Owly wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Might it be that Cliff Hagan should rank higher than Arizin?
So, I like that Hagan's emerged as such a strong contender over time. I think it does make sense to ask whether Hagan could have set the world on fire with big numbers all season long if he were simply unleashed, but when it comes to achievement, I think there's a pretty basic bump you have to get over:
Based on regular season accolades, Hagan just isn't a guy getting much love. Only 6 all-star appearances to Arizin's 10 for example.
So, Hagan's almost certainly getting the nod over Arizin and a bunch of others based on his playoff performances. Makes sense, but I think we need to be very careful when looking at stats from the entire post-season to assert things like Hagan was the true MVP of the Hawks' chip. When we look at the finals, it really seems crystal clear that Pettit would have won that Finals MVP by a landslide and deservedly so.
Quibbles, not to say I disagree overall... or that I'd back Hagan here or whatever ...
All-star ... okay but
- not really a direct measure of players (see also "Yay, points")
- especially at that time when all teams needed representation so teams were functionally capped
- you believe in an S curve development right? Arzin posts his two highest WS totals (in shorter seasons) and establishes himself as a star in the league's early years.
Now for the Hagan specific comp maybe his first year stats might suggest he wouldn't be ready. Or that playing out of position didn't suit him. Or service rendered him more rusty than Arizin. It hurts, but it's hard to be sure what's going on.
I would quibble with asserting that it is "crystal clear" a player "deserved" FMVP "by a landslide" off the data we have. Maybe you've got those games, tabulated full box-scores and on-off and scouted closely ... I think I'd have left more wiggle room in the phrasing.
Even just fading back to the full title run (or chip), okay Pettit put in his seemingly (much) weaker performances versus the Pistons and the Pistons weren't good. Still Hagan was great and the Hawks win games 1 and 2 by 3 points each. If the Hawks lose both of those (taking the other results as a given or not) the Hawks are in a bad way (and unfortunately we likely don't get to see Pettit's finals, only that weak first series).
But if I were championing Hagan it would be as a good playoff performer overall, not on a single series.
Re: Yay, points! I mean, aren't points the basis for Hagan's candidacy? We're not talking about two drastically different players here. If you were to ask me the top two scoring perimeter players of the era, I think I'd say these two guys. I'm inclined to call Arizin the best scorer of the era, and to say that Hagan was generally considered the second best scorer on his own team within that era. Hagan's playoff spikes raise the question of whether he could have done much more, but just based on what he did, that was Pettit's team in the eyes of everyone at the time.
Re: all-stars functionally capped at the time. True statement but odd argument. In a league where there are 9 teams and 24 all-star spots, your typical team is getting at least 2 all-stars. So then, how is it not a reflection of Hagan's perceived longevity to look at all-star selections? If he ain't making that cutoff, that's actually a lower bar than it would be in today's game.
Note that I said "perceived". Fine to disagree with the selections, but the issue shouldn't be about it being too high of a bar when discussing players in this rare air.
Re: S-curve? Arizin early peak? Ah! Yes, I like talking S-curves to help people understand the maturation of fields and I'm happy to talk in these terms.
You're asking whether Arizin having his statistical peak in his 2nd year in the league might be a reflection of the NBA's S-curve growth. Great question, and absolutely something to consider as I would say there's clear evidence among Arizin's contemporaries. My answer would be:
Not primarily, and not dramatically, but it affects everyone in the era to some degree. Some relevant details:
1. We have to remember the context of Arizin's career getting broken up by military service. Arizin's best year came immediately before the service ('51-52), and he improved drastically from his first year back to his second year back ('54-55 -> '55-56).
2. We should keep in mind that Arizin's was a pretty obvious POY guy in that second year back, so if you're the best player in the world at the same time as you're falling victim to the S-curve, that's actually pretty impressive I think.
3. In both '55-56 and '56-57, the only guy who stood in the way of Arizin re-taking his TS Add crown from before the military was his teammate Neil Johnston. It's complicated to say what this says, but I'll say that Johnston really seemed to be fool's gold when it came to playoff basketball. Take a look at the team's playoff numbers compared to the regular season, and you'll the shift away from Johnston and toward Arizin. I'll also note again that Johnston's whole scoring game essentially didn't work against Bill Russell.
Over to Arizin-v-Hagan:
Re: Finals MVP wiggle room in phrasing. I think you give wise advice. I'm happy to give myself some wiggle room: What I said before was hyperbolic and I don't want to attempt to defend it as if being 100% confidence is something I possess. I don't.
But man, Pettit going for 50 (while Hagan goes for 15) in the Game 7 would clinch any typical previously-contested Finals MVP vote, would it not?
Re: full title run; Pistons. So, let me put it like this. If we divide the Hawks' championship year into the regular season and each playoff series, that means we get:
82 game regular season: Pettit seen as clear Hawks' MVP.
1st playoff series against the 33-39 Pistons in which they won 4-1: Hagan likely series MVP
2nd playoff series against the 49-23 Celtics in which they won 4-2: Pettit likely series MVP
I'm pretty confident contemporaries would have seen in the same, and from it draw the conclusion that Pettit was the MVP over the duration.
Of course, perhaps we'll get a fine-grain enough signal of impact that it will eventually sway me for Hagan here, but it's hard for me to imagine arguing against Batman in favor of his Robin when in the biggest game Robin seemed to disappear.
I'll hit one other thing here because a riposte against my post that comes to mind is this:
Doc, why are you trying to argue for Arizin over Hagan using Pettit as if both Pettit & Hagan couldn't be better than Arizin?
Okay so, it's true that possibly both could be better than Arizin, but please do keep in mind the relative dominance of the teams in question.
In '55-56, their title season, the Warriors had an SRS of 3.82.
In '57-58, their title season, the Hawks had an SRS of 0.82.
Over the course of the Hawks' 12 year run in St. Louis, their peak SRS was a 2.99 in '60-61 (featuring Pettit & Hagan).
Now of course, Hagan's whole thing is about rising in the playoffs and everything I've said here is regular season focused, so there's certainly an avenue for continuing to side with Hagan here, but what I want to make clear to folks is that this Warrior team - despite being something of a one-hit-wonder - wasn't a team that just squeaked through in the absence of Hawks-level threats. In that window of time, the Warriors had a real spike of peak that should be taken seriously as more than just a fluke.
Perhaps when Hagan was at his very, very best the Hawks were better than peak Warriors, but this wasn't something he was able to sustain even over the entirety of the two series of their champion run. Meanwhile in the Warrior championship run, Arizin's the rock constant the team holds on to as his co-star struggles.
I can't help but see Pettit & Arizin as north stars for their teams to rely upon in a way I don't see of Hagan - or Schayes for that matter, which relates to why I tend to see Pettit & Arizin (along with what-if of Alex Groza) as the best players to come along between Mikan & Russell .