magicmerl wrote:turk3d wrote:On offense, there's no comparison between the two and I'm not su sure that Draymond has him beat by that much on defense.
Draymond is handily the better defender, but you're right that offensively Malone is flat out better.PCProductions wrote:My thought experiment is here: what if I asked you to what degree can you affect the game without netting a single statistic? No points, rebounds, assists, steals, blocks. What is there that one can do in a game without netting one of any of those? I mean, for starters, you can box out, you can set screens, you can have a "hockey assist", you can space the floor. Those are some of the offensive things. Defensively, we all know well that most of that is untracked in those stats. In fact, I would argue that the defensive box score is less meaningful than the other things you can do--that is, steals and blocks amount to less than half of the impact that a great defender has when he plays.
Great post, but ultimately isn't this +/- you're talking about here?PCProductions wrote:Anyway, what gets even more interesting with Draymond is just how this season and his impact compute. I mean, if we're on the side of people who agree that the game can be impacted in a way without necessarily being represented in the box score, then all that really matters is winning and a player's ability to help that happen. The Warriors just cracked the all time record for wins and netted the 6th best SRS of all time. That objectively states that this is one of the NBA's historically great teams. Furthermore, Draymond has had more than enough evidence to state that he is largely to be credited for that dominance, with some even arguing that his impact edges Curry's. And yet, because he doesn't have the PER of Malone's prime, most of that "impact" must really be the product of the system he's in. Malone is independently great because of his ability to stuff the traditional stat sheet, and Draymond does things that are simply enabled by the program he's in, and that cannot be the other way around because... why?
I think PER is a rubbish stat that overrates players who take all the shots. That said, there are statistical box score values that matter, and show Draymond as being good too.
The thing about Karl Malone was that he was never the most talented player in the league, or even in the top 5. But he was often the hardest worker in the league. That's why his regular seasons look so much better than the post season: he brought his A game vs the bottom feeders of the league as well as the best teams, with the obvious result being that he didn't have a 'next level' come playoff time. And he did it for SO LONG. His longevity can't really be a part of any single season evaluation between Draymond and Malone, since Draymond's career is so short by comparison.
I think a better intangibles comparison for Draymond would be Rodman, since he was such an intangibles guy too. It's hard to compare elite passing (for a big) with elite rebounding though.
That said, here's some numbers to compare Draymond with Malone's prime from 89 to 01:
Dramond '16 .190WS/48 5.9BPM 5.6VORP
Malone '89 0.233WS/48 6.1BPM 6.5VORP
Malone '90 0.245WS/48 6.6BPM 6.7VORP
Malone '91 0.225WS/48 5.8BPM 6.5VORP
Malone '92 0.237WS/48 5.3BPM 5.6VORP
Malone '93 0.238WS/48 7.6BPM 7.6VORP
Malone '94 0.193WS/48 6.3BPM 6.9VORP
Malone '95 0.212WS/48 5.8BPM 6.1VORP
Malone '96 0.233WS/48 7.3BPM 7.4VORP
Malone '97 0.268WS/48 8.5BPM 7.9VORP
Malone '98 0.259WS/48 7BPM 6.9VORP
Malone '99 0.252WS/48 6.8BPM 4.1VORP (lockout shortened, prorates as 6.1VORP over 82 game season)
Malone '00 0.249WS/48 6.9BPM 6.6VORP
Malone '01 0.217WS/48 5.9BPM 5.8VORP
So the years Draymond has a case over Malone in '92 (if BPM is your metric of choice). I personally don't think that current Draymond is better than any of the versions of Malone listed in a vacuum,
This is one of the most ridiculous things I've seen posted on this forum in my 15 years on this forum. 2 MVPs, one runner up, twice 3rd, three times 4th, and once 5th. He was 11 times All-NBA, I'm sure he was top 5 in the NBA a couple of times there. I would say Maloine was top 3 atleast 5 years, maybe more. Top 5? Somewhere between 10-15 years.
Defensively, Malone was probably little lower, but he All-Defense 1st three years in a row, and 2nd All-Defense once. That's pretty good.
Malone also had a great NBA Finals performance in 1997. He was a in a bad market, they could never get good free agents, and they never made the lottery, so it was hard to improve, yet they never were quite mediocre, they still got past the 1st round almost every season.

















