bastillon wrote:as for Dwight, I think you have to understand how APM stats function. there's some way to adjust those numbers but in the end you have to consider that backups do have impact on your performance. Gortat IMO is one of the best centers in the league (and certainly was that in his CY last year) so you have to take those numbers with a grain of salt.
more importantly, as much as he struggled offensively vs Celtics and vs Lakers, he was extremely dominant against the Cavs. he averaged like 26/13 and 70% TS (forgot exact numbers) and obviously was providing his DPOY defense in the meantime. and even when he wasn't dominant offensively against other teams, he still had excellent impact on opp defenses with his presence inside. Magic's system was based on the opps collapsing on Dwight inside so that's how they had so many 3s. I feel like stats strongly misrepresent his overall value. in the end, his team was top of the league defensively and his teammates were Turkoglu, Lewis and Nelson (give me a break anybody ?), none of whom are known for playing good defense (and then you have to consider that Turkoglu's one of the members of the worst defensive team in '10).
You have some interesting against the grain takes in this post, but I would rebut some of your logic. You are right that your backup factors into the equation. That said, we're arguing whether Howard was among the two best players in the NBA last season or whether he was "just" top five. Gortat was solid, but he doesn't belong anywhere near that exalted level of company. And if the team generally performed at a similar level with Gortat as opposed to Howard (not just "they won, so it's the same", I mean on a game-to-game basis there wasn't a glaring advantage to how the team performed with Howard) then I do have to at least question whether some of Howard's box score stats are not quite as valuable as they might look (like that 2008 study concluded).
Also, I find your examples of when he played well and when he didn't extremely telling. Howard struggled against Boston (Perkins, no KG) and LA (Gasol, injured Bynum, Odom) but exploited the heck out of slow-footed Ilgauskas and Cleveland. Later in the post you mention Varejao, but my recollection was that generally when Varejao was in the game and on Howard the Cavs would make their runs, then Brown would put Z back on Howard and the game would fall apart again. Nevertheless, the emergent pattern to me is that Howard could dominate lesser centers but struggled against teams with actual solid frontlines. Considering that one of the main arguments that detractors use against Howard is that he is only elite due to the dearth of quality centers in the league, the fact that his postseason performance last year seemed to support that criticism is a strike to me.
bastillon wrote:as for LeBron, his stats may have been great, but you have to take the context into account. he started the playoffs by playing against mentally collapsed Detroit Pistons that had finished the RS in an embarrassing fashion. then, he played against physically collapsed Atlanta that had relied on their starters to win in the RS, but now that Horford, Joe Johnson and Marvin Williams were flat out injured and the other guys were pretty banged up as well, they had nothing to showcase against the Cavs. that's a great way to padd your stats and the main reason Cleveland was so overrated before the Magic series started.
then James played against a serious playoff team for the first time and Cleveland failed immediately. for those who don't wanna give Dwight any credit for that series and handle LeBron the POY right away, consider this: IIRC Cleveland was twice winning by 20 points or more in the first two games. first time the Magic came back and won, the second time LeBron hit that shot to rescue their series. how much can we blame LeBron for this ? I mean those two games were basically won and LeBron let them win. blaming Mo and Delonte for playing really bad is one thing, but when your team is already up by 20, you CAN'T lose when you're as good as James.
also, how can you give LeBron the credit for his great defense when it was no longer the case in the playoffs ? the whole season for Cleveland basically started in the ECFs. they faced crap before and the east was pretty much terrible last year anyway (KG went down, Atlanta was a lottery team after the injuries etc). the only opponent that's worth mentioning was Orlando. now whether you like it or not, James defense was horrendous during that series and it's possibly the biggest joke ever to give him runner-up DPOY after you watch that series. not only that James was hidden on Rafer freaking Alston AKA the worst starting PG on finals team, but also Alston torched him twice in that series. I forgot which game that was, but he had like 25-pt game and 17-pt game at some point. those were 2 crucial games that let Magic won the series. LeBron being great offensively on one end is one thing, but when he was pretty much a liability on defense, it's something you have to take into account.
As someone else has pointed out, I see gross double standards applied here vs the way you addressed Howard and Kobe. LeBron and Howard both dominated the regular season against possibly inferior game-in/game-out competition, but individually LeBron's postseason was much better than Howard's. As mentioned above, Howard struggled individually in both of the series where he faced legitimate frontlines, losing one series and frankly almost losing in the other against a Celtics team that had no business even remaining competitive. LeBron, on the other hand, demolished every defender and defense put in his path. The Magic were a horrifying matchup for them, and that's not just revisionist history...before the series began and/or one game in there were several analysts (including me) that pointed out how the Magic squad was built to take advantage of every Cavs weakness. I thought that it wouldn't matter, that somehow LeBron would "will" his team to victory, but the more and more I "grow up" as a basketball analyst the more I find that such things rarely REALLY happen...I grew up being sold that they did, but when you go back and look there is much more often a solid basketball reason besides "will" to account for the majority of wins.
bastillon wrote:as for Bryant, I think he's generally overrated. I think he doesn't have the tools to compete with the likes of Hakeem, Magic etc on ATL. that being said, he's being overlooked in this thread. have you forgotten yet the "bad mofo" face against the Nuggets ? have you forgotten how he played against Battier/Artest combo in the 2nd Round ? the "hand in the face" shots he made consistently against picture-perfect defense of Battier ? have you forgotten how inspired the Lakers were in ALL statement games ? have you forgotten the 35/6/7 Kobe (or smth like that) in the WCFs ? have you forgotten how far they were from losing in those playoffs ? they pretty much demolished every statement game that year and Bryant was clearly the best player on by-far the best team. I'm gonna credit him for that... and he won the title as well.
I mean... what could he have done more ? put up better stats when you have Gasol, Odom and Bynum on your team ? do you really think it was the most important thing. Bryant dominated in the playoffs like nobody else.
When it comes to Kobe's postseason performance, I am torn. He did personally enough for his team to win, but the team wasn't overly impressive in doing so and circumstances conspired to prevent him from having to face what should have been his toughest tests. For a personal example to you, I remember you arguing in the past that Duncan's 2003 championship run wasn't quite as legendary as it is sometimes made out to be because he went through a Laker's team where Kobe was hurt, then Webber and Dirk both went down with major injuries that paved the way for him to go through lesser competition. I actually agree with that assessment, but that's besides the point...the point is that if you're going to note that as a negative for Duncan (who also posted consistently absurd numbers that postseason), then you have to do the same for Kobe. They beat two reasonable but uninspiring teams (Utah and Denver), got gift wrapped a Houston team without their two best players but still got taken to 7 games, and then got to face the least of the 3 Eastern contenders as far as matching up with that team. Garnett's injury and LeBron's cast difficulties with the Magic paved the way for Kobe's Lakers.
Now, as I put in my post on the first page of this thread, I give Kobe some bonus points for leading his team to the title no matter what the circumstances are. But he was well behind LeBron going in, and his performance as an individual doesn't garner nearly enough bonus points to overcome that gap for me.