Retro POY '90-91 (Voting Complete)

Moderators: penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ, trex_8063

Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 52,719
And1: 21,664
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#81 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Jun 11, 2010 11:46 pm

Manuel Calavera wrote:I think what sp6r was asking was Robinson being denied the ball which limited his touches? Even short PF/SF's can deny the ball to a center if that's what the focus of the defense is.


Well, it has to be mentioned that this is a major part of why big men have limited impact on offense, and why a guy who can score like a big man without that limitation is a white tiger.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
User avatar
kaima
Senior
Posts: 526
And1: 27
Joined: Aug 16, 2003

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#82 » by kaima » Fri Jun 11, 2010 11:48 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
Manuel Calavera wrote:I think what sp6r was asking was Robinson being denied the ball which limited his touches? Even short PF/SF's can deny the ball to a center if that's what the focus of the defense is.


Well, it has to be mentioned that this is a major part of why big men have limited impact on offense, and why a guy who can score like a big man without that limitation is a white tiger.


Also gets back to the question of efficiency's worth; Robinson was very efficient, but was he very effective?

Sometimes it's better to force the issue. It might make your advanced stats look worse, but it may be what the team needs.

Limiting shot attempts? May be understandable, depending. But for a volume scorer to only get 13 shots a game is critically bad.
Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 52,719
And1: 21,664
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#83 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Jun 11, 2010 11:49 pm

ronnymac2 wrote:All right. I need to dock Hakeem for missing 26 games. That's borderline really bad for me. When Shaq was missing thirty, I only put him at fifth once because of only good competition. Hakeem has great competition here.


It goes well beyond that though. Aside from the fact that Hakeem's production went way down this year, when a team gets to play 26 games without their star, you get to see what they are capable of. The Rockets did fine without Hakeem (again they did much worse the next year when Hakeem played significantly more). This is absolutely not a case where you knock an MVP-level guy don't a couple spots because he missed some time, there was far more going on here than that.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
User avatar
Dr Positivity
RealGM
Posts: 62,305
And1: 16,261
Joined: Apr 29, 2009
       

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#84 » by Dr Positivity » Fri Jun 11, 2010 11:55 pm

Just a note on Malone. For the most part he played well in the PS. But there are cracks like the end of Game 1 in 97 and going 1/6 in the 2nd half of the Flu Game. You can also look at something like 95 Game 5 against Houston. Utah is up 7 in the 4th quarter at home. Houston comes back and wins it. The really transcendent players... those are the games they make sure are locked up and they step up and take them by the throat... they make sure that when Houston cuts it to 1-2 or w/e, they come back and scores the next couple possessions to make it a 6-7 point game again to kill their spirit. Malone scores a couple more points there they win. They score a couple more in Game 6 in 98 and they maybe win. He doesn't get smacked around by Jordan in the Flu Game and they go up 3-2 and are in a really good position to win. So Malone didn't step up and take those games. That's deserving of getting hit a few spots
Liberate The Zoomers
Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 52,719
And1: 21,664
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#85 » by Doctor MJ » Sat Jun 12, 2010 12:05 am

DavidStern wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Barkley is leading a weak supporting cast here too (as mentioned before, the Sixers were tuurrible for a half decade after he left),



But they weren't terrible that season!
Hawkins was All Star, they had Giliam and Mahorn, solid Green and good role players like Anderson.


I don't know what you mean. Hawkins and Gilliam were still there in prime after Barkley left, and they got Hornacek then. Green was there one year only, and the team was good before he got there. Anderson was a bench guy.

I mean, I know the team wasn't terrible that season - their success was what I was using to argue for Barkley. There's nothing about that supporting cast that makes me think "Wow, they're WAY better than the next few years!".



DavidStern wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:Now Robinson's got the D advantage, but a huge question all through this project is how tough his D really is.


We are talking only about 1991. Besieds it kind of funny how Robinson's HUGE advantage on D is ignored here, while for example in All Time League no way Barkley 1991 wuld be pick before Robinson 1991. I remember some ATL threads and Barkley defense was criticized as much as possible. Now suddenly it doesn't matter.

BTW, even people at the time think that Robinson was much better:
MVP voting:
Magic 497 pts
Robinson 476
Barkley 222

So Robinson was closer to Magic than Barkley to him. And suddenly 4 post season games are supposed to change that? And Robinson even didn't played bad in post season...


Funny you should bring up the ATL.

As the guy who ran the original ATL and managed to get both Jordan and Barkley on his team, I have a long history of being exasperated as people constantly lifted the centers of this era up way above the power forwards in the name of defense.

Re: "people at the time thought Robinson was much better". That's just silly. First off, a one spot difference in MVP voting is never "much better". Secondly, MVP voters had already shown a track record of consider Barkley to be virtually an equal of Magic. This wasn't Barkley's best year, and it should be held against him to some degree, possibly to the point in the view of some that Robinson surpasses him. No one should pretend though that Barkley was looked at as a tier below Robinson.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
User avatar
kaima
Senior
Posts: 526
And1: 27
Joined: Aug 16, 2003

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#86 » by kaima » Sat Jun 12, 2010 12:05 am

Dr Mufasa wrote:Just a note on Malone. For the most part he played well in the PS. But there are cracks like the end of Game 1 in 97 and going 1/6 in the 2nd half of the Flu Game. You can also look at something like 95 Game 5 against Houston. Utah is up 7 in the 4th quarter at home. Houston comes back and wins it. The really transcendent players... those are the games they make sure are locked up and they step up and take them by the throat... they make sure that when Houston cuts it to 1-2 or w/e, they come back and scores the next couple possessions to make it a 6-7 point game again to kill their spirit. Malone scores a couple more points there they win. They score a couple more in Game 6 in 98 and they maybe win. He doesn't get smacked around by Jordan in the Flu Game and they go up 3-2 and are in a really good position to win. So Malone didn't step up and take those games. That's deserving of getting hit a few spots


Don't fully agree with all those examples, but there's a larger point to be made -- and that is how winning a championship makes people forget the other players -- ahead of Malone, Barkley, Elgin -- who had plenty of bad moments themselves.

For example, Tim Duncan. Consistently misses FTs late. Did this a hell of a lot against Detroit in the 05 Finals. Almost cost SA the championship by way of game 5. But Horry made a couple big shots, and the Spurs snuck out of there with a win.

Was that transcendence on display? Duncan barely averaged 20 points a game, but won the Finals MVP. Was he better than Shaq in the 04 Finals? Malone in the 98 Finals? Barkley in 93?

Winning specifically and broadly covers up for a lot of mistakes. Suddenly, there's nothing to analyze on that scale once you've won one. To me, this isn't fully logical or fair.

But it is what it is.

On the other side of the debate, people forget something like Malone in game 1 of the 98 Finals making two huge jumpers in the last minute to get Utah into OT, or that he made the key layup and clutch FTs in game 4 in 97, or how he scored about 35 a game in the last two games of the 98 Finals. They don't remember Barkley taking apart opponent after opponent in deciding games on the way to the 93 Finals (game 7 V Seattle, 40+/20+). Jerry West is Mr. Clutch, while Elgin Baylor might be best known as the GM of the Clippers.

People also tend to forget that all three players had their best teams when there was a league-dominant, all-time dynasty at peak form as well.
User avatar
kaima
Senior
Posts: 526
And1: 27
Joined: Aug 16, 2003

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#87 » by kaima » Sat Jun 12, 2010 12:29 am

Dr Mufasa wrote:
jicama wrote:
Dr Mufasa wrote:All-star:
Eaton
Hornacek
Jeff Malone

(and Dantley but he doesn't really count

Uh, no.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/tea ... _star.html

Tom Chambers was an allstar at one time, but not with Utah.
Just Stockton; and one year, Eaton.

For career totals (stats, awards), almost nobody is ahead of Malone.
For sustained peak value, a few are.
Some of those 14 were neither.


Hornacek and Malone made the ASG before they came to Utah, where they weren't going to make it because a) As the 3rd best offensive guy on the team they had a smaller role, and b) It's extremely rare one team gets 3 all-stars and c) They weren't all that great in the first place and had inflated career years when they made the ASG.


Wow. That really doesn't help your argument.

But they were still all-stars


Is that how we're counting this? Former All-Stars on a given roster, no matter how overrated they were when selected or depleted by the time they arrived on the specific team?

Just All-Star selections, then. Here I thought we were talking about surrounding talent.

By that standard, I assume the third best player on the 02 Lakers was Mitch Richmond.

And Michael Jordan actually played with Robert Parish -- circa 84 -- in 1996. The 96 Bulls were loaded.

For anybody that thinks this has nothing to do with 1991, I think the defense is shaky. Arguable, but shaky.
User avatar
Dr Positivity
RealGM
Posts: 62,305
And1: 16,261
Joined: Apr 29, 2009
       

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#88 » by Dr Positivity » Sat Jun 12, 2010 1:08 am

I'm not arguing anything except Malone did not lack all-star talent, which was the original claim. He had a top 10 player in the league for a decade and a handful of decent 3rd wheels in Eaton/Malone/Hornacek. Nobody's saying those guys were HOFers, but they were good players, enough to make an all-star team once, and when you add that to Stockton it's more than enough for all-star talent... whether they had the depth after that is a different question. It's not like Malone was unlucky to not have John Stockton AND another perenniel all-star like Chris Mullin or Dikembe Mutumbo. That would've given him more luck than anyone. And in that Jazz system dominated by 2 players it's hard to imagine a 3rd guy thriving at their level without reducing their effectiveness anyways

Anyways I just watched the 4th quarter of the Houston-Utah Game 5, which I thought wasn't on youtube for some reason. Karl Malone is absolutely at fault for letting that game go. After Utah goes up 82-75 and Hakeem misses 2 FTs with 5 minutes left, aka when it looks like Houston is absolutely dead, Malone misses a jumper and then doesn't touch the ball except to turn it over until it's 85-82 Houston. After the lead is gone there's a shot of him looking at his shoes like he wants to puke. If you're going to lose, at least go down swinging. Malone folded that game and the rest of the team followed him. Part of it is being a big who needed the ball passed to him, but again, that's a fault of his game if so.
Liberate The Zoomers
User avatar
Dr Positivity
RealGM
Posts: 62,305
And1: 16,261
Joined: Apr 29, 2009
       

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#89 » by Dr Positivity » Sat Jun 12, 2010 1:32 am

kaima wrote:
Dr Mufasa wrote:Just a note on Malone. For the most part he played well in the PS. But there are cracks like the end of Game 1 in 97 and going 1/6 in the 2nd half of the Flu Game. You can also look at something like 95 Game 5 against Houston. Utah is up 7 in the 4th quarter at home. Houston comes back and wins it. The really transcendent players... those are the games they make sure are locked up and they step up and take them by the throat... they make sure that when Houston cuts it to 1-2 or w/e, they come back and scores the next couple possessions to make it a 6-7 point game again to kill their spirit. Malone scores a couple more points there they win. They score a couple more in Game 6 in 98 and they maybe win. He doesn't get smacked around by Jordan in the Flu Game and they go up 3-2 and are in a really good position to win. So Malone didn't step up and take those games. That's deserving of getting hit a few spots


Don't fully agree with all those examples, but there's a larger point to be made -- and that is how winning a championship makes people forget the other players -- ahead of Malone, Barkley, Elgin -- who had plenty of bad moments themselves.

For example, Tim Duncan. Consistently misses FTs late. Did this a hell of a lot against Detroit in the 05 Finals. Almost cost SA the championship by way of game 5. But Horry made a couple big shots, and the Spurs snuck out of there with a win.

Was that transcendence on display? Duncan barely averaged 20 points a game, but won the Finals MVP. Was he better than Shaq in the 04 Finals? Malone in the 98 Finals? Barkley in 93?

Winning specifically and broadly covers up for a lot of mistakes. Suddenly, there's nothing to analyze on that scale once you've won one. To me, this isn't fully logical or fair.

But it is what it is.

On the other side of the debate, people forget something like Malone in game 1 of the 98 Finals making two huge jumpers in the last minute to get Utah into OT, or that he made the key layup and clutch FTs in game 4 in 97, or how he scored about 35 a game in the last two games of the 98 Finals. They don't remember Barkley taking apart opponent after opponent in deciding games on the way to the 93 Finals (game 7 V Seattle, 40+/20+). Jerry West is Mr. Clutch, while Elgin Baylor might be best known as the GM of the Clippers.

People also tend to forget that all three players had their best teams when there was a league-dominant, all-time dynasty at peak form as well.


This is all very well. But part of being great is being timely. And this matters when ranking Malone against EPIC players. And on that note I don't think Malone's production if you take away the team success and playoff performances, is necessarily worth more than a couple spots higher than where he's at. Just a note - Specifically who do you think Karl Malone should be above, going by the last RealGM top 15: (7. Hakeem 8. Shaq 9. Duncan 10. Dr. J 11. Jerry West 12. Oscar 13. Moses 14. John Havlicek) Judging from your comments you think Karl should be 5 spots higher. Hondo can probably be cut off. Dr. J, if you take away his ABA career. But then he still has to pass at least 3 of West, Oscar, Moses, Duncan, Shaq, Hakeem? That's pretty tough. And that list doesn't include Kobe who most have top 12 by this point. At the very least it would take a much heavier argument than one about Malone not having enough talent on his side to say top 10 for him.
Liberate The Zoomers
User avatar
Manuel Calavera
Starter
Posts: 2,152
And1: 308
Joined: Oct 09, 2009
 

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#90 » by Manuel Calavera » Sat Jun 12, 2010 4:02 am

1) Michaell Jordan
2) Magic Johnson
3) David Robinson
4) Karl Malone
5) Charles Barkley
User avatar
kaima
Senior
Posts: 526
And1: 27
Joined: Aug 16, 2003

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#91 » by kaima » Sat Jun 12, 2010 5:20 am

Dr Mufasa wrote:I'm not arguing anything except Malone did not lack all-star talent,
which was the original claim.


Even when you then add that some of that All-Star talent wasn't really All-Star talent. Um...

I don't know how the discussion became All-Star talent, but in the context of our disagreement my argument was depth.

You also claimed that no one over Malone in all-time rankings had more support. I'm still scratching my head over that one.

He had a top 10 player in the league for a decade and a handful of decent 3rd wheels in Eaton/Malone/Hornacek. Nobody's saying those guys were HOFers, but they were good players, enough to make an all-star team once, and when you add that to Stockton it's more than enough for all-star talent...


From a scoring perspective, Eaton was a non-starter, J. Malone was far too limited.

Hornacek was the only so-called third piece that I really like for those Stockton/Malone Utah teams.

whether they had the depth after that is a different question. It's not like Malone was unlucky to not have John Stockton AND another perenniel all-star like Chris Mullin or Dikembe Mutumbo. That would've given him more luck than anyone.


Really? Would that automatically make Malone's Jazz better than the 80s Celtics? The 60s Celtics? The 72 Lakers? The 80s Lakers? The 96 Bulls? The 97 Rockets? The 08 Celtics?

Just from a star-laden or talent perspective.

And in that Jazz system dominated by 2 players it's hard to imagine a 3rd guy thriving at their level without reducing their effectiveness anyways


Since when is it about individual stats? That's been my point the whole time -- depth, and complementary ability.

Anyways I just watched the 4th quarter of the Houston-Utah Game 5, which I thought wasn't on youtube for some reason. Karl Malone is absolutely at fault for letting that game go.


Absolutely? Who put Utah in position in the first place? Further, where was the help? Even when Houston's making the run, it's balanced. Drexler, especially. Stockton was MIA the whole game. Doesn't that rather undermine your argument? Especially since you're trying to use this as a microcosm or indictement on Malone's career.

Teams make runs. Utah had theirs, and then Houston responded.

During the last 8 minutes of the game, Olajuwon scored 10 points, Malone had 7. For what it's worth, Houston won by 4.

Utah appeared to have much more trouble getting the ball to Malone than Houston did in getting the ball to Hakeem. The Houston doubles were much more effective -- which begs the question of who was more at fault, the perimeter players or Malone inside.

I tend to think that the Houston rotations were better, and part of that is Utah's floor spacing. As an example, with about 4:35 to play Utah works a screen with Malone and Benoit under the basket, Malone then receives a pass from Hornacek on the left block, Hakeem immediately covers from the top of the key off Carr to double, leading to a pass from Malone, for rotational purposes, that itself leads to...Houston's defense rotating back out with time because the spacing is so porous off the weakside.

Carr dives, but much too slowly relative to Olajuwon's double, he also doesn't do enough to rub Horry off on the rotation, and then compounds it by continuing to run a route that's already no-go on coverage (though you could argue rebounding position); all this begs the question of why Carr was at the top of the key, if not to keep Olajuwon out of the paint (suffice it say, Utah did a terrible job of this). Utah then simply is left with Stockton's penetration and a weak (though open) Benoit three off of it. In all, Utah wasted about 22 seconds with this.

The next play, Malone makes his move to the basket, gets good position quickly and...Stockton loses it on a Drexler steal.

I saw a lot of this happening, from my cursory look again at the tape.

I will say that Utah got outside looks. They didn't tend to cash them in -- particularly Benoit (2-8).

Houston's spacing is better, because Utah has to come farther for collapse purposes. This is the result of Houston's shooters.

Though there's no doubt that Hornacek shot well, both Stockton and Benoit were miserable on three pointers. There really were no shooters after that, while Houston had about 6 rotation guys that could spread the floor.

After Utah goes up 82-75 and Hakeem misses 2 FTs with 5 minutes left, aka when it looks like Houston is absolutely dead, Malone misses a jumper and then doesn't touch the ball except to turn it over until it's 85-82 Houston.


Utah also burnt way too much clock.

Watch Houston, they get the ball to Hakeem quickly. Utah? I saw one play where Stockton/Malone initiate a pick and roll, which inexplicably leads to Stockton deciding to curl and pass to his right rather than go to Malone. They then rotate the ball on the perimeter, and get a lousy shot.

If Malone's help was so great, why is it that no one else seems to step up? Why are no questions asked of Stockton, the same guy you credit as more than enough help? He seemed to play like crap in this game.

Houston's doubles were partially more effective because Utah often were playing a game of three-on-five.

Plays involving Carr (before he fouled out) as a draw on Olajuwon seem to fail in rotational purposes, then compounded by the fact that Houston clearly wants to see Benoit shoot -- which he does.

Sloan seems oblivious.

After the lead is gone there's a shot of him looking at his shoes like he wants to puke. If you're going to lose, at least go down swinging. Malone folded that game and the rest of the team followed him.


Let's look at some facts.

One, Utah was in a very bad position against the best C in the league before the series even started. They literally had no Center, after Felton Spencer got injured. This left them way undersized, lacking in talent and took away, arguably, their best bench scorer as Carr became basically 6 fouls and out.

Two, Houston won whenever Drexler scored 30+. They lost every time he didn't. Isn't this the same guy you lumped in with a Houston team you said lacked talent?

Three, no secondary scorer for Utah ever reached the 30 point mark in this series. In four different cases, more than one player scored thirty for the Rockets -- in game two, they got 32 from Kenny Smith, 30 from Drexler, 27 from Olajuwon and 21 from Robert Horry.

And four, Malone scored 35 in this game, the only opposing post player in those playoffs to outscore Olajuwon in a closeout game. He also made a three that at least made it interesting with 14 seconds left (remained a one possession game).

I don't think Malone outplayed (or even played as well as) Olajuwon, but I also question whether he had as much support. Game 5, says no -- and since that was your focus in questioning Malone, I rather question on this side how it helps to prove your, I think, original point that Malone had plenty of star-level help.

Part of it is being a big who needed the ball passed to him, but again, that's a fault of his game if so.


This is the case for just about all bigs not named Barkley. Not seeing how there's much of an indictment here.
User avatar
kaima
Senior
Posts: 526
And1: 27
Joined: Aug 16, 2003

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#92 » by kaima » Sat Jun 12, 2010 5:22 am

Dr Mufasa wrote:This is all very well. But part of being great is being timely.


Timing is era. Timing is often luck. It's peaking in a serendipitous context.That's not to say that's all there is to the description of "timing", but that it actually is so contradictory because it's so expansive.

As far as your meaning, I gave examples of Malone being timely. Barkley as well.

I could give more examples of players ranked ahead of them not being timely on the big stage. Many times over.

Somehow it matters greatly, when you give examples of Malone failing in the moment. If not, why bring those moments up? What was the point, now that it seems you're devaluing and running from it as a standard? It seems, again, that it only counts against some players -- others are immune.

When a counter-example is used, or the same is shown of a player ranked over Malone, it automatically becomes beside the point from your perspective.

Which actually is my point, conveniently. This is all about championships. Let's not pretend otherwise.

I don't purely agree with that metric. Obviously you do.

I've tried to follow your standards here, and compare players based on them. But they seem to be ever-changing.

First it was surrounding talent. Then it was all-star talent. And, then, it became "big moments". In all three I countered as best as I could, and all three times you seemed disinterested in the standard you originally argued for Malone V these other great players.

Now it seems that it's all about how Malone isn't "EPIC" enough to be argued. I hate to admit it, but I really have no substantive argument against that. But I also think that there isn't much substance in the argument itself.

And this matters when ranking Malone against EPIC players.


But it doesn't matter at all when we see that some of those same "EPIC" players screwed up in big moments as well.

Again, because, simply, of the championship argument.

As far as timing, that's a double-edged sword on many levels.

Looking at the RealGM list, there are quite a few slots I disagree with -- that includes not just where Malone ended up, but Baylor and Barkley as well.

What we're left with is, actually, simple: two people that have different standards in all-time player rankings. I don't think it's an automatic that you had to win a championship to be a top-ten player. Many disagree.

I'll leave it at that, and try to salvage this thread's purpose.
lorak
Head Coach
Posts: 6,317
And1: 2,237
Joined: Nov 23, 2009

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#93 » by lorak » Sat Jun 12, 2010 7:10 am

Doctor MJ wrote:


DavidStern wrote:
We are talking only about 1991. Besieds it kind of funny how Robinson's HUGE advantage on D is ignored here, while for example in All Time League no way Barkley 1991 wuld be pick before Robinson 1991. I remember some ATL threads and Barkley defense was criticized as much as possible. Now suddenly it doesn't matter.

BTW, even people at the time think that Robinson was much better:
MVP voting:
Magic 497 pts
Robinson 476
Barkley 222

So Robinson was closer to Magic than Barkley to him. And suddenly 4 post season games are supposed to change that? And Robinson even didn't played bad in post season...



Re: "people at the time thought Robinson was much better". That's just silly. First off, a one spot difference in MVP voting is never "much better".


That's not only "one spot" but 250 points difference. That's big. According to MVP voting Robinson was close to Magic (21 pts), but no way Barkley was close to Robinson. That year it was clear that Jordan was no 1 and then was TWO man race for place no 2. Then was Barkley and then other players. So at least 4 groups and there was clear big separation between each other.

And now some posters don't even put Robinson in top 5. :o

Anyway, my votes:

1. MJ
2. Magic
3. Robinson
4. Barkley
5. Malone
ElGee
Assistant Coach
Posts: 4,041
And1: 1,206
Joined: Mar 08, 2010
Contact:

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#94 » by ElGee » Sat Jun 12, 2010 8:46 am

My 1991 POY Ballot:

1. Michael Jordan
2. Magic Johnson
3. Karl Malone
4. Charles Barkley
5. David Robinson

Unfortunately, we're running out of seasons I remember/I didn't have cable then. :sigh: That, coupled with a lack of research time right now and dwindling online videos is starting to make my vote feel too stat-based.

Anyway, the top 2 are self explanatory. I remember constantly fearing Charles Barkley and being impressed by him and the numbers certainly support that. He's right in that range where missed games are an issue for me and thus I've penalized him accordingly. I still thought about Chuck over Malone because if we adjust for pace his scoring is actually fairly consistent throughout the decade. This is Malone's worst TS% year relative to league average until 1994, and I consider his passing and defense improved throughout those years. Nonetheless, he's still giving you 40 and 16 playoff games (G2) against really good playoff teams like Portland. Someone needs to check his vitamin supplements.

David Robinson falls behind those guys for basically the same reason he always falls behind them. I've tried to be fairly consistent about how I judge his contributions, and in his second year in the league he was a monster, a force, a defensive wrecking ball...in most situations. I'm with a number of voters in sharing concerns about his 13 FGA performance against Nellie's small ball (part 1 - er, 2. Or is it 3?) There was a significant drop in pace in those days between regular season and playoffs, and with Robinson's "limitations" on offense I think it was clearly harder for him to dominate a halfcourt game in which defenses had multiple days to scheme specifically for the Spurs.
Check out and discuss my book, now on Kindle! http://www.backpicks.com/thinking-basketball/
sp6r=underrated
RealGM
Posts: 20,763
And1: 13,437
Joined: Jan 20, 2007
 

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#95 » by sp6r=underrated » Sat Jun 12, 2010 10:06 am

I don't have time for a long explanation

1. Jordan: His best season
2. Magic: I explained my thoughts earlier on him. What he accomplished his final few years is sadly under appreciated.
3. Malone
4. Barkley
5. Robinson
Image
User avatar
kaima
Senior
Posts: 526
And1: 27
Joined: Aug 16, 2003

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#96 » by kaima » Sat Jun 12, 2010 11:58 am

1) MJ
2) Magic
3) Chuck
4) Mail






5) Mermaid

Malone and Barkley were a tossup. The more I analyze Robinson, the more I wonder...still ranks. Which is kind of...rank.

HM: Stockton, Mullin, Pippen

Both Mullin and Stockton were better this season than the proceeding when looking at regular season+playoffs.

Some numbers:

Jazz/Suns

Stockton: 18 PPG, 12.75 APG, 4.5 REB, 1.5 STL, 62% FG, 50% 3P, 2.8 A/TO ratio

Johnson: 12.75 PPG, 9.75 APG, 3.25 REB, 0.5 STL, 30.1% FG, 14.3% 3P, 3.25 A/TO ratio

Jazz/Blazers

Stockton: 18.4 PPG, 14.6 APG, 4.8 REB, 2.8 STL, 47.6% FG, 35.3% 3P, 5.2 A/TO ratio

Porter: 22.2 PPG, 6.8 APG, 3.4 REB, 1.8 STL, 50% FG, 33.3% 3P, 3.09 A/TO ratio

Playoffs overall

18.2 PPG, 13.8 APG, 4.7 REB, 2.2 STL, 53.7% FG, 40.7% 3P, 3.9 A/TO ratio

Regular Season

17.2 PPG, 14.2 APG, 2.9 REB, 2.9 STL, 50.7% FG, 34.5% 3P, 3.9 A/TO ratio

Mullin

V Spurs


25 PPG, 7.25 REB, 3.5 APG, 1.75 STL, 1.25 BLK, 52% FG, 100% 3P

V Lakers

22.5 PPG, 7.25 REB, 2.25, 2 STL, 1.75 BLK, 53.1% FG, 66.6% 3P

Playoffs overall

23.8 PPG, 7.3 REB, 2.9 AST, 1.9 STL, 1.5 BLK, 52.7% FG, 69.2% 3P

Regular season

25.7 PPG, 5.4 REB, 4.0 AST, 2.1 STL, 0.8 BLK, 53.6% FG, 30.1% 3P

(keep in mind, Mullin was injured during the playoffs; missed a couple of games, battling a knee injury; played 46 minutes per)

And I had to mention Pippen. Not only because of his play, but to avoid being seen as the Marc Stein of these threads: i.e. the Bob Sugar of white star PR.
drza
Analyst
Posts: 3,518
And1: 1,859
Joined: May 22, 2001

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#97 » by drza » Sat Jun 12, 2010 2:35 pm

1) Jordan
2) Magic

Here it gets hard. Like ElGee, a combo of fading memory and lack of time for research for this year is making me feel less confident. I'm leaning heavily upon my impressions and the arguments in this thread. My impression/memory is that Robinson was the best of the rest, but the pro-Malone contingent has done a better job of arguing their point in this thread than the pro-Robinson contingent. It is difficult, at least at first blush, to justify why Robinson couldn't do more against the Warriors. It's not quite Dirk-in-07 because at least Robinson was hugely effective at what he did, but I needed to see someone that watched that series in-depth break down why the Warrior's success shouldn't reflect badly upon Robinson. And I haven't seen that here, which gives me pause.

All things being equal, I tend to rate Barkley below players that produce similarly on offense but also do well on defense.

So, barring a change (and I doubt there'll be time for that) my vote is:

1) Jordan
2) Magic
3) Malone
4) Robinson
5) Barkley

HM: Pippen, who I would like to rank but I can't justify over 5 franchise guys that I think were just better at this point in their careers.
Creator of the Hoops Lab: tinyurl.com/mpo2brj
Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
Contributor to TYTSports: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTbFEVCpx9shKEsZl7FcRHzpGO1dPoimk
Follow on Twitter: @ProfessorDrz
lorak
Head Coach
Posts: 6,317
And1: 2,237
Joined: Nov 23, 2009

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#98 » by lorak » Sat Jun 12, 2010 3:03 pm

drza wrote:1) Jordan
2) Magic

Here it gets hard. Like ElGee, a combo of fading memory and lack of time for research for this year is making me feel less confident. I'm leaning heavily upon my impressions and the arguments in this thread. My impression/memory is that Robinson was the best of the rest, but the pro-Malone contingent has done a better job of arguing their point in this thread than the pro-Robinson contingent. It is difficult, at least at first blush, to justify why Robinson couldn't do more against the Warriors. It's not quite Dirk-in-07 because at least Robinson was hugely effective at what he did, but I needed to see someone that watched that series in-depth break down why the Warrior's success shouldn't reflect badly upon Robinson. And I haven't seen that here, which gives me pause.


I don't have time, but in short: Spurs lost this series on the perimeter.

G2
Mullin .597 TS%, 27 pts
Hardaway .563, 20
Richmond .383, 16
Sarunas .743, 16


Anderson .529, 19
Strickland .311, 8
Elliot .129, 1
Pressey .524, 12

G3
Mullin .679, 22
Hardaway .656, 22
Richmond .774, 27
Sarunas .615, 21


Elliot .661, 24
Strickland .429, 16
Anderson .409, 11
Pressey .621, 7

G4
Mullin .652, 23
Richmond .585, 17
Hardaway .583, 32
Sarunas .709, 14

Strickland .517, 21
Elliot .640, 23
Anderson .250, 8
Pressey .375, 6

Only 1 time Warriors player had game with below .550 TS%. In spurs only 3 times they were above that mark...
Only 4 times Warriors player scored below 20 points. In Spurs only 3 times they scored above 20 points...
User avatar
An Unbiased Fan
RealGM
Posts: 11,671
And1: 5,656
Joined: Jan 16, 2009
       

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#99 » by An Unbiased Fan » Sat Jun 12, 2010 3:25 pm

#1 MJ
#2 Magic
#3 Barkley
#4 DRob
#5 Malone
7-time RealGM MVPoster 2009-2016
Inducted into RealGM HOF 1st ballot in 2017
TrueLAfan
Senior Mod - Clippers
Senior Mod - Clippers
Posts: 8,168
And1: 1,625
Joined: Apr 11, 2001

Re: Retro POY '90-91 (ends Sat. morning) 

Post#100 » by TrueLAfan » Sat Jun 12, 2010 4:06 pm

That's a bit of a false argument...the Warriors were among the league leaders in threes, and got something like two thirds of their total team scoring from their starting PG, SG, and SF. They had no interior play, on offense or defense. Rod Higgins, Tom Tolbert, Alton Lister, Tyrone Hill, Jim Petersen, Steve Johnson, and Paul Mokeski combined to score--are you ready?--2583 points out of the team's 9564. 27% of the team's total point from the two frontcourt positions. That's horrible. So you pretty much knew going that the Warriors were going to score on your from the perimeter.

But let's be real. That's not why the Warriors won. Their scoring went down in the series against San Antonio by nearly four points a game. They didn't more scoring fromthe perimeter than usual; Run-TMC averaged aboput 71 a game in the series; they averaged about 72 in the regular season. The Warriors won not because of what they did, but of what San Antonio didn't do. When Alton Lister went down, the Warriors lost (by far) their best interior defender. During the season, the Warriors' opponents put up 115 points a game. The Spurs were more than seven points a game below that. And their leading scorer and MVP candidate had undersized and poor defenders on him and didn't raise his scoring.
Image

Return to Player Comparisons