carlquincy wrote:whats bitw?
anyway from the retro poy here, he's a distant 5th.
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Love the link back to the RPOY project from that year. I really think it's a great way to get your head around what others thinking about the same stuff have gone back and forth on and '07-08 in particular is extremely noteworthy because of the discussion around Kevin Garnett.
Nowadays people tend to see me as extremely high on KG, but you can see in that discussion I was on the low side - entertaining the arguments for KG, complimenting them, but in the end sticking with where I had him before.
But over time the arguments marinated in my mind, and now I rank them differently.
On the general question of Duncan in '07-08, and whether he was so much different from '06-07 or maybe just had some injury issues, it's always something to be wary of. What's absolutely the case though is this marks a spot on the way from the Spurs playing a slow offense built around Duncan's post-offense to a faster style with more passing and 3's. They became less effective, and then with the shift became more effective.
So while it's possible Duncan could have been just as much of a BITW candidate in '07-08 as he was in '06-07 given his physical body, we would never again after '06-07 see the Spurs have a great offense with Duncan having that primacy, and since the leap forward that would come was driven primarily by the co-stars already on his team at that time, it's hard to really be that satisfied with an answer of worsening supporting cast.
So back with the POY that year, most of us had a clear top 4 in some order - Bryant, Garnett, James, Paul - with Duncan in the next group down. While the guys having the POY level seasons are not necessarily the guys I'd call "best in the world", I would tend to rank players with an eye toward their capacity for POY, and I think I'd say I feel more confident in those 4 guys at that point than Duncan.
I see a lot of debate about Duncan vs Kobe and that's an interesting one for me. I'm generally on the pro-Duncan side of that one. I think in general he was better in prime, and better outside of prime, but I suppose I tend to see this as Duncan slipping out of his prime at the same time as Kobe is actually most synergized as an alpha with the rest of his team, and seems like the brief window where Kobe has the edge.
While I'm confident that these general trends were true though, it doesn't mean necessarily that that window ever actually opened.