Post#68 » by Sedale Threatt » Mon Jul 11, 2011 5:17 pm
Attitude, injuries and less-than-full effort on the boards and defense are all legitimate criticisms of Shaquille O'Neal.
Duncan and Olajuwon were just better defensive players, period.
Olajuwon had his moments when he squabbled with management, but was generally highly regarded as a teammate. Duncan, of course, is about the model for that area. Neither was on par with Shaq in terms of feuding with teammates; indeed, has anybody in history?
Both had more versatile skill sets, and could obvious dominate any given game they played in. But I'm looking at basic offensive numbers, and I'm wondering how Shaq isn't better than them both by a decent margin.
Duncan's career high in points: 25.5 ppg. Shaq surpassed that TEN times! Duncan's career-best in TS% would have been an average season for Shaq. Whatever edge Duncan has on Shaq in terms of defense, I'd argue that Shaq surpasses that on the other end. Duncan was never, ever the offensive force Shaq was in his prime.
Plus, it wasn't as if Shaq, for all the (legitimate) questions about his effort, was a poor defender and rebounder. Indeed, he was usually at least good, just not what he could have been. And let's not forget -- Duncan, while an admittedly better defensive player, never led the league in blocked shots and rebounds, either.
Other than the fact you're not going to have to deal with injuries and attitude, I'm just not seeing a big edge for Duncan. I can certainly understand a case for him, but in terms of peak over consistency, I think I'm taking the peak.
Then we get to Olajuwon, who was an even better defensive player, and pretty hard to argue against a guy who improved in the playoffs like he did.
This is probably unfair, just like a lot of the flak KG got during his detention in Minnesota, but I guess I look at Olajuwon and wonder, where was uber-Dream on a more consistent basis?
I understand he started his career late, and his development unfolded accordingly. But the biggest feathers in his cap are those two championship seasons, and it just didn't feel when he was playing, nor do his numbers indicate, he was at that level consistently throughout his career.
Looking at Olajuwon's peak as an offensive player, he was obviously more skilled and versatile. But sort of like Duncan, his top scoring years would have been average for Shaq during his first 11 years in the NBA.
Plus, Shaq got to the line way more -- didn't convert well, but there still value in racking up fouls -- and he also shot better overall (Shaq career TS%, 58.2; Duncan 55.2; Olajuwon 55.3).