John Stockton or Mark Price?
Posted: Sat Nov 5, 2016 3:29 am
In their prime, which PG would you rather have in today's league?
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UDRIH14 wrote:mp is an underrated player man...he is equivalent or better then prime nash mvp b2b
Timmaytime wrote:UDRIH14 wrote:mp is an underrated player man...he is equivalent or better then prime nash mvp b2b
I love Mark Price as much as the next guy, but saying he was better than Steve Nash is bold man...
UDRIH14 wrote:Timmaytime wrote:UDRIH14 wrote:mp is an underrated player man...he is equivalent or better then prime nash mvp b2b
I love Mark Price as much as the next guy, but saying he was better than Steve Nash is bold man...
took jordan to 6 games, what has nash done during his prime?
Timmaytime wrote:UDRIH14 wrote:Timmaytime wrote:
I love Mark Price as much as the next guy, but saying he was better than Steve Nash is bold man...
took jordan to 6 games, what has nash done during his prime?
Took Duncan and Dirk to 6 games each? and probably should have been to the finals in '07 if not for a questionable Amare suspension? Because he took a 29-53 team and turned them into a 62-20 team with one of the best offenses ever? Because he shot the ball more efficiently and set his team up better? C'mon man
Tim Lehrbach wrote:I love Mark Price and hate John Stockton, but Price is being misconstrued here, IMO. He was not quite the proto-Nash he's made out to be. He was really, really good, but Nash was a pick-and-roll and open court genius, whereas Price was more about making his other solid scorers beneficiaries of the gravity from his scoring (and he likewise benefited from playing with other great offensive talents). Which is not to say that there's anything whatsoever wrong with the latter -- hell, it's how Curry had a top ten peak -- but Price was neither spamming his shot like Curry nor breaking down defenses to historic effect like Nash, merely returning really darn good individual and team results. I suspect Price would be an amazing player today, but I can't give him credit for what he didn't do and am accordingly unwilling to project heights he never got the chance to show he could climb.
Stockton, too, seems like a player who might well thrive in this era where more responsibility to score would be thrust upon him, but how do we just assume he could do it? There is no shortage of posts here covering Utah's offensive successes when Stockton had more or less responsibility (hint: the more he became an ordinary initiator instead of constantly running the 1-4 P&R -- the latter leading to his and Malone's greatest statistical seasons -- the better the team's offense became). Yet, side-by-side, I can't help but think he just was a slightly better player than Price at the basketball they played in their day and would adapt just as well to today's game. And it pains me because he was a total dick of a player and a real menace to honest basketball, but that too has to be accounted for and, I guess, credited to Stockton. He'd find infuriating ways to get an edge today, too. He had a head for the physical subtleties, and that's always going to have its place. He'd defend well today even without the handcheck. He also coupled being a flawless tactician of the basic play with precision passing that stayed just ahead of recovering defenders, the latter of which has never been more important than against the defensive schemes of today. But he would have to be more assertive with the jumper, and that's the biggest concern for me.
DirtyDez wrote:
The Suns beat the Mavs in 05' and Nash averaged 30/12/6 on 55/42/96.
picc wrote:His numbers on the Cavs were eerily similar to pre-Suns Nash, where he too was being used below his potential. And was also sharing the ball with another point (NVE) - though unlike the Cavs, Dallas ran two points together because Nellie was trying to run teams out of the gym and didn't care if one got torched.
I
Texas Chuck wrote:the idea that Nash wasn't an elite offensive PG in Dallas or that he wasn't given freedom to run PNR is just well incorrect. The Nash/Dirk PNR was a staple of the Dallas offense and as unstoppable as any action in the league. Yes NVE played a lot of minutes because he was clearly the 4th best player on the Mavs and as you say Nellie is going to play scorers. But Nash was very effective with NVE.
The issue came the next year when they traded NVE for Jamison and Rafe for Walker. Nellie insisted on starting the year running the offense through Walker a lot because he always loved point forwards. But 2004 isn't representative of Nash' tenure in Dallas by any means. Elite offense were the order of the day and Nash was a huge part of that.
The single biggest issue holding Nash back in Dallas was Steve Nash. He didn't work hard enough. He partied a lot and was into dating supermodels and going out. He was never remotely in the kind of shape he got himself into when Cuban chose not to pay him. But the idea that Don freaking Nelson didn't know how to use Steve Nash is just silly.
MDA obviously used him well, maybe even better, tho I think a much larger key is the cast fit him better. Dirk benefited from Nash, but didn't need him to the degree the Suns guys did. Dirk could get his own far better than Amare/Marion/Richardson etc. So Nash was able to lift those players better.