RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 (Manu Ginobili)

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RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 (Manu Ginobili) 

Post#1 » by trex_8063 » Mon Feb 1, 2021 11:52 pm

2020 List
1. LeBron James
2. Michael Jordan
3. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
4. Bill Russell
5. Tim Duncan
6. Wilt Chamberlain
7. Magic Johnson
8. Shaquille O'Neal
9. Hakeem Olajuwon
10. Larry Bird
11. Kevin Garnett
12. Kobe Bryant
13. Jerry West
14. Oscar Robertson
15. Dirk Nowitzki
16. Karl Malone
17. David Robinson
18. Julius Erving
19. George Mikan
20. Moses Malone
21. Charles Barkley
22. Kevin Durant
23. Chris Paul
24. Stephen Curry
25. Bob Pettit
26. John Stockton
27. Steve Nash
28. Dwyane Wade
29. Patrick Ewing
30. Walt Frazier
31. James Harden
32. Scottie Pippen
33. Elgin Baylor
34. John Havlicek
35. Rick Barry
36. Jason Kidd
37. George Gervin
38. Clyde Drexler
39. Reggie Miller
40. Artis Gilmore
41. Dolph Schayes
42. Kawhi Leonard
43. Isiah Thomas
44. Russell Westbrook
45. Willis Reed
46. Chauncey Billups
47. Paul Pierce
48. Gary Payton
49. Pau Gasol
50. Ray Allen
51. Dwight Howard
52. Kevin McHale
53. ???

Target stop time around 7pm EST on Wednesday.

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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#2 » by Cavsfansince84 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 12:27 am

52. Dave Cowens
-Great combination of scoring, rebounding, defense and playmaking which led to very high win teams
-Very strong playoff performer, averaging 18.9/14.4/3.7 for his career. Led league in ps win shares in 76 despite not getting fmvp
-career treb% of 17.1 and ast % of 13.7 which are both good for a pf/c(Shaq's career %'s were 17.8/13.9)
-2x nba champ
-1x nba mvp
-4x top 4 in mvp voting(shows how highly regarded he was in his era)
-3x all nba 2nd team
-3x all defensive(1x 1st, 2x 2nd)
-Had 4 years with a ts+ above 100 in his prime so wasn't that inefficient as a scorer
-prime length of 9 years imo which is right there with most players despite career more or less ending at 31

53. Sam Jones
-Going with Jones here for sustained excellence in both rs and ps and obviously his role in the greatest dynasty in nba history which I think his role in is probably underrated in general. I'm just going to go through and post his rank on those teams in win shares for both the rs and ps from 62-67 to show what I am talking about. rs first and ps second(62-66 all being title teams)
62: 2nd 2nd
63: 2nd 2nd
64: 2nd 1st
65: 2nd 2nd
66: 2nd 2nd

So as we can see and which the actual numbers do a better job of showing is the degree to which it was Russell and Jones at the top and then usually quite a large gap between them and everyone else on those teams. His role on 5 of those title teams was very large which is something no one else left can match when it comes to contributing to post season success imo(granted Cousy could be argued but I think Jones was better).

-3x all nba 2nd team
-3x top 10 in mvp voting(high of 4th)
-10x nba champ
-6 seasons averaging over 19ppg with career ts+ of 104(highly efficient for a wing)
-5 playoff runs averaging over 23ppg all at or above .516 ts%(when league average was under 50%)
-career ws/48 of .182 which ranks 35th all time
-known as clutch playoff scorer
-from 1962-1966 the Celtics played in 6 decisive game 5 or game 7's and Jones averaged 32.5ppg in those games which were all wins(most by 3 pts or less).

54. Anthony Davis

-7 year prime imo at this point which I think on average is the strongest perhaps by far of any remaining player
-great athlete and combination of inside scoring/finishing, outside shooting, shotblocking and defense which is going to translate to any era
-4x all nba 1st team
-4x all defensive(2x 1st, 2x 2nd)
-4x top 10 in mvp voting(high of 3rd)
-ranks 12th in career bpm
-ranks 11th in career ws/48
-3x nba leader in bpg
-career 23.9ppg scorer on 107 ts+
-career playoff bpm of 7.4 would rank 6th all time if he qualified(only 3 playoff runs)
-1x champ
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#3 » by Hal14 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 1:18 am

1. Bob Cousy
2. Nate Thurmond
3. Dave Cowens

Bob Cousy - Very underrated on this board. When you look at the players from his era, Mikan and Pettit were better than Cousy. But Cousy has a strong argument for being better than any other player from his era. You could argue that Cousy was better than Schayes and Schayes got voted in a long time ago in the no. 41 spot.

Cousy - 13x all star, 10x all NBA 1st team, 1 MVP, 6x NBA title
Schayes - 12x all star, 6x all NBA 1st team, 0 MVP, 1x NBA title

Not to mention the impact Cousy had on the game and his legacy. We simply had never before seen a guy who could make the kind of passes that Cousy could. It's like he had eyes in the back of his head - able to see 2 steps ahead of the opposition, able to anticipate where his teammates would be, hit teammates perfectly in stride for transition layups. Some of the plays he made - you might watch them today in 2021 and think they are routine plays - but a) many of the plays he made were truly outstanding and not routine at all and b) He was so far ahead of his time - to make the types of plays he did back in the 50s was pretty amazing. Keep in mind back then there was much more strict rules in regards to dribbling. The way players dribble the ball in today's game - they would get called for a carry, palming or travel pretty much every time down the floor. Cousy was called the hardwood Houdini for a reason. And it's not like he was all flash and no substance (like Maravich, Jason Williams, etc.), Cousy was all about winning. That's all he cared about - winning. Scoring the basketball, making great passes to teammates to get them baskets. Hell, he was even a good rebounder for his size. He did whatever it takes to win. He became the player that all point guards who would come later on would model their games after.

Not for another 2 decades when Frazier came along would we see a player as good as Cousy at both scoring and setting up teammates for scores. Frazier was obviously a better defender, but he also had the advantage of coming along decades later, when more players were lifting weights, rules weren't as strict on palming/carrying/traveling, the ball was easier to shoot and easier to dribble than the one Cousy played with, etc. Frazier was voted in at the no. 30 spot in this poll. Is he really 23 spots better than Cousy? No way.



Nate Thurmond - right in that same tier with Reed, Gilmore and Ewing. I see those four centers as pretty debatable. Ewing, Gilmore and Reed all got voted in already - it's Thurmond's time now. Thurmond has a strong case for being better than all 3 of them (probably the best defender of the group, but Gilmore has the longevity and ABA Finals MVP, Reed has 2 Finals MVPs so I've got Thurmond just barely ranked behind those other guys).

Thurmond is one of the most underrated players of all time and is top 50, no question in my mind.

https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/warriors/defensive-dominator-thurmond-one-nbas-most-underrated-all-time

Thurmond went against Wilt, Russell, Chamberlain, Kareem, Unseld, Bellamy, Beaty, Cowens, Reed - all in their prime. Yet he still managed:

-7 all star games in 14 seasons

-2 times all defensive 1st team, 3 times all defensive 2nd team...despite the fact that all defense awards didn't exist until his 6th season! Clearly one of the best defensive players of all time and one of the best rebounders of all time

-Did not make a 1st or 2nd team all NBA (obviously those usually went to Wilt/Kareem/Russell) but there's very little question he would have made quite a few all NBA 3rd team selections if it existed back when he played

-Finished 2nd in MVP voting in 66-67, finishing ahead of Russell, Robertson and Barry - Thurmond finished no. 2 behind Wilt who was no. 1. Finished 11th in 69-70, 8th in 70-7, 8th in 71-72, 9th in 72-73 and 8th in 73-74

-Helped his team to NBA Finals in 67, where they lost to arguably the greatest team of all time, the 67 Sixers. That series Thurmond averaged 14 PPG and 26.7 RPG while playing 47 MPG, going head to head vs Wilt. Thurmond's Warriors fell in 6 games to Wilt's Sixers. Let's compare that to the Eastern Division Finals - Russell (while also going against Wilt) averaged less PPG (11) and less RPG (23) than Thurmond, and Russell's Celtics lost in 5 games to Wilt's Sixers. How did Wilt do in each series? His numbers. were better in the Eastern Division Finals, going against Russell than they were in the NBA finals vs Thurmond. Wilt went from 21 PPG, 32 RPG and 10 APG vs Russell down to 17 PPG, 28 RPG and 6 APG vs Thurmond.
1/11/24 The birth of a new Hal. From now on being less combative, avoiding confrontation - like Switzerland :)
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#4 » by trex_8063 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 2:21 am

1st vote: Robert Parish
So yeah.....I'm a meaningful longevity guy. This is not a secret, nor new. And Parish is actually my clear top pick via my criteria; as my list stands now, there's actually no one left on the table who's even within 5 places of Parish.

But seriously:
Parish was an entirely fine two-way player [and was so for a really damn long time].
While I think he’s somewhat more remembered for his offense, he was also a very capable defender thru much of his career (especially early on).

For example, during his first SEVEN seasons in the league......
*He never averaged less than 2.8 blocks per 100 possessions (and as high as 4.4).
**In both ‘79 and ‘81 he was 4th in the league in bpg despite playing just 31.7 and 28.0 mpg; was 5th in ‘82 while playing just 31.7 mpg, too.
***He had a cumulative 97 DRtg, leading the league in DRtg in ‘79; had a DRtg in the top 8 four times (three times in the top 3).

Offensively, he was a 7-footer who ran the floor pretty well, while being a competent finisher (making him one of the more notable transition threats among the centers of his era). He was a very very good low-post scorer (could utilize a little hook shot, or that crazy high-arcing turnaround of his), and also had a tiny bit of range (out to about 12-14 feet, anyway, he was quite effective).
Was an entirely decent FT-shooter for a big-man (72.1% for his career).
The primary reason he was averaging just 16-20 ppg during his prime was because he was playing on an extremely stacked team thru most of it. I've little doubt prime Parish could have avg ~23-24 ppg for a less talent-laden club.

While I don't think Parish could have been “the man” on a contender, I think we’re well past the point on the list where that is a necessary consideration. Especially when one has the kind of longevity that Parish had: he had a prime that basically lasted 13 years (>1,000 rs games), and five other seasons as decent role player of varying (but certainly relevant) value; only 3 seasons (years 19-21) that were of negligible or nil value.

And while he couldn’t have been #1 on a contender, he certainly could have been the #1 on a 40-45 win playoff participant. I think this was more or less proven in '89 when Bird missed the entire season: Parish was arguably the best player [at worst a "1B"] on a 42-win team.....this was at age 35 (the single-oldest man on the Celtic roster). No Bird to feed him, but old-man Parish still averaged 18.6 ppg @ +7.0% rTS, to go with 12.5 rpg and 1.5 bpg.

And he was clearly capable of being the #2 on a contender. Indeed, he WAS either the 2nd or 3rd best player on MULTIPLE contenders.
He’s got one ring as the clear #2 ('81), another as---at worst---the #2B ('84), a third ring as the clear #3 ('86), and then a 4th ring as a sparsely used limited-value bench player ('97).

He was 7th in MVP voting in ‘81, 4th in MVP voting in ‘82.

A look at his prime production…….
Robert Parish (‘79-’91) (13 years: 1022 rs games!)
Per 100 (rs): 25.8 pts, 15.6 reb, 2.5 ast, 1.3 stl, 2.5 blk with 3.6 tov @ 58.4% TS
PER 20.2, .168 WS/48, 113 ORtg/102 DRtg (+11) in 32.4 mpg
Playoffs Per 100: 22.9 pts, 13.9 reb, 1.9 ast, 1.2 stl, 2.5 blk, 3.2 tov @ .551 TS%
PER 16.5, .121 WS/48 in 34.9 mpg

Robert Parish (full career)
Per 100 (rs): 24.6 pts, 15.5 reb, 2.3 ast, 1.3 stl, 2.5 blk, 3.5 tov @ .571 TS%
PER 19.2, .154 WS/48, 111 ORtg/102 DRtg (+9) in 28.4 mpg
**And note this is over 21 years, 1611 rs games (more than any other player in history)
Per 100 (playoffs): 22.6 pts, 14.2 reb, 1.9 ast, 1.2 stl, 2.5 blk, 3.1 tov @ .547 TS%
PER 16.6, .121 WS/48, 109 ORtg/105 DRtg (+4) in 33.6 mpg

Career rs WS: 147.0 (#26 all-time)
Career playoff WS: 15.6 (#39 all-time)
9-Time NBA All-Star
2-Time All-NBA (1x 2nd, 1x 3rd)

That’s an awful lot of career value, imo.


2nd vote: Bob Lanier
A big body with sweet shooting touch in the mid and close ranges, very good rebounder, fair passing big. Sporadically [like in '74] was a good defensive big, though overall probably not so much. But when looking at his production, efficiency, and signs of lift, as well as his totally decent longevity (generously might be said to have had a 9-year prime [so so], but 14 mostly durable seasons in which he was ALWAYS good).......he seems like a worthy candidate for this stage.

From '72-'80 (extended prime) he averaged roughly 28 pts/100 possessions [give or take a couple tenths], ~14.4 reb/100, and ~4.2 ast/100 @ +4.2% rTS with a fair/respectable big-man turnover economy [based on '78-'84].
This is all while averaging 37.4 mpg thru those 9 seasons.

In '74 he averaged 1.6 steals and 3.7 blocks per 100 possessions with a 27.1% DREB%, anchoring a -3.9 rDRTG [3rd of 17 teams]. He had both the league's best individual DRtg AND the league's best DBPM (this was a league that contained Dave Cowens and Kareem).

Granted, that year appears like a completely outlier for him [defensively], but it's still worth acknowledging.

His WOWYR is more than strong for this stage of the list, with a prime WOWYR of +5.4 (career WOWYR of +5.8).
This jives with some of my own more crude WOWY studies for Lanier [omitted his first four years since he only missed four games TOTAL in that span]......
With/Without Records and Wins added per season (pro-rated to 82 games)
‘75: 39-37 (.513) with Lanier, 1-5 (.167) without him/+28.4 wins
‘76: 30-34 (.469) with Lanier, 6-12 (.333) without him/+11.1 wins
‘77: 38-26 (.594) with Lanier, 6-12 (.333) without him/+21.4 wins
‘78: 31-32 (.492) with Lanier, 7-12 (.368) without him/+10.2 wins
‘79: 21-32 (396) with Lanier, 9-20 (.310) without him/+7.1 wins
‘80 Pistons: 9-28 (.243) with Lanier, 5-12 (.294) without
‘80 Pistons overall before trading Lanier for Kent Benson): 14-40 (.259)
‘80 Pistons after trade: 2-26 (.071)
‘80 Bucks before obtaining Lanier: 29-27 (.518)
‘80 Bucks after obtaining Lanier: 20-6 (.769) (Lanier played all 26 games)
‘81: 48-19 (.716) with Lanier, 12-3 (.800) without him/-6.9 wins
‘82: 53-21 (.716) with Lanier, 2-6 (.250) without him/+38.2 wins

The above data spans eight years, SIX different head coaches, and a fair amount of supporting cast turnover, fwiw.

He always took a back seat to some of the other great centers of his day, as he just never seemed to be on a team that could generate the narrative. I'll back-track to that '74 season, because it was a pretty impressive accomplishment (almost a "carry-job", I would say [and I HATE that term, and feel it's way over-used])......but they won 52 games with a +4.02 SRS [2nd of 17] with just Lanier, post-injury Dave Bing, and nothing much behind that [Curtis Rowe was probably the 3rd-best player].
They lost in the first round, though it was in 7-games to 54-win +3.20 SRS Bulls team that boasted Chet Walker, Jerry Sloan, Bob Love, and Norm Van Lier; and the Pistons actually outscored them by 2.3 ppg in the series. The Piston victories were by 9, 14, and 4; while their losses were by 5, 1, 4, and 2.
sansterre would probably say they merely lost a coin-toss, or even that they may have been the marginally better team.


3rd vote: Manu Ginobili???
I'm not 100% set on this pick, but it's who I'm tentatively going with for now. Going to present some info/arguments tomorrow if I have time, but might be open to supplanting him with other potentials: Anthony Davis, Allen Iverson, Bob Cousy, Elvin Hayes, maybe Dikembe would be the top potentials.


btw, I'll state right here my order among some other guys currently with traction: Cousy > Cowens > Dantley > Jones.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#5 » by sansterre » Tue Feb 2, 2021 2:39 am

1. Manu Ginobili - had a peak as good as anyone remaining with a solid career around it. At his best he was the one of the top players in the league (four straight +7 AuRPM seasons), and was (arguably) the best scorer on a champion multiple times. In his prime he was actually great at everything. He was a strong passer, great scorer, unusually good rebounding 2 and full-on ball-hawk. His minutes per game were low, but his career minutes are still comparable to McHale, Cowens or most of the guys being talked about here. He has his share of flaws, but he is, to my mind, considerably above those remaining.

2. Bob Lanier - I know next to nothing about his play, but I've loved his stats ever since I could read them. One of the highest WOWYRs remaining (+5.4/+5.8), he played on multiple teams and missed some time so we got a good sample of his impact, and it was considerable. He was a high-usage player (I'm eyeballing it in the mid-high 20s) but extremely efficient, averaging +5 rTS% through his peak. He was not a skilled passer, but he wasn't a liability with the ball either. He wasn't an historically great rebounder, but he commonly was in the top ten in rebounds per game, dominant on the defensive glass. He was a sufficient defender, but his unusually high efficiency combined with high volume made him unusually valuable, and it was value that he retained regardless of team. And in the playoffs his shooting, far from dropping, actually *increased* 2%. In fact, here are his per 100s for regular season and playoffs from '74 to '80:

Regular Season: 28.2 points on 24.8 TSA (56.2% TS), 13.9 TRB, 4.4 AST, 1.5 TOV
Playoffs: 28.9 points on 24.8 TSA (58.2% TS), 15.2 TRB, 4.4 AST, 0.7 TOV

So against playoff defenses his usage stays the same, but he's even more efficient, rebounds even more and drops his turnovers in half, without losing any assists. Seriously. Bob Lanier was fantastic. So why don't we hear about him? Because he played for the sad-sack Detroit Pistons through his entire prime and only ended up in Milwaukee a little past his peak. And Milwaukee happened to play in a murderous conference and could never make the Finals. He may never have been on a winner. But I'm telling you. Bob Lanier deserves serious consideration.

3. Dave Cowens - box score metrics don't appreciate his defense. Which is a problem, because his defense rocked. He was never one to rack up many blocks, but he anchored many strong defenses. He was never an efficient scorer, but he shot enough and at range which would pull opposing centers out of the paint. He was a formidable rebounder (especially defensively), a good passer for a big and a consummate team player. His career was fairly short, but he retained his value well in the playoffs and was a key player on two different championship teams.

Remaining: Parish > Dantley > Jones > Cousy
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#6 » by penbeast0 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 2:48 am

1. Manu Ginobili -- Limited minutes but reasonable career length and just seemed impressively impactful whenever he was on the court. I'd rate him over Kawhi Leonard for career value at this point in Kawhi's life.
2. Alex English -- Versatility seems to be a theme here. English doesn't have the stats of Adrian Dantley (though he's close) and probably even Ray Allen looks more impressive in raw stats after adjusting for pace, but English played many roles and always made his teams better no matter what role Denver played him in. One of the most underrated players in history despite having scored more in the 80s than Larry Bird, Isiah Thomas, Dominique Wilkins, Adrian Dantley, or well, anyone else in the game. Also won numerous citizenship awards, one of the great people to play the game.
3. Adrian Dantley -- The Wilt of wings, ridiculous numbers, some of his coaches (Chuck Daly) rave about him while others (Frank Layden) rip him. Just too good to let slide further.

For bigs, I have Dave Cowens over Anthony Davis, Parish adds ridiculous longevity but not as strong a prime impact. For wings, Paul Arizin before Sam Jones and Hal Greer. Tmac is the best modern candidate. Cousy behind Arizin for 50s impact and I didn't think he was much of a positive for the Russell championships; I actually have him as the weak link with his continual bad playoff performances.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#7 » by DQuinn1575 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 2:52 am

Ginobili is getting lots of support, largely due to playoff and team success. In this regard, he matches up poorly versus Sam Jones.

Ginobili Jones
2nd team all-nba--- 0 / 3
all-star games--- 2 / 5
mvp finishes --- 8,10,11 /4,5,9
playoff ws per 48 --- 0.164 / 0.157
playoff ws per game --- 0.095 / 0.098
ws per 48 --- 0.19 / 0.182
ws per game --- 0.101 / 0.106
Playoff Game 7 ave --- 19.7 / 27.1
Team record - games 7 --- 3-3 / 9-0
Titles --- 4 / 10


Dave Cowens was a top player in the league, surpassing both of these players in his peak, but didnt last as long, and didnt have the playoff successes as Jones.
Arizin is similar, I have him lower than Cowens.



1 Sam Jones
2 Dave Cowens
3 Paul Arizin
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#8 » by Joao Saraiva » Tue Feb 2, 2021 3:14 pm

Votes
1. Manu Ginobili
2. Adrian Dantley
3. Sam Jones


My vote goes for Manu. Yes limited minutes, we know that. But his impact was very good in those minutes and he was a big part of San Antonio's success. As a matter of fact, even in the early championships with Duncan and Parker the offense got better results with him being the driving force instead of playing trough Duncan.

His longevity seasons wise is very good, and he was both a positive on offense and defense.

I'm not that high on Parker, so I think Manu deserves a ton of credit for the success of the Spurs, along with Duncan and Pop.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#9 » by Dutchball97 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 3:47 pm

1. Manu Ginobili - He's a play-off beast. He's 20th in career play-off WS and 19th in play-off VORP. Sure you have to take into account that he played on very strong Spurs teams that never missed the play-offs but even his teammate and fellow All-Time great Tony Parker isn't even close as he's 57th in play-off WS and 66th in play-off VORP. This wasn't just a right place, right time moment for Manu. He simply was a big reason for the Spurs' continued success even despite relatively low minutes. Just longevity isn't enough though as the next available players in play-off WS/VORP are players like Horace Grant, Robert Horry and Robert Parish but none of them had a significantly high peak for me to vote for them already. A big part of why Manu ranks ahead of players like them in total WS and VORP is because of his excellent 2005 post-season. This run is the highest single season VORP left available and is only second in WS to 2020 AD. When there is a player who has done the most in the play-offs in total out of anyone left, while also having one of the highest peaks still on the table I think that overrules the low minutes and strong team arguments when most other candidates left are either lacking in peak or longevity.

2. Paul Arizin - I won't clog up the page by posting my extended argument for Arizin as I think it already served it's purpose of getting him on at least some people's radars. Arizin is a player who was a star player for a decade with a 2 year military break inbetween. In this time he led the league in WS over Mikan in 52, was top 3 in MVP voting twice and led his team to a title in 56, while this time leading the league in play-off WS. He's the same caliber of player as Schayes in my opinion and the only reason he's lower on this list is somewhat worse longevity. The era argument is fair but while it's enough to put Arizin behind similar players from stronger eras I don't think it should put him behind worse players from better eras.

3. Elvin Hayes - I'm not completely set on this pick yet but he's someone who does fit my criteria. I'm a big advocate for peak over longevity but I do want to see at least a couple years of sustained high level performance, especially in the play-offs. The trio of AD, Giannis and Jokic intrigues me at this point but their play-off accomplishments so far are on the light side. Hayes is someone who has had a long and productive career. He made multiple All-NBA first teams and ended up in the top 3 of MVP voting twice just like Arizin, while also leading his team to a title and in general having a couple of pretty good play-off runs. Other guys I'm considering at this point are Sam Jones, Dantley, Kevin Johnson and a bunch of 70s centers.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#10 » by trex_8063 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 4:14 pm

I'm again going to present some figures for players with a tad of traction [fwiw...food for thought and/or discussion]....

Peak [rs] Scaled PER
Anthony Davis - 29.62 (‘15)
Giannis Antetokounmpo - 29.21 ('20) [note: in only 30.4 mpg]
Bob Lanier - 27.26 (‘74)
Adrian Dantley - 26.74 (‘84)
Robert Parish - 26.34 (‘81) [note: in only 28.0 mpg]
Manu Ginobili - 23.96 ('07) [note: in only 27.5 mpg]
Sam Jones - 22.54 ('66 [note: only 32.2 mpg])
Bob Cousy - 21.73 ('52 [was 21.72 in '53 as well])
Dave Cowens - 20.44 ('75)


Peak [rs] Scaled WS/48
Adrian Dantley - .2888 (‘84)
Anthony Davis - .2772 (‘15)
Giannis Antetokounmpo - .2718 ('20) [note: in only 30.4 mpg]
Manu Ginobili - .2647 ('05) [note: in only 29.6 mpg]
Robert Parish - .2566 (‘81) [note: in only 28.0 mpg]
Bob Lanier - .2555 (‘74)
Sam Jones - .2310 ('66) [note: only 32.2 mpg]
Dave Cowens - .1990 ('75)
Bob Cousy - .1831 ('57)


Prime WOWYR (Giannis and AD not included)
Bob Lanier: +5.4 [note: +5.8 for career, whereas most others have a career value LOWER than his prime value]
Bob Cousy: +4.4
Robert Parish: +4.3
Adrian Dantley: +4.3
Sam Jones: +3.4
Manu Ginobili: +3.0
Dave Cowens: +1.6


Best 7-Years RAPM added (minutes played in those seasons [shortened seasons pro-rated], and crude product {RAPM * minutes} with product rank in group) (utilizing AuPM as proxy for '94-'96; Reed, Cousy, Jones, and McHale excluded obviously)
Manu Ginobili - 44.6 (13,325, 594,295 [1st])
Anthony Davis - **15.29 (16,393, 250,649 [2nd])
Giannis Antetokounmpo - *14.05 (17,137, 240,774.85 [3rd])

*Don't have RAPM for '20 for GA; used conservative +3 rating for that year.
**Don’t have RAPM for ‘20 for AD; used a VERY conservative +2 estimate for that year.


*Total Value Above Replacement by PER and WS/48 [SD scaled, and calibrated for seasons played], and all-time rank
*Scaled PER and WS/48 used, "replacement level" set at PER of 13.5 in rs [12.5 in playoffs] and WS/48 of .078 in rs [.064 in playoffs]; modifiers used the make WS/48 of .100 be worth the same "score" as PER of 15.0; playoff minutes weighted 3.25x as heavy as rs minutes; calibrated for years to dilute advantage of extensive longevity.

Adrian Dantley - 11,427.52 (34th)
Bob Lanier - 10,905.01 (39th)
Robert Parish - 10,312.37 (44th) (*worth noting that in version that looks at just cumulative VOR by scaled term [NO calibration for years] Parish comes in 33rd; Dantley 32nd, Lanier 43rd in that version)
Manu Ginobili - 9,693.17 (49th)
Sam Jones - 7,927.99 (65th)
Anthony Davis - 7,788.47 (66th)
Bob Cousy (**does not include '51)- 6,852.29 (88th)
Dave Cowens - 6,168.69 (106th)
Giannis Antetokounmpo - 5,768.18 (116th)



fwiw, I have another family of formulas that utilize regular season mpg, PER, WS, WS/48, win%, WOWY, rDRTG, total pts, total reb, total ast, career ppg, peak ppg, playoff mpg, PER, WS, WS/48, win%, as well as accolades/honors [weighted against position-specific year-by-year era rating], MVP award shares [weighted against general year-by-year era rating], peak season [as determined by largest rs mpg*PER*WS/48 product], titles, finals appearances, FMVP's, and total seasons/games played......
.....Different versions weight things differently. And note that unlike the above formula, this family does NOT use scaled PER and WS/48.
But just going with the "original" (which is actually like 5th or 6th generation) weighting BUT utilizing my more recent one that then calibrates against years played [to better ensure it's not grossly over-valuing longevity], here are their all-time ranks:

Anthony Davis (44th)
Robert Parish (51st)
Giannis Antetokounmpo (52nd)
Bob Cousy (55th)
Manu Ginobili (63rd)
Bob Lanier (64th)
Dave Cowens (66th)
Adrian Dantley (69th)
Sam Jones (93rd)


Or for one of the alternate versions in this same family, there's one titled "Version 16.8.1"......relative to the one cited above, it does NOT have a specific longevity calibration, BUT thru how things are weighted it inherently has less longevity emphasis compared to the "original" anyway. It also has less regular season winner's bias, places a little more emphasis on big-man defense [using rebounds as a proxy], slightly more efficiency accountable [via how WS/48 is weighted], and PER and WS/48---instead of used as raw terms---are considered in the degree to which they are above [or below] replacement level.
Here are their standings in Version 16.8.1:

Anthony Davis (43rd)
Robert Parish (48th)
Bob Lanier (57th)
Manu Ginobili (58th)
Adrian Dantley (60th)
Giannis Antetokounmpo (61st)
Bob Cousy (64th)
Dave Cowens (86th)
Sam Jones (96th)


For whatever this is worth to you.....
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#11 » by sansterre » Tue Feb 2, 2021 4:33 pm

Dutchball97 wrote:2. Paul Arizin - I won't clog up the page by posting my extended argument for Arizin as I think it already served it's purpose of getting him on at least some people's radars. Arizin is a player who was a star player for a decade with a 2 year military break inbetween. In this time he led the league in WS over Mikan in 52, was top 3 in MVP voting twice and led his team to a title in 56, while this time leading the league in play-off WS. He's the same caliber of player as Schayes in my opinion and the only reason he's lower on this list is somewhat worse longevity. The era argument is fair but while it's enough to put Arizin behind similar players from stronger eras I don't think it should put him behind worse players from better eras.

I looked into Arizin on your recommendation.

Oh my gosh what a nightmare to evaluate. He puts up what is clearly a monster season in '52 (on a pretty awful team), he's pulled for military service (the team drops 21 wins when he leaves) and then he comes back but isn't quite the same. It isn't like Ted Williams where his war service was in his prime, but at least we got plenty of years before and after, but Arizin doesn't have anywhere near the longevity Williams had. And with the exception of Johnston, Arizin seemed to have almost zero good teammates. He feels a lot like early Elgin Baylor (or early West), in the sense that the drop between him (or him and Johnston) and the rest of the team was completely mind-boggling. And his value consistently jumps in the postseason (more accurately his WS/Helio).

He's got three tragic obstacles to value. 1) A short career (not unusual in that era), 2) missing two years in his prime (and seeming to lose the next to recovery) from military service and 3) absolute garbage teammates with one exception.

So all we're left with is a guy who was a really good scorer for a bunch of underwhelming teams (not his fault) who has seriously low longevity (also not his fault). If he'd only been blessed with a decent front office we could have seen him with strong teammates and on some strong teams and his narrative might be different.

I'm really glad that I looked into him and learned about him. But I'm going to have a very hard time putting him up against most of these players. There's a pretty good argument that Arizin, with those two military years and not recovering in '55, would have already made the list. But those things did happen, for better or for worse.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#12 » by ccameron » Tue Feb 2, 2021 6:18 pm

Probably an unpopular choice but when is Allen Iverson going to get more traction? So far I've only seen JoeMalburg and Trex say anything about him. I know he is often overrated by a lot of people but sometimes I feel the more sophisticated analysts go too hard in the other direction, and I feel like he deserves some thought at this point in the list.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#13 » by Hal14 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 6:22 pm

ccameron wrote:Probably an unpopular choice but when does Allen Iverson get a mention? Anybody thinking about him yet? I know he is often overrated by a lot of people but sometimes I feel the more sophisticated analysts go too hard in the other direction, and I feel like he deserves some thought at this point in the list.

He'll be appearing on my ballot very soon.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#14 » by ccameron » Tue Feb 2, 2021 6:35 pm

Hal14 wrote:
ccameron wrote:Probably an unpopular choice but when does Allen Iverson get a mention? Anybody thinking about him yet? I know he is often overrated by a lot of people but sometimes I feel the more sophisticated analysts go too hard in the other direction, and I feel like he deserves some thought at this point in the list.

He'll be appearing on my ballot very soon.


He's hard to place but I think for me there are three levels of analysis:

1. Surface Level: Iverson seems to be up there with the best, scoring champ, multiple all star appearances, MVP, flashy, lots of steals, lead a team to the finals as the lone star, all the things that make casual fans rate him highly. Even without getting into advanced metrics however you can already get a clue that he's perhaps not as good as he seemed, just looking at his inefficiency.

2. Advanced Metrics: This is where AI ends up looking really poor. Great scorer, but not leading good offense. Lots of steals, but not a good defender. The team he lead to the finals got their largely on the strength of it's defense (of which AI was not a big contributor). A deeper look at AI makes his gaudy stats look really hollow. And yet...

3. Beyond Stats: Despite the real shortcomings captured by advanced metrics, we shouldn't overlook what he was actually bringing to the table. Yes he was inefficient, but how do you capture the impact of a tireless dynamo like Iverson? It was a recent Gilbert Arenas podcast where he said he would rather guard Kobe than AI, because AI just never got tired, he had no chill, ever. He exhausted defenders. Making the other team exhausted I'm not sure is going to be reflected in any stat that is directly creditable to AI -- and there are probably a lot more ways that someone like AI could impact the game beyond the stats. Also, as much as this topic gets maligned when comparing players, he really was a true competitor -- not something you can quantify, I know, but I think it does come out in important moments. There's good and bad here -- like his selfish behavior and unwillingness to adapt.

So I think when looking at AI you have to of course realize that his gaudy stats don't tell the whole story, but I think you also need to recognize that his very poor advanced stats don't tell the whole story either.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#15 » by trex_8063 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 6:41 pm

Hal14 wrote:
ccameron wrote:Probably an unpopular choice but when does Allen Iverson get a mention? Anybody thinking about him yet? I know he is often overrated by a lot of people but sometimes I feel the more sophisticated analysts go too hard in the other direction, and I feel like he deserves some thought at this point in the list.

He'll be appearing on my ballot very soon.


After the three players I have on my current ballot, probably the next two guys I'll be voting on with be Anthony Davis, and Allen Iverson.
I'm not a fan of him at all, but I agree the backlash against [an admittedly incorrect] popular opinion has arguably gone too far in the other direction on this forum. And as you say: while his gaudy counting stats don't tell the whole story, nor do his less-than-stellar advanced rate metrics.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#16 » by trex_8063 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 6:43 pm

Thru post #15:

Manu Ginobili - 4 (Dutchball97, Joao Saraiva, penbeast0, sansterre)
Bob Cousy - 1 (Hal14)
Sam Jones - 1 (DQuinn1575)
Dave Cowens - 1 (Cavsfansince84)
Robert Parish - 1 (trex_8063)


About 29 hours left for this one.

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"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#17 » by Joao Saraiva » Tue Feb 2, 2021 7:22 pm

ccameron wrote:Probably an unpopular choice but when is Allen Iverson going to get more traction? So far I've only seen JoeMalburg and Trex say anything about him. I know he is often overrated by a lot of people but sometimes I feel the more sophisticated analysts go too hard in the other direction, and I feel like he deserves some thought at this point in the list.


I have him in the next few spots. I still have the 3 I voted in, probably Arizin and AD over him (not sure yet about both, specially Arizin since I have a hard time knowing where to place him).

I'm still not sure about Vince Carter vs AI but I think AI will get his share in that debate.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#18 » by Cavsfansince84 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 7:49 pm

ccameron wrote:Probably an unpopular choice but when is Allen Iverson going to get more traction? So far I've only seen JoeMalburg and Trex say anything about him. I know he is often overrated by a lot of people but sometimes I feel the more sophisticated analysts go too hard in the other direction, and I feel like he deserves some thought at this point in the list.


Iverson v TMac v English v AD is probably an interesting to debate to have at this point.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#19 » by euroleague » Tue Feb 2, 2021 10:10 pm

1. Bob Cousy
2. Bill Walton
3. Kevin McHale

1. Cousy was a revolutionary player in the NBA, and he was a huge contributor on many championship teams. His stats may not have been good, but as a PG, much of his impact wasn't in his scoring stats. His elite playmaking set the stage for Russell's passing to develop, and his transition offense helped the defense by tiring out opponents. It's no coincidence that the Celtics were consistently first in ppg - his offense also allowed for offensive rebounding to be more effective.

Many people hating on Cousy never actually watched these games. I myself haven't watched enough of them to be an expert, but what I have seen of Cousy has him as an elite floor general whose impact went far beyond his stats.

2. Bill Walton - This may be a lot higher than most have him, but his run at his best was so elite, both in the regular and post-season, i feel comfortable putting him this high. MVP, FMVP, would've won DPOOY, 6MOY with the Celtics on a GOAT level team. McHale had a bigger role on those teams, and will probably be my next selection, but Walton's brief period of being arguably the best player in the league, and winning Portland's only title, put him this high for me.

3. Manu Ginobili - doesn’t get enough appreciation for what he contributed to the Spurs, and Tony Parker/Duncan get too much, IMO.

Bob Cousy, to clarify, isn’t a pick based off of PER, which values high efficiency scoring... and will devalue many PGs. John Wall is a prime example of a relatively inefficient PG who has had good impact in the past.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #53 

Post#20 » by Cavsfansince84 » Tue Feb 2, 2021 10:55 pm

ccameron wrote:
2. Advanced Metrics: This is where AI ends up looking really poor. Great scorer, but not leading good offense. Lots of steals, but not a good defender. The team he lead to the finals got their largely on the strength of it's defense (of which AI was not a big contributor). A deeper look at AI makes his gaudy stats look really hollow. And yet...

3. Beyond Stats: Despite the real shortcomings captured by advanced metrics, we shouldn't overlook what he was actually bringing to the table. Yes he was inefficient, but how do you capture the impact of a tireless dynamo like Iverson? It was a recent Gilbert Arenas podcast where he said he would rather guard Kobe than AI, because AI just never got tired, he had no chill, ever. He exhausted defenders. Making the other team exhausted I'm not sure is going to be reflected in any stat that is directly creditable to AI -- and there are probably a lot more ways that someone like AI could impact the game beyond the stats. Also, as much as this topic gets maligned when comparing players, he really was a true competitor -- not something you can quantify, I know, but I think it does come out in important moments. There's good and bad here -- like his selfish behavior and unwillingness to adapt.

So I think when looking at AI you have to of course realize that his gaudy stats don't tell the whole story, but I think you also need to recognize that his very poor advanced stats don't tell the whole story either.


His advanced stats aren't all really that bad. I mean in career per he ranks 58th and in career vorp he ranks 36th. So it sort of fits into where we are now in the rankings. The main thing I think is just the super high usage rates at basically below average efficiency. Which allows him to carry teams offensively but raises questions about his ability to be the centerpiece of a very good offense though he fit in sort of well in his short time in Denver.

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