bastillon wrote:Why do people post w/l differentials like they mean anything without context. If a team is completely structured around the talents of one player, and lack depth at that player's position, they will struggle without him. It's like the people who like to point out the Laker's w/l differentials with Shaq and with Kobe, acting like the Lakers perimeter depth was comparable to having Samaki Walker, Slava Medvedenko, and AC Green as your replacements.
are you implying that Kobe's backups were lesser than what Medvedenko/decomposing AC Green and Samaki Walker represented ?
Um, yes, particularly with variation of the triangle the Lakers ran.
Yeah. The roster was "revamped" to continually sport undersized athletic finishers at the 4/5 with shooters/all-star wings up and down the perimeter. Seriously
05: Amare, Marion, JJ, Q, Barbosa
06: Diaw, Marion, TT, KT, Bell, Barbosa07: Amare, Diaw, Marion Bell, KT, Barbosa
08: Amare, Shaq (18/10), Hill, Diaw, Bell, Barbosa
10: Amare, J-Rich, Frye, Lopez, Dudley
Yeah, there have been plenty of teams that could replicate that talent, shooting, and athleticism.
matter of fact, 2005 Suns lost JJ, Amare and Q-Rich - three starters, one of whom was supposed to be all-NBA player. 2006 Suns replaced them with 3 bench players from 2005: K.Thomas, Bell and Diaw. before K-Thomas went down, they were as good as 2005 Suns. what does that tell you ? that Nash was really the only thing keeping them alive. they weren't anywhere near good team without him, as evidenced by their record in games without Nash (2-10), as well as countless +/- stats.
People like to blame Nash's failures on lack of defensive big men, completely ignoring the fact that the reason he's able to lead offensive teams like that is because he's running up and down the court with small forwards as his center. Color me confused (but not surprised).
the best Suns offense was constructed around Shaq and Barnes as starting bigs (post-ASG 09, under Gentry, some 120 PPG and 118 ORtg). who exactly was running up and down the court ? [/quote]You mean the offense Nash had the smallest part in of those squads? Not only does is that a weak point, but you're basically underselling you're own argument in the attempt to grasp at an argument.
another example, 2006 Suns with Kurt THomas and Diaw. they were THE slowest starting bigs in the league, you do realize that, don't you ?
No they weren't. KT still had his automatic mid-range jumper, and Boris Diaw was basically a hyper-Lamar Odom minus the rebounding that season.
I wonder also how do you explain monstrous Nash +/- over the years or how his teammates always VASTLY regressed without him, like this year's Amare, Miami/Dallas Marion etc.
It was always evident Marion was a system player, I got in several arguments on other message boards contending Odom/AK-47 were better or more useful players because of how reliant Marion was on having an elite passing PG (Kidd...Nash). At least while playing 4. And from the 3, his jumper is only average. Once his athleticism began to fall, it was the end of his utility, at least as an elite player.
Amare has gone to a dogcrap situation. It's completely unfair to make that statement with regards to him, but I don't expect much different. As for various role players doing worse, that has about as much to do with leaving the open system and going to more structured settings. It happens when people leave the Warriors too. And when people leave the side of most REAL superstars, like Wade, Shaq, Kobe, you see their %s drop. It's well-documented too, and it only trends upwards for PGs (meaning the lesser a player you are, the higher an impact you can have on said %'s from that position).