RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36

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RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#1 » by trex_8063 » Tue Aug 29, 2017 10:08 pm

1. Michael Jordan
2. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
3. Lebron James
4. Bill Russell
5. Tim Duncan
6. Wilt Chamberlain
7. Magic Johnson
8. Shaquille O'Neal
9. Hakeem Olajuwon
10. Larry Bird
11. Kobe Bryant
12. Kevin Garnett
13. Oscar Robertson
14. Karl Malone
15. Jerry West
16. Julius Erving
17. Dirk Nowitzki
18. David Robinson
19. Charles Barkley
20. Moses Malone
21. John Stockton
22. Dwyane Wade
23. Chris Paul
24. Bob Pettit
25. George Mikan
26. Steve Nash
27. Patrick Ewing
28. Kevin Durant
29. Stephen Curry
30. Scottie Pippen
31. John Havlicek
32. Elgin Baylor
33. Clyde Drexler
34. Rick Barry
35. Gary Payton
36. ????


Get it on!

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#2 » by trex_8063 » Tue Aug 29, 2017 10:13 pm

Updated and reposted comments on Jason Kidd:

I’m going to start out, ironically, with a stat that doesn’t favor Kidd at all. It’s pretty well-established that WS/48 (and thus WS) is a stat somewhat tightly correlated to shooting efficiency…..and as he’s been criticized for, Kidd’s shooting efficiency was often mediocre (or occasionally poor). As consequence, Kidd (even in his peak years) was not the Nets’ team leader in WS/48 (sometimes not even 2nd on the team). According to this stat, we’d be led to believe that Kerry Kittles or Richard Jefferson (+/- Kenyon Martin) were better players on the ‘02-’04 Nets.

I bring this up to illustrate just how unflattering this particular metric is to Jason Kidd, and to suggest that it very very likely underrated him thru the vast majority of his career.

And yet, here is Kidd’s rank all-time in NBA/ABA history in career rs WS compared to the ranks of each of the last FIVE players voted in within this project (as well as a couple others gaining traction):

28. Gary Payton (voted in #35)
…...
31. Jason Kidd (yet to be voted in)
…….
34. Clyde Drexler (voted in #33)
…..
36. John Havlicek (voted in #31)
……
39. Rick Barry (voted in #34; and that includes his ABA seasons)
……
41. Scottie Pippen (voted in #30)
…..
57. Walt Frazier (yet to be voted in)
…….
76. Elgin Baylor (voted in #32)
…..
145. Isiah Thomas (yet to be voted in; note: imo another player grossly undersold by this metric, fwiw)

Again, WS (although cumulative) are based on a metric that patently undersells his value......and yet there he still ranks ahead of each of the last five inductees in total career value, and ahead of several of the other guys gaining traction.

Here’s his rank (NBA/ABA combined) among these same individuals in career playoff WS……

13. Scottie Pippen
…..
25. John Havlicek
……
33. Walt Frazier
…..
36. Clyde Drexler
…….
38. Elgin Baylor
…...
47. Jason Kidd
…...
56. Rick Barry
…..
61. Isiah Thomas
…..
76. Gary Payton

Still in the mix.


Switching gears, let’s look at all-time rank in career rs VORP (omitting Baylor, Barry, Frazier, and Havlicek here)….

11. Jason Kidd
……
14. Clyde Drexler
……
18. Scottie Pippen
…..
22. Gary Payton
……
63. Isiah Thomas


All-time rank in career playoff VORP…..

5. Scottie Pippen
…...
16. Clyde Drexler
…..
18. Jason Kidd
…..
21. Isiah Thomas
……
45. Gary Payton



Kidd’s career rs PER was 17.91 (in 19 seasons).

Payton and Pippen each played 17 seasons, and had career PER’s of 18.88 and 18.63, respectively.
If Kidd had hung up his Nikes after 17 seasons, his PER would have been 18.2.

Havlicek had a career PER of 17.53 (though admittedly there was more parity then, and my scaled PER’s look a little different) in 16 seasons. Kidd’s PER after his 16th season was 18.5 (which is actually roughly the same as Hondo’s scaled career PER would be).

Drexler had a PER of 21.07 in 15 seasons. Kidd’s was 18.6 after 15 seasons.

Barry’s was 21.04 in 14 seasons; Kidd’s 18.7 after 14 seasons.

Elgin Baylor’s career PER was 22.69 in [basically] 13 seasons (really almost more just 12, as he only played 11 games total in his last TWO seasons). Isiah Thomas had a career PER of 18.11 in 13 seasons. Kidd had a PER of 18.9 after his 13th season.

Frazier had a PER of 19.12 in 12 seasons [basically: played just 3 games in his 13th season]; Kidd had a nearly equivalent 18.8 after 12 seasons (or again: 18.9 after 13 seasons).


And Kidd’s impact went beyond his box-based metrics. He was 5th in the league in PI RAPM three times (four times in the top 6).


Jason Kidd peaked at #2 in the MVP vote, same as Clyde Drexler and Elgin Baylor. Barry peaked at 2nd in the ABA only; peaked at 4th in the NBA. Pippen and Payton peaked at 3rd. Frazier peaked at 4th. Isiah peaked at 5th.


I could go on, but I’m hoping the above [objectively] implies that it’s past time Kidd had some serious traction.


trex_8063 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
Total WS (rs or playoff) isn't nearly as affected by efficiency as it is by longevity where Kidd is very high.


That was partly my intention: to underscore his longevity and point out how consistently useful he was throughout his long career.

Because (as we've both said) his WS/48 is relatively pedestrian at times, and because----and this cannot be overstated---it does NOT particularly fairly/accurately describe his per minute value, his accumulated WS per whatever unit of time (per minute, per game, or per season) will undersell his value as a player relative to most of the other guys I'd listed.
And in spite of that, he still rates out fairly well among that company in career accumulated WS (especially in rs, but also fair in playoffs).

penbeast0 wrote:Again, can't see Kidd above Payton for anyone who voted for Steve Nash. If you give PGs a lot of credit for top team offenses, Payton seems to have led a lot of them; Kidd almost none (none if you look at him before his second stint with the Mavs where he was a 3 and D roleplayer on a Dirk-centric offense). If you don't, Nash doesn't belong.


I don't necessarily agree. I mean, we focus on elite offenses more so with PG's than any other position for obvious reasons, and especially in cases like Nash or Magic specifically because they're NOT special (or necessarily even average) defensively. i.e. we're highlighting their good points (and maybe making mention that this makes up for defensive short-comings).
Kidd is a different animal.

I don't deny he's not definitively elite offensively (like Nash or Paul). But he's a small to moderate (very rarely near-elite) positive offensively, while also being a small to moderate positive on the defensive end.........and he did that basically EVERY year for nearly two solid decades (in which he was pretty much never injured).

Payton was definitely better offensive at respective peaks, and on average during primes......but he fell apart in multiple of his non-prime years, sinking to offensive lows that we never saw Kidd fall to.
Defensively, Payton probably peaked higher.......but we saw his defensive effectiveness already falling away by the EARLY 2000's in a way that we again never saw from Kidd. Sure, Kidd wasn't an "elite" defender in his late seasons, but he continued to be an effective defensive player right to his final season.


This is where I believe Kidd's accumulated career value easily places him competitively among inductees and potentials in this region.


trex_8063 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
drza wrote:...

Kidd was clearly the more effective floor general of the two, pushing into the historically elite in that area. He also developed into a good spot-up shooter, especially later in his prime and post-prime. While he wouldn't get the type of scoring/playmaking combo boost that Payton had, he likely would be expected to have the PG team offense initiating boost....


The trouble with giving Kidd the advantage based on his "PG team offense initiating boost" is that when you look at his team results, this so called boost is almost invisible. In fact, over his LONG career, Kidd's team offense ranged from mediocre to poor until his second stint in Dallas where he was basically a role player in a Dirk-centric offense. Prior to Dirk, Kidd NEVER had a team even in the top 10 in the league in Ortg (which is a better rating for teams than players). He was in the bottom 5 in the league 3 times though. Where is this magical passing?


The bolded isn't quite true, fwiw.
The '97 Suns (Kidd joined the team at mid-season) were 6th/29 at +2.6 rORTG. They obtained Kidd along with Richard Dumas and Loren Meyer and lost Sam Cassell, AC Green, and Michael Finley. They were a -3.2 rORTG prior to the trade; they were +6.3 rORTG after obtaining him.
The '99 Suns were a +3.6 rORTG (4th/29).




1st vote: Jason Kidd
2nd vote: Artis Gilmore




I have a hard time seeing myself going for anyone else until after these two are in. After them, next up for me will be guys like Paul Pierce, Pau Gasol, Dwight Howard, Walt Frazier, maybe Robert Parish, Reggie Miller, or Isiah Thomas.
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"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#3 » by dhsilv2 » Tue Aug 29, 2017 10:55 pm

Trex, can you speak on the number of teams that Kidd played for? Call me old fashioned or whatever else but that has always concerned me about him. I *think* he'll be the top teams guy we've put in. A top 40 guy on 3 teams (though I'd almost want to call dallas 2 teams given the time between and change in ownership) +1 (knicks don't really count) just seems off. And btw I am counting dallas as 2 in my head which might be silly.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#4 » by mikejames23 » Tue Aug 29, 2017 11:22 pm

Even amongst his peers, don't know if Kidd should be taken over Pierce. Pierce shows equal defensive capacity and superior offensive capacity. Also has Kidd beat in longevity with Career NBA W/S of 22nd.

Kidd also seems to have some major chemistry questions in his career. Quote from article -


But as quickly as it came together, it fell apart. First, it was Jackson and Mashburn feuding, with Kidd largely staying above the fray. Then, Mashburn suffered a season-ending injury, and Kidd and Jackson took things to a new level. It's not clear how much of the feud between the two men was basketball-related and how much was over a rumored love triangle between them and pop singer Toni Braxton, but either way, it got so bad that they went six weeks without speaking to each other. The Mavericks faded back to irrelevancy, and coach Dick Motta became the second of several coaches to lose his job in part due to something Kidd did.

The Mavericks initially decided to keep all three men together, hiring Bulls assistant Jim Cleamons to run the Triangle offense. But Kidd's erratic behavior made it impossible for the Mavericks to get things back on track. First, he ordered a public ultimatum that the Mavericks needed to choose between him and Jackson. Then, he backed off, saying they could work things out. First, he enjoyed the system; then, he chafed at it and claimed the Mavericks broke a promise to inform him of key decisions before they happened. He reportedly didn't speak to Cleamons for two months, and while Cleamons lasted in Dallas longer than Kidd, it wasn't long before he too was shown the door. The passive-aggressiveness was strange, to say the least, especially coming from a player who embodies everything a point guard should be about on the court.

That is how the Mavericks' one-time savior ended up getting dealt to Phoenix in a stunning move that gave the Suns the best player and allowed them to save money.




hat all came to a screeching halt in 2001, though it wasn't because of anything basketball-related. On January 18, Kidd spit a french fry in his wife Joumana's mouth, then struck her in the face during an argument involving their son. The incident tarnished what seemed like a happy marriage on the surface, and it came at a particularly bad time for Kidd, because his teammates were also getting in trouble with the law. Jerry Colangelo, the longtime owner of the Suns, was notoriously intolerant of poor off-court behavior, and ordered Kidd to apologize to Suns fans publicly before a game. That restored some goodwill, and to his credit, Kidd did work hard on his anger management to try to save his marriage, but the damage was done.

That summer, Kidd was traded for Stephon Marbury, who had maturity issues of his own. On his way out, Kidd claimed that Skiles was "intimidated" by him, a ridiculous suggestion that Skiles was stupefied to hear. It took just 51 games for Skiles to lose his job the next year. Make that a fourth coach Kidd helped run out of town.



https://www.sbnation.com/nba/2011/5/31/2197212/dallas-mavericks-jason-kidd-dirk-nowitzki-nba-finals-2011

---

For the most part in his post '01 career, I felt Kidd was a well liked leader and a guy anyone wanted on their team. His first half of career had some issues which need to be addressed, however - esp. since so much of his value comes from intangibles.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#5 » by O_6 » Tue Aug 29, 2017 11:33 pm

NOTE: Made this post before Payton was voted in. I don't have a vote btw, and I'm not asking for one because I can't commit to doing this every day. But these are my thoughts...

To me the big debate for the next spot comes down to a group of 4 PGs. Walt Frazier, Isiah Thomas, Gary Payton, and Jason Kidd. After comparing these players, I feel like Walt Frazier deserves to get the nod over the other 3. The main reason is because I believe he was on another level from the other 3 as a scorer.

SCORING SKILLS: Walt stands out
The 4 guys being discussed all averaged roughly the same PPG at 20ish, except for Kidd who was closer to a 15 PPG guy. But if you were to look at simple pure “Volume”, none of them really stand out from each other a great deal. But once you consider “efficiency relative to era”, you can see how Clyde Frazier shows himself to be a more dangerous scoring force than the other guys in the mix.

I decided to compare these 4 guys + Chris Paul (who I felt like would be fun to throw in the mix). I compared them during their best 10 year stretch as players, in terms of PPG + TS% + how that TS% fared vs. the league average TS% at the time.

REGULAR SEASON: 10 year prime
Paul ------ 19.1 PPG ----- 58.7 TS% ---- +4.9% ----- 692g --- (08-17)
Walt ------ 20.1 PPG ----- 54.5 TS% --- +4.1% ----- 736g --- (69-78)
Glove ----- 20.8 PPG ----- 53.4 TS% --- +0.8% ----- 782g --- (94-03)
Isiah ------ 19.9 PPG ----- 52.3 TS% --- -1.4% ------ 770g --- (83-92)
Kidd ------ 14.8 PPG ----- 50.8 TS% --- -1.6% ------ 731g --- (98-07)

PLAYOFFS: Same timeframe
Walt ------ 21.2 PPG ----- 55.9 TS% --- +5.5% ----- 89g
Paul ------- 21.4 PPG ----- 58.5 TS% --- +4.7% ----- 76g
Glove ----- 21.5 PPG ----- 52.8 TS% --- +0.2% ----- 68g
Isiah ------ 20.4 PPG ----- 52.0 TS% --- -1.7% ------ 111g
Kidd ------ 16.1 PPG ----- 49.0 TS% --- -3.4% ------ 95g

There are 3 clear tiers here. Walt/Chris Paul are very efficient volume scorers, Payton/Thomas are volume scorers with average efficiency, and Jason Kidd is simply a poor scorer.

But it’s more than just the efficiency stats. Walt scored without having to pound the ball all game, due to the Knicks’ offense. Walt could create for himself or he could make shots in spot-up situations. Walt had the most dangerous scoring skillset out of the group. He was an impressive slasher with a pretty damn solid mid-range jumper. He would’ve been even more dangerous in the 3pt line era, and especially dangerous in today’s no-hand-check era.


ABILITY TO FIT IN ANY ROLE
One thing that I’m really high on Frazier, is his ability to fit into almost any role that’s required of a guard. Walt was closer to Kidd in size than he was to Payton/Thomas/Paul. He actually seems to have more length than Kidd, although less strength. But because of his length and shooting ability, Walt is easily the most capable of moving over to the 2guard spot. The “Earl the Pearl” addition was something the Knicks could do because of Walt’s versatility.

I’ll put it like this. Paul/Thomas/Kidd/Frazier/Payton. Out of the other 4, who would I feel like is the best fit next to Paul? My answer is easily Frazier. Out of the other 4, who would I feel like is the best fit next to Kidd? Frazier. Same question and answer with Thomas and Payton. Frazier simply has the best skillset if you're looking for a secondary ball-handler, on top of being a guy who won 2 rings as a primary ball-handler.

Frazier could run an offense, slash to the rim, shoot from outside on a pull-up, make spot-up jumpers from deep, play all-world defense, and effortlessly switch between 2guard and Point on both sides of the ball.

BOTTOMLINE
Payton and Kidd have more longevity than Frazier. I feel like Frazier had the best 10yr prime of the bunch, but Kidd and Payton each provided about 5 more solid role-playing years on successful teams (both earning a title as a role player). If you want to give them the edge over Frazier because of this, I get it. But after really analyzing them, I feel like Frazier is in a different tier as an all-around offensive force because of his scoring ability and he was a super-elite defensive player like the other 2 as well.

Thomas does not have the longevity edge. And Thomas’ best argument, that he was the key to 2 titles, doesn’t work against Frazier who did the same thing. Frazier was a better playoff scorer + a more complete player. If they switched places and Frazier did what he did in NY during the post Magic/Bird TV era 80s while Thomas did what he did in Detroit in the 70s, this wouldn’t even be a discussion.

Chris Paul is a truly great player. But Frazier vs. Paul is a good debate in my eyes. Paul’s 3 best qualities are his passing, efficient scoring, and great defense. Frazier is a more efficient scorer and a better defender. So does Paul’s epic volume passing give him the edge overall? What makes it tougher is that Frazier’s assists totals were limited in New York due to their system. But I feel like Frazier would’ve racked up a ton more assists in today’s drive/kick 3pt era due to his style. I think considering the fact that Frazier led his teams to 2 titles vs. Paul not making a huge mark in the playoffs, I’d lean towards Frazier as of 2017.

Frazier was a beast of a player. A truly brilliant combo guard who looks like he would’ve been a star in any era on almost any team.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#6 » by pandrade83 » Wed Aug 30, 2017 1:04 am

Pick: Artis Gilmore
Alternate: Jason Kidd


My Top Point Guards left (in order): Kidd/Frazier
My Top Wing left: Gervin
My Top Center left: Artis


I've got a pair of longevity giants here and I'm going to acknowledge their warts right off the bat.

Gilmore: I can understand why he wasn't appreciated in his time. He played his best years in the ABA, he had 3 straight 50 loss years leading a team shortly after joining the NBA, watching him on YouTube in really any of his NBA years isn't enjoyable or inspiring because he moves worse than my 61 year old Dad (he just finished a cross country bike ride last summer - this really isn't hyperbole) - you're just watching this behemoth dunk on people and because he doesn't appear to have much fire, he's probably one of the weaker guys from an intangible standpointt. Add up all those warts, and I can understand why people feel like it's empty numbers.

Kidd

Two issues crop up - intangibles & shooting. The shooting is well documented - I don't feel a need to hit on that.

This article outlines Kidd's escapades well and while they are slightly overstate the effects, the incidents themselves all happened.
http://thebiglead.com/2014/06/30/jason-kidd-brooklyn-milwaukee-toni-braxton-wife-power-play-failed/

Kidd let his mistreatment and poor relationships of women negatively and detrimentally impact his team to the point that for much of his career he is a net negative from an intangible standpoint - he's arguably the worst player from an intangibles perspective who is likely to make the Top 40.


But here's the thing: At some point their pile of accomplishments really add up and the sheer weight of it all (no pun intended) just crushes the opposition. I think we're there.

A few lists:

Top 50 All Time Win Shares
Top 50 All Time Playoff Win Shares
10 X + All-stars
Top 50 All time MVP Shares
6 X + All-NBA/ABA
An MVP
Best player on a title team (subjective to my opinion, I know).

Only 3 players left make 5 of these lists (if you think Cousy was the best player on a C's title team, I think you're way off base, but that would put him at 5).

Artis Gilmore, Jason Kidd & Dolph Schayes - not to beat a dead horse, but I think Schayes needs to be the next player in from the '50's.

I listed Gilmore's warts earlier, but you combine those accomplishments with a very impressive 10 year prime of 21-15-3-3 on 60% TS and it's really hard for me to keep him out of the Top 40. Rick Barry just got in a couple spots earlier and while there's no way to prove this obviously, I strongly believe that if Kentucky played the Warriors, Rick Barry would not be part of our Top 40.

Of the guys left who even make 3 of the lists above, it's a short list of guys who started post merger simply because it's harder to get on those lists. Factor in the fact he's 11th on VORP all-time, and it's tough to keep him out of the Top 40 as well.

Jason Kidd (5)
Allen Iverson (4)
Dwight Howard (3)
Chauncey Billups (3)
Russell Westbrook (3)
Paul Pierce (3 - could be 4 if you think he was the best player on the '08 C's)
Pau Gasol (3 - got robbed of a Finals MVP)
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#7 » by scrabbarista » Wed Aug 30, 2017 1:27 am

36. Isiah Thomas

37. [Yes, 21 spots higher than he finished in 2014] Elvin Hayes

I. Isiah Thomas is the only player left who was the best player on two championship teams. It could be argued he was also a rolled ankle away from holding that distinction for three championship teams.

[Same as in the last thread, here] are some excerpts of mine from an old thread on Isiah Thomas:

Isiah is not overrated, unless someone is rating him in the top 20. The simple version - which obviously the media and public at large prefer - is that he was the best player on two championship teams, as well as the best or second best on a team that probably lost a third Finals because he twisted his ankle. He was also the best player on an NCAA champ. Only Jordan, Bird, and Magic made more All-NBA teams in the 80's. All of this is hard to dispute.

The more complex version hinges first and foremost on his elevating his play in the postseason. The post containing his all-time rankings in postseason improvement over the regular season should not be casually glossed over. The vast majority of players decrease their productivity in the playoffs, while the elite of the elite consistently increase it. Thomas' increases are historically high.

Secondly, the complex version states that he led and orchestrated top offenses for nearly his entire career, rather than relied on great defenses. There were four or five seasons when his team's OR even exceeded its DR.

A third point in the complex version is that Thomas was the galvanizing/uniting/driving leader behind the Pistons for all of the 80's. To illustrate, a player from the '88 team team has stated on record that when he and his teammates saw Isiah's heroic fourth quarter performance in game 6 of the 1988 Finals, they finally understood the depth of his determination, and they knew that even if he couldn't contribute in game 7 (he couldn't), they would come back the following year and win it all. Anyone who was paying close attention in 2014 should understand that the Spurs didn't win that year simply because of their system or their talent. The system was perfected and the talent was maximized over the course of nearly one hundred games because of the collective determination and focus that sprang from the agony of Ray Allen's miraculous shot in game 6 of the '13 Finals. Isiah's ankle injury in '88 played the same role as Allen's corner three in '13. If Isiah hadn't had the character, will, and desire that enabled him to excel on virtually one leg, his teammates might have lost a measure of confidence in their leader, and we might be looking at extra championships for Magic, Michael, or Clyde Drexler.

The people who say, "Show me where it says "character," "will," or "desire" on the stat sheet!" and accuse others of being simple-minded or narrative-dominated in their thinking are in fact the ones who fail to see the subtleties in the difference between winning and losing. No one person sees all the subtleties, but we must acknowledge their existence. As an example, when Dwight Howard, in a particularly tense moment in the playoffs, calls out his teammates even when they're doing their best, simply because he thinks he's looked bad on a particular possession, team cohesiveness is damaged as those players realize Dwight cares more about his own image than building up his teammates for the sake of collective success. Then Dwight leaves the court in the next timeout, and those players, still on the court, are trying to regain the focus and flow that Dwight's outburst cost them. Their play diminishes slightly, and Dwight's on/off numbers go up - or the quality of his "supporting cast" appears weaker. The stat sheet is lying - every part of it except the win/loss column. A hundred related scenarios occur in every game, and more occur on the practice court and in the locker room. More can occur in comments made to the media. Heck, this type of stuff has probably even happened in strip clubs.

A person who tries to sell you on a player based solely on stats without a narrative context is like someone who'll tell you he has a great marriage because he lasts a long time in bed with his wife - and then tells you exactly how long, down to the second.

I'm not one to echo Vince Lombardi's "winning is the only thing" quote. (That, too, would ignore context.) Karl Malone, in my opinion, had twice as good of a career as Isiah Thomas. But Thomas is a top 25 player [Top 28 now] because winning is the one "stat" that tells us what all the other stats never could. Winning is a coordinate on an imaginary graph: where a player's talent meets his daily determination to maximize it.

--------------


"I don't know man, I can't really get behind motivation and leadership being this huge of a factor into deciding who is greater. But we'll get to that."

I just can't help but what wonder what kind of life experiences a person has had so say something like "motivation and leadership are not huge factors in deciding who is greater." Like, have you ever had a job? Ever worked with other people? Maybe on a project with a bad leader? Or a great one? Ever notice the difference between the two - the difference in the results produced? Ever tried hard? Ever slacked off? Ever noticed the difference in the results between the two?

I can't force you to see things how I see them, but I watched last night's Game 2 and I saw a Cavs team that was more motivated than the Warriors team. It was obvious that Lebron and Dellavadova were working harder than anyone on the court - and this lead to multiple key offensive rebounds, not to mention loose balls that were saved or tipped - even one of which could have been the difference in the game. I'm not implying that actually making shots is irrelevant or that some of the things I've mentioned don't show up in the box score - that's a straw man - I'm just saying some things exist outside of the box score. The game is much more subtle and complex than the numbers alone can account for.

"Elevating play in the postseason is a great thing, but it's relevant only so far as to what level that increase actually leads to. If you're starting from a much smaller base than someone who doesn't improve as much, does it really matter if your increase is bigger if you still end up below them? The fact that the vast majority of players don't improve is irrelevant, because we aren't comparing Isiah to the vast majority of players here."

I agree with you. Only the end results matter in evaluating someone's greatness. I've just seen others on these boards highlight improvements and drops in playoff performance so many times that I guess it thought it might be relevant to this discussion.

Lest you be confused by my saying only the end results matter, then going on about process and narrative, my point in writing about process and narrative has never been that either is grounds for my rankings. They emphatically are not - my list is at least 99% results-driven. It depends almost exclusively on results that any objective observer could agree actually happened. The point I've been trying to make is that team success is one such result. Process and narrative only come into the discussion when they become useful in explaining why team success can be attributed to great players' actions that don't appear in the box score.

"Well, I wouldn't exactly call them great. Outside of the 1st place finish in 84, the Pistons while Isiah was an all-star level player were never a top 5 offense. And the defense being below average might have something to do with Isiah himself no? And the Pistons didn't make the conference finals until 87, the year their defense first replaced the offense as the better unit. So until the Pistons began "relying" on great defenses, they had basically no postseason success."

Perhaps they weren't great offenses. At least not plural. At least not when he was an "All-Star level player." As to below average defenses having something to do with Isiah, would you say the same about the Clippers defense and Chris Paul? It's generally acknowledged that point guard is the position that can have the least impact on a team's defense. Still, I happen to think all five players are important on both sides of the ball, so yes, he had something to do with it, and he also had something to do with the "great defenses" that came after. My original intent was just to dispel the myth that he never led a great offense.


"I can't get behind this. There's really no way to tell how much, if any at all, the drive of a player impacts the players around him. It's impossible, and always will be."

There's only one way: did the team do enough to get the job done? This is the same way leaders are evaluated in every walk of life.

"Saying Ray Allen's shot was the basis of the Spur's title run the next year is just so out there. It'd be like me saying the reason Duncan became a hall of fame player was because of the hurricane that destroyed the olympic swimming pool in his hometown that forced him to focus on basketball."

No, it's more like Duncan himself saying, "Me and my community were so devastated by that hurricane that I decided to do everything in my power to rise above it and make millions of dollars playing basketball to show that neither me nor my community could be bowed by the whims of fate." What you say has nothing to do with it. That's why I pointed out that a Pistons player actually said Isiah's determination drove them the entire following year. The Spurs players have said they were hoping to face the Heat. You can bet that desire was there from the moment game 7 of the '13 Finals ended, and you can bet the Spurs would not have been quite as focused against another team in the Finals. (They still would have won, obviously. They were too good by that time.) I never meant to imply that without Allen's shot, the Spurs don't win the championship. I did mean to imply, though, that it was a factor. Probably a very big factor.

"Every event is connected in the journey, as you say. But the way you tell it, it was Isiah's game 6 performance that was the most important moment of their 89 title run. That's ridiculous. It'd be way down on the list, waaaaaaaaaaay behind the level of play of the individual Pistons players during the actual season, which is what everyone else is using as the primary evaluator to make their all time list. Changes in confidence play a part, but not anywhere near THAT much. Having confidence in your leader isn't suddenly going to change you from a run of the mill playoff team into a champion. If I were to evaluate the 89 Pistons, I'd say their title was due to the emergence of Rodman and Dumars and the trade of Dantley making their team better and more cohesive, the way the rest of the Pistons played, the Celtics getting worse, the Lakers being injured, any amount of refereeing and injury randomness, how their other playoff opponents played, general randomness that's associated with all competitive sports (shots not falling etc.) and a whole bunch of other stuff. I can't see how looking at Isiah's leadership is going to come even close to having the impact those things do."

Again, it wasn't the way I told it. If it was just me making up a story, it would lose a lot of credence. It's there in the Bad Boys documentary. The players felt that way. Everything you mention was undoubtedly a factor. Just as in life, when a team has to work together on any common goal or project, everything that happens is a factor, and dozens of individual occurrences might each be the difference between success and failure. Many of these might be random. But what is the unifying concept throughout? The way the group responds to these occurrences. And what drives these responses? Leadership.

Again, I'm not saying that that previous paragraph explains why I rate Isiah where I do. What explains why I rate him where I do is the simple fact that he lead his teams to ultimate victory and near-ultimate victory four times in his career, three in the NBA and one in college. That previous paragraph was just to say that leadership is a real thing and it exists and it makes a difference in outcomes.

"First off, I don't really see anyone having an attitude like that. And I don't get the comparison to Dwight, because I don't think anyone here is calling Dwight a top 25 player either. And if Dwight's teammates are really that affected by a random "you guys suck" comment (and making an assumption that this has any impact on their play at all is a BIG assumption), they probably shouldn't be in the NBA in the first place. NBA players are getting heckled by fans, the media, and their teams ALL the time."

Correct, Dwight is not a top 25 player, but he may have more talent than Isiah. Most would probably say he does. Which is exactly my point. Talented players are often separated by "intangibles." Stating that human beings are affected by random "you suck" comments is not an assumption. It's common knowledge. And these random "you suck" comments tend to be more affecting when they come from people close to us or people on a higher level than us, and when they happen in public - all of which would describe Dwight in relation to someone like Ariza or Brewer, calling guys out on TV in the playoffs

I don't know how to save this and I need to go to work soon, but when you're talking about players getting heckled: a straw man. Dwight didn't heckle anybody in my example. Also, the fans and media are not in positions of leadership or in intimate relationships with the players. Also, there is a difference between making fun of someone and calling them out - and as I said, there is a difference in whether it is done to save Dwight's own face or to build up the cohesion of the team. Human relationships.

"The people you'd be comparing Isiah to if you think he's top 25 are guys like the usual suspects (MJ, Magic, Bird, Russell, Duncan, Kareem etc.) or more guys like Dirk, KG, Havlicek, Baylor, Barkley, Wade etc. Are we somehow going to argue that Isiah is a better leader than them? Or had more determination than them? How would we even go about that? We already have too much to look at with their respective basketball abilities and the circumstances in which they displayed those abilities."

We'd go about it by looking at wins. Determination, etc., do not appear on my ATG list. Winning does. If we're talking about how I evaluate players, then we're talking about stats, wins, and consensus - nothing else.

"Determination, like I said with the playoff thing earlier, is only relevant in how it affects your ability to play basketball. It's the starting from the lower base thing again. When compared with a guy who never meets his potential (like, say, Shaq) does it matter that Isiah had more determination if even with that determination Shaq was still in another stratosphere as a player?"

No, it doesn't matter. Shaq is higher than Isiah because he produced better results.

"Winning is a coordinate on a graph where a player's talent meets his daily determination to maximize it... AND where said player's teammates' talent meets their daily drive, AND where said player's opponents' talent meets their daily drive, AND where said player's coaches abilities to manage said talent, AND how lucky your team gets with injuries, AND how lucky your opponents get with injuries, AND how lucky your team gets with refereeing, AND a whole bunch of other things."

True, all of that factors in, but all of that also factors in to every other stat besides winning. So why would we decide other stats are more relevant than winning in evaluating players? Winning is the goal of the game. To ignore it or even minimize it is something I have a hard time understanding.

"The common thing here is talent. The talent and ability is the most important thing. And Isiah just didn't have enough talent and ability to be ranked where the consensus has him. The winning was just as much or more due to those other factors as it was to Isiah himself."

Talent Is Overrated. It's a good book. Check it out. As for Isiah's responsibility or lack thereof in his team's successes, I take the position that people often create their own opportunities and luck: when we consistently find a person in successful positions, in spite of all the other factors that might have been at play, the common thread is the person himself. I therefore give credit to that person.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#8 » by Dr Positivity » Wed Aug 30, 2017 1:30 am

pandrade83 wrote:Kidd let his mistreatment and poor relationships of women negatively and detrimentally impact his team to the point that for much of his career he is a net negative from an intangible standpoint - he's arguably the worst player from an intangibles perspective who is likely to make the Top 40.


He may have had his issues in his personal life but on the court his leadership was great. I don't think this is a situation like Tmac or Dwight where it plays a huge role in their evaluation. I take Kidd intangibles over Shaq, Barkley, Kobe, Barry, Gilmore to name some top 40 players, personally
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#9 » by euroleague » Wed Aug 30, 2017 3:07 am

Pick: Cousy
Alt: Isiah Thomas
HM: Kevin McHale


Pick: Cousy - Cousey's passing influenced the way the game was played hugely, and he did so in an unconventional way that didn't gain any unfair advantage a la goaltending. He won an MVP as his prime was ending, and his offensive style lives on far past his retirement and beyond his success leading the Celtics pre-Russell (questionable how Russell's passing would've developed without Cousey).

When Cousy joined the league, the Celtics were a 20 win team, and he immediately brought them to 40 his rookie year. He changed a bottom dwelling team to an immediate contender, and went on to contend with an elite offense in the eastern conference before Russell ever joined. He won MVP, and led the league in assists many times on his way to 10 all-nba first teams.

Alt: isiah Thomas: In 1988 he led the league in VORP for the post-season. In this post-season, MJ was playing on a team with no back-up, Magic was in his prime, Bird was beasting still. And Isiah Thomas led the league in VORP on a "deep" team that had other guards who were legit. The Pistons wouldn't be close to the team they were without Isiah, and even with him on the bench they immediately suffered more than the Lakers without Magic.

In 1988 he also led the league in DWS for the PS.

From 1987-1990, Isiah Thomas was never lower than 3rd in Post-Season VORP. His team is often called "the deepest of the 80s", in terms of talent across the board, but Isiah's impact was consistently on the tier of MJ/Bird/Magic (these 4 dominated the VORP rankings).

Isiah Thomas was also 3rd in playoff box-score plus-minus in 87 and 88, and 2nd in 90.

As a floor general, his impact went far beyond volume statistics. When IT wasn't in the game, the Pistons were suffering. He was capable of scoring if needed, evidenced by the 55 point outing that should've sealed a Pistons championship in 88 (except for a bad call from a ref in the last seconds) WHILE he was injured.

IT had his teammates back, and would throw himself under the fire to keep them alright. Isiah embraced the "bad boy" role even though he himself was obviously far from a bad boy image, with his clean smile and baby face, and his impact was equal to GOAT level players in the late 80s.


HM2: McHale is possibly the greatest m2m PF defender in NBA history, and one of the greatest individual scorers in the post in NBA history. His playstyle is similar to Hakeem for most of Hakeem's career in terms of scoring and man2man defense, except McHale may be the superior post scorer and the superior man 2 man defender. He was, however, even worse at passing (basically a black hole on offense) and not a rim protector so these two aspects give Hakeem the edge on both ends in the end. But, McHale's scoring is getting very underrated.

McHale averaged 26ppg on 65% TS in 1987. He had a 24 PER, 10rpg and 2.2 bpg. His ws/48 was .232 and he played more minutes than Larry Bird, resulting in 14.8 WS.

To compare with MJ that year, MJ had a league leading 16.9 WS and a 29.8 PER.

Larry Bird led the league in PER in 85 and 86 with 26.5 and 25.8.

McHale was 5th in the league in PER, behind only MJ/Bird/Barkley/maybe Magic didn't look. He was 4th in WS and WS/48. He was top 10 in VORP/BPM, but didn't have the same impact coming off the court as he would have if he was the team captain (obviously) because Bird was the leader of the team, so these numbers are lessened.

His PER/WS/WS/48 were all ahead of Hakeem, Moses, Drexler, Dominique Wilkins, and many other stars in their heyday.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#10 » by penbeast0 » Wed Aug 30, 2017 3:10 am

Just lost a very long post; I might try to recreate parts of it in responses tomorrow or Thurday. Basically I expressed skepticism about Cousy's career after 1957 although his early to mid 50s years were certainly elite (in a weak league) and about Kidd's " likely would be expected to have the PG team offense initiating boost" as drza claims when throughout the heart of his career in Phoenix and New Jersey, the offenses he ran were much more often bottom 5 in the league than top 5. If he was truly the great passer he was portrayed as, his inability to generate a shooting threat allowed defenses to negate that ability to the extent that I don't believe he was actually generating much, if any, positive impact on the offensive end though his defense and rebounding were elite.

Instead I argue that the top PG remaining looks like Walt Frazier for his defense, his scoring, and his ability to raise his game in the NBA finals twice to give the Knicks their only two titles in history.

I also still support Gilmore, more for his ABA years where his combination of size and athelticism combined with a much more active role both defensively and offensively to have more impact than his later incarnation as a hyperefficient but immobile low post player in the NBA.

Vote: Artis Gilmore
Alternate: Walt Frazier
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#11 » by Dr Positivity » Wed Aug 30, 2017 5:46 am

Thoughts on Cousy, Frazier, Thomas, Billups, Kidd, Miller, Gervin, Tmac, Gilmore, Mourning, Dwight from last thread:

Spoiler:
Bob Cousy - Case for: Superb longevity. He is still a 2nd team All-NBA level, all-star in his 13th season. Highly regarded by his peers with all his All-NBA, wins MVP, and in 1980 which is about the halfway point for this project is one of 11 players selected for the 35th anniversary team ahead of some contenders here like Barry and Frazier. Being one of the best slashers of his era and the best passer are both high value offensive roles. Helped Boston to 1st ORTGs when he was the best player. Case against: Played against mostly segregated players in his prime. Being the best guard passer in a poor passing league doesn't necessarily mean he was better at it than future players. Weak TS leads to disappointing OWS and WS production, never finishes higher than 8th/9th in WS. The Celtics dynasty was predicted to collapse without him but they did just fine. Likely overcredited in his time for Boston's offensive success, noting that this was a time where they didn't know any better than to think whoever scored the most points had the best offense, eg. in Cousy's MVP year they had the 5th highest ORTG but scored the most points easily so they may have credited the offensive player as the driving force.

Walt Frazier - Case for: Fabulous boxscore stats despite steals not being tracked a lot of his prime. Has multiple 2nd/3rd finishes in WS and if steals were tracked earlier would've done fabulously in VORP, he 4th/3rd the first two seasons it's tracked in 74 and 75 despite his offensive stats not being what it was a few years earlier. High value offensive role as a scorer/creator and one of the top defensive PGs making all-defensive 1st team throughout his prime. Great playoff career including one of the great Finals games. Case against: Weak longevity (6-7 years prime). No top 3 finishes in WS and voters at the time seemed to clearly prefer Reed as the Knicks best player, although a theory could be use racism (Frazier being "too black") having something to do with that.

Isiah Thomas - Case for: Very solid longevity being great for about a 11 year prime. Great intangibles and praised by many teammates. Strong playoff career leading his team to the top of the mountain. One of the best passers in the league which is a highly valuable offensive skill, along with creation ability. Case against: Average TS leading to only one top 10 finish in WS at 7th, and a 4th/7th in VORP. A good not great scoring career when you consider the volume and efficiency. Finishes 5th in MVP once and never above 8th and surprisingly underrecognized in Pistons title years in either MVP or All-NBA. Despite being a great leader and passer he struggles to fit in his most talented teammate ever in Dantley and keeps shooting as much as ever.

Chauncey Billups - Case for: Combination of passing, getting to the line and free throw line all of which is highly valuable on offense. Somewhat ahead of his time in appreciation for his skillset and value of 3pt spacing. Very good boxscore player with a few top 5s in WS (3rd/5th) and other top 10s and solid but would do better in VORP if his defense was rated better as it probably should've been. Leads Pistons to some strong seasons even without Ben Wallace. Iverson for Billups trade looks terrific for his case with his impact on the Nuggets both as a player and leader and Pistons decline without him. Case against: Ok longevity with about 8 strong years. Good but not great RAPM career, mainly peaking later in his prime. Felt less talented than other players in contention here. Not rated a superstar in his time, not even a star on the level of players like Pierce, Allen and Kidd. His reasonable MVP/All-NBA career somewhat misrepresents the lack of real star labelling there was for Billups. Seen somewhat like the game manager QB on an elite football defense, great at it, but still a game manager. Doesn't necessarily "put pressure on the defense" athletically.

Jason Kidd - Case for: One of the strongest RAPM players left ranking top 5 in his prime and some great on/off seasons. Playmaking alone has strong value at PG offensively, while is a great defensive player at his position who can up his value by guarding 2s. A great fastbreak starter due to his rebounder. Peaks at 2nd in MVP voting. Good VORP career finishing 1st in it once (99) and top 5 another time. Decent decade of prime longevity and valuable older player. Case against: Mediocre scoring career, making it harder to make a star level offensive impact and lack of shooting hurts floor spacing value. Not the best WS player with a 5th and 9th as his top 10s. Two top 5 finishes in MVP but often settled at 8th/9th.

Reggie Miller - Case for: Increases his stock in the playoffs where he is on several occasions a killer. Game translates to playoffs well since he can create open shots by movement. Outstanding longevity and durability and still has value late in his career as floor spacer. 17th in career WS. High floor spacing effect that he know better now than they did in the 90s the value of. Solid passing stats and ability to get to the FT Line, not just a spot up shooter. Good RAPM support. Case against: Shockingly little accolades in his time, not just missing MVP and All-NBA but all-star games half the time. Difficult to make the case he was ever a top 5 player, even in the stat that loves him WS he never finishes top 5. Limited RAPM sample also has him as very good but more of a fringe top 10 guy.

George Gervin - Case for: One of the best offensive careers left, leads the league in scoring 4x and a highly efficient scorer and leads good offenses and contenders. Considered a superstar on his time, 2x 2nd and 1x 3rd MVP finishes and 5 straight 1st team All-NBA. Case against: The Harden of his era on defense, probably worst top 50 defender if Harden doesn’t get in. Only finishes top 5 once in WS and peaks at 6th in VORP in NBA. Mediocre passing for his scoring volume, playmaking is typically critical for high offensive impact for a guard.

Tracy McGrady - Case for: Amazing statistical peak in 2003 right up there (9.7 BPM!) that’s up there with any Kobe season. Great playmaking wing increasing his value throughout his career along with high volume scoring. Good playoff performer. Case against: Weak longevity and health. Poor intangibles and often seemed half asleep. TS average outside of 03. Never makes it past 1st round as a real player. Him and Yao never seemed to reach their potential together and the Rockets suspiciously overperformed whenever one got injured.

Artis Gilmore - Case for: 10th all time in career WS. Very high peak in the ABA including MVP, best player on champion and leads in WS multiple times. Continued to put up good stats in NBA with the value of his TS possibly underrated at the time. Strong defensive center at high level defensive position C. Strong longevity and durability. Case against: Disrespected by eye test users at the time and future HOF voters, as being considered too slow and mechanical on offense and not having the inner fire to dominate. Doesn’t finish higher than 8th in MVP in NBA. Offensive style of play doesn’t appear to be high impact - non spacing post center who’s a poor passing/turnover player. Could have inflated stats in ABA (reb/blk) due to lack of size competition.

Alonzo Mourning - Case for: One of the best defensive centers remaining, as elite shotblocker and 2x DPOY. Plays the right position to be defense first. Peaks at 2nd in MVP voting in 00 and 1st in 99 RAPM (ascreamingacrossthecourt). Solid 8 years before kidney problems, decent play in 02 and valuable few years as mega shotblocking backup C in 06 and 07. 20 point scorer with above average TS and has midrange floor spacing. Outstanding intangibles, he is both the anti-Dwight and anti-Gilmore in a way. Case against: Not a great offensive threat. Terrible passing numbers and assist to turnover rate. Visually a Meh scoring skillset. May have got the job done in the regular season but to win a title there needs to be a more dynamic offensive player on the team.

Dwight Howard - Case for: Excellent accolades in his time, finishing 2nd in MVP (and possibly deserving to win) and 2x 4th place and 1x 5th place. 3rd a few times in WS and peaks at 5th/6th in VORP. The consensus best defender in the league in his prime and offensively is a 20 point, highly efficient scorer who creates gravity on the pick and roll. The defense alone is highly valuable at center. Peaks at 5th/8th in RAPM. Case against: Poor intangibles, annoying manchild. Very poor passing center who turns it over, and a complete non floor spacer at C. Played in a perfect offensive fit for his style, with ahead of its time floor spacing giving him room inside to score and he has never been the same without it. His offensive skillset never fully passed the eye test. Defensive impact seemed to evaporate after Orlando. When looking at how much better a player like late career Mourning was on defense than post prime Dwight, is it a clue about their ability on that end in their prime?


+ Dolph Schayes - Case for: Terrific all around offense for his time. High volume scoring, highly efficient, good passing and one of the original floor spacing bigs. Quality longevity as still a relevant player (2nd team All-NBA) in his 12th season and production as late as 61 shows he wasn't just a product of pre shot clock. Defense is hard to gauge but he did well in DWS and finished 1st in the league once. A clearcut top 5 player for his time which many of the alternatives above were not. Won a title as best player. Case against: Played in mostly segregated era and has an antiquated shooting style. Doesn't appear to have had a good defensive skillset even if he was good for his time - he just played in weaker era.

Vote: Jason Kidd

Kidd has a long career with excellent impact going by on/off and RAPM, he is not the best offensive player with options like Miller and Gervin out there but he makes up for with high defensive impact for a PG.

2nd: Bob Cousy
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#12 » by Pablo Novi » Wed Aug 30, 2017 6:18 am

from last thread (adjusted for Gary Payton's selection)
VOTE: Cousy
ALT: Gervin


Bob Cousy: Of the remaining players no one comes close to Cousy for dominance of their own position in their own era. Cousy was 1st-Team ALL-NBA TEN times and 2nd-Team two additional times. He revolutionized his position too.

I have Cousy as my GOAT #15, and GOAT PG #3 (behind: Magic and then "O"; ahead of: Stockton, CP3 & then J.Kidd)

George Gervin: ALL-League 1st-Team FIVE times; 2nd-Team FOUR times. Way more dominant of his position than any other remaining SG.

In what follows: in each descending set of 5 GOAT spots, there's one player per position. GOAT POSITIONAL rankings are determined primarily by "Points" which are determined by the number of ALL-League selections (pro-rated upwards for each succeeding decade):

my GOAT #15, PG #03:1st-Teams:10, 2nd-Teams: 2: (40.5 "Points") Bob Cousy
my GOAT #20, SG #04: 1st-Teams: 5, 2nd-Teams: 4: (31.5 "Points") George Gervin

Honorable Mention:
my GOAT #29, PG #06: 1st-Teams: 5, 2nd-Teams: 1: (28.0 "Points") Jason Kidd
my GOAT #30, SG #06: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (18.0 "Points") Sidney Moncrief
my GOAT #33, PF #07: 1st-Teams: 6, 2nd-Teams: 6: (28.2 "Points") Dolph Schayes
my GOAT #35, SG #07: 1st-Teams: 0, 2nd-Teams: 7: (17.5 "Points") Hal Greer

Upcoming (in my GOAT Top 50)
my GOAT #36,, C #08: 1st-Teams: 5, 2nd-Teams: 1: (31.4 "Points") Dwight Howard
my GOAT #37, PG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 3: (25.6 "Points") Allen Iverson
my GOAT #38, SF #08: 1st-Teams: 2, 2nd-Teams: 3: (22.1 "Points") Tracy McGrady
my GOAT #39, PF #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (17.5 "Points") Jerry Lucas
my GOAT #40, SG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 1: (17.5 "Points") Paul Westphal
my GOAT #43, SF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (19.3 "Points") Dominique Wilkins
my GOAT #44, PF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Amar'e Stoudemire
my GOAT #45, SG #09: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 0: (16.8 "Points") James Harden
my GOAT #47, PG #10: 1st-Teams: 4, 2nd-Teams: 2: (22.5 "Points") Walt Frazier
my GOAT #48, SF #10: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Grant Hill
my GOAT #50, PF #10: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (15.8 "Points") George McGinnis
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#13 » by LA Bird » Wed Aug 30, 2017 10:47 am

Same votes as last round:

1. Artis Gilmore
Previously had him behind Kidd and Miller but after going through the numbers again, I think I may have penalized Gilmore too heavily for his turnovers. A low post somewhat turnover-prone center without great passing is usually a major problem but Gilmore's insane scoring efficiency makes up for it to a certain degree. The dropoff from his ABA years is a concern but the same thing happened to Dr J as well as other ABA stars and FWIW, Gilmore accumulated more win shares than Erving in both leagues. Gilmore was the player of the year for me in 1975 and he had a very long career (top 25 in points, top 5 in rebounds and blocks) in addition to his solid ABA prime.

2. Jason Kidd
A poor man's Stockton with better longevity. GOAT defensive point guard IMO.

Don't really see the case for Cousy here. He led some elite offensive teams in the first 5 years of his career but the defensive shift after Russell's arrival and the consequent rings based off Russell's defense rather than Cousy's offense makes it hard to really give Cousy much credit for the later team success. Even though I think he is ranked a little too high on this list, Mikan at least dominated a league where most of the best players were big men. Schayes is around top 50 and Johnston, Macauley are probably borderline top 100. Cousy never came close to Mikan's level of dominance and none of his peers in the 1950s at the guard position (beside Sharman who was on the same team) are even close to top 100. Making the All NBA team multiple times ahead of somebody like Bobby Wanzer isn't really that impressive an achievement to me...
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#14 » by pandrade83 » Wed Aug 30, 2017 11:54 am

Dr Positivity wrote:
pandrade83 wrote:Kidd let his mistreatment and poor relationships of women negatively and detrimentally impact his team to the point that for much of his career he is a net negative from an intangible standpoint - he's arguably the worst player from an intangibles perspective who is likely to make the Top 40.


He may have had his issues in his personal life but on the court his leadership was great. I don't think this is a situation like Tmac or Dwight where it plays a huge role in their evaluation. I take Kidd intangibles over Shaq, Barkley, Kobe, Barry, Gilmore to name some top 40 players, personally


It's possible I'm allowing the first 1/2 or so of his career to skew how I feel about his intangibles.

I give him all the credit in the world for rescuing the Nets from the dumpster - no easy task- for those first 2-3 years. But his exit and the nature of it from Dallas, Phoenix and then New Jersey (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/20/sports/basketball/20nets.html) really bug me.

Even Gilmore wasn't actively hurting the team at any point or negatively disrupting franchises.

Intangibles is obviously the squishiest of all topics; while I disagree on some of the guys you listed, I think your opinion is reasonable.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#15 » by pandrade83 » Wed Aug 30, 2017 12:11 pm

scrabbarista wrote:36. Isiah Thomas

37. [Yes, 21 spots higher than he finished in 2014] Elvin Hayes



These two guys represent very different things. What's the idea of having them right next to each other?
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#16 » by scrabbarista » Wed Aug 30, 2017 1:47 pm

pandrade83 wrote:
scrabbarista wrote:36. Isiah Thomas

37. [Yes, 21 spots higher than he finished in 2014] Elvin Hayes



These two guys represent very different things. What's the idea of having them right next to each other?


I know it's probably the last thing you'd guess based on the post you're quoting from, but I actually use a formula for my rankings, so questions of what guys represent doesn't really come into play.

A quick scan of my spreadsheet, and the meaty parts of their resumes are:

*each guy won a title as the best player on his team (Isiah twice)
*both had solid PS totals
*Hayes has massive career totals in the five major traditional stats

That's it. Fwiw, I get your kind of question all the time on these forums whenever I post my rankings (at one point I had Bill Walton and Robert Parish next to each other, to use an extreme example). The general answer would be that whatever the opposing things being represented are, they apparently both led to wins, so I (apparently) value them both.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#17 » by trex_8063 » Wed Aug 30, 2017 2:52 pm

penbeast0 wrote:
Vote: Artis Gilmore
Alternate: Gary Payton


Payton was voted in the last thread. Update your alternate pick when you get a chance.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#18 » by daoneandonly » Wed Aug 30, 2017 3:02 pm

Kevin Garnett should not be ahead of Karl Malone or Dirk Nowitzki. Almost every ranking by the experts on all time greatest PF's has

1. Duncan
2. Malone
3. Dirk

Which I'd tend to agree with, don't see the argument for KG being better than either.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#19 » by trex_8063 » Wed Aug 30, 2017 3:25 pm

Fundamentals21 wrote:Even amongst his peers, don't know if Kidd should be taken over Pierce. Pierce shows equal defensive capacity and superior offensive capacity.


I disagree that Pierce shows equal defensive capacity. He was certainly a capable defender, but never elite (as Kidd was several years of his career). I don't feel Pierce as equal to Kidd defensively is reflected anywhere, either. Although I think individual DRtg and DBPM are rotten as far as their accuracy in assessing individual defense (at least for perimeter players): Kidd's career DRtg is 102 (Pierce's is 103), Kidd's career DBPM is 1.8 (Pierce's is 0.5).

Then we have honors: Kidd was NINE times All-Defensive Team (four of those 1st team), Pierce I don't believe had any (right or wrong). Kidd also made at least a couple appearances in the DPOY vote (I don't believe Pierce ever did).

Then there's DRAPM, which is close, though again favors Kidd. Avg DRAPM from '99-'10 for Kidd is +1.265 vs. +0.833 for Pierce.
And lastly there's my eye-test, which [for me] suggests the same thing that EVERYTHING else [as noted above] appears to be telling me: that Pierce was respectable/good defensively, but Kidd was excellent.


I do think they're roughly similar-tiered players overall. I would generally give Pierce the small edge offensively, though fwiw, impact data suggests Kidd was basically Pierce's equal offensively (and thus marginally more impactful overall during their respective primes).

Fundamentals21 wrote: Also has Kidd beat in longevity with Career NBA W/S of 22nd.


Don't agree with the bolded statement. WS/48, like all metrics, has its flaws and biases. It will underrate some players (like Kidd---as I elaborated on previously---or probably Isiah Thomas as another example), will overrate others (e.g. Chris Andersen in Miami, or Amar'e Stoudemire); others it will rate pretty fairly/accurately. Pierce, imo, falls into this latter category (whereas Kidd gets underrated by it). As result, Pierce has nabbed a slim career edge in total WS (25th all-time in ABA/NBA vs. 31st for Kidd).

You're mistaking Pierce rating out as a better player (as measured specifically by WS and WS/48) as him having better longevity. David Robinson also has Kidd soundly beat in career WS; so does he have superior longevity? EDIT (because I realized this sounded condescending): The DRob comparison isn't exactly fair as he's clearly on another tier from Kidd, whereas Kidd and Pierce are roughly (as I myself stated) similar-tiered players; and from that standpoint I can see where a cumulative stat [like WS] might suggest better longevity for Pierce. But it's just that the metric itself favors him. As a counter, I could point out a different cumulative measure, such as VORP (where Kidd ranks #11 all-time and Pierce is #23, with Kidd ahead by a proportion that is larger than Pierce's WS edge).


In actual longevity, Kidd has the small but clear edge. Both guys played 19 seasons, but Kidd played 48 more games, >4,000 more minutes, and was a useful player ALL nineteen of his seasons (whereas Pierce was pretty clearly a total non-factor his last two seasons).
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #36 

Post#20 » by penbeast0 » Wed Aug 30, 2017 3:37 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
Vote: Artis Gilmore
Alternate: Gary Payton


Payton was voted in the last thread. Update your alternate pick when you get a chance.


Thanks, meant Frazier, wrote Payton. Will fix post.
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