
3. 90 Charles Barkley
4/5/6. 11 Dwight/98 Karl/00 Zo (again, in order)

My nominations will be:
1. 03 Tracy McGrady
2. 90 Patrick Ewing
3. 83 Moses Malone

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