tsherkin wrote:One_and_Done wrote:That's crazy. Oakley was a super effective role player, to the point he made an all-star team for his defensive game. That's not easy to do when you're not putting up stats, not unless you deserve it. He was a brutal defender and enforcer, and tough on the boards. He wouldn't be as good in today's game, but in the early 90s he was a killer at the 4.
Super effective rebounder and an era-appropriate physical defender, sure. Dumb as a bag of bricks on offense, though, which was a theme for those Knicks. Lots of good defensive help; almost none on O.
Once he was allowed to play a bigger role on a less stacked team, Anthony Mason was an all-nba teamer. He was able to score, pass, defend and rebound at a high level. He made multiple all-star teams, an all-nba team, and got MVP votes two separate years.
Those MVP votes can't be taken seriously. Literally 7 points and no first-place nominations in 97, and 1 point with no first-place nominations in 01. He was a 1-time All-Star and he made a single All-NBA team. Scored more than 14.6 ppg twice in his career, and one year in took him over 43 mpg to do it, the other almost 41.
Mase was pretty good, but let's not overplay what he was.
Particularly in '92. Mason was a late-bloomer, and hadn't yet developed those "point-forward" skills in '92 (which also happens to be one of his worst FT-shooting seasons, fwiw).
He was basically a league-average player in '92 (or negligibly above
at best)......which is reasonably nice to have in the guy who is 6th in minutes; but yeah: let's not overstate things.
tsherkin wrote:X-Man was one of the best wing defenders of his era, as well as an Artest style enforcer. He was also a good offensive player, and had led rag tag underdog teams on upset playoff runs. He was probably the best player on a WCF team.
He wasn't Seattle X in 92. He was like a 14/6/2 defensive specialist who, as he did in all but two seasons of his career, scored below league average efficiency.
X-man is a weird one to evaluate on offense, as that aspect of his game seems to fall off relatively early in his career without a notable injury [that I'm aware of] to blame it on. It could be a "bad fit" situation in, well.......just about anywhere except Seattle, apparently: note that from '87-'91 he's never lower than 17.3 PER or +1.2 OBPM in Seattle, but immediately drops to sub-15 PER and negative OBPM when he's traded to Phoenix. Then as a Knick [while still in his late 20s], he falls marginally lower. Then briefly pops back up to 16.3 PER [still -0.1 OBPM] for one year in Boston, before then going into quick decline in his 30s.
But still, even in that '87-'91 Seattle stretch.....
He averaged ~30 pts/100 poss at league-average
or worse shooting efficiency, was a near-zilch playmaker (managed as many as 3 apg just ONCE) who was also rather turnover-prone (Ast:TO ratio of 0.91, and a mTOV% of 9.43% [which is kinda bad for a wing]).
He's maybe like a Norman Powell level offensive player,
in his best offensive years (which '92 is not one of).
As to the "best player on a WCF team", I'd at least highlight that was after going 39-43 in the rs [+0.08 SRS]. Them advancing that far feels pretty flukey. When they met the eventual champions, they got whupped soundly (compared to the '92 Knicks when they met the eventual champion: took them to 7 games [one of only TWO times the Bulls title teams were so tested]).
tsherkin wrote:New York loaded up on defenders and did not have a ton of particularly competent offensive help around Ewing.
Agree. Mark Jackson is a decent facilitator, though doesn't leverage much scoring against it. And yet he's fairly clearly the single-biggest piece of
offensive help Ewing has.
Starks is probably the second-best piece of offensive help, but notably collapses [as usual] in the playoffs.
McDaniel was, in his best years, like a Norman Powell-level
offensive player (obv better defensively), and does NOT appear to be having one of his better offensive years in '92, fwiw.
Oakley was, as you said, a defensive guy who's barely scoring above Ben Wallace level volume (though at least decent efficiency); is at least a good offensive rebounder.
Mason does not yet have his playmaking chops and is shooting below 65% at the line, and is thus a pretty darn limited offensive player.
Wilkins was NEVER a truly good offensive player......he just kept getting the playing time because the Knicks didn't have better options all through the 80s [and early 90s]. He was a guy who scored middling or slightly above average volume on [consistently]
below average shooting efficiency ('94 is the ONLY season of his career where he topped league-average), was a mostly ineffective playmaker who also has a marginally poor turnover economy. If there's an offensive prize to be found in that package, I'm just not seeing it.
I'm not saying these guys "sucked" on offense, or that this constitutes a "bad" offensive supporting cast.......but it's not "good" either. When your strongest offensive supporting cast player is Mark Jackson and 2nd-best is an early-prime [pre-peak, 26 mpg] John Starks, that's probably not a strong offensive cast.
But there's a load of defensive support there: Oakley, Xavier, Starks, Mason (even Wilkins is fair).
It's a decent cast overall [if a little over-balanced on one side of the ball], but not one that I'm going to get all gooey about. If I were to rank the supporting casts each "team's best player" had, it's certainly in the top half, maybe in the top 10. Very doubtful it's in the top 5 [or even 6-8].
The success achieved with that is......idk, pretty good, I think: 51 wins, 7th-best SRS, beat a decent Piston team in the 1st round (more soundly than the 3-2 edge suggests), and then gave the eventual champions their biggest challenge of their title run.
I'd NOT have voted Ewing 2nd on my ballot, but a fair chance he could make my top 5 (rough cut that I'd done some years ago, I had him 6th behind Jordan, Malone, DRob, Clyde, and Pippen).
70sFan wrote:.
"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