SD Chargers wrote:It is a pretty seismic difference in accomplishments since '05.
It would be like saying, in '91 everyone would have taken Magic over Jordan. Come '98 though Jordan had clearly surpassed him.
While this is a good analogy, the parallel isn't the same.
First of all, KG was WAY ahead of Kobe in 2005 ITO of what he gives you over a career. KG was comparable to Kobe in 2006 IMO. Just as a ballpark measure, at that point in time I'd have Kobe somewhere between 30 and 35 and probably behind someone like Clyde Drexler. KG was ~ top 20.
Then in 2006, they are quite comparable. 2007, Kobe's better. 2008, I think Kobe's better by a similar margin again, but it was a big year from KG (I thought he was MVP, he won RPOY). It's really the last 3 years where Kobe makes huge strides on Garnett, bringing his career value into the same ballpark.
KG missed the playoffsFirst of all, KG didn't miss the playoffs. His team did. The project criteria is incredible clear on this -- we want to focus on individuals. The idea that Kobe and KG were in comparable situations, all we have to is isolate everyone else and look at team W-L as a reflection of player value is not only naive it's spectacularly wrong. It'd be like suggesting Dallas and New Orleans had similar teams this year.
I've written about this a number of times, here are the cliff notes:
*Minnesota lost 4 consecutive 1st round draft picks. Strip that from any team, and they will struggle massively
*Minnesota lost all of its best complimentary players to crippling injuries (Gugliotta, Brandon, Szczerbiak). This hurt the team on the court and crippled value in trade assets
*Dwayne Casey was no Phil Jackson
The 2005 team is a near 2 SRS team that misses the PS. The biggest difference is in defensive drop, in which they lose a guy like Johnson at center and have the loping, lost Michael Olowokandi trying to play (and he was a disaster). Cassell is injured, Spree on his last legs and post-injury Wally is a defensive liability. They still finish 15th on D and 6th in offense.
In 2006, the whole thing collapses with Casey at the plate. (I Know drza has some great posts about these teams -- he can fill in.) Consider that teams roster though of over 100 min:
Blount, Banks, Griffin, McCants, Davis, Wally, Jaric, Hassell
That's it! I'm not leaving out a Lamar Odom. Wally, Banks and Blount missed half the year. Justin Reed started 6 games! Ronald Dupree, Richie Frahm and Bracie Wright got burn! What's so significant about that?
Well when you put together a bunch of players who can't play in the league with a coach who can't, the offense will absolutely stink (28th). Oh, all bad teams are created equally? No, no they aren't. There is a giant different between a team with balance, roles, other creators, like
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... r_by_asc=YKobe's "Historic" Scoring seasonI'm not sure why this is brought up, other than to overstate value. Yes, it was an historic scoring season. So was Wilt's 1962. So was Barkley's 1988 or Dantley's 1982. None of them were GOAT offensive level seasons, so pointing to it speak of a misunderstanding of offensive team dynamics or just an attempt to arbitrarily prop someone up. Why not reference Garnett's 04 as an "historic?" Or KG's "historic" opening decade (one of 4 players to avg. 20-11-4 for first 10 years).
The season's been put under a microscope, including in the RPOY, so I won't say much more here, other than to note the obvious that plenty of players have taken mediocre teams to ~.500...I consider 2006 Bryant's 5th or 6th best season, so again it's strange to hear it referenced in a debate like this in which I assume we all understand jacking up a billion shots, while helpful at times, does not equate to GOATness.