RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Kawhi Leonard)

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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#41 » by homecourtloss » Sat Oct 14, 2023 11:08 pm

Vote: Walt Frazier
ALT Vote: Reggie Miller
Nomination: Draymond Green
ALT Nomination: Manu Ginobli

I think I prefer a peak Walt and peak Kawhi to Miller though it’s close; Miller has more career value, but his peak impact signals, leave some thing to be desired.

Moonbeam wrote:Image

Image
Image

Having someone like Frazier as a guard creator/scorer/lead premier defender gives a team a lot of flexibility in filling out the rest of the roster to create a contending team. Can be seen in his masterpiece game seven versus the Lakers in 1970 when he was the best player on the court in a game in which Jerry West, and will chamberlain both play the entire game.



Moonbeam wrote:Image


But I also love Reggie Miller’s overall efficacy including in the playoffs, which was basically inelastic other than some games played when he was 37 years old. It didn’t really matter how good the defense was, e.g., vs. the Knicks in 1994It’s very very close, and all of these players are deserving.
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.

lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#42 » by Clyde Frazier » Sat Oct 14, 2023 11:09 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:Kawhi Leonard has other great seasons other than 2019.

Also, dinging his availability in a comparison with Frazier...? Even if Frazier played more it isn't by much. Frazier has played more RS games, Kawhi has played more PS games (by a lot)

I think brushing aside what Kawhi did in 2014 is really weak. He was flat out underrated by the media which by reach meant most of the basketball populous. He didn't score that many points but considering we've voted someone like Pippen in over an infinite amount of better volume scorers I would hope we've grown past that point of rating players.

I don't think Kawhi was much worse in 2014 than he was in 2015. He seemed more like a misunderstood player than anything. Most parts of his game have always been underrated or not acknowledged until years later. ("Woah he learned how to shoot!" - he always knew how to shoot. "WOAH look at his iso game!" - he had been doing that for years before he had the reputation of a scorer, even defensively he was overlooked hence why the Spurs got him relatively deep in the draft)


The clippers have been an outright failure relative to expectations because Kawhi and George flat out haven't been healthy enough. To be clear, I'm not trying to downplay his ability as a basketball player at all. Also never claimed he wasn't the best player on the 2014 spurs.

I don't care that he's played in more playoff games than Frazier when there were less playoff rounds back then. Frazier was still the more reliable star in playoff runs for their careers.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#43 » by HeartBreakKid » Sat Oct 14, 2023 11:20 pm

Clyde Frazier wrote:
HeartBreakKid wrote:Kawhi Leonard has other great seasons other than 2019.

Also, dinging his availability in a comparison with Frazier...? Even if Frazier played more it isn't by much. Frazier has played more RS games, Kawhi has played more PS games (by a lot)

I think brushing aside what Kawhi did in 2014 is really weak. He was flat out underrated by the media which by reach meant most of the basketball populous. He didn't score that many points but considering we've voted someone like Pippen in over an infinite amount of better volume scorers I would hope we've grown past that point of rating players.

I don't think Kawhi was much worse in 2014 than he was in 2015. He seemed more like a misunderstood player than anything. Most parts of his game have always been underrated or not acknowledged until years later. ("Woah he learned how to shoot!" - he always knew how to shoot. "WOAH look at his iso game!" - he had been doing that for years before he had the reputation of a scorer, even defensively he was overlooked hence why the Spurs got him relatively deep in the draft)


The clippers have been an outright failure relative to expectations because Kawhi and George flat out haven't been healthy enough. To be clear, I'm not trying to downplay his ability as a basketball player at all. Also never claimed he wasn't the best player on the 2014 spurs.

I don't care that he's played in more playoff games than Frazier when there were less playoff rounds back then. Frazier was still the more reliable star in playoff runs for their careers.




You dont care that Kawhi substantially more games than Frazier but you're arguing about his lack of availability (which everyone is well aware of). That seems highly inconsistent to me. I did not mention the Clippers at all and am focusing on his Spurs career yet you brought up the Clippers. The Clippers sole problem is not Kawhi Leonard's injuries, they are not a great team in general, and you cannot just lump PG with Leonard as they are ...literally differnt people. You cannot add George's injuries to Kawhi's to make Kawhi's lack of availability seem greater.


The discussions against lack of availability, having an elite coach, having great teammates (Frazier's were better..?), not being the "leader". These are all arguments that can just as easily be used against Frazier, or at the very least aren't things that point toward being his strong points.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#44 » by Clyde Frazier » Sat Oct 14, 2023 11:26 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:
Clyde Frazier wrote:
HeartBreakKid wrote:Kawhi Leonard has other great seasons other than 2019.

Also, dinging his availability in a comparison with Frazier...? Even if Frazier played more it isn't by much. Frazier has played more RS games, Kawhi has played more PS games (by a lot)

I think brushing aside what Kawhi did in 2014 is really weak. He was flat out underrated by the media which by reach meant most of the basketball populous. He didn't score that many points but considering we've voted someone like Pippen in over an infinite amount of better volume scorers I would hope we've grown past that point of rating players.

I don't think Kawhi was much worse in 2014 than he was in 2015. He seemed more like a misunderstood player than anything. Most parts of his game have always been underrated or not acknowledged until years later. ("Woah he learned how to shoot!" - he always knew how to shoot. "WOAH look at his iso game!" - he had been doing that for years before he had the reputation of a scorer, even defensively he was overlooked hence why the Spurs got him relatively deep in the draft)


The clippers have been an outright failure relative to expectations because Kawhi and George flat out haven't been healthy enough. To be clear, I'm not trying to downplay his ability as a basketball player at all. Also never claimed he wasn't the best player on the 2014 spurs.

I don't care that he's played in more playoff games than Frazier when there were less playoff rounds back then. Frazier was still the more reliable star in playoff runs for their careers.


Yeah...this is the gut feeling I've been getting all thread long. I didn't mention the Clippers or anything relating to them and you brought them up as your first sentence.



Spurs don't count, for whatever reason.

Raptors were a one time thing.

Clippers suck.


I think I'm going to keep #1 Leonard and #2 Frazier because I really am just seeing a lot of narrative stuff and not a lot of discussion about them as players. That generally tells me I'm going in the right direction.


You dont care that Kawhi substantially more games than Frazier but you're arguing about his lack of availability (which everyone is well aware of). That seems highly inconsistent to me.


The discussions against lack of availability, having an elite coach, having great teammates (Frazier's were better..?), not being the "leader". These are all arguments that can just as easily be used against Frazier, or at the very least aren't things that point toward being his strong points.


I'm not really looking to get into an argument with you, but you keep making implications based on things *I haven't said*, which aren't true. Maybe this puts it better perspective for you based on my criteria: I always vote for Walton very highly in peaks projects but he'll never make my top 100. Yes that's the extreme example, but it should at least give you an idea of why I don't think Kawhi is ready for this spot.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#45 » by HeartBreakKid » Sat Oct 14, 2023 11:27 pm

Clyde Frazier wrote:
HeartBreakKid wrote:
Clyde Frazier wrote:
The clippers have been an outright failure relative to expectations because Kawhi and George flat out haven't been healthy enough. To be clear, I'm not trying to downplay his ability as a basketball player at all. Also never claimed he wasn't the best player on the 2014 spurs.

I don't care that he's played in more playoff games than Frazier when there were less playoff rounds back then. Frazier was still the more reliable star in playoff runs for their careers.


Yeah...this is the gut feeling I've been getting all thread long. I didn't mention the Clippers or anything relating to them and you brought them up as your first sentence.



Spurs don't count, for whatever reason.

Raptors were a one time thing.

Clippers suck.


I think I'm going to keep #1 Leonard and #2 Frazier because I really am just seeing a lot of narrative stuff and not a lot of discussion about them as players. That generally tells me I'm going in the right direction.


You dont care that Kawhi substantially more games than Frazier but you're arguing about his lack of availability (which everyone is well aware of). That seems highly inconsistent to me.


The discussions against lack of availability, having an elite coach, having great teammates (Frazier's were better..?), not being the "leader". These are all arguments that can just as easily be used against Frazier, or at the very least aren't things that point toward being his strong points.


I'm not really looking to get into an argument with you, but you keep making implications based on things *I haven't said*, which aren't true. Maybe this puts it better perspective for you based on my criteria: I always vote for Walton very highly in peaks projects but he'll never make my top 100. Yes that's the extreme example, but it should at least give you an idea of why I don't think Kawhi is ready for this spot.


I edited my post because I slightly misread you (it's 7 AM here, oops).
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#46 » by iggymcfrack » Sun Oct 15, 2023 12:14 am

Cavsfansince84 wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
Kawhi was very clearly the best player on the 2014 Spurs, much moreso than Frazier was on the 1970 Knicks. It's not just the Finals MVP. Here are the top VORPs in the regular season and postseason:

RS: Kawhi 3.5, Duncan 2.9, Ginobili 2.4, Mills 2.3, Green 2.2
PS: Kawhi 1.3, Manu 1.1, Green 1.1, Duncan 1.0, Diaw 0.9

Here are the top Spurs by RAPTOR which combines RS and PS:
Kawhi +6.6, 12.8 WAR
Manu +5.9, 9.7 WAR
Green +5.1, 8.9 WAR
Mills +5.3, 7.7 WAR
Duncan +2.3, 7.5 WAR

Manu had the best on/off on the team in both the regular season and postseason, but Kawhi's was far and away the best among starters. Kawhi missed 16 games and the Spurs went 54-12 with him in the lineup and 8-8 in games he missed. For comparison's sake, they went 10-4 in games Manu missed.

Meanwhile, Frazier and Reed had pretty similar numbers and I doubt that even as an excellent PG defender Clyde could come close to matching Reed's defensive impact. He did come up big when Reed got hurt in the Finals, but I think that's still a 1a/1b situation where you could go either way rather than a clearcut best player like Kawhi was for the Spurs.


Worth noting I would say that if we are using vorp as one rough estimate of player goodness and Kawhi had a 3.5 in 2014 that Walt in 74&75 in years that were probably slightly worse than 1970 had vorps of 4.4&4.7. So even though Kawhi's might have led the Spurs in 2014 more than Walt's did(if he would have over Reed that year which he probably wouldn't have), Walt likely still had significantly higher vorps in both the rs and ps, comparing these two seasons.


VORP is just BPM multiplied by minutes played. In the regular season in 2014, Kawhi played 1923 minutes compared to 3338 for Frazier in '74 and 3204 in '75. So yes, Frazier has the advantage due to games and minutes played. Frazier's BPMs in those 2 years though were 3.2 and 3.8 compared to 5.1 for Kawhi in 2014. So on a per minute basis, Kawhi was still well ahead.

Kawhi mostly maintained the same BPM in the playoffs (4.7) while playing every game in the playoffs in 2014 after missing 16 games in the regular season while Frazier had a lower PER in the 1970 playoffs than he did in any regular season or postseason from '69-'78 so actually it's very unlikely that Frazier would have had a higher VORP in the 1970 playoffs than Kawhi did in 2014.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#47 » by Cavsfansince84 » Sun Oct 15, 2023 1:40 am

iggymcfrack wrote:VORP is just BPM multiplied by minutes played. In the regular season in 2014, Kawhi played 1923 minutes compared to 3338 for Frazier in '74 and 3204 in '75. So yes, Frazier has the advantage due to games and minutes played. Frazier's BPMs in those 2 years though were 3.2 and 3.8 compared to 5.1 for Kawhi in 2014. So on a per minute basis, Kawhi was still well ahead.

Kawhi mostly maintained the same BPM in the playoffs (4.7) while playing every game in the playoffs in 2014 after missing 16 games in the regular season while Frazier had a lower PER in the 1970 playoffs than he did in any regular season or postseason from '69-'78 so actually it's very unlikely that Frazier would have had a higher VORP in the 1970 playoffs than Kawhi did in 2014.


I know this(as pretty much we all do) but you were the one who used vorp and Frazier's vorp/bpm in 70 is likely a decent amount higher due to how much more efficient he was as a scorer. It's also harder to have a higher bpm while being great on both off&def when a player crosses roughly the 33-35 mpg mark along with playing 75+ games so I don't see it as relevant to use that line of reasoning ie Frazier's vorp is higher due to him playing a lot more minutes. That's to his credit here imo. If a guy can be all nba level on both sides of the ball and play 40+mpg that's better than a guy being good on offense and great on def for only 30mpg.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#48 » by OldSchoolNoBull » Sun Oct 15, 2023 5:10 am

Vote: Kawhi Leonard

I think he is the highest peak on the current ballot and, despite his injury/availability issues, I think he's shown consistent impact over multiple contexts over a decade to warrant being voted in at this point.

His WS/48 and BPM in both RS and PO are consistently outstanding, even eye-popping in some instances. I think Frazier is the only one on the current ballot who comes anywhere close - I sorely wish we had BPM for Frazier's whole career so there could be a fairer comparison.

The multiple contexts thing stands out to me.

He went to two Finals and won a ring as part of an ensemble with Duncan/Manu/Parker in 13 and 14, and as a previous poster pointed out, was statistically the best player on the 14 Spurs.

In 16-17, in the Spurs' first post-Duncan year, Kawhi led the team as the undisputed #1 with LMA as his #2, and Manu/Parker on their last legs, to 61 wins, a 7.13 SRS, and +7.6 Net Rtg. He led the team in both WS/48 and BPM by wide margins in both the RS and the PO. That team was a legitimate contender before Kawhi went down in the GS series. I suppose detractors would point out that the Spurs won the last game against the Rockets by 39 without Kawhi but, it's one game.

He gets to Toronto, he has that magical year, putting an already good time over the top and leading them to the title, again leading the team in both WS/48 and BPM in both the RS and PO.

People look down on his Clippers' tenure because of the load management and playoff failures, but the impact has still been there.

In 19-20, he played 57 out of 72 games in the COVID season. The Clippers were 41-16 in those games, and only 8-7 without him. Ivica Zubac somehow led the team in WS/48 in the RS, but Kawhi as at #2, and he led in BPM and in both categories in the playoffs. That Nuggets series in the bubble was admittedly a low-point for the whole team.

In 20-21, he played 52 games. The Clippers were 36-16 with him, 11-9 without. Again, Kawhi leads team the team in WS/48 and BPM in RS and PO(excepting Ibaka in the playoffs due to a tiny 18 minute sample size). They were tied at 2-2 vs the Jazz when Kawhi went down, and I recall plenty of people thinking the Clippers could go at least the Finals if not win it if they stayed healthy, and I think the fact that they still got to the WCF and took two games off the Suns without Kawhi reinforces that idea.

In 22-23, he played 52 games. The Clippers were 33-19 with him, 11-19 without. Once again, he leads in WS/48 and BPM in RS and PS(though admittedly small 2-game sample in the playoffs).

Now, I realize Paul George also missed time in those seasons, and that may be making these WOWY numbers look deceptive, particularly that 11-19 without in 22-23. So the numbers might come out different in a more in-depth analysis, and I haven't even begun to try to calculate SRS differences with Kawhi vs without. But the general point is that Kawhi has consistently had superstar impact in multiple contexts for a decade now.

Yes, he has an injury/availability issue - if he didn't, he'd probably be in the top 25 here. But I can't comfortably see him outside the top 35 even with those issues.

A couple of final notes:

1. With regard to timing of his offensive and defensive peaks - it's true that his defensive peak came before his offensive peak, but when that argument is made, it makes it sounds like he was no longer and effective defender when at his offensive peak. His highest impact defense was in San Antonio, but I certainly think he was still a plus/positive defender in Toronto and LAC, and that paired with his peak-level offense is still a very powerful combination.

2. Someone argued that Kawhi wasn't a good locker room presence or teammate or something to that effect. The only time I see that being true was maybe with the ugliness in San Antonio in 17-18.

I was actually always impressed with how he handled himself in Toronto. The whole world knew he never wanted to be traded there. But he never made a stink publicly, he played hard, he did the job, he won a title, and then when his contract expired he left. I've always that there was something strikingly professional about how he handled that.

As for the Clippers...I guess there have been rumblings that the privileges he's given regarding his load management and his living in San Diego have rubbed some of his teammates the wrong way. Even if that is true, that is on the team for allowing a player special privileges. He's not doing anything he doesn't have permission to do.

Kawhi seems like he is pretty introverted and isolated, but I don't know if that by itself makes one a bad teammate.

Secondary Vote: Walt Frazier

Elite two-way player who was the #1/#1A on a team that went to three finals and won two rings. Really good box stats all around. Doc's writeup is great and goes into more depth.

Nomination: Rick Barry

Rick Barry was the #1 on a championship team and three Finals teams(including his ABA years here) and it's difficult for me to look past that. Even if I don't look at his ABA years, he won the ring as the #1 in 1975. He was not a terribly efficient scorer, particularly for his volume(outside of some extreme outlier high efficiency in the early ABA), but he managed to be a bit above average in his prime years while still being a solid playmaker and rebounder.

Secondary Nomination: Elgin Baylor

Baylor had the same lukewarm efficiency issues as Barry, but he was a high volume scorer who could score in a variety of ways, and was an elite rebounder. He is unquestionably one of the most important players in the league's history due to being one of its first stars of color(along with Russell, Wilt, and Oscar) and for really being the first player of his kind - a big, athletic wing who played above the rim; the common notion is that he was Dr. J before Dr. J.

The thing that keeps me from putting him above Barry is that when Baylor and West played together all those years, West consistently, statistically speaking, always looked like the clear #1 - much more efficient a scorer, better playmaker, better defender. Barry proved he could win it all as #1, and even though Baylor went to a bunch of Finals, I don't know that anyone, looking back now, considers him the #1.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#49 » by 70sFan » Sun Oct 15, 2023 6:30 am

iggymcfrack wrote:
70sFan wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
Why? Here are their box composites:

Kawhi (RS): 19.4 PER, .193 WS/48
Clyde (RS): 21.1 PER, .236 WS/48

Kawhi (PS): 18.7 PER, .191 WS/48
Clyde (PS): 16.5 PER, .163 WS/48

So Frazier had better RS numbers and Kawhi had better postseason numbers by similar margins. Then, when you get into non-box impact, Kawhi shut down LeBron to win FMVP. He guarded him more than anyone else and held him to 34% from the field when he was the primary defender after he'd shot at least 55% from the field in each of the 3 opening rounds. I know Frazier was a good defender and a decent enough passer, but I don't see how he would have anywhere near that kind of non-box impact.

Plus Frazier's season took place in one of the weakest seasons in league history when professional basketball had recently exploded from a total of 10 teams in 1967 to a total of 25 teams in 1970 between the NBA and ABA. There's no way he'd be able to replicate that level of success against the difficulty of competition that Kawhi faced 20 years after the Dream Team pried international markets wide open. What makes you laugh about this exactly?

"Kawhi shut down LeBron" in 2014 finals is one of the biggest myths in the league recent history, so I won't even comment that.

ABA wasn't that relevant in 1970 yet, so I don't think 1970 is anywhere near the weakest seasons in the league history.

Do you think 2014 Kawhi was comparable offensive player to 1970 Frazier? That's a serious question.


"Comparable" is kind of a nebulous term to define. Like is Giannis comparable to Dame on offense? Dame's clearly better, but they're not that far apart. I guess if I had to answer, I'd say that 2014 Kawhi and 1970 Frazier weren't comparable offensive players in the regular season, but they were in the playoffs.

So Kawhi became comparable offensive player in the playoffs to a leading ball-handler and playmaker of the best team in the league because he was hot from three...?

Leonard wasn't a creator in 2014 playoffs. He was strictly a finisher at that point, an excellent one but he didn't have a lot of responsibility on offense and was surrounded by significantly better creators than himself. Of course such things are not captured in PER or BPM unfortunately.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#50 » by Rishkar » Sun Oct 15, 2023 7:04 am

Induction Vote 1 Walt Frazier. Incredible defender, good passer, good scorer. Poor longevity is his main weakness, but I feel like he has a significant health advantage over Kawhi and I prefer his leadership style.
Induction Vote 2 Kawhi Leonard. All time great defender who morphed into a great scorer. I tend to focus on the regular season, but so many of Kawhi's injuries were simply bad luck (or bad intentions) that it's hard for me to lower him out of the 30s.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#51 » by iggymcfrack » Sun Oct 15, 2023 7:55 am

70sFan wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
70sFan wrote:"Kawhi shut down LeBron" in 2014 finals is one of the biggest myths in the league recent history, so I won't even comment that.

ABA wasn't that relevant in 1970 yet, so I don't think 1970 is anywhere near the weakest seasons in the league history.

Do you think 2014 Kawhi was comparable offensive player to 1970 Frazier? That's a serious question.


"Comparable" is kind of a nebulous term to define. Like is Giannis comparable to Dame on offense? Dame's clearly better, but they're not that far apart. I guess if I had to answer, I'd say that 2014 Kawhi and 1970 Frazier weren't comparable offensive players in the regular season, but they were in the playoffs.

So Kawhi became comparable offensive player in the playoffs to a leading ball-handler and playmaker of the best team in the league because he was hot from three...?

Leonard wasn't a creator in 2014 playoffs. He was strictly a finisher at that point, an excellent one but he didn't have a lot of responsibility on offense and was surrounded by significantly better creators than himself. Of course such things are not captured in PER or BPM unfortunately.


More that he just maintained his level of play while Frazier fell off in the playoffs. If we pace adjust Frazier's raw playoff numbers in 1970 to 2014 we come up with:

12.8 PPG, 6.3 RPG, 6.6 APG

It's not like he was exactly some giant offensive force that was bringing up the whole team. Best fit I can find in terms of those numbers combined with good defense for 2014 would be Mike Conley with less points.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#52 » by AEnigma » Sun Oct 15, 2023 1:39 pm

Frazier was a perennial top ten playoff scorer and passer from 1969-75. Basically Mike Conley though.
MyUniBroDavis wrote:Some people are clearly far too overreliant on data without context and look at good all in one or impact numbers and get wowed by that rather than looking at how a roster is actually built around a player
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#53 » by iggymcfrack » Sun Oct 15, 2023 2:17 pm

AEnigma wrote:Frazier was a perennial top ten playoff scorer and passer from 1969-75. Basically Mike Conley though.


I’m speaking specifically of the 1970 playoffs when he posted the worst numbers he would for any regular season or postseason over a 10 year stretch. He just didn’t play that well in their first title run and I don’t think the season compares favorably to Kawhi in 2014.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#54 » by 70sFan » Sun Oct 15, 2023 2:33 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:
70sFan wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
"Comparable" is kind of a nebulous term to define. Like is Giannis comparable to Dame on offense? Dame's clearly better, but they're not that far apart. I guess if I had to answer, I'd say that 2014 Kawhi and 1970 Frazier weren't comparable offensive players in the regular season, but they were in the playoffs.

So Kawhi became comparable offensive player in the playoffs to a leading ball-handler and playmaker of the best team in the league because he was hot from three...?

Leonard wasn't a creator in 2014 playoffs. He was strictly a finisher at that point, an excellent one but he didn't have a lot of responsibility on offense and was surrounded by significantly better creators than himself. Of course such things are not captured in PER or BPM unfortunately.


More that he just maintained his level of play while Frazier fell off in the playoffs. If we pace adjust Frazier's raw playoff numbers in 1970 to 2014 we come up with:

12.8 PPG, 6.3 RPG, 6.6 APG

It's not like he was exactly some giant offensive force that was bringing up the whole team. Best fit I can find in terms of those numbers combined with good defense for 2014 would be Mike Conley with less points.

So 13/6/7 now is significantly worse than 14/7/2?

Let's also forget for a moment that Walt struggled the most in the only one sided series, while Kawhi played his worst basketball in 2014 playoffs against two teams that were the closest to beat them (Dallas and OKC).
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#55 » by penbeast0 » Sun Oct 15, 2023 2:41 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:[

More that he just maintained his level of play while Frazier fell off in the playoffs. If we pace adjust Frazier's raw playoff numbers in 1970 to 2014 we come up with:

12.8 PPG, 6.3 RPG, 6.6 APG

It's not like he was exactly some giant offensive force that was bringing up the whole team. Best fit I can find in terms of those numbers combined with good defense for 2014 would be Mike Conley with less points.


So we handwave the GOAT guard candidate defense, ignore the size/switchability, ignore the 3 ball that makes it much easier for guards to score relative to bigs, ignore the rebounding, ignore differences in coach's offensive styles and how assists were counted, (Frazier led all players in playoff assists in 1970), take the one playoff from 69 on that he didn't score over 20 ppg, and gee, now he's Mike Conley with less points.

Oh, and in game 7 of the finals, with Jerry West guarding him, Frazier had 36 pts (12/17, 12/12 from the line), 7 rebound, 19 assists. Frazier had a weak scoring playoff run by his own standards but that's the game that sticks in memory.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#56 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Oct 15, 2023 3:41 pm

Induction Vote 1:

Miller - 1 (AEnigma)
Kidd - 1 (trex)
Kawhi - 5 (Dutchball, iggy, HBK, ShaqA, OSNB)
Frazier - 6 (beast, Clyde, Samurai, Doc, hcl, Rishkar)

No majority. Going to Vote 2 between Frazier & Kawhi:

Kawhi - 1 (trex)
Frazier - 1 (AEnigma)

Frazier 7, Kawhi 6

EDIT: Missed vote for Kawhi. Goes to runoff.

Nomination Vote 1:

Barry - 3 (AEnigma, Clyde, OSNB)
Baylor - 1 (trex)
Davis - 3 (Dutchball, iggy, HBK)
Artis - 2 (beast, Samurai)
Walton - 1 (ShaqA)
Ginobili - 1 (Doc)
Green - 1 (hcl)
none - 1 (Rishkar)

No majority. Going to Vote 2 between Barry & Davis.

Barry - 1 (Doc
Davis - 2 (Samurai, ShaqA)
neither - 4 (Rishkar, trex, beast, hcl)

Anthony Davis is added to Nominee list.

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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#57 » by LA Bird » Sun Oct 15, 2023 3:47 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:.

You missed trelos6's vote for Kawhi in post #13 which should make this a Kawhi vs Frazier runoff
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Deadline 5:00AM PST on 10/15/23) 

Post#58 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Oct 15, 2023 3:49 pm

LA Bird wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:.

You missed trelos6's vote for Kawhi in post #13 which should make this a Kawhi vs Frazier runoff


Gah!

Thank you LA Bird, fixing. Will do a quick correction and then put in quotes for posters later.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Runoff - deadline 10/16) 

Post#59 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Oct 15, 2023 3:54 pm

Folks I cannot emphasize enough how much I appreciate it if you follow standard notation bolded with your vote on the very first line I see - ideally with nothing on that line but the Vote and player's name. When I miss a vote, it's generally because the voter was not doing this. My bad for being mistake prone, but I appreciate your help.

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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #34 (Runoff - deadline 10/16) 

Post#60 » by 70sFan » Sun Oct 15, 2023 5:05 pm

So, I won't vote because I'm not supposed to jump in only in this specific moment, but here are my CORP evaluation of these two:

Walt Frazier

GOAT-level: 0
All-time: 0
MVP: 0
Weak MVP: 4 (1971-74)
All-nba: 3 (1969, 1970, 1975)
All-star: 2 (1976, 1977)
Sub all-star: 1 (1978)
Role player: 0

Kawhi Leonard

GOAT-level: 0
All-time: 0
MVP: 2 (2017, 2019)
Weak MVP: 2 (2016, 2020)
All-nba: 2 (2015, 2021)
All-star: 2 (2014, 2023)
Sub all-star: 1 (2013)
Role player: 1 (2012)

They look reasonably close to me, they rank basically identical in career CORP as well. The main difference to me is that Kawhi peaked higher, but 3 of his high level seasons (2017, 2021, 2023) were destroyed by injuries.

I wouldn't vote for either that high to be fair, but it's an interesting discussion.

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