RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 (Oscar Robertson)

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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#41 » by eminence » Tue Nov 10, 2020 5:19 pm

70sFan wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
70sFan wrote:What are your thoughts on Pettit vs Mikan? Was George much better at his peak than Bob?


More dominant on the defensive end, certainly. Pettit was a good defender, Mikan was the dominant defender of his era. ON the offensive end, it's less clear; Pettit was probably the most efficient and prolific scorer of the mid 50s, a great rebounder, and he lived at the foul line. Mikan for his era also drew the most fouls, was probably a better post passer than Pettit, and was also a prolific scorer and rebounder. I would say offensively it is close.

Are there any evidences of Mikan being strong defender? I know that Lakers were dominant defensively, but I've also heard that his supporting cast was the main reason for that - not him. I don't have any strong opinion about it, so if anyone could explain that I'd highly appreciate that.

Here is (almost) full Mikan game for anyone who'd like to watch him:



Here I go with what league history has taught me, great defenses are almost exclusively led by big men. The Lakers were the dominant defense during his time and immediately pretty mediocre when he left despite not much other turnover (and replacing him with a HOF guy in Lovellette). When I watch the limited footage of him I see perimeter players basically terrified of going into the hoop against him, combine that with strong post defense (biggest/strongest player in the league with decent athleticism otherwise) and we have the clear strongest defender of the era.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#42 » by 70sFan » Tue Nov 10, 2020 5:27 pm

Dutchball97 wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:
I'm going to have to disagree on both points. KD was better than Curry (or at least more productive) in their years together, which makes it an even easier situation for Curry than KD. It's just so easy to only judge Durant on this and no one else. MJ's pretty stacked Bulls teams in the talent barren late 90s ring a bell? LeBron on the Heatles? The Shaq/Kobe Lakers? Bill Russell's entire career? It's not even a point of criticism that came up for any of those guys but now we get to the snake and for him it disqualifies him? That seems like a very bad faith way of looking at things.

You're talking like KD's Warriors years were far more productive than the Thunder years but that's once again not true. I'm not going to post all the WS and VORP numbers for KD when it's just one easy click away on bkref but 2012 edges out 2018 for KD's most productive year in both categories and there isn't even a massive notable difference between the OKC and GSW years on yhe whole. Even when we're excluding the GSW years (which would be dumb) then KD would already be catching up to Karl Malone rapidly and would've still peaked much higher already as well.

If anything, I'm interested in hearing what seperates Karl from his teammate Stockton. And I'm honestly not really planning on voting for Stockton untill the late 20s/early 30s either. Is it just the MVPs?

If you really think that Jordan's or Russell's team situation is comparable to Durant's then we have nothing to discuss. Warriors team would be main contender for winning titiles without Durant in 2017-18.

Durant posted 14.1 WS (0.177 WS/48) and 8.0 VORP in 91 OKC playoff games. He posted 9.0 WS (0.244 WS/48) and 4.6 VORP in Warriors in only 46 games. That's significant difference. Not to mention that his boxscore production was significantly higher in Warriors as well.

Saying that Malone had Stockton when Durant had Curry/Green/Klay/Iggy is unreasonable. KD played with the most stacked team of all-time, Malone's Jazz weren't that talented (although they were good when they added Hornacek, their depth was poor).

If anything, tell me what KD did before joining the Warriors that separated him from Karl Malone. What makes him that much better outside of VORP or WS (which aren't good at measuring who's better player)? Because Malone's longevity edge is gigantic.


I'm going to keep it short because I'm at a loss for words. You say KD getting more WS and VORP on average in his GSW years means his OKC years don't count for much but then you turn around and disregard WS and VORP entirely. In 2012, at 23 years old he led his team to the finals. He had a PER of 27.5, TS% of 63.2, 4 WS, .231 WS/48, 8.1 BPM and 2.2 VORP. But sure he never did anything. I'm disappointed tbh. The GSW move has people so riled up they stop being objective.

I didn't say anything you just posted.

I said that KD got more WS and VORP in GSW because he had unusually easy situation. It doesn't mean that OKC years don't count for much - they count for a lot more than his GSW seasons in my opinion. They show how good KD truly was and he was damn good.

I'm consistent with WS and CORP critique, it's you who used them before so I kept using them to counter your point. I've never used WS or CORP to show how good (or bad) player is/was.

I never said that Durant never did anything, you again put these words into my mouth. The key is that we're comparing him to other top 20 players ever - Malone led his team to the finals twice with (in my opinion) weaker supporting cast than Durant had in OKC. People keep talking how underwhelming Malone's postseason play was, so we shouldn't use different criteria for KD, who outside of 2012 was quite diappointing in playoffs as well.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#43 » by Doctor MJ » Tue Nov 10, 2020 5:30 pm

Jordan Syndrome wrote:I'm going to hard disagree with any notion of placing Durant ahead of Curry as a player in 2017 or 2018.


Yeah the notion that statistically “Durant made it easier for Curry than Curry did for Durant” based on some notion of this effect being proportional to box score production is superficial.

Aside from Curry’s unmatched gravity, when you look for it you can actually see Curry moving off ball to suck defenders out of Durant’s way to give him direct access to drive (or move to his preferred shot). That is the sort of thing we mean when we say Curry made it easier for Durant, and neither Durant nor any other Warrior, nor any other player in the league that I’m aware of, does this.

I’ve said it a million times but the basketball world still drastically underestimated the value of strategic off-ball improvisation. We’re starting to get the vocabulary where we can start to really examine this stuff, but it won’t really become the norm in the NBA until the next generations come in showing the massive influence Curry is having downstream.


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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#44 » by Ambrose » Tue Nov 10, 2020 5:35 pm

I'm thinking Oscar, Mailman and Dirk but I'll try and read some of this stuff and decide.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#45 » by trex_8063 » Tue Nov 10, 2020 5:35 pm

70sFan wrote:
Here is (almost) full Mikan game for anyone who'd like to watch him:



Hey! Where was this game when I was more actively doing the game log project? If it's even remotely cohesive game footage, it'll be a nice addition to that data-pool.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#46 » by eminence » Tue Nov 10, 2020 5:39 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Here is (almost) full Mikan game for anyone who'd like to watch him:



Hey! Where was this game when I was more actively doing the game log project? If it's even remotely cohesive game footage, it'll be a nice addition to that data-pool.


Just to note, but dang, one of the few (fullish) games from Mikan is an abysmal shooting performance (12/36 by the bbref box-score).

Edit - Abysmal may be a bit tough by the standards of the day, but certainly a bit of a chucker performance from Mikan.

Fun game to watch though :)
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#47 » by Hal14 » Tue Nov 10, 2020 5:57 pm

14) Oscar Robertson
15) Moses Malone
16) Julius Erving

West got voted in already, but I have Oscar ranked slightly ahead of him because:

-better durability, resulting in Oscar playing over 7,000 more minutes than West despite the fact that they played the same amount of seasons.
-Better passer/playmaker
-Bigger/stronger which allowed him to overpower smaller guards and match up with wings
-Better rebounder

To me, those factors outweigh the fact that west was a better defender and better playoff performer. Scoring-wise, they're about even. Also, West had a better supporting cast for most of their careers so it's safe to say that Oscar's team success and individual stats would be even better if he had more help during his prime.

In terms of Moses vs Dr. J, it's close. If Dr. J put up those numbers and had all of those accolades in the NBA, he'd have a stronger case. But his fist few years he did it in a slightly weaker league, the ABA - I only say slightly though. The ABA did have some very good teams and have a good amount of talent, but wasn't quite as good as the NBA, as evidenced by the Doctors individual stats and team success suffering a little bit after he went from ABA to NBA.

Moses meanwhile, matched up very well vs Kareem (the no. 3 GOAT according to this board), beating him in the playoffs in both 81 and 83, leading his team to the finals in 81 and sweeping the defending champs Lakers in 83. Yes, Dr. J was on that 83 Sixers team but Moses was the MVP of the league that year and finals MVP. Moses won 3 NBA MVPs compared to 1 fr Dr. J. Yes, Dr. J won 3 ABA MVPs, but again, it depends how much you value the level of competition in the ABA. IMO, 3 NBA MVPs is just as impressive as 3 ABA MVPs and 1 NBA MVP - possibly more. Dr. J was a better defender and passer, but he was by no means GOAT level at either defending or passing, whereas Moses was a GOAT level rebounder.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#48 » by WestGOAT » Tue Nov 10, 2020 5:58 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
Jordan Syndrome wrote:I'm going to hard disagree with any notion of placing Durant ahead of Curry as a player in 2017 or 2018.


Yeah the notion that statistically “Durant made it easier for Curry than Curry did for Durant” based on some notion of this effect being proportional to box score production is superficial.

Aside from Curry’s unmatched gravity, when you look for it you can actually see Curry moving off ball to suck defenders out of Durant’s way to give him direct access to drive (or move to his preferred shot). That is the sort of thing we mean when we say Curry made it easier for Durant, and neither Durant nor any other Warrior, nor any other player in the league that I’m aware of, does this.

I’ve said it a million times but the basketball world still drastically underestimated the value of strategic off-ball improvisation. We’re starting to get the vocabulary where we can start to really examine this stuff, but it won’t really become the norm in the NBA until the next generations come in showing the massive influence Curry is having downstream.


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Facts.

For some reason people are obsessed with using assists as the measure for the playmaking ability of point guards.

Curry may not be the most *pure* (lol I will never get this term) PG, but he opens up the floor so much for his teammates, often leading to 4-on-3 matchups for his teammates from the top of the court. See Durant vs the Cavs during the finals.

Perhaps they should start counting hockey assists to properly measure Curry's impact, but even that is probably not enough.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#49 » by eminence » Tue Nov 10, 2020 6:14 pm

Thought again on my modern Mikan comparison - a bought in Cousins with better defensive instincts is about the closest I can come up with. Anybody else have any thoughts? Emotional on court (not as much off court), very physical, high skill, strongest in the league sort.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#50 » by Dr Positivity » Tue Nov 10, 2020 6:29 pm

1. Dirk Nowitzki
2. Karl Malone
3. Oscar Robertson

Dirk and Malone both have among the best longevity left, I like Dirk's scoring game more to the high end skill and spacing, it reflected in the playoffs leading to 2011 run. Malone however is a good passer and defender to make up for it.

Oscar's great obviously, I just think his teams underperformed in the 60s for their talent and his personality is arguably more grating than Dirk or Malone. Not sure about his defense either.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#51 » by Odinn21 » Tue Nov 10, 2020 6:35 pm

Dr Positivity wrote:1. Dirk Nowitzki
2. Karl Malone
3. Oscar Robertson

Dirk and Malone both have among the best longevity left, I like Dirk's scoring game more to the high end skill and spacing, it reflected in the playoffs leading to 2011 run. Malone however is a good passer and defender to make up for it.

Oscar's great obviously, I just think his teams underperformed in the 60s for their talent and his personality is arguably more grating than Dirk or Malone. Not sure about his defense either.

How so?
Roberton's and West's team situations were discussed to death in the #13 thread, and if you go back and look at them, you'd see that if the Royals underperformed, the Lakers underperformed even more and you had West on your ballot.

I'd like you to elaborate how Robertson's teams underperformed and more than that, how it is decider going against Robertson when you vote for even more questionable names for their underperformed seasons - playoffs?
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#52 » by trex_8063 » Tue Nov 10, 2020 6:38 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:
Karl Malone - he is an all around player but his main asset is supposed to be scoring, yet he is a pretty bad scorer in the post season. I am not really convinced at all that Karl Malone was that great - the three players I listed would all butcher him in scoring. Scorings not the only thing that matters but Karl really left a lot to be desired there for most of his career, and he wasn't elite enough at the other aspects of basketball to make him a top 14 player.


I disagree with the characterization that he was a "bad scorer" in the post season. If you haven't already read it, please take the time to read post #4 above. But a couple bullet points from that post to note:

*He scored at a rate of 35.3 pts/100 possessions in the playoffs during his prime. That's not a cherry-picked couple of years, that's his 13-year average ['89-'01] in the playoffs. By comparison, Dirk has only four seasons TOTAL that exceed that AVERAGE rate: four consecutive years ['09-'12], in which he averaged out to 37.9 pts/100; that was on 39.2 mpg, whereas Malone's 13-year average of playing time in the ps was 41.4 mpg.

**That scoring volume was still just negligibly above league-avg efficiency (+0.1% rTS).

***That scoring volume came while facing [on average] a -2.39 rDRTG (which was marginally tougher than Dirk's average opponent).

****The apparent large decline in his scoring rate or efficiency during the post-season appears so---to some degree---due to how outstanding [in an all-time sense] his regular season scoring was. Per Elgee's Top 40 write-up: Malone is one of only 14 players to EVER achieve a rate of 40+ pts/100 poss (and one of only FIVE players to do it more than once). Among those player seasons, ONLY '14 Durant and '16 Steph Curry did it on better rTS% than '90 Malone.
Ironically, I sometimes feel many would feel better of him [wrt the post-season] if he'd been LESS dominant during the rs.

*****His turnover economy IMPROVED in the post-season.

******Underrated [imo] passing PF, and better on the offensive glass than Dirk.---->while Malone was "mostly" a scorer, as you noted, just want to re-iterate these things; also that he was indeed a two-way (or "all around") player.

*******On average during his prime, Utah's offense barely fell off at all in the playoffs (compared to rs), based on the defenses being faced. And there are 5-6 years in there (roughly '92-'97, iirc) in which their playoff offense was remarkable.


Anyway, just a few things to mull over....
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#53 » by Joao Saraiva » Tue Nov 10, 2020 6:45 pm

Dr Positivity wrote:1. Dirk Nowitzki
2. Karl Malone
3. Oscar Robertson

Dirk and Malone both have among the best longevity left, I like Dirk's scoring game more to the high end skill and spacing, it reflected in the playoffs leading to 2011 run. Malone however is a good passer and defender to make up for it.

Oscar's great obviously, I just think his teams underperformed in the 60s for their talent and his personality is arguably more grating than Dirk or Malone. Not sure about his defense either.


Malone has better longevity than Dirk for sure.

Malone also spaced the floor well. He didn't shoot the 3, but that's cause PFs didn't do that when he played. His midrange was absolutely superb and you can rewatch for example the Jazz vs Sac in 1999. Malone was already old, but without the Jazz getting anything to go our entire offense was still competitive just because Malone was hitting midrange after midrange shot. His spacing is being under appreciated here.

I'd also like to state the defensive gap is bigger than most people suggest. Not that I believe Dirk is a below average defender, but Malone was a big plus on that side of the court too.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#54 » by drza » Tue Nov 10, 2020 7:32 pm

David Robinson vs Karl Malone

(The following is an older post comparing Karl Malone and David Robinson in some depth. While I might modify some aspects slightly, the general tone and most of the details still fit just as well today as it did when I wrote it. Yes, Malone is the longevity king, but as I examine it, it just appears that Robinson was the clearly better player. And, Robinson's longevity isn't worse than a player like Bird's, who is already voted in. So...well...here's the post, for you to consider yourselves.)

Background thoughtsMy evaluations of these two have evolved over time. Live action, there was no question to me that Robinson was better. I've said it before, but Robinson was one of the most electric players that I've ever seen. I remember when he was at Navy, watching him burst onto the national scene in that tournament run was kind of like how Barry Sanders came out of nowhere at Oklahoma State in football. I was planning to see the greatness of Danny Manning (or Aikman/Peete in football), and instead this phenom exploded all over the place and stole the show. I impatiently waited for Robinson to serve his Naval duties, and when the time came for him to make his NBA debut I was watching avidly. And he didn't disappoint, building even upon the promise he showed in college to quickly become one of the best players in the NBA. He came in right as the best of my childhood (Magic and Bird) were on the way out, and it wasn't long before Jordan was leaving as well to go swing at baseballs. I was sure that it wouldn't be long before Robinson was the acknowledged best in the NBA.

On the flip side, Malone had been in the NBA pretty almost as long as I could remember. I was watching the NBA before he came in, but I was really young and I really wasn't paying attention to Utah at that time. By the time I started, Stockton and Malone were already becoming household names. I always knew they were good, but neither one of them ever struck me as the best. I thought that Barkley was better than Malone in general (even though when they matched up 1-on-1 it seemed like Malone was just too big for him), and there was just never a time through the 80s and into the early 90s when I saw Malone on that level.

By the mid-90s I was in college and not watching the NBA as closely. Maybe that's part of why my opinions of these two didn't evolve that much even as Malone started having more success. I remember being stunned at how badly Hakeem outplayed Robinson in that fateful series. I remember how meh I felt when the Jazz and Bulls faced off back-to-back (I was never a fan of either squad, and wanted them both to lose). Actually, I was pretty bummed that the Rockets weren't the ones making the FInals from the West because I really wanted to see old Hakeem/Barkley against Jordan and Pip. But no, the daggone Jazz had to get in the way. I think the biggest disappointment was that I was positive that the Jazz couldn't beat the Bulls, because I was sure that Malone didn't have that extra gear. I thought Hakeem and/or Chuck might be able to find something inside, but I never believed that Malone would. And when they made it close, only to have Jordan strip Malone and then immortalize Byron Russell that just put the taste of ashes in my mouth.

Anyway, by the time we did the RPoY project in 2010, I still had Robinson as the better of the two in my mind. I thought that his legacy had been overly tarnished by that one series against Hakeem, and that by going through year-by-year as we were it would be clear that Robinson was a beast. Instead, a poster named Kaima brought up the 1994 and 1996 playoffs (in addition to the expected 1995 Hakeem match-up) in which Robinson really didn't look good against Malone and the Jazz. He shifted the argument from "Robinson just got outplayed by a transcendant Hakeem" to "Robinson consistently got outplayed in the postseason" to "Robinson just wasn't a good postseason performer". At the time I wasn't expecting that line or argument, and in going year-by-year and playoff series by playoff series, the argument that the Admiral couldn't perform in the postseason sounded plausible.

Then, the next year we did the 2011 Top 100 and by then it was accepted dogma among many of the voters that Robinson's offensive style simply wasn't suited for the postseaosn. That his offense took too much advantage of fast breaks and face-up opportunities that weren't there in the postseason, and thus that he could never be a championship team's #1 option. Meanwhile, ElGee also led the charge for Malone, pointing out his ridiculous longevity and arguing that his playoff downfalls weren't as bad as advertised. Before I knew it, Malone was voted in at #12, a full 10 spots before Robinson.

But it's never really set well with me. I keep finding myself re-considering the evidence and arguments made in those projects. And the more I look, the more hollow they seem. So today I want to start over with a clean slate and see what conclusions my analysis leads to.

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Longevity

The absolute first thing that has to be mentioned in a Malone vs. Robinson comparison, even before we get to the numbers, is the difference in prime longevity. Malone is the iron man of NBA history, never really missing a game over 20 years and with a graceful decline in his box score numbers. As I pointed out when I first posted the 10-year prime box score data (seen below for Malone and Robinson), Malone has about four more seasons at this exact same level while I had to add an extra year (to make up for the missed '97) and include some years when Robinson was "playing 2nd fiddle" to Duncan in order for the Admiral to get his 10 year prime. And even in one of those seasons (1992), Robinson got hurt and missed the playoffs. When looked at that way, the longevity gap seems insurmountable. And maybe it is. But.

Suppose, for the sake of argument, that Robinson was actually significantly better than Malone. Suppose, in fact, that Robinson at his best was as good as Larry Bird. If Robinson were that good, would longevity still be an obstacle that couldn't be overcome? Seemingly not, right, since Bird was voted in at #10 and longevity king Malone is still waiting on the call. So before go any further, let's stop for a moment and compare Robinson's longevity to Bird's.

Bird: 9 prime years from 1980 - 1988, one full missed season (1989), 2 lesser but productive seasons (1990 and 91) and a final season when his body broke down and he couldn't finish the season.

Robinson: 7 prime years from 1990 - 1996, one full missed season (1997), four more "side kick" seasons (1998 - 2001), one productive but lesser season where his body broke down and he couldn't finish the season (2002) and a final season in which he was physically limited but still a strong role player in limited minutes.

Is there really a difference there? The key, for me, is how to characterize those 1998 - 2001 years for Robinson. Because he was only playing 32 mpg over that stretch and Duncan was acknowledged as the star, most (including me) considered these to be post-prime years for Robinson. But while we're here, let's compare Robinson's 1998 - 2001 stretch to the late prime of one player that's already been voted in, and to the early prime of Bird himself:

Regular Season
1998 - 2001 Robinson: 32 mpg, 17.5 ppg (57% TS), 9.7 rpg, 2 apg, 2.1 TO; 25.3 PER, 47 WS
2005 - 2008 Duncan: 34 mpg, 19.5 ppg (55% TS), 11 rpg, 3 apg, 2.4 TO, 25 PER, 46.2 WS
1980 - 1983 Bird: 38 mpg, 22.2 ppg (55% TS), 10.8 rpg, 5.4 apg, 3.3 TO, 21.7 PER, 48.4 WS

Playoffs
1998 - 2001 Robinson: 35 mpg, 17.4 ppg (53% TS), 11.7 rpg, 2.3 apg, 2.3 TO, 24 PER, 6.9 WS (43 games)
2005 - 2008 Duncan: 38 mpg, 22.4 ppg (54% TS), 12.3 rpg, 3.1 apg, 2.7 TO, 25.8 PER, 11.1 WS (73 games)
1980 - 1983 Bird: 42 mpg, 20.5 ppg (51% TS), 12.8 rpg, 5.8 apg, 3.5 TO, 19.9 PER, 6.4 WS (44 games)

Now, the point of this isn't to make this a Robinson vs Duncan or Bird thread. But just take a look at those statlines again. Robinson was only playing a few minutes less than Duncan, and outside of scoring volume (Duncan by a bit) he was contributing very similarly in the box scores in both regular and postseason to Duncan during years universally included in his prime. Bird was playing much heavier minutes than Robinson, and was also the player most helped by pace here (for example, Robinson's rebound rate is higher despite Bird's higher raw boards due to pace). But even with that, Robinson had almost as many win shares (used as a cumulative catch-all stat, as opposed to a rate one) as Bird in the regular season and more in the playoffs with a much higher PER and WS/48. Again, these are years universally included in Bird's "productive prime" years tallies.

Plus, because we have RAPM studies starting in 1998, we know that Robinson's RAPM from 1998 - 2000 (using Doc MJ's normalized PI RAPM method) was +7.4, +8.9, and +8.3 (with a heavy defensive influence, notching DRAPM's that match the best that we ever saw from Duncan in his career). Those overall RAPMs in the ~8.2 range couldn't quite keep up with the best-of-the-best in the study, but they were right there on average with the average of the highest three career RAPM scores of Nash (+8.2 3-year average) or Kobe (+8.0) and just below 2005 - 08 Duncan (4-year average 9.3 RAPM). Robinson wasn't playing as many minutes as any of them, so they would have had higher volume impacts on game than these years of Robinson, but the point is that Robinson appeared to be still having huge impact on games from 98 - 2001 according to both the box scores AND the +/- data.

Thus, if we return to our Bird longevity comparison, I now see it:

Bird: 9 prime years from 1980 - 1988, one full missed season (1989), 2 lesser but productive seasons (1990 and 91) and a final season when his body broke down and he couldn't finish the season

Robinson: 7 prime years from 1990 - 1996, one full missed season (1997), four more almost prime seasons on the order of 1980 - 1983 Bird (1998 - 2001), one lesser but productive season when his body broke down and he couldn't finish the season (2002) and a final season in which he was physically limited but still a strong role player.[/spoiler]

Suddenly, Robinson's longevity looks EXACTLY like Bird's to me. And if Bird's career length is the gate-keeper for being ranked this high, suddenly Robinson is eligible. If his prime is strong enough. So let's get away from quantity, and look at quality.

Who's best at their best?
Box Score Statistics

[spoiler]Regular season, 10 year primes per100 possessions
Karl Malone (1990 - 1999): 36.8 pts (59.3% TS), 14.5 reb, 5 ast, 4 TO
David Robinson (90 - 2000): 33.3 pts (58.8% TS), 15.9 reb, 4 ast, 3.9 TO

Playoffs, 10 year primes per 100 possessions
Karl Malone (1990 - 1999): 35 pts (52.9%), 15 reb, 4.4 asts, 3.7 TO
David Robinson (90 - 2000): 30 pts (54.6%), 16.1 reb, 3.8 ast, 3.7 TO

One thing that jumps out at me when I look at these numbers is that Robinson was a MUCH better player than Malone, both regular season and post-season. The numbers itself don't tell me that, of course. Numerically, you'd be hard pressed to find any space at all between the general box score stats displayed above. But that, of course, is the problem (for Malone). Because if he couldn't create any space between he and Robinson with his offense, then of course he's going to get left behind because Robinson smokes him on defense. Malone was a rugged post defender who earned an air of intimidation with his hatchet man tendencies. And ironically, he limited Robinson in the 1994 postseason with those same strong 1-on-1 defensive skills. But Robinson is one of the best team defenders that ever lived, a true defensive anchor. And more and more I've come to appreciate that the game isn't neatly broken down into a box score battle with a small tie-breaker for defense and everything else. No, an elite defender can have defensive impact that rivals the best offensive impacts. And Robinson was definitely that.

Image

Available +/- data
Obviously, since the first available play-by-play data doesn't start till '97, we missed the majority of both players' primes. However, '98 is widely considered by many (including Malone) as potentially his peak season and he was the MVP in '99. Thus, I think it's reasonable to see what types of impacts he was having in those seasons. We've already touched briefly on Robinson's available +/- results, but I'd like to put them in some context as well.

Malone
98: 9.0 (+8.8 ORAPM; 0.2 DRAPM)
99: 5.8 (+6.4 ORAPM; -.6 DRAPM)
00: 5.5 (+6.9 ORAPM; -1.4 DRAPM)

Robinson
98:7.4 (+1.2 ORAPM; +6.2 DRAPM)
99: 8.9 (+2.3 ORAPM; +6.6 DRAPM)
00: 8.3 (+2.7 ORAPM; +5.6 DRAPM)

For those that don't know, this data came from Doc MJ's normalized PI RAPM spreadsheet from 1998 - 2012. I only did 1998 - 2000 for both players, because we don't have +/- data in 2001 and only partial for 2002, and by 2003 both were on their last legs. I found these numbers revealing for a few reasons. Malone's value in these years was almost all offense, while Robinson's value was primarily defense. Here are a few thoughts that come to mind:

1) Malone's offense aged gracefully. There's been some speculation that Malone may have made a mistake later in his career by continuing to play the same offensive role for the Jazz as his physical tools eroded. I've seen this idea put forth by (I believe) Doc MJ, and I know that Ronnie Mac addressed this potential concern in one of his big Malone posts. However, when we break the RAPM numbers into offensive and defensive components, it doesn't appear at all that Malone's offense was struggling by the turn of the century. He was still putting up offensive numbers over 6, which compare very favorably with the best career ORAPM numbers that we saw from Dirk, KG or Duncan.

2) Robinson's defense was elite till the end. Robinson obviously became the subordinate to Tim Duncan in an overall sense, but defensively Robinson appears to be the anchor through at least 2000. Robinson's average DRAPM from 98 - 2000 (+6.1) was almost double the DRAPM of young Duncan (+3.2). Duncan's impact on those teams was bigger due to offense and minutes played, and his impact grew over time while Robinson's waned, but defensively in the first few years of their union Robinson was the man. Plus, Robinson maintained a DRAPM up around +6 all the way until he retired in 2003, indicating that even as his body broke down and limited his minutes, he was still a defensive beast for every moment that he could spend on the court.

3) Mailman's defensive impact was surprisingly low. Or maybe it wasn't. Malone's rep is as a strong 1-on-1 post defender, not as a team anchor. However, one theme we see repeatedly is that team defenders make a much bigger mark than individual defenders. Malone's DRAPM scores here look remarkably like Kobe's DRAPM scores during the parts of his career when he was gaining recognition for his 1-on-1 defense.

We have to be careful about extrapolating the conclusions from this RAPM info over their entire careers, because again this is just three years near the end for each. However, as mentioned, these were three years where both were still having star impact and I think we can do some qualitative projections backwards. Namely:

1) I believe that these years represented Malone's offensive peak (or at least the end of it). Early Malone put up better scoring numbers, but he was almost purely a finisher. Late Malone was a better passer and much better initiator, plus he had a better mid-range game. These are all things that generally lead to better offensive impact.

2) I believe that these years represented Robinson's defensive peak as well (as far as measurable impact). Robinson, in the Duncan years, played a similar role to Garnett after the championship year in Boston. At this point in their careers, both were focusing more on their defense and ceding more offensive responsibility to teammates. It is to both of their immense credits that they could maintain overall impacts just a step down from the elite (+ 8 range) primarily with defense, because it indicates the versatility of their impact. But, like Garnett, this also means that during the years when Robinson was having to carry both the offense and defense his DRAPM scores likely weren't quite as high.

Playoffs

I'll finish off with a discussion on Malone and Robinson in the playoffs, as this is the big criticism that both face. As has been pointed out many times, both saw a drop in both volume and scoring efficiency in the postseason when compared to their regular season numbers (Malone -1.8 pts, -6.4% across 10-years displayed here, Robinson -3.3 points and -4.2% TS drop).

ElGee and AcrossTheCourt have done a lot of great work normalizing their production in the face of defensive quality. ElGee that both Robinson and Malone did a lot of feasting on poor defenses in the regular season, that their scoring (volume and efficiency) dropped quite a bit in either the regular season against good defenses or the postseason against "bad" defenses, and that they dropped the most in the postseason against good defenses. It appears that Malone's drops may have been larger than Robinson's.

The resulting narrative is that both Robinson and Malone have offensive styles too predicated on things like easy buckets, face-up mismatches and/or getting set up by teammates that are more limited by good defenses than other offensive skills. Thus, that it isn't a fluke that their scoring was attenuated, that it was a result of the flaws in their games that could only be exposed in the crucible of the post-season.

I'm on record in this project (and really, for awhile now) as believing that scoring efficiency is (way) over-used as a mechanism for determining individual offensive contributions. The fact that all of the most commonly referenced individual box score metrics (PER, win shares, offensive rating, TS%) all are strongly dependent on scoring efficiency tends to, IMO, cause us to double- and triple- count scoring efficiency either for or against players to the degree that it skews the results. This is especially true for players that have large parts of their impacts in areas besides scoring (e.g. Larry Bird' or Garnett).

This thought process makes me want to give Robinson the benefit of the doubt, because his all-world defense might not be fully captured by postseason box score stats. If that's true, and he's still having mega impact on games when his scoring was off due to his defense then I would be inclined not to be as worried by his scoring drop. However, this leniency is tempered because his three peak playoffs (1994 - 96) all ended with him out-right losing a perceived 1-on-1 match-up against a similar caliber big man on teams that seemingly were well-matched. Plus, unlike Bird or Garnett, Robinson didn't have the offense initiation/distribution skills to have a positive team impact on offense when his shot was off. So he would really need to demonstrate a strong team defensive trend in the postseason for me to feel comfortable overlooking the scoring issues, and I haven't had the time to do any type of team defensive analysis for Robinson's Spurs. I'd love to see a breakdown of the Spurs' playoff opponents' regular season/expected offensive ratings vs. their actual offensive ratings against Robinson's 90 - 96 Spurs defenses. If anyone has the time to do that, I'd be appreciative.

With Malone, on the other hand, I have a really hard time seeing how his drop-off in scoring shouldn't be a big deal. Not only is scoring his primary role, but we saw in the 98 - 2000 RAPM data that at (what I consider to be) his peak his value was almost ENTIRELY on offense. His defense, though solid 1-on-1, didn't seem to move the needle much on a team level. Older Malone was a better passer than young Malone, so perhaps later in his career he was able to help mitigate the scoring a bit by setting up teammates. But on the whole, it seems hard to credit Malone with much non-scoring impact and thus the more than 6% drop in TS% could be significant. But he has the opposite caveat as Robinson, because my perception is that in 94 and 96 his individual defense DID have an impact on how Robinson played and thus the results of the series. So, just like with Robinson, if a more thorough examination of the Jazz's defensive results through the years suggests a previously unexpected strength and that strength can be traced to Malone, then that might change how I see him in the postseason for the better.

Bottom line

Robinson and Malone are two of the best big men left on the board. Malone was an awesome offensive threat in the regular season for a lot of years, and a still strong presence in the postseason. His 1-on-1 defense was rugged, but at least late in his career did not appear to be moving the needle as much as I'd have thought in terms of defensive impact. Robinson was an awesome 2-way threat early in his career in the regular season, and a ridiculous defensive player who was strong as a secondary scorer in both the regular and postseason at the end of his career.

Karl Malone played forever at a really high level. But I tend to feel that Robinson was the better player during his prime, and upon further examination I'm seeing that productive prime stretch for Robinson at closer to 10 years than the 6.5 I previously credited him with. In theory, Robinson should have also been a better postseason performer than Malone because his defense should translate better, but I'd like to look into that further before finalizing that conclusion.

On the whole, at the moment, I'm leaning Robinson over Malone (just like I had them pre- RPoY project). But, just like with those projects, I'm still willing to listen and learn and could be talked into changing my mind.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#55 » by 70sFan » Tue Nov 10, 2020 7:40 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Here is (almost) full Mikan game for anyone who'd like to watch him:



Hey! Where was this game when I was more actively doing the game log project? If it's even remotely cohesive game footage, it'll be a nice addition to that data-pool.

You have to come back and finish this project then! :D
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#56 » by Dr Positivity » Tue Nov 10, 2020 7:45 pm

Odinn21 wrote:
Dr Positivity wrote:1. Dirk Nowitzki
2. Karl Malone
3. Oscar Robertson

Dirk and Malone both have among the best longevity left, I like Dirk's scoring game more to the high end skill and spacing, it reflected in the playoffs leading to 2011 run. Malone however is a good passer and defender to make up for it.

Oscar's great obviously, I just think his teams underperformed in the 60s for their talent and his personality is arguably more grating than Dirk or Malone. Not sure about his defense either.

How so?
Roberton's and West's team situations were discussed to death in the #13 thread, and if you go back and look at them, you'd see that if the Royals underperformed, the Lakers underperformed even more and you had West on your ballot.

I'd like you to elaborate how Robertson's teams underperformed and more than that, how it is decider going against Robertson when you vote for even more questionable names for their underperformed seasons - playoffs?


Oscar's Royals teams had about the same success as KG's Wolves despite having a variety of good players in my opinion as TrueLAFan said last htread

Still thinking about switching off my Oscar vote to Malone or Dirk. I’m reading the support of Oscar’s “winning” with moderate interest, but not a whole lot of belief. And I personally think the “team makeup” favors Oscar over West. Oscar didn’t just have decent teams behind him; they were relatively well-balanced teams. He almost always had an effective frontcourt player (Lucas/Embry), another good to very good perimeter player (Twyman/Van Arsdale), an adequate SG (Bucky Bockhorn/Adrian Smith), and some good defensive role players, often in the frontcourt to complement Embry/Lucas (Boozer/Hairston/Hawkins). I just don’t how see how teams like that with a superstar player stay around .500 every year.


Personally I like Jerry Lucas game a lot with Oscar, he is one of the best floor spacing bigs in the league, led the league in TS multiple times, elite rebounder. The combination of Oscar and Lucas (elite ballhandling guard, spacing big) is decades ahead of time. Twyman early on was elite level scorer, others like Embry are pretty good.

The Bucks played amazingly well when he got there but they were already headed for an elite season as they had won 56 games with rookie Kareem and Dandridge who both then got better in year 2. That's not to take away from how Oscar took him to another level, but adding any top 20 all time player to that team makes them unstoppable.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#57 » by 70sFan » Tue Nov 10, 2020 7:51 pm

The problem with Embry is that he was only decent offensively (sort of a screen setter and decent finisher for Oscar) and he's not good on defense. You basically have decent, but very limited offensive center who couldn't protect the paint in the league when average starting center looked like Walt Bellamy or Zelmo Beaty - it's not positive thing at all.

That was Royals problem - they couldn't defend at all and I think that you have to carry this heavily against Embry and Lucas. Oscar proved that he could be impacful defensively on good defensive teams, so I don't believe he was the problem. His team was full of decent, limited offensive players (outside of Lucas and Twyman, nobody was anything special on offense to be honest) who couldn't defend, especially inside. I mean, a frontcourt of Lucas and Embry/Dierking is terrible on one end of the floor and they weren't dominant offensively either.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#58 » by penbeast0 » Tue Nov 10, 2020 7:52 pm

70sFan wrote:Are there any evidences of Mikan being strong defender? I know that Lakers were dominant defensively, but I've also heard that his supporting cast was the main reason for that - not him. I don't have any strong opinion about it, so if anyone could explain that I'd highly appreciate that.
...


2 things basically:
(a) contemporary observers in books like Terry Pluto's "Tall Tales" talk about Mikan being really good defensively. (I will say that a guy named Bob Kurland who didn't play in the pros at all was supposed to be the greatest defender of that generation, but Mikan gets good rep from those who saw him or played with him).
(b) the team defense is good in an era where the center was at least twice as important as any other position on the floor defensively.

Skillwise, he doesn't seem to be a great shotblocker (no one was in his era that I've seen, maybe because coaches taught you weren't supposed to leave your feet defensively) but he seems quick up and down the floor, plays help defense when I watch him, and his man never seems to either be wide open or to overpower him; more step backs or hook shots in front of him which, as someone who lived by the hook shot as a teenager, I can tell you is a very difficult shot to stop (though the mechanics of it keep it from being as accurate as a jump shot or set shot where you faced up to the basket). He was also considered the strongest player in the league (though not the tallest, that would be Charlie Share).

He had two teammates with excellent defensive reps, Slater Martin at PG and Vern Mikkelsen at PF and I'm sure that was very helpful as was the coach, but he did have that rep as the league premier defensive center from everything I've heard.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#59 » by mailmp » Tue Nov 10, 2020 7:56 pm

Jerry Lucas was also an abysmal defender for most of his Royal career and the team repeatedly showed it did not really need him. If Jerry Lucas is why Robertson is below West then I get chills thinking about the forthcoming arguments with Nash and his incredible privilege in playing with Amar’e. :roll:

To say nothing about how ludicrous it is celebrate Twyman and Embry while taking umbrage at points about how Garnett regularly played with all-star guards on the Timberwolves...
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #14 

Post#60 » by penbeast0 » Tue Nov 10, 2020 8:00 pm

eminence wrote:Thought again on my modern Mikan comparison - a bought in Cousins with better defensive instincts is about the closest I can come up with. Anybody else have any thoughts? Emotional on court (not as much off court), very physical, high skill, strongest in the league sort.


Marc Gasol with Joel Embiid's level of physical talent? Trying to think of a center that is pretty groundbound while still being very effective; which is hard to do in today's league. Marc Gasol is the best example I can think of. Then add best in the league physical talent to that mix.
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