ElGee wrote:therealbig3 wrote:I can't really see Hill over Carter, personally. Carter was a guy who took on a huge offensive burden in the playoffs...Hill never really did, or at least, wasn't really able to. And Carter's time in NJ gets underrated, while I feel that Hill's prime gets overrated.
And regarding Thurmond...even if he was a bad offensive player...what about the numbers that bastillon posted? Regardless of what he was good at, he had huge impact. Russell was a bad offensive player too (very unimpressive scoring numbers, poor team offenses), but he had such a monstrous impact on defense that it makes him a GOAT candidate. I think it's a similar case with Thurmond, though obviously not as extreme.
Agree on Thurmond.
Obviously you are Carter's biggest supporter and have made sound points on him. It's weird, when he first was mentioned I thought "I'm going to have Vince Carter much higher than everyone else." Now I think "I might have Vince Carter lower than everyone else." And I really only disagree with your classifications of him slightly (in the negative direction) unless you are understating it. As it stands, I have Carter at around No. 75. To boot:
I don't happen to think much of his rookie season in the grand scheme of things. In 2000 I do have him as a top-10 player in the league, but it's really low all-nba quality stuff IMO. In 2001 he's slightly better, but it's in the same ballpark...and that's arguably his peak. He's 22nd overall in Ilardi's 03-09 study which really only captures the end of his dropoff and should treat him well. He's +2.4 on offense which is 36th -- 33rd if we remove small minute players. His on/off numbers in NJ reflect someone having positive impact, as his game would suggest.
But 02 and 03 are basically lost to me due to injury. (03 he's at least there at the end)
What's left is 04-07, and I'm not sure he does play his best basketball in New Jersey. You make a compelling case that he does, but (a) he's playing with Kidd and (b) the rules are different to make him look statistically more favorable. Not saying it's a bad stance, but how much better was he in NJ than in Toronto at his best? He looks excellent in the PS but I watched those series against Indy and the sometimes Shaq-less Heat and thought he played well, but nothing otherworldly. (eg Decent game 1 and they win with a 107 ORtg, he blows up in G3 and they post a 101 ORtg.)
I wonder how others compare 06 Carter to Allen and Iverson? I'm open to an argument there that would move him up for me...but at the end of the day I'm not wild about drafting Carter. Never liked his defense, he has some injury problems, and there are many all-around wings I would want on a team ahead of him, although at least he has a decent outside shot.
Well, how much does playing with Kidd help Carter? What's interesting to me is that when Kidd was being considered, his detractors were saying how he doesn't really lead great offenses, because he's not a great scorer, nor is he a great halfcourt offensive player in general. So if that's true, why would his presence now be used to detract from Carter? And when I watched him play, Carter never relied on Kidd to help him generate offense. Carter was not a guy who liked to run out on the break (weird, because when he did, he was one of the best open court players of all time), and Carter liked to iso and create for himself in the half court. Sure, there were some highlight reel alley oops between them, but it's not like scoring was so much easier for Carter now that Kidd was around...especially past his prime Kidd who at that point was especially no longer a threat to score a lot. RJ was there, and he helped, but his game didn't fit that well with Carter's. Overall, it was pretty much a unipolar offense that ran through Carter.
And after the trade to NJ in 05, he played the best basketball he had ever played. His raw numbers during that time was around 28/6/5 on 56% TS. It was mainly his explosion that got the Nets into the playoffs that year. And he played well in the playoffs too, despite low efficiency scoring, considering that he played against a dominant Heat team that had Wade emerging as a superstar. RJ was injured and didn't play that well, and Kidd, again, wasn't really a threat to score, so that he could alleviate the pressure off him. I think this gets overlooked, because the first 20 games with Toronto bring his overall averages down for the season.
And in 06, Carter has an All-NBA caliber 06, with a fantastic playoff run. Clearly his best individual playoffs actually, and I remember that I picked him as the best playoff player through the first round. Overall for that playoffs, he put up 30/7/5 on 56% TS. That's pretty dominant stuff, and Wade is greatly praised for his playoff run, but compare him and Carter head to head in their series:
Wade: 27.6 ppg, 6.0 rpg, 6.6 apg, .598 TS%
Carter: 30.2 ppg, 5.6 rpg, 4.8 apg, .554 TS%
Carter was holding his own against Wade, who had a very dominant overall playoff run, and is considered by some to be the best overall player that year.
Carter's 07 was arguably his best all-around regular season, although he was disappointing that year against the Cavs in the playoffs.
And I don't think his 08 and 09 should be ignored. He was still the best player on the team, and he was still the guy they ran the offense through, and he was still a 21/6/5 type player. The team was crap, which is why they didn't go anywhere, but Carter was still carrying that offense...I don't want to say losing Carter was the sole reason why the Nets went from a 34 win team to a 12 win team...but it pretty clearly is the main reason imo.
Compared to Allen in 06, this was Allen's regular season peak imo, and so he was better than Carter during the regular season...but not by terribly much, and like I said, Carter had a huge playoffs, while Allen didn't get a chance to play. It's a similar case with Iverson.
And regarding Carter's numbers looking better because of rule changes, you're basically talking about his efficiency, it's true, his raw efficiency went up, but it's not like it was masking an inefficient player, he was pretty much around league average with the Nets.
And I don't really see the injury concerns...he was injured for 2 seasons, and then never played less than 73 games in a season during his prime.
I'm seeing an All-NBA player in 00, 01, 05, 06, and 07, and a fringe All-NBA player in 08 and 09. He was a good playoff performer, who was capable of carrying big offensive loads, a strong rebounder for his position, an underrated passer, and to be honest, I never got the impression that he was a poor defender...not great, but not bad either. Definitely better than Iverson, FWIW.