SNPA wrote:There was not a single Kings fan in the 99 to early aughts period that thought Webber was not the leader of that team. It was far and wide considered the case without question.
Right, I never contended otherwise. He was the "star" and leader in that he was the most recognizable, took the most shots, and had the prettiest game. But that's not an exact correlation to goodness.
SNPA wrote:Peja coming into his own at the physical prime of his career at that point skews the numbers in favor of Miller. Miller had a fringe MVP candidate in Peja, that matters a lot. Plus, that whole team had more time together under the same coach and system. These things all add up.
It's true that Peja had an outlier shooting year compared to the rest of his career, but his role in the offense also changed. 2004 was his career peak in minutes played, FGA, and USG%. He was assisted on his 2pFG more than ever before. The Kings offense as a whole went from +2.5 eFG% to +3.6 eFG%. They also went from 28th in FTAs to 9th (FT drawing being a notable weakness of Webbers). It would be quite a stroke of coincidence that Peja and the Kings just happened to peak right as Webber was injured and Miller got more time; I think the more likely conclusion is staring at you in the face but you may not want to see it.
Consistency goes a long way, but the results are too damning to flimsily credit the historic offense to that. Take a look at the Kings offensive evolution from Webber's inaugural season to the 2005 season:
+0.5 --> +0.9 --> +2.6 --> +4.5 --> +2.3 --(Miller now arrives and Webber is hurt)--> +7.4 --(Miller and Webber are both hurt, though Miller plays about 400 more minutes)--> +4.4
Teams don't just jump 5 points in rORTG because of being together for so long even when their supposed best player gets hurt...
SNPA wrote:I’m happy to concede Miller was a better jump shooter from the elbow to three. He wasn’t as dynamic a player overall though. He was a super high level replacement, not the cornerstone of the Greatest Show on Court. Give a healthy Webber that version of Peja… And shooting mid rangers was never what Webb was best at, again, he was doing what the team needed to win. He was fitting in with the Princeton and it was working beautifully. He was sacrificing elements of his game for the greater good of his teammates. He should be rewarded for that, not put down for it.
At this point it seems like we are just talking past one another. Yes I know the general NBA fandom and media labeled the early aughts Kings as the Greatest Show on Court, that doesn't take away from the fact that they were at their most potent in 2004 and just as potent in 2005. Webber generally had the same Peja, he was just taking more inefficient shots because...sacrifice or something. I am NOT saying Webber was bad or what he was doing didn't work, simply that Miller was BETTER at it. If you consider that an attack on Webber then you may have some personal, nostalgic biases in the way.
Surely you can understand why I think it is ridiculous to claim Webber was sacrificing for his teammates, when they shot better and had a much better offense without him, right?
SNPA wrote:As for Webber’s legacy and what tier he belongs in, if he is not screwed in the biggest screw job in the history of the sport what happens? He wins a title, beating the prime Kobe/Shaq/Phil Lakers (Nets were not a factor). Yeah, I think that massively changes the narrative of his career. I don’t see how it can be argued otherwise. Generally, I’m open to counter evidence but the odds of convincing me that outcome doesn’t dramatically change his legacy is damn near zero. He’d have a humongous accomplishment that would rival his competitors. Would he be considered the best amongst them? That’s not the argument.
Again, seems important to mention that Peja was out so that's a huge loss. And regular season matchups aren't the best indicators, but the Nets at least showed some capability in beating the Kings comfortably, something they didn't show with the Lakers. Ironically, the Nets lost to the Kings by 1 early in the season when Webber wasn't playing, and then whooped the Kings by 34 later in the season when Webber was playing. I only use these data points to say it's not a certainty that the Kings even beat the Nets in the finals, nothing more. If they do win the finals, then his reputation certainly gets a huge boost. It wouldn't change how good he actually was though, and in a conversation of GOODNESS, he still wouldn't belong in the Dirk/KG/Duncan tier.