iggymcfrack wrote:Owly wrote:iggymcfrack wrote:
I think when we’ve seen Nash in different systems and he’s SOOOOO much more impactful in one specific system that was tailored to him with an ahead of his time coach and a roster where he’s the only real playmaker than he was in other system, it makes sense to be a little skeptical. I think his poor defense and need to dominate the ball to show impact make it hard for him to scale up next to other elite talent. His actual value has to be somewhere between what he showed in Phoenix and what she showed in Dallas and LA.
Do you really think it’s just a super weird aging curve that made him elite from age 30-37 in Phoenix and not show any comparable impact before or after? We’ve seen Harden perform in a variety of roles and systems and be very effective. Nash probably has the biggest difference in performance I’ve seen for how a player did in one system vs. how he did in any other system, and he also has some of the biggest difference between his peak impact stats and his box stats. If there’s any player in NBA history where the context would make me question his peak impact stats, it’s Nash.
I don't have a dog in the fight, I was just wondering if there was a good reason for this ... I'm now even more doubtful.
Maybe I'm wrong in being persuaded that Nash was the core and the mind of that Phoenix system.
So my first instinct questions from this would be
Are you curving towards playoff success, deep runs as many seem to be? I'm not tracking every voters preferences, so maybe not. A lot of the early voting trended towards title-team players.
If yes, then how does this fit with penalizing a player for doing well in positive circumstances?
On the lines of reasoning offered thoughI think when we’ve seen Nash in different systems and he’s SOOOOO much more impactful in one specific system that was tailored to him with an ahead of his time coach and a roster where he’s the only real playmaker than he was in other system
How many systems are we counting here, just to understand the framing? A personal taste aside but I trend a little ... skeptical ... on CAPS to make a point in general. My understanding is the core of the "one specific system is ..." often argued as get the ball up quickly, let Nash make decisions. Arguably a positive that a player does well when trusted to make decisions. "Only real playmaker" seems a stretch with Johnson and then Diaw. On D'Antoni (beyond above regarding system) ... it was replicated with Gentry once they realized Shaq wasn't the route to go down. How high one wants to go on D'Antoni is up for grabs (and some of his doesn't have to be zero-sum ... trusting a smart player to do smart things is ... smart even if perhaps you may only be enabling by not impeding) ... but it may potential ring a little hollow from anyone using Harden and any of his box-side numbers under that coach.I think his poor defense and need to dominate the ball to show impact make it hard for him to scale up next to other elite talent.
My recollection of the older impact stuff suggested defensive weaknesses were somewhat overstated (and are baked into IRL impact). And given his smarts I'd argue they're the sort of relative weaknesses that could be covered, blended well with good defenders, good coaching, perhaps a rim-protector. And whilst at the margin there may be some scaling stuff ... the idea that your point guard who's having terrific impact playing on the ball and making decisions is a bad thing ... sits a touch uneasy. It's also possible some might lodge these criticisms at Harden.His actual value has to be somewhere between what he showed in Phoenix and what she showed in Dallas and LA.
Wait ... LA is a significant part of your assessment of Nash. And specifically Nash at his peak?Do you really think it’s just a super weird aging curve that made him elite from age 30-37 in Phoenix and not show any comparable impact before or after?
You want it after 37?
On before ... I'd argue it's largely moot for peaks unless everyone's getting this systematically, but one can debate rules changes (and how one accounts for this across eras), versus being given the keys to the offense, versus commitment to conditioning (and some may say pride, "I'll show you" as a motivator), versus did Dirk's primacy mute his offensive impact to why his impact signal was so much weaker in Dallas. Still I am inclined towards he largely was the system in Phoenix and that succeeded so whilst it probably has to take away from potential career accumulated value ... I'm not sure how much Dallas matters to his peak.We’ve seen Harden perform in a variety of roles and systems and be very effective.
Fairly fuzzy so it somewhat depends what you mean. I really liked how final year OKC Harden was effective and impactful whilst he wasn't being given a lot of opportunity in terms of primacy. Still beyond that ... and whilst defensive concerns for him too were sometimes overblown ... it's not like he didn't like holding on to the ball. And on his best in-strong-prime chance, whilst injuries were a major blow and he faced elite opponents ... I think it's generally perceived that he and Paul didn't mix well and then Harden sought to move Paul on for a worse fit and worse player. He's a great player and absolutely worthy of contending here. Fwiw, to my knowledge barring some mental gymnastics I don't think he does have Nash's pure impact-side profile at apex but I'm not an expert.
IDK, I just kind of hoped there was something ... deeper to why we'd be using clearly lower level years versus another player's actual peak.
At age 37 in Phoenix, Nash has much better impact numbers than he did in any of his 24-29 seasons in Dallas. At age 38 in Los Angeles, he’s completely washed and a shell of himself. Yes, I absolutely think that’s relevant!
Look at these 2 year RAPMs:
Last 2 years in Dallas (age 28-29): -0.6 (177th in the league)
First 2 years in Phoenix: (age 30-31): 6.1 (3rd in the league)
Last 2 years in Phoenix (age 36-37): 4.0 (15th in the league)
2 years in Los Angeles (age 38-39): -1.5 (357th in the league)
I don’t see how that doesn’t give you any pause. If his RAPM was negative immediately surrounding these Phoenix years where he’s always top 20, AND the box numbers and hybrid systems all suggest he’s not as good as the impact stats would suggest, I don’t see how you can just take them as gospel.
On 38 relevant to peak because age 37 is really good? No ones arguing 2012 as his peak. Nor a year close to it. It's not D'Antoni if the idea is he was magically making Nash better. Nash was already down at 31.6mpg in '12. The idea that his age 38 season in which he's hurt, on a new team, that's had significant other turnover, turns out to be somewhat of a dumpster fire and he isn't as entrusted as a decision maker where that's a (the?) primary asset he gives you ... I just don't see that.
On
I don’t see how that doesn’t give you any pause ...
I'm not sure about the use of tense or assumption that everyone is familiar with and using the exact dataset as you.
But to that data ... per above Lakers to assess him at peak makes no sense to me. What it comes down to is ... is Dallas relevant, and was the way it was used earlier transparent and fair?
And I do worry on the latter, the answer on the latter questions is "no."
Because this now really does look make it look like it was "if I deliberately spike down a four or five year spell where I know there are multiple better ones and compare it to my candidates best one, my candidate comes out on top", because it seems you aware that in these already large samples there were multiple better ones and are intentionally dragging it down.
Now is Dallas relevant ... that's a reasonable question and I think the answer is yes. I don't think the use applied was sensible but having a discussion about why his Dallas impact was relatively low if you're picking a nearby year seems fair enough. There have been discussions of that in terms of why his Dallas impact was so much lower and how much one wants to buy into those is up for grabs. So whilst it has been suggested
f4p wrote:... the impact numbers are so bad that we can't even look at the numbers to evaluate Nash because it's somehow unfair.
This doesn't seem to reflect any actually given position that I've seen on Dallas. It's just that "look[ing] at" and "using against someone else's best" are very different things.
The one other thing I'd note regarding context of '04 specifically is that roster is considered somewhat of a mess. I think I'm higher on it than some as a team, but it's not exactly a sensibly balanced construction.
And briefly touching on a couple of downstream points.
iggymcfrack wrote:I don’t think his impact was weaker in Dallas because he was used wrong. Don Nelson wasn’t exactly a fuddy duddy who didn’t want to let an offensive maestro cook. If anything I’d say the team’s ORtg was evidence that he was used pretty optimally.
...
Nash has some serious weaknesses especially defensively that make it hard for him to have elite impact unless the offense is completely and utterly dependent on him
I'm struggling with internal coherence here. He was used optimally but needs the offense dependent on him ... well then surely a substantial stagger would be optimal? And I'm not sure why a good offense would necessarily mean optimal use given it now seems, though elite, perhaps less than the sum of its parts.
Defensive weaknesses make it so that offenses need to be centered around him to have elite impact? I'm not sure how that would follow. I guess this is supposed to read that such is the cost of his defense, his offensive value only dwarfs it if the offense is "completely and utterly dependent on him". Yet actually this seems to make a construction around him really easy. Defensive pieces tend to be cheaper than offensive ones. Nash can have elite net impact when given the keys to the offense. And Nash can have an elite offense
'05: 120.3 Ortg on in a 106.1 league
06: 114.2 Ortg on in a 106.2 league
07: 118.6 Ortg on in a 106.5 league
08: 118.2 Ortg on in a 107.5 league
with an offense that is "completely and utterly dependent on him". If one believes this entirely, then one merely needs to put together good defenders strong enough to cover for Nash enough to not bleed too much of the enormous offensive advantage he generates and one would seem to have a contender. If not then there's a little more room for maneuver ... but those weren't my words (and he does seem to be driving very substantial impact).
iggymcfrack wrote:Both of them can show superstar impact if they have a team that perfectly fits their strengths.
I'm open to being wrong here as I've said before but my impression and that of others here has been perfectly fitting his strengths seems primarily to be giving him (a point guard) the ball and trusting him (and fwiw Nash is in different tier of impact to Iverson).
iggymcfrack wrote:but it’s hard to win a title with them because their value is muted when they play with enough talent for their team to actually contend.
Whilst some seem to assume the hip-check necessarily turned the outcome and then perhaps go further in terms of assumptions ... implicit in this statement is the idea that the Suns didn't "actually contend" (which is hardly a given) and "it's hard to win a title" with Nash ... presumably because it's hard to put together better defensive pieces around Nash than the Suns did. And, in fairness, those teams get too much heat for "bad" defense where the reality is more around league average and there are some pieces there: Bell and Marion first coming to mind. Still it doesn't seem that much of a stretch to imagine a better defensive build, especially where a team can depend on him for offense.









