#11 Highest Peak of All Time (Garnett '04 wins)
Posted: Thu Aug 23, 2012 4:16 am
LeBron has been enshrined. We move on.
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Doctor MJ wrote:semi-sentient wrote:Here's a great thread (RPOY Project) that should give people more insight into Walton's '77 season.
It got me thinking about whether or not he should have actually landed just behind Kareem given that the voting was so close. Lots of great posts regarding his impact and I think it quite clearly separates him from Dr. J.
viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1042101&start=6
Once LeBron's in, Erving vs Walton is probably my big debate for my next vote so I'm definitely with you.
When you say Walton's separated from Erving, while making clear that Kareem's above Walton in your mind, it raises an eyebrow for me.
To my mind, Walton has a legit argument over both Kareem and Erving, but I see it as basically the same argument, and the counterarguments are largely the same to. If that's not how it appears to other people, then I question whether they are focused too much on Erving in Philly on a team with terrible fit.
Walton was more valuable to the Blazer than Erving was to the 76ers, just like he was more valuable than Kareem to the Lakers. In terms of obvious basketball outstanding-ness though, Walton's below both Erving & Kareem. And with Erving in '77, he's coming off just one year prior having value at least comparable to Walton's when he was in a Walton-like situation where everyone of his strengths was needed and used to its maximum.
Doctor MJ wrote:This is a crucial point for me. I've talked before about the identical twin scenario - I don't want to mistakenly conclude one identical twin is better than the other because of his situation. If Walton is giving more lift to his team than Kareem, but Kareem has all Walton's skills and then some, then Kareem's my clear choice.
ElGee wrote:On a more subtle level, I think that highlights some of the differences between Walton and Jabbar offensively. Although, in Jabbar's defense, his teammates weren't very good in 77 and 78, so it's possible LA/Jabbar's approach was closer to optimal anyway.
Walton and Jabbar clearly have different offensive skill-sets. It's possible that Walton's defense/outlet passing does just help the Blazers that much when he's on the court. But it's also possible, that despite his lower TS% and fewer post moves, he was playing at a more "optimal" approach offensively; he had a perfect balance of when to shoot, when to cut, when and where to screen, where to pass, spacing, angles and boxing out. And of course, he was a ridiculous half-court passer and "coached" on the floor.
Obviously, in a one-on-one game, we'd all take Kareem. When he puts his pivot foot down and goes to work, he can spin, hit the jumper over his left shoulder, finger roll, drop step, and of course...dribble...dribble...swing...Sky Hook.
But Walton's bringing something very different to the table, and I'm not sure it isn't better at the end of the day. Or at least, better if we include his defense.
Doctor MJ wrote:Kareem's defense on Walton is clearly much more successful, but Walton doesn't spend a lot of time trying to score when Kareem's on him. Instead, he immediately starts looking for someone to pass it to, and once the ball is passed, Kareem seems largely out of the play. Part of that is due to Walton being able to draw Kareem out, which leaves Kareem in poor position to challenge shots. Walton's passes seem strategically smart, and often quite sharp, but he is committing a good amount of turnovers in the process.
Doctor MJ wrote:This is a crucial point for me. I've talked before about the identical twin scenario - I don't want to mistakenly conclude one identical twin is better than the other because of his situation. If Walton is giving more lift to his team than Kareem, but Kareem has all Walton's skills and then some, then Kareem's my clear choice.
Doctor MJ wrote:I'm with drza that for me it's probably between Erving '76, Walton '77, and Garnett '04.
I guess I'll start off by asking people to ask themselves:
Since all but one of you just voted for LeBron, why wouldn't Erving be next?
For me personally I see these two seasons as extremely similar: You've got the only two players in history to lead their contending team in points, rebounds, assists, blocks and steals. In both situation, the players picked up their games quite clearly come playoff time.
Both are also classified as small forwards, although admittedly that's a touch too general to get carried away with. They didn't dominate the same way. LeBron is a more natural passer as is strong as-all-get-out. Erving was the ultimate guy who seemed to be playing on a trampoline while everyone else played on hardwood, and he added along with that unsurpassed grace and touch near the rim, the willingness to adjust to his teammates much more than ost scorers, and the dude seemed to have an aura around his head (beyond the afro) which inspired his teammates.
So yeah, I'd like to see people raise concerns that I can address.
Doctor MJ wrote:Re: Walton vs Garnett
As I mentioned before. This is quite difficult:
I'm inclined to say their peak defensive impact is quite possibly comparable, but I do think Walton's '77 impact is clearly ahead of Garnett's '04 impact. Walton was the best defensive player in the game at this point.
On offense, I give Garnett the offensive edge, but I do so with less confidence. It's relatively easy to look at Walton's scoring from individual stats and video that year and say that that gives Garnett the edge, but we already know:
1) That if you only used those measurements you'd have no idea the kind of GOAT on/off impact he was having.
2) Walton showed incredible scoring touch when he was at UCLA.
It's not only possible, but to my mind, basically a certainty that Walton could have put up more traditional big man volume scoring number had that been how his team decided to use him. They chose to do something else with him, and coach Ramsey has no end to how much praise he'll shower on Walton for what he did. Ramsey thinks he was a GOAT candidate. Simple as that.
I'll note as I say this to those who are skeptical: Walton's FG% in '77 was 52.8% and he had a very solid (for a big) FT% of 69.7%. This is Walton playing high post. He's not right by the basket, and he's putting up percentages in line with the Hakeem's and Ewing's of the world.
Don't let the comparison with Kareem fool you. Walton only looks like a bad scorer, because Kareem is freakishly, freakishly good.
Last note:
If anyone has some detailed data analysis on Walton that'd be great to share. The general on/off stuff is great of course (though we already know Walton is beyond massive there), but could we see break downs on offense vs defense?
Doctor MJ wrote:Philadelphia was a horribly constructed team who already had Dr. J Lite in George McGinnis. It would have made a hell of a lot more sense to get a Walton-like guy on that team than add Erving. When you look at Erving '76's supporting cast, where you're literally talking about a guy lifting the last talent supporting cast around to a championship, on that team swapping Walton in causes a much weaker team.
The finishing touch for assembling the best team money could buy and then just awaiting the delivery of the championship came last October with the purchase for almost $3 million of Julius Erving from the New York Nets. It was made by the 76ers’ new millionaire owner, F. Eugene Dixon, despite the rather cool interest at first expressed by the 76ers’ coach, Gene Shue. Shue was not interested in adding another forward, even if that forward was Erving, the game’s most exciting player.
Shue recently explained that reasoning to a Philadelphia newsman.
“The reason was,” said Shue, “I didn’t know if he could strengthen our team. That sounds ridiculous, but the strength of our team was already in our forwards. I also told the owner there was no way I was going to guarantee we would win a championship just because we got Dr. J. If it would have been Bill Walton (the Trail Blazer center), I would have said something different.”
Gene Shue wrote:He doesn’t have any weaknesses. You can’t shut him off. He can score when he has to but he is above all else a team player. He makes the players around him so much better.
PORTLAND, Ore (UPI) — Philadelphia Coach Gene Shue gave a quick congratulations to Portland Coach Jack Ramsey, then went into seclusion to mask his disappointment at losing the NBA championship to the Portland Trail Blazers.
But, when he came out of that seclusion, he spoke like a gentleman and with candor.
“I went in to congratulate Jack,” he said. “You know, if Bill Walton had been healthy the whole season, there is no doubt that the Portland Trail Blazers would have the best regular season record in the NBA.”
Asked about the championship matchup of Portland’s “classic style team-oriented play” versus his “one-on-one” type of team, and Shue said his own philosophy of basketball “always has been in favor of the classic style, the team that passes, the team that hits the open man. I learned that in college, and as a pro player.
“But you know, in the pros, you take what you can get. You can’t say I’ll take this guy or that guy. The object of the game is to win. I feel very satisfied that we reached our objective of the championship finals.
“I have a group of very strong-willed individual players. But I also wish I had Bill Walton.”
Doctor MJ wrote:I'm with drza that for me it's probably between Erving '76, Walton '77, and Garnett '04.
I guess I'll start off by asking people to ask themselves:
Since all but one of you just voted for LeBron, why wouldn't Erving be next?
drza wrote:1) For me personally, I don't see the players in these two seasons as extremely similar at all. LeBron and Doc are both freak athletes, but their style of play on offense is completely different. And in this case, the style seems to be pretty important because so much of LeBron's offensive value comes from his ability to be a team offensivel engine. From the lists of GOAT offensive players floating around, the tops of the list are always offensive creators. Magic, Bird, Nash, Jordan, etc. and now LeBron...they all are adept at creating with the ball for both themselves and for teammates.
drza wrote:2) The NBA/ABA split has to be addressed. I've seen the logic that the leagues were roughly equal in overall talent, and that the Nuggets that Doc mersecuted in '76 went on to be a strong defense and play in the Finals for the combined NBA in '77. But there are a few issues with this line of thought:
For one, even if the ABA were exactly as strong as the NBA, in 1976 that means the ABA was still 1/2 as good as what the overall top professional league in the world should have been.
drza wrote:For two, I've seen several folks point out that the '76 Nuggets and the '77 Nuggets weren't the same entity. There were similar parts, but there was a lot of turnover as well. And since basketball isn't entirely additive...you don't just add/subtract the production of different pieces, but instead the whole changes as the ingredients do, I don't think you can just excise the '76 Nuggets and say that beating them was the same as beating the '77 version and thus being equivalent to winning the '77 crown.
drza wrote:And for three, even if the top end talent is similar, it's the middle and lower tiers where the split really makes a difference. Doc getting to play against lesser players and lesser teams for half of his games helped him stay fresher, compile bigger numbers, and have a bigger influence with his style of play than he would have in a unified league.
drza wrote:3) Doc has his own strengths, he doesn't need to borrow LeBron's.
DavidStern wrote:Because of weaker competition, talent split between two leagues so it's hard to determine how good Dr J really was.
drza wrote:It's hard to tell what part of your statement is just nuanced writing and what part is your actual opinion. But I will say that the feel of this comment, much like the feel of the similar comment that you posted in response to me a couple of threads ago, is that you see Walton as clearly better on defense but that KG was only marginally better on offense with an asterisk, because Walton's college career convinces you that if he were used differently on offense he could have been better.
If I'm interpreting you correctly, that seems like a strange stance to me for 2 reasons: 1) there's a large body of information to suggest that 2004 Garnett was an all-world defender (if not the best in the league, at worst right there with peak Duncan and peak Wallace, both of which would be on the all-history defensive team anyway), and 2) we know from NBA (as opposed to NCAA) action that if used differently Garnett DEFINITELY could have had even more impact on defense at his peak. As such, if there were a line for which of the two should get more benefit of the doubt, I don't see how Garnett's defense shouldn't get that edge much (much) more-so than Walton's offense. Do you see where I'm coming from?
drza wrote:Also, as I pointed out in my long post earlier...isn't Walton's GOAT (that we know of) in/out "impact stats" countered by Garnett's GOAT (that we know of) on/off +/- stats? As you point out, if we went only by traditional box scores we wouldn't necessarily realize how absurd Walton was. But isn't the same true of KG? Only, not only were his +/- stats off the charts, but he was ALSO putting up historical box score stats. And not even just in the composite stats like PER or win shares...I pointed out that KG was, for example, much more efficient as a finishing passer than Walton with a higher assist percentage and a simultaneous (much) lower turnover rate. Since Walton doesn't have the kind of clear impact advantage over Garnett that he might have in other comparisons, shouldn't we at least make note that a player who does a lot of very similar things seemed to be doing them better, to every extent that we can possibly track?
Doctor MJ wrote:drza wrote:For two, I've seen several folks point out that the '76 Nuggets and the '77 Nuggets weren't the same entity. There were similar parts, but there was a lot of turnover as well. And since basketball isn't entirely additive...you don't just add/subtract the production of different pieces, but instead the whole changes as the ingredients do, I don't think you can just excise the '76 Nuggets and say that beating them was the same as beating the '77 version and thus being equivalent to winning the '77 crown.
Okay, but you have to have a starting basis don't you? I mean, it makes no sense to assume that the '76 Nuggets were a weak team. If you aren't tying them at least at a starting point to the '77 Nuggets team, how are you attempting to come up with your assessment of them?
I'm totally fine with someone diving into details here, and if they unearth something that goes against what I've described, that's cool. However, the same holds true for any consecutive versions of the same team. I emphasize what I do so much because people might not realize that unlike some other ABA teams, the Nuggets were not taken apart over the course of the merger. They literally got added to the new league,
Doctor MJ wrote:
As luck would have, Erving's crescendo happened against the Denver Nuggets, who remained essentially intact and went on to be very good in the NBA generally, and the best in the league in defense.
Seems legit to me.
mysticbb wrote:The ABA players which played then in the NBA in 1977 played about 4% above league average in the ABA (minute weighted average), they also played about 4% above league average in 1977. So, no change in their average performance level
It just looks dubious for Erving, because his statistically best seasons were during his time in the ABA, but at the end the average wing player shows to have their best statistical season during the same age span too. While then he came to a new team, was put into a complete new role and performed worse right away. Tracy McGrady saw a much bigger drop in performance level between 22 to 25 and 29 to 32. Is someone questioning the value of his 2003 season as well in the same fashion as they do it with Erving?