tsherkin wrote:LAL1947 wrote:I read what you said... and I've brought up Shaq there to lead on to my next point. Despite Shaq having the better "scoring resilience"... and having the better team (IMO atleast)... he still lost to Karl Malone's Jazz twice in a row! The Lakers lost 1-4 in 1996-97 and got swept 0-4 in 1997-98. Surely that has to count for something.
No, it doesn't really count for anything. The Jazz were obviously the better team, and individual ability matters only so much to team success. This much is staggeringly obvious, and a lesson repeatedly handed down decade after decade.
Malone was a good player, and in fact an ATG player. But his style of play (particularly later in his career) created some specific challenges. He was heavily jumper-reliant after the early 90s, which didn't help him, and he was not an especially remarkable isolation player. He was very good off-ball, and he had some decent bully ball in him, but by and large, he lost a significant amount of effect come the playoffs. He started from such a high beginning point that a lot of the time, he was still at least league-average in efficiency, and even then, there's some value to what he was doing bootstrapping their offense with inefficient scoring without much in the way of scoring help around him, for sure. But like David Robinson, you could almost count on him to look nothing like his RS self once the playoffs got under way, and that's a problem, particularly in a comparison with players filling a similar role for whom that was not true (like Shaq and Dream).
I agree with some of the things you're saying about Malone's playing style. Yet don't you think you're being too harsh on him by saying, "you could almost count on him to look nothing like his RS self once the playoffs got under way"?
Even in 1997-98, when Malone was age 34yo...
- RS Averages: 27.0 PPG, 53.0 FG%, 59.7 TS%
- Playoffs vs Lakers: 30.0 PPG, 50.6 FG%, 59.3 TS%
More points, similar TS%, slightly lower FG%.
Utah starting 5: Stockton (35), Hornacek (34), Byron Russell (27), Malone (34), Greg Foster (29)
Lakers starting 5: Fisher (23), Eddie Jones (26), Rick Fox (28), Horry (27), Shaq (25)
That team swept the Lakers 0-4... and it wasn't that bad of a team to lose in that manner. Everyone except maybe Fisher was in prime physical condition, and Fisher split minutes with Van Exel (26yo). This was prime Horry and Fox, not the hobbling versions from 2002-03.
In another thread that I found today, the PC Board voted Eddie Jones as the 6th best defensive SG of all-time while leaving Kobe off that Top 10. So Eddie must've been pretty good to earn that praise, lol.
Anyway, I'm not saying he was a better player than Hakeem or Shaq... just saying that I feel Malone performed the best with what he had during the whole 1990s, i.e., after MJ and Hakeem. The two wins over Shaq's Lakers seals the deal for me against Shaq.