Modern NBA: Steph/Klay/Dray or TP/Manu/Duncan
Posted: Fri Jan 20, 2023 7:22 pm
With everyone at the level of their average prime season, which trio would you take for one season in today's NBA?
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70sFan wrote:It's the core of my favorite team of all-time, how can I choose anyone else than Spurs trio?
rand wrote:With everyone at the level of their average prime season, which trio would you take for one season in today's NBA?
Doctor MJ wrote:rand wrote:With everyone at the level of their average prime season, which trio would you take for one season in today's NBA?
Interesting that we're tied at 50/50 here.
Let's make clear one thing from the jump:
The Warriors have been more dominant than the Spurs were if you take longevity out of the mix, and I don't think this should be controversial to say. The Warriors are 18-0 in Western Conference playoff series in their last 6 years with these 3 playing together, while the Spurs never made it through the Western Conference in back to back years when these guys were in prime.
Given this alone, I think folks need to ask themselves whether they were thinking in these terms when they voted for the Spurs trio, and if they were, what made them choose the less dominant core in the comparison? I'm not saying there can't be a good reasoning here, but I think it should be seen as something of a surprising conclusion...and I doubt people are thinking in these terms given the fact that the Spurs won more titles and Duncan is generally agreed upon to be the highest on the GOAT list of anyone in the conversation. Those two facts I think make it pretty easy to assume we're talking about at least comparably dominant runs, but they really aren't.
Then there's that thing about "today's NBA". With the Spurs, we're talking about a core who when they were in prime were using an offensive scheme built around a post-scorer with far less 3's that no one would even consider using today, and thus I really don't think people should assume that they'd be as (or more) effective today than they were back then. Someone could certainly make the argument for how much better the Spurs back then would have been if they'd just played more like today's game, and that that's why they should be the choice in this particular comparison, but that certainly shouldn't be something that's just assumed.
As a general rule, I think it probably makes sense to think that among cores from the past, the better those cores were at shooting from range, the better they'd translate to the modern game. And of course, in that Spurs trio, you only have one guy (Ginobili) who is really good at shooting, and he wasn't anywhere near as good at shooting as Curry & Thompson.
So yeah, I'm interested in people's thoughts here - I'm sure there's some very knowledgeable basketball folks picking the Spurs - but I went for the Warriors, and the points above were key to why.
toodles23 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:rand wrote:With everyone at the level of their average prime season, which trio would you take for one season in today's NBA?
Interesting that we're tied at 50/50 here.
Let's make clear one thing from the jump:
The Warriors have been more dominant than the Spurs were if you take longevity out of the mix, and I don't think this should be controversial to say. The Warriors are 18-0 in Western Conference playoff series in their last 6 years with these 3 playing together, while the Spurs never made it through the Western Conference in back to back years when these guys were in prime.
Given this alone, I think folks need to ask themselves whether they were thinking in these terms when they voted for the Spurs trio, and if they were, what made them choose the less dominant core in the comparison? I'm not saying there can't be a good reasoning here, but I think it should be seen as something of a surprising conclusion...and I doubt people are thinking in these terms given the fact that the Spurs won more titles and Duncan is generally agreed upon to be the highest on the GOAT list of anyone in the conversation. Those two facts I think make it pretty easy to assume we're talking about at least comparably dominant runs, but they really aren't.
Then there's that thing about "today's NBA". With the Spurs, we're talking about a core who when they were in prime were using an offensive scheme built around a post-scorer with far less 3's that no one would even consider using today, and thus I really don't think people should assume that they'd be as (or more) effective today than they were back then. Someone could certainly make the argument for how much better the Spurs back then would have been if they'd just played more like today's game, and that that's why they should be the choice in this particular comparison, but that certainly shouldn't be something that's just assumed.
As a general rule, I think it probably makes sense to think that among cores from the past, the better those cores were at shooting from range, the better they'd translate to the modern game. And of course, in that Spurs trio, you only have one guy (Ginobili) who is really good at shooting, and he wasn't anywhere near as good at shooting as Curry & Thompson.
So yeah, I'm interested in people's thoughts here - I'm sure there's some very knowledgeable basketball folks picking the Spurs - but I went for the Warriors, and the points above were key to why.
To make it more simple, I don't think many would dispute that the Warriors core is better offensively than TP/Manu/Duncan, both on paper and for actual team level results. Defensively I don't think it's clear at all that the Spurs guys have an advantage here, there's a good argument that Draymond is a more ideal defender for the modern spaced out/highly switchable game than Duncan is (though he was more versatile and switchable in his early-mid 20s than you might expect), and Parker is easily the worst defender of the bunch here.
Playoff offenses in the modern game are so often about hunting a team's weakest defender and involving them in the action as much as possible, and with how much more switching there is and the amount of space making it harder to help, Parker's defense would be much more of a problem now than it was in his era. I feel pretty comfortable taking the Warriors core here.
HeartBreakKid wrote:Ideal or not Duncan is a top ten defender of all time dude. Most dominant defenders today are bigger and not as good as switching as Green today but they're still anchoring good defenses - there is obviously more to defense than that. Tim Duncan is incredibly agile for a 7 footer, he would be in argument for best shot blocker, and he would be among the leaders in rebounding.
In addition while Parker is the weakest defender he is playing the least impactful position. So sure, Parker is the worst perimeter defender and worst defender overall, but Manu is probably the best perimeter defender among the 4.
Duncan, Manu and Parker are more balanced. They have better ball handling, better rim protection, better rebounding, better playmaking, better driving, and are better in the paint. While shooting and switchability have become more pronounced in today's game it's not the only thing that matters.
Manu is a more efficient player than Klay Thompson despite not being as good of a shooter, and is really just a higher level player than either Thompson or Green are imo.
Doctor MJ wrote:The Warriors have been more dominant than the Spurs were if you take longevity out of the mix, and I don't think this should be controversial to say. The Warriors are 18-0 in Western Conference playoff series in their last 6 years with these 3 playing together, while the Spurs never made it through the Western Conference in back to back years when these guys were in prime.
Doctor MJ wrote:rand wrote:With everyone at the level of their average prime season, which trio would you take for one season in today's NBA?
Interesting that we're tied at 50/50 here.
Let's make clear one thing from the jump:
The Warriors have been more dominant than the Spurs were if you take longevity out of the mix, and I don't think this should be controversial to say. The Warriors are 18-0 in Western Conference playoff series in their last 6 years with these 3 playing together, while the Spurs never made it through the Western Conference in back to back years when these guys were in prime.
Given this alone, I think folks need to ask themselves whether they were thinking in these terms when they voted for the Spurs trio, and if they were, what made them choose the less dominant core in the comparison? I'm not saying there can't be a good reasoning here, but I think it should be seen as something of a surprising conclusion...and I doubt people are thinking in these terms given the fact that the Spurs won more titles and Duncan is generally agreed upon to be the highest on the GOAT list of anyone in the conversation. Those two facts I think make it pretty easy to assume we're talking about at least comparably dominant runs, but they really aren't.
Then there's that thing about "today's NBA". With the Spurs, we're talking about a core who when they were in prime were using an offensive scheme built around a post-scorer with far less 3's that no one would even consider using today, and thus I really don't think people should assume that they'd be as (or more) effective today than they were back then. Someone could certainly make the argument for how much better the Spurs back then would have been if they'd just played more like today's game, and that that's why they should be the choice in this particular comparison, but that certainly shouldn't be something that's just assumed.
As a general rule, I think it probably makes sense to think that among cores from the past, the better those cores were at shooting from range, the better they'd translate to the modern game. And of course, in that Spurs trio, you only have one guy (Ginobili) who is really good at shooting, and he wasn't anywhere near as good at shooting as Curry & Thompson.
So yeah, I'm interested in people's thoughts here - I'm sure there's some very knowledgeable basketball folks picking the Spurs - but I went for the Warriors, and the points above were key to why.
70sFan wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:The Warriors have been more dominant than the Spurs were if you take longevity out of the mix, and I don't think this should be controversial to say. The Warriors are 18-0 in Western Conference playoff series in their last 6 years with these 3 playing together, while the Spurs never made it through the Western Conference in back to back years when these guys were in prime.
Wow Doc, if I didn't know you I'd think that you just used very insolet manipulation here...
The Warriors are 18-0 in the last 6 years... except they missed the playoffs 2 times in a row during that period, so not really. I know that you will respond that Klay was absent in these years, but what does it change? If you take Warriors trio, you'll have to deal with Curry and Klay missing a lot of games throughout the years.
Spurs didn't make WCF back to back - yeah, that's a fact. When you present it, it seems that their accomplishements look clearly less impressive. Except that if you take 2005-07 Spurs period you get 2 titles and one WCSF game 7 loss. To get a better 3 year peak from Warriors duo, you have to include seasons with Kevin Durant, which... is pointless in this thread. I'm quite sure that the Spurs would have won a lot more if you give them Dirk Nowitzki in 2005-07 period. Using 2017-18 Warriors to conclude that Warriors duo is better is intelectually dishonest.
I know, you will point out that the Warriors went to the finals back to back in 2015 and 2016. Great, but why is it more impressive than 2005 and 2007 titles? What makes "back to back" so important?
About consistency - that's false narrative again, because you use KD years to conclude how consistent Warriors trio is. In reality, Warriors trio resume includes missing playoffs two straight times, losing in the first round and being on pace to miss another playoffs this year (though I think they will get there). Spurs from 2003-14 never missed playoffs.
The last thing to note is that Warriors trio all reached their primes at the same time and have been consistently on that level throughout the years (maybe with the exception for Klay last year), while Manu and Parker were much younger than Duncan and their peaks didn't happen at the same time.
It's perfectly fine to choose Warriors trio, but I don't like what you did here and I'm sure it wasn't intentionally. Still, it doesn't look good from my prespective.
HeartBreakKid wrote:The Warriors are not more dominant than the Spurs...the Spurs w/l records are insane. The ratios that guys like Duncan, Manu and even Leonard have are pretty incredible. They have a pretty comparable level of dominance, the whole "the Spurs never did back to back and "only" did every other year" has always been an incredibly arbitrary criticism. They're still winning championships, who cares if they lose in between years instead of after?
70sFan wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:The Warriors have been more dominant than the Spurs were if you take longevity out of the mix, and I don't think this should be controversial to say. The Warriors are 18-0 in Western Conference playoff series in their last 6 years with these 3 playing together, while the Spurs never made it through the Western Conference in back to back years when these guys were in prime.
Wow Doc, if I didn't know you I'd think that you just used very insolet manipulation here...
The Warriors are 18-0 in the last 6 years... except they missed the playoffs 2 times in a row during that period, so not really. I know that you will respond that Klay was absent in these years, but what does it change? If you take Warriors trio, you'll have to deal with Curry and Klay missing a lot of games throughout the years.
Spurs didn't make WCF back to back - yeah, that's a fact. When you present it, it seems that their accomplishements look clearly less impressive. Except that if you take 2005-07 Spurs period you get 2 titles and one WCSF game 7 loss. To get a better 3 year peak from Warriors duo, you have to include seasons with Kevin Durant, which... is pointless in this thread. I'm quite sure that the Spurs would have won a lot more if you give them Dirk Nowitzki in 2005-07 period. Using 2017-18 Warriors to conclude that Warriors duo is better is intelectually dishonest.
I know, you will point out that the Warriors went to the finals back to back in 2015 and 2016. Great, but why is it more impressive than 2005 and 2007 titles? What makes "back to back" so important?
About consistency - that's false narrative again, because you use KD years to conclude how consistent Warriors trio is. In reality, Warriors trio resume includes missing playoffs two straight times, losing in the first round and being on pace to miss another playoffs this year (though I think they will get there). Spurs from 2003-14 never missed playoffs.
The last thing to note is that Warriors trio all reached their primes at the same time and have been consistently on that level throughout the years (maybe with the exception for Klay last year), while Manu and Parker were much younger than Duncan and their peaks didn't happen at the same time.
It's perfectly fine to choose Warriors trio, but I don't like what you did here and I'm sure it wasn't intentionally. Still, it doesn't look good from my prespective.
eminence wrote:Question - is it the average prime season of the trio as a group (this leads me to the Warriors pretty cleanly), or a mishmash of each trios primes (more interesting, as Parker didn't really have his prime overlap much with Duncan).
eminence wrote:Question - is it the average prime season of the trio as a group (this leads me to the Warriors pretty cleanly), or a mishmash of each trios primes (more interesting, as Parker didn't really have his prime overlap much with Duncan).
I think regardless I lean towards the Warriors trio, and plenty of the arguments here seem to be arguing against them based of longevity/injury issues, which to me is not generally the spirit of the question (Duncan/Manu of course had their own injury issues over the years, though not as notable as Steph/Klay).