Post#30 » by O_6 » Thu Aug 4, 2022 8:17 pm
I think people kind of ignore or just don't really care about Gary Payton's offensive game. Among the non-Magic/Curry PG group of Nash/Stockton/CP3/Kidd/Frazier/Thomas etc. that he's typically placed in, his offensive game is the least "sexy" and memorable of the group. When it comes to Payton, it always goes back to people talking about his defense. But he brought some skills to the offensive end as well.
Payton averaged 21.8 PPG on slightly above league average efficiency from '97 to '03. He averaged 19.7 PPG from '93 to '04. Those aren't amazing numbers, but certainly more than respectable for a PG who is also averaging 8 assists at the same time.
But more specifically, Gary Payton was absolutely elite at scoring inside the paint for a guard. The following are his ranks in terms of "Points in the Paint" for each of these seasons...
1997: 2nd
1998: 12th
1999: 5th
2000: 6th
2001: 6th
2002: 4th
2003: 5th
This is just ridiculous paint scoring volume for a point guard. For reference, Tony Parker finished in the top 10 for PITP during 3 seasons with his best finish at 8th ('06 and '09). Russell Westbrook finished Top 10 for PITP during 5 seasons with his best finish at 3rd ('20) but he had no other seasons ranked better than 7th. Allen Iverson finished in the top 10 for PITP during 3 seasons with his best finish at 8th ('05). Chris Paul finished 12th and 18th in '08 and '09 respectively, those are his only seasons in the Top 45 of paint scoring. Jason Kidd finished 34th in '99 and Nash finished 38th in '03, their only Top 50 appearances in Paint Scoring. Billups never finished in the Top 100. Kobe finished in the top 10 one time (8th in '02).
Bottom-line, Gary Payton got buckets inside. Even guys like Parker/Westbrook/Iverson who are known for getting inside a ton didn't quite match up to The Glove in that area. He was perennially in the Top 5 mix for an extended stretch. His ability to post-up smaller PGs, his open court game, and his driving led to Payton being a really unique scorer for a PG.
2nd, 2nd, 8th, 3rd, 3rd, 6th, 9th, 10th, 5th... these are the Sonics' ORtg rankings from '94 to '02 when Payton was there running the show. That is a really great stretch of team offense with different casts that Payton led. And I'm sure his unique ability to inverse the defense with his paint scoring had a positive spacing effect that led to better looks for his team.
20 points, 8 assists, best paint scorer in the league for a guard, average to slightly above average efficiency, consistently led elite offensive teams
I think Gary Payton is underrated or underappreciated offensively. Ironically, I think he's probably a hair overrated on defense but overall I think he deserves some more love. He was a two-way stud in his prime.