No-more-rings wrote:Does championship bias play a role in Giannis usually getting the benefit of the doubt over Jokic? The guy just broke the PER record by nearly a whole point, then in the playoffs made the champion and 1st ranked defense look completely hopeless trying to guard him. Does Jokic's defense really hurt him that much? The Bucks defense in 2022 was only marginally better than the Nuggets despite the fact that Giannis had Jrue Holiday, Kris Middleton, and a bunch of other good defenders.
Giannis' offense is overrated, and people overrate his offense because of how big of numbers he puts up. Just in his last series against the Celtics, he put up amazing raw numbers 34/14/7, but shot 51.6 ts% with over 5 tov and the Bucks wound up with just a 101.7 ORTG(-13.4 from regular season). It was a solid series by his standards, I just think his high scoring and assist numbers tend to overstate his real offensive impact. This doesn't even mention the fact that he's a relatively poor shooter. I know he's made some improvements the past few years, but teams also welcome him 3s and long 2s.
Seemed like during the regular season most were saying Jokic>Giannis, and now it's the opposite? What changed considering Jokic was also better in the postseason?
I think there are a couple issues with this post with respect to the peak ranking of those players.
1) You bring up the peak project but then use data from Giannis' 2022 season when the peaks project ranks Giannis' 2021 season.
– Note: the 2022 POY voting had Jokic #1, Giannis #3. So Jokic was ranked ahead for the seasons you compare here, there was no flip.
2) You point to ‘a bunch of good defenders’ in MIL when that really wasn't the case in 2022 anymore.
3) You ignore, for some reason, that the concerns about Jokic' defense are mostly playoff-related and not RS-related.
4) In this regard, you point to how the Warriors could not stop Jokic (true) but failed to mentioned that he had a miserable 125.4 on-court DRTG.
5) Meanwhile, Giannis on-court DRTG in the entire playoffs was absolutely elite (as was his on-off net rating, by the way).
6) Also, while Jokic feasted vs. the Warriors, his on-court ORTG was actually only a pedestrian 110.9 (122.4 off-court ORTG).
So I think you should reflect on your objectivity in evaluating these two players. Certainly in presenting the cases you should strive to be more balanced (if you want an open discussion) and as a starting point, you should...
... compare 2021 Giannis to 2022 Jokic considering that the peaks project seemingly sparked this thread.
... focus a lot more on the defensive side because this is what much of the argument for Giannis revolves around.
... evaluate playoff series honestly and consistently, e.g. use on-court DRTG/ORTG and do not do it selectively.
The way the argument is structured right now feels strongly biased with cherry-picked foci (e.g. pointing to the Bucks' offensive struggles versus the Celtics but not to the Nuggets' defensive struggles versus the Warriors, focusing on the playoff offense for the Bucks but then on the regular season defense for the Nuggets-Bucks comparison, not using 2021 Giannis in the comparison with 2022 Jokic etc.).