RealGM Top 100 List #42

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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#61 » by drza » Thu Sep 22, 2011 6:21 pm

Dr Mufasa wrote:Yeah, as I said, with Rodman it's useful to compare him in each role compared to KJ, Lanier, Pau, Parish, etc.

As 1st player/team leader - Takes a big strike compared to the others here, in both pure game and leadership. I agree that with most of the players on the board you're not getting past 50 W pretender type team if they're your best guy like Lanier, Pau, KJ's best teams... but I don't think Rodman gets that far. 92 I suppose was the closest we saw to that with Rodman being the best statistical player on a 48 W-er, but the it was still the Isiah and Dumars backcourt defining the team, especially mentally

As 2nd best player - Very feasible he can be #2 on a contender/title team. But I'd feel even more confident if KJ, Pau, etc. are my 2nd best player. With Rodman your best fit is a great guard I would assume... Kobe seems as good a fit as any. Would anyone really rather have Kobe and Rodman over Kobe and Pau? I wouldn't. Harder to cross compare KJ's superstar partner Barkley because you obviously don't want him playing with Rodman, but we can sub in Jerry West or Steve Nash who are close to Barkley in impact - Would you take West and Rodman/Nash and Rodman over KJ and Barkley? Over say, Wade and Parish? I definitely, would not. When I look at the situations, the 20/10 big man like Pau, Parish, etc. always looks even better beside a star guard like a Kobe, Wade, Isiah, etc. than Rodman does. And Rodman doesn't have more value beside a star SF, PF, or C than they do, I wouldn't think - We saw him with DRob and while it led to fine results, obviously you'd prefer Kevin Johnson or Ray Allen playing beside Robinson that year if you could have them


See, this is where we each have to decide how well our intuition serves us. Because yes, the intuition is that you would prefer a balanced player like Pau Gasol to a super-specialist like Rodman. But then, what happens if you really play it out in your head...

Let's look at the two times in the last four years that the Lakers have lost in the playoffs. In '08 against the Celtics, a little-appreciated aspect of that series is that the rebounds told the story. In games 1, 2 and 6 the Celtics dominated the glass (average 14.7 rpg advantage for Celtics) while in games 3, 4 and 5 the Lakers battled them on the glass (Lakers +1 net on the glass in those 3 games). Not coincidentally, the 3 games that the Celtics easily won the battle of the boards are the 3 games that they controlled, while the other 3 games were two Lakers wins and another game that the Lakers perhaps SHOULD have won outside of an epic collapse.

The same two teams met in the Finals 2 years later, and once again, it was the rebounds that told the story. The team that won the battle of the glass won all 7 games in the series, and of course game-7 was a Lakers win almost solely because they were able to crash the boards so hard to overcome a difficult shooting night.

Then, this year, the Lakers were swept by a Mavericks team that they purely couldn't stop. Dirk Nowitzki absolutely torched them. But if you were able to pick any player from NBA history that you would choose to guard Dirk Nowitzki...wouldn't Rodman have to be top-3 on your list?

I feel like I could make a very reasonable case, from this exact example, that the Lakers with Rodman instead of Pau Gasol would have been favored to win the title in each of the last four years. The primary benefit of Pau over Rodman is obviously on offense, but Kobe and Odom both had the ability to score more that they reigned in with Pau in attendance, and then when Bynum was healthy he gave you another scoring option. But at the other end, the Lakers never really had anyone that could fully replicate what Rodman could give them. The difference is, if it were Rodman in place of Gasol our instinct would be to declare that it was really Odom or Bynum that was the 2nd best player because they would be handling more offense. But just because Rodman's tools of dominance lie elsewhere, that doesn't mean they aren't being brought to bear.

And though what I just fleshed out was an argument based on one specific example, I feel like we've seen enough from Rodman's career to suggest that his impact is scalable to many different situations. That was something that the in-depth website that DocMJ linked to several threads back really brought home...Rodman missed a lot of games over many different years, and the consistent result was that when he was gone his teams suffered. As such, when the author looked at in/out effect on win%, scoring differential, or a combination of the two, the result was always the same...Rodman leading every NBA player since 1986 that had missed a lot of games ( http://skepticalsports.com/?p=1214 ). A list in which the rest of the top-5 that he beat out were Shaq, Barkley, Kidd and Kobe.

I've seen folks question whether Rodman was really one of the best players on the '90 champion Pistons, but he was the Defensive Player of the Year on a team that won with defense first. In Chicago he amped up his minutes when Pippen missed half of a season in '98, and the defense if anything got stronger without arguably the best perimeter defender in history.

Rodman' skill set is what we associate with role players, but his impact seems much more consistent with what we consider to be superstars. And every thought exercise proposed, if I really play it out to it's end point, seems to end with me believing that Rodman really would improve a team even over the more traditional offensive contributions of the other players that we are considering for this slot.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#62 » by ElGee » Thu Sep 22, 2011 9:38 pm

I've rethought Rodman, watched old game or two, and am slowly telescoping my opinion. The last 2 posts by Dr Mufasa and drza were really good -- is it possible to agree with both of those?

The 92 game I watched Rodman played a lot of CENTER. As he did at times in Chicago. What's so amazing about this to me is that in the same season, he started a number of games at SF...and can truly guard SG's. Pretty cool versatility, and frankly for many years I think he was a better offensive player than someone like Ben Wallace (better shooter, more athletic finisher, better OREB).

BUT!

Look at his career value year-by-year...

88 is probably the first plausible year to say he's relevant, and he's a 26 mpg player and 21 mpg in the PS. I don't know if I'm there

89 his role expands slightly and he is all-D...goodness is he an amazing rebounder though. (24.4 in the PS)

90 He's an all-star and DPOY.
91 his role expands to 34 mpg and again DPOY
92 He's an all-star but his minutes go way down in the New York seres.
93 Rebounding title (as discussed) but misses 20 games
94 Rebounding title and big PS numbers (and team stunk in one game he missed in PS)
95 All-NBA despite missing 33 games...and the difference in SAS with/without him wasn't huge in those games. There's the question of him not guarding guys like Horry and sitting home for rebounds in the PS.
96 Great year.
97 Missed 27 games and struggled in the PS. Only 28 mpg, IIRC he had discipline problems and didn't start until the Miami series. He was ejected from 3 playoff games early in the PS and I believe that was the groin-kicking suspension season. He played big minutes v Mia and small min against Uta.
98 Well behaved Rodman who also had good minutes/impact in PS.

That's basically it. I wonder about years like 92, 95 and 97. Which leaves 89-98 as 7 good years. And I don't think I can argue Rodman is a top-10 player in any of those years. Probably not top-15...and that kind of value doesn't crack where we are my list quite yet.

To leave on a positive, I remember Rodman joining a struggling Lakers team after the lockout and really helping them. But then of course, that didn't work out...

99 LAL without Rodman (27g) +1.6
99 LAL with Rodman (23g) +4.7
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#63 » by Fencer reregistered » Thu Sep 22, 2011 10:23 pm

On the intangibles side, I'm oddly unconcerned about Rodman, even though he's close to my best player. He's not really going to lead other guys into drunken debauchery, practice laziness, or rebellion against the coach. He does fill my Looney Tunes quota; if I have Rodman on the team, I can't also have Artest. That's a negative. On the positive side, defending hard is automatically a favorable intangible of leading by example -- but the positive effect is diminished by the general "I'm not like that weirdo" vibe.

So I think Rodman's intangibles net out close enough to even to be disregarded.

Good point about his actual longevity -- we're looking at a lot of guys here who really had only 5-7 good seasons. A plausibility argument supporting the year by year analysis is that undersized hard-playing big men rarely last all that long, be they on the MVP level (Cowens) or just nice role players (Jerome Williams, aka Junkyard Dog). Rodman arguably lasted longer than most.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#64 » by Laimbeer » Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:18 am

Hard to imagine how Miller goes ahead of bigs like Reed, Cowens, and Hayes, who were forces on title teams and far more impactful, particularly on the defensive end. Does anyone take Miller over those guys to start a team?

Waaaay too early for KJ. Do we realize he played in three all-star games? Somewhat so for Rodman, but he's a reasonable choice.

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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#65 » by therealbig3 » Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:27 am

Updated count:

Vote:

Miller-6 (therealbig3, Doctor MJ, JordansBulls, Fencer reregistered, Dr Mufasa, ElGee)

Reed-5 (ronnymac2, Snakebites, drza, TMACFORMVP, Laimbeer)

Moncrief-1 (penbeast0)

Iverson-1 (FJS)



Nominate:

KJ-6 (therealbig3, Dr Mufasa, ElGee, Doctor MJ, Snakebites, TMACFORMVP)

Rodman-5 (penbeast0, Fencer reregistered, DavidStern, drza, Laimbeer)

McAdoo-1 (ronnymac2)

Penny-1 (JordansBulls)

Worthy-1 (FJS)
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#66 » by Fencer reregistered » Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:31 am

Laimbeer wrote:Hard to imagine how Miller goes ahead of bigs like Reed, Cowens, and Hayes, who were forces on title teams and far more impactful, particularly on the defensive end. Does anyone take Miller over those guys to start a team?


Longevity factored in, yes.

Season by season, do I take Cowens (or Reed) plus Kirk Hinrich over Reggie plus Kendrick Perkins? Probably. But adjusting for longevity, Reggie wins. Is the era discount enough to swing it back to Cowens or Reed? Close.

(I'm judging Hinrich & Perk to be roughly equivalent -- non-all-stars who are however better than typical full-MLE players.)
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#67 » by Fencer reregistered » Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:32 am

Is there much difference between Reed and Cowens, two guys with similar accolades and longevity? If so, why?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#68 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:32 am

Laimbeer wrote:Hard to imagine how Miller goes ahead of bigs like Reed, Cowens, and Hayes, who were forces on title teams and far more impactful, particularly on the defensive end. Does anyone take Miller over those guys to start a team?

Waaaay too early for KJ. Do we realize he played in three all-star games? Somewhat so for Rodman, but he's a reasonable choice.


Re: Miller

Problem with Reed is the longevity. It's a serious issue.

Cowens doesn't have huge longevity so that's part of the deal, but I could see someone making an excellent case for him over Miller even though I don't think it would sway me.

I've talked about my feelings on Hayes. Essentially I think he's a pinnacle of being overrated by volume: Shooting inefficiently and playing minutes I wouldn't play anyone. He's also got serious longevity, but then so does Miller.

Re: KJ 3 all-stars. Yes 3 all-stars, but 5 all-NBA teams, 4 of which are on the 2nd teams. And 3 of those 2nd teams came with Magic & MJ in the league which essentially made 1st team impossible. Add in some really outstanding playoff performances, and this really isn't a guy who should be looked at drastically differently from other high peak, mediocre longevity guys.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#69 » by therealbig3 » Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:37 am

Laimbeer wrote:Hard to imagine how Miller goes ahead of bigs like Reed, Cowens, and Hayes, who were forces on title teams and far more impactful, particularly on the defensive end. Does anyone take Miller over those guys to start a team?

Waaaay too early for KJ. Do we realize he played in three all-star games? Somewhat so for Rodman, but he's a reasonable choice.

Vote: Willis Reed
Nominate: Dennis Rodman


Well, only 2 guards made the team in 89, and they were Magic and Stockton...and you could make the case that KJ should have made the team over Stockton.

In 92, I think KJ should have made it over Hardaway.

In 97, Eddie Jones, Sprewell, Stockton, and Payton all made it over KJ. I think you can definitely make the case for him over all of them.

And finally...who really cares about All-Star appearances anyway? It's a popularity contest, which is why AI and Shaq were getting votes way after their time had passed. And we're supposed to vote in the best player, not the most popular. KJ was a beast in his prime, he should definitely be voted in imo.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #42 

Post#70 » by penbeast0 » Fri Sep 23, 2011 2:39 am

Miller in, KJ on list by therealbig3's count . . . ok, new thread coming up
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