RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Dwight Howard)

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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#21 » by penbeast0 » Sat Dec 2, 2023 2:22 am

WintaSoldier1 wrote:... Will return with a update on my view of Bob Lanier after watching some tape of him


Focus on his defense, that's where the big disparity in opinion lies. Everyone concedes his offensive skills but was he bad, below average, average, or above average at the other end is the question.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#22 » by HeartBreakKid » Sat Dec 2, 2023 3:35 am

OhayoKD wrote:1. Draymond Green


-> Superstar impact by every approach throughout prime
-> Playoff-Riser
-> Centerpiece of an arguably era-best defense
-> Cornerstone of an all-time dynasty
-> Best-in-league calibre defender
-> One of the few two-way floor-generals in history

Nomination:
1. Bob Davies

As I am mainly using an era-relative framework it feels like a good time to reach into Mikan's era

2. Bill Walton

A little too good to not at least be in the discussion, even if he's a hard-sell for a career-value approach
What's your overall summary of Davies?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#23 » by OhayoKD » Sat Dec 2, 2023 8:06 am

LA Bird wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Nomination:
1. Bob Davies

As I am mainly using an era-relative framework it feels like a good time to reach into Mikan's era

If we are looking purely at team success, the early Rochester Royals were definitely a strong dynasty. The question though is how significant of a role Davies played in that success. He had one big scoring year in 47 which saw him winning the league MVP but in the two surrounding NBL seasons, there were multiple teammates who finished above Davies in All League selections. WOWY analysis on Davies' 29 missed games in 1946-48 would be very useful but I don't think we have any game by game records from that period. We do, however, have WOWY numbers in the 16 games he missed in 1950-53 and the Royals had a +8.63 MOV while going 11-5 (three of the losses in OT including a legendary 6OT game). Obviously not a huge sample for his missed games but it seemed like the Royals were still playing at an elite level without Davies.

And then on the box score side, Davies simply doesn't look that impressive once we have more numbers from 1949 onwards. Unlike Cousy who was racking up assist titles almost every year, Davies only finished top 3 in assists per game once in his career. When the Royals won the championship in 51 with Mikan injured, it was their PF Jack Coleman not Davies who led the team in assists in the playoffs (Coleman had a 14/28/8 statline in Finals G2). Davies was not a volume scorer, peaking at 16.2 ppg and he was not an elite FT shooter either, peaking at 79.5%. Davies' numbers absolutely cratered in the postseason during his last 3 seasons (18.4 PER, 0.156 WS/48 -> 8.7 PER, -0.018 WS/48) but even before that, he didn't rank that highly within the team in the playoffs (4th, 9th, 5th, 2nd in WS). For that era, I think it's hard to make the argument for Davies going above Cousy and the gap only widens if people are factoring in other "legacy" points like accolades and rings.

Sidenote: For some reason, there is very little information about Davies' 2 professional seasons with the ABL before joining the Royals. He only played 9 out of 38 possible games and his teams both year were trash but he didn't exactly crush that league despite the weak competition as one would probably expect.

Seems fair, Who should I be loooking at as the 2nd best Mikan-era player then
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#24 » by LA Bird » Sat Dec 2, 2023 10:05 am

OhayoKD wrote:
LA Bird wrote:
Spoiler:
OhayoKD wrote:Nomination:
1. Bob Davies

As I am mainly using an era-relative framework it feels like a good time to reach into Mikan's era

If we are looking purely at team success, the early Rochester Royals were definitely a strong dynasty. The question though is how significant of a role Davies played in that success. He had one big scoring year in 47 which saw him winning the league MVP but in the two surrounding NBL seasons, there were multiple teammates who finished above Davies in All League selections. WOWY analysis on Davies' 29 missed games in 1946-48 would be very useful but I don't think we have any game by game records from that period. We do, however, have WOWY numbers in the 16 games he missed in 1950-53 and the Royals had a +8.63 MOV while going 11-5 (three of the losses in OT including a legendary 6OT game). Obviously not a huge sample for his missed games but it seemed like the Royals were still playing at an elite level without Davies.

And then on the box score side, Davies simply doesn't look that impressive once we have more numbers from 1949 onwards. Unlike Cousy who was racking up assist titles almost every year, Davies only finished top 3 in assists per game once in his career. When the Royals won the championship in 51 with Mikan injured, it was their PF Jack Coleman not Davies who led the team in assists in the playoffs (Coleman had a 14/28/8 statline in Finals G2). Davies was not a volume scorer, peaking at 16.2 ppg and he was not an elite FT shooter either, peaking at 79.5%. Davies' numbers absolutely cratered in the postseason during his last 3 seasons (18.4 PER, 0.156 WS/48 -> 8.7 PER, -0.018 WS/48) but even before that, he didn't rank that highly within the team in the playoffs (4th, 9th, 5th, 2nd in WS). For that era, I think it's hard to make the argument for Davies going above Cousy and the gap only widens if people are factoring in other "legacy" points like accolades and rings.

Sidenote: For some reason, there is very little information about Davies' 2 professional seasons with the ABL before joining the Royals. He only played 9 out of 38 possible games and his teams both year were trash but he didn't exactly crush that league despite the weak competition as one would probably expect.

Seems fair, Who should I be loooking at as the 2nd best Mikan-era player then

Depends on your definition of Mikan's era. If we are talking late 40s, there is nobody else who really stands out enough to warrant a top 100 placing. Kurland is almost guaranteed a spot if he had turned pro but there is so little information about his AAU career that it's impossible to rank him. Of the players starting from the early 50s, Schayes/Arizin/Cousy would all be above Davies. Most likely Groza too but he got banned from the league after only two years so his longevity is non-existent. That's six players from that era better than Davies and even if we exclude Kurland/Groza on a careers list, four players born within a 5 year period is still good representation considering the size of the league back then. I don't think Davies deserves a spot on a top 100 list unless there is stronger evidence linking his individual value to the Royals' success as a team.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#25 » by Owly » Sat Dec 2, 2023 11:45 am

LA Bird wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Nomination:
1. Bob Davies

As I am mainly using an era-relative framework it feels like a good time to reach into Mikan's era

If we are looking purely at team success, the early Rochester Royals were definitely a strong dynasty. The question though is how significant of a role Davies played in that success. He had one big scoring year in 47 which saw him winning the league MVP but in the two surrounding NBL seasons, there were multiple teammates who finished above Davies in All League selections. WOWY analysis on Davies' 29 missed games in 1946-48 would be very useful but I don't think we have any game by game records from that period. We do, however, have WOWY numbers in the 16 games he missed in 1950-53 and the Royals had a +8.63 MOV while going 11-5 (three of the losses in OT including a legendary 6OT game). Obviously not a huge sample for his missed games but it seemed like the Royals were still playing at an elite level without Davies.

And then on the box score side, Davies simply doesn't look that impressive once we have more numbers from 1949 onwards. Unlike Cousy who was racking up assist titles almost every year, Davies only finished top 3 in assists per game once in his career. When the Royals won the championship in 51 with Mikan injured, it was their PF Jack Coleman not Davies who led the team in assists in the playoffs (Coleman had a 14/28/8 statline in Finals G2). Davies was not a volume scorer, peaking at 16.2 ppg and he was not an elite FT shooter either, peaking at 79.5%. Davies' numbers absolutely cratered in the postseason during his last 3 seasons (18.4 PER, 0.156 WS/48 -> 8.7 PER, -0.018 WS/48) but even before that, he didn't rank that highly within the team in the playoffs (4th, 9th, 5th, 2nd in WS). For that era, I think it's hard to make the argument for Davies going above Cousy and the gap only widens if people are factoring in other "legacy" points like accolades and rings.

Sidenote: For some reason, there is very little information about Davies' 2 professional seasons with the ABL before joining the Royals. He only played 9 out of 38 possible games and his teams both year were trash but he didn't exactly crush that league despite the weak competition as one would probably expect.

Probably wouldn't advocate for Davies yet ... that said

"Legacy points" is woolly and "rings" seems a generous manner to interpret Cousy given his playoff play in the Boston title winning era (he was part of 57-63) which features him collaring a net -0.8 OWS, being in the negative 4 of the 7 years. If Boston's defense wasn't great, his WS situation there woulad look really ugly and whilst there is fuzziness (I may be a little less confident his D was bad than others ... idk - this era stuff is really fuzzy) his rep would suggest he's not a big part of driving this.

For equity in actually won championships via playoff performance - not a method I'd advocate for but since rings and status is out there...
it's fuzzy and depends what counts (1946 has been outside the remit on previous projects, but idk about this years version) ... information is particularly limited on the Davies side but Cousy's shooting looks actively harmful.

Davies late career playoff box weakness is true but also ... off a 338 total minute sample, driven by shooting numbers perhaps unlikely to sustain given the sample and the way such numbers fluctuate, and is in his ages 33-35 seasons.

LA Bird wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
LA Bird wrote:
Spoiler:
If we are looking purely at team success, the early Rochester Royals were definitely a strong dynasty. The question though is how significant of a role Davies played in that success. He had one big scoring year in 47 which saw him winning the league MVP but in the two surrounding NBL seasons, there were multiple teammates who finished above Davies in All League selections. WOWY analysis on Davies' 29 missed games in 1946-48 would be very useful but I don't think we have any game by game records from that period. We do, however, have WOWY numbers in the 16 games he missed in 1950-53 and the Royals had a +8.63 MOV while going 11-5 (three of the losses in OT including a legendary 6OT game). Obviously not a huge sample for his missed games but it seemed like the Royals were still playing at an elite level without Davies.

And then on the box score side, Davies simply doesn't look that impressive once we have more numbers from 1949 onwards. Unlike Cousy who was racking up assist titles almost every year, Davies only finished top 3 in assists per game once in his career. When the Royals won the championship in 51 with Mikan injured, it was their PF Jack Coleman not Davies who led the team in assists in the playoffs (Coleman had a 14/28/8 statline in Finals G2). Davies was not a volume scorer, peaking at 16.2 ppg and he was not an elite FT shooter either, peaking at 79.5%. Davies' numbers absolutely cratered in the postseason during his last 3 seasons (18.4 PER, 0.156 WS/48 -> 8.7 PER, -0.018 WS/48) but even before that, he didn't rank that highly within the team in the playoffs (4th, 9th, 5th, 2nd in WS). For that era, I think it's hard to make the argument for Davies going above Cousy and the gap only widens if people are factoring in other "legacy" points like accolades and rings.

Sidenote: For some reason, there is very little information about Davies' 2 professional seasons with the ABL before joining the Royals. He only played 9 out of 38 possible games and his teams both year were trash but he didn't exactly crush that league despite the weak competition as one would probably expect.

Seems fair, Who should I be loooking at as the 2nd best Mikan-era player then

Depends on your definition of Mikan's era. If we are talking late 40s, there is nobody else who really stands out enough to warrant a top 100 placing. Kurland is almost guaranteed a spot if he had turned pro but there is so little information about his AAU career that it's impossible to rank him. Of the players starting from the early 50s, Schayes/Arizin/Cousy would all be above Davies. Most likely Groza too but he got banned from the league after only two years so his longevity is non-existent. That's six players from that era better than Davies and even if we exclude Kurland/Groza on a careers list, four players born within a 5 year period is still good representation considering the size of the league back then. I don't think Davies deserves a spot on a top 100 list unless there is stronger evidence linking his individual value to the Royals' success as a team.

Arizin plays 3 years of overlap with Mikan (including the return year) and 3 with the back end of Davies. Whether he's of that era I think would depend quite a bit on "giving him" in some sense, even if just for career center of gravity purposes, his armed forces years. I don't know whether people would do that or not.

On notional impact side Groza's departure with Beard, whilst Grabowski arrived saw Indiana SRS increase by 2.08 (despite '51 having over half a season of the Capitols on the schedule, who were weaker and lead to an easier schedule and inflated SRS - whilst '52 was fully down to 8 teams). In general I do prefer in-season to cross comparison impact stuff but if old Davies takes a hit, I would say Groza does too here ... this probably shouldn't happen if he were close to his box-level production in impact and it's probably more important here as a 2 year sample is doing all the lifting for him.


Given those players tilted towards substantial career production post-Mikan I'll leave (in no order) a list of (non-Mikan) players I (once) arbitrarily deemed as 40s players but were also "major league" era players. They'll have either made GOAT type lists, won awards or had high career or peak level production.

In no particular order
Bobby Wanzer
Arnie Johnson
Bob Davies
Connie Simmons
Arnie Risen
Don Otten
Red Rocha
Joe Fulks
Max Zaslofsky
Bob Feerick

A longer list, based off a larger player database with mid point of career (just average of first and last year) occuring before 1956 (wasn't sure where to go given Mikan's comeback but including 1955.5 means an inclusive list list not showing a lot of mainly post-Mikan players) again, just somewhat notable players by at least one criterion.

Don Barksdale
Leo Barnhorst
Frankie Baumholtz
Ralph Beard
Vince Boryla
Carl Braun
Frankie Brian
Ernie Calverley
Nat Clifton
Jack Coleman
Howie Dallmar
Bob Davies
Thomas Dwight "Dike" Eddleman
Bob Feerick
Joe Fulks
Bill Gabor
Harry Gallatin
Joe Graboski
Alex J. Groza
Chick Halbert
Bob Harrison
Mel Hutchins
Neil Johnston
John Logan
Ed Macauley
Slater Martin
Dick McGuire
Horace "Bones" McKinney
Stan Miasek
Vern Mikkelsen
Jack Molinas
Andy Phillip
Jim Pollard
Arnie Risen
Ephraim "Red" Rocha
Kenny Sailors
Fred Schaus
Fred Scolari
Paul Seymour
Bill Sharman
Don Sunderlage
Paul Walther
Max Zaslofsky

(otoh) Notes, not advocating for guys here:
I tilt to liking Wanzer, himself an MVP (though lineage slightly unclear) and whilst this isn't me, I'd argue for those with a strong playoff tilt his playoff composites for a guard in that era (especially OWS) are pretty crazy, though as ever limited and incomplete data for that era, playoffs are always a small sample against uneven opponents (though Rochester was on the Lakers side of the bracket so probably not at first glance a soft schedule) etc.

In general I think I like Sharman (who doesn't really belong here, especially as his earliest, otoh career flitting, years are weaker) and Feerick more than most do. Which, again, isn't to say anything specific about absolute term rankings.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#26 » by eminence » Sat Dec 2, 2023 2:50 pm

HMs to Kurland/Haynes (bummer we never got a Davies/Haynes game) for era competition, but I'd probably be looking at the slightly later Cousy or Arizin vs Davies. I have Arizin peaking the highest, Cousy with the best longevity, and Davies leading in team accomplishment (viewing Cousy as more of a complementary guy to the Russell dynasty). How you treat Arizin's missed war years might matter. I suppose the same goes for considering the start of Davies career, though I haven't seen it done in the same way. Personally I don't think I'm boosting either there at this time (more of a tie-breaker), but I understand the perspective.

I'm not sold on Groza being competitive, signs point towards him having a huge scoring/impact disconnect. Perhaps he would've ironed that out if he'd stuck around longer. As is, obviously not a pick here.

I like the Royals depth, but would have Davies as the #1 from the squad. Johnson in particular I think gets overrated by the box-score, it's quite rare for 5th option offensive guys who don't seem to do much else to be their teams driver even if they do have great efficiency. They kind of filtered through all the other guys with Davies as the strongest constant. There's a brief video of a Lakers film session ('52 I want to say, but low confidence) and in a somewhat joking manner they seem to think of Davies as their first example of a tough to guard perimeter guy.

Edit: And Davies was still the Royals assist leader in the '51 playoffs, though Coleman did up his volume considerably and was the leader in the '52 POs (6 game sample where Davies missed most of one of the games).

Edit2: Though if counting Arizin/Cousy as the era Schayes is the easy actual #2 for me, with this being the discussion for #3.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#27 » by WintaSoldier1 » Sun Dec 3, 2023 1:12 am

penbeast0 wrote:
WintaSoldier1 wrote:... Will return with a update on my view of Bob Lanier after watching some tape of him


Focus on his defense, that's where the big disparity in opinion lies. Everyone concedes his offensive skills but was he bad, below average, average, or above average at the other end is the question.


Watched the only available game on YouTube of Bob Lanier.
Honestly his game wasn’t that impressive to me, has some freakish athletic ability( Crazy Spring).

To sum it all up in that game he’s a habitual ball watcher, who only really cares about the rebound. Plenty of times people came into the paint and the opposing team(although on a heater from inside and out) weren’t extremely concerned about his presence in paint. In the game I watched often he’ll just kinda of watches the play happen and doesn’t make any real attempt to discourage the defense from doing certain actions aside from muscling up on his own defender in preparation for a rebound.


He has freakish ability although, he BALL watches a lot but if you step inside a certain radius of him he just kinda of materializes and blocks the shot, dude has a spring on his legs. It’s similar to like playing a video game where if you give close enough to the character they’ll active and begin to charge at you; Bob Lanier is a high level version of that defensively, unless you come into his radius he’ll charge at you but otherwise he’s just… watching. Occasionally he’ll go block hunting but he’ll kinda leave his man to go do it…

His rebounding is phenomenal dude knows where the ball is at and where it’s gonna go, It’s some of the most impressive ball tracking I’ve seen. Feels like he was touching the ball everytime there was an opportunity to rebound. Quick Spring, Slides into the seams of the Rebound offensively he doesn’t look to create his own space he just goes where he can and just takes it. Defensively he muscles up and makes sure he has you where he wants you.


Honestly I wasn’t that impressed, Great Athlete with Amazing Ball Tracking Ability and a Good Motor. Doesn’t understand the game all that well and primarily relies on instinct to bolster his ability.


If it came down to Embidd vs Lanier, I have no real words on how someone could think Lanier is better than Embidd. Although I can see a very very strong case for Impact in speaking to correlative success. The things he does are very good and they do change the flow of the game, he also feels very portable team to team.

I need more information from you guys, how impressive is this for 70s Ball?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#28 » by WintaSoldier1 » Sun Dec 3, 2023 1:13 am

I may sound pessimistic in my post but I am fond of Lanier’s game.

He’s like the 6 Foot HS Center( whos really a football player), But 7 Foot with Springs on his legs.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#29 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Dec 3, 2023 6:15 am

Cool to see folks talking about the earlier eras.

Here's a link to a post ranking early players for contention from before the project.

The list order I had was:

1. George Mikan
2. Bob Davies
3. Arnie Risen
4. Jim Pollard
5. Slater Martin
6. Paul Seymour
7. Vern Middelsen
8. Bobby Wanzer
9. Ed Macauley
10. Neil Johnston

I'll note that Al Cervi is not on that list, but has an argument to be #2 among greatest players on the list. Cervi was older - made his NBL debut in the '30s, and never actually played in the NBA, but played in the NBL during the BAA's existence.

I also have my POY-style rankings going back into the '40s for POY, OPOY & DPOY for anyone who wants to look season-by-season.

In terms of guys on my list above, Davies would be the next one I'd champion. I'd note though that I'd struggle to champion Davies before Cliff Hagan (or Paul Arizin obviously). Davies had the greater career without normalizing for opponent quality to be sure, but competition also got tougher in subsequent eras. Hard to know how to make the call, but something I'd be clear on is that Hagan was a better scorer, Davies the better dribbler and passer. On defense, Davies had a specifically weak reputation.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#30 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Dec 3, 2023 7:10 am

LA Bird wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Nomination:
1. Bob Davies

As I am mainly using an era-relative framework it feels like a good time to reach into Mikan's era

If we are looking purely at team success, the early Rochester Royals were definitely a strong dynasty. The question though is how significant of a role Davies played in that success. He had one big scoring year in 47 which saw him winning the league MVP but in the two surrounding NBL seasons, there were multiple teammates who finished above Davies in All League selections. WOWY analysis on Davies' 29 missed games in 1946-48 would be very useful but I don't think we have any game by game records from that period. We do, however, have WOWY numbers in the 16 games he missed in 1950-53 and the Royals had a +8.63 MOV while going 11-5 (three of the losses in OT including a legendary 6OT game). Obviously not a huge sample for his missed games but it seemed like the Royals were still playing at an elite level without Davies.

And then on the box score side, Davies simply doesn't look that impressive once we have more numbers from 1949 onwards. Unlike Cousy who was racking up assist titles almost every year, Davies only finished top 3 in assists per game once in his career. When the Royals won the championship in 51 with Mikan injured, it was their PF Jack Coleman not Davies who led the team in assists in the playoffs (Coleman had a 14/28/8 statline in Finals G2). Davies was not a volume scorer, peaking at 16.2 ppg and he was not an elite FT shooter either, peaking at 79.5%. Davies' numbers absolutely cratered in the postseason during his last 3 seasons (18.4 PER, 0.156 WS/48 -> 8.7 PER, -0.018 WS/48) but even before that, he didn't rank that highly within the team in the playoffs (4th, 9th, 5th, 2nd in WS). For that era, I think it's hard to make the argument for Davies going above Cousy and the gap only widens if people are factoring in other "legacy" points like accolades and rings.

Sidenote: For some reason, there is very little information about Davies' 2 professional seasons with the ABL before joining the Royals. He only played 9 out of 38 possible games and his teams both year were trash but he didn't exactly crush that league despite the weak competition as one would probably expect.


So, some thoughts based on things I think I know (but which could prove to be bad information).

Davies, like most of the basketball talent at the time, was in the military during World War II, and was playing most of his basketball there. I don't know much about his ABL play, but feel pretty confident that there was nothing "under the radar" about him at that time. When Les Harrison put together the Rochester Royals, Davies was his must-get. It wasn't just that he was good at competitive basketball, but that his dribble & playmaking was wildly entertaining, which would be critical for the Royals since they made most of their revenue by barnstorming until they left the NBL and joined the BAA/NBA, and the new league forbid this. Because of this, the Royals would soon enough leave for a bigger city, which would not have been necessary had they been able to stay as barnstormers.

In that first Royals season - '45-46, the first season after the war - Davies had a bumpy start fitting in with the other talents Harrison had acquired. Harrison talked about it in terms of the other players learning to play with Davies rather than the other way around, but nevertheless benched Davies at times early on because the other guys were arguably the second best team in the league without Davies. The style that Davies brought was all about pace. Davies turned the court into a race track leading the team in transition.

From my recollection of the box scores - which used to be up somewhere on APBR but I can't find them right now - Davies progressed through the season and the offense ended up shifting from George Glamack as the focus to Davies, and that Davies would have clearly been the Finals MVP had one existed at the time.

I'll say that my assessment was that Al Cervi was the real MVP of the team both that year and the following when some sources say Davies was named NBL MVP (other sources say it was Cervi, and frankly given Davies' missed time, it seems like it should have been Cervi). Cervi was a fine scorer in his own right, but what set him apart was his defense which was absolutely suffocating, and which completely dismantled the star - Bobby McDermott - who had been seen as the best player in the league for several years. McDermott was the greatest of all long-distance set shooters with a range that went well past the modern 3-point line, so what Cervi did is just stuck to him like glue wherever he was on the court. Took tremendous motor and endurance, but you need separation to take get the ball and take a set shot, and McDermott struggled mightily to get that space when Cervi was on him.

Before I move on I'll give a shout out to future HOF Knicks coach Red Holzman who worked very well as a #2/3 primacy guy for the Royals both in their initial Glamack-oriented offense and in the subsequent Davies-oriented scheme (whereas Glamack faded out quickly with Davies' emergence).

Ah heck, I'll also shout out football legend Otto Graham who was also a core member of that championship team.

Moving on, the first big change to the Royals happened with the arrival of center Arnie Risen for the '47-48 season. Risen was an established star on lesser teams and got brought in not just because he was good, but because the Royals were clearly struggling in the wake of George Mikan. Risen would not prove equal to the task of course, but I'd say he was the second best center in the league over the next few years.

As I say that though, the reality for Risen is that he didn't get the accolades you'd expect if people thought he was the actual best player on the Royals. It wasn't just he failed to make 1st team - which would have been understandable given Mikan's presence - but that he only rarely made 2nd team twice, whereas Davies made 1st team as a guard as a matter of course.

Cervi, incidentally, would end up leaving the team over money. In a nutshell, he thought he deserved to get paid like Davies, and boss Harrison disagreed. Now, Cervi was considerably older so even on a purely rational basis, building around Davies made sense. But I also think a factor here was that Davies wasn't just getting paid for his competitive value but his box office value which was in an entirely different league compared to Cervi.

Fast forward a few years and you have a Davies-Risen led core winning an NBA title after a Mikan injury opened the door, and while it matters that they got lucky, the fact that Davies was the face of the team during both the NBL and NBA championships, and neither Cervi nor Risen were there for both, make Davies the clear cut top Royals of the time period in my book. One can argue that other experience puts Cervi or Risen over Davies, but honestly the only one I'd seriously consider is Cervi.

Last: Shout out to Bobby Wanzer who becomes the other major guard on the Royals after Cervi exits. Wanzer was a Davies protege from Seton Hall and a better scorer (and as with all the other guys, a weaker playmaker). I can see an argument for Wanzer over Cervi or Risen, but I think Davies pretty clearly is the more accomplished player between the two Pirates.

Looking over your post:

What about Davies not getting more assists? I think it's a style of play thing. While Davies was the floor general out there, the Royals played in a scheme that was read & react which would later provide the template for Holzman's Knicks, Jackson's Bulls & Kerr's Warriors down the branches of this tree of influence. This wasn't anything like a heliocentric style...whereas I'd say Cousy was arguably the original helio, dominating the ball.

I don't think it's at all clear Cousy was the more effective passer over Davies. I do think Cousy getting so many more assists than his contemporaries was about the role he was allowed to play more so than him hitting passes other guys couldn't see. Further, we know that Cousy showed problematic judgment when it came to calling his own number too much and falling into ugly shooting efficiency. Davies by contrast would remain a positive TS Add guy through his final season as a 35 year old, and would be the floor general on a team that was the league's first offensive dynasty based on my estimation of best ORtg, and even in that final year, the offense would be above league average. And then Davies would retire, and the offense would just fall off a cliff.

This then to say that while I'm cautious about putting Davies over a guy like Hagan (or Arizin), I do have him above Cousy. I think Cousy had some massive issues in his game that the basketball world of the time just overlooked because the Celtics kept winning titles, and I think he'd have been a more valuable player if he'd understood that he really shouldn't be his team's main shooter.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#31 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Dec 3, 2023 7:25 am

LA Bird wrote:Depends on your definition of Mikan's era. If we are talking late 40s, there is nobody else who really stands out enough to warrant a top 100 placing. Kurland is almost guaranteed a spot if he had turned pro but there is so little information about his AAU career that it's impossible to rank him. Of the players starting from the early 50s, Schayes/Arizin/Cousy would all be above Davies. Most likely Groza too but he got banned from the league after only two years so his longevity is non-existent. That's six players from that era better than Davies and even if we exclude Kurland/Groza on a careers list, four players born within a 5 year period is still good representation considering the size of the league back then. I don't think Davies deserves a spot on a top 100 list unless there is stronger evidence linking his individual value to the Royals' success as a team.


So I agree with a lot of what you say:

- Kurland was the other known great talent of the era and there's a gap between Mikan/Kurland and everyone else.

- I do have Schayes & Arizin ahead of Davies.

- I think Groza is almost certainly on this list if he doesn't get banned.

But when you say "six players from that era better than Davies and even if we exclude Kurland/Groza...four players born within a 5 year period", my eyebrows furrow a bit so let me go look this information back up and share what I see, because I like framings like that, and yours is giving me something different from what I had in my head.

The players mentioned by birth year:

1920 - Davies
1924 - Mikan, Kurland
1926 - Groza
1928 - Schayes, Arizin, Cousy

Okay, yeah, that's what I was thinking:

You're putting Davies in there like he's in the same group but he's maybe half-a-generation off. If we focus on the time between the true generational talents that encapsulate Davies:

1916 - Hank Luisetti (note, no pro career, but definitely the most celebrated player of his time)
1924 - Mikan or Kurland

That leaves us a 7-year period of births where Davies has a strong case for being the best of the bunch. (Again I'll say that I think Davies vs Cervi is debatable.)

With that in mind, for anyone who isn't looking to adjust for league degree-of-difficulty, I'd think being the best in such a 7-year period would generally clinch a guy's place on your list, and so I would not see Davies as a guy who was failing to stand out from those born around him.

But of course, I'm with everyone who is adjusting for era in degrees, and so I don't think it's a given that Davies should make the list simply for standing out in those late-10s-early-20s birth years.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#32 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Dec 3, 2023 7:35 am

Found the page I was looking for:

http://www.nbastats.net/

Look under Game Logs for the NBL. When you click, it'll download an Excel file.

Some RWOWY analysis could probably be done with this, though the data is spotty.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#33 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Dec 3, 2023 8:06 am

Induction Vote 1: Draymond Green

Image

Repeating vote:

Spoiler:
Saying something relevant to the direction things have taken to start the '23-24 season:

I think Draymond makes it really clear why it's so hard to draw the line between on-court and off-court impact when we see him get violent on the court. There's good and bad to green, and figuring out how to reconcile all of that makes ranking even harder than it already is evaluating a guy impact really isn't well-captured by the box score.

What I'm most firm on is that Draymond is a generational-level defender, and being the anchor of a defense that was critical in enabling a dynastic run means a lot to me regardless of everything else.

I don't think there's any doubt that Draymond's level of achievement in the NBA would vary drastically depending on where he ended up. Now, I think that's mostly about a) coaches not recognizing how impactful he can be, and b) the good fortune of being part of a lightning-in-a-bottle situation. The former is something I try not to count against the player. The latter is something that means different things to me depending on what I'm evaluating. When I'm looking at total career achievement, well, the phrase "it is what it is" comes to mind.

I think Draymond's also typically been a positive on the offensive side of the ball too, and I think his force of personality has often helped galvanize his teams.

But the negatives are there, it's just a question of what they mean. I'll certainly say they hurt Draymond, but how to quantify how much? No objective way. I tend to ask questions like:

"Could I build a dynastic core with him being him and being critical to the core?"

I ask this partially with respect to how good the player is of course, but I'm also thinking about the warts of a guy's professionalism. Some guys are prone to losing motivation, some guys want things that are unreasonable, some guys are prone to self-annihilating jealousy. And so on that front, a thing that gets in the way of using a guys for a many-year core can hurt a lot.

And while we could imagine a career path where we something that Green's attitude would make it impossible to do this, since we actually saw this, I don't really have the same doubts as I do for some other guys.


Induction Vote 2: Jimmy Butler

Really agonized between Butler & Lanier here. Definitely looking to keep re-considering between the two of them.

I'd say I'm convinced that it's unfair to assume Lanier had "loser tendencies". Definitely a guy who should be seen as a superstar, and not someone who utterly falls apart in the playoffs.

I do think though there's something really special about what Butler has achieved particularly in the playoffs. If we just take a look at 2020's playoff success without a "chip or bust" mentality, Butler's got a case of having accomplished more cumulative stuff than anyone else in the league in that time. That's really crazy.

Nomination Vote 1: Paul Arizin

Image

Repeating vote:

Spoiler:
Okay I'm going to just add on to what I was saying before because I want to address some of the things others brought up.

Previous post:
I'm really sold on Arizin as a player. I think at his best he was the best non-big the NBA ever saw until Oscar & West showed up, and I'd say arguably he was the most modern player the NBA saw until them also. This was a guy who was known for his one-handed jump shot at a time when this was not yet the norm, and he was also known for slashing his way to the basket.

For the early to mid stages of his career, he was also someone who seemed to correlate greatly with his team's success. Now, by moonbeam's RWOWY he comes off more mild here in favor of teammate Tom Gola, and I'm willing to have that conversation given that Gola was supposed to be a best-in-world candidate coming out of college, but my guess is that what we're seeing here is that Gola's arrival on the team coincided with Arizin really getting his sea legs back after the military service, and since that took a year, that prior year gets effectively held against him.

I will say there are considerable longevity concerns with Arizin, and frankly that's why I didn't vote for him earlier.
There are also concerns about why the later years with Wilt didn't feel like a team with overwhelming talent, and there while my answer would be the style of play the Warriors chose to play around Wilt, it doesn't change the fact that Arizin's impact didn't age as well as we'd like in practice.

Am I saying Arizin had poor impact?

Definitely not saying that. I'm acknowledging that Moonbeam's RWOWY did not show Arizin as that impressive and bringing up the teammate (Gola) who came off looking better. I'm giving brief explanation for how I take that for data. Happy to talk about it in more detail, just a question of what would be helpful to communicate.

The essence of the situation is that RWOWY is going to hold a Player A's improvement against him if Player B's arrival coincides with that improvement. Arizin improved his second year back in the NBA much like you'd hope give that he had been much better previously, and I don't think it's reasonable to say something like "That was Gola's impact on Arizin!".

Why champion Arizin when he doesn't stand out that much within his own era?

Arizin does stand out to me though. I have him as my OPOY in '51-52, '55-56 & '56-57, and he qualifies as an Offensive Player of the Decade (OPOD) for me taking over from George Mikan, preceding Bob Pettit.

I would also consider Arizin to have the best offensive peak of the '50s, and would name him my POY in his championship season.

I am curious who else people think stands out as much as Arizin from his own era, but I have seen another name mentioned here from the era that intrigues me.

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.

I previously said that George Gervin has more POY Shares by my personal votes than Arizin, so why vote for Arizin over Gervin?

So, one of the things here is that the period where Gervin was racking up his shares was a really weird period. I literally have Gervin as my POY in '77-78, but it wasn't exactly the most satisfying of seasons with both Walton & Kareem's seasons disrupted, and Gervin's Spurs getting upset in their first playoff series. Getting upset in the playoffs was a thing for those Spurs and while that doesn't necessarily say anything concretely about Gervin, it leaves some doubts at the least.

I see Arizin as the guy with championship belt in his era among perimeter players for being best able to take it to opposing defenses all the way through the deep end of the playoffs...and I just can't say I see Gervin the same way.

Now, as we've talked about many times before, I'm not evaluating players for this project by considering them in other eras. I can definitely see the argument that Gervin's era was better than Arizin's so that should make up for the difference, but I'm cautious.

Does a player really "stand out" if he doesn't show up as massively on PER, WS/48/ BPM as another guy from another era?

So, I do see the logic of this thought. If we're talking about stats that are already normalized for era, and a more modern guy looks better by them, what exactly is the reasoning for picking the guy from the past?

Let's first acknowledge that this general argument stands even if we find specific reasons why a particular guy is better or worse than these simple metrics say. All other things equal though, is there a basis for which we could say that the guy with the worse-normalized numbers in the weaker league somehow might be seen as more impressive by those numbers?

Big thing here I think is that in general alphas are claiming more of the box score stats (per minute) of their team more and more as we embrace more star-optimized systems. In some cases this is happening beyond what's actually best for the team, but even if we expect that it's mostly a good thing if the team is choosing to do it, there's a question of whether we want to do cross-era lists that ended up getting dominated by guys from ultra-high-alpha-primacy eras simply because they are ultra-high-alpha-primacy eras.

Incidentally statistically, the thing worth determining are the standard deviations of these stats over the years.


Nomination Vote 2: Dave Cowens

I think it's time for Cowens. I don't think he should have won MVP...but I don't think he was far from it. He really came in and his arrival re-opened the championship window for the post-Russell Celtics. Playing with extreme motor which seems to be respected as high on the BBIQ scale (despite the shooting efficiency), this is an impressive thing to me.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#34 » by OldSchoolNoBull » Sun Dec 3, 2023 9:00 am

Induction Vote 1: Dwight Howard

Induction Vote 2: Bob Lanier

This round seems like it's coming down to Dwight and Lanier. I'll be honest, I'm a bit surprised to see Lanier potentially leapfrog a number of guys who've been on the ballot longer.

It's tough. I very much admire Lanier's game and acknowledge the terrible situation he was in in Detroit, and he does have a longevity advantage in terms of impact, but the lack of team success in perhaps one of the least competitive eras in the league's history(I am an era-relativist, so I don't usually talk about strength of era, but here I feel it's warranted) even in his terrible situation makes gives me pause, and peak-for-peak, I think you can argue statistically that Dwight was a more efficient scorer and a more impactful defender, so I'm going with Dwight. I am a bit nervous here as I believe my vote is a tie-breaker at this moment in time, but there it is.

Nomination Vote 1: George Gervin

Nomination Vote 2: Paul Arizin

It's honestly getting silly that Gervin hasn't been nominated yet. He was inducted #37 in 2020 and we're about to cross #50 and he's not nominated yet. This is a fairly shocking drop. He's at minimum a top 10 SG all time. How far is he going to fall?

As for Arizin, in era-relative terms, I think he was better statistically and had more team success than Payton, and since these are the two with traction right now, I'm going with Arizin.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#35 » by HeartBreakKid » Sun Dec 3, 2023 9:09 am

OldSchoolNoBull wrote:Induction Vote 1: Dwight Howard

Induction Vote 2: Bob Lanier

This round seems like it's coming down to Dwight and Lanier. I'll be honest, I'm a bit surprised to see Lanier potentially leapfrog a number of guys who've been on the ballot longer.

It's tough. I very much admire Lanier's game and acknowledge the terrible situation he was in in Detroit, and he does have a longevity advantage in terms of impact, but the lack of team success in perhaps one of the least competitive eras in the league's history(I am an era-relativist, so I don't usually talk about strength of era, but here I feel it's warranted) even in his terrible situation makes gives me pause, and peak-for-peak, I think you can argue statistically that Dwight was a more efficient scorer and a more impactful defender, so I'm going with Dwight. I am a bit nervous here as I believe my vote is a tie-breaker at this moment in time, but there it is.

Nomination Vote 1: George Gervin

Nomination Vote 2: Paul Arizin

It's honestly getting silly that Gervin hasn't been nominated yet. He was inducted #37 in 2020 and we're about to cross #50 and he's not nominated yet. This is a fairly shocking drop. He's at minimum a top 10 SG all time. How far is he going to fall?

As for Arizin, in era-relative terms, I think he was better statistically and had more team success than Payton, and since these are the two with traction right now, I'm going with Arizin.


That isn't saying much.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#36 » by Owly » Sun Dec 3, 2023 11:00 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
LA Bird wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Nomination:
1. Bob Davies

As I am mainly using an era-relative framework it feels like a good time to reach into Mikan's era

If we are looking purely at team success, the early Rochester Royals were definitely a strong dynasty. The question though is how significant of a role Davies played in that success. He had one big scoring year in 47 which saw him winning the league MVP but in the two surrounding NBL seasons, there were multiple teammates who finished above Davies in All League selections. WOWY analysis on Davies' 29 missed games in 1946-48 would be very useful but I don't think we have any game by game records from that period. We do, however, have WOWY numbers in the 16 games he missed in 1950-53 and the Royals had a +8.63 MOV while going 11-5 (three of the losses in OT including a legendary 6OT game). Obviously not a huge sample for his missed games but it seemed like the Royals were still playing at an elite level without Davies.

And then on the box score side, Davies simply doesn't look that impressive once we have more numbers from 1949 onwards. Unlike Cousy who was racking up assist titles almost every year, Davies only finished top 3 in assists per game once in his career. When the Royals won the championship in 51 with Mikan injured, it was their PF Jack Coleman not Davies who led the team in assists in the playoffs (Coleman had a 14/28/8 statline in Finals G2). Davies was not a volume scorer, peaking at 16.2 ppg and he was not an elite FT shooter either, peaking at 79.5%. Davies' numbers absolutely cratered in the postseason during his last 3 seasons (18.4 PER, 0.156 WS/48 -> 8.7 PER, -0.018 WS/48) but even before that, he didn't rank that highly within the team in the playoffs (4th, 9th, 5th, 2nd in WS). For that era, I think it's hard to make the argument for Davies going above Cousy and the gap only widens if people are factoring in other "legacy" points like accolades and rings.

Sidenote: For some reason, there is very little information about Davies' 2 professional seasons with the ABL before joining the Royals. He only played 9 out of 38 possible games and his teams both year were trash but he didn't exactly crush that league despite the weak competition as one would probably expect.


So, some thoughts based on things I think I know (but which could prove to be bad information).

Davies, like most of the basketball talent at the time, was in the military during World War II, and was playing most of his basketball there. I don't know much about his ABL play, but feel pretty confident that there was nothing "under the radar" about him at that time. When Les Harrison put together the Rochester Royals, Davies was his must-get. It wasn't just that he was good at competitive basketball, but that his dribble & playmaking was wildly entertaining, which would be critical for the Royals since they made most of their revenue by barnstorming until they left the NBL and joined the BAA/NBA, and the new league forbid this. Because of this, the Royals would soon enough leave for a bigger city, which would not have been necessary had they been able to stay as barnstormers.

In that first Royals season - '45-46, the first season after the war - Davies had a bumpy start fitting in with the other talents Harrison had acquired. Harrison talked about it in terms of the other players learning to play with Davies rather than the other way around, but nevertheless benched Davies at times early on because the other guys were arguably the second best team in the league without Davies. The style that Davies brought was all about pace. Davies turned the court into a race track leading the team in transition.

From my recollection of the box scores - which used to be up somewhere on APBR but I can't find them right now - Davies progressed through the season and the offense ended up shifting from George Glamack as the focus to Davies, and that Davies would have clearly been the Finals MVP had one existed at the time.

I'll say that my assessment was that Al Cervi was the real MVP of the team both that year and the following when some sources say Davies was named NBL MVP (other sources say it was Cervi, and frankly given Davies' missed time, it seems like it should have been Cervi). Cervi was a fine scorer in his own right, but what set him apart was his defense which was absolutely suffocating, and which completely dismantled the star - Bobby McDermott - who had been seen as the best player in the league for several years. McDermott was the greatest of all long-distance set shooters with a range that went well past the modern 3-point line, so what Cervi did is just stuck to him like glue wherever he was on the court. Took tremendous motor and endurance, but you need separation to take get the ball and take a set shot, and McDermott struggled mightily to get that space when Cervi was on him.

Before I move on I'll give a shout out to future HOF Knicks coach Red Holzman who worked very well as a #2/3 primacy guy for the Royals both in their initial Glamack-oriented offense and in the subsequent Davies-oriented scheme (whereas Glamack faded out quickly with Davies' emergence).

Ah heck, I'll also shout out football legend Otto Graham who was also a core member of that championship team.

Moving on, the first big change to the Royals happened with the arrival of center Arnie Risen for the '47-48 season. Risen was an established star on lesser teams and got brought in not just because he was good, but because the Royals were clearly struggling in the wake of George Mikan. Risen would not prove equal to the task of course, but I'd say he was the second best center in the league over the next few years.

As I say that though, the reality for Risen is that he didn't get the accolades you'd expect if people thought he was the actual best player on the Royals. It wasn't just he failed to make 1st team - which would have been understandable given Mikan's presence - but that he only rarely made 2nd team twice, whereas Davies made 1st team as a guard as a matter of course.

Cervi, incidentally, would end up leaving the team over money. In a nutshell, he thought he deserved to get paid like Davies, and boss Harrison disagreed. Now, Cervi was considerably older so even on a purely rational basis, building around Davies made sense. But I also think a factor here was that Davies wasn't just getting paid for his competitive value but his box office value which was in an entirely different league compared to Cervi.

Fast forward a few years and you have a Davies-Risen led core winning an NBA title after a Mikan injury opened the door, and while it matters that they got lucky, the fact that Davies was the face of the team during both the NBL and NBA championships, and neither Cervi nor Risen were there for both, make Davies the clear cut top Royals of the time period in my book. One can argue that other experience puts Cervi or Risen over Davies, but honestly the only one I'd seriously consider is Cervi.

Last: Shout out to Bobby Wanzer who becomes the other major guard on the Royals after Cervi exits. Wanzer was a Davies protege from Seton Hall and a better scorer (and as with all the other guys, a weaker playmaker). I can see an argument for Wanzer over Cervi or Risen, but I think Davies pretty clearly is the more accomplished player between the two Pirates.

Looking over your post:

What about Davies not getting more assists? I think it's a style of play thing. While Davies was the floor general out there, the Royals played in a scheme that was read & react which would later provide the template for Holzman's Knicks, Jackson's Bulls & Kerr's Warriors down the branches of this tree of influence. This wasn't anything like a heliocentric style...whereas I'd say Cousy was arguably the original helio, dominating the ball.

I don't think it's at all clear Cousy was the more effective passer over Davies. I do think Cousy getting so many more assists than his contemporaries was about the role he was allowed to play more so than him hitting passes other guys couldn't see. Further, we know that Cousy showed problematic judgment when it came to calling his own number too much and falling into ugly shooting efficiency. Davies by contrast would remain a positive TS Add guy through his final season as a 35 year old, and would be the floor general on a team that was the league's first offensive dynasty based on my estimation of best ORtg, and even in that final year, the offense would be above league average. And then Davies would retire, and the offense would just fall off a cliff.

This then to say that while I'm cautious about putting Davies over a guy like Hagan (or Arizin), I do have him above Cousy. I think Cousy had some massive issues in his game that the basketball world of the time just overlooked because the Celtics kept winning titles, and I think he'd have been a more valuable player if he'd understood that he really shouldn't be his team's main shooter.

Notes
Regarding all-league: in the NBA (BAA) at least, Risen wouldn't need to surpass Mikan to make first team. Voting wasn't positional. In the final 3 years of that format (53-55) it would see Cousy plus 4 bigs (Johnston constant, Schayes constant, Mikan twice, Macauley, Gallatin, Foust, Pettit). I don't know about the system for the NBL.

"some sources say Davies was named NBL MVP (other sources say it was Cervi"
My recollection doesn't quite match up with this phrasing. This could be my memory and it's you who alerted me to the '47 issue so happy enough to defer but I'll just put what I recall out.
"Some ... some ..."
sounds
a) as if different sources are either side
b) as if they're about equally balanced

My limited knowledge/recollection is that there are places have listed/claimed both players, there are places that just list Davies. I would guess the latter to be more common. I don't recall somewhere just saying Cervi. It seems like some places effectively removed Cervi's claim (iirc the first official NBA Encyclopedia - the Hollander, Sachare '89 version - had a Hall profile section that cited Cervi's MVP, I think by the 3rd edition, perhaps the 2nd too [both just Sachare iirc, don't recall exact years] and on the Hall's website Cervi isn't claimed an MVP).

I've no great knowledge about deserving it.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#37 » by Owly » Sun Dec 3, 2023 11:33 am

OldSchoolNoBull wrote:It's honestly getting silly that Gervin hasn't been nominated yet. He was inducted #37 in 2020 and we're about to cross #50 and he's not nominated yet. This is a fairly shocking drop. He's at minimum a top 10 SG all time. How far is he going to fall?

As ever your choice but since the language suggests you feel firmly on it I'll engage with some notes

1) make the case. More than just where he was last time ... (we could pump out the same list each year the core value is in the discussion). What did people get right about him then and miss this time around?

2) '20 rank of 37 probably looks like the real terms high watermark for Gervin on these projects (after accounting for increased competitive pool).

3) As implied in the above some absolute rank drop is to be expected as new players come in. This will exaggerate real terms drops and mask real-terms climbs at the margins.

4) We're at a point where these things are really close. And a "rank" isn't a consistent unit of measure. So it's hard to know what that rank "drop" really means.

5) These "jumps" do happen (cf point 4), though perhaps less so recently than between earlier lists. Cousy pretty consistently so., Dominique, Dantley, Cunningham, Parish, DJ, Schayes, Nance, Billups, Monroe, Mar. Johnson, Walton; McGrady, KJ, Unseld, King, Archibald (Dumars and Je. Lucas on earlier lists). Reasons will vary and with that whether it is something that will be regressed back from or the setting of a new normal will vary.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#38 » by penbeast0 » Sun Dec 3, 2023 12:58 pm

What's the case for Gervin over Dantley (my go to benchmark for pure scorers that add almost nothing else)?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#39 » by eminence » Sun Dec 3, 2023 1:03 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:Cool to see folks talking about the earlier eras.

Here's a link to a post ranking early players for contention from before the project.

The list order I had was:

1. George Mikan
2. Bob Davies
3. Arnie Risen
4. Jim Pollard
5. Slater Martin
6. Paul Seymour
7. Vern Middelsen
8. Bobby Wanzer
9. Ed Macauley
10. Neil Johnston

I'll note that Al Cervi is not on that list, but has an argument to be #2 among greatest players on the list. Cervi was older - made his NBL debut in the '30s, and never actually played in the NBA, but played in the NBL during the BAA's existence.


Lots of good stuff in recent posts Doc, wanted to quickly note that Cervi did have a brief run with the Nationals: https://www.basketball-reference.com/players/c/cervial01.html

And I'd say showed his star capability in that first season before fading out. Overall I'd be pretty confident with Davies over him for career, I'm not confident which was more impressive when they were together, but Davies accomplishments with the NBA Royals solidly outstrip what Cervi did with the Nationals.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #49 (Deadline ~5am PST, 12/3/2023) 

Post#40 » by Clyde Frazier » Sun Dec 3, 2023 1:43 pm

Vote 1 - Dwight Howard
Vote 2 - Bob Lanier 
Nomination 1 - George Gervin
Nomination 2 - Willis Reed

I feel strongly that Dwight peaked as an MVP level player in 2011. His prime isn't as long as I'd like, but was the centerpiece of some very good teams in Orlando and a deserving multi-time DPOY winner. While not the same player post back surgery, he still had some good years in Houston. Had a small role in the lakers' 2020 title run, but still a positive late career note for him.

Kinda feel like Gervin is slipping through the cracks at this point.

Even though his playoff success leaves something to be desired, he was still an impressive playoff performer, putting up the following from '75-'83 (65 games):

28.8 PPG, 7.2 RPG, 3 APG, 1.2 SPG, 1.1 BPG, 56% TS, 113 ORtg 

In '79, the spurs faced the defending champion bullets in the ECF, with a heartbreaking 2 pt game 7 loss. Gervin scored 42 pts in the game, including 24 in the 2nd half. The spurs and bullets ranked 1st and 2nd in SRS respectively that season.

In '82, the spurs made a mid season trade for talented scorer Mike Mitchell. He would only appear in 57 games for the spurs, and gervin still led the spurs to the 7th best SRS in the league. They would fall to the eventual NBA champion lakers (4th in SRS) in the WCF.

In '83, the spurs (6th in SRS) would again fall to the lakers (3rd in SRS) in the WCF. Gervin and Mitchell both had solid performances in the post season that year, but simply weren't enough for a deep lakers roster that featured magic, kareem, nixon, wilkes, mcadoo and cooper.

Had gervin and gilmore had more time together during each other's primes, i'm sure both would have helped each other to further playoff success.

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