How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton

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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#61 » by JordansBulls » Wed Jul 24, 2013 12:29 pm

Joao Saraiva wrote:People just rank Nash ahead cause he won two MVP awards. Guess what that doesn't mean everything.

Shaq has ONE MVP. He's better tham almost every multiple MVP winner.

I think they rank him ahead because of how the offenses were led for the teams he was on.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#62 » by Joao Saraiva » Wed Jul 24, 2013 6:32 pm

JordansBulls wrote:
Joao Saraiva wrote:People just rank Nash ahead cause he won two MVP awards. Guess what that doesn't mean everything.

Shaq has ONE MVP. He's better tham almost every multiple MVP winner.

I think they rank him ahead because of how the offenses were led for the teams he was on.


I think the defensive gap between Stockton and Nash is much bigger than at the other of the court.

Also it's not like Nash played with crap teams.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#63 » by JordansBulls » Wed Jul 24, 2013 11:30 pm

Joao Saraiva wrote:
JordansBulls wrote:
Joao Saraiva wrote:People just rank Nash ahead cause he won two MVP awards. Guess what that doesn't mean everything.

Shaq has ONE MVP. He's better tham almost every multiple MVP winner.

I think they rank him ahead because of how the offenses were led for the teams he was on.


I think the defensive gap between Stockton and Nash is much bigger than at the other of the court.

Also it's not like Nash played with crap teams.

Well it isnt like Stockton played with crap teams either.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#64 » by SDChargers#1 » Tue Oct 29, 2013 11:56 pm

therealbig3 wrote:Stockton wasn't the offensive force that Nash was. He was good, Nash was great. That's really the difference here.

Seems to me Stockton's defense is once again getting VASTLY overrated. It's only recently that Stockton has all of a sudden been described as a "great" defender...he was considered solid during his playing days and just solid until a few years ago, when all of a sudden he started getting treated like Kidd or Payton on defense.

And Nash's defensive deficiencies have always been hugely overblown as well. The fact is, Nash is more or less neutral on defense, Stockton is more or less above average. That's not enough to overcome the fact that Nash is clearly better as an offensive anchor.


Stockton made 5 All Defensive 2nd Teams. He was absolutely considered to be a VERY good defender. Nash has always been considered one of the worst defensive PGs in the NBA.

Say what you will about Stockton's defense. But Stockton is MUCH closer to Nash offensively, than Nash is to Stockton on defense, and that isn't even debatable.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#65 » by CaliBullsFan » Wed Oct 30, 2013 12:46 am

Stockton is better than Nash
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#66 » by Joao Saraiva » Wed Oct 30, 2013 12:47 am

Come on. Stockton is way above Steve Nash.

9 time leader in assists. (best ever in the NBA)
38 game with 20+ assists (Steve Nash has 8!)
More steals than anyone in the NBA
2 time steal leader
more APG in one season 14.5
More assists in one season (it's not the same season as the APG)

Stockton really is a lot underrated. Magic is ahead of him but for me that's it.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#67 » by wallsfamily » Wed Oct 30, 2013 1:09 am

Texas Chuck wrote:"scrappy" doesnt begin to describe Stockton as a defender.


And please stop telling Stockton supporters to not use raw assists totals None of us have tho when a guy laps the field as soundly as Stockton did its not something that should just be brushed aside either. This forum in attempting to understand the true value of an assist has now gone over the edge to where assists are somehow a negative...... Im old enough to have watched Stockton play in his prime and he's not just some system pg. His assists arent meaningless stat padding. Is he a creative playmaker at Nash's level? No I dont think anyone thinks he was. Is there still tremendous value in having a guy who can run your offense to perfection time after time? Is there value to a guy who makes the right pass to the right guy at the right time repeated ad nauseum? Some of you seem to be suggesting otherwise.



That is what I have been saying. The more assists the more points! I go with Stockton barely
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#68 » by nurseryc » Wed Oct 30, 2013 1:18 pm

He wasn't better than Stockton, the leading assist and steals leader in NBA history.

Yes Nash has more MVP awards however MVP's are media driven and have alot to do with popularity rather than who is most deserving of the award. The MVP award has been awarded to many many undeserving winners (some almost criminally wrong choices). Similar to comparing who made the all star team more when again it;s the voting process is media driven and a popularity contest.

Stockton was a better pure point guard than Nash.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#69 » by BmanInBigD » Wed Oct 30, 2013 2:33 pm

Stockton was better than Nash. And Isiah. And just about every other PG not named Magic.

Two MVP's that were fairytale-driven at a time when there were no other all-time dominant players at their established peak don't negate what actually happened on the court.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#70 » by The Infamous1 » Wed Oct 30, 2013 2:52 pm

Nash craps on stockton in the playoffs
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#71 » by Texas Chuck » Wed Oct 30, 2013 3:04 pm

The Infamous1 wrote:Nash craps on stockton in the playoffs


a guy who never took multiple contending level teams in Dallas and Phoenix to even a single finals appearance probably doesnt need to lead with his PS resume in comparison with a guy who never missed the PS for 2 decades, made b2b trips to the finals in a tough Western Conference.

Yeah I know Nash had some tough luck with the Dirk injury in the WCF, the suspensions from gettting hip checked, Amare's injury. But at some point if you want to label a guy a vastly superior PS performer it has to translate into team success especially considering the strength of Nash's teams. This isnt a TMac or KG situation where they rarely if ever had the goods to get there.
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Bottom line is Nash is flashier, and more recent. Stockton is boring and has been reduced to "that guy with all the assists and assists are meaningless." Anyone suggesting either guy is vastly superior to hte other is doing so for reasons other than honest and fair evaluations of their respective basketball abiliities.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#72 » by FortyDaysThree » Wed Oct 30, 2013 3:09 pm

Nash is my #2 point guard all time and Stockton would be somewhere around 5-6.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#73 » by Doormatt » Wed Oct 30, 2013 3:47 pm

Damn this thread was awful. Some guy got seven And 1s for literally just listing Stocktons career numbers as his argument. I thought the PC board was better than that.

Not a single person has mentioned that Nash ran some of the greatest offenses ever or really what he accomplished as a Sun. Stockton never came close to the levels of offensive dominance Nash had. Really this thread was nothing but Stockton fans circle jerking each other.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#74 » by Texas Chuck » Wed Oct 30, 2013 3:55 pm

Doormatt wrote:Damn this thread was awful. Some guy got seven And 1s for literally just listing Stocktons career numbers as his argument. I thought the PC board was better than that.

Not a single person has mentioned that Nash ran some of the greatest offenses ever or really what he accomplished as a Sun. Stockton never came close to the levels of offensive dominance Nash had. Really this thread was nothing but Stockton fans circle jerking each other.


luckily you stopped by and elevated the level of discourse......
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#75 » by Doormatt » Wed Oct 30, 2013 3:58 pm

My input has nothing to do with the quality of discussion that occurred
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#76 » by HeartBreakKid » Wed Oct 30, 2013 7:14 pm

nurseryc wrote:He wasn't better than Stockton, the leading assist and steals leader in NBA history.

Yes Nash has more MVP awards however MVP's are media driven and have alot to do with popularity rather than who is most deserving of the award. The MVP award has been awarded to many many undeserving winners (some almost criminally wrong choices). Similar to comparing who made the all star team more when again it;s the voting process is media driven and a popularity contest.

Stockton was a better pure point guard than Nash.


Well, that isn't very fair.

You're saying Nash's MVP award is just media driven. Well okay.

Then John Stockton's assist are just driven by total minutes. I mean the guy played a ton of games. Why does total assist mean anything? Isn't Mark Jackson second in total assist?
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#77 » by HeartBreakKid » Wed Oct 30, 2013 7:23 pm

G35 wrote:
Gideon wrote:While I think the criticism that Stockton deferred too much offensively in an overall sense may have some validity, the idea that he especially deferred at the end of close games is completely off the mark.

Actually, at the end of close games, Stockton would start to look for his own shot more and/or look to really make something happen instead of just running the standard offense. The fact that he has famous PS game-winners and clutch plays (and even missed shots that he had the courage to attempt, such as the last-second missed three against the Bulls) should actually be pretty good evidence -- but I remember a number of instances in the RS, as well -- both makes and misses -- when Stockton took the last shot. I even remember a couple where he had trouble getting a good shot and ended up forcing something and missing badly (late in his career, there was a fall-away airball from the corner that AK tipped in at the buzzer). He absolutely wasn't reluctant to shoot in those moments.

I think what happens is that people view Stockton, quite reasonably, as the archetypal pass-first fundamentally sound PG. Going along with that feeling, they may think he didn't score quite enough himself to maximize his potential positive impact -- hell, I actually feel sorta that way (although I don't think it was extreme by any means). Then people start thinking -- well, if this guy was "afraid" to shoot enough, I bet he really was afraid when it counted. And that's when the analysis goes off the tracks... because whatever Stockton's reasons were for not looking to score more overall, he actually looked to score quite often at the end of close games.

This makes sense in a basketball-philosophy way if you really think about it -- as a PG, getting everybody else involved, and getting a rhythm going on offense for the team is important. Early in the game, those are things you want to establish. If a play where you keep the ball yourself and shoot is worth, for example, 1.2 points on average, and a play where multiple guys get involved and somebody else shoots is worth 1.1 points on average, it may still be more valuable to run the latter play in the first quarter. With 1 second left and the score tied, that stuff stops mattering, and it's just about giving your team the best chance of getting the ball in the hoop. Not only that, but because of Stockton's style of play earlier in the game, he could sometimes catch opposing teams by surprise when he looked to score aggressively towards the end of a close game.


I agree with this completely. During the course of the game John ran the offense according to the gameplan. When the game was on the line he freelanced a little more looking for his own shot. Wow, what a coincidence that is that maybe coaching affected the way John played. Perhaps if Nash played for Jerry Sloan Nash isn't winning two MVP's.

I don't understand how people give Nash so many excuses and run with a narrative that could apply to a lot players. Nash got lucky and signed with PHX at the right time, with the right coach, and the right combination of players that fit his talents. That's how it works, you get lucky and strike lightning in a bottle. Stockton might have been able to run all time offenses to if his coach sacrificed the defense for offense and let Stockton dictate the offense.....


Well, hey, it's not like Stockton was dealt a bad hand. John was given a great coach, the GOAT PF (Duncan came later), spent the vast majority of his long career in the weaker conference & had the luxury of never getting seriously injured (and strangely enough, so did his partner in Malone). Let's not make Nash vs Stockton a question of who is more fortunate.
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#78 » by G35 » Wed Oct 30, 2013 7:41 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:Well, hey, it's not like Stockton was dealt a bad hand. John was given a great coach, the GOAT PF (Duncan came later), spent the vast majority of his long career in the weaker conference & had the luxury of never getting seriously injured (and strangely enough, so did his partner in Malone). Let's not make Nash vs Stockton a question of who is more fortunate.


Stockton was drafted in 1984 and Sloan didn't become the Jazz coach until the 88-89 season. Playing against the juggernaut of the Lakers with their stacked team is not being given the weaker conference. That is unless you want to say that the Bulls during the 90's had the weaker conference because the West was much stronger at that time with:

Blazers Drexler/Porter/Buck/Duckworth
Suns KJ Barkley
Sonics Payton/Kemp
Rockets Hakeem admittedly not the strongest team but an ATG C with decent parts
Spurs see the Rockets but insert DRob and lesser parts

These teams were winning 50+ games annually in the 90's. Not the easier conference. That would be the East. The Knicks and Miami were flawed defensive teams with lesser stars.

It's not a luxury of never getting injured. He was injured for the first time when the Jazz made the finals for the 2nd time.

That offense that the Jazz ran was not perfect for boxscore stat stuffing. It was a safe, predictable, efficient offense but that safe and predictable doesn't produce all time great offenses. Plus the pick and roll offense that Utah ran relied quite a bit on Stocktons baseline screens to free up players. Nash would not be physiaclly capable of setting those screens that helped make the Jazz offense so effective.

Nash was in the league for several years and never showed that he could be an effective ball dominant PG. Nash should send D'Antoni for allowing him to run those Suns offenses because no one else would have......
I'm so tired of the typical......
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Re: How much better was Steve Nash than John Stockton 

Post#79 » by HeartBreakKid » Wed Oct 30, 2013 10:57 pm

G35 wrote:

Stockton was drafted in 1984 and Sloan didn't become the Jazz coach until the 88-89 season.
Well, yeah, but that is 15 seasons worth of having Jerry Sloan.

Playing against the juggernaut of the Lakers with their stacked team is not being given the weaker conference.
Hm? During that same time there were the Celtics who were as relevant for nearly as long. Bad Boy Pistons. Jordan. What's so great about the West in the 80s?

Aside from that, it is not like the Lakers were a road block to the Jazz. It's one thing if they bumped into them every year, but the Jazz lost to teams that were not great at all. Mavericks, Nuggets, Warriors, Rockets. I'm not saying that that tells the whole story, but let's not make it seem like their lack of success was due to being thrown into the wolves. They lost or struggled against teams that were the underdogs quite a few times.

That is unless you want to say that the Bulls during the 90's had the weaker conference because the West was much stronger at that time with

Blazers Drexler/Porter/Buck/Duckworth
Suns KJ Barkley
Sonics Payton/Kemp
Rockets Hakeem admittedly not the strongest team but an ATG C with decent parts
Spurs see the Rockets but insert DRob and lesser parts

These teams were winning 50+ games annually in the 90's. Not the easier conference. That would be the East. The Knicks and Miami were flawed defensive teams with lesser stars.
But some of those West teams were stronger at different points. Like the Blazers and Suns had already fizzled out by the mid 90s.

Maybe I shouldn't have said weaker conference, that is kinda a strong connotation. Though I'm thinking it is one thing for them to run into a team like the Bulls every season. But some of these teams, there is no reason why the Jazz could not win - or at least be game (which sometimes they were).

Also, why call the Knicks a flawed team but mention the Rockets and Spurs?

It's not a luxury of never getting injured. He was injured for the first time when the Jazz made the finals for the 2nd time.
Out of 20 seasons thats not too bad, aye?

You can't play that many seasons and that many games, and not say that the guy was a little lucky, or at the very least he was not unlucky. Not only that, but the franchise player on his team was basically never injured either. Many players who are "unlucky" have had the misfortunes of either being seriously hurt or having a star player that they needed get seriously hurt.

That offense that the Jazz ran was not perfect for boxscore stat stuffing.
Who cares about stuffing stats? Aside from that, Stockton fills up the statlines pretty well. Also, many would say that Sloan's offense does lead to a lot of assist, there are people who have called Deron Williams a system PG for that very reason.

I'm not saying John is merely a system PG (though technically he was), I dont even care if guys can only be good in certain systems - but it's not like he is someone who has poor stats and that is why someone would take Nash over him. Stat wise they are pretty similar. Mentioning a system hindering someones stats would work with someone like Frazier, who's stats didn't capture how much of a passer he was, but for Stockton? I don't know, I think everyone basically gets the memo that he's an all time great passer and shooter - so much to the point where he might even be an archtype.

It was a safe, predictable, efficient offense but that safe and predictable doesn't produce all time great offenses.
True enough.

Nash would not be physiaclly capable of setting those screens that helped make the Jazz offense so effective.
Hm..maybe - regardless Nash has proven himself in the pick and roll with stellar results.

Nash was in the league for several years and never showed that he could be an effective ball dominant PG.
[/quote]Really? He was damn good before he ever got to Phoenix. Maybe he was overlooked and what not, but you can't say he didn't have star talent or potential.


I understand the counter argument to Nash being ranked above Stockton. Nash leading an all time great offense shouldn't count for much because his production is heavily reliant on a system. But shouldn't he get some credit for that?

It's one thing to call someone a system PG or infer it. But is it an actual insult if Nash is the only person who can run that system? During the time Steve Nash played, how many other people could run the Suns offense the same way Nash did? Stockton has the tools to do the same thing, don't get me wrong, but when you're only talking about a handful of players who could have done what Nash did, he def deserves a large chunk of the credit. D'Antoni hasn't been able to duplicate anything like what he did when he worked with Nash during his MVP years.

Another thing is, Nash has proven himself to not be a one trick pony. At least to me. I've seen Nash in many different systems, with many different players, with many different talent gaps, and he's been stellar in all of them. Heck, his last season with Phoenix he nearly carried a team that would be a bottom 3-5 team with out him to the playoffs in the West (a game or 2 behind).


Anyway, the morale of this story is I don't like the arguments that Steve Nash got lucky. Maybe it was the perfect storm, but he's proven that he can be pretty much elite when he's not running an SSOL. I mean it is not like the guys career fell apart when D'Antoni left, Nash himself still played great for many years.

I just think in a debate between Stockton and Nash, one should acknowledge that both guys had good talent around them at certain points in their career. Both guys had great longevity and played at a very high level at a very advance age. It just rubs me the wrong way when I see people say "John was so lucky, he played with Karl Malone" or "Look at how stacked Nash's team was, so many offensive weapons". I mean both guys had it pretty good.

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