Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 - 2016-17 Stephen Curry

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Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 - 2016-17 Stephen Curry 

Post#1 » by LA Bird » Wed Jul 20, 2022 12:55 pm

RealGM Greatest Peaks List (2022)
1. 1990-91 Michael Jordan
2. 2012-13 LeBron James
3. 1999-00 Shaquille O'Neal
4. 1976-77 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
5. 1966-67 Wilt Chamberlain
6. 2002-03 Tim Duncan
7. 1993-94 Hakeem Olajuwon
8. 1963-64 Bill Russell
9. 1985-86 Larry Bird
10. 1986-87 Magic Johnson
11. ?

Spoiler:
Please vote for your 3 highest player peaks and at least one line of reasoning for each of them.

Vote example 1
1. 1991 Jordan: Explanation
2. 2013 LeBron: Explanation
3. 2000 Shaq: Explanation

In addition, you can also list other peak season candidates from those three players. This extra step is entirely optional

Vote example 2
1. 1991 Jordan: Explanation
(1990 Jordan)
2. 2013 LeBron: Explanation
(2012 LeBron)
(2009 LeBron)
3. 2000 Shaq: Explanation

You can visit the project thread for further information on why this makes a difference and how the votes will be counted at the end of the round.

Voting for this round will close on Saturday July 23, 9am ET.
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#2 » by SickMother » Wed Jul 20, 2022 2:08 pm

01 Erving 75-76: 28.7 PER | .569 TS% | 110 TS+ | 17.7 WS | .262 WS/48
01 Erving 75-76 Playoffs?!?: 32.0 PER | .610 TS% | 3.7 WS | .321 WS/48
[a peak so high the NBA absorbed a whole other league to get this guy under their banner. Doctor turned in a top tier regular season, then followed it up with one of thee largest postseason efficiency increases of all time.]

02 Curry 15-16: 32.5 PER | .669 TS% | 124 TS+ | 17.9 WS | .318 WS/48
02 Curry 15-16 Playoffs?!?: 22.3 PER | .603 TS% | 1.9 WS | .152 WS/48
[greatest shooting season of all time fueling the greatest regular season team of all time. Can also see the logic behind 14-15 (most complete season start to finish) or 16-17 (best playoff run) so will include them as 02B and 02C.]

03 Hawkins 67-68: 28.8 PER | .597 TS% | 124 TS+ | 17.5 WS | .273 WS/48
03 Hawkins 67-68 Playoffs?!?: 30.0 PER | .651 TS% | 4.0 WS | .310 WS/48
[for what amounts to spot #13 on the list I'll go with maybe thee unluckiest player in basketball history, robbed of his collegiate & early NBA career by completely spurious gambling allegations, then derailed by a knee injury which occurred amidst the ABA Championship in this very season.

but there was never any doubt Connie could ball from the outset as one of the original NYC greats at Rucker Park & being named the best high school player in the country in 1960. As for his 67-68 peak, the Hawk simply did it all. Topped the brand new ABA in PPG on monster efficiency, 2nd in the league in RPG, 3rd in the league in APG. Then took his game to a whole other level in the playoffs, hurting his knee during the Championship series & returning to lead his team to the top in heroic fashion even before Willis Reed did it.

I get it, the 67-68 ABA is probably the 2nd weakest competition level to receive a vote so far besides 49-50 Mikan, but Hawkins had no alternative, it was the best league available to him due to his illegal blacklisting from the NBA. Also think that Connie's peak game works in any era with his mix of size, athleticism and all around skillset.]
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#3 » by CharityStripe34 » Wed Jul 20, 2022 2:14 pm

1. Giannis Antetokounmpo (2021): Had another awesome season with 1st Team All-Defense and historic levels of efficiency offensively, only this was the season he made the mini-leap in the playoffs to put it all together with a phenomenal post-season run, capping it with one of the most dominant Finals series ever. Morphed his style of play in the middle of the playoffs from "Point-SF" to "PF/C-Point".

Honorable mention: Giannis Antetokounmpo (2020, 2022)

2. Bob Pettit (1959) : A man much forgotten in the annals of NBA lore, but who's entire career was almost one extended peak. He had an awesome season the year before, even leading the Hawks to their lone title over the vaunted Russell/Cousy Celtics. But his following year was his second MVP season with ridiculous averages of 29-16-4. He's the guy who essentially created/defined the PF position once he bulked up and added a long-distance jumpshot when mostly everyone was shooting hook-shots and set shots. 1959 he also led the league with 14.8 WS.

Honorable mention: (1958, 1962)

3. Oscar Robertson (1964): Basically averaged a triple-double (31-11-9.9) and the Royals had their best season with 55 wins and went toe-to-toe with Russell's Celtics in the second round. Was basically the league's greatest PG in its first 35 years, leading the league in assists as well as FT%. Was efficient from the field for a G (48%) and won the league MVP award in the middle of Wilt and Russell's primes, which is no easy feat.

Honorable mention: (1962, 1965)
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#4 » by Dutchball97 » Wed Jul 20, 2022 3:17 pm

1. 1976 Julius Erving - Dr J had one of the most dominant years ever in North American pro basketball in the final year of the ABA. Where you rank him mostly depends on how good you think the ABA was towards its end. I'd say I'm probably somewhere in the middle. With the likes of Artis Gilmore, Dan Issel, Bobby Jones and George Gervin the ABA had become a serious competitor to the NBA but it didn't become on the same level just yet and since even the mid-70s NBA is generally considered as a relatively weak era, the mid-70s ABA isn't one of the strongest eras either. Overall though this is still a very complete season and it remains a fact you can only beat who is put in front of you. What especially helps him out here is the Nets roster besides Dr J himself wasn't particularly special, which is a huge contrast to the other guys I'm considering around this spot.

2. 1983 Moses Malone - Moses wasn't the best defender but in 83 he does look pretty impressive on that end, while his offense has always been strong. He's hurt somewhat by playing on a historically stacked team but it's hard to go against him winning MVP by a landslide and leading the 76ers to a dominant title. I might be somewhat influenced by winning bias here but we have rather incomplete advanced stats for the early 80s so I'd rather not put too much emphasis on Moses not having an overwhelmingly high BPM.

3. 2017 Stephen Curry - Curry has been on the edge of my ballot for a few rounds now but this is where I can't really see a lot of seasons that are clearly more impressive. It helps that I'm starting to come around more on the idea that Curry was the clear most valuable player on the Warriors that year. We can't deny Curry has a lot of help around him here, arguably the most out of anyone ever, but we also can't deny 2017 was Curry's best post-season run. While his 2016 and even 2015 regular seasons are stronger than his 2017 regular season, his 2017 season actually ranks the highest out of all his seasons in PI RAPM. I also strongly considered 2021 Giannis here but with Giannis also taking a step back in the regular season compared to 2019 and 2020 I don't think his advantage there is big enough to pass Curry. I'm not entirely sure so I might switch it around in a following round but with how close Curry has been the last few rounds I doubt it'll even come to that.
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#5 » by trex_8063 » Wed Jul 20, 2022 4:18 pm

THis is again mostly a copy/paste from last thread, with few small edits/augmentations....

1. '04 Kevin Garnett
I'll for the third time point to the #8 spot taken by Bill Russell.......because I feel Kevin Garnett is one of just a few who is probably very near him in his defensive chops. No one ever achieved the level of defensive impact that Bill Russell did.......but to be fair, players like Garnett, Duncan, Mutombo, Hakeem, big Ben, etc never had the opportunity to be a defensive anchor in an era where the floor was so condensed (fully potentiating the impact of a rim-protecting big).
I don't know if any player could have matched Russell's impact in his own time......but I think Garnett [and perhaps Duncan] are the guys who'd have a shot. Both of them appear to be the top of their era in defensive IQ [Draymond Green is the only other defensive big of the last 25 years I can think of who perhaps can match them in this]; and they have Russell's length (and Garnett has at least really close to his athleticism, too).

On the flip-side, I'm skeptical Russell could do appreciably better in the modern(ish) era than Garnett did.

Short-version: I think Garnett is pretty close to Russell as a defensive juggernaut; but whereas Russell was merely fair-to-decent offensively, Garnett is actually REALLY good [though perhaps short of "great"] on that end too. I simply have a helluva hard time seeing Russell having much of a relevant edge overall.

imo, such two-way dynamos at least marginally out-shine the more one-sided player peaks. So I personally feel he peaked slightly higher than Russell [or Magic Johnson, for example].
fwiw, this is not a purely retrospective viewpoint fueled by analytics. I distinctly remember composing an "NBA update" email to my dad in early 2004, and thinking fairly definitively at the time that Kevin Garnett was the best player in the world (which was perhaps striking in my mind, considering the league contained prime [if not peak] Tim Duncan, Shaquille O'Neal, and Kobe Bryant).

imo, we're PAST due for Garnett's peak.
And I strongly suspect that if Cassell hadn't got injured and the TWolves had won the title that year [with Garnett playing NO BETTER in the playoffs than what he did], he would already be off the table.
This is the subtle unintentional [largely unconscious] ring-bias in effect, imo.


2. '95 David Robinson ('96 DRob, '94 DRob)
Not sure the best year to go with; each has a slightly differing selling point, and honestly I think he was near the same level in all three years.
I imagine this will be a contraversial pick, but it sort of follows in the same vein as my Kevin Garnett pick: two-way dynamos.
I think people sometimes fail to acknowledge how extraordinary an OFFENSIVE player Robinson was in the regular season.......they just focus on the playoff decline.
I've made this [only slightly hyperbolic] statement before: Robinson was essentially asked/expected to be Bill Russell on defense AND Michael Jordan on offense for those early-mid 90s Spurs teams.

And the crazy as **** part is: he was mostly successful during the rs.

Frankly if he HAD been able to maintain that in the post-season, he'd have more than a puncher's chance of taking the #1 greatest peak of all-time.

In addition to his off-the-chart box-derived metrics [in the rs], look at his rs impact metrics over this same three-year span:
'94 Top 5 APM (from colts18)
1. David Robinson: +7.31
2. Kevin Willis: +5.44
3. Karl Malone: +5.37
4. Hakeem Olajuwon: +5.10
5. Nate McMillan: +4.85
(NOTE: the separation between Robinson [at #1] and #2 is greater than the separation between #2 and #11).

'94 Top 5 AuPM (Backpicks)
1. David Robinson: +6.7
2. Karl Malone: +5.2
3. Nate McMillan: +4.8
4. Hakeem Olajuwon: +4.5
5. Kevin Willis: +4.3
(NOTE: the separation between Robinson [at #1] and #2 is greater than the separation between #2 and #6).


'95 Top 5 APM
1. David Robinson: +7.42
2. Shaquille O'Neal: +5.80
3. Karl Malone: +4.93
4. Anfernee Hardaway: +4.68
5. Scottie Pippen: +4.63
(NOTE: the separation between Robinson [at #1] and #2 is greater than the separation between #2 and #6).

'95 Top 5 AuPM
1. David Robinson: +8.7
2. Scottie Pippen: +5.9
3. Shaquille O'Neal: +5.6
4. Anfernee Hardaway: +5.6
5. Karl Malone: +5.3
(NOTE: the separation between Robinson [at #1] and #2 is equal to the separation between #2 and #24).


'96 Top 5 APM
1. Michael Jordan: +6.67
2. David Robinson: +5.89
3. Anfernee Hardaway: +5.26
4. Scottie Pippen: +4.99
5. Karl Malone: +4.89

'96 Top 5 AuPM
1. David Robinson: +6.7
2. Michael Jordan: +6.5
3. Scottie Pippen: +5.8
4. Anfernee Hardaway: +5.7
5. Karl Malone: +5.2


I mean, holy cow. You look at these three years, and he's not just outperforming the competition......he's obliterating it! Except for a prime Michael Jordan [in '96], there's no one remotely close to him in the rs.
And these are almost exclusively all-timers he's obliterating.
In the playoffs, he comes back to Earth: down to maybe being only maybe like the 2nd or 3rd-best player in the league. Oh dear.

So how much deduction should he get for going from GOAT-candidate in rs to circa-2nd best in any given year in the playoffs?
idk.....decide for yourself. But don't sleep on how friggin' unearthly he was in the rs.
For myself, he's near the region of Duncan/Hakeem/Garnett; usually just behind, but really really close.


3. '21??? Giannis Antetokounmpo ('20, '22)
Continuing with the two-way juggernauts: Giannis is definitely that. And because in some ways they're similar players, it feels appropriate to have Giannis somewhere within 1-2 places of David Robinson [even if it's Giannis you have ahead].
I reserve the right to switch my last pick to one of my HM's below, but for now I'll go this route.

Other top considerations for me were Nikola Jokic, Steph Curry. Bill Walton crossed my mind, but health/missed games is just enough of an issue to me that I back him out of consideration; he'd come up right after those fellows.

tbh, Jokic/Giannis/DRob are all very very close to me. So I may end up changing my 2nd and 3rd picks.
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#6 » by DraymondGold » Wed Jul 20, 2022 4:22 pm

1. 2017 Curry (1b 2016 Curry)
2. 2004 Kevin Garnett
3. 1994 David Robinson (3b 1995 Robinson)

Also considering for this tier: Kobe, KD, Walton, West, Oscar, possibly Jokic, possibly Giannis. For this tier after Curry, I'm certainly open to changing my order, but currently KG and David Robinson seem to be the best by the data. Garnett vs Robinson is interesting... both are All-Time Defensive 1st Options and a perfect Offensive 1b Option/2nd Option. Both also had terrible fitting teams at their peak, which could bias the data against them. Most people favor KG over Robinson (including some nice comments about 2 threads ago), but I'd like to revisit this comparison and how they stack up against other players in this tier (e.g. Kobe/Oscar/West/Giannis/Jokic) soon. I'll edit in deeper statistical details at some point.

1. Reasoning for Curry:
It’s a bit disheartening to have the same player on my ballot since Greatest Peak thread #2 and to be voting for him at the top of my ballot since thread #6 and not see much change. :(


Some of the arguments I’ve raised are:
1. The data we have are in near-consensus, favoring Curry over all the players being mentioned (and some of the peaks already voted in)
2. Play-by-play film analysis shows that his playmaking is almost GOAT-tier, indicating why people may be underrating his playmaking, and shows that his defense is positive
3. Team-building analysis favors Curry, who’s boosted by his GOAT-level scalability
4. Comparative Era arguments favor Curry, who’s playing in an era with a greater talent pool and better strategy than ever before
5. Time-machine arguments favor Curry, who fits just as well as anyone in the current era
6. Qualitative arguments also have Curry’s leadership among the greatest ever

I’ve also tried to address every concern everyone has mentioned:
7. I’ve addressed the concern that Curry’s teammates and abnormally-good fit enabled his perceived success (Curry’s teammates benefited from him far more than the reverse)
8. I’ve addressed the concern that the defensive gap against Curry is greater that the offensive advantage in favor of Curry (as far as I can tell, it just isn’t)
9. I’ve addressed concerns that Curry’s less well rounded than everyone else in this tier (simply not true)
10. I’ve addressed people’s resilience concerns with Curry relative to peers (he’s certainly less healthy, but when healthy he improves much more in the playoffs than numerous other players in this tier. Over his prime, he actually shows a small improvement in the playoffs even including injured seasons)
12. I’ve addressed concerns that Curry faced weaker opponents than the competition (this is simply not true)
13. I’ve addressed concerns that Curry was less good in the 2017 than in the 2016 regular season (the data/film show he was just as good as a player)
13. I’ve addressed concerns about peak length (Curry’s peak is no shorter than other peaks voted in already)
14. I’ve addressed discussions about him playing below maximum potential in the 2017 Regular Season (It was due to adjusting to a new fit, which potentially shows good leadership, but even if that’s unconvincing, the evidence we have suggests Curry’s prime regular season is still over the rest of the current competition)

A few of the most compelling facts I’ve found:
Data in the Playoffs: in 3-year Playoff PIPM, Playoff Augmented Plus Minus, and Playoff Backpicks Box Plus Minus, 2017 Curry universally beats every single player mentioned in the previous thread. He’s also almost-universally considered the better regular season performer in his prime than anyone else mentioned in the last thread, and the data supports this.

Near GOAT-level playmaking: Curry consistently created better shots for his teammates and improved his teammates' efficiency more than older LeBron, Harden, Jokic, Luka, Westbrook, and older Chris Paul, whether we're looking at a 1-year peak or a 5 Year prime. In 2017: Curry improved his teammates’ shooting percentage by +7.3%. LeBron (2nd in the league) was way down at +3.9%.

Defensive attention: In the 2017 Finals Game 5: Curry drew the primary attention of at least 2 defenders on 62% of possessions where he was involved (34/55), and his teammates' points were made easier by this 89% of the time (34/38 points benefited from the attention Curry drew). Throughout the 2018 Finals, Curry received double teams 2000% more (that's two-thousand times more) than KD.

Team success: The Warriors dynasty won more regular season games in 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, 4 years, and 5 years than any other team in NBA History. They are one of only 2 teams in NBA history to make it to 5 Finals in a row, along with with Russell’s Celtics.
Curry drove the team success: With all 3 other all stars off, and just Steph on, the 17-19 Warriors have a better net rating than the 16 Warriors, 13 Heat, 2000 Lakers, 91 Bulls, 87 Lakers, or 86 Celtics. With all 3 all stars on, and just Steph off, the 17-19 Warriors are worse than this season's 2022 Cavs. This trend remains in the playoffs.

Playoff Opponents: 2017 Curry faced harder opponents than peak Duncan, Jordan, Bird, Magic, and Russell, who have all been voted over him. Including opponent Injury, peak Curry still faced harder competition than peak Bird, Magic, or Russell.

Playoff Resilience: By the data, 2017 Curry improved in the playoffs far more than prime Giannis or prime Garnett have in any of their playoff runs. (Giannis and KG are the next most-voted players)

In sum: Curry’s the best of the player on the best modern team ever, and the offensive advantage he has over the other peaks we’re considering is massive. He may end up having the biggest gap between when numerous people started voting for him and when he gets voted in. At this point, I’m just not sure what additional evidence I could show to convince people that this Curry guy is deserving of your vote.

I’d like to imagine that people aren’t just ignoring my posts or don’t care about this evidence. Certainly, I’ve had some lovely conversations with people who seem intelligent and open-minded. The only other explanation I can think of is that my posts just aren’t that convincing. With that in mind, if anyone has advice on how I could do better as a poster, do please send it my way! I’d love to get better at explaining my side or trying to convince others, and I don’t seem to be very effective at it, so if there’s ways I can improve, I’m all ears :D In a similar vein, if I haven't listened enough to the evidence in favor of another player, I'd love to hear that too!
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#7 » by Proxy » Wed Jul 20, 2022 4:24 pm

Proxy wrote:I'm thinking Oscar might possibly be 4th on my ballot but would like some more discussion(more specifically on his defense honestly).

Here are some impact indicators for anyone interested to get started on some. He truly looks like one of the more impactful players ever and one of the best offensive players ever in his prime, like not too far behind Steph or Magic who have both been getting traction for a while now(WOWY numbers taken from backpicks.com).
https://backpicks.com/metrics/wowy-data/
Oscar WOWY:
Pre Oscar:
• 1960 Royals: -5.92 SRS(-1.7 rORTG)
• Oscar Joins in 1961:-3.04 SRS (+2.3 rORTG) - Team improves by +2.88 SRS and +4 rORTG
• Oscar Misses 9 in 1961(SRS Change of +12.6) / -1.8 SRS In
• Oscar Misses 9 in 1965-66(SRS Change of +4.4) / +1.8 SRS In
• Oscar Misses 12 in 1967-68(SRS Change of +8.9) / +1.8 SRS In
• Oscar Misses 16 from 1969-1970(SRS Change of +6) / -1.3 SRS In
• Oscar Misses 27 in 1972-73(SRS Change of +1.6) / +9.5 SRS In

WOWY from 1961 - 1970(46 Games) - +8 SRS Change

WOWY over that full stretch(73 Games) - +6.7 SRS Change

Prime Scaled WOWYR = +7.8 (7th All-Time)

1962-1971 10 Year Scaled Game-Level adjusted Plus Minus = +7.7 (7th All-Time):
Image
https://backpicks.com/2017/11/17/part-iv-historical-impact-multiple-wowyr-studies/


His offensive resilience in his peak for the playoffs looks impressive as well. ScoreVal and PlayVal are 1 number metrics that estimate a player's value just from scoring or playmaking and have an adjustment for teammates and opponents(era).

62-64 Oscar RS ScoreVal & PlayVal averages: +1.67 ScoreVal +1 PlayVal = +2.67
62-64 Oscar PS ScoreVal & PlayVal averages: +2.2 ScoreVal +0.6 PlayVal = +2.8

Image
(He was also the best playmaker of the era)

Numbers from backpicks.com

I'd also like to point out his average TS% from '61 - '71 is literally higher than the league average TS% right now, and he did this being top 3 in volume in the league almost 60 years ago lol. He has ZERO seasons below 113 TS+ until 1972(10 seasons with 200 or more TS add), possibly the most efficient volume scorer in the regular season ever. (Via basketball reference)

Explanations for the metrics:
ScoreVal:
https://backpicks.com/2019/10/09/the-most-valuable-scoring-seasons-in-nba-history-scoreval/
PlayVal:
https://open.spotify.com/episode/2VBerOHZrLRxpFQFBGBqCL?si=uWcz_H9AQLGS0-PKIBrHVQ&utm_source=copy-link

They also had arguably some of the more impressive team offensive results ever(like I said before in my Bill arguments in earlier threads - I think taking these relative ratings at face value and comparing them to other eras is not an even comparison because the less points available):
Image

Now they DID slant heavily towards offense to get those results, but the collapse they had without Oscar still looks tremendous so i'm not sure how much to quite balance those factors:
Image

Here is some film I found on youtube(shoutout to 70sfan again btw for not being one of the channels randomly taken down the last few days):




Anyways, what do you all think?
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#8 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Jul 20, 2022 4:39 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
70sFan wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:the only person in the top 15 peaks most likely from 2010 onwards is gonna be curry

It's not possible, because 2013 James is already in :wink:


Should have said 3 point revolution onwards lol, I def count 2013 bron as before that. Honestly I’m really not high on 2013 lebron at all, I’m in a minority on this but I don’t think of it as a top 5 lebron season


Saw this strand of the last thread and wanted to continue the conversation.

Obviously, I've taken a stand from the first thread in the project and then made other statements that are pushing people toward taking current players more seriously, so my perspective - or "bias" if you'd rather call it that - right now is pretty clear.

I'll add further that the fact that the only current player to get voted in so far, specifically got voted in for a year that occurred before the most dramatic shift in play is an interesting wrinkle here. "We'll take modern players seriously, just so long as we can pick a year from before modern tactics." :wink:

But let me say two things that are not so antagonistic:

1. I think it's often a challenge to know how to stack up current players with older players, and it's understandable if the general response is one we could call "conservative". Putting a current player in a position we might later consider "too high" is something we all would like to avoid, and would like to avoid more than a mistake in the opposite direction. We don't want to be prisoner's of the moment we're in.

2. The paradigm shift that has occurred is leaving everything in particular flux. When we did this project in 2012 (which I think was the first of these, but if someone remembers one from further back, please say something), it was no surprise that MJ & Shaq would be 1 & 2. They'd generally been considered the two top modern peaks for more than a decade at that point - Shaq's peak was recognized as a rival to MJ's while it was happening. Yes there was a cross-era debate between those two and Russell & Wilt (who got the 3rd & 4th spot respectively), but while we talked about how the game had changed between the eras, we were still largely thinking about the 3-point shot being of minor consequence in the grand scheme of things.

And now we know that doesn't work any more. Since that time, recognizing we're in the midst of the largest revolution in the sport since the coming and consequences of the big man, it's made it much less clear how we should approach cross-era comparisons, and it's really highlighted a difference between two criteria that previously seemed largely the same: a) adjusting for era by a general sense of era quality, and b) adjusting for era primarily through projecting players across era.

All this to say: While I might look like I'm wagging my finger at people saying "You're doing it all wrong silly!", truly, what we're trying to do is tough, and I understand people taking a different approach than myself. Heck, I always reserve the right to change my approach over time myself.

To me the most important thing right now is that people are recognizing the conundrum and grabbling with the implications earnestly.
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#9 » by mdonnelly1989 » Wed Jul 20, 2022 4:48 pm

#1.) Oscar Robertson (Pick a year) -> Triple Double Machine.

#2.) 1995 David Robinson

#3.) 2017 Stephen Curry
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#10 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Jul 20, 2022 5:02 pm

f4p wrote:jokic and giannis make me wonder if i'm not considering them enough at this point or have any bias against recent players, but i guess i have kawhi 2017 so i'm not exactly against recent seasons. giannis gives me pause because he didn't end the 2019/2020 playoffs well at all and even in 2021 he needed literally every contender to be injured to win. it looked like milwaukee would lose with just harden injured and then when it was harden and kyrie and harden tried to play on one leg, the bucks still lost game 5 and needed everything it took to win game 7. and atlanta was a bad opponent and the suns only won the west because the lakers, clippers, and nuggets were injured, even getting lucky enough that the clippers beat the jazz while injured. but arguably 2022 giannis felt better to me than 2021 giannis. the celtics strategy was basically guard him with 5 people and hope the bucks would shoot horribly without middleton around.

and jokic statistically just put up a ridiculous season and did everything possible with his 2nd and 3rd best players injured. and still had great playoff numbers. it doesn't feel crazy to say they aren't as great as 2017 kawhi or 1983 moses, but it also feels like i'm clearing out a whole lot of older seasons before getting to the new guys.


Also wanted to propagate this to the next thread.

I believe 70sFan stated that there was no reason to expect 5 of the 15 top players to be in the current era when history goes so far back. My first thought when he said that was "Right but we're just trying to get to #2 right now, and there's no reason to assume that putting Curry in means that a bunch of other guys have to come next."

But of course, the fact of the matter is that people in general aren't so sure that Curry should rank ahead of Jokic, Giannis and other current players, so we may well see a bunch of modern players break through in a row.

For myself, I see Curry as a clear choice ahead of these other players...but I'm also in the minority that just voted Curry POY over Jokic, and I'm certainly not going to say those folks are unreasonable. There's also the matter that I love, love, love Jokic the player so much and I'm thrilled to see him get so much support from others.

Among the other players being mentioned, Giannis will be the next one on my list, and I've been debating Giannis vs Garnett, and I believe I'll be going with Garnett. Garnett's been being held back for me based on the fact that he wasn't ideally built around (in supporting cast or scheme) in his prime which I think held back what he could do...but of course he still had massive impact. Hard for me to be put guys above him that seem less impactful than he was back then.

I have guys like Magic & Bird ahead of Garnett because I think their impact was in the ballpark, but I have more confidence in their ability to lead top tier teams given the way they and their team played at the time.

I don't think I can say the same thing about Giannis. I think Giannis has a lot in common with Garnett...but I think Garnett's the better playmaker, shooter, and defender (while I think Giannis is the better transition attacker, and also able to use some of that in the half court). Forced to pick, I'd still have to take Garnett.

After Giannis, I'm not entirely sure who I'll have next from current players. Jokic, KD & Kawhi all have arguments. But I think the thing I want to say here is that even though I don't think I'll be voting for any of these guys for a while yet, I question whether I should have them much higher.

In the case of Jokic, we are witnessing the best offensive big in history, and possibly the best offensive player in history. Kind of amazing that that guys isn't in our top 10, but I still have concerns about his defense, and he plays a position that has largely been defensively-oriented ever since the big man cometh. (And KD & Kawhi thus have their own arguments over him as the next best player of this era.)
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#11 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Jul 20, 2022 5:15 pm

1. Steph Curry '16-17 (HM '15-16, '20-21, '21-22)

I've gone on about Curry for a long time now so I think people know the case. He's the player that defines the current and most advanced era of basketball, and who also has led the team that has dominated this era which would dominate earlier eras if the teams could play each other, and played with a 3-point line. This is a big deal.

2. Julius Erving '75-76

A golden year. Serious argument for GOAT Peak impact in this year due to his obvious offensive impact, and crucial role on an elite defense, while playing with a supporting cast that was exceptionally pedestrian.

3. Kevin Garnett '03-04 (HM '02-03, '07-08)

Massive, massive impact within his own era despite being used sub-optimally. May well be the best player if playing today.

Others considered:

Oscar & West. As I said earlier, I've never actually gotten to the point where I see a clear cut gap between Magic & Bird, and Oscar & West. I've also never been able to justify putting the older duo ahead of the newer duo, so no surprise here that Magic & Bird are in and I'm still debating about where to put Oscar & West. The uncertainty ranges with these players are bigger than the gaps, and that just is what it is.

I was debating KG vs these two and ended up siding with KG. All 3 had big impact while being hampered by the thinking of the era they were in, but push comes to shove, I think I'd end up drafting KG over the other two in pretty much any era.

Giannis, as mentioned. I think KG vs Giannis is one of the salient conversations to have right now.
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#12 » by jalengreen » Wed Jul 20, 2022 6:01 pm

1. '04 Kevin Garnett

One of the greatest defenders in NBA history enjoying his peak impact season dragging an unremarkable Timberwolves squad to a 58 win season. On top of his historic defensive impact, his offensive impact is advanced as he's able to space the floor to an extent that other all-time great defenders didn't come close to doing and his playmaking ability makes him the type of player that can fit in virtually any team environment - be it the 2004 Timberwolves or 2008 Celtics.

2. '51 George Mikan
('50 George Mikan)

In terms of relative impact in era at their best, Mikan's arguably up there with anyone. And in most cases I don't really care about strength of competition faced (I think the modern era is the most talented by far but I don't place much weight on that in these comparisons) but I do view Mikan as an extreme exception. I debated whether to put him on by ballot at this point. I think it's a fair spot for him, though, and I've always been impressed by his advanced offensive skillset (while also being a dominant defensive presence) in particular when watching the rare footage available from his playing days. It's certainly possible that I'll change my mind and end up putting someone else in (Robinson, Curry, Erving, Bird, etc all have arguments)

3. '17 Steph Curry
('16 Steph Curry)

One of the greatest offensive players of all-time led a 67-win and 11.35 SRS team in the regular season along with the greatest postseason team in NBA history. 2015-17 was an absurd three-year stretch of 10+ SRS regular seasons from the Curry-led Warriors and 2017 was Curry's best postseason in that stretch which is why I'm picking it over 2015 or 2016. Curry still maintained an arguably league-best level of impact even if it wasn't quite at the level of 2016.
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#13 » by capfan33 » Wed Jul 20, 2022 6:16 pm

1. 2017 Curry
This is where everything starts to get very hazy, as I think 4-5 guys are essentially a coinflip here. Ultimately, I went with Curry in 2017 albeit I'm not convinced at all by it. It came down to Curry, KG and Robinson to me. KG is someone I really struggle to rank, some of the recent posts have made me reconsider his case. While I love his versatility and IQ, I just can't put him in yet due to his scoring limitations. I just feel that no matter how good KG is at other aspects of basketball, he needs a very good to elite perimeter scorer next to him to be able to win a title, and I think that's a relatively high bar to clear to the point where I can't justify putting him in quite yet. I have KG a bit higher than Robinson largely due to portability and diversity of skillset.

2. 2004 KG
Probably the greatest 2nd option ever (debatable between him and Robinson) I have to remind myself sometimes of how absurd KG was as a complete package. A 6-10+ physical freak that moved like a forward, could handle and pass the ball like the best point-forwards, but played horizontal defense better than anyone outside of Russell and maybe Walton/Olajuwon. Oh and he was an elite mid-range shooter with a beautiful array of post-moves. Just an absurd combination when you realize the full-breadth of his skills. It's hard to rank him because of how awful his teams were in his prime, and maybe with better talent around him he would be more viable as a #1 scoring option, but just based on what I've seen both watching him and statistically I have too many questions about his ability to be the #1 option on a title team to rank him any higher. However, his unrivaled versatility and portability make it hard to put him too much lower than here.

3. 1994 Robinson
Similar to KG in many ways, I ultimately have him a bit below KG largely because I like KG's skillset more overall and think he's a bit more portable. I also think KG's absurd horizontal defense is the best overall skill either of them have and is a bit more of an outlier, which tips things in his direction. I also am not a huge fan of how basic Robinson's scoring game seems to be, I think it makes him more predictable and easier to gameplan against. While I have reservations about KG's playoff scoring, his superior mid-range game and passing makes me more comfortable with him in the playoffs in various situations, specifically in regards to his baseline impact level on offense. It is close however, and I can see arguments both ways.
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#14 » by falcolombardi » Wed Jul 20, 2022 6:44 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
f4p wrote:jokic and giannis make me wonder if i'm not considering them enough at this point or have any bias against recent players, but i guess i have kawhi 2017 so i'm not exactly against recent seasons. giannis gives me pause because he didn't end the 2019/2020 playoffs well at all and even in 2021 he needed literally every contender to be injured to win. it looked like milwaukee would lose with just harden injured and then when it was harden and kyrie and harden tried to play on one leg, the bucks still lost game 5 and needed everything it took to win game 7. and atlanta was a bad opponent and the suns only won the west because the lakers, clippers, and nuggets were injured, even getting lucky enough that the clippers beat the jazz while injured. but arguably 2022 giannis felt better to me than 2021 giannis. the celtics strategy was basically guard him with 5 people and hope the bucks would shoot horribly without middleton around.

and jokic statistically just put up a ridiculous season and did everything possible with his 2nd and 3rd best players injured. and still had great playoff numbers. it doesn't feel crazy to say they aren't as great as 2017 kawhi or 1983 moses, but it also feels like i'm clearing out a whole lot of older seasons before getting to the new guys.


Also wanted to propagate this to the next thread.

I believe 70sFan stated that there was no reason to expect 5 of the 15 top players to be in the current era when history goes so far back. My first thought when he said that was "Right but we're just trying to get to #2 right now, and there's no reason to assume that putting Curry in means that a bunch of other guys have to come next."

But of course, the fact of the matter is that people in general aren't so sure that Curry should rank ahead of Jokic, Giannis and other current players, so we may well see a bunch of modern players break through in a row.

For myself, I see Curry as a clear choice ahead of these other players...but I'm also in the minority that just voted Curry POY over Jokic, and I'm certainly not going to say those folks are unreasonable. There's also the matter that I love, love, love Jokic the player so much and I'm thrilled to see him get so much support from others.

Among the other players being mentioned, Giannis will be the next one on my list, and I've been debating Giannis vs Garnett, and I believe I'll be going with Garnett. Garnett's been being held back for me based on the fact that he wasn't ideally built around (in supporting cast or scheme) in his prime which I think held back what he could do...but of course he still had massive impact. Hard for me to be put guys above him that seem less impactful than he was back then.

I have guys like Magic & Bird ahead of Garnett because I think their impact was in the ballpark, but I have more confidence in their ability to lead top tier teams given the way they and their team played at the time.

I don't think I can say the same thing about Giannis. I think Giannis has a lot in common with Garnett...but I think Garnett's the better playmaker, shooter, and defender (while I think Giannis is the better transition attacker, and also able to use some of that in the half court). Forced to pick, I'd still have to take Garnett.

After Giannis, I'm not entirely sure who I'll have next from current players. Jokic, KD & Kawhi all have arguments. But I think the thing I want to say here is that even though I don't think I'll be voting for any of these guys for a while yet, I question whether I should have them much higher.

In the case of Jokic, we are witnessing the best offensive big in history, and possibly the best offensive player in history. Kind of amazing that that guys isn't in our top 10, but I still have concerns about his defense, and he plays a position that has largely been defensively-oriented ever since the big man cometh. (And KD & Kawhi thus have their own arguments over him as the next best player of this era.)


Better in a vacuum or in practice? I mean being a bigger scoring threats is a big deal to playmaking

If you had the smartest and better vision player in the history of basketball but he was a 6'0 guard with mediocre handles, shooting and athletism would he really be a better playmaker than someone like giannis or even westbrook? Less smart pkayers who nonetheless create more and better opportunities than him through their athletism and scoring threat?

That is an extreme example exxageration of course to get the point across. But i believe that even if garnett is the better passer in a vacuum. His better scoring/handle skillset may lead him to create more shots thsn garnett regardless of eras

And simarly just as garnett would benefit offensively from playing in a 4-out era like giannis's. Giannis would benefit defensively from playing in the opposite one.

For how much we talk about garnett defense thriving in the modern game (he probably would) is actually giannis who has played in this era of 5/4-out offenses and thrived defensively even in the playoffs. With garnett it is very likely theory that he woukd dominate defensively today
With giannis is a proven fact, no theory needed

I actually find it fascinating that if giannis played in the 90's in, lets say, david robinson place.his development likely would have gone into developing an admiral-like game. A great athletic center with monster rim protection who does some face up drives and has a solid if unresilient post up power game and then we would wonder if he coukd translate that defensive impact to the 2020's since he is not as light footed as a hakeem or garnett

Right now my top 3 after mikan (who i think makes sense to put around as the last player to absolutely dominate and stand out above everyone else in a full era/decade alongside lebron, jordan, kareem and russel. His absolute ceiling may be as high as 5th based on that even when handicapping for era)

Is curry, giannis and garnett but i am also considering kobe, wade, west, robinson, walton and others like nash, paul or julius

I expect to have curry, jokic and giannis all in my top 20 with curry and giannis in my top 15
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#15 » by falcolombardi » Wed Jul 20, 2022 7:13 pm

This is my current top 7, subject to change

1-1950 mikan (1951, 1949)

Maybe the Most dominant peak left relative to any era which is why i feel he should be above the fuys who were not really the clear best players of theirs

I think his ceiling can be as higg as 4th best career ever below jordan, kareem, lebron and russ3l for that reason and peak somewhere around that

Seems fair to put him around here

2-2015 curry (a-2017, b-2019)

I may sometimes come across as a curry hater (?) With how much i push back on some pro curry arguments i heavily disagree with but i think he is one of the most impactful players of all time still

Per impact metrics of the last 25 years only really garnett or robinson have a case to be better and while the gravity arguments for why curry never really has a bad game can be tiring.... is also true that curry can keep his offensive value even when slowed down from scoring better than garnett or robinson can in the playoffs

Now robinson and garnett remain impactful offensively and sustain their defense too, so maybe they would still be bettee to have than steph..... but steph gets tiebreaker points over them for doing it on a tougher era in competition level and as doc often points out proving he can reach higher team heights

We dont know for sure robinson or giannis or garnett couldnt do the same in comparably talented teams but since is not known for sure i give curry a small tie breaker over them here



3-2021 giannis (2019, 2022)

I feel like garnett may be bettwr defensively but giannis better offensively by small margins. Garnett often is seen as the more portable one alongside better offensive talent (maybe true) but giannis has proven he can be the first option of a championship team

Bucks playoffs offense is wprrying... but giannis has generally kept producing at hugr volumes of reasonably effective scoring and voluminous playmaking i dont think garnett has the handle/power/willingness to go to the paint over amd over for

The perennial struggles of jrue and bucks shooters with finishing giannis created shots is not somethingh i blame anteto too much for

And i also believe that the "garnett is a better second option" argument is unpersuassive. A on ball scoring/creation skillset of giannis caliber is unvaluable even for a second option and his off balñ offense of reboundint amd finishing is elite too

I am not even convinced giannis wouldnt be a better second option offensively than garnett passing amd shooting game, let alone as first options and considering how the ceiling of a defensive big is lower now giannis results defensivelt may be as impressive as garnett ones

4- 2004 Garnet (2008, 2003)

I already said a lot about garnett in the giannis write up but we are still talking about one of the easiest fit players ever who is an all time great in one end and very inpactful in the other one, i think he is the defensive first equivalent of bird and maybe even more valuable

Just one of the most valuable players of all time who like bird has a offensive game that doesnt stack so well as a scoring first option in the playoffs

5-1995 robinson

Lots of similarities with garnett and maybe an even more impactful defender for his era but his offemsive skillset is less complete than garnett so i give kevin the tiebreaker

6- 2006 wade. I see this season as the offensive version of 2003 duncan-lite. One of the most impactful offensive players ever who is also big in the defensive end for a guard

7-2009 kobe. Similar to wade but less impr3ssed with his defense (but more with his portability in offense) all thinghs being equal i prefer to have kobe offensively but think wade defense edge barely overcomes that gap

8-2022 jokic- truly one of the greatest offensive players of all time whose playoffs defense is still a worrisome question mark. If a better roster construction prives you cam build a strong playoffs defense with jokic i will feel comfortable rising him to giannis current placement or higher

9- 1976 julius

One of the most impressive boxscore seasons ever leading a good but not stacked team to a title in a spmewhat weaker league (not necesarrily cause the aba was much weaker than the nba byt because both were weaker than a post merger league that combined the leagues talents)

10- 1967(?) jerry west

Monster offensive results at his best and per people opinions a elite individual defender. When two close ish offensive players have one be considered a clearly better defender i go with the two way guy

11- 1964 (?) oscar robertson

Which is why i put west barely above oscar

12- walton 1977 Absolutely monster impact signals but durability costs him points

After walton i am probably putting paul another monster impact player with durability issues

Then guys like durant, moses, harden and kawhi

Then guys like westbrook,barkley, ewing and karl malone

I actually have everyone from 9th (bird) to 22th (walton) as close enough to be a near wash so i could see a list that reverses my order anf goes walton first and giannis 20th and see it as more than reasonable

I probably would have paul 2015 after walton cause he is just as bad durability wise in his best seasons (compared to 77 walton) but i think his height lowers his playoffs impact a bit in a way curry more off ball game is a bit less affected by playoffs

After paul i may go with engines like harden and ultra portable scorers like kawhi and durant

Then some pkayers who are great but with some clear flaws to me as far as building around (ewing barkley, karl, maybe moses who also could be above this group, embiid , etc)

Edit: i forgot dirk and nash lol, i would have them somewhere above or below walton

I think reggie miller would be in the same tier as ewing and barkley for me

Elgyn baylor or bob petit may be there too i
Oe right below guys like barkley and karl malone. I may honestly include butler already here or even in the barley/ewing tier

Guys like mutombo, stockton or kidd next after

Edit: switched giannis and curry

1-mikan 50 (51)
2-giannis 21(19,22)
3-curry 15 (17,19,22)
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#16 » by Lakers LeBron » Wed Jul 20, 2022 7:47 pm

So obviously lack of highly rated modern players in lists such as this or the Top 100 Players Project is beginning to stand out. For example in this list, there are multiple seasons from the 60s, 80s, 90s, and early 2000s in the top 10 including a 17 year stretch from 86 to 2003 that apparently has 6 of the top 10 seasons of all time. Yet there's only one season from the last 19 years in the top 10 and that was LeBron's 2013 season which happened almost a decade ago. I simply find it hard to believe that players are now peaking lower given the greatly increased 3 point shooting skills and the larger talent pool of international prospects.

One area of bias that I've noticed is that a lot of thought is given to how older players would be able to adapt to and dominate the modern game. But very little thought is given to how modern players would essentially break older eras. For example, watching the late 90s Bulls, one thing that immediately stands out is that opposing teams were forced to guard Rodman standing on the 3 point line due to the illegal defense rules. If Steph Curry were playing in the 90s, he would never see the type of defense that the Cavs used to contain him in the 2016 finals by helping off of Harrison Barnes every single play. Who knows what kind of mind-boggling numbers Curry would be able to put up if he were operating with as much space as Jordan or Pippen were on those Bulls teams.
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#17 » by Lakers LeBron » Wed Jul 20, 2022 7:51 pm

Of course the explanation I prefer is that LeBron is just so much better than any other player in NBA history that players in his era are naturally going to be rated lower because they're being compared to the King. Like how can you say that 2016 or 2017 Curry is a top 10 peak when post-peak LeBron was by far the best player in the league?
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#18 » by CharityStripe34 » Wed Jul 20, 2022 7:55 pm

Lakers LeBron wrote:So obviously lack of highly rated modern players in lists such as this or the Top 100 Players Project is beginning to stand out. For example in this list, there are multiple seasons from the 60s, 80s, 90s, and early 2000s in the top 10 including a 17 year stretch from 86 to 2003 that apparently has 6 of the top 10 seasons of all time. Yet there's only one season from the last 19 years in the top 10 and that was LeBron's 2013 season which happened almost a decade ago. I simply find it hard to believe that players are now peaking lower given the greatly increased 3 point shooting skills and the larger talent pool of international prospects.

One area of bias that I've noticed is that a lot of thought is given to how older players would be able to adapt to and dominate the modern game. But very little thought is given to how modern players would essentially break older eras. For example, watching the late 90s Bulls, one thing that immediately stands out is that opposing teams were forced to guard Rodman standing on the 3 point line due to the illegal defense rules. If Steph Curry were playing in the 90s, he would never see the type of defense that the Cavs used to contain him in the 2016 finals by helping off of Harrison Barnes every single play. Who knows what kind of mind-boggling numbers Curry would be able to put up if he were operating with as much space as Jordan or Pippen were on those Bulls teams.



Bottom line: all lists have biases lol. I'm also a firm believer in that if you take the top 30 (or so) players of all-time they would be really good in every era if given the benefit of that era's coaching tactics, rules, etc. That same argument you used (illegal defense rules) for Curry in the 90's, apply that to Gianni as well, where entire teams (or 3-4 defenders) couldn't shade their defense toward him. I guess the counter to that would be that teams stupidly would put 2-3 players in or around the paint on offense, clogging the lane (unlike, say, the 90's Rockets).
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#19 » by falcolombardi » Wed Jul 20, 2022 8:05 pm

Lakers LeBron wrote:So obviously lack of highly rated modern players in lists such as this or the Top 100 Players Project is beginning to stand out. For example in this list, there are multiple seasons from the 60s, 80s, 90s, and early 2000s in the top 10 including a 17 year stretch from 86 to 2003 that apparently has 6 of the top 10 seasons of all time. Yet there's only one season from the last 19 years in the top 10 and that was LeBron's 2013 season which happened almost a decade ago. I simply find it hard to believe that players are now peaking lower given the greatly increased 3 point shooting skills and the larger talent pool of international prospects.

One area of bias that I've noticed is that a lot of thought is given to how older players would be able to adapt to and dominate the modern game. But very little thought is given to how modern players would essentially break older eras. For example, watching the late 90s Bulls, one thing that immediately stands out is that opposing teams were forced to guard Rodman standing on the 3 point line due to the illegal defense rules. If Steph Curry were playing in the 90s, he would never see the type of defense that the Cavs used to contain him in the 2016 finals by helping off of Harrison Barnes every single play. Who knows what kind of mind-boggling numbers Curry would be able to put up if he were operating with as much space as Jordan or Pippen were on those Bulls teams.


I have giannis and curry botg around top 10th and jokic only a bit below. When giannis ans jokic finish their careers their peaks may be even higher to me
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Re: Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #11 

Post#20 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Jul 20, 2022 8:07 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
f4p wrote:jokic and giannis make me wonder if i'm not considering them enough at this point or have any bias against recent players, but i guess i have kawhi 2017 so i'm not exactly against recent seasons. giannis gives me pause because he didn't end the 2019/2020 playoffs well at all and even in 2021 he needed literally every contender to be injured to win. it looked like milwaukee would lose with just harden injured and then when it was harden and kyrie and harden tried to play on one leg, the bucks still lost game 5 and needed everything it took to win game 7. and atlanta was a bad opponent and the suns only won the west because the lakers, clippers, and nuggets were injured, even getting lucky enough that the clippers beat the jazz while injured. but arguably 2022 giannis felt better to me than 2021 giannis. the celtics strategy was basically guard him with 5 people and hope the bucks would shoot horribly without middleton around.

and jokic statistically just put up a ridiculous season and did everything possible with his 2nd and 3rd best players injured. and still had great playoff numbers. it doesn't feel crazy to say they aren't as great as 2017 kawhi or 1983 moses, but it also feels like i'm clearing out a whole lot of older seasons before getting to the new guys.


Also wanted to propagate this to the next thread.

I believe 70sFan stated that there was no reason to expect 5 of the 15 top players to be in the current era when history goes so far back. My first thought when he said that was "Right but we're just trying to get to #2 right now, and there's no reason to assume that putting Curry in means that a bunch of other guys have to come next."

But of course, the fact of the matter is that people in general aren't so sure that Curry should rank ahead of Jokic, Giannis and other current players, so we may well see a bunch of modern players break through in a row.

For myself, I see Curry as a clear choice ahead of these other players...but I'm also in the minority that just voted Curry POY over Jokic, and I'm certainly not going to say those folks are unreasonable. There's also the matter that I love, love, love Jokic the player so much and I'm thrilled to see him get so much support from others.

Among the other players being mentioned, Giannis will be the next one on my list, and I've been debating Giannis vs Garnett, and I believe I'll be going with Garnett. Garnett's been being held back for me based on the fact that he wasn't ideally built around (in supporting cast or scheme) in his prime which I think held back what he could do...but of course he still had massive impact. Hard for me to be put guys above him that seem less impactful than he was back then.

I have guys like Magic & Bird ahead of Garnett because I think their impact was in the ballpark, but I have more confidence in their ability to lead top tier teams given the way they and their team played at the time.

I don't think I can say the same thing about Giannis. I think Giannis has a lot in common with Garnett...but I think Garnett's the better playmaker, shooter, and defender (while I think Giannis is the better transition attacker, and also able to use some of that in the half court). Forced to pick, I'd still have to take Garnett.

After Giannis, I'm not entirely sure who I'll have next from current players. Jokic, KD & Kawhi all have arguments. But I think the thing I want to say here is that even though I don't think I'll be voting for any of these guys for a while yet, I question whether I should have them much higher.

In the case of Jokic, we are witnessing the best offensive big in history, and possibly the best offensive player in history. Kind of amazing that that guys isn't in our top 10, but I still have concerns about his defense, and he plays a position that has largely been defensively-oriented ever since the big man cometh. (And KD & Kawhi thus have their own arguments over him as the next best player of this era.)



Could you touch on scheme limiting Garnett? I know the cast wasn’t great but I remember backpacks said the scheme offensively was decent in era, unless this is in the sense of a modern offense.

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