penbeast0 wrote:trex_8063 wrote:penbeast0 wrote:Alternate: Adrian Dantley?
I'll try to post some details later, but does it not bother you that Dantley---for all of his scoring efficiency----did not seem to move the needle a great deal as far as team offensive performance?
I mean, Allen Iverson arguably has a greater record of elevating poor offensive casts up to mediocrity (occasionally a little better) than Dantley does. And that's quite a problem, imo, when volume scoring is really your entire forte.
Yes, very much so. If it didn't, he would have been up (or above) Charles Barkley for me because he was a better scorer than Chuckles and (arguably) better intangibles and passing though of course nowhere close to Sir Charles as a rebounder. As far as pure individual scoring, Dantley may be the GOAT or at least in the argument and unlike players I like better like Sidney Moncrief, he had excellent durability/longevity. As it is, I am looking at him after English so marginally top 50 seems about right? Hard decisions here.
Not sure I agree that he was a better passer (particularly relative to positional expectations) than Barkley, fwiw.
Yeah, idk.....Dantley's a hard one.
While it's true the Jazz ORtg abruptly improves by 3.1 upon his arrival (despite losing PF Truck Robinson/Spencer Haywood, who had split the season as the PF of '79), and they do have their worst offensive year during his tenure in the season he misses 27 games (and the 2nd-worst offense of his tenure in the season he missed 60 games [will try to compile some with/without data at some point]).......it's also true that they only had one season (out of seven with Dantley at the helm) above mediocrity on offense (Dantley's peak year of '84: they were a +1.4 rORTG), and had TWO seasons (in which Dantley was perfectly healthy) where their rORTG was
worse than -2.0.
How the Jazz ORtg is effected on his departure is difficult, as there are other confounding factors: they got Kelly Tripucka (and Kent Benson) in the trade, and one could note that Karl Malone and John Stockton are improving, too (though neither yet in their primes; Stockton still coming off the bench in ‘87)........the Jazz rORTG would only worsen by 1.2 with Dantley’s departure (and overall they
improved marginally--->+2 wins and +0.71 SRS change).
Certainly those details don’t
help his case as a strong offensive anchor.
And the fact that the Piston’s rORTG gets
worse by 0.9 upon Dantley’s arrival gives one pause.
It's hard [for me] to reconcile some of this, if we're considering him an offensive anchor worthy of fringe top 50 status (when he doesn't have any other hooks upon which to hang his hat).
By comparison (since you invoked the Barkley comp), Barkley seemingly induced a +4.2 change to Philly’s rORTG upon his arrival, and they suffered a -3.5 drop when he left. He NEVER allowed a below average offense during his time in Philly (even when he had a crap bench and Charles Shackleford/Manute Bol splitting time at the C position), and led TWO
elite offenses with frontcourt sidekicks Mike Gminski and Ron Anderson (+/- Rick Mahorn) and a backcourt of Hersey Hawkins and either Johnny Dawkins or old Maurice Cheeks.
Even steering clear of the Barkley comparison, let’s look at Dominique Wilkins…..
During his 9-year prime (‘86-’94, almost entirely in Atlanta), they only had ONE year of mediocre offense in that near decade: a -0.9 rORTG, not surprisingly in the year Nique missed 40 games due to injury.
EDIT: They were a +0.6 rORTG in the 42 games he played, -2.6 rORTG in the 40 games he missed.They were above average offensively every other year of Nique’s prime, including two fairly elite seasons (peaking at +4.9 rORTG, with a supporting cast of ancient Moses Malone, Kevin Willis, a rotating backcourt of Spud Webb, Doc Rivers, John Battle, and John Long; and Cliff Levingston, Jon Koncak, and Alexander Volkov as the primary frontcourt bench players). They had four
consecutive years with a rORTG of +3 or better (significantly better than ANY Dantley-anchored offense).
Didn’t intend this to turn into a pro-Wilkins post, but there are things that are often overlooked [if too zeroed in on shooting efficiency] when viewing some of these elite scoring wings. Things which contribute to offensive success.
Things like offensive rebounding (Wilkins > Dantley as an offensive rebounding SF) and turnover economy (Wilkins > Dantley in turnover economy, even in light of the difference in assists/playmaking…...Wilkins career rs Modified TOV% is 8.05, Dantley’s (minus ‘77) is 9.79).
There’s also the “ball-stopping” criticism of Dantley (I leave it to individuals to determine how valid that consideration is).
Anyway, at the end of the day, I can’t help thinking that Dantley’s remarkable shooting efficiency overstates [perhaps grossly] his overall capability as an offensive anchor.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire