tsherkin wrote:In deference to Kobe, people should revisit his TS% relative to league average from 01-10; the idea that he was generally inefficient is wrong. His issue has always been his shot selection and willingness to iso versus play the team game, which is defensively exploitable and has come up in the playoffs at inopportune times before. He's actually been a +2-3 TS% player for most of his career, which is very good. Not Jordan-esque, but still better than guys like McGrady and Melo and Vince, generally speaking.
While I agree that you need to adjust West's numbers for pace, you also need to look at his efficiency (already Kobe level or better) in terms of the league around him and you will see his numbers are "Jordan-esque" as are Oscars. Since Kobe's main competition at the guard right now look like West and Oscar, those are the guys you want to compare rather than McGrady or Vince.
West v. Kobe'
Explosiveness -- Kobe
Efficiency -- West
Defense -- West (probably)
Playmaking -- West (though West did play PG v. Kobe's triangle SG which gives West an edge, still West led the league in assists in an era when assists were less frequent)
Intangibles/Leadership -- West (pretty clearly)
Playoff performance -- West
Longevity -- Kobe
Kobe voters just dismissing West without actually making any kind of comparison is starting to push me to consider West (and for that matter Oscar) ahead of Kobe. If there is a legitimate comparison that shows Kobe as the better player, please make it rather than just closing your eyes and saying: "because I said so."
Oh, and as far as era differential goes, I see the 60s as a fairly strong era, unlike the 50s (very weak due to the racial barriers), 70s (the most ridiculous era of expansion and a lot of playing for contracts/jumping leagues/plus the cocaine issues. The talent pool in the 60s was considerably smaller than today (money plus non-US players) but far more concentrated (8 teams v. 30 is a big difference) -- these things show up most clearly in the center position because the genetic pool is much smaller when you exclude anyone under 6-10 (in shoes).
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.