RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Kevin Durant)

Moderators: Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal

Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 53,869
And1: 22,806
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#81 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Sep 6, 2023 9:40 pm

One_and_Done wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:Paul wasn't the same after his 2018 injury. That was why he was traded. Still very good of course, but hardly a top 30 player.


Well, he wasn't the same after his injury, but that's not really why he was traded.

He was traded because Harden was sick of Paul nagging him, and using a power play to force the Rockets to get rid of the nagger even if it meant destroying any chance of the Rockets ever being a contender again - which is what Westbrook's arrival clinched.

If CP3 had been just as good, Harden would have put up with it, is the feeling I had.


Well this gets into the whole thing:

Thinking that getting Westbrook instead of Paul was an upgrade was a really, really bad thought. So either:

a) Harden wanted Paul gone for personal reasons.
or
b) Harden is a horrendous judge of team talent who damages his franchise when he's allowed to have power.

One can choose not to count either thing in one's Top 100 criteria, but nevertheless, at least one of those two things is true.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,790
And1: 5,785
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#82 » by One_and_Done » Wed Sep 6, 2023 9:51 pm

Neither seems relevant to top 100. Just noting why CP3 left. Harden even alluded to CP3 not being as good anymore as the problem.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 53,869
And1: 22,806
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#83 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Sep 6, 2023 9:56 pm

One_and_Done wrote:Neither seems relevant to top 100. Just noting why CP3 left. Harden even alluded to CP3 not being as good anymore as the problem.


- Okay if it's not part of your criteria, but it is part of my own personal criteria.

- "Harden even alluded to". It's certainly possible that he believed it even if it wasn't the truth, but it's also possible he was practicing artifice. All we really know is that anyone who actually thought that was wrong, and that the actions taken by the franchise afterward to please Harden clinched that they'd never compete for a title again with Harden there.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,790
And1: 5,785
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#84 » by One_and_Done » Wed Sep 6, 2023 10:31 pm

We're not judging them on their GM'íng skills. If a player hurts on court performance sure, it matters, but the Westbrook trade in this example seemed to be coming from the owner rather than Harden overruling Morey. Morey seems to have had no problem standing his ground with Harden over the years.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
f4p
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,969
And1: 1,981
Joined: Sep 19, 2021
 

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#85 » by f4p » Wed Sep 6, 2023 10:41 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:Paul wasn't the same after his 2018 injury. That was why he was traded. Still very good of course, but hardly a top 30 player.


Well, he wasn't the same after his injury, but that's not really why he was traded.

He was traded because Harden was sick of Paul nagging him, and using a power play to force the Rockets to get rid of the nagger even if it meant destroying any chance of the Rockets ever being a contender again - which is what Westbrook's arrival clinched.


the nagging certainly doesn't help. it's one thing when you're the best player on the team and nagging everyone. when you're the #2 and the #1 just carried your injured ass through an entire season, it's a bit less palatable.

a) Harden wanted Paul gone for personal reasons.


i didn't want to trade cp3 and i would never ever trade him for westbrook, but i can see harden's POV from a non-personal perspective. in the biggest playoff series of harden's career, chris paul missed 2 games like chris paul always does in the playoffs. then in the 2nd biggest playoff series of harden's career, chris paul sucked after sucking all season because he was either injured or didn't care about taking care of his body. that's the 2 best chances harden had ever had, and cp3 basically messed them both up by not being healthy. at some point you look at how short your career is and you aren't willing to roll the dice again on another wasted year. who would have thought cp3 would look at the 2019 rockets as a throwaway season but then when he got traded, suddenly use vengeance as a reason to go vegan and actually start taking care of his body for a 1st round exit team in OKC.

or
b) Harden is a horrendous judge of team talent


possibly, but until that moment he basically let morey do whatever he wanted while he was there until he started to see the window closing around him. and as OaD mentions, the dummy owner is the one who ultimately made the trade happen (by his own words, not speculation) so who knows if harden would have actually forced it. and it's worth nothing that even with 2 more years of evidence that it was a terrible idea, lebron james was somehow lured by the same russell westbrook siren song. late career westbrook has probably been traded for more combined assets than any terrible player ever.
OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,935
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#86 » by OhayoKD » Wed Sep 6, 2023 11:20 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Well, he wasn't the same after his injury, but that's not really why he was traded.

He was traded because Harden was sick of Paul nagging him, and using a power play to force the Rockets to get rid of the nagger even if it meant destroying any chance of the Rockets ever being a contender again - which is what Westbrook's arrival clinched.

If CP3 had been just as good, Harden would have put up with it, is the feeling I had.


Well this gets into the whole thing:

Thinking that getting Westbrook instead of Paul was an upgrade was a really, really bad thought. So either:

a) Harden wanted Paul gone for personal reasons.
or
b) Harden is a horrendous judge of team talent who damages his franchise when he's allowed to have power.

One can choose not to count either thing in one's Top 100 criteria, but nevertheless, at least one of those two things is true.

In fairness, we didn't really get to see proof of concept for harden-westbrook since westbrook had a quad injury
Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 53,869
And1: 22,806
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#87 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Sep 7, 2023 12:08 am

One_and_Done wrote:We're not judging them on their GM'íng skills. If a player hurts on court performance sure, it matters, but the Westbrook trade in this example seemed to be coming from the owner rather than Harden overruling Morey. Morey seems to have had no problem standing his ground with Harden over the years.


Once again I think you need to stop using "we" as if you're deciding the fundamental scope of this project.
You may ignore what you consider to be "GM'ing skills" if you'd like, others don't need to.

Re: Westbrook trade coming from owner. Harden made his wishes to get rid of Paul publicly known after the 2019 playoff elimination.

Re: Morey no problem standing his ground with Harden over the years. I'd say Harden's wishes are precisely why the team got rid of Howard, McHale & Paul, so no, I don't think Morey had a track record of standing up to Harden in Houston.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 53,869
And1: 22,806
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#88 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Sep 7, 2023 12:22 am

f4p wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:Paul wasn't the same after his 2018 injury. That was why he was traded. Still very good of course, but hardly a top 30 player.


Well, he wasn't the same after his injury, but that's not really why he was traded.

He was traded because Harden was sick of Paul nagging him, and using a power play to force the Rockets to get rid of the nagger even if it meant destroying any chance of the Rockets ever being a contender again - which is what Westbrook's arrival clinched.


the nagging certainly doesn't help. it's one thing when you're the best player on the team and nagging everyone. when you're the #2 and the #1 just carried your injured ass through an entire season, it's a bit less palatable.

a) Harden wanted Paul gone for personal reasons.


i didn't want to trade cp3 and i would never ever trade him for westbrook, but i can see harden's POV from a non-personal perspective. in the biggest playoff series of harden's career, chris paul missed 2 games like chris paul always does in the playoffs. then in the 2nd biggest playoff series of harden's career, chris paul sucked after sucking all season because he was either injured or didn't care about taking care of his body. that's the 2 best chances harden had ever had, and cp3 basically messed them both up by not being healthy. at some point you look at how short your career is and you aren't willing to roll the dice again on another wasted year. who would have thought cp3 would look at the 2019 rockets as a throwaway season but then when he got traded, suddenly use vengeance as a reason to go vegan and actually start taking care of his body for a 1st round exit team in OKC.

or
b) Harden is a horrendous judge of team talent


possibly, but until that moment he basically let morey do whatever he wanted while he was there until he started to see the window closing around him. and as OaD mentions, the dummy owner is the one who ultimately made the trade happen (by his own words, not speculation) so who knows if harden would have actually forced it. and it's worth nothing that even with 2 more years of evidence that it was a terrible idea, lebron james was somehow lured by the same russell westbrook siren song. late career westbrook has probably been traded for more combined assets than any terrible player ever.


Re: Paul nagging. Yup. Paul is annoying and often rubs teammates the wrong way. It's up to each to decide what that means for assessing him, but as a characteristic displayed pathologically, it's undeniable.

Re: Harden's frustration with Paul's injury understandable. Sure.

Re: Paul didn't take health seriously until OKC. Nah. Guys take this stuff more seriously as they age, but Paul was taking way better care of his body in Houston than Harden was.

Re: until that moment let Morey do whatever he wanted. Harden had a locker room war with Howard, came in out of shape when he wanted McHale fired, then demanded Paul gone within 2 years, then demanded out of Houston the next year, then demanded out of Brooklyn, then Philly. The throughline here is pretty clear at this point. I think a lot of us cut Harden slack when he was doing his MVP thing in Houston because the things he wanted seemed correct, but it's clear now that he's basically been doing power plays for as long as he's had power and it just became more obvious when the things he wanted weren't reasonable.

Re: dummy owner made Westbrook trade happen. So, what I think is absolutely clear is that Harden wanted Paul gone and that he stops at nothing to get these things done. How in love was Harden with playing with Westbrook? Enough that he was happier with the idea that sticking with Paul...and that was very, very foolish.

Re: LeBron foolish too. Yes, stunningly so, and I've criticized him a great deal for it as well.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 53,869
And1: 22,806
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#89 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Sep 7, 2023 12:25 am

OhayoKD wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:If CP3 had been just as good, Harden would have put up with it, is the feeling I had.


Well this gets into the whole thing:

Thinking that getting Westbrook instead of Paul was an upgrade was a really, really bad thought. So either:

a) Harden wanted Paul gone for personal reasons.
or
b) Harden is a horrendous judge of team talent who damages his franchise when he's allowed to have power.

One can choose not to count either thing in one's Top 100 criteria, but nevertheless, at least one of those two things is true.

In fairness, we didn't really get to see proof of concept for harden-westbrook since westbrook had a quad injury


Well, Harden had seen enough, and while I don't have much faith in his judgment, I wouldn't claim he was wrong on that one.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
trex_8063
Forum Mod
Forum Mod
Posts: 12,723
And1: 8,354
Joined: Feb 24, 2013
     

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#90 » by trex_8063 » Thu Sep 7, 2023 12:53 am

Nash is one of my three favourite players all-time [probably top two]; so it always feels like a supreme irony that I appear to be in the bottom 10-20% of this forum in terms of how highly I think of his career. Obviously a great player; I just don’t think his candidacy for top 25 of all-time is particularly strong. So if the following seems excessively critical or negative in slant, understand it’s because it comes from a position of providing counterpoint to such high placement.


I think my hesitancy [in ranking him so high] stems from two primary factors: 1) being a bit less bullish on his impact profile [compared to some], while also (1b) questioning how universal it is (in different situations). And 2) perhaps I put more faith or stock [compared to some] in box-based metrics.


I’m not going to dwell on his box-based metrics; suffice to say they fall below a number of other candidates presently on the table (ALL of them except Moses, as a matter of fact; as well as one or two not yet on the ballot [e.g. Wade or Jokic, or even Stockton slightly]).

Looking at his impact profile, I acknowledge he led some of the greatest relative ORtg's in league history. To be fair, those teams were strategically ahead of the curve, and were the early sign of what has now been amply demonstrated: that the "right way" to play (at least if your goal is offensive efficiency) is space & pace, ball movement, off-ball movement, and lots of threes. D'Antoni seemed to recognize this earlier than much of the league, and to his credit: so did Steve Nash. And Mike basically just gave Nash the reins to make it happen (also a credit to Nash).

However, it still feels a pinch situational (to me). I mean, to my possibly mistaken perception, Nash couldn’t be plugged into ANY circumstance and instantly manufacture greatness. We only ever really saw it in Phoenix.

The offenses in Dallas in the early 00’s were great, at least in the rs [still very good in the playoffs]; I believe the ‘04 Mavs are the best rs rORTG of all-time, actually. Though Nash was never “the man” on those squads (that was Dirk); and fwiw, they were “elevated” above a pretty sluggish league average (that greatest ever rORTG, in raw terms, is LOWER than ‘23 league avg [would have placed just 26th in the league last year]). I’d also comment that those teams were somewhat constructed for offense (at the expense of defense), with big rotational minutes for Dirk/Nash/Finley + Van Exel or Jamison. And finally Nash’s individual impact metrics underwhelm somewhat [relative to reputation] while in Dallas.

Maybe Don Nelson was holding him back (some would say Sloan held Stockton back, too, fwiw). But it does perhaps suggest that Nash was fortunate to find D'Antoni (and vice versa); maybe a bit of a Duncan/Pop situation.

I'm not sure how critical I want to be about '13. It was with D'Antoni again, and Nash was injured a bit, and past his prime anyway. Though it was a disappointing season to say the least (anyone remember Peace predicting 73 wins?), and it's perhaps suggestive that Nash can't automatically mesh with just any cast of stars and make them great [on offense]. Sometimes the chemistry just doesn't work.

Anyway, where his impact is concerned, I wanted to have a look at his RAPM profile vs others of the databall era. (NOTE: I'm including rs AuPM as proxy ['94-'96, and earlier for Sixer players], just to have a broader sample of players/years).....

Nash never led the league in RAPM (highest finish was 3rd, I believe). Was top 5 three or four times, top 10 six.
Looking at his best 7 years [not necessarily consecutive] added, here are players of the databall era he falls behind:

LeBron James
Kevin Garnett
Shaquille O'Neal
Tim Duncan
(mostly late career/post-prime) David Robinson
Chris Paul
*Manu Ginobili
Stephen Curry
Dirk Nowitzki
*Dwyane Wade

And only a little ahead of *Alonzo Mourning, *[mostly late career/post-prime] John Stockton, Kobe Bryant, and *Kevin Durant. (players marked with * are also not yet voted in)

Which is to say he looks very good, though not necessarily burnin' down the house by RAPM.
And since this also is a rate metric, it's worth mentioning that Nash's best years come while averaging around 2600 or so minutes per season, between 33-35 [avg 34.1] mpg. The people ahead of him---with the exception of Ginobili [played less], Curry and mostly late-career Robinson [played same(ish) mpg]---were averaging >36 mpg, often somewhere nearer to 3000+ minutes (same for some of the guys immediately below him; Durant for example averaged 36.8 mpg in the seven seasons in question).

Also needs mentioning that RAPM [or any impact indicator] is not strictly a measure of "player goodness". It could be said to measure "player goodness" + "utilization" + "fit" (+/- some additional contextual considerations, such as roster colinearity). That is: their impact within a given circumstance. For as portable as we would think Nash should be, Phoenix was the only place where we really saw it all come together.

NOT saying box-based metrics are a measure of "player goodness", btw. They do, however, take stock of things we'd typically think of as valuable: efficient scoring, turnover economy, rebounding, distributing the ball (yes, not all assists are created equal), and so on. Personally, I like to COMBINE impact indicators and the box indicators. Maybe that's a mistake, but that's my comfort zone: not putting all my eggs in one basket [or, family of data].



I also want to provide a slight counterpoint to a narrative that is used in his favour: that of the Phoenix turnaround. It was a helluva change, from '04 to '05, and without a doubt Nash was the single biggest factor in engineering that change.
But he wasn't the ONLY factor. There were actually a handful of moving parts here.

It might not seem so at a glance, because the top three in minutes played [both seasons] were: Joe Johnson, Shawn Marion, Amar'e Stoudemire (in that order).
However, the '04 roster was in such flux that Amar'e was third in playing time despite missing a third of the season and barely topping 2k minutes. He actually played about 43% more minutes in '05 than he had in '04; which is not irrelevant.

He also appears to improve quite a lot, which I don't think we can entirely chalk up to Nash "lifting" him. I mean, it's not at all uncommon for players to show significant improvement from their 2nd season to their 3rd (and perhaps especially young ones??). Some notable examples from recent(ish) history: Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Jayson Tatum, Kevin Durant, Chris Paul, Draymond Green, Anthony Davis, Carmelo Anthony, Clint Capela, Patrick Ewing, Boris Diaw, Josh Howard, Kevin Garnett, John Stockton and Karl Malone. 3rd-season improvement is perhaps even expected (arguably the MOST expected or common year-to-year improvement we typically see).

So how much is improvement and 43% greater availability of Amar'e worth to a team that only won 29 games? I don't think it's unreasonable to suggest that's worth "a few" wins, at least.

They also added Quentin Richardson, who was not a great player, but a fair/decent one (and being somewhat of a 3pt specialist, he was a decent fit next to Nash). By the same token, they were also able to off-load some garbage time players to pick up an aging Jim Jackson mid-season. Again, not a special player, but better than EVERYTHING they traded away to get him, and a not awful fit (shooter) next to Nash. How much are these pieces worth as additions to a bad team, considering their minutes were probably mostly taking the place of *Casey Jacobsen and a washed up Anfernee Hardaway? That might be at least a couple more wins.

*Now that I've mentioned Jacobsen, I should expound on just how bad the extended cast of the '04 Suns were: 4th and 5th [respectively] in playing time on that team were Casey Jacobsen (a career scrub who washed out of the league in his mid-20s) and Jake Voskuhl (a replacement-level player at best). Voskuhl actually averaged >24 mpg that year; he would never again average more than 16 mpg in any other season of his career. These are simply NOT good NBA players.......yet they combined for a staggering 3,434 minutes on that '04 squad.

Speaking of Voskuhl, the reason he played less in '05 was they also added Steven Hunter, who took the place of the C minutes of Jahidi White and some of Voskuhl's. Hunter was not a particularly noteworthy player, but he's a clear improvement over EITHER of the other two at C. How much improvement does that translate to?

Joe Johnson had a staggering improvement from behind the arc in '05, which no doubt was PARTLY due to Nash and the SSOL system. But I'm skeptical that is the ONLY thing accounting for a sudden +17.3% improvement from trey (which he would never again even come within 6.5% of). The rest of his career DOES, however, show him as a more than capable 3pt shooter, which he was NOT in his first three seasons ['02-'04]. He obviously put in some work in during that off-season. Is this worth anything to this bad team?

Anyway, I'm just illustrating that there were several moving parts within that sudden improvement. Nash I'll comfortably award with the lion's share of credit; but is he responsible for all +33 wins? No, most certainly not. I’d estimate that something like a quarter of the improvement [at least] can be traced back to OTHER factors.

And if we’re to use the turnaround in Phoenix as a point in his favour, it’s probably only fair to look at the flip-side of that coin: what happened to the team he left?

This is more difficult to parse out, as there were even more moving parts on that end. They didn’t just lose Steve Nash; they also lost Antoine Walker and Antawn Jamison (as well as low-minute Travis Best and Eduardo Najera, fwiw).
Relevant additions to the roster were Jason Terry, Erick Dampier, Jerry Stackhouse, Alan Henderson, and rookie Devin Harris.

Nash was, in essence, replaced by Jason Terry as a featured backcourt player. So I’ll first look at the OTHER moving pieces in comparison.

I’m not terribly high on Walker or Jamison, personally.
Walker was a chucker, a turnover-prone chucker, who was grossly overrated by mainstream media because he frequently (for some bad Boston teams, fwiw) crossed that magical 20-pt threshold that makes many a casual fan go gooey. But he just wasn’t that good. To be fair, in ‘04 he’s shooting less [which is good], assisting a little more (though his are generally going to be of the vanilla variety), and he is a decent rebounding forward (particularly on the offensive glass in ‘04). I thought he was passable on defense, too. But he’s no prize.

Jamison was a good offensive forward: decent finisher near the rim, could make little runners and such in the mid-range, OK outside shooter. He could score, basically, and his efficiency really seemed to benefit in playing next to Dirk and Nash in ‘04. He was really excellent on the offensive glass in ‘04 for Dallas, too; also took pretty good care of the ball.
However, he’s a weak defensive forward. Much of what he gains you on offense, he gives back on defense. Still a net positive player, but probably not as much as his box suggests.

Best and Najera were whatever…….basically replacement-level players, more or less what you’d expect of guys who were 9th and 10th [respectively] in minutes played.

Let’s look at who replaced these guys’ minutes…..

Best, as back-up PG, was largely replaced by rookie Devin Harris, who even as a rookie was a small upgrade (for whatever that’s worth in the guy who’s 9th in minutes). The minutes of Walker, Jamison, and Najera were replaced by Jerry Stackhouse, Erick Dampier, and Alan Henderson (as well as increased minutes for Josh Howard; more on that in a moment).

Dirk had been playing mostly C [according to bbref] in ‘04, which looking at the typical line-ups probably was the case. That’s certainly gotta put a cap on your defense. A frontcourt of Dirk/Dampier and Howard or Stackhouse is definitely a defensive upgrade from Dirk/Walker/Jamison. Dampier is a much better defensive C than Dirk (and arguably the best defender mentioned here), and replacing Jamison with pretty much anyone except maybe Carmelo Anthony is going to be a defensive upgrade at SF. This is probably a slight offensive downgrade in your frontcourt, however, for losing Jamison (though the aforementioned Devin Harris perhaps mitigates that slightly). Dampier doesn’t try to score a lot (good shooting efficiency on what he does score), and he’s an EXCELLENT offensive rebounder, though he’s also extremely turnover-prone (luckily he doesn’t touch the ball a lot).

My hunch is the defensive improvement is larger than the offensive downgrade. So I call this a small net gain overall.

Josh Howard, in his second season [‘05] gets perhaps marginally better. His shooting efficiency improves significantly, mostly by way of improved mid-range shooting (and +3% at the FT line), though he’s still not a good scorer; and he’s still a little turnover prone (slightly WORSE than his rookie season, actually). His rebounding numbers decline a bit, too, though his tendency to foul gets a little better. He’s still active defensively. Overall it’s only a slight improvement on a per-minute basis, though his minutes do go up substantially (increasing by 54% over ‘04).
Does that account for much on an already good team? Idk. Maybe, but probably not much (he’s still only a slightly above average NBA player at this stage; I can’t see a substantial increase in minutes for a slightly above average player moving the needle a lot for a team that was already >50 wins).

Dirk himself has a better year in ‘05 than he’d had in ‘04. That’s a double-edged sword in terms of evaluating Nash: on the one hand it mutes the loss resulting from Nash’s departure; on the other hand, Dirk having a substantial improvement to his scoring the year after Nash leaves tarnishes Steve’s reputation for consistently elevating his teammates.

Anyway, those are the main moving pieces (aside from the Nash/Terry roster swap). Generally, they translate to a small, but clear, net positive change, imo. The roster changes outlined above, plus the increased utilization of Josh Howard should translate to notable defensive improvement, with only a small downgrade to the offense (I would think).

But Jason Terry for Steve Nash should be viewed as a downgrade, right? And actually a pretty big one, if we’re advocating for Nash here. On paper, it seems like this should probably be a small net loss overall for this Mavs team…..maybe a net neutral change if you’re particularly low on Nash [and/or high on Terry], or a SIZABLE downgrade overall if you’re generally high on Nash.
What actually happened?

Well, the Mavs got better by +1 SRS and 6 wins, and went one round further in the playoffs. And just to show it wasn’t a fluke, they improved by another +0.1 SRS and 2 more wins the following year, and made it to the NBA Finals. (to be fair, the ‘03 Mavs with Nash had been more or less equally wicked, though)

Yes, the Dallas offense got substantially worse in ‘05 (and one would point to the loss of Nash as the primary explanation). It was a massive improvement on defense that produced the slightly better overall result.
But, what are we saying then? That Nash/Jamison traded for Dampier/Terry should be viewed as a basically equal swap? That the defensive improvement the latter duo gives you will balance the offensive decline you suffer? That’s not exactly a flattering piece of argumentation for Nash.

His reputation is almost that of a savaant, who [because he's not a primary scorer] you can just "plug and play" with any cast, any environment, and the result will always be monster impact. But I don't feel his career is fully reflective of that sentiment. It felt to me like a lot of fortuitous things crystalized in Phoenix (can go into more detail later, perhaps).

At any rate, with a few prime years next to Dirk, and then some decent casts for a few years in Phoenix (where his impact was unleashed), and still a title nor even a Finals appearance ever materialized.**
This^^^ last stab is a generic argument, I realize, but one which has, in so many words, been used against both Stockton and Malone, fwiw. And I'll repeat: I've been going for counterpoint in this post.

(**Disclaimer: I vomited a little in my mouth [not really] while playing devil’s advocate with that argument, as I’m still kinda sore about ‘07. The Robert Horry Hip-check Incident still strikes me as one of the larger playoff injustices in NBA history. A total thug/goon move that CLEARLY should not benefit the Spurs, in the end, did exactly that. I realize the league had put in place some new rules after the Malice in the Palace, but players weren’t fully used to them yet (how often are you really tested on such rules?). And come on, it’s the playoffs; you shouldn’t have rules like that (when no real tussle actually even occurred) cripple a team in a playoff series (particularly the team on the receiving end of the goon play). I just felt the league handled that poorly. It felt like the Suns had the momentum at that point; and while obviously it’s pure speculation, I feel they would have won the series if not for that incident. And once past the Spurs, who else had the steam to stop them?
For me, the WC semis Suns/Spurs was the REAL Finals that year: those were the two best teams, imo.)

Anyway…..
These things produce a reluctance to support him yet, for me. Still a great player, still one of my favourite players, but I just don’t view him as a top 25 player/career. Top 35, sure.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
trex_8063
Forum Mod
Forum Mod
Posts: 12,723
And1: 8,354
Joined: Feb 24, 2013
     

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#91 » by trex_8063 » Thu Sep 7, 2023 1:34 am

VOTE: Kevin Durant
Alternate: Charles Barkley


Well, I wrote a lot about why I'm NOT ready to vote for one of my favourite players (Nash) above [post #90 of this #22 thread], as well as hinting slightly at my approach.

I'm going with Durant, as he provides a solid basis of both impact indicators [RAPM-based] and box-based production/efficiency. At this point his longevity isn't bad either (though durability wanes a little). What he does well is very much on the surface (not a lot "hidden" with him); and he's got all the little legacy boxes ticked, too, fwiw. And all of this in one of the most competitive eras in the game's history. It all combines to make me feel fairly comfortable in going with him, especially with most of the heavy contenders [for me] off the table already.
Hope that will suffice as support of this pick.

My alternate is made slightly easier by who is on the table; if Stockton were among the nominees, that would give me pause. Giannis I'm not quite ready for yet (longevity; he wasn't particularly good till his 3rd season, too). Moses I think is oversold by his three MVP's.


Nomination: John Stockton
Alternate: James Harden
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,790
And1: 5,785
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#92 » by One_and_Done » Thu Sep 7, 2023 2:15 am

I don't understand how you can be down on Nash, the nominate Stockton of all people. If it's just about the advanced stats I guess you have Draymond next? He has alot in common with Stockton; they're both all-star role players who you couldn't build a contender around as the best player.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,790
And1: 5,785
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#93 » by One_and_Done » Thu Sep 7, 2023 2:26 am

trex_8063 wrote:Nash is one of my three favourite players all-time [probably top two]; so it always feels like a supreme irony that I appear to be in the bottom 10-20% of this forum in terms of how highly I think of his career. Obviously a great player; I just don’t think his candidacy for top 25 of all-time is particularly strong. So if the following seems excessively critical or negative in slant, understand it’s because it comes from a position of providing counterpoint to such high placement.


I think my hesitancy [in ranking him so high] stems from two primary factors: 1) being a bit less bullish on his impact profile [compared to some], while also (1b) questioning how universal it is (in different situations). And 2) perhaps I put more faith or stock [compared to some] in box-based metrics.


I’m not going to dwell on his box-based metrics; suffice to say they fall below a number of other candidates presently on the table (ALL of them except Moses, as a matter of fact; as well as one or two not yet on the ballot [e.g. Wade or Jokic, or even Stockton slightly]).

Looking at his impact profile, I acknowledge he led some of the greatest relative ORtg's in league history. To be fair, those teams were strategically ahead of the curve, and were the early sign of what has now been amply demonstrated: that the "right way" to play (at least if your goal is offensive efficiency) is space & pace, ball movement, off-ball movement, and lots of threes. D'Antoni seemed to recognize this earlier than much of the league, and to his credit: so did Steve Nash. And Mike basically just gave Nash the reins to make it happen (also a credit to Nash).

However, it still feels a pinch situational (to me). I mean, to my possibly mistaken perception, Nash couldn’t be plugged into ANY circumstance and instantly manufacture greatness. We only ever really saw it in Phoenix.

The offenses in Dallas in the early 00’s were great, at least in the rs [still very good in the playoffs]; I believe the ‘04 Mavs are the best rs rORTG of all-time, actually. Though Nash was never “the man” on those squads (that was Dirk); and fwiw, they were “elevated” above a pretty sluggish league average (that greatest ever rORTG, in raw terms, is LOWER than ‘23 league avg [would have placed just 26th in the league last year]). I’d also comment that those teams were somewhat constructed for offense (at the expense of defense), with big rotational minutes for Dirk/Nash/Finley + Van Exel or Jamison. And finally Nash’s individual impact metrics underwhelm somewhat [relative to reputation] while in Dallas.

Maybe Don Nelson was holding him back (some would say Sloan held Stockton back, too, fwiw). But it does perhaps suggest that Nash was fortunate to find D'Antoni (and vice versa); maybe a bit of a Duncan/Pop situation.

I'm not sure how critical I want to be about '13. It was with D'Antoni again, and Nash was injured a bit, and past his prime anyway. Though it was a disappointing season to say the least (anyone remember Peace predicting 73 wins?), and it's perhaps suggestive that Nash can't automatically mesh with just any cast of stars and make them great [on offense]. Sometimes the chemistry just doesn't work.

Anyway, where his impact is concerned, I wanted to have a look at his RAPM profile vs others of the databall era. (NOTE: I'm including rs AuPM as proxy ['94-'96, and earlier for Sixer players], just to have a broader sample of players/years).....

Nash never led the league in RAPM (highest finish was 3rd, I believe). Was top 5 three or four times, top 10 six.
Looking at his best 7 years [not necessarily consecutive] added, here are players of the databall era he falls behind:

LeBron James
Kevin Garnett
Shaquille O'Neal
Tim Duncan
(mostly late career/post-prime) David Robinson
Chris Paul
*Manu Ginobili
Stephen Curry
Dirk Nowitzki
*Dwyane Wade

And only a little ahead of *Alonzo Mourning, *[mostly late career/post-prime] John Stockton, Kobe Bryant, and *Kevin Durant. (players marked with * are also not yet voted in)

Which is to say he looks very good, though not necessarily burnin' down the house by RAPM.
And since this also is a rate metric, it's worth mentioning that Nash's best years come while averaging around 2600 or so minutes per season, between 33-35 [avg 34.1] mpg. The people ahead of him---with the exception of Ginobili [played less], Curry and mostly late-career Robinson [played same(ish) mpg]---were averaging >36 mpg, often somewhere nearer to 3000+ minutes (same for some of the guys immediately below him; Durant for example averaged 36.8 mpg in the seven seasons in question).

Also needs mentioning that RAPM [or any impact indicator] is not strictly a measure of "player goodness". It could be said to measure "player goodness" + "utilization" + "fit" (+/- some additional contextual considerations, such as roster colinearity). That is: their impact within a given circumstance. For as portable as we would think Nash should be, Phoenix was the only place where we really saw it all come together.

NOT saying box-based metrics are a measure of "player goodness", btw. They do, however, take stock of things we'd typically think of as valuable: efficient scoring, turnover economy, rebounding, distributing the ball (yes, not all assists are created equal), and so on. Personally, I like to COMBINE impact indicators and the box indicators. Maybe that's a mistake, but that's my comfort zone: not putting all my eggs in one basket [or, family of data].



I also want to provide a slight counterpoint to a narrative that is used in his favour: that of the Phoenix turnaround. It was a helluva change, from '04 to '05, and without a doubt Nash was the single biggest factor in engineering that change.
But he wasn't the ONLY factor. There were actually a handful of moving parts here.

It might not seem so at a glance, because the top three in minutes played [both seasons] were: Joe Johnson, Shawn Marion, Amar'e Stoudemire (in that order).
However, the '04 roster was in such flux that Amar'e was third in playing time despite missing a third of the season and barely topping 2k minutes. He actually played about 43% more minutes in '05 than he had in '04; which is not irrelevant.

He also appears to improve quite a lot, which I don't think we can entirely chalk up to Nash "lifting" him. I mean, it's not at all uncommon for players to show significant improvement from their 2nd season to their 3rd (and perhaps especially young ones??). Some notable examples from recent(ish) history: Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Jayson Tatum, Kevin Durant, Chris Paul, Draymond Green, Anthony Davis, Carmelo Anthony, Clint Capela, Patrick Ewing, Boris Diaw, Josh Howard, Kevin Garnett, John Stockton and Karl Malone. 3rd-season improvement is perhaps even expected (arguably the MOST expected or common year-to-year improvement we typically see).

So how much is improvement and 43% greater availability of Amar'e worth to a team that only won 29 games? I don't think it's unreasonable to suggest that's worth "a few" wins, at least.

They also added Quentin Richardson, who was not a great player, but a fair/decent one (and being somewhat of a 3pt specialist, he was a decent fit next to Nash). By the same token, they were also able to off-load some garbage time players to pick up an aging Jim Jackson mid-season. Again, not a special player, but better than EVERYTHING they traded away to get him, and a not awful fit (shooter) next to Nash. How much are these pieces worth as additions to a bad team, considering their minutes were probably mostly taking the place of *Casey Jacobsen and a washed up Anfernee Hardaway? That might be at least a couple more wins.

*Now that I've mentioned Jacobsen, I should expound on just how bad the extended cast of the '04 Suns were: 4th and 5th [respectively] in playing time on that team were Casey Jacobsen (a career scrub who washed out of the league in his mid-20s) and Jake Voskuhl (a replacement-level player at best). Voskuhl actually averaged >24 mpg that year; he would never again average more than 16 mpg in any other season of his career. These are simply NOT good NBA players.......yet they combined for a staggering 3434 minutes on that '04 squad.

Speaking of Voskuhl, the reason he played less in '05 was they also added Steven Hunter, who took the place of the C minutes of Jahidi White and some of Voskuhl's. Hunter was not a particularly noteworthy player, but he's a clear improvement over EITHER of the other two at C. How much improvement does that translate to?

Joe Johnson had a staggering improvement from behind the arc in '05, which no doubt was PARTLY due to Nash and the SSOL system. But I'm skeptical that is the ONLY thing accounting for a sudden +17.3% improvement from trey (which he would never again even come within 6.5% of). The rest of his career DOES, however, show him as a more than capable 3pt shooter, which he was NOT in his first three seasons ['02-'04]. He obviously put in some work in during that off-season. Is this worth anything to this bad team?

Anyway, I'm just illustrating that there were several moving parts within that sudden improvement. Nash I'll comfortably award with the lion's share of credit; but is he responsible for all +33 wins? No, most certainly not. I’d estimate that something like a quarter of the improvement [at least] can be traced back to OTHER factors.

And if we’re to use the turnaround in Phoenix as a point in his favour, it’s probably only fair to look at the flip-side of that coin: what happened to the team he left?

This is more difficult to parse out, as there were even more moving parts on that end. They didn’t just lose Steve Nash; they also lost Antoine Walker and Antawn Jamison (as well as low-minute Travis Best and Eduardo Najera, fwiw).
Relevant additions to the roster were Jason Terry, Erick Dampier, Jerry Stackhouse, Alan Henderson, and rookie Devin Harris.

Nash was, in essence, replaced by Jason Terry as a featured backcourt player. So I’ll first look at the OTHER moving pieces in comparison.

I’m not terribly high on Walker or Jamison, personally.
Walker was a chucker, a turnover-prone chucker, who was grossly overrated by mainstream media because he frequently (for some bad Boston teams, fwiw) crossed that magical 20-pt threshold that makes many a casual fan go gooey. But he just wasn’t that good. To be fair, in ‘04 he’s shooting less [which is good], assisting a little more (though his are generally going to be of the vanilla variety), and he is a decent rebounding forward (particularly on the offensive glass in ‘04). I thought he was passable on defense, too. But he’s no prize.

Jamison was a good offensive forward: decent finisher near the rim, could make little runners and such in the mid-range, OK outside shooter. He could score, basically, and his efficiency really seemed to benefit in playing next to Dirk and Nash in ‘04. He was really excellent on the offensive glass in ‘04 for Dallas, too; also took pretty good care of the ball.
However, he’s a weak defensive forward. Much of what he gains you on offense, he gives back on defense. Still a net positive player, but probably not as much as his box suggests.

Best and Najera were whatever…….basically replacement-level players, more or less what you’d expect of guys who were 9th and 10th [respectively] in minutes played.

Let’s look at who replaced these guys’ minutes…..

Best, as back-up PG, was largely replaced by rookie Devin Harris, who even as a rookie was a small upgrade (for whatever that’s worth in the guy who’s 9th in minutes). The minutes of Walker, Jamison, and Najera were replaced by Jerry Stackhouse, Erick Dampier, and Alan Henderson (as well as increased minutes for Josh Howard; more on that in a moment).

Dirk had been playing mostly C [according to bbref] in ‘04, which looking at the typical line-ups probably was the case. That’s certainly gotta put a cap on your defense. A frontcourt of Dirk/Dampier and Howard or Stackhouse is definitely a defensive upgrade from Dirk/Walker/Jamison. Dampier is a much better defensive C than Dirk (and arguably the best defender mentioned here), and replacing Jamison with pretty much anyone except maybe Carmelo Anthony is going to be a defensive upgrade at SF. This is probably a slight offensive downgrade in your frontcourt, however, for losing Jamison (though the aforementioned Devin Harris perhaps mitigates that slightly). Dampier doesn’t try to score a lot (good shooting efficiency on what he does score), and he’s an EXCELLENT offensive rebounder, though he’s also extremely turnover-prone (luckily he doesn’t touch the ball a lot).

My hunch is the defensive improvement is larger than the offensive downgrade. So I call this a small net gain overall.

Josh Howard, in his second season [‘05] gets perhaps marginally better. His shooting efficiency improves significantly, mostly by way of improved mid-range shooting (and +3% at the FT line), though he’s still not a good scorer; and he’s still a little turnover prone (slightly WORSE than his rookie season, actually). His rebounding numbers decline a bit, too, though his tendency to foul gets a little better. He’s still active defensively. Overall it’s only a slight improvement on a per-minute basis, though his minutes do go up substantially (increasing by 54% over ‘04).
Does that account for much on an already good team? Idk. Maybe, but probably not much (he’s still only a slightly above average NBA player at this stage; I can’t see a substantial increase in minutes for a slightly above average player moving the needle a lot for a team that was already >50 wins).

Dirk himself has a better year in ‘05 than he’d had in ‘04. That’s a double-edged sword in terms of evaluating Nash: on the one hand it mutes the loss resulting from Nash’s departure; on the other hand, Dirk having a substantial improvement to his scoring the year after Nash leaves tarnishes Steve’s reputation for consistently elevating his teammates.

Anyway, those are the main moving pieces (aside from the Nash/Terry roster swap). Generally, they translate to a small, but clear, net positive change, imo. The roster changes outlined above, plus the increased utilization of Josh Howard should translate to notable defensive improvement, with only a small downgrade to the offense (I would think).

But Jason Terry for Steve Nash should be viewed as a downgrade, right? And actually a pretty big one, if we’re advocating for Nash here. On paper, it seems like this should probably be a small net loss overall for this Mavs team…..maybe a net neutral change if you’re particularly low on Nash [and/or high on Terry], or a SIZABLE downgrade overall if you’re generally high on Nash.
What actually happened?

Well, the Mavs got better by +1 SRS and 6 wins, and went one round further in the playoffs. And just to show it wasn’t a fluke, they improved by another +0.1 SRS and 2 more wins the following year, and made it to the NBA Finals. (to be fair, the ‘03 Mavs with Nash had been more or less equally wicked, though)

Yes, the Dallas offense got substantially worse in ‘05 (and one would point to the loss of Nash as the primary explanation). It was a massive improvement on defense that produced the slightly better overall result.
But, what are we saying then? That Nash/Jamison traded for Dampier/Terry should be viewed as a basically equal swap? That the defensive improvement the latter duo gives you will balance the offensive decline you suffer? That’s not exactly a flattering piece of argumentation for Nash.

His reputation is almost that of a savaant, who [because he's not a primary scorer] you can just "plug and play" with any cast, any environment, and the result will always be monster impact. But I don't feel his career is fully reflective of that sentiment. It felt to me like a lot of fortuitous things crystalized in Phoenix (can go into more detail later, perhaps).

At any rate, with a few prime years next to Dirk, and then some decent casts for a few years in Phoenix (where his impact was unleashed), and still a title nor even a Finals appearance ever materialized.**
This^^^ last stab is a generic argument, I realize, but one which has, in so many words, been used against both Stockton and Malone, fwiw. And I'll repeat: I've been going for counterpoint in this post.

(**Disclaimer: I vomited a little in my mouth [not really] while playing devil’s advocate with that argument, as I’m still kinda sore about ‘07. The Robert Horry Hip-check Incident still strikes me as one of the larger playoff injustices in NBA history. A total thug/goon move that CLEARLY should not benefit the Spurs, in the end, did exactly that. I realize the league had put in place some new rules after the Malice in the Palace, but players weren’t fully used to them yet (how often are you really tested on such rules?). And come on, it’s the playoffs; you shouldn’t have rules like that (when no real tussle actually even occurred) cripple a team in a playoff series (particularly the team on the receiving end of the goon play). I just felt the league handled that poorly. It felt like the Suns had the momentum at that point; and while obviously it’s pure speculation, I feel they would have won the series if not for that incident. And once past the Spurs, who else had the steam to stop them?
For me, the WC semis Suns/Spurs was the REAL Finals that year: those were the two best teams, imo.)

Anyway…..
These things produce a reluctance to support him yet, for me. Still a great player, still one of my favourite players, but I just don’t view him as a top 25 player/career. Top 35, sure.


1) You have the leaving the bench rule stuff a bit mixed up. Those rules were introduced as a result of Kent Benson almost killing Rudy. They had nothing to do with Malice in the Palace. The rules had been around for literal decades, and had to that point ALWAYS been enforced in a draconian manner. David Robinson was among the many players who missed a playoff game as a result. I think it's impossible to argue the rule was unfair to the Suns or they didn't have time to adjust to it.
2) After the suspension the Suns went back at full strength for the close out game and were absolutely waxed. Horry was still missing in the closeout game, as he got a 2 game suspension. I think the reality is the Spurs were just better, and were winning regardless. Not that the Suns weren't awesome.
3) Nash was definitely held back in Dallas
4) Nash was injured in 2013. I don't see why we'd hold it against him at all. He couldn't move laterally anymore and knew not long after he'd have to retire. It seemd totally offbase to criticise an aged Nash for the Lakers falling short. Blame Kobe and Dwight.
5) You talk about 'other factors' driving the Suns rise into a contender. To a small degree sure, but in 06 Amare got hurt and Joe Johnson left, and they were still a contender while playing Boris Diaw at the 5. Over time Marion and others left too. Still Nash proved he could drive them to contender status, as long as Terry Porter wasn't trying to run things through old Shaq, something that was very visible in their record of games without him. In 2010 they made the WCFs and pushed a stacked Lakers team with J.Rich as their 3rd best guy after post-microfracture Amare. No Marion, no Joe Johnson, no Diaw, no Q.Rich, no Raja Bell.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
User avatar
OldSchoolNoBull
General Manager
Posts: 9,107
And1: 4,506
Joined: Jun 27, 2003
Location: Ohio
 

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#94 » by OldSchoolNoBull » Thu Sep 7, 2023 3:50 am

Vote: Kevin Durant

I guess I'll pile on for KD in this thread, since it's going to be an easy win for him. I still think he's a bit one-dimensional, and I still say his impact numbers don't look great, but he has crazy scoring efficiency, he's a very good off-ball mover, he's got four finals appearances under his belt, and he's way ahead in the vote, so why not.

Secondary Vote: Charles Barkley

I'm having a difficult time deciding between Barkley and Moses. Going with Barkley for now, but will discuss more in the next thread.

Nomination: Bob Pettit

Jokic, Pettit, and Harden are in a three-way tie right now after preferences with 4 votes apiece. I've decided to break that tie, for the moment, in favor of Pettit. He's got the best era-relative case right now imo. Four Finals in five seasons, won a title, and was one of two players to lead a team to a playoff series victory over Bill Russell in his whole career, the other being Wilt(I am aware that Russell was hurt that series). There just isn't any real impact data for players from that long ago, but his box numbers are remarkably consistent in both RS and PO.

In light of that argument, you might mention Wade, who went to five Finals and won a ring, but four of his Finals were as the clear #2 option, the last two of them he was seen as in decline, and Pettit tops Wade in rTS and TS Add(even after pace adjustment).

Secondary Nomination: Nikola Jokic

As I have said on multiple occasions, I have big reservations about elevating a player with only seven seasons to his name, but I think his peak warrants it. He achieved the ultimate goal of winning a championship without - all due respect to Jamal Murray, Michael Porter Jr., and Aaron Gordon - ever having a KD or a CP3 or an Embiid next to him(like Harden did), while going through KD/Booker and LeBron/AD.
User avatar
OldSchoolNoBull
General Manager
Posts: 9,107
And1: 4,506
Joined: Jun 27, 2003
Location: Ohio
 

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#95 » by OldSchoolNoBull » Thu Sep 7, 2023 3:53 am

If anyone's curious, here are the placements on the 2020 Top 100 for the players being discussed currently:

Moses - 20
Barkley - 21
Durant - 22
Pettit - 25
Stockton - 26
Nash - 27
Wade - 28
Harden - 31
Giannis - 74
Jokic - 95
rk2023
Starter
Posts: 2,266
And1: 2,273
Joined: Jul 01, 2022
   

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#96 » by rk2023 » Thu Sep 7, 2023 4:26 am

I'm a really big fan of Jokic, how far he's come, and some of the amazing things he does on a basketball court (the dude strikes me as a damn supercomputer at times). He certainly is on my radar of guys to be nominated sometime soon, and even his lesser offensive-load years on offense come with an end-result of a very impactful player (when considering meaningful longevity, being very valuable and having impact trumping that of your box stats in a lesser role moves me - hence the Paul vote at 20).

With all of this said, I have a hard time voting him over Wade / seeing the case for it at this point of his career. Even with longevity concerns for Wade, he still has tremendous campaigns like 2006 and 2009-11 under his belt.

Read on Twitter
?s=20

Read on Twitter
?s=20

Despite having his rookie season, coming back from an injury in 2007, and 2008 which was a vast downturn of a year for Wade - he still looks good in JE's RAPM for the multi-year, PI samples that hone in on his prime play (in comparison to this project's #1/5/9/13/19/20 voted players and a current nominee in Nash.

Using JE's RAPM for Wade's marks:

Code: Select all

2002-2011: 6.2 (6.2-0), 3rd
2006-2011: 6.1 (6.4-(-.3)), 7th
2008-2011: 6.7 (6.2-0.5), 7th


As a player, I think Wade's floor raising ability is the best of anybody not named Nikola Jokic or Giannis Antetokounmpo (where he's debatable with them in this regard imo) due to being able to shoulder a very high, quite resilient scoring attack predicated on puncturing the rim. Solid passing ability coupled with this gave Wade a great playmaking / shot-creating track record too. Not only could Wade shoulder a huge load to keep casts bereft of talent (before the 'Heatles') afloat, Wade was a tremendous guard defender all throughout the main part of his career (eg. amazing lateral quickness to rotate horizontally or to/from the rim and perimeter, GOAT level shot blocking / rim proto for a guard, athletic/smart enough to function well as a man defender). Even as a 2nd fiddle to LBJ, the 12 and 13 Heat (before Wade battled through injuries / had to get his knee drained) looked amazing with Wade and James on-court. I'd say they surely figured it out :wink:.

- 12 RS: 13.46 net-rating with James/Wade on court
- 13 RS: 13.54 net-rating with James/Wade on court
- 12 PS: 13.35 net-rating with James/Wade on court

Not that I value this *as* much, but Wade was a hell of a leader too for my 2 cents (I saw Doc citing how important Wade was as a figure of Heat Culture). Still turning the clock back despite a very rough 2013 PS to eek out a few vintage games that helped Miami win the 2013 finals, buying in to adding/subtracting from his game (eg. less creation, more of a release valve scoring function, smart cutting, forming arguably the GOAT transition duo, providing a ton of defensive utility in Spoelstra's scheme, having James' back after the 11 finals and reinforcing the Heatles being James' attack to lead). I think all of that is embedded into "scalability" and being a winning player.
Mogspan wrote:I think they see the super rare combo of high IQ with freakish athleticism and overrate the former a bit, kind of like a hot girl who is rather articulate being thought of as “super smart.” I don’t know kind of a weird analogy, but you catch my drift.
Doctor MJ
Senior Mod
Senior Mod
Posts: 53,869
And1: 22,806
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Location: Cali
     

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#97 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Sep 7, 2023 4:50 am

1st Induction Vote: Kevin Durant

Image

2nd Induction Vote: Moses Malone

Pretty clear on these choice for me. One thing they both have in common is that they joined great teams and proceeded to win Finals MVP in all-time dominant runs. Is it more impressive to win a chip with the team built around you? Often, but that doesn't mean such performances should be taken for granted.

1st Nomination Vote: Dwyane Wade

Image

2nd Nomination Vote: Bob Pettit

Continuing to vote for Wade as my nomination. It's an odd situation because I feel solid in my voting for Wade, but having recently switched from a criteria where I ranking him lower, it's hard for me to really muster arguments against those ranking him lower - I definitely get it, there are limitations to his game.

But man of man, was it effective when he was young, and extremely resilient against playoff defense. And while I'll acknowledge that he's at a longevity disadvantage compared to many in conversation here, the way that he was still turning on alpha mode as needed when LeBron got there, and gracefully took a back seat to build LeBron up for the good of the team was inspiring.

For the second spot, I'm torn between Jokic and Bob Pettit. Jokic better, Pettit better longevity. Right now I'm going to side with the old legend.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board

Come join the WNBA Board if you're a fan!
User avatar
OldSchoolNoBull
General Manager
Posts: 9,107
And1: 4,506
Joined: Jun 27, 2003
Location: Ohio
 

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#98 » by OldSchoolNoBull » Thu Sep 7, 2023 5:37 am

A pretty good argument for Wade, but a few things...

rk2023 wrote:I'm a really big fan of Jokic, how far he's come, and some of the amazing things he does on a basketball court (the dude strikes me as a damn supercomputer at times). He certainly is on my radar of guys to be nominated sometime soon, and even his lesser offensive-load years on offense come with an end-result of a very impactful player (when considering meaningful longevity, being very valuable and having impact trumping that of your box stats in a lesser role moves me - hence the Paul vote at 20).

With all of this said, I have a hard time voting him over Wade / seeing the case for it at this point of his career. Even with longevity concerns for Wade, he still has tremendous campaigns like 2006 and 2009-11 under his belt.

Read on Twitter
?s=20


While there is obviously more to offense than scoring, I would struggle to call him a "force offensively" during his final ten seasons when in that period of time he had five seasons of <0 TS Add and nine seasons of <100 TS Add.

Even as a 2nd fiddle to LBJ, the 12 and 13 Heat (before Wade battled through injuries / had to get his knee drained) looked amazing with Wade and James on-court. I'd say they surely figured it out :wink:.

- 12 RS: 13.46 net-rating with James/Wade on court
- 13 RS: 13.54 net-rating with James/Wade on court
- 12 PS: 13.35 net-rating with James/Wade on court


Out of curiosity, where do you get those numbers?

As for figuring it out - neither here nor there w/r/t Wade, but I said this recently, I think the idea of LeBron and Wade figuring it out is overstated, and the real change was getting rid of Joel Anthony, moving Bosh to the five, and putting another shooter on the floor to open the offense up.

Not that I value this *as* much, but Wade was a hell of a leader too for my 2 cents (I saw Doc citing how important Wade was as a figure of Heat Culture). Still turning the clock back despite a very rough 2013 PS to eek out a few vintage games that helped Miami win the 2013 finals, buying in to adding/subtracting from his game (eg. less creation, more of a release valve scoring function, smart cutting, forming arguably the GOAT transition duo, providing a ton of defensive utility in Spoelstra's scheme, having James' back after the 11 finals and reinforcing the Heatles being James' attack to lead). I think all of that is embedded into "scalability" and being a winning player.


I agree Wade was a good leader, but if Heat Culture is a real thing, I would give most of the credit for it to Pat Riley, who has pretty much been running the show since he got there in 1997. It starts from the top. Heat Culture is the culture he established. After winning four titles with Showtime and starting the only period of real relevance the Knicks have had in 50 years, he came to Miami when it was a Johnny-come-lately expansion team with less than a decade under its belt that had never come close to winning anything, and in his 26 years there they've had four different contending cores; won three titles; gone to the Finals seven times; gone to the ECF ten times; and missed the playoffs only six times.

Not trying to take anything away from Wade, but I do think Riley deserves credit for the culture he created.

Also re: "forming arguably the GOAT transition duo" - they've got an argument, but I'd take Michael and Scottie.
iggymcfrack
RealGM
Posts: 12,044
And1: 9,479
Joined: Sep 26, 2017

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#99 » by iggymcfrack » Thu Sep 7, 2023 5:37 am

rk2023 wrote:I'm a really big fan of Jokic, how far he's come, and some of the amazing things he does on a basketball court (the dude strikes me as a damn supercomputer at times). He certainly is on my radar of guys to be nominated sometime soon, and even his lesser offensive-load years on offense come with an end-result of a very impactful player (when considering meaningful longevity, being very valuable and having impact trumping that of your box stats in a lesser role moves me - hence the Paul vote at 20).

With all of this said, I have a hard time voting him over Wade / seeing the case for it at this point of his career. Even with longevity concerns for Wade, he still has tremendous campaigns like 2006 and 2009-11 under his belt.

Read on Twitter
?s=20

Read on Twitter
?s=20

Despite having his rookie season, coming back from an injury in 2007, and 2008 which was a vast downturn of a year for Wade - he still looks good in JE's RAPM for the multi-year, PI samples that hone in on his prime play (in comparison to this project's #1/5/9/13/19/20 voted players and a current nominee in Nash.

Using JE's RAPM for Wade's marks:

Code: Select all

2002-2011: 6.2 (6.2-0), 3rd
2006-2011: 6.1 (6.4-(-.3)), 7th
2008-2011: 6.7 (6.2-0.5), 7th


As a player, I think Wade's floor raising ability is the best of anybody not named Nikola Jokic or Giannis Antetokounmpo (where he's debatable with them in this regard imo) due to being able to shoulder a very high, quite resilient scoring attack predicated on puncturing the rim. Solid passing ability coupled with this gave Wade a great playmaking / shot-creating track record too. Not only could Wade shoulder a huge load to keep casts bereft of talent (before the 'Heatles') afloat, Wade was a tremendous guard defender all throughout the main part of his career (eg. amazing lateral quickness to rotate horizontally or to/from the rim and perimeter, GOAT level shot blocking / rim proto for a guard, athletic/smart enough to function well as a man defender). Even as a 2nd fiddle to LBJ, the 12 and 13 Heat (before Wade battled through injuries / had to get his knee drained) looked amazing with Wade and James on-court. I'd say they surely figured it out :wink:.

- 12 RS: 13.46 net-rating with James/Wade on court
- 13 RS: 13.54 net-rating with James/Wade on court
- 12 PS: 13.35 net-rating with James/Wade on court

Not that I value this *as* much, but Wade was a hell of a leader too for my 2 cents (I saw Doc citing how important Wade was as a figure of Heat Culture). Still turning the clock back despite a very rough 2013 PS to eek out a few vintage games that helped Miami win the 2013 finals, buying in to adding/subtracting from his game (eg. less creation, more of a release valve scoring function, smart cutting, forming arguably the GOAT transition duo, providing a ton of defensive utility in Spoelstra's scheme, having James' back after the 11 finals and reinforcing the Heatles being James' attack to lead). I think all of that is embedded into "scalability" and being a winning player.


I’d take Wade over most of the guys currently nominated, but when you compare him to Jokic, he really doesn’t have much of a meaningful edge in longevity. As the graphic you posted yourself showed, Wade really only had 7 seasons at an all-NBA level and he had a pretty steep dropoff after that. Jokic also has 7 seasons at an all-NBA level (every year expect his rookie year so far).

Jokic peaked much higher as his 2023 season was MUCH better than Wade’s title carry run in 2006 and his MVP season with bad teams in 2021 and 2022 would be ahead of Wade’s elite years on bad teams in 2009 and 2010. Wade’s only real edge is accumulating some extra years late in his career where he was basically an average starter. I’d take the guy with the much better peak over just longevity for longevity’s sake that’s not really making an impact.
rk2023
Starter
Posts: 2,266
And1: 2,273
Joined: Jul 01, 2022
   

Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #22 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 9/7/23) 

Post#100 » by rk2023 » Thu Sep 7, 2023 6:04 am

OldSchoolNoBull wrote:A pretty good argument for Wade, but a few things...

rk2023 wrote:I'm a really big fan of Jokic, how far he's come, and some of the amazing things he does on a basketball court (the dude strikes me as a damn supercomputer at times). He certainly is on my radar of guys to be nominated sometime soon, and even his lesser offensive-load years on offense come with an end-result of a very impactful player (when considering meaningful longevity, being very valuable and having impact trumping that of your box stats in a lesser role moves me - hence the Paul vote at 20).

With all of this said, I have a hard time voting him over Wade / seeing the case for it at this point of his career. Even with longevity concerns for Wade, he still has tremendous campaigns like 2006 and 2009-11 under his belt.

Read on Twitter
?s=20


While there is obviously more to offense than scoring, I would struggle to call him a "force offensively" during his final ten seasons when in that period of time he had five seasons of <0 TS Add and nine seasons of <100 TS Add.

Even as a 2nd fiddle to LBJ, the 12 and 13 Heat (before Wade battled through injuries / had to get his knee drained) looked amazing with Wade and James on-court. I'd say they surely figured it out :wink:.

- 12 RS: 13.46 net-rating with James/Wade on court
- 13 RS: 13.54 net-rating with James/Wade on court
- 12 PS: 13.35 net-rating with James/Wade on court


Out of curiosity, where do you get those numbers?

As for figuring it out - neither here nor there w/r/t Wade, but I said this recently, I think the idea of LeBron and Wade figuring it out is overstated, and the real change was getting rid of Joel Anthony, moving Bosh to the five, and putting another shooter on the floor to open the offense up.

Not that I value this *as* much, but Wade was a hell of a leader too for my 2 cents (I saw Doc citing how important Wade was as a figure of Heat Culture). Still turning the clock back despite a very rough 2013 PS to eek out a few vintage games that helped Miami win the 2013 finals, buying in to adding/subtracting from his game (eg. less creation, more of a release valve scoring function, smart cutting, forming arguably the GOAT transition duo, providing a ton of defensive utility in Spoelstra's scheme, having James' back after the 11 finals and reinforcing the Heatles being James' attack to lead). I think all of that is embedded into "scalability" and being a winning player.


I agree Wade was a good leader, but if Heat Culture is a real thing, I would give most of the credit for it to Pat Riley, who has pretty much been running the show since he got there in 1997. It starts from the top. Heat Culture is the culture he established. After winning four titles with Showtime and starting the only period of real relevance the Knicks have had in 50 years, he came to Miami when it was a Johnny-come-lately expansion team with less than a decade under its belt that had never come close to winning anything, and in his 26 years there they've had four different contending cores; won three titles; gone to the Finals seven times; gone to the ECF ten times; and missed the playoffs only six times.

Not trying to take anything away from Wade, but I do think Riley deserves credit for the culture he created.

Also re: "forming arguably the GOAT transition duo" - they've got an argument, but I'd take Michael and Scottie.


- Guess I’ll address these in points. To begin, I’m aware Wade didn’t have the most efficient scoring game compared to some other comparable offensive talents - but the overall volume of scoring and playmaking is impressing me and that total responsibility was what was lifting some pretty mediocre supporting casts (the Heat were awful without Wade on court in 06/09/10, 05 playoffs was when he really broke out and took the torch from Shaq from what it seems). Whether it’s these years or the ones cited at first, all of the information I’m getting is coming from PBPstats. I’ve seen data from the platform cited often by HCL and LessThanJake throughout the project’s voting as well. The UI is a little overwhelming at first, but it’s very fun to toggle with after getting the hang of things (spans from 2001 season onwards).

- Re: Figuring it out. Certainly agree that it’s a top down effort, and changing rotations / Spo growing as a coach played a massive part on the Heatles’ success as well. I still see a fair share of responsibility and credit to be accrued for James/Wade adding new dimensions and approaches towards their lone-star, more heliocentric seasons pre 2010-11. Just my $.02

- Re: Heat Culture. Agree with you here. The God-father is someone whom I regard very highly as a basketball figure / mind (who couldn’t feel the same way), and after all - he was the one who’s been involved at the top in various roles and has seen success with various personas at the coaching and player level(s). Was more or less adding that point as I saw it being cited in nominating Wade before. Not that I fully agree, but I’d take it we’re more or less on the same length regarding Wade being a selfless player / solid leader (great shout for a transition duo, by the way :D )
Mogspan wrote:I think they see the super rare combo of high IQ with freakish athleticism and overrate the former a bit, kind of like a hot girl who is rather articulate being thought of as “super smart.” I don’t know kind of a weird analogy, but you catch my drift.

Return to Player Comparisons