There isn't much statistically that makes him look particularly great.
His offensive efficiency is pretty brutal, both RS and PO. He only had a positive rTS once in 13 regular seasons and three times in 9 postseasons.
There seems to be a wide range of opinions about how good of a defender he really was(or wasn't), and the idea that his box defensive stats(2.5 steals per 100) and defensive reputation overstate what he really was as a defender isn't an uncommon notion.
The only box stats that really paint him in a positive light are a/t ratio - 12.4 assists to 5 turnovers per 100 in the regular season for a 2.48 ratio, and 12.1 assists to 4.5 turnovers per 100 in the playoffs for a 2.69 ratio. Those numbers are comparable - worse in the regular season, but comparable - to Steve Nash(2.94, 2.78) and Jason Kidd(3,00, 2.78), for example. He could run an offense pretty well even if he wasn't an efficient scorer himself.
There's also RAPM - Squared has three seasons of Isiah's career. Isiah doesn't look bad at all in these samples, but while he's in the Top 3 on his team in all three seasons, he's never #1 on his team. In three separate seasons, he's had Laimbeer, Sally, and Rodman top him. Elite number one options are usually in the Top 5-10 of the entire league in RAPM and Isiah only did that once out of three times, in 1991 when he was on the decline and sporting what looks to me like a D-RAPM outlier considering his DRAPM in the other years.
1984-85:
Laimbeer - #10 / 5.07 O / -0.41 D / 4.66
Isiah - #39 / 2.59 O / -0.53 D / 2.05
Tyler - #52 / -0.21 O / 1.97 D / 1.77
Tripucka - #85 / 1.86 O / -0.87 D / 0.99
Long - #122 / 3.68 O / -3.33 D / 0.35
Benson - #144 / -0.17 O / 0.16 D / -0.01
Thirdkill - #184 / -1.34 O / 0.83 D / -0.51
Vinnie - #197 / 0.42 O / -1.16 D / -0.74
Jones - #214 / -0.34 O / -0.72 D / -1.06
Roundfield - #254 / -2.62 O / 0.63 D / -2.00
Steppe - #255 / -3.20 O / 1.19 D / -2.01
Cureton - #281 / -0.57 O / -3.15 D / -3.72
Campbell - #292 / -2.48 O / -3.66 D / -6.14
1987-88
Sally - #7 / 2.89 O / 1.34 D / 4.23
Laimbeer - #16 / 2.17 O / 1.05 D / 3.21
Isiah - #22 / 2.96 O / -0.21 D / 2.75
Vinnie - #49 / 0.67 / 0.80 / 1.47
Dantley - #191 / -0.13 O / -0.30 D / -0.43
Dumars - #192 / 0.85 O / -1.30 D / -0.45
Mahorn - #245 / 1.60 O / -2.80 D / -1.20
Rodman - #250 / 0.40 O / -1.77 D / -1.37
1990-91
Rodman - #3 / 2.75 O / 2.14 D / 4.89
Isiah - #7 / 1.53 O / 2.68 D / 4.21
Laimbeer - #56 / 1.45 O / 0.40 D / 1.85
Dumars - #71 / 1.60 O / -0.15 D / 1.45
Sally - #77 / -1.22 O / 2.56 D / 1.34
Aguirre - #307 / 1.16 O / -2.85 D / -1.70
Vinnie - #323 / 0.63 O / -2.67 D / -2.03
Edwards - #362 / -2.07 O / -1.97 D / -4.04
But Isiah has a huge reputation. The thing about Isiah is that he's one of ten guys in NBA history who was, at least in perception, the best player on a back-to-back champion. In chronological order:
Mikan
Russell
Magic
Isiah
Jordan
Hakeem
Shaq
Kobe
LeBron
Steph(sorry KD fans, giving it to Steph)
Of those ten, eight have already been inducted in the Top 15 of the current Top 100 project, and it seems like Mikan might get in the next few rounds. Isiah probably won't get in until the 40s at the earliest.
And the Pistons were one controversial-to-this-day foul call away from winning the title in 1988, so Isiah was nearly one of five guys in NBA history who was, at least in perception, the best player on a three-peat champion.
He had iconic playoff scoring outbursts like this:
and this:
and it's those sorts of memories that people attach to him. (Though it's worth noting the Pistons lost both those games, the latter was a result of that controversial foul call.)
Isiah was one of the biggest names in the league from the mid-80s to the early 90s. I'm going to disagree with what OaD says here:
One_and_Done wrote:Perhaps the biggest disconnect between Isiah Thomas fans and reality is the myth that he was seen as a generational player in his day. This is not reflected at all in the awards voting of the time, no matter what Pistons fans like to think.
Here are his MVP rankings from 82 to 91; 17, 16, 5, 9, 9, 8, 12, 17, 13, 13. Hardly the rankings of a generational player. Nor did he get much recognition as such in the all-nba voting. He made 5 teams in his career, only 3 of them 1st teams (in very weak years for the guard spot), and he didn't make a single team after 1987. As the Pistons were winning, his role and award recognition actually decreased. Usually, when a big time star starts winning, it's the reverse.
And the public outrage to this was nil. Nobody complained loudly to the media that Isiah had been hard done by, because it was felt his rating way largely fair. The stats also back that up. As we've discussed, Isiah looks like a solidly vanilla all-star on the stats.
Specifically the underlined parts. I don't think he was seen as a generational player in his own era, but I do think he was seen as a star player and, as I said, he was one of the biggest names in the game.
When you say there was no public outrage, you're leaving out the biggest instance where a lot of people felt Isiah got wronged - when he got left off the Dream Team. Outrage is not the right word, but it was a big deal when he was left off the team where he would've been the biggest name outside of MJ/Magic/Bird. I mean, Isiah had burned so many bridges by then and MJ specifically didn't want to play with him, but to people who didn't know that(and even some that did), the notion that Isiah could be left off the team was very, very surprising.
This was the media and fans; players within the league probably saw it differently. This passage from Jack McCallum's "Dream Team" certainly makes it seem like the big names knew Isiah wasn't on Jordan/Magic/Bird's level:
The extent to which Jordan, Magic, and Bird formed a subset within the universe of great players cannot be overestimated. Magic and Bird had been measured against each other for over a decade by that time, and Jordan had come along to join them; the three formed the golden tripod on which the NBA was standing strong. No one else could join this exclusive club. Some players, like Barkley, understood this and carved out a comfortable position outside the tripod but friend to all three. Others, like Malone, may have resented the primacy of Michael/Magic/Larry but remained on the outside, smoldering but seemingly unconcerned.
Isiah was different. It was an enduring frustration for him that he could not break into this select society, that, as great as he was, he was on the outside looking in. Had he been as tall as Magic or Larry, or even Michael, yes, perhaps it would've been a Big Four(Isiah would make that point, in typically ham-handed fashion, years later.) But at 6'1', he just couldn't dominate like the others, and it gnawed at him that he was, in his view, perpetually underappreciated.
I don't personally think Isiah should've been on the team - both because Stockton was a better player in 1992(maybe always) and because too many people on that team hated him - but it was a huge story that he wasn't on the team and, even to this day, you can hardly tell the story of the Dream Team without talking about the fact that a lot of people think Isiah was snubbed.
Isiah was ranked #43 in the last Top 100 and I think that's fair. His team accomplishments and reputation would have you think Top 15, and his statistical reality would have you think maybe #60 or worse, so #43 seems like a fair compromise.









