Peaks Project #7
Posted: Wed Sep 16, 2015 3:12 am
OK boys, have at it.....
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drza wrote:Offense:
Duncan: I think that, while less flashy, Duncan's post game was as effective as Dream's. I also think that he was a better passer than either Robinson or Olajuwon. I think that this makes him as good of a low post hub option on offense as Olajuwon was. However, I don't think that either Duncan or Olajuwon are as good of big men offensive hub options as Shaq or Kareem. Thus, I don't know that you could scale up an offense built primarily around Duncan (or Olajuwon's) low-post offense to a best-in-the-league level the way that you could one built around Shaq or Kareem. However, what both Duncan and Olajuwon demonstrated with their post-game was the ability to lead/anchor an offense that was good enough to win with the right combination of strong defense and shooters. Duncan was good in the iso, but not brilliant like Hakeem could be. He also shared shooting range with Hakeem out to about 15 feet, which was a nice counter to the post games.
ShaqAttack3234 wrote:I looked into this season a while ago, and have been meaning to make a thread about it, but forgot until the last few days, so now is as good of a time as any.
He didn't win the title this year like he did in '83, but this has a strong case for being his best season. The individual feats are just astonishing.
I'll start with the final 2 games in January. Entering these games, the Rockets were a mediocre 19-22, but they won both games with Moses scoring 33 in the first game and in the second game, he had 32 points, 20 rebounds, 2 assists and 4 blocks on 12/18 from the floor and 7/10 from the line in 41 minutes. This would start an 8 game winning streak, a stretch where Houston went 13-2, a streak of 13 consecutive 30+ point games, a stretch of 30+ in 19 out of 20 games, and lead into a month of February which would make these 2 late January wins look quiet.
Moses opened up the month of February with 53 points(19 in the 4th quarter), 23 rebounds(11 of them were offensive boards), 4 assists and 1 block on 19/30 from the floor and 15/18 from the line.
That was just the first of 3 consecutive 40 point games. He followed it up with 45 points and 20 rebounds and then had 47 points, 14 rebounds, 3 assists and 2 blocks on 18/28 from the floor and 11/15 from the line.
Here's what Del Harris had to say following these 3 games."If there's anybody playing any better in the NBA right now ... well, there just isn't," said Houston Coach Del Harris. "And the thing of it is, he's getting his points off the flow. He's getting them within the framework of our offense, plus the fact he's averaging about 10 points a game off his own hard work on the offensive boards."
Then Moses had a nice 33 point game before he continued with the legendary performances. His next game was a 38 point, 32 rebound game vs the Sonics, he broke his own record with 21 offensive rebounds, a record that still stands 30 years later, and this was the last 30/30 game until Kevin Love did it in the 2010-2011 season.
Moses outrebounded the entire Sonics team by himself, and Lenny Wilkens had this to say.Originally Posted by Lenny Wilkens
"Moses was really controlling the boards," said Seattle Coach Lenny Wilkens. "Bob Pettit and Bill Russell were two of the best (rebounders) that I ever saw. Moses compares very favorably."
Moses finally offered his 2 cents as well."I had stretches like this in high school, but never in pro ball," Malone said, "My body feels so good right now. I stay in shape. I'm losing pounds. The main thing is I'm getting rest."
After a few more 30+ games, one of them in Houston's first loss in more than 3 weeks, Moses had 44 points and 16 rebounds vs the Cavs. Followed by a few more "ordinary" 30+ games, Moses had 34/21 vs Dallas, then he was finally held under 30 with 23 points and 9 rebounds on 8/17 shooting show that he was normal, but the Rockets still beat Denver ever.
However, he'd end February with 43 points and 23 rebounds, and 44 points. Unfortunately, this game didn't end so well as Moses was held to just 2 points in the 4th, missed the potential game-winner in regulation and was held to just 2 points in overtime.
He'd add another 40+ game with 43 points on his first game in March, 14 of his points in the 4th quarter, although Houston would lose this game too.
Overall, Moses averaged 38.1 ppg and 17.3 rpg in the month of February. he had at least 30 points in 13 of the 14 games, scored 40+ 6 times that month and had at least 20 rebounds 6 times that month. He led Houston to an 11-3 record and to nobody's surprise was voted player of the month for February.
But this was not the end of Malone's dominance. After starting off March with the aforementioned 43 point game for a second streak of 3 40+ games in a row in about a month, he continued dropping 30+ including 38/12 with 3 blocks on 16/26 from the floor and 6/6 from the line while playing all 48 minutes, he then came through in the clutch the next game. He had 39 points and 18 rebounds including the offensive rebound and game-winner with 4 seconds remaining to beat the Suns by 2.
He was then held under 30 for just the second time in 21 games with 28 and he shot just 10/28, and followed it up with a 26 point game, which may have made people think he was cooling off. Not the case. He responded with 49 points and 12 rebounds while scoring 22 in the 4th quarter to beat the Blazers, then he was relatively quiet with games of 24 and 19 points, respectively, but responded with 39 points and 17 rebounds vs Kareem's Lakers, though Kareem sat out the second half with a sprained ankle.
Moses transitioned into his next outstanding performance with 31 points in between. He duplicated his outstanding performance from about a week and a half earlier vs Portland when he had 41 points and 18 rebounds as well as a 12 point 4th quarter to beat Portland again. He followed this up with 46 points vs the Sonics to continue his dominance of both these Northwest teams. he had a 38/20 game vs the Mavs sandwiched between 29/17 and 35/15 games vs the Warriors, the latter being on April 1st. He had a relatively quiet 21/15 game in a win vs the Spurs to lead into another monster game vs Kareem and the Lakers. Moses had 37 points and 21 rebounds, although Kareem did get the last laugh with 12 of his 20 points in the 4th quarter to pull out the win.
This was really when Malone's historical dominance, which last over 2 months, finally came to an end, as he scored 30+ in just 1 of his last 6 games to end the regular season.
But comparable stretches to Malone's 2 months in April have been few and far between.
Moses finished the season with a career-high 31.1 ppg which was 2nd in the league and a league-leading 14.7 rpg as he was voted MVP.
Dr Spaceman wrote:Spoiler:
Garnett Duncan and Robinson should be the next 3 IMO, and then after that I'm going to start pushing the offensive perimeter players. I have them in this order:
15 Curry
87 Magic
11 Nowitzki
86 BirdSpoiler:
dankok8 wrote:I always knew it was a great season but upon further analysis I think it's on a very short list of the greatest ever. Only Wilt and Kareem in their peak years ever dominated throughout the regular season so thoroughly. Funny thing is Moses started the year a bit slow but the second half of the season he was as dominant as any player ever. U He just steamrolled the best centers in the league. For the entire season he averaged 31.1 ppg and 14.7 rpg on 51.9% shooting. He was second in the league in scoring and led in rebounding, PER, and Win Shares.
Month-by-Month:
October (2 games): 39.0 ppg, 10.5 rpg
November (15 games): 25.3 ppg, 13.7 rpg
December (12 games): 28.5 ppg, 15.4 rpg
January (13 games): 28.7 ppg, 13.8 rpg
February (14 games): 38.1 ppg, 17.3 rpg on 55% shooting
March (16 games): 35.0 ppg, 14.1 rpg
April (9 games): 28.1 ppg, 15.6 rpg
During the all-star game on January 31st, Moses had 12 points and 11 rebounds in just 20 minutes played but West coach Pat Riley decided to bench Moses in the 4th quarter in favor of Kareem. The West lost the game and Moses was pissed and this event is rumored to have motivated his tear on the league. For 33 straight games from February 2nd to April 6th, Moses averaged 36.0 ppg and 15.8 rpg.
His game against Sikma and the Supersonics on February 11th is one of the all-time legendary performances. Moses outrebounded the entire Seattle team 32-21, grabbed an NBA record 21 offensive rebounds, and outrebounded center Jack Sikma by a 32-3 margin (and also outscored him 38-16). Sikma was in his prime that season averaging 19.6/12.7 and one of the best defenders and rebounders in the league.
Here are his performances against the best centers in the league.
vs. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (5 games)
Moses: 34.8 ppg, 15.8 rpg
Kareem: 21.8 ppg, 6.2 rpg, 3.2 apg on 51.8% shooting
Kareem left one game in the 1st half with an ankle injury but Moses still killed an aging Kareem. Moses had games of 36/10, 37/22, 23/9, 39/17, and 37/21 against the Lakers.81-82 Season
10/30/1981
Kareem: 33/10/2 (11/25, 11/16)
Moses: 36/10 (18/?, 0/2)
Rockets win 113-112 in double OT. Moses scores a game-winning lay-up with one second remaining.
11/11/1981
Kareem: 21/9/3 (9/21, 3/3)
Moses: 37/22 (15/?, 7/9)
Lakers win 95-93. Kareem had 4 points in the last minute to fuel the Lakers comeback.
11/29/1981
Kareem: 23/3/4 (10/14, 3/5)
Moses: 23/9 (9/?, 5/6)
Lakers win 122-104. Magic had 12/11/11 for LA and Hayes had a 30/12 game for Houston.
3/21/1982
Kareem: 12/6/4 (6/9, 0/1)
Moses: 39/17 (12/?, 15/18)
Lakers win 107-102. Kareem left the first half with an ankle injury and did not return. Moses had 25 points in that half and just 14 in the second. Magic took over late.
4/6/1982
Kareem: 20/3/3 (7/14, 6/8)
Moses: 37/21 (9/?, 19/21)
Lakers win 108-97.
Cumulative Stats
Kareem: 21.8 ppg, 6.2 rpg, 3.2 apg on 51.8 %FG/69.7 %FT/55.9 %TS
Moses: 34.4 ppg, 15.8 rpg on 82.1 %FT
Moses just dominated Kareem this year in 3 out of the 5 games. He’s the clear winner here.
vs. Robert Parish (2 games)
Moses: 37.5 ppg, 11.5 rpg
Parish: 11.0 ppg
Moses had games of 37/11 and 38/12 against the Celtics.
vs. Jack Sikma (5 games)
Moses: 31.4 ppg, 16.0 rpg
Sikma: 17.8 rpg
Moses had games of 21/11, 28/15, 24/9, 38/32, and 46/13 against the Sonics.
vs. Mychal Thompson (5 games)
Moses: 36.2 ppg, 13.6 rpg, 1.4 apg on 60.8% shooting
Thompson: 21.4 ppg, 12.4 rpg, 3.4 apg on 59.3% shooting
Moses had games of 28/10, 34/8, 29/20, 49/12, and 41/18 against the Blazers.
vs. Artis Gilmore (2 games)
Moses: 29.0 ppg, 16.0 rpg
Gilmore: 21.5 ppg
Moses had games of 31/16 and 27/? against the Bulls.
Overall in 19 games against the five best centers in the league above, Moses averaged a monstrous 33.8 ppg and 14.8 rpg. He went 17-1-1 in scoring and we don't have rebounds for all games but of course he dominated them pretty badly on the glass.
bastillon wrote:JordansBulls wrote:Why do people say Moses was overrated?
1) his defense was poor, was a big mins guy on the worst defensive team of his era (late 70s/early 80s Rockets) so he deserves a lot of blame for that, particularly playing the center position which has the most impact on defense both in positive and negative way. if you're a bad defensive PG, it won't matter all that much, but if you're Bargnani your team is surely not gonna be able to hide you defensively.
2) his offense was dependant on playing with other star players, you couldn't run the offense through Moses like you could with many of the all time bigs, it gets worse, you couldn't even dump the ball down low and expect Moses to dominate 1 on 1 because he didn't really have much of a post-game. his scoring was all about offensive rebounding and finishing off of others. sure he had some scoring moves, that famous pump fake and drive, he fouled out your entire frontline, he was amazing FT scorer, he was surely very unconventional, but the most valuable bigs gave you a guy who is able to be a playmaker, either from the high post (Walton, KG) or from the low post (Hakeem, Shaq). Moses was neither.
3) his style of play made his offense hurt his team's defense because as he was crashing the boards, he was unable to get back on defense and that was a huge loss in an era when every team played at 100+ pace. if you look at Moses stats what stands out the most is offensive rebounding, the least valuable stat in the boxscore. then you have high volume scoring @ high efficiency but those pts come as a finisher, not from his shot creation. think Pau Gasol vs McHale. then most importantly you have his defense being well sub-par. didn't boxout very well (Rockets had bad defensive rebounding %), blocked some shots but that came from chasing blocks not from playing good defense, played well as a man defender but that's not nearly as important as help D etc. the study of Moses Malone's game teaches you which boxscore stats are important in terms of high impact, and which aren't. it teaches you what's the right way of playing basketball. Moses' style
as a result of which his boxscore stats were great but they didn't translate very well to impact. Moses was excellent at what he was doing, as boxscore stats clearly indicate, but what he was doing wasn't necessarily that valuable to his teams. it wasn't the right way.
mysticbb wrote:kasino wrote:the better scorer/rebounder/defender isn't picked here?
Playoff numbers. All 12 years for Nowitzki and for Malone from 1979 to 1989.Code: Select all
Gm PPG TS% ORB% DRB% AST% TOV% STL% BLK% PER WS/48
Malone 77 23.8 54.8 14.1 23.4 6.5 11.3 1.1 2.4 22.1 0.177
Nowitzki 128 25.9 58.4 4.2 24.6 11.8 9.4 1.4 1.8 24.7 0.205
So, overall Malone had a couple of more blocked shots and the higher ORB%. The higher BLK% came from Malone rather trying to block a shot than really defend the position and the higher ORB% was a result of Malone playing strictly underneath the opponents basket. Overall Malone's playing style did not lead to a huge impact. His defense was mediocre at best, him being late back on defense was making the defense rather worse. Nowitzki has to be seen as the better defender.
Malone's positional advantage underneath the own basket did not lead to a higher percentage of rebounds. That is a big indicator that Nowitzki is indeed the better rebounder. The raw boxscore numbers are giving a misleading impression here.
Nowitzki has a huge advantage in terms of passing and ball handling, something which can't be ignored. Overall Nowitzki was the higher impact player and a look at the advanced boxscore metrics reveals him also having the better combination of production and efficiency. Thus, the logical choice has to be Nowitzki in both cases. Especially for the team building aspect we have to see that Malone missed more games.
mysticbb wrote:kasino wrote:Moses
22/14/1.6 on .48%
Dirk
25/10/.9 on .46%
Since when is 25.9 ppg rounded down to 25? And using FG% in that case is misleading, because of the 3pt%. Nowitzki has 49.3 eFG% while Malone during his best years has 48.1 eFG%. The TS% is also a better tool to get a grasp on the scoring efficiency.kasino wrote:Dirk well undoubtably stay as the better PS scorer of the two while Moses is of course the better regular season scorer is at 25ppg for his first 13 NBA seasons
Malone scored 23.3 ppg during his first 13 NBA seasons, not 25. Malone also played at a higher pace during those years, which increased his touches. Obviously he went down in the playoffs despite playing more minutes, while Nowitzki went up. Nowitzki's scoring efficiency stays the same in the playoffs, Malone gets worse.kasino wrote:Moses is unquestionably a better rebounder then Dirk PS and RS
No, he isn't. Malone is just put into a different situation on the offensive end, which led to more opportunities to get offensive rebounds. The DRB% in the RS shows Malone as better, but that changes in the postseason. Now, what do you think is a better indicator of rebounding strength? Beating up weaker opponents in terms of rebounding or being better against better opponents?
Offensive rebounding is based much more on the offensive position than on skills, unless you believe that someone can rebound under the own basket while being incapable of doing it under the opponents basket. Makes no sense to assume such thing. A PF having a more perimeter oriented game will not have as many chances to grab an offensive rebounds than a C who only stays under the opponents basket. That one should be easy to understand. Well, and due to that the offensive rebounding numbers aren't telling you much about the ability of a player to rebound. Let alone that offensive rebounding does not show any kind of positive impact on the overall team success in average.kasino wrote:I don't understand your use of percentages, those that are in favor of Malone come with negativity from you
Because the numbers have to put into context. Nowitzki as center has a higher BLK% than Moses Malone, just that Nowitzki didn't play that much center. Also, Nowitzki in the post is rather defending the position, while Moses Malone rather tried to challenge the shot. The former is the better way to defend. And given the latter Malone's BLK% is rather low.kasino wrote:Dirk has never been called a good defender while Moses has, its not unthinkable that he would block more shots
If someone called Moses Malone a good defender, he rather didn't see him play or didn't understand the implications on defense Malone's playing style had.kasino wrote:he took a very Lebron Cavs Rockets team to the Finals against Bird Celtics
The Rockets run to finals was rather lucky. They played really weak teams and had the luck that their opponents missed more free throws than usually in important games. The Lakers went 22 of 35 from the line in game 3, while the Rockets went 21-22. If both are shooting their free throws normally, the Lakers go 25-35 and the Rockets 17-22, that makes a 7 point swing in a 3pt game. The Rockets should have been out in the first round without the luck at the free throw line. Then they play the Spurs, a team similar to the 2011 Rockets in terms of strength in the next round, then they go on playing the Kings in the WCF, a team as weak as the 2011 Suns. That was really just luck, because the better 1981 Suns lost game 7 at home to those Kings. And then in the finals, despite their two wins, the have in average a -9.8 scoring margin. They basically went lucky twice, which is within the normal variance, in order to not get swept.
The Rockets made the finals 1981, because of circumstances, not because they were such an incredible strong team due to Moses Malone's playing level.kasino wrote:then had one of the best PS runs with Philly, imo having a better performance then Dirk
No, Malone did not have a better performance level than Nowitzki. Heck, Nowitzki's performance level in 2006 was higher than anything Moses Malone ever did in the playoffs. Malone just happened to play in a faster era, making his raw boxscore numbers looking more impressive. For example, the 1983 76ers had 97.2 pace, the 2006 Mavericks 88.9, the 2011 Mavericks 86.9.
And it is pretty telling that you completely ignore the fact that Nowitzki is clearly superior in terms of ball handling and passing. Keep in mind, Moses Malone went to a team which went to the finals the season before. That team was more depended on Julius Erving than on Malone, when we look at the performance level of the team in games without those respective players.
mysticbb wrote:ronnymac2 wrote:I'd probably roll with Dirk, but Moses gets underrated. His offensive value gets misunderstood.
In this thread 7 people picked Moses Malone (Nowitzki has 6), 6 of them seem to think that this is an easy choice and some making statements like Malone would have had the far superior peak and had some sort of crazy longevity. Malone is constantly considered the better defender despite the fact that there is NOTHING (including watching them play!) which can back that up. Malone is considered the far superior rebounder, because people don't understand that a guy underneath the basket is more likely to grab an offensive rebound than someone playing on the perimeter while going back on defense. The defensive rebounding numbers are not showing any kind of advantage for Moses Malone. The only thing we see in the regular season is that Moses Malone as center on defense gets more defensive rebounds than Nowitzki as PF. Well, if someone actually know where the ball goes most of the time, that is hardly surprising. When Nowitzki played C he had a clearly higher DRB% than when he played PF too.
As it seems Malone is still overrated. The reason seems to be that most people are judging players solely on raw boxscore numbers like PPG and RPG. How they come up with the idea that Moses Malone was the better defender is really interesting, because the only explanation I have is that they still think Nowitzki would be some sort of bad defender.
Moses Malone is like Kevin Love without the jumper. Someone who produces impressive boxscore numbers while not having such a high overall impact.
Btw, for that guy posting Erving's boxscore stats: Erving was busy covering up defensive lapses also by Malone during that championship run. He was the defensive anchor of that team, while Moses Malone was allowed to crash the offensive board. Erving was blocking more shots in less minutes than the supposed to be great defender Moses Malone. But well, I doubt that people are aware of that ...
mysticbb wrote:Moses Malone didn't even make a huge difference to the team performance at his peak, why should I want him in other seasons when he constantly was out in the first round and not the cornerstone of a franchise being able to win.
I count 8 seasons in which Malone was healthy enough and good enough to be the best player on a championship team, that is exactly 1 season more than James has. But Malone had a lot less impact, if we don't dismiss all the evidence we have. He made a small improvement to the Rockets when he joined. He didn't improve a below average team much (granted, he had that playoff run to the finals), he didn't make a big difference to the 76ers at his absolute peak. The 76ers without him were already a 5.7 SRS team, with him that improved to 8.15 SRS with a healthy Erving playing in 1983. When Erving missed 10 games (2 games in January and 8 games in March with a wrist injury) the 76ers went down to a 3.06 SRS team. The 76ers without a absolute peak Malone were better than the 76ers with absolute peak Malone and without past peak Erving. What should I believe when peak Malone doesn't even come close a difference LeBron James made?
I think people are putting way too much stock into the boxscore numbers and way too easily they are impressed with big offensive rebounding numbers. Since the offensive rebounding numbers are available the correlation coefficient between scoring margin and ORB% is 0.06, in the last 10 years it is even -0.1. There is no clear indication that offensive rebounding helps a team to win more games. In comparison the coefficient for DRB% is 0.3. Offensive rebounding might be the single most overrated boxscore stat, even BLK% and STL show a much higher correlation to scoring margin (0.2 and 0.17 respectively). That is based on the data of 983 single team seasons from 1973/74 to 2010/11.
If you want to know how much someone helps a team win with his rebounding look at the DRB% of that player. Moses Malone's defensive rebounding is basically on par with Nowitzki's, his BLK% and STL% too. The defensive impact of Moses Malone was not big, for sure not bigger than Nowitzki's, especially when we take into account the negative effect of turnovers for the team defense. It is very likely that Moses Malone's impact on the game was lowered due to the high TO-R (turnover rate has a -0.3 correlation coefficient to scoring margin, a much bigger impact factor than offensive rebounding).
And that all is reflected in the team results with and without Moses Malone. He didn't make such a big difference, for sure not a big difference as people seem to think.
mysticbb wrote:MisterWestside wrote:mysticbb's data on the correlation between OReb% and wins is useful, but other studies show that it's bit of a layered issue that depends on team strategy and personnel: http://www.basketballprospectus.com/unfiltered/?p=954" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Pelton was right saying that correlation doesn't mean causation. But I established the causation before. And overall the conclusion of Pelton and myself is the same.
Interesting thing regarding rebounding and defense: The Spurs last season explicitly decided to focus their defense more on positional defense and shot defense instead of being prepared for the defensive rebound. The result: a better defense in comparison to the year before. Overall I argued before that the most important part of the defense is actual positional defense, then rebounding then shot defense. We can't really deceiver whether the better positional or better shot defense of the Spurs led to a better defensive efficiency, but I might need to change my opinion on the importance of defensive rebounding in comparison to the shot defense. Unfortunately I haven't really come up with an idea to really test that, but the SportsVU data might give a pretty good database for that.
Overall I wrote up my opinion on Moses Malone multiple times (even cited here in this thread); he is overrated due to more impressive total numbers, adjusted for pace, minutes and league average he isn't as impressive anymore. Someone pointed out the 16/9 season in 1992 and implied that it would have made him the best C in the league right now, but that couldn't be more wrong. Malone was an even worse defender that season than usual, his offensive numbers weren't really that impressive. The Bucks were about 3 points worse than the previous season without Moses Malone, most of that came on the defensive end. I easily take the current Garnett at C over the 1992 Moses Malone.
Malone was a good player, hard worker, but not particular great skilled or blessed with a high basketball IQ, his passing was bad, his ball handling below average for a C, he was great at positioning himself underneath the opponents basket, never gave up on an offensive rebound opportunity, tried to make it fit underneath the own basket and had even sometimes the ability to limit better offensive players just by his pure will and hustle. But he was slow in transition defense, didn't cover much ground on the defensive end, slow at recover on the defensive end, and overall not a good team defender due to his lack of really understanding the defensive concepts. For a part of his career his was clearly a positive influence on the court, for the later part of his career he was not. He collected boxscore numbers, but he was far away from the impact elite players made. Even at his peak his impact was limited due to his limited skillset. In 1983 he gets the awards, but Erving turned out to be the more important player for the 1983 76ers.
Garnett is easily the choice here; much better at peak, better longevity (the guy had still elite impact last season, and since having a better role established for him on the Nets, his impact is again up there with the best in the league (the defensive numbers for January were already presented here in this thread). Yeah, Garnett was never the elite scorer, but his overall offensive skillset and versatility are more helpful for a team to establish a better offense than Moses Malone's. On the defensive end there is no question at all (at least there shouldn't be), that Garnett is the much better defensive player.
If someone really wants to disagree with that, I suggest looking at Garnett and his play, try to understand why the teams played so much better with Garnett on the court, it really helps to understand the overall basketball game better (talking strictly about 5on5 basketball here).
SideshowBob wrote:Dr Spaceman wrote:Spoiler:
Garnett Duncan and Robinson should be the next 3 IMO, and then after that I'm going to start pushing the offensive perimeter players. I have them in this order:
15 Curry
87 Magic
11 Nowitzki
86 BirdSpoiler:
What are your thoughts on 09/10 Nowitzki vs 11? Do you think he's improved his skillset but everything doesn't come together (teamwise) until 2011 or that there are changes/improvements in 2011 that are driving the Mavs?
The way I see it, he's got about as much polish in his game in 09/10 than he did in 11, but with the added bonus of youth (better stamina, more mobile, better rebounding, etc.). More along the same lines, I think a lot of the arguments for earlier Nowitzki, 06 and 07, center around the same idea - his offense is almost certainly more refined later on but the age makes him a bit of a negative on defense (at high opportunity cost at PF spot). While the younger version doesn't quite have the post-game, his defense isn't as much of a liability, if one at all, and that might account for the difference on the offensive end.