DQuinn1575 wrote:One_and_Done wrote:DQuinn1575 wrote:
Career adjusted shooting Oscar is 3,519 he was 115 TS+,
KD in a few more games is now at 3,298 , with 113 TS+
Oscar is 3rd all-time NBA behind Kareem & Wilt,
So Oscar was a more efficient scorer relative to his time,
He scored over 29 ppg 7 times versus KD's 4. Career points per game are lower as he scored a lot less in MIL, only in CIN he was over 29 ppg, while KD career is 27.
KD is one of the very few players in history who are in the same neighborhood as Oscar as an efficient high volume scorer.
Oscar led the league in assists 7 times, Chris Paul 5.
So better True Shooting add and more efficient than KD, and led league in assists more times than Chris Paul.
Which is why we shouldn't use adjusted shooting.
KD's best year in effective FG% was 7th, Oscar was in top seven 6 times.
He was in the top 5 in scoring and field goal % 4 times.
Question was who was Oscar most similar to:
Oscar was:
top 1-5 scorer in league, while being in top 5-10 field goal %
multiple time assist leader
The scoring part is probably most similar to KD, I'm fine if anyone rates KD higher. But if you make a list of most efficient non big scorers you got MJ & KD, and next you probably got Gervin and Oscar. So pick KD 1, Oscar is somewhere in the top 5.
Playmaking, again I'm fine if you rate CP3 as better.
I can see the reason there's pushback against including KD at all.
Robertson wasn't the same kind of perimeter shooter. Hell, he only hit 85%+ at the line 4 times. This current year would be the only time KD HASN'T shot 85%+ at the line, and he has shot 90%+ on 4 occasions. 3pt shooting we can leave aside because it didn't really exist in Oscar's time, but he heavily emphasized shots around the foul line and in general, getting as close as he could before shooting.
Hard to evaluate handles with two very divergent eras of officiating, but Oscar was a very effective on-ball guy. He wasn't the size of a big playing a smaller man's role, but he did have a size advantage over his positional peers. Again, not quite the same as how the Sonics were using Durant as a 2 in his rookie year or how he's generally been a 6'11 / 7'0 small forward the bulk of his career, but plying size as an advantage is something shared. Oscar also had more of a power game, whereas Durant wields length more readily.
Durant's also a 108 2P+ guy on his career. Oscar, 111. And it is worth mentioning that he was a 57.1% TS guy in the 60s... which is an insane deviation from league average. He had 3 seasons at or above 58% TS, which would have been above league average in both 2023 and 2024. That's food for thought, man. He could score with the best of them.
Now, if you look at them on a per-possession basis, the scoring volume doesn't really line up to favor Oscar. Hell, even PER36 instead of his career average of 42.2 mpg, he drops down from 25.7, 7.5 and 9.5 to 21.9, 6.4 and 8.1. So it's worth mentioning that the scoring rate isn't really the same. And then if you adjusted some for pace, the scoring would probably drop a bit again. Of course, if you adjusted for era, those assists might go up.
I don't think KD is a particularly good example for very many reasons. It doesn't click apart from "a highly efficient volume scorer." The aesthetics don't match at all, the body types are divergent. The physical tools leveraged differ considerably and KD is an ATG shooter on a level very, very few guys can match. Like, he may actually be the greatest shooter in league history when you look at his combination of mid-range and 3pt shooting, even if there are a couple of guys notably better from 3. And he is definitely one of the greatest scorers in league history. Of course, once you start to look at Oscar, even though his volume doesn't translate, he held up pretty well in the playoffs, and that resilience matters too. He lost, what, 0.6% TS and like 2% FG, but shot almost 90% at the line while maintaining roughly comparable volume with Cinci? That's pretty excellent.
Anyway. Like I said, there are too many differences for me to get behind the inclusion of KD. Oscar was a power guard who liked to push people around and battled for every inch closer he could bully out of the defense. That isn't KD at all. Surface-level similarities only.