falcolombardi wrote:Dutchball97 wrote:I have a hard time with properly grading the offense of Steve Nash. He's obviously a great offensive force but was he so good he's arguably the GOAT on offense? I'm just not quite sure. 2005 especially is messing with my head on this. On one hand Dallas didn't miss a beat without him so it's hard to say he was extremely important for their offense but then he also almost singlehandedly turned the Suns from a below average offense to best in the league on that side of the ball.
His PI RAPM (which is probably the main reason for his hype here) goes from really good in Dallas (+2 to +3 range) to all-time great in Phoenix (+6, +7). The odd thing to me is that there is no significant uptick in terms of usage so it's not like this is simply due to him taking on a much larger role and his boxscore production remains almost the same as well. I'm just not really buying Nash suddenly becoming the best offensive player overnight on the Suns when there is otherwise very little to suggest he's on a completely different level than the last few years in Dallas.
There was a big discussion about Jordan being so effective on offense due to his teams being optimized around him but you never really hear this brought up about Nash. Isn't it fair to say Nash landed in a very helpful environment for him to thrive? The 7 seconds or less offense was more or less build on the skillset of Nash. If someone has a different perspective on this please share as I might very well be missing something.
I dont think the reason people are so high on nash is only his plus-minus metrics as you say. The team offense results are probably a bigger reason why
But either way i am high on him more so because of his skillset. One which was very well complimented by his coach and teammates in phoenix no doubt, but he created goat (no hyperbole) level offense with that opportunity so what more can you ask of him there?
What I meant with the +- stuff is that Nash doesn't particularly stand out among all-time greats in terms of raw production, boxscore stats or team success but it's the +- metrics where he ranks incredibly highly so I assume people who have Nash higher than average are likely taking +- into account pretty heavily. I'm not insinuating Nash shouldn't be getting any type of support as an offensive GOAT candidate, I personally have a hard time seeing the case for him but am open to arguments.
Like the offensive team results are great but obviously like I said how much of that is because of Nash and how much is that because of system/coaching/teammates etc? What I'm getting at with that is that Nash didn't move the needle that much in Dallas but had a huge positive effect for the Suns on offense so it's not as clear for him as for some other players in my eyes.
You can't really ask more of Nash in Phoenix, he did an amazing job. The thing is that the likes of Jordan and LeBron get pretty extreme scrutiny over how much of their offensive success was because of them and if they'd be able to replicate or come close to that level in less fortunate team environments. Because of this divide between his impact in Dallas and Phoenix I have a harder time seeing Nash able to replicate his GOAT level offenses anywhere. Still though I'm not just stating Nash isn't as good offensively as some people here make it seem, I'm saying I can see why people have him that high up but Dallas not really dropping off at all offensively when he left gives reason for doubt. While in most basketball discussions you're up against people who are pretty low on Nash so it rarely comes up but in a more critical and knowledgable board like this I feel like there should be some room to question whether Nash might be getting more benefit of the doubt on his portability than others.









