Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor)

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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#981 » by 70sFan » Thu Mar 11, 2021 11:29 am

limbo wrote:The arguments against KD's creation are not unreasonable by any means, but how much doea he deserved to be knocked for it compared to other ATG players is the real question.

Westbrook was clearly superior to Durant in terms of shot creation and 'defense-wraping' gravity, so would people take peak Westbrook over peak Durant? Or are the two closer in that sense than Durant would be to a Dirk? It's not like Durant has zero shot creation ability. He has elite outside gravity, he developed into a solid passer as a Forward, he can obviously penetrate well and he can draw fouls on an elite level. It again becomes a question of floor and ceiling raising in a sense. I would much rather have Durant on a contender than Westbrook, unless that contender is really starved in terms of playmaking (maybe a team like the 2012-2014 Pacers).

Since we are talking about greatest peaks ever here, i do agree that KD being in that group is speculative at best, but i do think he's clearly better than AD as an offensive player. People putting him in that tier are reaching at this point. He's probably around that Barkley tier somewhere, which is still pretty damn good.

I agree, people spend way too much time criticizing Durant's offense to question this selection. He's still absurd scorer with above average vision and his off-ball game is great, even if inconsistent.

I'd pay more attention to his defense, since all players mentioned in this project are either two-way monsters or GOAT-level offensive players (Magic, Curry and Bird). The only questionable choice is Kobe, who is actually pretty similar to KD in that aspect. Neither one of them is bad defender of course (they are clearly above average), but are they good enough on offense to shorten defensive gap and compete with the greatest? I mean, Durant is probably a bit better defensively than Magic or Curry but he doesn't touch them on offense.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#982 » by Djoker » Thu Mar 11, 2021 5:03 pm

Ryoga Hibiki wrote:
Djoker wrote:We kind of went off tangent from discussing Nash's portability and impact to discussing Dirk's peak but I don't see Dirk's peak on the level of guys like KD and Kobe. Both score at a bit higher volume than Dirk and in Durant''s case there isn't even a drop in efficiency. In Kobe's case I'd say he's a significantly better passer than Dirk and Ben Taylor himself agrees with that. He gives Kobe a much higher passer rating and his box creation is a lot higher which I completely agree with. Kobe gave a ton of open shots to his teammates too probably more than Dirk. It definitely agrees with my eye test as well. Kobe even though he made some selections off of reputation was also a much better defender than Dirk. KD is also a better defender though the gap is smaller. And KG is also a better passer than Dirk.

The thing that hurt Dirk's impact throughout his career is that he generally offers little outside of scoring. When his shot isn't falling his value frankly isn't very high. Spacing... yea he provides some. He's a good defensive rebounder. He's an average passer at best and a mediocre defender in general. Can't protect the rim and generally very stiff and upright on defense. He's around a neutral defender.

This is not totally true because even when his shot was not falling Dirk was still commanding enough attention that defenses were scheming on him. But definitely if he was not scoring he was not going to win it for you, I agree.
But were Durant or Kobe, really? If his jumper wasn't falling Kobe could EASILY shoot you out of games as he would have kept going, while Durant's defense wasn't certainly going to make the difference.
We're not talking about creators like LeBron or defensive monsters like Garnett, if any of these guys is not scoring he's not helping that much in a team built around their strengths. So I am more interested to understand whose scoring is more resilient in a playoff setting while creating opportunities for others, and that was Dirk in my view.


Kobe and KD are better passers and defenders than Dirk though. They do contribute more to the game outside of scoring. They aren't huge in that regard compared to a Lebron or a KG but they still contribute more than Dirk.

I think Kobe might have been the most resilient scorer ever. His offensive profile (Big 4 categories that Ben maps) stayed the same in the playoffs vs. regular season and held up against elite defensive opponents as well. Kobe may have the most inelastic or resilient offense ever. It doesn't make him the best but Kobe could always manufacture his shots. Dirk and KD are sort of the same though. KD always has that pullup and Dirk always has that fadeaway. They are close enough as scorers, all three of them, that they are hard to differentiate for me.

But yea when it comes down to it I see KD as a slightly better all-around player than Dirk.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#983 » by zimpy27 » Thu Mar 11, 2021 5:23 pm

I think Wade has an argument to have an equal or better peak than Durant.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#984 » by PistolPeteJR » Thu Mar 11, 2021 8:39 pm

zimpy27 wrote:I think Wade has an argument to have an equal or better peak than Durant.


I wholeheartedly agree. While Durant was obviously the better shooter, I don't have Durant as being that much better as a scorer than Wade. Defense and playmaking go the 'way of wade".



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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#985 » by KTM_2813 » Thu Mar 11, 2021 8:41 pm

Djoker wrote:
Ryoga Hibiki wrote:
Djoker wrote:We kind of went off tangent from discussing Nash's portability and impact to discussing Dirk's peak but I don't see Dirk's peak on the level of guys like KD and Kobe. Both score at a bit higher volume than Dirk and in Durant''s case there isn't even a drop in efficiency. In Kobe's case I'd say he's a significantly better passer than Dirk and Ben Taylor himself agrees with that. He gives Kobe a much higher passer rating and his box creation is a lot higher which I completely agree with. Kobe gave a ton of open shots to his teammates too probably more than Dirk. It definitely agrees with my eye test as well. Kobe even though he made some selections off of reputation was also a much better defender than Dirk. KD is also a better defender though the gap is smaller. And KG is also a better passer than Dirk.

The thing that hurt Dirk's impact throughout his career is that he generally offers little outside of scoring. When his shot isn't falling his value frankly isn't very high. Spacing... yea he provides some. He's a good defensive rebounder. He's an average passer at best and a mediocre defender in general. Can't protect the rim and generally very stiff and upright on defense. He's around a neutral defender.

This is not totally true because even when his shot was not falling Dirk was still commanding enough attention that defenses were scheming on him. But definitely if he was not scoring he was not going to win it for you, I agree.
But were Durant or Kobe, really? If his jumper wasn't falling Kobe could EASILY shoot you out of games as he would have kept going, while Durant's defense wasn't certainly going to make the difference.
We're not talking about creators like LeBron or defensive monsters like Garnett, if any of these guys is not scoring he's not helping that much in a team built around their strengths. So I am more interested to understand whose scoring is more resilient in a playoff setting while creating opportunities for others, and that was Dirk in my view.


Kobe and KD are better passers and defenders than Dirk though. They do contribute more to the game outside of scoring. They aren't huge in that regard compared to a Lebron or a KG but they still contribute more than Dirk.

I think Kobe might have been the most resilient scorer ever. His offensive profile (Big 4 categories that Ben maps) stayed the same in the playoffs vs. regular season and held up against elite defensive opponents as well. Kobe may have the most inelastic or resilient offense ever. It doesn't make him the best but Kobe could always manufacture his shots. Dirk and KD are sort of the same though. KD always has that pullup and Dirk always has that fadeaway. They are close enough as scorers, all three of them, that they are hard to differentiate for me.

But yea when it comes down to it I see KD as a slightly better all-around player than Dirk.


Kobe was definitely one of the most resilient scorers ever, but I have trouble finding an argument for him over Jordan. I believe there's a Thinking Basketball video specifically about this topic, and in it, the research found that Jordan's insane regular season scoring numbers actually went up in the playoffs. Pretty insane.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#986 » by Outside » Thu Mar 11, 2021 9:33 pm

I do think Durant has a case to be included, but I also wonder if choosing him over other candidates is recency bias or falling in love with TS%.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#987 » by Djoker » Thu Mar 11, 2021 10:19 pm

KTM_2813 wrote:
Djoker wrote:
Ryoga Hibiki wrote:This is not totally true because even when his shot was not falling Dirk was still commanding enough attention that defenses were scheming on him. But definitely if he was not scoring he was not going to win it for you, I agree.
But were Durant or Kobe, really? If his jumper wasn't falling Kobe could EASILY shoot you out of games as he would have kept going, while Durant's defense wasn't certainly going to make the difference.
We're not talking about creators like LeBron or defensive monsters like Garnett, if any of these guys is not scoring he's not helping that much in a team built around their strengths. So I am more interested to understand whose scoring is more resilient in a playoff setting while creating opportunities for others, and that was Dirk in my view.


Kobe and KD are better passers and defenders than Dirk though. They do contribute more to the game outside of scoring. They aren't huge in that regard compared to a Lebron or a KG but they still contribute more than Dirk.

I think Kobe might have been the most resilient scorer ever. His offensive profile (Big 4 categories that Ben maps) stayed the same in the playoffs vs. regular season and held up against elite defensive opponents as well. Kobe may have the most inelastic or resilient offense ever. It doesn't make him the best but Kobe could always manufacture his shots. Dirk and KD are sort of the same though. KD always has that pullup and Dirk always has that fadeaway. They are close enough as scorers, all three of them, that they are hard to differentiate for me.

But yea when it comes down to it I see KD as a slightly better all-around player than Dirk.


Kobe was definitely one of the most resilient scorers ever, but I have trouble finding an argument for him over Jordan. I believe there's a Thinking Basketball video specifically about this topic, and in it, the research found that Jordan's insane regular season scoring numbers actually went up in the playoffs. Pretty insane.


Oh sure. No. Kobe has no case over Jordan. None whatsoever. Because Jordan's offense better to begin with. MJ put up much better numbers in the regular season and the playoffs. In fact MJ's boxscore metrics are the best ever and it's not even that close.

zimpy27 wrote:I think Wade has an argument to have an equal or better peak than Durant.


Absolutely. I think if I had to pick one more guy who didn't make the series it would be him. Wade has marginally worse scoring but much better playmaking and at least a bit better defense as well.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#988 » by bondom34 » Fri Mar 12, 2021 12:16 am

Going to first say I didn't really watch much of the series but hope to (saw Walton). I tend to agree with the others that don't see Durant's peak close to this high, and the idea of "less than the sum of the parts". He's a prototype of player, and one of the best of the prototype that has all the tools to do everything but when it's all added up the impact isn't all there and don't seem to match the expectations. I'd take at least a handful of current players peaks over him if it's single year and probably at least consider more.

Letsskibro's post summed up my sentiments generally pretty well, but his defense is mostly fine though not as good as the idea of his defense seems. His scoring is amazing, but the rest of the offense not quite at the all time level of some others (the handle got looser ever since the MVP year IMO). And he's always had that elite level ball handler on his team on any teams with postseason success (and really in the RS since 14). Just never really felt like his peak was quite this level.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#989 » by Statlanta » Fri Mar 12, 2021 12:50 am

The KD episode doesn’t feel as bad when you think of his sentiment on KG which is similar to RealGM. The argument of super special “portable” players who don’t need to be de facto #1’s. I agree that you don’t need to be a number 1, the series started with Russell to elicit this point, but I never felt neither KG or KD were outlier dominant in their complimentary roles even with the versatility they displayed.

KG had glimpses in 2004 and KD looked like it in his injured season in 2015 but neither sustained that level.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#990 » by clearlynotjesse » Fri Mar 12, 2021 12:50 am

Does anyone think there are peaks, besides the other 13, that are a clear tier ahead of Kobe/Durant? I think they + Dirk, Nash, Wade, CP3, and others are all kind of bunched up in the same tier and Kobe/Durant are easily the most popular. Ben's still gotta collect views. Personally would've liked to see Dirk and Nash videos but oh well.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#991 » by PistolPeteJR » Fri Mar 12, 2021 3:02 am

clearlynotjesse wrote:Does anyone think there are peaks, besides the other 13, that are a clear tier ahead of Kobe/Durant? I think they + Dirk, Nash, Wade, CP3, and others are all kind of bunched up in the same tier and Kobe/Durant are easily the most popular. Ben's still gotta collect views. Personally would've liked to see Dirk and Nash videos but oh well.


Wade’s peak from ‘08-10 tops Durant’s, in my opinion. ‘09 alone is significantly greater than Durant’s 14, which isn’t even considered his peak in this breakdown.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#992 » by HeartBreakKid » Fri Mar 12, 2021 4:25 am

clearlynotjesse wrote:Does anyone think there are peaks, besides the other 13, that are a clear tier ahead of Kobe/Durant? I think they + Dirk, Nash, Wade, CP3, and others are all kind of bunched up in the same tier and Kobe/Durant are easily the most popular. Ben's still gotta collect views. Personally would've liked to see Dirk and Nash videos but oh well.

Well, I think Durant has the weakest peak among the top 15 in Taylor's list (assuming Curry is the last guy).


Guys who I would take over Durant are Nowitzki, Erving, Paul, Wade, Nash and Leonard.


I don't know if I would call those players a tier ahead of Durant though. I think guys ranking from the top 12-25 or so are more or less comparable.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#993 » by LukaTheGOAT » Fri Mar 12, 2021 5:08 am

Statlanta wrote:The KD episode doesn’t feel as bad when you think of his sentiment on KG which is similar to RealGM. The argument of super special “portable” players who don’t need to be de facto #1’s. I agree that you don’t need to be a number 1, the series started with Russell to elicit this point, but I never felt neither KG or KD were outlier dominant in their complimentary roles even with the versatility they displayed.

KG had glimpses in 2004 and KD looked like it in his injured season in 2015 but neither sustained that level.


I'm curious, what did 2015 KD that was superior to 2014?
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#994 » by KTM_2813 » Fri Mar 12, 2021 3:53 pm

clearlynotjesse wrote:Does anyone think there are peaks, besides the other 13, that are a clear tier ahead of Kobe/Durant? I think they + Dirk, Nash, Wade, CP3, and others are all kind of bunched up in the same tier and Kobe/Durant are easily the most popular. Ben's still gotta collect views. Personally would've liked to see Dirk and Nash videos but oh well.


I would be shocked if the decision to include Durant wasn't at least somewhat influenced by the business side of things. I doubt that any of the other players you listed get as many views as Durant. If that's the case, then it's a bit of a shame, but such is life, and we would all probably do the same thing if we were in Taylor's position.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#995 » by Texas Chuck » Fri Mar 12, 2021 4:12 pm

KTM_2813 wrote:
clearlynotjesse wrote:Does anyone think there are peaks, besides the other 13, that are a clear tier ahead of Kobe/Durant? I think they + Dirk, Nash, Wade, CP3, and others are all kind of bunched up in the same tier and Kobe/Durant are easily the most popular. Ben's still gotta collect views. Personally would've liked to see Dirk and Nash videos but oh well.


I would be shocked if the decision to include Durant wasn't at least somewhat influenced by the business side of things. I doubt that any of the other players you listed get as many views as Durant. If that's the case, then it's a bit of a shame, but such is life, and we would all probably do the same thing if we were in Taylor's position.



I'm giving ElGee the benefit of the doubt that he didn't make his selections based on what he thought would be most popular. Maybe he did, but his brand is quality and I don't think he dilutes it for a few more hits.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#996 » by Jaivl » Fri Mar 12, 2021 4:17 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:
KTM_2813 wrote:
clearlynotjesse wrote:Does anyone think there are peaks, besides the other 13, that are a clear tier ahead of Kobe/Durant? I think they + Dirk, Nash, Wade, CP3, and others are all kind of bunched up in the same tier and Kobe/Durant are easily the most popular. Ben's still gotta collect views. Personally would've liked to see Dirk and Nash videos but oh well.


I would be shocked if the decision to include Durant wasn't at least somewhat influenced by the business side of things. I doubt that any of the other players you listed get as many views as Durant. If that's the case, then it's a bit of a shame, but such is life, and we would all probably do the same thing if we were in Taylor's position.



I'm giving ElGee the benefit of the doubt that he didn't make his selections based on what he thought would be most popular. Maybe he did, but his brand is quality and I don't think he dilutes it for a few more hits.

Come on, say it. Say it. "Dirk was snubbed". Say. It. SAY IT.

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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#997 » by drza » Fri Mar 12, 2021 4:18 pm

Owly wrote:
drza wrote:
Ryoga Hibiki wrote:The issue I have is that the sample size of non Dirk minutes in his early playoff career is really too small.
He was playing like 43min/game, not sure what to take out of the on/off


Spent a lot of time talking about playoffs +/-, and what useful info we can get from it, for a really long time around here. I used to calculate playoffs on/off +/- by hand for years before basketball-reference started doing it for us. So, with that said, I recognize your point if we're discussing single playoff runs of a handful of games...those can be way too noisy to get much out of.

But once you start getting out to the conference finals and beyond in a single year, there starts to be some useful signal there under the right circumstances. Still can be lots of noise, but enough signal there to start seeing some useful trends. And when you start grouping multiple seasons together, the signal starts to stand out pretty distinctly from the noise. Even for big minutes players. To whit, just as a quick non-rigorous illustration:

Dirk made the All NBA team in 2001 in his age 22 season, and won MVP in 2007 in his age 28 season. After that, during the Carlisle era, I argue that Dirk solidified his post moves for a handful of years while he still had his fastball and reached a new level of postseason impact compared to early in his career...a postseason impact more comparable to his typical regular season impact. So, taking only a quick look at his on/off numbers during that span, we get:

01-07 reg season: on/off +12.6
01-07 playoffs: on/off -0.5, over 82 games

08-11 reg season: on/off +10.4
08-11 playoffs: on/off +11.5 over 42 games

Dirk's playoffs on/off +/- from 01-07 just stands out as a huge outlier, compared to every other epoch. And it's over an 82-game sample. Yes, he averaged 42 minutes/game over that sample, but 82 games is enough to get some useful signal even in a noisy stat like on/off. You can't, IMO, just gloss past that.

Then, compare Dirk's 01-07 playoffs on/off +/- with that of the other guys in the databall era from Ben's best peaks during a similar time window (age 22-28 where applicable; for Shaq & Curry it's age 24-30):

Shaq: +15.3
Garnett: +12.6
Curry: +12.6
LeBron: +11.5
Duncan: +11.4
Kobe: +8.4

Durant: +5.1
.
.
.
Nowitzki: -0.5

I'm sorry. There's useful signal in this. All are big minute players, but Dirk is just way on an island compared to his peers in postseason impact for the majority of his prime...and not in a good way.

6/7ths of those minutes for Kobe are with Shaq on the team and as you note Shaq on is +15.3. So with Kobe not as the best player on his team, Kobe playing most his "on" with a GOAT peak peak candidate in and around his peak (don't know how to get the splits easily here), different competition (moreso than RS, and possible series and year imbalance in when a player's on and off time falls) ... and that the era seems to have been carved up to exclude Dirk's best playoff numbers in this regard ...

... it's not exactly apples to apples.

There is typically some signal but also ... KG on the '05 T'Wolves looks neutral with ... how to put it politely ... unexceptional backups ... over 82 games and that's without all the aforementioned playoff specific issues (which is to say that the noise can put a fair distance between on-off and actual goodness in that sample size). To my mind, presently, (and I'm very open to moving, and not an expert on these numbers) this is a small ding on Dirk, but I'd be inclined to want a detailed inspection to if it meant much (was he for instance not proportionally on for much of Boki Nachbar's '01 playoff explosion [22.9 PER, .227 WS/48, on-off +37.7]; '02 looks bad but even so they stay afloat during van Exel's single digit PER, negative WS/48 minutes ... I'd just want to look closer at what's going on, say, is Nowitzki's on matched with Garnett's on versus Minny [certainly seems Minny went to hell in KG's off samples - worse than -50 per100]? ...)

Without knowing the why and with it going against the trend of much larger samples against more even competition and versions of impact metrics that have tighter controls it's har for me to weigh it that much.


These are perfectly reasonable points to make. I'd respond in a few ways:

1) As I mention in the post, I've been looking at this kind of data for a really long time. This post was just a quick summary to make a point, not a rigorous case. It's a given that this data is noisy, so to get a good signal you'd have to put things in context and look for reasons/confounds/explanations for why things might look like they look. And I'd also expect counter-cases, especially if looking at generals. But if something stands out starkly from the expectation, there's likelihood that there's either useful signal there or there should be some pretty glaring explanatory reasons.

2) I'd say the counter-examples you used are, typically, pretty straight-forward to address without really challenging the point I was making. You started with Kobe's age 22-28 being the Shaq era, and therefore he wasn't the best player, which is reasonable. Much of the signal I've found in playoffs +/- samples is for the player that most influences the results (or synergy among a pair of players or unit), and you can make a good case that Kobe age 22-28 is the latter and not the former. Can make a similar case for Steph (e.g. part of a killer ensemble, not carrying the load himself). But Kobe's playoffs +/- profile in the post-Shaq era is very similar to what it was next to Shaq and the Steph/Draymond synergy in the postseason reflected a similar phenomenon in the larger sample of the regular season. In addition, neither of those situations are explanatory for why Dirk's number is both so low and so different from his regular season norm for much of his prime. In the summary of all the databall era players in Ben's series, that would still leave Dirk way on an island with a result so far outside of the "norm" established by his peers, which is ultimately the point that requires further discussion.

3) Garnett in '05, to me, is an example of what one of my stats professors used to call an "ash" phenomenon. Prof used to say that if you could have spilled ash on one test and therefore gotten an outlier result in that one test, you can't really put much stock into that result. On a repeated measures basis, Garnett's '05 on/off +/- stood out as a huge outlier compared to literally every other season of his career between ages 19 and 36. In that circumstance you have to check to see if there is any potential ash...likely confounds...that make that sample much different than the others. And without much thought, there are plenty of such confounds. The Wolves had 3 different coaches that year; the other main rotation players were all either dealing with injury, age, bad-at-basketball-ness and/or very odd rotations; the second-best player on the team played more on the 2nd unit in exchange for one of the worst players on the team (leading to a modification of the Manu effect, where a strong second unit sometimes confounds the on/off of a starter), etc.

Meanwhile, ash can't explain Dirk's postseason struggles, because they were spread out over a bunch of different playoffs, with different casts and coaches, were Dirk is one of (if not the only) commonality. So then, yes, I'd want to look closer into the different years that make up the sample. I must admit...I'm stumped on your Boki Nachbar playoffs '01 reference. Far as I can tell, Nachbar didn't enter the NBA until the 02-03 season, and never had a playoffs where he even faced Dirk? I looked at Dirk's 01 and even 02 playoffs opponents and couldn't find anyone with the numbers you quoted, especially not a non-star, so I can't really speak on that? But taking even a small step back, again going with the ash criteria, Dirk's playoffs on/off +/- were between meh/ok and awful every season during that stretch. He didn't have a single postseason run where he posted either a really high number or seemed to really drive his team's scoring margin until 2008, when he then did it in 3 of the next 4 seasons. And again, pretty much any player that we consider mega-elite on that level routinely turned in great playoff on/off profiles. I don't think that's a small thing, or something to chalk up to chance. At the very least, I'd say there's some onus on the other side of the ledger to explain what happened?

Focus: I'm not arguing that Dirk was a bad postseason performer. As Ryoga alluded to in his response to this post, Dirk was typically known for having strong postseasons. He posted typically great boxscore numbers in the postseason, and was the best player on a couple of teams that had legit championship aspirations before his big 2011 season. But here, my question/point is...why does an elite player whose regular season +/- footprint tracks so clearly with his value consistently post such consistently meh postseason impact results through the first decade of his career, especially when the boxscores suggest otherwise? Why does his impact not seem to translate the way pretty much any of his other elite peers do? The way his own, in fact, did translate at the tail-end of his prime? Especially because "noise" doesn't seem to address the differences between Dirk's profile and the other elites.

And it seems to me that, there are some potentially explanatory reasons when you look at trends within the now mammoth 25-year sample of impact stats. The monster impact guys tend to have certain characteristics that make them stand out...and interestingly, high-efficiency volume scoring alone is NOT one of those primary characteristics that pushes the impact envelope. Typically, things like "big man defense", "team offense creation on-ball" and "spacing/defense warping" (or some combination there-of) are some of the primary culprits for the huge impacts. I've argued for years (and in this thread) that Dirk's impact super power came from that last...his ability to warp defenses and create spacing/good looks for his teammates is what sets him apart from even Durant, who's better at the scoring volume/efficiency continuum. But that Dirk was doing his thing as a 4/5 while Durant was a 3/4, to me, made a significant difference in Dirk's favor on the whole.

But in the playoffs for the majority of Dirk's career, way too often opposing teams were either defending him with wings or putting their bigs on an island against him and living with the consequences. Thus, Dirk could still post excellent box score lines in the postseason, complete with huge scoring volume/efficiency bursts, without moving the impact needle the way that he was able to in the regular season. Or the way that his all-history peers, whose impact super-powers were more robust in the face of postseason life, were able to do. But at the end of his prime when Dirk changed up his offensive style such that opponents could no longer get away with defending him in that way, which included both the afore-mentioned post game as well as a much-improved passing/teammate shot creating game...(in fact, quick aside chart:

01 - 04: Dirk's postseason assist% was 7.8% w/ a 0.9 assist%/TO% ratio --> postseason on/off was -4.1 over 40 games
05-07: Dirk's postseason assist % was 12.4% w/ a 1.3 A%/TO% ratio --> postseason on/off was +2.9 over 42 games
08 - 11: Dirk's postseason assist% was 15.2% w/a 1.5 A%/TO% ratio--> postseason on/off was +11.5 over 42 games

)
...that's when Dirk became a problem in the postseason the way he always was in the regular season.

So, that's my working theory. That earlier in his career, in the postseason, Dirk wasn't creating the spacing/defensive warping due to the way that defenses changed in the playoffs, and that since he was almost always a finisher and not a shot creator he wasn't able to do enough to create team offense early on the counter that deficit. Both the post game and the passing improved over time, until by late in his prime Dirk had put the two together enough to create postseason offense for the team at a similar level as his regular season norm, and thus start posting the elite playoffs impact we were looking for.

But, like you said, I also come here to debate and also learn what others think. I've had many an opinion changed through the years by a good argument. So I guess I'd hope that, instead of dismissing or minimizing the signal to be found within the postseason +/- data, someone could really dig with me into why DIrk's postseason +/- profile looks like it does. And maybe let me know where my theory doesn't hold water. Because frankly, a high-volume/efficiency scorer that doesn't mega-warp defenses to a massive degree, doesn't create offense for teammates at a high level and isn't an elite team defender would typically be EXPECTED to have a +/- profile similar to pre-2008 DIrk's. Which is also, by the way, more similar to Durant's impact profile. And if the shoe doesn't fit for postseason Dirk...I'd love to discuss more the hows and whys .
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#998 » by Texas Chuck » Fri Mar 12, 2021 4:22 pm

Jaivl wrote:Come on, say it. Say it. "Dirk was snubbed". Say. It. SAY IT.

Spoiler:
I agree btw


:D

Oh do I disagree with him on a couple of his choices? Of course. Not sure Dirk is one of them. I don't consider Dirk a super peak guy. I think part of Dirk's greatness is how close his entire prime is to his peak year.

I just really don't think he made choices trying to please people or gain a wider audience. Maybe I'm naive on that, but I'm not prepared to make that assumption on Taylor.
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#999 » by LukaTheGOAT » Sat Mar 13, 2021 6:08 am

Jaivl wrote:
Texas Chuck wrote:
KTM_2813 wrote:
I would be shocked if the decision to include Durant wasn't at least somewhat influenced by the business side of things. I doubt that any of the other players you listed get as many views as Durant. If that's the case, then it's a bit of a shame, but such is life, and we would all probably do the same thing if we were in Taylor's position.



I'm giving ElGee the benefit of the doubt that he didn't make his selections based on what he thought would be most popular. Maybe he did, but his brand is quality and I don't think he dilutes it for a few more hits.

Come on, say it. Say it. "Dirk was snubbed". Say. It. SAY IT.

Spoiler:
I agree btw


Dirk deserved a vid over Durant, but the thinking that Taylor was biased in some way is pretty unfair. If you look at his CORP evaluations done back in the 19 season, he had KD's peak higher than Kobe's, Dirk's, etc. This isn't some new development by him that came out of nowhere. He has always been high on Durant due to his shooting, and him making the GSW offense go from all-time to the GOAT offense.

He quite literally had his old work up, so I don't know why KD being in here is some kind of surprise, unless you felt that some people since 19 have peaked higher than Durant (maybe Giannis)?
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Re: Greatest Peaks series (Thinking Basketball/Ben Taylor) 

Post#1000 » by KTM_2813 » Sun Mar 14, 2021 2:43 pm

LukaTheGOAT wrote:
Jaivl wrote:
Texas Chuck wrote:

I'm giving ElGee the benefit of the doubt that he didn't make his selections based on what he thought would be most popular. Maybe he did, but his brand is quality and I don't think he dilutes it for a few more hits.

Come on, say it. Say it. "Dirk was snubbed". Say. It. SAY IT.

Spoiler:
I agree btw


Dirk deserved a vid over Durant, but the thinking that Taylor was biased in some way is pretty unfair. If you look at his CORP evaluations done back in the 19 season, he had KD's peak higher than Kobe's, Dirk's, etc. This isn't some new development by him that came out of nowhere. He has always been high on Durant due to his shooting, and him making the GSW offense go from all-time to the GOAT offense.

He quite literally had his old work up, so I don't know why KD being in here is some kind of surprise, unless you felt that some people since 19 have peaked higher than Durant (maybe Giannis)?


For some reason, my recollection was that he actually had Dirk higher than Durant in his CORP evaluations, so definitely my mistake there. Either way, I certainly wasn't intending to deeply criticize Taylor or the Thinking Basketball channel. They're the best in the business by a country mile.
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