1. 2004 Kevin Garnett.
2. 1994 David Robinson 2b. 1995 David Robinson
3. 1966 Jerry West 3b. 1969 Jerry West. 3c. 1968 Jerry West
HM: Oscar, Kobe, Walton, Jokic
Reasoning for KG: Since so many people are focused on Giannis, let me focus my comparison there. In short:
A.
Garnett > Giannis: 1) Stats: I’ve mentioned this before, but the stats do favor Garnett. KG clearly wins in RAPM, regular season / playoff PIPM, Corp, regular season and playoff AuPM, and BPM. Giannis is barely ahead in just RPM and playoff BPM. The fact that Garnett does better in the true plus minus stats (sometimes by a lot) while the only stats Giannis wins in have box-score inputs (which might miss KG’s value) make me confident in KG.
2) KG is clearly more scalable. The most scalable skills are spacing, passing, finishing, off-ball play, and defense. KG is better in at least 4/5 of these scalable skills, and is commonly considered a top 5 GOAT scalable star. Giannis isn’t.
3) Giannis has a reputation of being more resilient, but I’ve argued otherwise. Giannis had all-time level scoring/offensive declines in 19-20. Even if he improved in 2021, he still showed some decline, and this decline increased against better teams (he declines even after adjusting for opponent defense). I’m not sure Giannis has the true resilience advantage, and it’s certainly not much if so.
4) Health: KG’s slightly less injury prone in the playoffs, but I don’t think it’s a big factor in either of their peaks.
5) Team fit limiting a player’s impact: here, Garnett >> Giannis. Garnett had the worse team and the worse-fitting team by a lot. KG probably has the worst fitting team at his peak year of any all-time peak. Giannis on the other hand had a great fitting offensive and defensive team in 21.
6) Time machine: KG’s pretty favored in discussions of being moved to today. He’s basically the perfect defender for this era, even over Giannis. Particularly his mental advantage, as one of the smartest defenders ever — he’d be like Draymond in Giannis’ body. Meanwhile, although Giannis might get better defensively in a previous era, he’d be worse offensively. The dribbling rules would be very unforgiving to Giannis’ transition game, and the packed paint would be far harder on Giannis’ driving game.
This is not to say Giannis is a terrible peak, not at all! But Garnett is the better and smarter defender, he’s a massively better passer, he’s a better spacer and complimentary offensive piece, and he might be the better off-ball player. I think he’s the better player.
B. Garnett >> Moses: The data clearly favor KG, as does scalability, the time-machine argument, team fit being poor, etc. Moses isn’t a good defender for an all-time peak at the big man position. KG meanwhile is one of the single best defenders ever. Moses might be the single worst passer to elect at this level, while KG is once again one of the best passing big men ever. KG’s shooting is also better. Garnett is also surprisingly a higher volume scorer in the regular season at their peak. How much of a better rebounder would Moses have to be to make up for all the other gaps?
C. Garnett >> Erving: similar argument to above vs Moses, but less emphasis on rebounding (KG’s the better rebounder) and more on scoring (Erving’s probably the better scorer). It’s also worth repeating that Erving took a massive massive drop the very next year after 1976 when he joined a larger league in the ABA-NBA merger.
D. Garnett >= Robinson. Comparitive stats can be found here:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=100683694#p100683694In Preferred stats: Tie. Playoff-only stats: Robinson by 1 (2 ties). Total stats: tie.
94 Robinson is pretty clearly Robinson’s best regular season year and it might edge out 04 Garnett in the regular season stats we have, but people see 94 Robinson as clearly less resilient and 95 Robinson as more. 96 Robinson might be even more resilient relative to regular season value, but the playoff improvement isn’t enough to counteract the regular season decline.
The fact that Robinson performs much better in WOWY and is close in PS PIPM does give me pause, but KG looks great in RAPM and is still better in PS PIPM. Both suffered from some of the worst team construction of any peak player, but I see KG as having worse team. 99 Robinson might edge out 08 KG, but both clearly have better impact with better team construction.
Health isn’t too much of a factor, and neither have a strong defensive advantage. Garnett has the edge in scalability (he’s one of the GOAT scalable players, though Robinson is no slouch there) and in the time machine argument (both on offense and defense). It’s statistically close, but with KG’s peak resilience and contextual factors, I lean him.
Reasoning for Robinson: As I mentioned on the previous page
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=100683694#p100683694, Robinson is up next in the stats we have. When not comparing him to Garnett, I like Robinson's scalability over most other players. His resilience clearly struggled as a massive-volume 1st option in the playoffs without help, but he showed he could be far more resilient when paired with another offensive star in 1999 onward. He doesn't have health concerns, his defensive value is massive (which could cause his box-stats to underrate him), and the team fit during his peak was clearly sub-optimal (which likely contributed to his perceived lack of playoff success). I see him doing fairly well in a time machine to today. His defense would clearly be Tier 1 in today's NBA. Offensively, with far more spacing and spread pick-and-roll, I see him being more resilient as a rolling big man.
Reasoning for West: The next tier will be the hardest to order. Now that players' imperfections are getting bigger, we have to start making some difficult comparisons. I might end up changing this vote in the next round (maybe for Walton, Kobe, KD, Oscar, or Jokic). Here's my thought process currently:
Skill wise, Jerry West looks great. He's very likely the best scorer of the bunch, with a fantastic driving game, incredible foul-drawing ability, and a shooting touch that was ahead of his time. He also improved his scoring in the playoffs more than any other star here. In terms of playmaking, he definitely ins't at the level of Oscar, Walton, or Jokic. That said, I don't see it below Kobe, and it's probably above KD (and other players like Moses, Erving, Wade). His defense is also often heralded as the best of the guards and wings we're considering.
Statistically, West seems lower in the group. So what made me pick him?
-BPM: While West does have a lower BPM than many of his competitors, it was far harder to gain separation in BPM as a 1960s guard. BPM could be underrating both Oscar and West. Further, BPM may be less effectively capturing West's defensive value, without any sort of steal/block input. Much of the BPM gap gets closed if we just look at Offensive BPM, and Defensive BPM has him as the worst defender of the guard/wing group (again because of the missing steal/steal numbers), which is certainly not true.
-WOWY: West performs a lot better here. He's 2nd all time in prime un-regressed WOWY and 11th all time in prime regressed WOWYR (which is like RAPM to the un-regressed APM). This stat puts him above all the other wings/guards except Oscar. While Oscar does pull ahead in prime WOWY, if we constrain it to 5-year peak WOWY, West pulls ahead of Oscar (5 years gives us stabler numbers). It's also worth noting that WOWY tends to favor players who are quarterbacks of the offense or defense (e.g. primary play-makers or primary rim protectors) over finishers like West. The fact that West gets this close to Oscar, despite Oscar playing an archetype that is arguably favored by WOWY, makes me wonder whether West is better.
-WS/48: Sticking with the comparison to Oscar, while Oscar is ahead in 1-year regular season WS/48, they're actually tied in 2-year regular season WS/48. The gap shrinks in the playoffs, and West is again ahead in multi-year playoff WS/48.
Philosophically, I also like many of West's characteristics.
He's quite scalable, certainly more than Oscar, Kobe, and Wade. He's single best shooter of the 1960s. As a combo-guard, he could play both on and off ball. And as I've said, he's also arguably the best defender of the bunch. These are all scalable skills. He's also arguably the most resilient; nobody improves their scoring more in the playoffs. I'm definitely open to the idea that the one-number metrics underrate his defense (specifically BPM and WS/48), especially when lacking even the most basic defensive stats in the 60s. I also see him as someone who would clearly win the time-machine test. Jerry West played in the single worst era for a perimeter guard. Today, his all-time shooting would improve, as would the value of his perimeter defense.
Is it possible I'm biased, with the philosophical argument making me too favorable of his worse data? Absolutely possible. Like I said, I'm still figuring this next tier out, so feel free to push back if you disagree. I'm open to reconsidering
