AEnigma wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:AEnigma wrote:Alright, yes, Manu will and should go well above Kevin Willis despite a substantial gap in minutes, but that is not the scale of comparison. If Manu is a regular “weak MVP” player despite his minutes, then sure, prop him up against Frazier or Pippen, but for me, he is more typically in that lower all-NBA group with Pierce (2005 postseason aside).
I've never made the case for Ginobili over Frazier in this project. I was in debate between Ginobili, Pippen, Stockton, Miller, Havlicek, and others, but I had Frazier distinctly above all of them.
Personal point of distinction with Frazier acknowledged, but my point here is more that if people are pushing Manu for his prime value, then I feel like that is roughly the level of star he needs to be given his minutes. Manu has eight regular seasons where he played more than 24 minutes a game (i.e. half the game — pretty paltry bar), and 2009 was basically a throwaway year. You have stated you see his case more tied to the playoffs, and there he does increase his minutes (as key rotation players do) so that now he has a twelve-year stretch (eleven postseasons) where he crosses that 24-minute mark. Of course, in a playoff setting I think 24-minutes is a pitifully marginal cutoff, and then I note he only has six postseasons above 28 minutes a game. He still has value in those surrounding years — two championships and another narrow Finals loss — but we are talking about a player who is typically fourth or fifth on his team in postseason minutes, and the one series where he was top two (led the team) produced an ignominious sweep and the worst playoff “impact” of Manu’s prime.
Now, I am sympathetic to the idea that the Spurs were typically deepest on the wings between Bowen, SJax, Brent, Finley, Kawhi, Danny, etc., and that the 2010 exception was tied to Parker and George Hill splitting time for similar reasons. I have a hard time saying it is to Manu’s credit that for the first ~five years of his career he was playing fewer minutes than Bruce Bowen, but hey, if it were someone like Pete Myers then that would not have happened. However, if we want to say Manu could have played more than he did on worse teams (leaving a question of how much more and to what extent that may have affected his career length or general availability), and that swapping Pierce and Manu would to some extent close the per minute gap, then we also need to admit it is easier to exert “impact” in more select rotations and that some hypothetical Manu matching Pierce’s minutes would almost certainly not be as productive on any possessional basis.
To reiterate, we are for the most part referring to a true prime stretch of seven or eight regular seasons and six postseasons, and the only way I think that justifies his placement here is if he truly was a regular top ~five force throughout that period rather than more of an all-NBA one. And while I can acknowledge the framing of him as a valid top five choice in 2005 specifically based on his outlier postseason stretch, realistically, I am not taking Manu over Duncan, Garnett, Nash, Shaq, or Dirk on any random team. Furthermore, if we replayed that postseason a hundred times, I am skeptical Manu’s average production would provide more than Wade, McGrady, or Kobe (placed on a better team), and to be really honest, I am similarly uncertain that he would be clearly surpassing lesser peak wings like Pierce or even Vince either in total per game contribution on otherwise identical teams. I am willing to mark Manu with a higher peak than those two based on what actually happened, but take away the shooting variance and I am not sure that distinction would be anywhere near as easy to make.
Your perspective not only makes sense but I’d expect most to see things pretty similarly to you. In general this relates to why I’m not really expecting most people to come with me here, I’m just hoping they really think through how they assess Ginobili because I think a lot of the heuristics we use to peg players generally just fall well short of what’s required in a case like this.
Let me put something forward as an either/or:
Either Pop was brilliant for placing a player so capable of plus minus impact into a 6th man type role, or it was a mistake.
Folks here are wise with nuance and may chafe at this black and white thinking, but what I’m trying to get at here is specifically that we simply don’t have anyone with the kind of long-term profile of majority-but-limited minutes putting up plus minus numbers like Ginobili did, and we certainly don’t have others like this who get considerably better in the playoffs.
Typically if you recognize a guy capable of great impact you want to feature him within your standard starting lineup, and so when that’s not what happened, we should all be asking ourselves why the coach did what he did. And the answer is either that he something really counter-intuitive about the best way to use the player…or he simply didn’t max out what he could have with the player. Brilliance, or mistaken.
And I’m saying I think it was a mistake. I think Pop did it because he thought the best offense he could build was around interior post-up volume scoring where the guards passed the ball in and got out of the way, and this was a dead wrong way to think about 21st century in general.
Pop is a great coach who did a lot of things right, and his misperception here goes along with the dominant paradigm of the time so I don’t want overstate how damning this is of Pop.
But I think the chips make people think that Pop must have been right in his approach, and then tend to twist what they know into knots that essentially portray Pop as a genius on this, when we know full well that the team improving on offense in later years doesn’t make sense if the Duncan post-up offense was really working that well.
This then to say I don’t think Bowen playing more minutes than Ginobili really had anything to do with Bowen, but rather had everything to do with Pop’s perception of what guards should be doing next to Duncan…which was just plain wrong.
None of this means I’m looking to pretend Ginobili played more than he did - Ginobili is absolutely getting hurt by minutes in my criteria. But I don’t think a skepticism toward Ginobili’s level of play is warranted at this point in my analytical journey.
To put it in plain words that are obviously bold:
Do I think Ginobili was in general a Top 5 level player when he was on the court? Yes, I do. I think he was better at basketball in the time he played than any other shooting guard in the 21st century.
Is there a question of whether he could have maintained this level if he played superstar minutes? Yup, and there always will be.
But do I think superstar minutes shooting guards would have matched Ginobili’s per minute impact if they played his minutes? Nope. I don’t think there’s anything magical about playing a bit less minutes that would have allowed other players to have the impact Ginobili did because frankly, they just didn’t play like he did. Playing a bit less is not going to make a guy’s instincts better, and Ginobili’s instincts on both sides of the ball were outlier-level good.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk










