henshao wrote:
maybe someone more focused than I can draw some sort of conclusion from these because they only make it muddier for me, other than supporting the general perception that David Robinson was a regular season stud and playoff dud
Everyone remembers that he was rooked by Olajuwon, yeah? That's the prevailing narrative. And of course, his playoff drop-offs are known. That season was no different, though it was a bit better than his average performance ITO playoff OBPM. Defensive impact measured by playoff DWS led the league, and his playoff DBPM was higher than anyone on that list except Shawn Kemp. Solid second-tier overall playoff BPM.
Stank against Denver offensively. Looked better against the Lakers. Nothing like his RS efficiency, but he put about 30/16 on LA on around 53.5% TS, was killing the offensive glass, etc. Led the game in PTS the last four straight games, and tied or led the game in rebounding from games 3-5. Front court, of course, was Elden Campbell and Vlade Divac, so make of that what you will. This was a couple years before Shaq. Unremarkable FG% backed up by excellent FT draw, which is sort of a hallmark of Robinson in the playoffs. Came up with a big game to close out the series, though. 31/15 on 63.8% TS, 11/12 at the line, 10/19 from the field. +11 going into the 4th in a game they won by 12. Not a smooth face-up guy, looked really slow and indecisive, not aggressive. Picked up his dribble way too much.
Ball-handling and playmaking really sucked from San Antonio's guards. They let the Lakers get within 2. 4:21 remaining, they're +6. Lots of turnovers and fouls for Robinson. He really had no feel whatsoever in this game. Bob Hill had maybe the worst-looking normal suit I've seen, shy of the really aggressive, peacocking nonsense you see from Don Cherry, or used to from Craig Sager, or Russell Westbrook. It looks like someone inflated him with air like in a cartoon. Robinson's 5th foul was BS. He finally hit a couple of jumpers, squeaked in on the secondary for a play. Nothing remarkable, but some decent off-ball play. He looked like crap every time he isolated, but when he took a quick J or moved around someone else's action, he did well. SO yeah, not the most stunning performance I've ever seen, but he did put points on the board in the 4th to help put away the Lakers.
Also, watching slow-footed Elden Campbell was as funny this time as the first time, hehe.
Olajuwon was in beast mode. He'd put 35 ppg on 60.6% TS against Utah while shooting under 67% from the line. Struggled a bit with the Suns, 29.6 ppg on 52.7% TS (mainly from 61.4% FT, though, he shot almost 51% from the field). He put 32.8 ppg on Shaq, but again at 51.4% TS. Was better at the line (69.3%) but Shaq and Orlando held him to 48.3% FG on 29 FGA/g. That, of course, was more of a moral victory than anything else, of course, because he was scoring all over them and they couldn't do enough to counter. Turnovers were a huge problem for Orlando, and especially Shaq. Against Robinson in the WCFs, he posted 35.3 ppg on 59% TS. Robinson actually posted 23.8 ppg on 55.3% TS (shot just under 45% from the field, though), but he was helpless trying to stop Olajuwon.