homecourtloss wrote:
I agree, but the discussion is about just how good Draymond is, and how much of his impact we can tease out from Steph Curry’s; obviously, it can’t be done 100% satisfactorily, but what we can do is look at other players to see if they had a teammate who had the type of impact that Draymond has had, and in the Databall age, nobody has. We can say older David Robinson paired with young Tim Duncan being one, though for a shorter amount of time, and then Tim Duncan with Manu Ginobili being another, but that pairing does not compare to the length along with heights that Draymond reaches with Curry or Dray on his own in 2016 for example. So, if we want to list out these numbers, then we also have to look at the fact that Draymond Green grades out as more impactful over a long period of time than even most players thought to be driving engines for their respective teams’ success, including over noisy playoff data, including in 2016 when he spent the lowest percentage of his playoff minutes paired with Steph Curry but had his best post season along with 2017. Now, this doesn’t mean the Draymond is “better“ than those other players, but with this amount of data and the number of possessions, it’s something to think about. And, if the postseason lineup data is posted, well, Dray grades out, extremely, extremely well.
I’m not sure that that’s really right though.
Let’s take the Cheema data. Draymond has had full five-year spans in that data ranking: 7th, 8th, 4th, 7th, and 19th in the given timeframes. Here’s some other examples of players that were not the best player on their team:
- Ginobili’s 5-year spans with Duncan ranked: 12th, 10th, 3rd, 3rd, 3rd, 2nd, 4th, 7th, 5th, 8th, 13th, 4th, 5th, and 12th. This is on its face superior to Draymond’s rankings.
- David Robinson’s 5-year spans with Duncan ranked 4th and 6th.
- John Stockton ranked 3rd, 1st, and 3rd in his final three five-year spans, with Karl Malone (and of course we don’t have data for Stockton before this).
- Russell Westbrook ranked 7th in his last five-year span with Durant.
- Dwyane Wade was still being rated top 5 in RAPM in this data set in the years with LeBron, until that final broken down 2013-2014 year gets added to the mix and the ranking goes down a good deal (though that’s also from taking out his great 2008-2009 year).
- Kyle Lowry played a season with Kawhi, and in the 5-year spans that included that season, Lowry ranked 4th, 5th, 7th, 6th, and 17th.
The NBAshotcharts data is typically similar to the above to the extent the data exists (which isn’t always the case, since it only starts in later years). For instance, Ginobili’s last five-year span with Duncan was 6th in the NBAshotcharts data (compared to 12th in the Cheema data). Cheema’s data doesn’t have the last couple seasons though, so a couple additional notes based on that:
- Jrue Holiday spent the last three years with Giannis, and those years are recent enough that they’re not really in the Cheema data. And in the NBAshotcharts data, Holiday is ranked 4th in the last three years, which is as highly ranked as the best Draymond timespan by this measure.
- Paul George is ranked 4th in the most recent five-year span, again as highly ranked as the best Draymond timespan (and, in case you wonder if it’s biased by that last OKC year still in the data set, he’s ranked 6th in the last three years).
And, of course, while these are a lot of examples, the number of examples that can be found are inherently limited by what data exists. There are very likely other examples from prior eras of the NBA. For instance, Kareem was 2nd and 4th in the Squared RAPM data from 1984-1985 and 1987-1988. Kevin McHale was 3rd in the Squared 1987-1988 data. Pippen was 2nd in the 1995-1996 Squared data. Obviously very limited data, but these are exactly the types of second-best players we’d probably expect to be up there in RAPM, and there they are.
And I should note that Draymond’s impact metrics were not as good in recent timeframes. As noted above, his last five-year timeframe in the Cheema data (2017-2021) was ranked 19th. And his last several three-year timeframes in the NBAshotcharts data (using three-year so we have a timeframe after 2019-2020, as well as one that is between the 2015-2016 season and the 2019-2020 season) were 30th, 61st, 27th, 54th, and 12th. And the Warriors won 3 titles in the years encompassed in those timeframes!
The bottom line is that there’s been other similarly or even more impactful players who played with major stars. Indeed, the guy about to be ranked #5 had guys generally ranked even better in RAPM (i.e. Ginobili and Robinson).
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I also think that this discussion misses that Steph is a huge enabler of Draymond being impactful, and that that’s a *good* thing. For instance, Draymond gets more offensive impact with Steph, because Steph papers over Draymond’s bad shooting and consistently creates short roll situations where Draymond can best utilize his passing. Draymond also gets more defensive impact with Steph, because Steph’s offensive ability makes it so Draymond can actually be played at PF when it’s advantageous to do so (which is the vast majority of the time), despite Draymond’s lack of shooting.
At a basic level, I think it’s a massive *positive* for a star to be someone that other great players can be hugely impactful alongside! That is what being a great ceiling raiser looks like! You play in a way where your presence doesn’t suck the air out of the room and other great players on your team can maximize their impact too. It’s not a bad thing for Draymond or Ginobili to have been really impactful! It’s a function of playing alongside all-time great guys that can get huge impact while leaving room for others to get huge impact too. This is a feature, not a bug! You concede that Draymond might not be better than other players who have had less impact alongside stars. And I think that’s essentially undeniably right. So why isn’t it a positive for Steph that Draymond could get more impact alongside Steph than plenty of better players have gotten alongside other all-time greats? This is actually a huge part of why I rank Steph so highly!