you'd understand that he played devil's advocate and he actually showed that all these lazy arguments are highly unlikely to be true.
Highly unlikely? Like no joke. How about inane? One of the greatest passers in league history
was merely a good distributor? One of the greatest players of all-time
just didn't have that killer instinct?
Nonsense. It's one thing to state an opinion. But it's another to state it as if it was a fact when you (1) have never watched the guy play, (2) ignore his overly impressive statistics, and (3) ignore his accolades like his all-NBA nominations, his MVP, and his MVP votes received voted on by those who saw him play at that time.
Why do you need an analysis of VORP or Win Shares of Helio-whatever to substantiate his career? He was an outstanding scorer, an outstanding shooter, and an outstanding passer for his era. There was no one even remotely comparable (Jerry West was as close as you could get at the time).
He was easily arguably the best guard the league had seen until Jordan came along. For those that did not actually see him play, what is it about his statistics and accolades that do not show that?
Defensively, he's marginal and treading around slight positive to neutral to slight negative through his career
Where is this coming from? Is this coming from someone who watched him play his whole career? In his decade with the Royals the Cs were 6-8 Wayne Embry, 6-10 Connie Dierking, and 6-11 Walt Wesley. The PFs were 6-8 Jerry Lucas and 6-7 Happy Hairston. Not exactly Russell, Chamberlain, Thurmond, or Gus Johnson-like defenders. Yet how does
that make Robertson just an average defender?
I know that Bryant got a lot of all-defensive votes, but it's not an argument for him being better than Oscar, at least not for me.
I absolutely agree.
that's why I am not sure if there is a significant gap in his and Bryant's defense
Again, I agree. Bryant was a
great defender, and while I do not feel Robertson was anywhere near the great defender West or Bryant was, he was clearly a better than average to good defender, and far from being just average or worse than average.
I don't look at all-defensive votes.
Prior to about a decade ago, NBA coaches are the ones who voted for the all-defensive teams. And I for one greatly value the opinions of the men who game planned against these players and saw them play first hand and up close on a daily basis.
Rodman? Rodman? You're really telling on yourself thinking he was remotely in KG's league defensively.
Garnett was named all-defensive 1st team 9 times, Rodman 7 times. But up through the age of 34 Rodman was not named all-defensive 1st team just twice, Garnett 7 times. As mentioned above, NBA coaches voted for them, who game planned against both players and watched them play more than you or I. I'd trust their opinions long before yours or any plus/minus calculated derivative.
I like how up above someone slams Robertson's greatness and defense because his team didn't win much or in his opinion was not a good defensive team. Well Rodman won 5 titles and Garnett just 1, plus Rodman played on more great defensive teams than did Garnett. Does
that make Rodman the better defender?
he was so focused on getting rebounds that he didn't have much impact at all. KG had absolutely elite DPOY-level impact across 2 different teams where he was an absolute game-changer. He and Dwight played in the same era and KG had 6 seasons where his DRAPM was better than Dwight's best.
Again - another opinion not based on watching both players but on a plus/minus derivative revered as gospel, as if plus/minus is not the least bit flawed.
yet guys like Rodman, McHale, and Hayes have legit arguments over KG according to you
Correct.
McHale was not quite the great defender Garnett was but was still an excellent defender. Yet McHale was much more efficient on offense over his career than was Garnett.
Rodman was every bit the defender Garnett was, in my opinion was the better defender, and was DPOY twice to Garnett once despite being in the league quite a few seasons less, and played on better defensive teams.
I would like to see whatever multi-year cherrypicked sample of box stats or media accolades that point to those 3 being better.
Open your eyes. Played on more better defensive teams, statistically. More DPOY awards. HOF because of his defense. That cherry-picked enough for you?
Such an immature response
Yes, I see you are a plus/minus advocate that can't handle it's inaccuracy being questioned..
most of that post was on film observations of his game
Where was this mentioned?
Should I have just touted box score statline averages and narratives alone like you to make an argument?
Much better than professing a flawed plus/minus derivative as being meaningful.
After all these years, now we know that Kobe's defense on a grand scale (not talking about defensive peak, but overall) doesn't move the needle. He had some strength and could rack up his intensity in the playoffs, but overall Bryant's defense was only a slight positive in his average prime season. Better at his peak, but his defensive peak was brief.
You say this based on what evidence? And who is
we? You say this as if it was factual.
NBA coaches seem to think otherwise. They voted Bryant all-defensive 1st team 9 times, including 6 years in a row (2005-06 to 2010-11). You ignore the coaches opinions and also ignore the statistical evidence that the Lakers were a very good team defensively the 9 years Bryant was named all-defensive 1st team.