Rate between three duos

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Re: Rate between three duos 

Post#41 » by 70sFan » Fri Dec 30, 2022 7:44 am

migya wrote:I didn't say anyone did, but the topic of discussion was Garnett's relatively weak scoring, which is weak compared to some non star players in the PO. Robinson is held to his drop in scoring and efficiency in the playoffs, though it's less significant than Garnett's, and Garnett isn't. A total double standard.

Both players are hurt by their postseason drop off, otherwise Garnett would be ranked close to top 5 like Duncan usually is on this board. I really struggle to understand why you think Garnett scoring isn't held against him, it definitely is.

I want to add one thing - Garnett scoring dropped in the playoffs but his main offensive strengths (passing and shooting) remained consistent. Robinson still drew a lot of fouls, these players were still very impactful even with weaker scoring numbers.

Garnett was a star and had to lead his team on both ends like other alltime bigs did theirs. Robinson, Olajuwon, Shaq, Duncan, Malone, Kareem and Chamberlain are all examples of bigs that did so.

Garnett led 2008 Celtics on both ends of the floor and they won the title.

Barkley's massive offensive impact contributed more to his teams winning than Garnett's defense.

Anything to back it up?
How about Garnett's offense vs Barkley's defense?

It is easier to find good defensive bigs that aren't good scorers than good scoring bigs.

Maybe, but it doesn't mean that good scoring bigs (who are also poor defenders) are more impactful than good defenders (who are actually good scorers).

Barkley had Bol, not versatile but a great shotblocker, in Philly and that gave them enough for Barkley to flourish. Nowitzki had a similar situation.

Maybe I am missing something, but Barkley-Bol duo didn't win anything relevant.

This was the whole quote. The other factors are, as I said earlier, that Barkley gets more assists than Garnett, more rebounds, draws more fouls and the metrics are higher for him.

But you are wrong again. If we compare Barkley's career with Garnett through 21-36 years (Barkley's whole career), then he has no visible advantage in rebounding or passing:

1985-00 Barkley: 18.2 TRB%, 17.5 AST%
1998-13 Garnett: 17.5 TRB%, 20.5 AST%

Barkley has a slim edge on the boards, but it's Garnett who actually had more assists. Garnett was a better passer than Barkley.

This is not the case between Nash and Kidd, where Nash provides nothing outside of efficient but not very good scoring and playmaking. Kidd's metrics were better and ofcourse defense.

This is why you should go beyond "advanced stats". Steve Nash came to Phoenix and turned them into the best offensive team of all-time. His "efficient but not very good scoring and playmaking" made him one of the greatest offensive players in the whole history of the league. Nash was basically the best shooter ever before Curry got drafted. Kidd never anchored elite offense, even once in his career and it's not true that he never had help.

The difference on offense between Kidd and Nash is much, much bigger than between Garnett and Barkley (even though this difference is already quite big).

Garnett provides nothing better than Barkley than defense, Kidd provides more than just defense better than Nash.

Garnett was a better passer, even by crude "advanced stats".
What Kidd provided on offense that Nash couldn't? Nash was a better shooter, passer, playmaker, finisher, FT shooter, transition player, ball-handler... Kidd has rebounding I suppose, but it means very little.

I said his efficiency wasn't much better than Kidd's which it wasn't, it's only 2.5ts% higher and only 52.5ts%. A player with 55ts%, which isn't considered high, has the same difference in ts% to Garnett. Again, Garnett had to perform better for his team to win.

Now use the same criteria for Robinson. He had to perform better for his team to win.

But nothing else he did was great and didn't help his team win. His PO performances are mostly below the level of most top 20 players and great bigs.

That's not true, Garnett was elite passer and shooter for his position.

And Garnett didn't perform that well in context.

In 01 he played even to Duncan, a good performance not great.

Playing even to Duncan against such an amazing defense like 2001 Spurs isn't a great performance? It's better performance against quality defense than anything Kidd (or Robinson) did in his career.

In 02 his raw numbers are good but his impact wasn't and he got totally outplayed by Nowitzki. So much has been made of Robinson being outplayed by Olajuwon in the wcf in 95 but he was double teamed and got no defensive help, his team lost in a close six games. Garnett got swept by a young and inexperienced Dallas team.

So you realize that Robinson criticism is too harsh, but at the same time you have no problem with doing the same with Garnett... Got it, no double standards.

Stick to the subject of the thread, it's about comparison between the duos which you haven't contributed to.

It is about the subject. You ignore gigantic efficiency gap between Kidd and Nash, while you focus on Barkley's efficiency advantage over Garnett.

Do you view Robinson higher than Garnett?

No, because Garnett has much better longevity. I view their peaks in similar light though.
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Re: Rate between three duos 

Post#42 » by migya » Fri Dec 30, 2022 10:01 am

70sFan wrote:
migya wrote:I didn't say anyone did, but the topic of discussion was Garnett's relatively weak scoring, which is weak compared to some non star players in the PO. Robinson is held to his drop in scoring and efficiency in the playoffs, though it's less significant than Garnett's, and Garnett isn't. A total double standard.

Both players are hurt by their postseason drop off, otherwise Garnett would be ranked close to top 5 like Duncan usually is on this board. I really struggle to understand why you think Garnett scoring isn't held against him, it definitely is.

I want to add one thing - Garnett scoring dropped in the playoffs but his main offensive strengths (passing and shooting) remained consistent. Robinson still drew a lot of fouls, these players were still very impactful even with weaker scoring numbers.


As I said, the drop off for Garnett is greater. On this forum write a few have said Robinson's "dramatic" drop off in the playoffs drags his career down alot but they never mention the same for Garnett.

His shooting certainly was worse in the PO as has been brought up many times referring to his ts%, which was very low.


Garnett was a star and had to lead his team on both ends like other alltime bigs did theirs. Robinson, Olajuwon, Shaq, Duncan, Malone, Kareem and Chamberlain are all examples of bigs that did so.

Garnett led 2008 Celtics on both ends of the floor and they won the title.


He had 20 pts in 38mins in the 08 PO, slightly ahead of Pierce, not great scoring. His defense was great.

Barkley's massive offensive impact contributed more to his teams winning than Garnett's defense.

Anything to back it up?
How about Garnett's offense vs Barkley's defense?


There isn't any information that far back but having seen them both, Barkley created so much gravity and havoc for the opposition to defend it was immense. You say Nash had great offensive impact but that's only because of the talent on his team but Barkley was without talent on his.


Barkley had Bol, not versatile but a great shotblocker, in Philly and that gave them enough for Barkley to flourish. Nowitzki had a similar situation.

Maybe I am missing something, but Barkley-Bol duo didn't win anything relevant.


Barkley won more PO series in Philly, after the 83 roster was dismantled after 86, than Garnett did in Minnesota and the East late 80s was as good as the West early 00s. Barkley had as bad a team as Garnett did.


This was the whole quote. The other factors are, as I said earlier, that Barkley gets more assists than Garnett, more rebounds, draws more fouls and the metrics are higher for him.

But you are wrong again. If we compare Barkley's career with Garnett through 21-36 years (Barkley's whole career), then he has no visible advantage in rebounding or passing:

1985-00 Barkley: 18.2 TRB%, 17.5 AST%
1998-13 Garnett: 17.5 TRB%, 20.5 AST%

Barkley has a slim edge on the boards, but it's Garnett who actually had more assists. Garnett was a better passer than Barkley.


You've said if watched nba from past eras so I don't know why you're saying that. Barkley generated practically all the offense for his Philly teams, creating scoring opportunities for them. He was far above Garnett offensively and he was among the best offensive players almost his entire career. Watching Barkley was like watching Shaq but with more skill and better passing. He didn't just use his girth and strength.

The metrics are large in favor of Barkley, you can't ignore it.


This is not the case between Nash and Kidd, where Nash provides nothing outside of efficient but not very good scoring and playmaking. Kidd's metrics were better and ofcourse defense.

This is why you should go beyond "advanced stats". Steve Nash came to Phoenix and turned them into the best offensive team of all-time. His "efficient but not very good scoring and playmaking" made him one of the greatest offensive players in the whole history of the league. Nash was basically the best shooter ever before Curry got drafted. Kidd never anchored elite offense, even once in his career and it's not true that he never had help.

The difference on offense between Kidd and Nash is much, much bigger than between Garnett and Barkley (even though this difference is already quite big).


That's not right. Kidd was a great playmaker on more than one team, Nash was fortunate to land on a team filled with talent and a coach with a brand that suited him exactly. Nash was accurate, he wasn't a great scorer. Kidd stepped up in some playoff series, in scoring, that I can't recall Garnett doing. His PO runs were him pushing on both ends. That Nets defense improved so much with Kidd. His impact is big.

Barkley had more bpm and ws/48 than Garnett, while Kidd has more bpm than Nash and Nash more ws/48 than Kidd.


Garnett provides nothing better than Barkley than defense, Kidd provides more than just defense better than Nash.

Garnett was a better passer, even by crude "advanced stats".
What Kidd provided on offense that Nash couldn't? Nash was a better shooter, passer, playmaker, finisher, FT shooter, transition player, ball-handler... Kidd has rebounding I suppose, but it means very little.


Nash scored better and more accurately, not much else. Had he stayed in Dallas noone would be mentioning him.


I said his efficiency wasn't much better than Kidd's which it wasn't, it's only 2.5ts% higher and only 52.5ts%. A player with 55ts%, which isn't considered high, has the same difference in ts% to Garnett. Again, Garnett had to perform better for his team to win.

Now use the same criteria for Robinson. He had to perform better for his team to win.


And Robinson won much more, look it up. Raised his team much more.


But nothing else he did was great and didn't help his team win. His PO performances are mostly below the level of most top 20 players and great bigs.

That's not true, Garnett was elite passer and shooter for his position.



And Garnett didn't perform that well in context.

In 01 he played even to Duncan, a good performance not great.

Playing even to Duncan against such an amazing defense like 2001 Spurs isn't a great performance? It's better performance against quality defense than anything Kidd (or Robinson) did in his career.


Robinson was team defended well by the Rockets in 95 and he held up quite well. The 90 Blazers were good defensively and he performed well also. Garnett definitely was a jump shooter, not a great approach for him with his length, so it wasn't interior defense that would trouble him greatly. I said he did well that series.


In 02 his raw numbers are good but his impact wasn't and he got totally outplayed by Nowitzki. So much has been made of Robinson being outplayed by Olajuwon in the wcf in 95 but he was double teamed and got no defensive help, his team lost in a close six games. Garnett got swept by a young and inexperienced Dallas team.

So you realize that Robinson criticism is too harsh, but at the same time you have no problem with doing the same with Garnett... Got it, no double standards.


It's not mentioned, Robinson 95 is.



Stick to the subject of the thread, it's about comparison between the duos which you haven't contributed to.

It is about the subject. You ignore gigantic efficiency gap between Kidd and Nash, while you focus on Barkley's efficiency advantage over Garnett.


I mentioned a number of other things. You haven't answered the OP yet. That's the subject.


Do you view Robinson higher than Garnett?

No, because Garnett has much better longevity. I view their peaks in similar light though.


Garnett had little real longevity, I've said it before, he only has about 12-13 relevant seasons and they're not at Robinson's level.
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Re: Rate between three duos 

Post#43 » by 70sFan » Fri Dec 30, 2022 12:50 pm

migya wrote:As I said, the drop off for Garnett is greater.

That's not true:

1990-98 Robinson RS: 25.5 pp75 on 59.0 TS%
1990-98 Robinson PS: 23.3 pp75 on 54.9 TS%
Difference: -2.2 pp75 and -4.1 TS%

2000-08 Garnett RS: 22.7 pp75 on 55.4 TS%
2000-08 Garnett RS: 22.1 pp75 on 52.5 TS%
Difference: -0.8 pp75 and -2.9 TS%

Garnett was a worse scorer than Robinson in RS, but Robinson drop off is definitely bigger.

On this forum write a few have said Robinson's "dramatic" drop off in the playoffs drags his career down alot but they never mention the same for Garnett.

I think we are active on different boards then, because Garnett's scoring limitations are mentioned in every single Garnett discussion...

His shooting certainly was worse in the PO as has been brought up many times referring to his ts%, which was very low.

Shooting data:

2000-08 Garnett RS: 45.7% from 10-16, 44.8% from 16-3P
2000-08 Garnett PS: 48.0% from 10-16, 40.5% from 16-3P

Garnett's weaker TS% is mostly caused by his weaker inside scoring and foul rate, not by his shooting struggles.

He had 20 pts in 38mins in the 08 PO, slightly ahead of Pierce, not great scoring. His defense was great.

Garnett averaged 23.3 pp75 on +1.1 rTS% in 2008 postseason. It definitely wasn't a great scoring run, but he was great two-way player overall. It's similar scoring run to 1995 Robinson by the way (24.8 pp75 on +0.3 rTS%).

There isn't any information that far back

Wrong, we have Barkley +/- numbers from Pollack.

but having seen them both, Barkley created so much gravity and havoc for the opposition to defend it was immense

Yes, Barkley was amazing offensive force. He was also a very mediocre defender at his best, in worse seasons coming close to liability.

You say Nash had great offensive impact but that's only because of the talent on his team but Barkley was without talent on his.

Barkley played with a lot of talented rosters, stop with that. He started his career in outstanding team, then got traded to very talented Suns team and then played with a lot of talent in Houston. The only moment he didn't have a lot of talent was 1987-92 period.

Nash had immense offensive impact regadless of his rosters. When Amar'e missed full season in 2006, Suns didn't miss a beat. When Suns lost D'Antoni, Nash still made them the best offense in the league in 2010. Even as an old man, he had a lot of impact for these 2011-12 Suns teams.

I'm not trying to say that Nash is better than Barkley, I'm just saying that you ignore offensive advanatge Nash has over Kidd.

Barkley won more PO series in Philly, after the 83 roster was dismantled after 86, than Garnett did in Minnesota and the East late 80s was as good as the West early 00s. Barkley had as bad a team as Garnett did.

After 1986, Barkley won a total of 2 series. That's less than Garnett did in Minnesota. You are wrong here.

You've said if watched nba from past eras so I don't know why you're saying that. Barkley generated practically all the offense for his Philly teams, creating scoring opportunities for them. He was far above Garnett offensively and he was among the best offensive players almost his entire career. Watching Barkley was like watching Shaq but with more skill and better passing. He didn't just use his girth and strength.

Yeah, Barkley was far better offensive player than Garnett, but that's not my point. You should really focus on what I'm saying, instead of forcing your perception here...

Barkley was far better offensive player than Garnett, but he's not a better passer or rebounder and he's much worse defender. That's enough for you to take Barkley.

Nash is far better offensive player player than Kidd and he's a better passer, but worse rebounder and he's much worse defender. That's enough for you to take Kidd.

You really don't see inconsistency here?

The metrics are large in favor of Barkley, you can't ignore it.

Offensive metrics, sure because Barkley is better offensive player. I don't ignore that, I go beyond that.

Offensive metrics also are large in favor of Nash over Kidd, yet you ignore them...

That's not right. Kidd was a great playmaker on more than one team, Nash was fortunate to land on a team filled with talent and a coach with a brand that suited him exactly.

Kidd's great playmaking never led to elite results. They usually didn't lead to even good results.

Nash was a great playmaker before he came to Phoenix and after D'Antoni left Phoenix.

Nash was accurate, he wasn't a great scorer.

True.

Kidd stepped up in some playoff series, in scoring, that I can't recall Garnett doing.

Which playoff series exactly? Kidd had a total of 3 playoff series with scoring above 20 ppg:

2003 vs Pistons: 23.8 ppg on 51.3 TS%
2002 vs Pacers: 22.2 ppg on 50.1 TS%
2002 vs Lakers: 20.8 ppg on 48.9 TS%

Garnett had 9 series above 20 ppg:

2003 vs Lakers: 27.0 ppg on 53.9 TS%
2004 vs Nuggets: 25.8 ppg on 50.8 TS%
2002 vs Mavs: 24.0 ppg on 51.4 TS%
2004 vs Kings: 23.9 ppg on 51.9 TS%
2004 vs Lakers: 23.7 ppg on 51.9 TS%
2008 vs Pistons: 22.8 ppg on 58.4 TS%
1999 vs Spurs: 21.8 ppg on 48.8 TS%
2001 vs Spurs: 21.0 ppg on 56.9 TS%
2008 vs Hawks: 21.0 ppg on 53.7 TS%

Garnett wasn't a great scorer, but he had 4 series with higher scoring average than Kidd's career high. He had 6 series better than Kidd's 2nd best. He had 9 series better than Kidd's 3rd best.

Your memory fails you here, Kidd isn't even remotely close as a scorer to Garnett in the playoffs.

If we look at averages, Kidd didn't really step up in the playoffs. In fact, he got notably worse:

1999-05 Kidd RS: 16.4 pp75 on 50.5 TS%
1999-05 Kidd PS: 16.3 pp75 on 48.7 TS%


His PO runs were him pushing on both ends. That Nets defense improved so much with Kidd. His impact is big.

Garnett literally turned Boston into one of the greatest defensive teams in NBA history, I think you would appreciate that...

Barkley had more bpm and ws/48 than Garnett, while Kidd has more bpm than Nash and Nash more ws/48 than Kidd.

Now let's take a look at 8 years primes, shall we?

2001-08 Garnett: .223 WS/48, 7.8 BPM, .180 WS/48, 6.8 BPM in PS
1987-94 Barkley: .236 WS/48, 7.3 BPM, .202 WS/48, 7.1 BPM in PS

2003-10 Nash: .189 WS/48, 4.2 BPM in RS, .145 WS/48, 4.8 BPM in PS
1999-06 Kidd: .157 WS/48, 5.0 BPM in RS, .116 WS/48, 4.5 BPM in PS

The situation is identical in RS for both pairs, but Nash has a clear advantage in the playoffs over Kidd - yet, you don't consider him to be a better postseason player than Jason.

Nash scored better and more accurately, not much else. Had he stayed in Dallas noone would be mentioning him.

Barkley scored better and more accurately, not much else. Had he stayed in Philly noone would be mentioning him.

And Robinson won much more, look it up. Raised his team much more.

That's not true:

1993-96 Spurs: 59 average wins, 5.64 SRS
2002-04 Wolves: 53 average wins, 3.97 SRS

Spurs did a bit better, but not "much more" and Robinson had better teammates on average than Garnett.

Robinson was team defended well by the Rockets in 95 and he held up quite well.

1995 Rockets weren't elite defensively anymore though, certainly not on par with 2001 Spurs. Robinson had worse offensive series than Garnett in 2001 as well.

The 90 Blazers were good defensively and he performed well also.

But he wasn't even the main scorer in 1990 series.

You also forgot to mention 1993 vs Blazers, 1994 vs Jazz, 1995 vs Nuggets, 1996 vs Jazz, 1998 vs Jazz... Basically every single series against relevant defensive team in his career.

Garnett definitely was a jump shooter, not a great approach for him with his length, so it wasn't interior defense that would trouble him greatly. I said he did well that series.

Interior defense troubles whole teams, it's not only about shot defense.

It's not mentioned, Robinson 95 is.

Of course it is, every KG thread is full of posters saying how overrated he is because he's not a great postseason scorer...

I mentioned a number of other things. You haven't answered the OP yet. That's the subject.

I answered in my first post. These stats are not enough to compare players.


Garnett had little real longevity, I've said it before, he only has about 12-13 relevant seasons and they're not at Robinson's level.

That's your opinion. 12-13 relevant seasons (in reality 1999-12, so more like 14) is a lot compared to Robinson, whose prime is basically 8 seasons (1990-98 without 1997) and 3 solid additional post-prime seasons in 1999-01. 11 vs 14 is a big difference.

You are very high on Robinson and I understand that, he was a great player. Just please, do not attack other players just because they are not Robinson or they didn't play in the 1990s.
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Re: Rate between three duos 

Post#44 » by 70sFan » Fri Dec 30, 2022 12:54 pm

By the way, if you are really into Garnett vs Robinson comparison, this is a good starting point:



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Re: Rate between three duos 

Post#45 » by migya » Fri Dec 30, 2022 2:04 pm

70sFan wrote:By the way, if you are really into Garnett vs Robinson comparison, this is a good starting point:





Yea seen it. Nice series.
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Re: Rate between three duos 

Post#46 » by 70sFan » Fri Dec 30, 2022 3:41 pm

migya wrote:
70sFan wrote:By the way, if you are really into Garnett vs Robinson comparison, this is a good starting point:





Yea seen it. Nice series.

I think it gives you a fair evaluation of both players, even though I think Ben is a bit higher on Garnett than I am.

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