f4p wrote:OhayoKD wrote:not sure why you brought up jordan so much, this was a post about duncan. also not sure why the antagonistic tone, as i didn't even address you and simply threw an opinion out into the ether. only here does thinking jordan was good get brought into every conversation. i brought up russell for 4th place because that's where i have him. i believe it was none other than you in a recent thread that said "I do think the offensive stuff may be fairly debilitating for future translation" so i'm not sure why my low opinion of russell's offense is so uhh...offensive.
Because MJ is your #1
and one of the 4 players you can't see Duncan above. So when you list a bunch of stuff that applies harder to Jordan, referencing MJ makes sense. It also helps that we just had a whole big drama because people voted duncan over mj while others stated they were considering duncan over jordan. In fact I suspect that drama was what started this thread...
As for Russell, you've specifically made a bunch of era-relative claims(including a couple in this post), so I'm not seeing the relevant of my time-machine stances(especially when it's Duncan, not Russell, Kareem, or Jordan who stand to benefit).
OhayoKD wrote:
The GOAT coach who didn't pick up 5 rings after he retired and didn't see his team skyrocket within the span of a season simply on the implementation of a scheme? Very interesting
Russell is the member of the top 4 you think is vulnerable here. Your list of quibbles with Duncan probably applies more strongly to another guy who
also only ended up winning half as much.
i never said jordan didn't have a good situation. but it started in like year 7, not year 1, and he basically batted 1.000 after that. also, i said "a GOAT", as in one of the GOAT's, not "the" GOAT. are we really arguing pop wasn't one of the greatest ever?
We are arguing that Duncan did not have an unfair advantage with Popovich relative to most all-time greats including the guy whose even better coaching situation(again, schematic shift -> team gets exponentially better over the course of a season) has not prohibited him from a literal #1 rating.
Duncan also didn't always have a "good"(what an understatement)situation. The difference is Duncan found a way to win when the deck wasn't stacked(and it was never
that stacked in his prime). And when he wasn't winning,
he was always, as you say, "contending".
his organization drafted a future HOF PG with the 28th pick.
his organization drafted an even better future HOF SG with the 57th pick.
they used another non-lottery pick (18th?) to trade for an even better future HOF SF.
What a creative way to say the Spurs drafted 3 good players for Duncan to play with. 3 good players who were barely even factors for Duncan's first two titles. Again, there's a guy this line of attack applies much more strongly to, and you have him at the very top.
it was a creative way to point out how a team can overhaul itself with no rebuilding, thus why most people don't play on 19 straight contenders because teams ebb and flow as guys age, their contracts get expensive, and you have to eventually reload and retool. simply spawning a few hall of fa...umm, elite guards onto your team right as things were going to get dicey helps you not ever have to retool. because every team has a low 1st and low 2nd (at least) at their disposal at any given moment. but most teams are lucky to turn that into a single rotation player, much less great players. usually you have to make trades and mortgage the future or suffer for a few years while you build up cap space or high picks. the spurs skipped that. all i said was duncan played for the most contenders ever, a fact you did not dispute, and laid out how that came to be.
The Bulls and Celtics never rebuilt. Lebron mostly skipped the rebuilding phase. The only guy this applies to in any meaningful capacity is Kareem who got to dry his tears with Magic Johnson giving him service. And again, plenty of this is because of Tim Duncan's own choices:
trex_8063 wrote:Well, backtrack to 2012, it is documented that Duncan voluntarily took a pay-cut to enable the Spurs to sign Diaw, Green, and Mills to the contracts they were asking for.
But it seems Tim had a hand in that too: he voluntarily took a pay cut in ‘15 (and I think ‘14 as well) to allow the Spurs the cap space to acquire his replacement LaMarcus Aldridge, as well as re-signing Kawhi Leonard.
In essence, he was sacrificing for a team he would not even be part of; just looking out for the future after he was gone.
He supposedly took “team friendly” contracts at other points along the way. And indeed we can see that in his 19 playing years he earned more than $53M less than Shaquille O’Neal did [in 19 years], nearly $90M less than Kobe Bryant did [in 20 years], and $105M less than Kevin Garnett did [in 21 years, also mostly for a small market team].
Wanna guess which guy did the opposite, threatening to leave for a team that came within a game of a championship?
has anyone picked up 3 hall of fame teammates with assets that are basically free?
Ah yes, lucky Duncan, picking up manu while his competition picked up Kobe. A prime with Pippen, several years with Magic? Gunning against McHale and Stockton? Just ain't fair.
how many playoffs would you say pippen was better than 2005 manu? hell, how many was kobe? and of course, it's not that manu was the greatest, but per minute he was pretty damn amazing, and i'm pretty sure he was an impact beast so i'm not sure why you're downplaying him. throw on a tony parker, some good 3&D guys and a mid-2000's nba where the 2004 pistons and janky-looking 2006 heat could pick up titles and i'm not sure sure why i'm supposed to think the spurs weren't supposed to win a lot. hell, robert horry arguably saved the 2005 title with his crazy 4th/OT performance in game 5.
For Pippen? 91, 92 and 94-97 all have cases. Kobe literally turned into Jordan in 01, and 02's pretty easy to take as well. Manu was an impact beast
per-minuite. He was never a true superstar. Contrary to how you frame these conversations, I like to
apply context to what I'm using and look at the forest as opposed to whatever isolated leaves(cough gamescore dumps cough) suit a specific narrative.
he basically pulled a brady with belichick by showing up at the exact same time as a legendary coach and then got to play for him for 2 decades. pop is why the 7th man on the team was scared to miss a defensive rotation in the 2nd quarter in a game in the middle of january. and he's why it was the correct rotation to begin with. that's how you churn out smart, disciplined teams, that pretty much everyone acknowledges as smart, disciplined teams, for 19 straight years.
Pop would tell you he was able to do all that because Duncan was one of those rare superstars who didn't let being told what to do hurt his ego. And we have pretty clear evidence that doesn't apply to at least one member of your big four. Of course that wasn't the guy you decided to highlight as vulnerable...it was
Bill, who literally coached two championship winners while playing.
and there it is. the popovich was only good because of duncan argument. the tim duncan version of the ridiculous "pippen was only good because jordan made him good" argument. where the player isn't lucky to be in a great situation, but somehow created it out of sheer will.
The question is whether Duncan's "great situation" was special relative to other greats we're comparing him to. Since Kevin Garnett is not the comparison, the answer is no.
duncan wasn't a kobe or jordan who, for better or worse, were going to run things.
They were going to run things without ever actually demonstrating they knew how.
“They’re not interested in winning. They just want to sell tickets, which they can do because of me. They won’t make any deals to make us better. And this Kukoc thing. I hate that. They’re spending all their time chasing this guy.”
“I don’t know about trading a 24 year-old guy for a 34 year-old guy.” – Michael questioning the Oakley trade
Jordan flipped his lid over his manager getting him a lotto pick then pushed against getting the role players that would help him pick his rings. Kobe found himself a Shaq and tried to be a hard-ass after derailing a season because he didn't know the definition of "consent". Mikey ran things and Rodman still skipped practice during the finals, his bigs laughed him off, and the machine clicked just fine when his airness took his break. OTOH
But as soon as the 19-year-old came in, Jordan was all over him, “ritually reducing Brown to tears in front of his teammates”. Washington Post called Kwame MJ’s whipping boy, who usually call him by some outrageous names like “Flaming *****ot”
.
“The criminal charges were ultimately dropped and the civil suit settled, the scrutiny was unabated. Kobe also infuriated Shaq by intimating in interviews with Eagle Colorado detectives that O'Neal paid off woman quote, not to say anything about his encounters with them.”
Being a talented player who does the work is
not difficult to work with. It doesn't require a specific disposition. It simply requires competence. Toxic machismo does require special considerations, as does a proclivity for petty beefs and a refusal to take personal responsibility:
“I hate when I have to read that in the papers the next day, that I couldn’t do something. It wasn’t my fault.”
Mj, Kobe, and Shaq? They needed Zen masters. And triangles. And proper co-stars alongside teams that could win 50+ without them. Duncan just needed someone who knew how to do his job. Oh and some complimentary pieces. How very unfair.
he was drafted to a 59 win team with a HOFer and elite defender that had recently added a GOAT coach, one of the best starts to a career you could ever hope for. right up there with russell's early celtics, bird getting mchale and parish right away, and magic getting to play with Kareem and then worthy.
I guess you forgot the bit where that the HOFer suffered a season-ending injury and was never the same again? Or that the "GOAT COACH" was literally on the verge of getting fired after he brillantly inspired the robinson-less spurs to
20 wins?
come on, we're going to pretend the spurs record mattered when they were literally tanking?
The Spurs were not trying to tank when they went 3-15 before D-Rob broke his foot(yes that wasn't under Pop). Bit players also don't tank, they're playing for their careers. Pop was coaching for his. I
will accept you dodging d-rob as a concession that "spurs won 59 games with peak d-rob and a completely different coach" wasn't particularly relevant.
1998 D-Rob scored alot less(on the same efficiency), saw his turnover% spike(on the same ast%) while playing significantly less minutes than his 1996 iteration. 1999 D-rob had more turnovers than assists, saw his efficiency and volume drop a second time while playing even less. And off course lucky Duncan couldn't overcome his co-star slipping steadily from superstardom. Except...
these sound suspiciously like box score numbers. didn't 1998-2001 david robinson post the greatest APM or AuPM in playoff history according to his peak video from ben taylor? theoretically, he was the best player in the game by that measure, the same thing that tends to make duncan look so good.
Now why don't you compare their minutes played.
even just with the box score, my main man drob led the league in WS48 3 times in duncan's first 4 seasons and added a BPM win for good measure. does that sound like some "meh" player or does that sound like a guy still bringing the goods?
That sounds to me like a guy who did super well in a very specific role. Remember. the comparisons here are Pippen, Magic, and Kobe Bryant. Maybe if the second best dudes were Rodman or Worthy, you'd have a point.
The Spurs...got better, winning 60 games and then going 15-2. IOW, 2nd year Duncan got to play with something resembling a co-star and responded by pulling a 1991. Truly fraudulent.
and in the playoffs, duncan's net on/off was actually negative at -3.6.
Now why don't we look at Duncan's on/off over the next 3 post-seasons:
+38.8
+23
+23
Forest. Trees. It's not Quantum Physics. Jordan was +2.2 in 1992. Lebron got on/off'd by Dereck Fisher in 2016, and the Bulls posted a nice postseason o-rating with Pete Myers instead of your GOAT.
This is why you look at things
in totality as opposed to cherrypicking point a or b. Jordan has crossed +20 twice over his whole playoff career. Lebron has never done it 3 times in a row. Duncan had some help(to go along with a 20-win base) and the spurs dominated. Duncan had "nice sparks" in 03 and the Spurs won 60 games before snagging a title. Just because there were
points where Duncan had great help(and let's be real, 1999 is a stretch given the comparisons we're making) does not mean
it was always so.
Using the fact Duncan always led very good teams
against him is nonsensical. Those teams stayed very good when the cast was weaker, when the teammates were different, and when the league was different. It is the ultimate evidence of consistency and you're trying to spin it as a negative. Just absurd.
when that team was about to age out
No, the team was
already aging out when Duncan had them run the league roughshod. Then, when this over-the-hill hall-of-famer was well and truly a corpse, Duncan went and won 62 games and title #2. The following two seasons as he battled through injuries, the Spurs saw improvement with him on the floor that matches a rather optimistic appraisal of the guy you have at #1.
i've never disputed 2003 duncan. robinson was great defensive but nothing on offense, manu and parker weren't anything yet other than nice sparks. bower is underrated though.
Ah, but I'm sure you have various seasons engineered in much easier contexts above it. How many players can say they won 62 games and a championship with "nice sparks"? Duncan leading contenders is bad because duncan always had a great infrastructure!! Except all the times he didn't.
And since I'm suspect you have some one-in-alls you're about to fire up, I feel I should remind you how very strawy the straws you reached for were the last time we discussed the merits of taking winning out of the equation:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=103164373#p103164373maybe not quite the loaded teams of the 80's celtics and lakers and maybe on par with russell's later celtics. but stability to an extraordinary degree.
I think you're forgetting a far stabler and significantly more "loaded" team from the 90's. Especially when you're bringing up the super unfair 35-win Celtics.
how exactly are the bulls so much stabler? main teammate and coach were the same, whole rest of team changed. is that way more stable than coach and main 2 teammates for duncan? also, when did i say unfair celtics? i said they WERE NOT as loaded as the 80's celtics and lakers, just like the spurs were not either.
You mean besides him playing under the same coach, with the same co-star, with the same type of tertiary pieces, in the same system for the vast majority of his prime?(and crucially, for all of his rings). As you've admitted, those 2 "main-teammates" weren't actually all that relevant to his first two rings. And unlike the Bulls, Duncan's spurs contended playing a wide variety of styles in very different iterations of the league.
and the russell celtics were clearly not a 35 win team for all of russell's later career.
No, they simply were that when Russell knocked of two of the best teams of his era. Feel free to post your evidence for the Celtics still being an uber doober juggernaut for the 5 rings they won after Cousy and co faded into obscurity. Also feel free to tell me which other player in history replicated what Russell managed for that
one ring, let alone all
eleven.
Because 21 ppg+ DPOY winner Kawhi and 12 ppg Kawhi were absolutely the same player. Just like Duncan got to play with Peak D-rob when he clapped the league in year 2. You understand that throwing "hall-of-fame" on top of a guy does not magically make them better than they actually were at the time Tim Duncan played with them?
Duncan got great help well, well past his peak and capitalized. Duncan got very limited help at his apex...and found a way anyway. That "always contending" tag lasted through a variety of casts, teammates and eras with exactly one player consistently at the center. He won about as much as anyone not named Russell and by raw winning has no peer in the modern NBA. Your assumption that was a reflection of unprecedentedly stable help falls to pieces the second we apply scrutiny.
pretty damn close to peak DRob by the impact numbers. also, i don't know where i said 12 ppg and 21 ppg kawhi were the same.
No, you simply said "Kawhi" and then referenced 2016 which has almost zero role in how people view Duncan as he was well, well over the hill. And yes, RS Drob looks "damn close" to pretty much anyone not named Lebron, Kareem or Russell using that approach. But he was a big big playoff dropper. Still not seeing how that's relevant for TD.
who were the more stacked teams? the 2005 suns? you guys don't like amare so can't be them. the 2006 heat with post prime shaq?
You just listed a 62 win team with the greatest offense ever(anchored by an arguable offensive GOAT), Peak(or close) Wade+ A superstar, and one of the best full-strength teams ever(with arguably the greatest ever post-russell defense)? Shaq-Kobe lakers also weren't a thing apparently. Nor were the Heatles, the Westbrook-KD thunder(paired with Ibaka and, at one point, an about to shine Harden).
the warriors saved the 2007 spurs from meeting dallas.
And the universe conspired to save the Bulls from Hakeem. Is this the part where we throw random hypotheticals and hope they stick?
you can't knock jordan for having a good team relative to the league when he constantly won with that good team, then act like duncan is amazing for winning with a very good team in a league with no superteams.
The team that posted 50-win SRS without numero uno or tres was "good". Over-the-hill D-rob and "nice sparks" is "very good." Interesting choice of language.
Regardless, I
can knock Jordan for failing to replicate Duncan's success outside of exceptionally loaded casts(the thing you seem to think all of Russell's teams had for...reasons), being a comically more volatile lockeroom presence, repeatedly failing to match or exceed peak Duncan in empirical analysis that isolates for winning(as opposed to the stuff that looks at steals per game and concludes MJ was a better defender than 4-point defense pusher Kareem), and failing to match Duncan's longevity(and no, "he'd done it all" doesn't really work when you've won half as much as your predecessors).
As it is, this all started with you trying to knock Duncan
because he won too much. Your opening salvo was pretending David Robinson didn't have a career altering injury in 1997. Round two was you pretending Duncan didn't win 2 titles without much help from the non-superstars who would
eventually hit their peak.
I also have no clue what you're talking about regarding competition because Duncan faced much stiffer opposition including multiple superteams he faced
and beat as the best, or arguable best player. Duncan did not play in an especially favorable situation for his prime. But he led
19 contenders(your count, not mine) anyway, and helped anchor one of the most successful teams ever both with what he did on and off the court.
But somehow this is a negative. Because you seemingly forgot how
time works.
Correction, Russell led contenders forever(well champions actually), your assumption all of those teams would have contended without him is uh...completely unfounded. I'm noticing a pattern here.
don't get pedantic. you know i didn't say they were contenders WITHOUT russell. is the argument really that russell could make a contender of anybody?
Considering he made championships out of everything he was ever handed, that wouldn't suprise me no.
that would speak poorly of the 60's.
Considering that 3 of your big 4 played
before Duncan, breaking relativity does not help you here.
i don't know why we have to pretend the lucky ones somehow made it happen themselves.
"Pretend" is when we actually analyze context to determine the extent of "luck". "Truth" is when we look at how much a guy won and then conclude it's a matter of "luck" because we forgot that David Robinson had a career-changing injury.
Duncan led 16 contenders. And thus far you've done a quite terrible job arguing this is because his deck was unfairly stacked.
yes, all the players we talk about "led" contenders.
no one said it was unfairly stacked. i said he played for the most contenders. that doesn't mean 16 straight 72-10 bulls type teams. it just means he basically never had a year he couldn't think about contending. if we're going to praise duncan for longevity, we must praise the spurs/pop for the longevity of never having a slip in terms of team construction. somehow constantly reloading without ever rebuilding. some guys played just as high a percentage of their years on contenders, but duncan got it for all 19 years. maybe the lakers could have done it with magic or celtics with russell, the other contenders for pretty much pretty much always being contenders, but we didn't see it happen.
[/quote]
Actually, that is exactly what you tried to argue:
You do realize this only works as a critique if you demonstrate Duncan had more help than whoever you're comparing him to?
Correct. duncan played for a GOAT organization and a GOAT coach and had hall of fame teammates all along the way, though obviously they were at different stages of their careers at various points.
Duncan leading more contenders than basically anyone is bad because he had too much help. **** Brillant.