AEnigma wrote:BenoUdrihFTL wrote:AEnigma wrote:Weird to write all of this while completely sidestepping this post:
Odd to accuse me of "completely sidestepping" when this Colbinii post was actually his second response to the same post of mine. I replied to his original response and this second response slipped under my radar. Looking at it now, I didn't miss much as it's essentially the same on/off argument he already put forthAEnigma wrote:For my own part, the idea that defenders singularly anchor all-time great defences seems facially ridiculous.
An interesting take. In any case, I can't claim full ownership of the idea I put forth. I'm saying I agree with the commonly held belief that interior defense is the single most important single element of overall team defense, and elite rim-protectors have a greater impact on their team's interior defense than do other players fulfilling other rolesAEnigma wrote:Is Dikembe Mutombo not an all-time great defender because of 1995/1996/1998/2000?
Mutombo and Atlanta's numbers don't suit your interest here, not sure why you cited himAEnigma wrote:Is Patrick Ewing the best defender of the past forty years? He anchored a lot of all-time great defences.
Was Patrick Ewing most responsible for New York's dominant defense? That's the relevant questionAEnigma wrote:Why did someone like Hakeem not do the same?
Ugh... teammates? Coaching? I'm aware this is an intended "gotcha" but it fails for reasons that should be clear. To assert that X is most impactful on Y isn't a declaration that non-X is irrelevantAEnigma wrote:Or is Hakeem just overrated because individually he never broke that -5 drtg mark?
So strawman, much misrepresentationAEnigma wrote:Regardless, both he and Ewing have better results than someone like Dikembe, even though Dikembe more purely fits this shotblocking archetype you value so completely above all else.
It's becoming a trend, the strawman thing. In any case I suggest you recheck your Deke dataAEnigma wrote:Alonzo Mourning has a -6 defence under his belt; does he too have the higher defensive peak?
I consider peak Zo to be among the most impactful defenders in NBA history, so his performance here doesn't contradict my argument. It rather supports itAEnigma wrote:Interestingly — and with the acknowledgment the core point of this particular argument can be applied to Boston Garnett too — Howard shares something of a defensive through-line with Patrick Ewing and Alonzo Mourning; do you happen to know what it is?
No? Howard and Mourning both played for SVG but Ewing was coached by Stan's brotherAEnigma wrote:Why did the 2006 Pistons and 1992/93 Spurs take such a step back defensively after a certain bench individual left the team?
Because coaching matters and Larry Brown was an excellent defensive coach?
If the question is whether prime versions of Mutombo, Ewing, Olajuwon and Mourning were more valuable defenders than KG, my answer would be that evidence says they were. If you were trying to dismantle my argument with examples of inferior defenders boosted by what you perceive to be my criteria, you could've done a lot better than these 4 ATG defensive monsters
So teammates and coaching systems matter. “Merely” anchoring a -4 drtg is not prohibitive because of teammates and coaching systems. Data matters — we know these defenders are impactful. And on different teams that have better schemes or teammates, or even with changes on the same team over time, we can see drastically different results in team defence.
So apart from simply disbelieving that he could possibly be as important as any all-time rim protector, what is the case against Garnett, who generally had poor defensive support and systems in Minnesota but regularly showed giant impact on his team and at his best had the team playing at elite levels, then went to Boston and anchored historically great defences which also collapsed without him?
Data is only relevant when it fits my priors tbh













