Thank you for the thoughtful reply. Going to respond to just a couple points.....
OldSchoolNoBull wrote:
In reference to trex's underline question, I don't think it's necessarily an easy sell, but I think you can certainly make the argument, yes. The reason is, I think I disagree with Iggy's underlined point - I don't think Pau DID "get it done" as a #1. Assuming "as a #1" is referring to his Memphis years.
Setting aside the pre-trade portion of 07-08, Gasol was in Memphis for six full seasons. Here are the team's records and SRS for those six seasons:
01-02: 23-59, -6.74
02-03: 28-54, -2.60
03-04: 50-32, 2.95
04-05: 45-37, 2.63
05-06: 49-33, 3.74
06-07: 22-60, -4.44
So they're in the cellar the first two years, then they have three significantly better years where they make the playoffs and lose in the first round, and then they go back to the cellar for 06-07.
Okay.
Now let's do the same for Willis Reed (to see how he did as 1st option before Frazier came into his prime, as this was only vaguely alluded to [but not shown] in your post, which instead used only the years to paint Reed in the best possible light).....
'65: 31-49, -3.26 SRS
'66: 30-50, -2.31 SRS (was only 3rd-option on offense that year)
'67: 36-45, -2.74 SRS
'68: 43-39, +1.78 SRS (rookie Walt Frazier here)
Is ^^this looking like he did any better than Gasol in Memphis?
It's not like he didn't have some decent(ish) players in these years (Dick Barnett, Walt Bellamy, and Dick Van Arsdale from '66 onward, Red Holzman as coach beginning ~third of the way through '68 season).
OldSchoolNoBull wrote:So first off, just on the surface, they never got out of the first round with Pau as the #1.
Ditto Willis Reed prior to Frazier/Holzman; except Reed only got into the PS twice (one of those because EIGHT of 10 teams made the playoffs in '67).
OldSchoolNoBull wrote:But it's not just that. Those three years they made the playoffs? Those were the three years Shane Battier was on the team.
They were the years Barnett, Bellamy, DVA were on the team with Reed (plus rookie Frazier and Holzman in the second one).
OldSchoolNoBull wrote:You look at the team's rel ORtgs and rel DRtgs, they were clearly winning on the defensive end(remember with these ratings, positive is good for offense, negative is good for defense):
2003-04: rel ORtg(+1.9), rel DRtg(-0.7)
2004-05: rel ORtg(-0.6), rel DRtg(-3.2)
2005-06: rel ORtg(-0.3), rel DRtg(-4.6)
and Battier was the anchor there. All three seasons they played together, Battier had a higher RS on/off:
2003-04 - Battier(+3.8), Gasol(-1.3)
2004-05 - Battier(+10.8), Gasol(+2.9)
2005-06 - Battier(+9.2), Gasol((+4.9)
Battier also had a higher RS+PO RAPM two out of three years.
I might note that the '14 and '22 Golden State Warriors were both notably better on defense than on offense. And in '14, Steph Curry's on/off was +15.2, while Klay's was +15.6 and Iggy's was +18.0. So was Iggy the true engine of that team's success?
But anyway.....
Who was the notable offensive
help Gasol had in Memphis? Mike Miller? James Posey in one weird outlier year in '04? Jason Williams (fun to watch, but not exactly a prize). These definitely are not barn-burner offensive names, and those really are the best ones I can mention.
Meanwhile, look at the notable
defensive help Battier had (good defenders, guys who were getting playing time on any NBA franchise at all because of their defense [mostly, at least].....
'04: James Posey, Bo Outlaw, Stromile Swift, Bonzi Wells
'05: Bonzi Wells, Brian Cardinal, Stromile Swift, James Posey
'06: Eddie Jones (at 34 years old, he'd faded to average on offense)
(not sure if Lorenzen Wright or Jake Tsakalidis could be called a decent defenders, but they also were around)
So.......it's kinda no wonder they were better defensively, no?
Especially considering no one is arguing Gasol is an ideal or awesome 1st-option offensive player (nor is it necessary out here at #62). There AREN'T a ton of those guys left at this stage, and most have flash in the pan sized careers and/or are notably awful defensive players [e.g. Damian Lillard].
Gasol was a capable(ish) 1st-option, and was an AWESOME, near-ideal 2nd-option [on a contender] offensive player.......and he was that
really consistently for a really long time (prime lasting a solid decade
at least; 18-years of usefulness in the NBA [all in a very competitive era]). That's his case.
OldSchoolNoBull wrote:Now, with regards to Reed...it's true that the Knicks didn't get great until Frazier and Holzman arrived. But look at the team's records and SRS from 68-69 to 73-74:
1969: 54-28, 5.48
1970: 60-22, 8.42
1971: 52-30, 5.05
1972: 48-34, 2.28
1973: 57-25, 6.07
1974: 49-33, 2.42
Look especially at the SRS. Those two years where it's significantly lower than the other four seasons, 72 and 74? Those are the seasons where Reed barely played(11 games in 72 and 19 games in 74). Is that just a coincidence?
And he was probably the second-best player for most of those teams [at least in the playoffs], despite the MVP and such.
Let's look at Pau's teams where he had great help [and was the 2nd-best player]:
'08: 57-25, +7.34 SRS (trip to Finals)
'09: 65-17, +7.11 SRS (NBA title)
'10: 57-25, +4.78 SRS (NBA title)
'11: 57-25, +6.01 SRS (lost 2nd round to eventual champion)
......also noting they were 42-40 (+0.24 SRS) in '07 without him; then 28-15 (on pace for 53-54 wins) before he arrived in '08, 29-10 (on pace for 61 wins) after he arrived.
Anyway, just by way of counterpoint.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire