Owly wrote:And this is getting into the impact, interplay with team context stuff and non-high end scorers (where you need to have gravity and/or playmaking value to have offensive value, because the "face value" of your scoring isn't there).
If he's firing up midrangers then you can have White and Jones in there and you don't need shot generation (or spacing) and you can have more possessions than opponents by rebounding and he mitigates others' weaknesses (similarly Davis and Whitney don't need to generate shots, just space the floor).
I do think the paucity of creation with those specialist type role players, whilst "making" him fire up more, might artificially boost his situational impact versus his holistic, in-a-vacuum value.
If you're trying to say the situation allowed him to exert an impact greater than his performance, there's something to that, sure... but that team sucked. Certainly, he had some guys who could hit the O-boards, but he was also essentially personally the reason they did so well with turnover economy. Richard Hamilton was like a crappier, less-efficient version of Reggie or early Ray, running the baseline and curling around screens for middies. Doug Collins' coaching didn't help. Whitney's shooting was very valuable, as was Popeye's offensive rebounding. They should have played Haywood more earlier, but he was a rookie, so Collins wasn't going to do that.
Jordan was able to impact them because basically anyone would have been able to help them. Surely, lots of players could have done more, yeah. But between his ball protection, his passing and his ability to move within Collin's offense and draw defensive attention, he was able to drive them more effectively than without him. They were a dogcrap -7.2 net team the year before, posting 100.6 team ORTG in 00-01 and were the worst defense in the league. They were a 104.8 offense with him. 22nd in eFG%, 4th in TOV%, 8th in ORB%, 18th in FT/FGA. 27th in pace, 19th in FTr.
The year before, they were 9th in ORB, 7th in pace, 5th in FTr, 22nd in eFG%, but dead last in TOV%. And similarly unhealthy. I think Jordan did a large amount of what they actually needed, to be honest. He certainly wasn't going to do a better job than a star a decade younger than him who actually still had elite athleticism and all that, and could pressure the defense with efficient scoring, though.