I have been a fan of Tim Duncan from the very beginning. In fact, early Duncan is still my favorite Duncan. In those days, as a teenager in the late 90s and early 00s, I was what you might've called a Laker Hater. I
always rooted for Duncan and the Spurs in those playoff matchups with Shaq/Kobe. With time and maturation, I no longer feel of any of the malice I once did towards those Lakers teams, and I am still a fan of Tim Duncan. All of this is to say that what I am about to argue does not come from a place of heavy personal bias.
It is my opinion that this board overrates Tim Duncan just a little bit. By that I mean, I think he is a lower-half-of-the-top-ten guy, while it seems a number of you think he is a upper-half-of-the-top-ten guy.
I've been looking specifically at the Shaq/Duncan question, because I think we aren't talking about Shaq enough in this thread..
LongevityI want to first address the longevity issue. Seeing as they both played nineteen years, I think Shaq's longevity hit(i.e. the extent to which he declined towards the end) is, while not inaccurate, overstated, while I also believe there's one key deficiency in Duncan's longevity that is being overlooked.
Look at their respective season-by-season RS rTS numbers.
Shaq:
Code: Select all
93 / +4.9
94 / +7.7
95 / +4.5
96 / +2.8
97 / +2.0
98 / +6.3
99 / +7.3
00 / +5.5
01 / +5.6
02 / +7.0
03 / +8.3
04 / +6.2
05 / +5.4
06 / +5.0
07 / +2.6
08 / +4.9
09 / +7.9
10 / +2.2
11 / +11.8
Duncan:
Code: Select all
98 / +5.2
99 / +3
00 / +3.2
01 / +1.8
02 / +5.4
03 / +4.5
04 / +1.8
05 / +1.1
06 / -1.3
07 / +3.8
08 / +0.6
09 / +0.5
10 / +1.7
11 / -0.4
12 / +0.4
13 / +1.9
14 / -0.6
15 / +2.6
16 / -1.8
I made this point in a previous post, but Duncan's scoring efficiency fell off significantly after his first six years. He was a legitimately top-tier scorer in the first part of his career, but by the mid-00s he wasn't the same scorer. As you can see above, from 2004 onward, he topped +2 rTS only twice, had a <1 rTS seven times, and a negative rTS four times.
His career average TS Add is 53.1. His average TS add during his first six years is 122.5. His average TS Add during the the last thirteen years of his career is 21.3. If we adjust the ranges a bit and look at his first ten years(up through 2006-07) and his last nine years - he has an average TS Add of 87.9 over the first ten years and 14.5 over the last nine.
I realize that some of the decrease in TS Add can be attributed to a decrease in volume as a result of a decrease in minutes, but that doesn't explain the efficiency drops as illustrated above.
Duncan's defense and playmaking ability were effective until the very end, but his longevity as a scorer seems not great.
On Shaq's end, there's no question he declined a lot defensively, and that he was slow and not moving very well for his last few seasons, but his bread and butter was always scoring, and in that respect I'm not sure he was ever ineffective. He kept up healthy rTS numbers right up until the end, and as late as 2008-09, he was putting up 17 points(and 8 boards) on +7.9% rTS over 75 games in Phoenix at the age of 36. You can chalk that up to Steve Nash magic if you'd like, but those are still solid(in volume)/elite(in efficiency) scoring numbers.
People might look at that Miami team falling apart(getting swept by the Bulls in 2007) and put it on him, but that whole team was old - Mourning and Payton were about done, Antoine Walker and Jason Williams had fast declines, etc. There's a reason they pretty much got rid of everyone other than Wade(and Haslem).
I think it was only those last two years with Cleveland and Boston where he really looked done.
Offensive Gap vs Defensive GapAs mentioned in the previous section, Duncan's career average TS Add over nineteen seasons is 53.1. Shaq's career average TS Add over nineteen seasons is 145.2.
Duncan recorded a 4+ RS rTS three times in his career, all of them in those first six seasons. Shaq recorded a 4+ RS rTS fifteen out of his nineteen seasons.
Shaq never recorded a negative RS rTS, Duncan did it four times.
Shaq's advantage over Duncan as a scorer is not a small one. It is a large one.
On the other side of the court, Duncan is clearly the superior defender; he was elite. But that doesn't mean Shaq wasn't solid. I feel like the numbers would characterize him as good-but-not-great. Just by his sheer size(not just height, but his girth too) and shot-blocking ability he was going to have an effect. It was like a wall in front of the basket.
Shaq had a 2+ D-RAPM eight times in his career(and that is without considering his Orlando tenure, which came before on/off was tracked). This obviously falls well short of Duncan's 15 3+ and 9 4+ D-RAPMs, but it's also far from nothing.
Take the Lakers' DRtgs for the years Shaq, Kobe, and Phil Jackson were together:
Code: Select all
1999-00: 98.2(1st)
2000-01: 104.8(21st)
2001-02: 101.7(7th)
2002-03: 104.7(19th)
2003-04: 101.3(8th)
That's three top ten finishes and two around the border between the middle and bottom third. Now look at Shaq's D-RAPM in those same five seasons:
Code: Select all
1999-00: 2.31
2000-01: 0.7
2001-02: 2.49
2002-03: 1.14
2003-04: 2.74
Shaq's higher D-RAPMs seem to correlate with the team's higher DRtgs. This would seem to suggest he did have some level of actual defensive impact(as well as his inconsistency on that end, to be fair), at least during his peak years. And FWIW, those 2+ D-RAPMs didn't end when he left LA; he posted 2.07 in 04-05, 2.27 in 05-06, and 2.44 in 07-08. After 2008 is where his defense fell off a cliff.
My point with all of this is this: Shaq, while clearly not the defender Duncan was, was still a
solid defender, and because of this I believe Duncan's defensive edge over Shaq can be matched by Shaq's sizable scoring edge over Duncan.
There is also the issue of playmaking, where Duncan also has an edge. Looking at bbref's "points generated by assists" stat(by no means the definitive metric for this, just one example) and taking their career averages in the regular season and the playoffs:
Duncan RS: 496.15
Duncan PO: 97.8
Shaq RS: 352.86
Shaq PO: 75.78
This is just one illustration of Duncan's edge in this department. What I will say for Shaq though, is that it seems logical to me that if Shaq is scoring more points than Duncan on average(Shaq averaged 35.2 points per 100 possessions for his career in the regular season and 34.7 points per 100 possessions for his career in the playoffs; Duncan averaged 29.7 in the regular season, and coincidentally, 29.7 in the playoffs), then that means he'd be creating less points for his teammates than Duncan because you only touch the ball so many times. So you can view this playmaking gap as a detriment to Shaq's game, or as the logical result of his dominance as a scorer.
Multiple ContextsI bring this up because the "multiple contexts" argument was used
a whole lot by many of you when arguing for LeBron, so I feel like it ought to apply here too. Shaq and Duncan have similarly glowing resumes. Duncan never had a <50 game winning season, he went to the finals six times, and won five titles. But he was drafted into an ideal situation, a team that had been in the WCF just two years earlier, and played his entire career for one coach.
Shaq won 50+ 16 out of 19 years.
Shaq came into the league with Orlando, who were an expansion team going into its fourth year of existence having never won more than 31 games, and spearheaded a 20-game(21 to 41), nearly 8-point SRS swing(-6.52 to 1.35) in his rookie year. By his third year(yes, with some crazy 1993 lottery luck), they were in the Finals.
He went to LA at a time when they were just starting to get good again after Showtime and anchored an era that saw four finals appearances, a threepeat, and eight straight 50+ win seasons.
He went to Miami, where the Heat had been a 42-win, -0.13 SRS team that sort of surprised in how hard they pushed the Pacers in their six-game second round series, and, along with Wade, was at the center of a 17-win, nearly 6 SRS point swing(and that's with them losing Lamar Odom and Caron Butler in the trade) that saw them get one game away from the Finals(and a lot of people still think they would've gotten there and possibly won it all if Wade hadn't gotten hurt in that series).
Shaq had a stretch of his career where he won
at least 50 games twelve times(they were at a 50-win pace in the 99 lockout season) and went
at least to the Conference Finals nine times(including six trips to the Finals and four championships) in twelve seasons across three different organizations with three different second options, at least three distinct supporting casts(maybe more than that considering how the lineup around him and Kobe kept changing from Eddie Jones/Nick Van Exel/Cedric Ceballos to Glen Rice/AC Green/Ron Harper to Robert Horry/Rick Fox/Derek Fisher/Horace Grant to Karl Malone/Gary Payton/Devean George), and five different head coaches(Brian Hill, Del Harris, Phil Jackson, Stan Van Gundy, Pat Riley).
Shaquille O'Neal strikes me as one of the safest bets to build a contender around in the history of the NBA.
As the final thing I'll say about Shaq/Duncan, going purely by on/off(note again that Shaq's numbers don't include his Orlando years because the data wasn't tracked):
Shaq's career average RS on/off: +8.5
Duncan's career average RS on/off: +8.0
Shaq's career average PO on/off: +11.7
Duncan's career average PO on/off: +8.5
A 3+ point on/off advantage in the playoffs is something worth considering.
I also lean towards Wilt over Duncan for a similar set of reasons. Wilt and Shaq were very similar, except that Wilt was a better defender and had less team success(at least in part due to some bad luck - poor roster with the Warriors, no Billy Cunningham in 1968, Breda Kolff wouldn't put him back in + improbable Don Nelson shot in 1969, no Jerry West in 1971, no Happy Hairston in 1973). I may have more to say about Wilt later, but I probably can't make a better case for him than ZeppelinPage just did.
Right now, I think I've got Wilt/Shaq, and then Duncan/Hakeem(exact order not determined yet). And I may put Magic before Duncan/Hakeem too.