Who was the best player in the 04-05 Season?
Posted: Sat Sep 23, 2023 4:30 am
During that season who was considered the best player in the league?
Sports is our Business
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2320711
Rich Michmond wrote:Who was considered or who was the best? You're asking two different questions.
durantbird wrote:Why Nash not in the poll
trelos6 wrote:Other. Manu Ginobili.
But yeah, prob Duncan.
mdonnelly1989 wrote:durantbird wrote:Why Nash not in the poll
I was going to but most on this board don't normally put him in the same catagory as the others.
If you asked who had a better prime between Duncan and Nash. Nash doesn't get a single vote. And not against Shaq or KG either.
Doctor MJ wrote:trelos6 wrote:Other. Manu Ginobili.
But yeah, prob Duncan.
So I'll just piggy back here and say that when I did my last pass doing POY for that season, I was surprised to have Ginobili come out at #1. I had Nash 2 and Duncan 3. The summary:
Duncan was the best player until he went down with injury, but afterward - despite coming back and winning the title as his team's lead scorer - I think Ginobili was pretty clearly the more valuable player.
Most would probably object to Ginobili ever being more valuable - fair enough.
Others might concede my point but still argue Duncan was more valuable for the season's entirety - fair enough.
Others might concede that Ginobili deserves to be the top Spur but would object based on Ginobili's limited minutes that he could ever be the top player in the league. This tends to be the thing I struggle with too.
In a nutshell I'd say that if a guy plays limited minutes and his team doesn't win the chip, it's hard for me to elevate him that high, because no matter how valuable he was in the minutes he did play, his lack of play can be said to have kept his team from the promised land.
But if a team does win it all, and a player who plays more limited minutes is the best player on the court in those minutes that decided the series, well, I think that should be hard to dismiss.
To go into a bit more detail, let's contrast Duncan & Ginobili's minutes in the playoffs that season recognizing ahead of time that literally no one tries to hold minutes against Duncan here:
Duncan 37.8
Ginobili 33.6
An advantage for Duncan to be sure, but does 4.2 MPG really determine the team's MVP necessarily? I'd say no.
Let's not that in the final 2 series of the run Ginobili averaged 36+ MPG both times. So this wasn't a situation where the Spurs won the title without Ginobili playing normal starter level minutes. When they knew they needed him to play more, they played him more.
Now let's look at the PM data per 100, both the On and the On/Off:
Duncan +3.3 -5.3
Ginobili +10.9 +19.9
It's not unusual for Ginobili to trump Duncan here - it's basically a rule that the Spurs couldn't win a title if that didn't happen - but in most years it's not enough to sway me that Ginobili was actually the more valuable player overall. This year though, the difference was incredibly stark.
And of course, while mainstream commentators didn't have +/- in their vocabulary really at the time, everyone was noting that Duncan was struggling coming back from injury. While some gave hyperbolic language to the effect that Duncan should get down on his knees and think Robert Horry for bailing him out, I don't think any major figures at the time were willing to seriously argue that Duncan shouldn't get the Finals MVP.
But I'll say flat out that I think Ginobili deserved the Finals MVP and - had they held it back then - the WCF MVP. He was the guy the Pace & Space Suns struggled with, not Duncan. He was the one with big +/- numbers against the Pistons, not Duncan (or Parker) who the Spurs got outscored with them on the floor. And of course, he was also the one with impressive shooting efficiency, while the other two were low.
Realistically I'd argue that the injury to Duncan meant that '04-05 should have been a year where the Spurs came up short...but Ginobili was just too good for any opponent they faced to stop them.
iggymcfrack wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:trelos6 wrote:Other. Manu Ginobili.
But yeah, prob Duncan.
So I'll just piggy back here and say that when I did my last pass doing POY for that season, I was surprised to have Ginobili come out at #1. I had Nash 2 and Duncan 3. The summary:
Duncan was the best player until he went down with injury, but afterward - despite coming back and winning the title as his team's lead scorer - I think Ginobili was pretty clearly the more valuable player.
Most would probably object to Ginobili ever being more valuable - fair enough.
Others might concede my point but still argue Duncan was more valuable for the season's entirety - fair enough.
Others might concede that Ginobili deserves to be the top Spur but would object based on Ginobili's limited minutes that he could ever be the top player in the league. This tends to be the thing I struggle with too.
In a nutshell I'd say that if a guy plays limited minutes and his team doesn't win the chip, it's hard for me to elevate him that high, because no matter how valuable he was in the minutes he did play, his lack of play can be said to have kept his team from the promised land.
But if a team does win it all, and a player who plays more limited minutes is the best player on the court in those minutes that decided the series, well, I think that should be hard to dismiss.
To go into a bit more detail, let's contrast Duncan & Ginobili's minutes in the playoffs that season recognizing ahead of time that literally no one tries to hold minutes against Duncan here:
Duncan 37.8
Ginobili 33.6
An advantage for Duncan to be sure, but does 4.2 MPG really determine the team's MVP necessarily? I'd say no.
Let's not that in the final 2 series of the run Ginobili averaged 36+ MPG both times. So this wasn't a situation where the Spurs won the title without Ginobili playing normal starter level minutes. When they knew they needed him to play more, they played him more.
Now let's look at the PM data per 100, both the On and the On/Off:
Duncan +3.3 -5.3
Ginobili +10.9 +19.9
It's not unusual for Ginobili to trump Duncan here - it's basically a rule that the Spurs couldn't win a title if that didn't happen - but in most years it's not enough to sway me that Ginobili was actually the more valuable player overall. This year though, the difference was incredibly stark.
And of course, while mainstream commentators didn't have +/- in their vocabulary really at the time, everyone was noting that Duncan was struggling coming back from injury. While some gave hyperbolic language to the effect that Duncan should get down on his knees and think Robert Horry for bailing him out, I don't think any major figures at the time were willing to seriously argue that Duncan shouldn't get the Finals MVP.
But I'll say flat out that I think Ginobili deserved the Finals MVP and - had they held it back then - the WCF MVP. He was the guy the Pace & Space Suns struggled with, not Duncan. He was the one with big +/- numbers against the Pistons, not Duncan (or Parker) who the Spurs got outscored with them on the floor. And of course, he was also the one with impressive shooting efficiency, while the other two were low.
Realistically I'd argue that the injury to Duncan meant that '04-05 should have been a year where the Spurs came up short...but Ginobili was just too good for any opponent they faced to stop them.
Very interesting post! I’ve long thought that Ginobili had an incredibly underrated season in 2005 and that he deserved FMVP, but I never thought of it going so far as him being actual POY.
Honestly, looking over the numbers, I don’t see anything to argue against it! The regular season numbers are nearly identical with just a slight edge for Duncan. He plays 2203 minutes to 2193 for Ginobili. Duncan has a 7.6 BPM to 6.9 for Ginobili. His on/off is +17.8 compared to +17.2.
In the playoffs though, the difference is marked. Not only does Manu have the massive difference in on/off that you mentioned (24.2 difference!!!), but he has a far superior BPM as well, 9.2 to 5.8. If you just combine RS and playoffs weighting them equally, Manu will have more VORP than Duncan despite playing less minutes.
And he came up the biggest in the biggest moments. Tied 2-2 with Seattle, he puts up 39 on .867 TS% in a near must-win home game. Game 7 of the Finals when absolutely no one can score, he puts in 23 on .757 TS% when Parker’s at .337 and Duncan’s at .442. Honestly, I think you’re just right here than Manu was the best player in the league that year. Anyone have counterarguments?