MyUniBroDavis wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Djoker wrote:Good post as well.
I realize the term red flag wasn't a good one to use. I didn't mean a red flag in terms of being bad for the team (winning = king) but in terms of forecasting great individual impact. A guard like Manu that has fantastic plus-minus but mediocre box score for a super star, simply raises doubts in my head about what exactly is going on. Because "this impact" has to come from somewhere and box score correlates quite heavily with guard impact.
I agree completely that it's difficult to definitively rank Ginobili because some of these factors like lower minutes and a secondary role isn't something typical for a player of his caliber. And I agree he is more impactful than his box score implies. It's just that my ceiling for him would probably be as a borderline top 75 player of all time. Much higher than that and I'm pushed into a position that I'd be very uncomfortable trying to defend.
As for his lack of accolades, if he played more, then he would have had more accolades as you said. So it's kind of mystery in that sense; why he didn't play more. Surely if he was that impactful, there has to be a big reason he wasn't playing more.
Asking why he didn't play more is a critical question, though not one we'll ever have the entire answer.
I do think that with his high motor it makes sense to think that he couldn't do his thing for as many minutes as most, and if you want to add some innate durability concerns to the mix that makes sense.
But another thing to understand is that when a guy gets slotted in in a 6th man-type role (by which I mean, he may still start but still plays a similar role) is that his minutes will get staggered away from the team's primary stars. When you do that, it's not in any way automatic that a guy is going to play the same number of minutes as the other main guys on the team, and I would argue that in general you expect such a player to play less minutes not out of endurance concerns, but simply because you don't think playing through him is the best option when your alpha is on the court, which you'd like to do as often as possible.
To boil it down: I'd say Pop played Ginobili like he did during the prime Duncan years because Pop wanted to play focused on the volume scoring post-up capacity of Duncan, which demanded that guards work predictably toward that end, rather than improvising to make something else happen.
This then gets to a key point: Teams don't use volume scoring post-up play any more because it's clearly inferior to pace & space. Who was the "pace & space" guy on those Spurs? Ginobili. Hence what I'd argue is that while it made sense to relegate Ginobili to the 6th man role under the assumption that interior post-up play was your best option...it wasn't actually Pop's best option. He was mistaken in what he thought was the best move, chose a path that was weaker than what could have been, and has been spared from criticism because the team won championships anyway built around great defense...where Duncan was indeed the proper anchor for the team.
To reiterate what I'd said elsewhere: I'm not saying Pop was an idiot for being confused here - his way of thinking was in line with the paradigm he grew up with and continued to dominate the NBA until the 2010s. Pop is a brilliant basketball mind...who also got this stuff wrong because basically everyone did.
Didn’t watch much ginobli, but if the idea is ginobli lineups represented a shift towards pace and space wouldn’t that inflate his impact offensively more than perhaps his actual ability level?
I think outside of 08, there was a bit of three point luck variance in some of his real good rapm years but I’m not sure
Hmm, to paraphrase:
"Doesn't that mean his tendency to play basketball an intelligent way increased his value relative to how much value he'd contribute if he played dumb?"
Yes, yes it does.

Re: 3-point luck variance RAPM years. His entire career RAPM is fantastic though.