Cavsfansince84 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
So, I understand why you're reading my post and thinking "He's saying Johnston's an empty stats guy", but I said what I said to try to convey more than that. To stick with the "empty stats" terminology, I might say this:
A player doing can do the same basic stuff in two situation, and in one situation be effectively empty stats, and in another, not-empty stats.
Now you might say in response to that, "If he's doing something that would be valuable on a great team, then isn't it winning bias to hold his crappy teammates against him?". But there's a subtle assumption there that X production has a standard Y value that I object to. Your value is always contextually dependent, and yes, there's contextual luck always lurking as a factor when we talk about the achievement of these players.
Re: key part of a title team 3 years later. I don't want to rush that conversation, but I will say this:
I think Johnston deserves some definite credit for that chip. But in the playoffs I don't think folks should think it a given that Johnston was more valuable than teammates Jack George & Tom Gola -- to say nothing of Arizin. And so that's the thing: If Johnston in the playoffs for a contender is a George-level player, well, then how much should we care that he can put up huge regular season numbers as the alpha on meh teams?
This question of whether Johnston's disappointing playoff stats represent something inherent to his limitations, or just bad injury luck, is not one where I'm trying to insist on an answer, but yeah, it would be easier to elevate Johnston for me if he had a dominant playoff run in his career. As it is, if you've never looked at Johnston's playoff numbers closely, I think you should.
I wasn't really getting 'empty stats' from your post. That was a comment someone else made in this thread and a general point that I've seen made regarding Johnston before. Regarding the title run, Johnston had one great series and one somewhat bad one. I think he was a co #1 in the series they won 3-2 and was more like a co#3 in that finals with George. I am familiar with his playoff numbers which is why I mentioned it above as something used to question his impact.
I'm glad you weren't getting that from my post.
Re: Johnston had one great series and one somewhat bad one, co-#1 in the first, Co#3 in finals. My quick thoughts:
He did have a fine series against the Nationals, though I would point out that Johnston's whole argument typically over Arizin was that he was the more efficient scorer. I would note that Johnston got more shot attempts but scored less points than Arizin. Now, on one level this is minor bragging rights and not something I want to push an extreme opinion on, but I do think it's worth recalling that Arizin was the perimeter player and Johnston was the interior player. For Johnston to have more shots than Arizin then this is probably due to one or both of these possibilities:
1. Johnston was getting extra shots from his rebounding.
2. The offense was running so as to push the ball into Johnston first, and then if he didn't have a shot he was passing out - and the assists line up with that too.
What's interesting here is that as I've alluded to elsewhere, I think in general what we've found as the NBA has evolved is that you don't want to force the ball into the interior unless that's better overall in its effectiveness (including things like passing TOs) than just letting the perimeter talents you have keep control. And the "better overall in its effectiveness" generally assumes that that interior guy will get a much better box score than any of his perimeter teammates would be capable of.
So then, we're to see a big man-first offense in a situation where they have a perimeter player who is clearly capable of scoring very efficiently at volume.
To put it mildly, this isn't how things worked on the team in '51-52, but when Arizin returned, he was pretty clear about changing his game to work around Johnston. I don't know what all that entailed, but it was definitely partly about him taking shots from further away, because with Johnston and his man in the paint, there wasn't space in there to operate.
Okay, moving on to the finals: When you call this a "co#3" performance from Johnston, it makes sense, but we should keep in mind that it's not like Johnston simply transformed into a role player here. He shot poorly.
In the regular season he shot 45.7% FG.
In the previous playoff series he shot 45.5%.
In the finals he shot 33.8%.
Next keep in mind that Johnston was the guy tasked with cleaning the boards for the Warriors.
In the first playoff series, Johnston looked like an absolute stud doing this getting more rebounds than anyone else (17.6), and allowing his team to dominate on the glass.
But in the finals? The Pistons has the two top rebounders, and the Pistons won the battle of the boards.
Of course the Warriors won so winning said battle doesn't mean much in the grand scheme of things, it's just the Warriors won quite specifically when Johnston was NOT able to do his thing, leading us to the very last game of the series where Johnston shoots 2-13 and teammates Grabowski, Gola & Arizin all collect more boards than he does.
Now, forgetting about how much credit each guy should get for the series in question, I think the tale of two series makes us ask about the matchup. Like is it a coincidence that Johnston looked like he had his whole game disrupted when going up against a duo like Foust & Yardley? Maybe it's all about health, but Foust may well have been the toughest s.o.b. in the league at that point, which also makes him someone you really don't want to face when you're a bit hurt.
And of course this gets into some of the concerns about Johnston. Whether the stories were fair, the stories of the late '50s and Johnston were of him struggling to keep play his game in the way of the new giants.
And I can't help be perceive some truth in what they say:
Arizin was a 6'4" slasher with an unusually modern shooting form that he could use out to depth, and who also had a knack for the boards relative to other perimeter players.
Johnston was a 6'8" big man whose game was dependent on hook shots and winning the battle for the board.
Does someone with Arizin's description play today? Absolutely.
Does someone with Johnston's description play in the NBA today? I don't think so.
Doesn't mean Johnston wasn't the best at his time necessarily, but it does mean that if I see some indicators that he struggles against tougher competition, and never really put up "Johnston-like" numbers in the playoffs, I have to wonder if what he was experiencing was a bit of a precursor to the talent that was to come in the league.