iggymcfrack wrote:rk2023 wrote:iggymcfrack wrote:1. Curry
2. Paul
3. Magic
4. Stockton
5. Oscar
Feel very good about that group. West, while close in an overall sense, is still clearly behind all those guys IMO. Harden, even if I classified him as a point guard (and I don't) would still be behind those 5 plus West and Nash at minimum.
How are CP3 and Stockton > Oscar and West? Seems like a take that’s rooted in the misapplication of advanced stats. I’ll give them longevity (though curving for era, Idek how much of an advantage there is), but in a prime sense - I fail to see it.
Stockton and Paul are both MUCH better passer/playmakers than Oscar and West and they're also MUCH better defenders than Oscar at least while being slightly better defenders than West too. Oscar had maybe the best passing season of the '60s in 1965 with an AST% of 37.8. Stockton beat that every year of his career. Paul beat it every year except for 2020 in OKC when he was focused on mentoring the young guys. Here's a quote from Backpicks describing Oscar's passing (which was better than West's):
"Unlike the modern ball-dominant quarterbacks, Oscar wasn’t spearheading attacks by relentlessly creating opportunities for teammates — such plays weren’t common for much of the 1960s. Oscar led the league in assists in most years, but even then assist rates were far below what they would become after the merger in 1977. Oscar’s assists per 75 possessions were regularly between 5.9 and 7.5. For comparison, John Stockton has the highest rate ever at 13.6, while Magic and Steve Nash peaked around 12. But the best mark before the merger was Kevin Porter’s 8.5.
Thus, Oscar wasn’t making life way easier for his teammates the way creators like Nash and LeBron did. Instead, he was a great facilitator. His more conservative passes put players in the right position to score. He could find easy offense in transition and his great feel for mismatches helped team efficiency too. But an enormous chunk of his global impact came from his own isolation scoring, which was orders better than anyone that decade not named Jerry West."
So basically, Oscar and West were closer to what we'd think of as almost a combo guard today, passing more like Curry than an elite facilitator, but without Curry's incredible gravity due to his constant off-ball movement. Also, while you're curving down longevity (where Stockton and Paul have large edges), don't forget to also curve up for the talent pool of the league growing much larger and it being much harder to dominate today than it was then due to tougher competition.
- I don’t doubt that the two of them *could* be considered better passers, but they are much more of “pass first” players and table setters. I’m high on Paul’s playmaking in an all-time sense (though he is a clear tier below Magic and Nash here) - certainly not Stockton’s. I’d take later career West and Oscar compared to the latter. I’ve read / watched through the Backpicks scouting report of Oscar coupled with other film. I’m aware that he might not be the modern-day “advantage creator” - but his table setting and on-ball QBing is holding much more value in an era-relative sense that I use in analysis (where it’s a harder era for even counting assists). His facilitation relative to the pack is obscene in and ahead of the time, which is fully reflected in team offenses and (what I suspect) Ben’s (and others’) WOWY studies. I’d regard him over Stock as a playmaker - unless you want to weight entry passing to Karl Malone highly. Oscar’s facilitation is lending itself into offensive success and an irreplaceable sense akin to levels of LBJ/Magic/Nash/Jordan/West/Curry.
- Defense, I don’t disagree. I regard Oscar as a slight + with defensive rebounding considered, and see West/Paul/Stockton as similar caliber defenders. It’s convenient to leave out the most important differentiator (while looking at macro skills) between the 2 X 2 in scoring. Not only did West / Oscar score more efficienctly, the gap in volume is astounding! Take a look into their rTS / TS+ / add as well. This is an era where being +9 is more valuable than it is now based on separation from the pack.
- West’s scoring and passing peaked at different times, whereas Oscar’s peaked together. That helps West’s longevity moreso than Oscar’s - but the latter came in as by far the GOAT Young offensive talent in NBA History (looking at production and impact) so he has solid longevity as well. I’m not sure if it’s more impressive than that of Paul and Stockton but *could* when realizing longevity then is objectively more impressive than longevity now. Regardless, when looking at peak and prime - Oscar and West are the vastly better players when it comes to impact, championship equity, and true value(s) over replacement. I’m taking an era relative approach here, where it appears that the much more valuable scoring volume/efficiency proved to be more additive than higher assist %ages in favor of Paul and Stockton (neither is a slouch here either!).