trex_8063 wrote:Joao Saraiva wrote:For the guys saying Malone played bad on some losses... I'll give you that. He did.
But it's not always the case, we're not talking about a guy who always did that.
Just to cite a few examples of him playing reasonably well to good in [mostly] later rounds in [mostly] pressure series situations:
Game 3 '92 WCF (down 2-0, basically "must-win"): 39 pts @ 67.9% TS, 7 reb, 7 ast, 2 stl, 4 tov. Jazz won by 8.
Game 4 '92 WCF (down 2-1 in series): 33 pts @
71.2% TS, 12 reb, 3 ast, 4 tov. Jazz won by 9.
Game 5 '92 WCF (series tied): 38 pts @ 58.2% TS, 14 reb, 2 stl, 1 blk, 3 tov. It wasn't enough; Jazz lost by 6. That's three consecutive games of 33+ [at no worse than 58.2% TS] in a late-playoff setting.
Game 5 '95 WC1 (elimination game, against eventual champ Rockets): 35 pts @ 58.7% TS, 10 reb, 3 ast, 2 stl, 3 tov. He played reasonably well. It wasn't enough; Jazz lost by 4. Worth noting that in their game 3 win of this series, Malone had 32/19/5.
Game 3 '96 WCSF (series tied): 32 pts @ 59.1% TS, 11 reb, 6 ast, 1 stl, 1 blk,
0 tov.
Game 5 '96 WCF (elimination game, down 3-1 in series): It was noted that he had a stinker in their game 7 to lose this series. It's true. Might be worth noting that there wouldn't have been a game 6 or 7 if not for this game 5: 29 pts @ 52.3% TS, 15 reb, 2 ast, 2 stl, 1 tov, in a 3-pt overtime win.
Game 6 '96 WCF (elimination game): 32 pts @ 61.6% TS, 10 reb, 7 ast, 4 stl, 1 tov. Jazz blow the Sonics out by 35.
Game 5 '97 WCF (series tied): 29 pts @ 56.8% TS, 14 reb, 4 ast, 1 blk, 3 tov. (Barkley had 10/7/5, fwiw). Jazz won by 5 pts.
Game 3 '97 Finals (down 2-0 in series, basically a "must-win"): 37 pts @ 55.4% TS, 10 reb, 3 ast, 4 stl, 2 tov. Jazz won by 11.
Game 4 '97 Finals (down 2-1 in series; defensive grudge-match where neither team scored 80, and Michael Jordan had just 22 pts @ 40.7% TS with 4 reb, 4 ast and 3 tov): 23 pts @ 53.1% TS, 10 reb, 6 ast, 1 blk, 2 tov. Jazz won by 5.
Game 5 '98 Finals (facing elimination): 39 pts @ 65.8% TS, 9 reb, 5 ast, 1 stl, 1 blk, 1 tov. An astounding +21.2 BPM and +38 net rating, in a 2-pt victory to stave off elimination.
Game 6 '98 Finals (facing elimination): His crucial turnover has been pointed out in the last thread as a sort of fatal flaw/error. But players will make errors in any/every game, no matter how great or "clutch" they are. With that game, my contention was that if not for the blown shotclock calls earlier, that turnover wouldn't have mattered [and that's not fair]. BUT, even inclusive of that turnover, he had a good all-around game.
5 turnovers, yes; otherwise: 31 pts @ 65.0% TS, 11 reb, 7 ast, 1 stl, +15.5 BPM, +14 net rating. He played well. It wasn't enough. They lost by 1 pt under dubious circumstances.
His starting backcourt [the other two that make up their "big three"] combined for 27 pts @ 54.8% TS, 5 ast and 6 tov.
Ostertag was out, and the ENTIRE center rotation [in 42.8 minutes total playing time] COMBINED for 11 pts @ 50.6% TS,
4 reb, 2 stl, 0 ast, 0 blk, 2 tov, 6 personal fouls. (In Per 36 minutes figures, their centers were collectively averaging 9.3 pts @ -1.8% rTS, 3.4 reb, 0 ast, 1.7 stl, 0 blk, 1.7 tov, 5.0 pf per 36. That’s a severe handicap against a good team when one of the five guys out there at pretty much all times is that putrid a performer.)
Anyway....
I'm not going to deny he probably had more stinkers in the playoffs than good/great games, compared many other all-timers. Though even his "stinkers" are often like 23/9/4 statlines that "stink" because of something like 47% TS. And part of the reason he's got a lot of them to cite, is because they were ALWAYS in the playoffs, and OFTEN making deep(ish) runs, and he was NEVER absent [until his final season]. So there's a ridiculous amount of playoff sample to cherry-pick from (he's tied for 11th all-time in career playoff games).
Though the one other thing I wanted to comment on is a subsequent statement that Joao made, that Malone is a top-10 rs [all-time] performer/resume. He is. And that matters (to some of us, at least).
I've read people stating "all that matters is how they help you win a championship" or something to that effect. I don't agree. While I'll concede that is the ultimate goal, it would seem to diminish [or try to] anything that is done or "accomplished" outside of a legit contending run.
I, otoh, believe there is "glory" to be found in lesser competitive encounters......including in the rs. For me, player comparisons is comparing to ALL of one's professional peers; not just a handful of the better ones who get increased chance to gameplan against you.
Maybe that comes from having a very extended ATL (out to ~350), it makes me consider all levels of competition more, and not just the playoffs.
That's not to say I don't weight a playoff game heavier than a rs one; I do. But will I, for example, weight a 10-game playoff sample as more relevant than an 82-game rs sample? Absolutely not. Will I weight a 22-game playoff sample [part of a title run] as heavily as an 82-game rs sample? idk, close. Point being: how they perform against ALL of their professional peers (even the lesser ones) is relevant to me.
Malone's rs resume is rather easily top-10 all-time with longevity factored in. How far you want to dock him for a less stellar or robust playoff resume is up to you. But let's not denigrate his career more than is reasonable. The bullet-points of his career MORE THAN make him a relevant inclusion at this stage; let's not pretend it is otherwise.