Blackmill wrote:Except I wouldn't say he has significantly more offensive impact. Jordan combined elite efficiency with elite volume in five seasons. Otherwise, his efficiency ranged from average to good. Shaq was actually able to match Jordan's volume, and while he never had the same peak efficiency as Jordan, he did have many more years with good efficiency. For that reason, over multiple seasons, I struggle to see how Jordan's point scoring is significantly better than Shaq's. And Kareem was able to match Jordan's efficiency but not his volume. Kareem had many more seasons than Jordan with either elite or good efficiency. Although he didn't have the same volume, he was still high volume, and the longevity of his scoring once more makes it hard for me to see Jordan as a vastly better scorer over the course of a decade.
I'm not gonna argue superlatives, but yeah, to me MJ was clearly superior offensively. How was Shaq able to match MJ's volume? That makes zero sense anyway you look at it, raw/per36/per100 & pace adjusted Jordan just scored more. I'm not seeing what you're seeing here. As far as efficiency goes, yeah, sure, Shaq had a bunch of seasons where he'd give you north of 25 ppg on around 58%TS but I don't feel that's significant enough in this comparison. MJ just peaked higher clearly as a scorer and was able to amass more prime years of such production while also bringing extra offensive value primarily via his playmaking and off-ball skills (and other things I've alluded to in my previous post). It's no surprise when you take all this in consideration that MJ also comes ahead multiple years in ORtg and OBPM etc. And some of these were achieved when MJ was surrounded with extremely incompetent offensive players the likes of which Shaq probably never experienced in his career. You can also add the fact that MJ, when he was out there, he was really out there in the literal sense, consecutively clocking north of 80 games each season + playoffs on 40 mpg, making his presence felt, while Shaq was known to play in cruise control and even skip multiple games per season during his career. I really don't know how you struggle to see Jordan was a better and more consistent scoring machine really, let alone a superior offensive player.
Kareem is in my Top 3 of all-time mainly because his longevity is stupid good. At the end of the day, it's up to the individual himself to asses how much value he puts in longevity vs. peak etc. etc. Are those extra seasons of Kareem putting 24 ppg on 58%TS playing on a team with Magic no less, enough to trump MJ for you? That's entirely on you, but for me it's not. Again, Jordan has the peak, he has the prime. And when you look at it from a very simplistic manner, it's funny too, because as stellar and long as Kareem's NBA career was, he still did not achieve as much as Jordan did despite playing like 9 more seasons than him. Take it for what it's worth.
Mutnt wrote:Which brings me to another major strength Jordan has over the guys you mentioned. His off-ball skills were godly... He'll just come off a screen and nail a jumper or drive straight in for a high percentage shot and there's not much you can do... Not to mention MJ is a far superior playmaker than any Big in NBA history.
Jordan was very good off the ball. I watched the 1997 finals game 2 yesterday, and so his skills are fresh in my memory, but I can tell you that he settled for many more jumpers than drives to the basket. While Jordan's jumper was smooth, it was never highly efficient on a consistent basis, as evident by his highly varied game-to-game efficiency in the playoffs. But even if Jordan was consistently efficient with his jumper (which he wasn't), him playing off the ball reduced his facilitation at times, which makes me value his off the ball skills less.
Again, I'm not sure where you're getting these uncited stats you are using to claim MJ's efficiency (or lack thereof). Jordan's mid-range jumper wasn't consistently efficient compared to who? To Dirk? To CP3? I think people here tracked and posted stats of Jordan's mid-range percentages in some of his playoff runs and he was very much efficient, not only compared to his contemporary league but rather in general history of the game. I don't have those numbers at hand, but I think if you ask for them in this topic I'm sure some of the many great posters here will be happy to throw some data your way. In the mean time, you don't post numerous years of 60%TS as a guard in the 80's/90's where there was minimal usage of the 3pt shot without being very good from mid-range, which Jordan was, undoubtedly. Big men like Shaq & Kareem logically should be more efficient at the rim, since they pretty much live there as centers, but Jordan matched or even exceeded their efficiency on greater volume as a guard. How was he able to do that without being marvelous from outside the paint? So as much as you wanna harp on MJ's jumper and the reliability and efficiency of it, the results and logic seem to speak otherwise...
re: off-ball; At times sure, but note, MJ posted absurd USG% throughtout his career no matter in what system he played. We're talking usage ratings bigger than Shaq and Kareem year in and year out. Don't think just because MJ didn't pound the ball at the top of the key for 14 seconds before he went to make a play ala LeBron, CP3, Wade etc. (well he did earlier in his career, not so much later on, but back to my point) that somehow limited his ability to make plays within the offense. He still got to make the plays, except Pippen or his PG brought the ball up and moved it until Jordan got free with enough time on the shot clock to make things happen.
I wouldn't say he was struggling. My point was that MJ was more than willing to take a dozen jumpers. And even for a player like MJ, who was very good at getting open looks, the jumper is not reliable.
Again, results speak otherwise. What evidence do you have his jumper was not reliable?
Several points to be made here. Firstly, both Shaq and Kareem have multiple very good post seasons, and like MJ they also have some not-so-good playoff series. There's a certain hypocrisy to complaining that I was singling out Jordan's bad seasons (and I wasn't) and then doing the same for Kareem. Jordan did play better during the playoffs in some respects but it wasn't this vast difference that you seem to be suggesting. Neither the film nor basic stats suggest this, but even if they did, how could you know they weren't a result of the particular teams he faced in the post-season? In the regular season, details such as opponent defense, match-ups, hot streaks and so on are abstracted away by the high number of games and opponents. In the post season these details need to be accounted for.
We're talking about 3 of the top 5 players of all-time. In the case of MJ vs. Kareem, I have them at #1 and #2... No one is talking vast differences here. Clear differences, sure, but vast? Not really. Anyway, like I said previously, a lot depends on subjective criteria and balance. Obviously when we talk about MJ vs. Kareem we talk about like 11 godlike seasons of MJ vs. like 20 of Kareem. After that it's just a matter of how much stock you put on what MJ did in those 11 seasons (6 titles, 6 finals mpvs, 5 mvps, godlike peak, godlike prime, amazing offensive production, solid defense etc.) and what Kareem did in those 20 (6 titles, 2 finals mvps, 6 mvps, not MJ level peak, not MJ level prime etc.)
The strenghts of opponents (both offensively and defensively) as well as teams MJ and Kareem were playing for are all taken into consideration. I don't know how familiar you are with RealGM, but I can tell you there are people on here that breathe basketball and analyze even the smallest of things you and I would never consider. A lot of these debates have been done ad nauseam each year but stick around, you'll be surprised at what information you can garner.