LAL1947 wrote:OhayoKD wrote:LAL1947 wrote:If you had used another player than Jordan in your original example, I could have agreed with your point because it can be a good one. When he played, Jordan was the best defender at his position, right?
"at his position" is doing alot of work. Jordan's never anchored an elite playoff defense, the bulls went from average to best in the league with his defense declining, and then the bulls weren't really affected by his depature. Duncan on the other hand was massively valuable to arguably the GOAT post-russell defense.
If we use metrics like drapm, dpipm, ect, ect jordan's best years are either +1 or +2. Duncan is at like +4 or +5. Duncan's a way way better defender.
Why would MJ, a Shooting Guard, need to anchor a defense? Bigs played a larger role on defense but that doesn't make Duncan a "way, way better defender" than MJ.
If you want to use stats like DRAPM, DPIPIM as an argument:
2002-03 RS DRAPM says Dirk Nowitski (2.31) and Tony Kukoc (2.06) had a higher DRAPM than Duncan (1.84).
2002-03 Playoff DRAPM says Manu Ginobili (2.93 in 2,880 possessions) had a higher DRAPM than Duncan (1.83 in 4,286 possessions).
So then what does that do to your argument?
I used 2002-03 season for the example because that's his best season.
A further example to show you the futility of using these stats to determine the best:
2000-01 RS RAPM has Duncan at 4th (4.10) and D-Rob at 13th (3.45) in their list overall... while Kobe was 36th (2.20) and Shaq was 50th (1.97)... yet the Lakers blanked the Spurs 4-0 in those playoffs.
why would duncan, a big, be expected to anchor an offense? If duncan can't be a much better defender because of his position, why should we care about jordan being a better at offense when he's a guard?
drapm is noisy over single year samples since there's no box-regression, by 5 year drapm duncan is #2 for the 2000's/2010's only passed by the best stretch of kg