Post#22 » by trex_8063 » Fri Jul 19, 2024 8:14 pm 
            
            
            Gonna kinda edit this one as I have time to do so; thus, it will become more complete as time goes by.....
Player of the Year
1.  George Mikan - I'm still going with the big guy.  Best player on the best team; led them in ppg, rpg [comfortably in both; 2nd and 1st in the league, respectively], 3rd on team in apg and TS%:  a nice +3.5% rTS while having the highest pts/100 rate in the league.  
All the while, of course, he's still the best rim-protector/shot-blocker in the league at this time (save maybe Mel Hutchins????); at any rate the anchor of the league's best defense. 
Efficiency in the playoffs falls, though still +0.9% rTS, while averaging 19.8/15.4 as they steam-roll everyone (the Pistons the only team that give them even a little trouble).  He's the league's best PER, best WS/48 [2nd in total WS], and 2nd-best estimated BPM [2nd in VORP, too].  However, the one guy ahead of him in BPM/VORP had an atrocious [and brief] playoff run this year, and the one guy ahead in WS had 12 total wins on the year.  
For me, I just don't see enough to challenge the notion that this was still the best in basketball.
2.  Bob Cousy - ZeppelinPage's stirring account of this season convinced me that he's underrated by the box metrics this year.  The Celtics had the best offense in the league, and as I believe eminence said:  he was the head of the snake.  
The 50-pt carry-job in G2 against the Nationals is utterly epic; it's like he pulled off a heater-Doncic game.  Would LOVE to see full-game footage of that one.  
Played pretty well in the Knick series, too, in a losing effort.  It's just a monster year.
3.  Dolph Schayes - Field is really wide open after Mikan and Cousy, imo.  I've never been as playoff-centric as many posters here, so no reason to break from that habit (particularly here, where we're talking about a 2-game sample).
Schayes was the preeminent anchor of the 2nd-best offense in the league, leading the team in ppg, TS%, almost assuredly in offensive rebounds, and 3rd in assists.  
He's 3rd in the league in PER and WS/48 (4th in total WS); was 1st in both estimated BPM and VORP.
17.8 ppg @ +5.0% rTS is a strong showing for an era where even the best offensive teams weren't scoring 90 ppg; to go along with 13.0 and 3.2 (all for a solid rs team), that's a good year.  I don't have it in me to over-penalize that body of work based on a 2-game sample.
4.  Ed Macauley - So hard to pick 'em.  For reasons given below in OPOY, I'm going with Ed.  I know his defense probably isn't good, but his synergy with Cousy is solid and that team had potential (sort of like the SSOL Suns) to contend (or at least they could if the Lakers didn't exist), with him damn near looking like a 1b on that team (although it's probably, to some degree, a statistical mirage, much like Amare vs Nash on those Suns teams).  
At any rate, he's got the numbers, it certainly seems to have contributed to what made this team good, so I'm giving him the nod for 4th.
5.  Harry Gallatin - Only 12.4 ppg, though on a wicked +8.0% rTS, to go with 13.1 rpg (which he was getting in <34 mpg; averaged a league-best [I think] 20.25 reb/100).  More or less maintained his rate and efficiency in the playoffs, though they lowered his minutes somewhat.  That was very much an ensemble effort, though, from a pretty deep team.  Not sure if they went more with Connie Simmons in the Finals because Connie was taller [to guard Mikan]??
Lots of guys I could also see going with for 4th or 5th:  first and foremost Neil Johnston.  But also Vern Mikkelsen, Paul Seymour, Bob Davies.  I may or may not edit this ballot later.
Offensive Player of the Year
1.  Bob Cousy - Again:  the "head of the snake".  Leading the league in assists by a solid margin, while also being a considerable scorer who had an awesome playoff run.  
2.  Ed Macauley - I don't know if this seems weird giving the top 2 to teammates; but with him being 3rd in ppg, 2nd in TS Add, and also posting a very impressive [2nd on team, something like 6th of 7th in league] 4.1 apg, I've got to give him some love.
3.  Neil Johnston - OK, I know no one else is going to give him any consideration because of how bad the team was; so I am.  Trouncing the league as a scorer (25 pts/100 at nearly +9% rTS, and this in a whopping 45+ mpg) has to be worth something.  The supporting cast was awful.  I'd like to point out that the year before a peak Paul Arizin---who had a full season of Andy Phillip, plus 15-16 mpg of Neil Johnston [already showing as a promising scorer], and George Senesky hadn't fallen off a cliff yet either---still only managed a .500 record (and sub-zero SRS) the year before.  Johnston has NONE of these three things (Phillip, non-declined Senesky, or a promising bench player) this year.
To some degree, this placement is a counter-balance to my leaving him off my POY ballot (I think he has a fine case for at least 5th).
My top HM in this category is probably Dolph Schayes (followed by Bob Davies and George Mikan [perhaps Bill Sharman, too]).
Defensive Player of the Year
1.  George Mikan - I'm still giving him the benefit of the doubt in this category.  The limited video of his shot-blocking is mostly from these later years, and he looks like a dominant defensive deterrent.  I know he likely had a little better defensive help than Clifton, but the defense he anchored appears substantially better (by another -1.4 in DRtg).  And he's certainly the more dominant rebounder.
2.  Nat Clifton - Give him the nod here as the apparent anchor of the 2nd-best defense.
3.  Mel Hutchins - His estimated BPM comes out pretty high, despite frankly poor offensive contributions.  And his team was the 3rd-best defense in the league.
If I have an HM in this category, I suppose it's Paul Seymour.
            
                                    
                                    "The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it."  -Edward Rutherfurd
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