FrogBros4Life wrote:Long post incoming....this discussion has piqued my interest and I wanted to chime in with a few things...
90 Ewing Playoffs Per Game: 29.4 ppg, 10.5 rpg, 3.1 ast, 1.3 stl, 2 blks, 2.7 TO, 58%TS
95 Robinson Playofffs Per Game: 25.3ppg, 12.1 rpg, 3.1 ast, 1.5 stl, 2.6 blks, 3.7 TO 54%TS
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90 Ewing Playoffs Per36: 26.8ppg, 9.6 rpg, 2.8 apg, 1.2 stl, 1.8 blks, 2.5 TO, 58%TS
95 Robinson Playoffs Per36: 22ppg, 10.5 rpg, 2.7apg, 1.3 stl, 2.3 blks, 3.2 TO, 54%TS
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90 Ewing Playoffs Per100: 37.5ppg, 13.4 rpg, 4apg, 1.7 stl, 2.6 blks, 3.4 TO, 58%TS
95 Robinson Playofffs Per100: 32.6ppg, 15.6 rpg, 4apg, 1.9 stl, 3.4 blks, 4.8 TO, 54%TS
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Whether you look at per game, per36 or per100, Ewing appears to have a clear edge in production offensively regardless of what BPM and WS yield as outputs. This falls in line with E-Balla's original claim even before we take into account that Ewing played against better defenses at a slower pace. In 90, Ewing played the Celtics who were 12th in DRTG, and the Pistons who were 2nd in DRTG (1st in playoff DRTG). In 95, Robinson played the Nuggets who were 14th in DRTG, the Lakers who were 16th in DRTG, and the Rockets who were 12th. In 90, The Celtics were 13th in Pace and the Pistons were 26th (2nd to last). In the playoffs the Celtics were 3rd in pace and the Pistons 15th. In the 95 regular season, the Nuggets were 20th in pace, but the Rockets were 10th and the Lakers were 4th. In the playoffs, Denver was 4th in pace, the Lakers were 8th and Houston was 2nd. The pace here clearly favors Robinson, even before we consider that in 95 Robinson played 15 postseason games to 10 for Ewing in 1990.
Robinson did have a slight edge in overall REB% (16.6 to 15.7), but Ewing had the edge in DEFREB% (26% to 22%), and with the increase in pace of play in Robinson's favor, it makes the slight rebounding edge for Robinson less impactful.
Over their entire primes, Ewing's overall playoff PPG increased from his regular season average 3 times. Robinson's overall playoff PPG increased from his regular season average once. Over their entire primes, Ewing's overall playoff APG increased from his regular season average 6 times. Robinson's overall playoff APG increased from his regular season average 4 times. Over the course of their entire primes Robinson's turnovers increased in the playoffs from his regular season average 4 times. Over the course of their entire primes Ewing's turnovers increased in the playoffs from his regular season average just twice (one of which was a 0.1 increase). And this is against ALL defenses....not just good ones, and we know that Ewing played in the harder of the two conferences during his time and routinely played more difficult defenses than Robinson did (again, as E-balla pointed out, Robinson never played an elite defense). With all of these factors, it's not a stretch at all to say that Ewing was a more resilient #1 option on offense in the playoffs, especially when you consider his raw stats will be somewhat deflated due to the slower pace at which his teams played. As for sacrificing his defense, I agree that 1990 was not Ewing's best defensive year, but over the course of their entire primes (as was how the original argument was framed), Ewing did this while managing to lead a defense that was top 5 in the league for about 8 straight years, 2 of which were among the best of all time.
Between 90-98, the relative difference in playoff points per 100 compared to actual playoff ppg favors Ewing in all but 2 seasons.
When we adjusted for minutes AND possessions in 90 Ewing vs 95 Robinson, we see that Ewing still appears to come out ahead on the offensive end any way you slice it. And again, when adjusting for pace for every year from 1990-1998, Ewing has better relative scoring numbers when comparing per100 possessions to actual playoff ppg (because Ewing was playing at a slower tempo than Robinson) in all but 2 seasons.
A few other things stood out to me while reading this discussion. Mainly...
euroleague wrote:DRob was often doubled while teams rarely needed to double Ewing.
This is just not true. If anything Ewing may have been double teamed more.
liamliam1234 wrote:Give me Robinson’s offensive performance against Hakeem over Ewing’s any day.
This is more than likely a fair statement, but just to add some perspective I will say this as matter of factly as possible:
Robinson against Hakeem in 95 scored ~5 more ppg than Ewing against Hakeem in 94, and Robinson did so on better efficiency (because Ewing
was double teamed with regularity). To score those extra 5 points however, the Spurs/Rockets series was at a faster pace and Robinson attempted
FIFTY free throws more (in a 6 game series) than Ewing did (in a 7 game series).
In 1995 Oljauwon averaged 27.8 ppg in the regular season, 33ppg in the playoffs and 35.3 pgg against the Spurs (Olajuwon was +2.3 ppg better against the Spurs than the postseason as a whole, and a whopping +7.5 ppg better against the Spurs than his regular season average). Robinson averaged 27.6 ppg for the regular season, 25.3 for the playoffs, and 23.8 ppg vs. the Rockets. (Robinson was -2.3ppg for the playoffs compared to his regular season, and -3.8ppg against the Rocket compared to his regular season). In 94, Olajuwon averaged 27.3 ppg in the regular season, 28.9 ppg in the playoffs, but only 26.9 vs the Knicks. (Ewing held Olajuwon not only below his regular season scoring average, but his scoring average for the playoffs that year as well). And while the Rockets routinely double teamed Ewing, The Knicks pretty much opted for single coverage against Olajuwon more than they doubled him. Ewing certainly got outplayed by Olajuwon, but Olajuwon ran Robinson out of the gym, dropping at least
39 (!) points on him in 4 of the 6 games.
In terms of overall play, Ewing out-rebounded Robinson (and Hakeem, in either series), had a better assist to turnover ratio than Robinson, and had more blocks by a significant margin (steals were roughly even). Ewing set a Finals record for both most blocks in a game and most blocks in a 7 game series. Ewing had more blocks through 2 and a half games in 94 than Robinson did all series in 95. Ewing's DRTG in the NY/HOU series was a 95 while Robinson's DRTG in the Rockets/Spurs series was a 107.
So...Robinson scored 5 more ppg on FIFTY more free throw attempts, but Ewing probably played him better overall, and the Knicks certainly gave the Rockets a much tougher series.
Again, Ewing's playoff PPG, APG and TO economy all increased from the regular season to the postseason with more frequency than so for Robinson over the course of their careers. If you are talking strictly regular season numbers, sure, Robinson was more productive on offensive, but he played the majority of his career at a faster pace of play with a style that didn't revolve around pounding the the air out of the ball for the first 20 seconds of the shot clock with a bunch of bricklayers around him.
Here is a rough breakdown of defenses Ewing faced every year in the playoffs from 90-00:
89-90: Detroit (2nd best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 1st in Opponent FG%, 1st in Opponent PPG, 1st in DRTG, 2nd in TO forced)
90-91: Chicago (7th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 2nd in Opponent FG%, 1st in Opponent PPG, 1st in DRTG, 5th in TO forced)
91-92 Detroit (6th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 1st in Opponent FG%, 2nd in Opponent PPG, 3rd in DRTG, 8th in TO forced)
91-92 Chicago (4th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 2nd in Opponent FG%, 6th in Opponent PPG, 2nd in DRTG, 6th in TO forced)
92-93 Charlotte (5th in playoff DRTG and 2nd in TO forced despite not ranking out well in either Opponent PPG or Opponent FG%)
92-93 Chicago (7th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 10th in Opponent FG%, 4th in Opponent PPG, 10th in DRTG, 5th in TO forced)
93-94 New Jersey (10th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 6th in Opponent FG%, 6th in Opponent PPG, 5th in DRTG, 4th in TO forced)
93-94 Chicago (6th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 9th in Opponent FG%, 4th in Opponent PPG, 9th in DRTG, 6th in TO forced)
93-94 Indiana (8th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 4th in Opponent FG%, 1st in Opponent PPG, 1st in DRTG, 2nd in TO forced)
93-94 Houston (2nd best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 1st in Opponent FG%, 7th in Opponent PPG, 6th in DRTG)
94-95 Cleveland (3rd best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 2nd in Opponent PPG, 4th in DRTG, 1st in TO forced)
94-95 Indiana (6th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 10th in Opponent FG%, 8th in Opponent PPG, 8th in DRTG, 8th in TO forced)
95-96 Chicago (1st best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 5th in Opponent FG%, 1st in Opponent PPG, 1st in DRTG, 1st in TO forced)
96-97 Miami (1st best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 1st in Opponent FG%, 1st in Opponent PPG, 1st in DRTG, 8th in TO forced)
97-98 Indiana (5th best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 5th in Opponent FG%, 7th in Opponent PPG, 8th in DRTG, 1st in TO forced)
98-99 Miami (8th best defense in the regular season, Alonzo Mourning DPOY) (Playoffs: 8th in Opponent FG%, 5th in Opponent PPG)
98-99 Atlanta (2nd best defense in the regular season) (Playoffs: 3rd in Opponent PPG, 4th in DRTG)
99-00 Miami (7th best defense in the regular season, Alonzo Mourning DPOY) (Playoffs: 3rd in Opponent FG%, 1st in Opponent PPG, 2nd in DRTG)
So, yes, he literally was facing top 5ish defenses in the playoffs almost every year. Certainly better than what Robinson was facing year in and year out in the Western Conference playoffs.
euroleague wrote:On DRob vs Ewing - the arguments are quite laughable regarding team defenses. When each player is a first option, playing the ball through them and being defended m2m, the team defense of the opposition isn't that important so much as how often they help. DRob was often doubled while teams rarely needed to double Ewing.
In 95, DRob's peak season, he was defended by …peak Hakeem, peak Mutombo, prime Divac and in 96 he was defended by Karl Malone (who had to take DRob quite a bit) and Felton Spencer.
In 90, Ewin'g peak, he dominated against 36 year old Robert Parish and had a bad series with 1 good game and 1 empty stats game while getting blown out against the bad boy pistons...defended by Laimbeer.
DRob's competition at Center was so much higher, the comparison is absurd. Even in 1990, DRob held his own as a rookie head to head. In 95, DRob was blowing Ewing out of the water.
I already addressed the claim about Ewing not getting double teamed, but I'll provide some extra "context" to the rest of this quote....
As for Ewing having a "bad" series against the Pistons, he averaged 27, 10reb and 2ast with 2 blocks on 56%TS on a much better turnover economy than his regular season averages that year. He also had the highest GMscore of any player on either team that series. And this again, was against a historically great defensive team, who were the defending champs en route to a repeat. I wouldn't say Ewing had a bad series so much as he simply lost to a better team.
As for man defense outweighing team defense...
It was claimed in 90 that Ewing dominated a washed up 36 year old Robert Parish and an (implied to be) defensively deficient Bill Laimbeer. Laimbeer had a playoff DRTG of 96 and a DBPM of 4.9 (both better than his regular season DRTG and DBPM). Parish meanwhile, while not necessarily "impressive" by any defensive metrics, still had the best postseason DRTG on his team (116) and was the only player on the roster with a positive DBPM in the playoffs. Kevin McHale also spent time guarding Ewing this series and he was 2nd team All Defense this season.
In 95 Robinson was guarded primarily by Mutombo, Divac/Elden Campbell and Olajuwon. Mutombo, while the DPOY only had a regular season DRTG of 103 (worse than Laimbeer) and a DBPM of 4.4. In the playoffs, Mutombo's DRTG was 117 (!) and his DBPM was 1.7. So Mutombo's playoff DRTG and DBPM were both SIGNIFICANTLY worse than Laimbeer, and his playoff DRTG was worse than "36 year old washed up Robert Parish" as well.
Seeing that Mutombo's defensive metrics were not only bad in a vacuum, but also much worse than his regular season marks, you would think that Robinson dragged him all over the court. But Robinson's averages that series? 19ppg, 6.7 rpg, 3.3 apg, 2 steals and 1.3 blocks on 43% FG. I wouldn't exactly call this blowing
anybody out of the water.
Against the Lakers, Divac and Elden Campbell both had playoff DRTG's of 106, and DBPMs of 3.4 and 4.1 respectively. Both still inferior to Laimbeer. Robinson spanked the Lakers front court (as he should have), but the Lakers were not a great defensive team and actually had an expected W-L this year that was BELOW .500 (40-42). So again, Robinson was feasting on a not great team, that also lacked great individual post defenders to offset that by virtue of man to man coverage on Robinson. Good for Robinson, but this is what E-balla was talking about with Robinson beating up on "cupcake teams".
Against the Rockets, Houston as a team was 5th in playoff points allowed and 9th in team DRTG. Hakeem's regular season DRTG (100) and DBPM (4.0) were both better than his playoff DRTG (108) and DBPM (3.7). Yet, in the postseason he still held Robinson below his season averages in Points, Assists, and TS% with Robinson playing almost 4 more minutes per game in this series compared to his regular season allotment. Robinson also committed almost 2 more turnovers per game while seeing a reduction in USG.
So the Pistons in 90 were better as a defensive unit as a team than any squad Robinson played in the playoffs in 95. And Laimbeer had better individual defensive impact stats than any player who guarded Robinson that postseason. And Ewing still outplayed Robinson from a box score standpoint, while also playing at a much slower pace (Detroit played at the 2nd slowest pace of any playoff team in 90....15th out of 16, Boston was 3rd out of 16). In 95, the slowest paced team the Spurs played were the Lakers who were 8th out of 16. Denver was 4th and Houston was 2nd.
And this is before we even take into account that Robinson's supposedly superior postseason run of 95 came against 3 sub-50 win teams. Granted, the 95 Rockets were much better than their 47-35 record indicated. But both the Nuggets and the Lakers that year were inferior to either the 90 Celtics (52 wins) or the 90 Pistons (59 wins). Ewing and the Knicks came back from an 0-2 deficit to beat the Celtics in an elimination game on the road. The Spurs had homecourt advantage against the Rockets, dropped both of the first 2 games in San Antonio, and lost the series in 6.
I'm not sure you can paint Robinson's 95 playoff run as better than Ewing's 90 run in any way other than trying to boil everything down to BPM or WS and then saying "See! This magic number says Robinson was better so it must be true". Absent of context, those numbers do not tell the entire story.
And this STILL does not explain why Robinson's 95 playoffs vs. Ewing's 90 playoffs was even brought up in the first place in an attempt to debunk the entirely different claim that over the course of their entire primes, Ewing played better than Robinson did against upper tier defenses. It was a silly thing to use as a counterpoint, but even in doing so, upon close examination, we can see that even in those individual years Ewing played as well or better against good defenses as Robinson did against bad and mediocre ones. And that is irrespective of whether you are defining a defense as being good based on the team's overall defense ranking or the individual man defenders that were guarding each player (in so far as we can quantify such things).
Also FWIW in comparing them as franchise players...Ewing lost a series as a higher seed 3 times (twice against Jordan). Robinson lost a series as a higher seed 5 times. Ewing won a series as a lower seed 6 times. Robinson won a series as a lower seed
ZERO times. Ewing also has a better record in game 7's (and game 5's when the first round was best 3 out of 5), and close out games in general. None of that proves anything definitively of course, but it's an additional point to ponder when thinking about them in terms of "leaders" on teams that were expected to contend for championships.
Basketball is not played in an excel spreadsheet and BPM and WS are not magic numbers that somehow refute claims where other pieces of evidence might lead us to a different conclusion. If any of you want to nitpick any of this additional context, feel free (I personally am not a fan of using DBPM for example), but at least now some more "context" has been provided.