So, this debate's been going on for as long as I've been on RealGM, and I don't really relish getting into arguments at the moment, but since I've thought a lot about it, here are some thoughts:
1. I have Nash higher on my list.
2. I see Nash with the better offense and higher peak, I see Stockton with the better defense and long longevity. Anyone who agrees with these statement is someone I'm largely in agreement with, even if we end up disagreeing on the GOAT list ordering.
3. When I came on RealGM in '04-05, this was a debate on everyone's minds. One argument used against Nash as an MVP candidate was "He's not even as good as Stockton, and obviously Stockton's not an MVP level player". I was coming at this having recently changed my mind (pre-RealGM) from "Obviously a guy who looks like Nash can't be MVP", too "I can't believe it, but I think Nash is actually the MVP". My response to that point about Stockton at the time was:
Whether or not Nash is better than Stockton was, are we sure that Stockton wasn't an MVP player? Are we sure that Stockton wasn't more valuable than Malone? And these were questions I looked into earnestly over the years with an open mind.
4. When we first got access to +/- data late in Stockton's career, it was essentially exactly what we were looking for as an indicator that Stockton might have been the true Jazz MVP, and I think a lot of us have kept that in mind ever since.
However, a key point at the time was this: We're not seeing data from prime Malone/Stockton. We're seeing stuff from their post-prime, during which Malone was still a big minute volume scorer but Stockton had become a limited minutes guy in a non-volume scoring role - the former can help how a player looks like +/-, while the latter allows you to age much more gracefully.
This left me and others waiting for earlier +/- data, and among other things, looking to see if we still saw an argument for Stockton over Malone once we got that data.
5. At this point we have raw +/- data back to '93-94 (in the regular season), and I would say it's given a resounding "Malone was the MVP when the Jazz mattered" answer. In the 6 '90s years where we have data, the data we have gives Malone the total +/- edge in 5 of those 6 years, and in the one exception ('95-96, where we don't have playoff data), I find it awfully hard to look at what happened in the playoffs and see Stockton as the better player.
To me this says pretty definitively that any notion of Stockton actually being someone who should have been considered as a serious MVP candidate - going against what the basketball thought was at the time - is misguided, which is certainly relevant to the debate in this thread where he's being compared to a guy who absolutely deserved to be seen as a serious MVP candidate.
6. From there, that takes us to what I'd say is actually the key question on people's minds when they have this debate, more so than who actually had the greater career:
Is it reasonable to see Stockton as someone who could have done what Nash did if only he'd been given the opportunity?
Before diving into some specifics, I think it's important to note that anyone answering "Yes" and having that be a key point in why they pick Stockton over Nash in this thread's debate, is not going based on what the player actually did, but what Stockton could have done.
I'm certainly not going to say this is a fundamentally wrong approach, but you've got to be careful when you do this. For example:
I think it's almost a certainty that both Stockton & Nash were less raw coming out of college than most of their peers - 4 year college players, smarter than their peers, not remotely drafted with an eye toward "upside", yet both took several years before they were given NBA floor generalship. Should we then treat their early years as back-ups as all-star years?
You do you, but if you're treating Stockton as if he had better-than-MVP-Nash play inside him, and giving him the nod based on that, then why not give both these guys credit for those early years when he should have had the ball in his hands and didn't?
Okay all that aside, on the question of whether Stockton could have done what Nash did?
7. I'd acknowledge a frustrating uncertainty here. On some level we'll never know.
What do we know?
8. That the initial impression that Nash represented what point guards would do in the new era, and thus guys like Stockton, Isiah, Price, etc, could "bump up to" in the new era simply because the landscape had changed, has not proven correct.
We're now 17+ years away from when the Nash MVP debate began, and we've never seen any point guard that really resembles Nash's offensive dominance. When we look at the other guys in the running to possibly being better offensive players than Nash since then, they don't even play a role that resembles a "traditional point guard".
17 years ago people might have thought we'd be seeing a ton of a ball dominant 6'3"-ish guys dominate the ball as pass-first playmakers, but it hasn't happened. The closest to Nash would be Chris Paul, and he doesn't approach the role similarly to Nash. Frankly, I'd say Stockton & Paul were the more similar players, which makes it hard to swallow the idea that if Stockton in a later era he'd naturally play like Nash. Seems more likely that he'd play like Paul.
9. We know that Stockton's APG numbers are a considerably bigger deal to people who analyze Stockton after the fact than it was seen at the time, and that there's a tendency to look at APG as a proxy for playmaking ability/value.
10. But we also know that an offense's trend toward assist-creation, and specifically assist creation by one individual, is not the same as playmaking value. We now have the term "Rondo Assist" for an assist created by a guy who gets to dominate the ball and then pass it to guys in less valuable scoring position who are then expected to shoot quickly enough that the guy who passed it to them will be credited with an assist, but we have data pertaining to this from Stockton's career too.
11. I saw that it was pointed out that Stockton was racking up assists before Sloan as proof that he wasn't a product of Sloan, and that's true, but it ignores the fact that the Jazz were playing in what could be called an "assist-inflating system" - based on assist generation outstripping ORtg - under the previous coach (Leydon) even before Stockton was in the pros.
12. There's also the matter that Stockton - like most glamour-assist guys - seemed to get extra assists credited to him at home, while Nash is the rare example of a guy who seems to have a stingy hometown scorekeeper.
13. There's also the matter that Nash played in a slower era, with lower league ORtgs, and less FG's being produced in general.
All of that are reasons to take APG with a grain of salt, even before we consider that with Nash assisting on 3's more than Stockton, the value of his assists would be expected to be more valuable on average even without the gravitational impact of his "Nashing" style of probing the defense.
14. With all that said about assists, probably the bigger question to me is about Stockton's volume scoring capacity. As has been pointed out in this thread, we have this weird thing where Stockton plays most of his career as just about the most conservative shooter you can imagine...but early in his career he doesn't seem to be like this.
15. Those arguing that the early stuff represents Stockton's true tendency and and capacity have a point that makes sense from a narrative arc perspective, but it's not that simple.
16. First, as I alluded to before, there's the matter of it mattering how guys actually played. We have plenty of footage of Stockton in his prime where he has plenty of opening to take a shot that not only would Nash have taken, but point guards from Stockton's era would have taken.
17. Second, there's the matter that the Jazz offense really doesn't get bogged down in the playoffs because Stockton isn't behaving like a scoring threat. One thing to feed your man on the interior as Plan A, but as a point guard, much of your job is supposed to be figuring out what else to do when the defense is ready for Plan A.
18. We can certainly attribute some of the blame to Sloan here, but we should remember that the next time Sloan had an all-star point guard, that point guard didn't seem held back in the same way at all.
19. It's entirely possible that Malone is the actual issue here - in terms of him petulantly demanding the ball, and Stockton & Sloan feeling like they have to do what Malone wants - but that point would seem more significant if we actually had indicators that Stockton was the more essential piece when the team was contending for a title, and as I said before, that's not what the data says to me.
20. There's the matter we need to make sure we don't end up looking to equate these two players' skills because we see superficial similarities.
Stockton should have shot some of the shots he didn't take, but he was also nowhere near what Nash was as a shooter, and so much of what Nash was able to do gravitationally came from the fact that he was a threat to make a shot anywhere in the half-court. When Nash was shooting those runners & floaters, often off "the wrong foot", what he was doing was taking advantage of a moment when his shot couldn't be blocked by taking a much harder shot than most guys shooting the ball from that spot on the floor. Nash isn't the only guy in history to do this, but such was Nash's shooting ability that there was data to suggest that Nash was the best all-half-court shooter of his era even before attempting to factor in degree of difficulty.
21. I realize I haven't talked about the misguided notions of "system players". The maddening thing to me here is that this was something that was instantly rebuttable in 2004 if you understood the root of the term, yet it became clear that people would continue using it as a criticism of Nash for forever simply because it "felt right" to them.
"System player" is a generalization of the term "system quarterback" in football. A "system quarterback" is a college player who puts up huge numbers because of the college system he's in, but can't do it in the pros even if you give him that same system. The term was invented after back-to-back University of Houston quarterbacks (Andre Ware & David Klingler) were drafted very high and became busts. The "system quarterback" tag was thus a label created after scouting mistakes were made so that future scouts would be warier about expecting college performance at a university known for big numbers to be able to do it in the pros.
The terms "system quarterback" was never, ever, ever, ever, EVER intended to mean "He's a very valuable NFL player, but you have to build the system around his strengths", else Michael Vick would have been called a "system quarterback" coming out of college.
So note first here that the idea of applying "system player" to guys who were already in the pros killing it, is the wrong way to use the term, despite the fact that people who use this in basketball typically use it exclusively to refer to these players. Hence, if you see someone using the term "system player" on these boards to criticize a player, know that this is someone who doesn't understand the term they are using.
22. Worse, if we map "system quarterback" into stats, what it would mean is essentially "a guy who has big stats, but isn't hard to replace". Aka "big production, small impact". This is "worse" because it's literally the opposite of what was going on when people used it against Nash. Literally, it was the absence of his production - particularly PPG - that was central to why people were so suspect of him, and it was his impact that was putting him in the MVP race.
People didn't just use a term they didn't understand, they looked to apply it in precisely the opposite direction to what would be reasonable...and it made them look foolish in '04-05. I'll refrain from going further about what it says about folks who are seen doing it in 2022.
23. I also haven't mentioned the whole "but it's a gimmick offense" attack. People have rebutted it well in this thread, but I'd be remiss if I didn't address it because again, it's people being 180 degrees wrong. The argument at the time was that the offense now known as "pace & space" a) didn't work in the playoffs, and b) prevented you from having a great defense. All of this stuff was disproved very quickly for anyone looking to see if it could be disproved, but most who used the argument never adjusted...which has become more and more bizarre with time.
At this point, as y'all know I tend to say: "pace & space" is just how you play winning basketball, and the bizarre thing is that this would have even more true 40 years ago, yet the collective epiphany equates it to something that only happened recently while also trying to insist that rule changes made the difference.
24. The rule changes of the past 40 years are not what has made the difference. Period.
The key rule change of the past 40 years was the removal of the illegal defense rules in 2001, which made it HARDER for the offense and EASIER for the defense. And in fact, if you look back to 2001, you can find guys like Pat Riley who are against the rule change because they thought it would hurt the offense. And of course it did until the offenses changed their strategies to pace & space.
They got rid of the illegal defense rule not to make things easier for offenses, but to sour the milk of the existing strategies and encourage them to try to play faster. And of course, that's precisely what's happened.
25. What about the hand check rule change of 2004? It had an effect helping offense in the short term, but that effect was a) minor compared to what happened as pace & space really came into its own, and b) hand check rules are nothing new, and the NBA has periodically made tweaks that were really more points of emphasis for decades whenever defenders started abusing the actual rule that's been around for a very long time - no shoving the guy who is driving with the ball.
26. Finally, I'm going to bring up what we know about Nash as an athlete beyond basketball - feel free to bring up stuff about Stockton if you're aware of it as I'm not saying it doesn't exist, but I think we need to remember what an outlier Nash was beyond the court.
In high school, Nash was a star player not just in basketball, but in soccer (where is father & brother were pros), hockey, lacrosse & rugby, and he had impressed so much as a shortstop prospect in baseball prior to high school, that there was a scout actively encouraging him to go back to baseball in high school, and then to walk on to the Santa Clara baseball team (since he was there for basketball anyway).
There's actually even an
academic paper on Steve Nash's athleticism, where one of the reasons Nash's case study is so special is that he's not someone who only operates on intuition. He had great intuition yes, but he also methodically built up his skills quite consciously from a young age.
None of this necessarily means Nash was better at basketball than Player X - be it Stockton or anyone else - but I do think it's critical to understand that Nash represents an extreme outlier in areas that we wouldn't necessarily see as related. We're talking about someone with a) extremely fast neural processing, b) extremely good fine-motor skills, c) extremely good general balance and body control, d) extreme creativity & anticipation, e) extreme awareness of his body and skills, f) extreme planning and drive to perfect his game.
Of course, we all think of him at a time where he had back issues that hampered some of what he could show on the court, and that's not something I'd suggest we should simply ignore to credit him with more than he actually did, but I think it's important to point out that part of what he was doing in those years was figuring out how to compensate for these issues that didn't exist when he was young.
As I look back on how he's talked about 17 years after he became a lightning rod, I just think it's so critical to understand that we haven't seen "a bunch of new Nashes" like we would expect if he were simply the right guy at the right time. Dude was a freak, and while that doesn't mean he was better than X, it does mean I think we should be very, very cautious about assuming other players ought to be able to do what Nash did if only given the opportunity.