How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’?

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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#41 » by sp6r=underrated » Wed May 7, 2025 9:32 pm

Disclosure: I don't agree with everything I wrote in this thread. It was 15 years ago and like all people I've learned something over time. But it does capture the chronic issue I've always had with those jazz.

There are a lot of good posts in this thread. So feel free to read it. I'll quote my OP, which again, I would write differently now. I'm far more questioning of Malone than Stockton now. I still have my Stockton doubts but they aren't nearly as tilted towards him as opposed to Malone.

First my OP

viewtopic.php?f=64&t=977550

sp6r=underrated wrote:I've learned from Stockton fans that he was a super dominate player. He led the league in assists nine times. His Win Share and Offense Rating numbers are through the roof. The only problem was idiot sportswriters didn't recognize his greatness due to a bias against short pasty white guys by short pasty white sportswriters.

The Jazz also had Karl Malone who always made first team All-NBA and was known to be even better than the dominate John Stockton. Jerry Sloan was and is a very good coach.

They won an average of 53 games. They got eliminated in the first round 4 times, and only made the Western Conference finals two times.

If you have two dominate players top 25 players all time, a good coach, you should accomplish a lot more unless your supporting cast is historically bad. Every other similar pairing of top 25 players who were at their peak accomplished significantly more (Jordan/Pippen, Duncan/Robinson, West/Baylor, etc.)

Why did the Jazz accomplish so little from 88-95?


And the key post that more articulately summarizes my issue with those jazz.

drza wrote:
I agree with your assessment of that series, as that was my memory as well. Which was actually one of the hidden points of my post: Malone and Stockton were IMO too limited to be considered among the best-of-the-best All-Time. On offense they were stupidly ridiculous at the pick-and-roll and also very good at some other things, but as a duo they weren't able to either volume-score or facillitate enough team offense to outgun the best opponents. And on defense, while they were good at their particular skill sets (i.e. 1-on-1 D against a good big man, annoying perimeter D for Stockton) they weren't difference makers at that end of the court.

So what you were left with was 2 players that put up outstanding numbers over the course of their long and illustrious careers but could only be difference-makers in certain, specific ways. If the opponent didn't cooperate and play the game in a way that fit their skill sets (which the very best opponents tended not to), they couldn't win.

And again, this criticism likely comes out harsher than I intend, but the fact that there were TWO of them is what sways me. One All-time great player, by himself, is generally able to put a stamp on his team barring a perfect storm epic-failure to put anything around him. So if you have TWO of those players, in a stable environment for a decade-plus, I just can't buy the "there wasn't enough support" argument.

If Malone is a top-15 of All-time player, he should only have required a modicum of help to get his team to at least 50 wins on the regular. Any more than a "modicum" of help should have been a legit contender. There shouldn't be a whole lot of holes in his game that couldn't be covered by reasonable teammates. A great player with him should lead to at least one ring.

But if you go beyond even "great player" and put a TOP-30 PLAYER OF ALL-TIME with him, one that happens to be great in areas where Malone wasn't perfect (playmaking, clutch scoring), if both are REALLY that impactful as players, then that should lead to titles (plural) over 15 years. Luxuries like a DPoY, a great coach, a 6th man of the year candidate...those should just be piling on, taking an already championship caliber core to dynasty-level status. And the fact that it WASN'T...that they needed all of this extra support and still rarely even got to the big stage and never won...that is telling to me. It tells me that they aren't quite as impactful as their "All Time Rankings" suggest they should be.


viewtopic.php?f=64&t=977550&start=60

The bolded statement is my issue with Utah. I just can't buy their supporting cast that bad in the period of the late 80s to early 90s. Maybe both of em were slightly worse than their reps. Maybe it was mainly Malone or Stockton. I don't have strong views. But I do think some of the fault lies between those two.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#42 » by theonlyclutch » Wed May 7, 2025 9:37 pm

Reposting this from a previous thread:
I see this argument brought up all the time, but 'Sucky 3rd options' don't actually prevent teams from being legitimate contenders if their top options are good enough:
-The 2020 Lakers had *checks notes* Kyle Kuzma and won the chip.
-The '22 Warriors won the chip and had a combination of, Andrew Wiggins and Jordan Poole, remind me how they've been doing?
-The Mavs this past season got to the finals with a bunch of cheap trade deadline acquisitions and a rookie around Luka + Kyrie.

Having not-so-great 3rd options would be a legitimate excuse for why a team might not match say, the Jordan Bulls or KD Warriors, but in no way does that prevent playoff success


Can add a couple more to that pile:
- 2023 Nuggets won the chip with either MPJ/Aaron Gordon as 3rd options, not exactly primo players from previous track records.
- The Miami Heat made the finals twice (2020/2023) with Tyler Herro, an inefficient 6-man microwave scorer reminiscent of the Jeff Malone everyone here has a hate boner for. And that's with Butler/Bam not exactly being MVP candidate material themselves.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#43 » by sp6r=underrated » Wed May 7, 2025 9:51 pm

theonlyclutch wrote:Reposting this from a previous thread:
I see this argument brought up all the time, but 'Sucky 3rd options' don't actually prevent teams from being legitimate contenders if their top options are good enough:
-The 2020 Lakers had *checks notes* Kyle Kuzma and won the chip.
-The '22 Warriors won the chip and had a combination of, Andrew Wiggins and Jordan Poole, remind me how they've been doing?
-The Mavs this past season got to the finals with a bunch of cheap trade deadline acquisitions and a rookie around Luka + Kyrie.

Having not-so-great 3rd options would be a legitimate excuse for why a team might not match say, the Jordan Bulls or KD Warriors, but in no way does that prevent playoff success


Can add a couple more to that pile:
- 2023 Nuggets won the chip with either MPJ/Aaron Gordon as 3rd options, not exactly primo players from previous track records.
- The Miami Heat made the finals twice (2020/2023) with Tyler Herro, an inefficient 6-man microwave scorer reminiscent of the Jeff Malone everyone here has a hate boner for. And that's with Butler/Bam not exactly being MVP candidate material themselves.


If Utah had never won a title from 88-94 but regularly turned out great RS/PS, I'd give em a pass. Sometimes are snakebit with terrible playoff draws, bad luck with injuries, a key game that was poorly officiated, etc. That can happen.

OKC from 2012-16 is a good example of this. They lost a key season to injury. They had another year in which they had a historically hard playoff draw. **** happens.

But let's use the OKC example:
2012-16: 2nd best record/SRS
2012: 3rd best record/SRS - Finals Loss
2013: 3rd best record/SRS - WCSF Loss (Russ miss playoffs)
2014: 2nd best record/3rd best SRS - WCF loss
2015: Durant injured
2016: 5th best record/3rd best SRS - WCF Loss (knocks out 67 win Spurs team/loses to 73 warriors team)

If that is what Utah looked like I'd give them a pass for not winning a title from 88-94. OKC really was a serious contender over those 5 years. But they had a key injury in 2 years to their equivalent of Malone/Stockton. And they got hammered with some really brutal playoff match-ups.

That isn't the story of the Utah Jazz from 88-94.

Most of those years they don't look close to elite either RS/PS.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#44 » by Jack Dempsey » Wed May 7, 2025 10:03 pm

falcolombardi wrote:If the late 90's were not kind of a joke they should have made zero, maybe 1 in 1996

As a fan I can say that the late 90s were amazing to watch.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#45 » by One_and_Done » Wed May 7, 2025 11:13 pm

Jack Dempsey wrote:
falcolombardi wrote:If the late 90's were not kind of a joke they should have made zero, maybe 1 in 1996

As a fan I can say that the late 90s were amazing to watch.

The late 90s were entertaining in the way professional wrestling appeals to many people; because of a bunch of narratives people enjoyed watching play out. The actual basketball was terrible.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#46 » by lessthanjake » Thu May 8, 2025 12:17 am

One_and_Done wrote:When the argument is that Stockton and Malone had at most 1-2 all-stars next to them, that's when you know they were overrated. They shouldn't have needed any all-stars next to them, but at various points they had Hornacek, Jeff Malone & Eaton, plus other solid role players like T.Bailey, Ostertag, B.Russell, etc.

Who were Tim Duncan's all-stars in 02 or 03? Or Lebron in 09 & 10? It's fine if you think Duncan/Lebron type guys are more impactful than Stockton/Malone combined, which I certainly do, but there are people who think these two were both top 20 all-time players. Even less lofty names than Duncan/Lebron managed to carry meh support casts better than these guys seemed to from 88-95, if you operate on the premise they were secretly both legit MVP candidates.


That’s not the argument though. Like, yes, Mark Eaton and Jeff Malone made all-star games. But Mark Eaton was genuinely one of the worst offensive players in NBA history, and the overlap between his defensive prime and the years where Malone/Stockton were actually star players was very short (and, in probably the most clearly overlapping year he was terrible defensively in the playoffs, and you can watch the full game that was posted in this thread and see that). I’m pretty comfortable with the conclusion that Mark Eaton was generally a significant negative in the time period where Malone/Stockton were actually star players. Meanwhile, Jeff Malone had made an all-star game, but it was one all-star game half a decade before he joined the Jazz. Of course, even that suggests he was a good player. But I think he was a neutral player if we are being very generous. This is a guy that gave you virtually nothing except some volume scoring, but he had a negative TS add for his career (with his time in Utah being basically the only time it was positive—likely a result of playing with Stockton and Malone). We don’t have essentially any impact data on him, but players of that mold tend to be negative-impact players, regardless of stray all-star selections. I was perhaps generous in saying he was neutral.

The only other guy you mention that isn’t actually from the era where the Jazz did quite well (more on that below) is Thurl Bailey. As an initial matter, like Eaton, his best years didn’t entirely overlap with the years Stockton and Malone were actually stars. And like Jeff Malone, he was a guy whose main function was giving you points (as a bigger guy he did rebound some too, but he wasn’t particularly good at it), but he was a negative TS add guy. Ultimately, this is a guy who literally had a *negative* BPM in all but one season in his entire career (and the one exception was +0.2). Notably, in the years where Thurl Bailey’s better years overlapped with Malone and Stockton being stars, he mostly shot terribly in the playoffs (like 45% TS% in two whole playoff runs). I wouldn’t really cling to sixth-man-of-the-year votes to justify Thurl Bailey actually being a positive-impact player. Historically, being a bench guy who put up a lot of shots has often been enough to get plenty of votes in that, regardless of whether the player actually shoots efficiently or provides much of any impact outside of that.

Other than those two, the only players you mention are guys that they had in the time period where they actually did very well and made two Finals in a row. Hornacek was actually a good player. And role players like Ostertag and Bryon Russell were probably slight positives. But those weren’t guys that Stockton and Malone failed to have good teams with. They had great teams that very likely win a title if they’d not run into one of the top few dynasties in league history twice in the Finals. What happened in those years is not at all inconsistent with Stockton/Malone being as good as people say they are, so the players in that supporting cast not being bad is essentially irrelevant to this discussion.

______________

Of course, there’s also a slew of pretty clearly bad players that you do not mention. But I just want to be clear about something. Every significant player in the Utah Jazz supporting cast from that pre-Hornacek era has a negative career BPM, and mostly by a good margin. You had a guy like Bob Hansen—who had a career BPM of -2.4. Blue Edwards with a career BPM of -1.6. A post-injury Darrell Griffith who had a career BPM of -1.4. Mike Brown, with his career BPM of -3.6. Thurl Bailey’s career BPM was -0.9, Jeff Malone’s was -1.5, and Mark Eaton’s was -0.2. They had Marc Iavaroni for some years, and he had an -3.6 career BPM. Delaney Rudd had an -3.9 career BPM. David Benoit had a -2.0 career BPM. And that was pretty much the team in those years. They all have negative career BPMs, and often by a lot. This is something you don’t even see from Garnett’s terrible supporting casts on the Timberwolves! So yeah, while BPM isn’t everything, I feel very comfortable saying that the Jazz had a genuinely awful supporting cast, until those Hornacek years. And, of course, when they stopped having an awful supporting cast, they put up some great years and probably would’ve gotten a title if they’d not overlapped with the Bulls dynasty. Even with two genuinely great players, I don’t think we can expect much more than some solid 50-55 win seasons and averaging about a second-round exit, if the rest of the team is all negative players.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#47 » by One_and_Done » Thu May 8, 2025 2:01 am

I don’t really care what players BPM was, there’s so many ways that stat can be wrong or misleading. I also think you downplay guys like Eaton, Bailey, Jeff Malone and Hornacek.

You go on about how Eaton’s offense was bad. Ok. But he wasn’t selected as an all-star because of his offense, he was selected because of his defence. It’s such a weird thing to criticise. Like, Ben Wallace and Deke were mostly bad on offense too, but that doesn’t mean they were bad players. I think that’s especially the case in the 80s, when Eaton didn’t have to worry about the problems on O and D he’d face in the modern game. He even got MVP votes on 2 separate occasions, and while I don’t agree with that I think it’s a stretch to describe him as an “awful” player. The guy was a 2 time DPOY, and in 1985 (before Malone even got there) he anchored the #1 defence in the NBA, on a team that frankly did not have many good defensive players. The years after that they were 3rd, 1st, 1st, 1st, and 5th in Drtg. I am sorry, but I am just not interested in hearing about how Eaton was no good because he was bad on O or had a poor BPM.

Then we have Jeff Malone, who you dismiss as “having been an all-star 5 years ago”. Well, yes, Jeff Malone didn’t make any all-star teams on the Jazz, which isn’t surprising. He went from being a primary option to a 3rd option. When your role shrinks like that, you’re going to see your stats (and all-star credibility) drop somewhat, especially in that era. However, Jeff Malone was only 29 when he got to the Jazz, and on a per 100 basis very little had changed about his statistical profile. He went from scoring 29-30pp100 in his all-star years, to scoring 26-28pp100 in his first 3 years with the Jazz. As you’d expect, as a result of his shot volume decreasing slightly due to his new role, his efficiency went up on the Jazz from 525 TS% in his 2 all-star years, to 551 in his first 3 years on the Jazz. He wasn’t hurt, and I don’t see much reason to think he was any worse as a player. I don’t think you can dismiss his stats as empty numbers either, because in Washington he led the Bullets to two playoff appearances as their best or second best player. They were actually above 500. in games he played, and actually gave the Barkley Sixers a tough series in the 1st round in 1986. It’s impossible to dismiss Jeff Malone as an “awful” player. He was a fringe all-star type guy to be sure, and he was mainly a scorer, but he was a good player for the times.

Hornacek was the best of all of these guys; an underrated player at the time, who would maybe even be a fringe all-star today still. He also complemented both Stockton and Malone very well. I won’t get into Thurl Bailey, but he was also a solid player who is being slandered. He would be out of position playing the 3 in today’s game, but for that era it was fine. He didn’t always hit his shots in the playoffs, but he gave them size and offensive rebounding to make up for it. It’s also a weak criticism to focus on this series or that series where the Jazz 4th best player didn’t show up. Like, he’s their 4th best player. Why should we be so focused on what he’s doing in a playoff series, when he performed fine in the RS and the team was still only a low 50s win team or worse? The 88-91 Jazz, when Bailey was around, won 47, 51, 55, and 54 games. They were not some powerhouse contender.

Ultimately the supposed talent or Stockton and Malone should have been sufficient to do much more than they did. The conclusion I draw is that Stockton was pretty overrated, but you are free to blame his coach or Malone if you prefer.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#48 » by lessthanjake » Thu May 8, 2025 5:26 am

One_and_Done wrote:I don’t really care what players BPM was, there’s so many ways that stat can be wrong or misleading. I also think you downplay guys like Eaton, Bailey, Jeff Malone and Hornacek.

You go on about how Eaton’s offense was bad. Ok. But he wasn’t selected as an all-star because of his offense, he was selected because of his defence. It’s such a weird thing to criticise. Like, Ben Wallace and Deke were mostly bad on offense too, but that doesn’t mean they were bad players. I think that’s especially the case in the 80s, when Eaton didn’t have to worry about the problems on O and D he’d face in the modern game. He even got MVP votes on 2 separate occasions, and while I don’t agree with that I think it’s a stretch to describe him as an “awful” player. The guy was a 2 time DPOY, and in 1985 (before Malone even got there) he anchored the #1 defence in the NBA, on a team that frankly did not have many good defensive players. The years after that they were 3rd, 1st, 1st, 1st, and 5th in Drtg. I am sorry, but I am just not interested in hearing about how Eaton was no good because he was bad on O or had a poor BPM.


Eaton was still a somewhat positive player overall for a significant portion of his career, due to his defense. But the timeframe you’re talking about doesn’t overlap a whole lot with his prime defensive years. You’re talking about a timeframe in which he was mostly in his mid-30s. You can even just take a glance at his block numbers and see that he got like 50% more blocks in the years before Malone/Stockton were stars than in the years where they were. Of course, blocks aren’t everything, but it’s indicative of Eaton’s defensive falloff in general, as he aged.

And you mention that Eaton was an all-star. That all-star year did come when Malone/Stockton were already good. Unsurprisingly, it also was probably his best defensive season in the years Malone and Stockton were star players. But, as I’ve pointed out already, he actually was awful defensively in the playoffs that year. There’s a video in this thread of one of those games, and you can judge for yourself. It’s bad. He provided essentially nothing defensively in that game (and was predictably terrible on offense), and overall for the series he only had 2 total blocks. Considering that you’re largely criticizing Malone/Stockton for the Jazz’s lack of playoff success, that seems pretty important. In his one year where he was selected as an all-star, Eaton was a massive negative in the playoff loss that you’re criticizing Stockton and Malone for. Even if you think Eaton’s defense overcame his awful offense that season, it certainly did not overcome it at all in that playoff series, so it’s hard to see how Eaton could provide any basis for a conclusion that Stockton/Malone didn’t have a terrible supporting cast during the time of the specific thing you were focused on criticizing. Meanwhile, after that year, Eaton kept falling off defensively and really was a clearly negative player overall. You might be able to convince me that there was one year where Stockton/Malone were star players and Eaton was actually still a great defender and didn’t lay a complete egg in the playoffs. That would be in 1988, but of course the Jazz took the title-winning Lakers to 7 games that year, so it’s hard to really criticize Malone/Stockton for that.

Then we have Jeff Malone, who you dismiss as “having been an all-star 5 years ago”. Well, yes, Jeff Malone didn’t make any all-star teams on the Jazz, which isn’t surprising. He went from being a primary option to a 3rd option. When your role shrinks like that, you’re going to see your stats (and all-star credibility) drop somewhat, especially in that era. However, Jeff Malone was only 29 when he got to the Jazz, and on a per 100 basis very little had changed about his statistical profile. He went from scoring 29-30pp100 in his all-star years, to scoring 26-28pp100 in his first 3 years with the Jazz. As you’d expect, as a result of his shot volume decreasing slightly due to his new role, his efficiency went up on the Jazz from 525 TS% in his 2 all-star years, to 551 in his first 3 years on the Jazz. He wasn’t hurt, and I don’t see much reason to think he was any worse as a player. I don’t think you can dismiss his stats as empty numbers either, because in Washington he led the Bullets to two playoff appearances as their best or second best player. They were actually above 500. in games he played, and actually gave the Barkley Sixers a tough series in the 1st round in 1986. It’s impossible to dismiss Jeff Malone as an “awful” player. He was a fringe all-star type guy to be sure, and he was mainly a scorer, but he was a good player for the times.


Again, Jeff Malone literally has a negative BPM for his career. And, unlike Eaton, there’s no “but BPM doesn’t adequately account for defense” excuse here. Jeff Malone genuinely was a guy who didn’t provide much of anything but volume scoring, and didn’t do that efficiently. Throughout NBA history, those types of guys have sometimes made some stray all-star games. But they’re generally actually negative-impact players.

To say he led the Bullets to two playoff appearances as their best or second best player is definitely handwaving things to avoid talking about specifics. The Bullets had the following SRS’s in Jeff Malone’s years there: -2.36, 0.15, -1.28, -1.02, -0.16, -1.77, and -2.42. They were a subpar team. And guys on those teams like Moses Malone, Jeff Ruland, and Gus Williams were all better IMO. Heck, even Cliff Robinson and a post-injury Bernard King were probably better. Being one of the main volume scorers on a negative SRS team that slips into the playoffs really doesn’t indicate someone is a positive impact player. We see proof of that all the time. For instance, due to scoring numbers, Zach LaVine was considered the second-best player on a negative-SRS playoff team and has been an all-star, but he is a negative-impact player. A guy like Jerry Stackhouse is another good example IMO. Honestly, if you look at negative-SRS playoff teams, pure volume scorers that are considered the team’s second-best player usually are negative-impact players—that’s usually a big reason the team is a below average team!

Also, you mention the 1986 series, but Jeff Malone had a 47.5% TS% in that series, as a guy who did essentially nothing but volume scoring. Not exactly a ringing endorsement of him being a positive player! The series definitely wasn’t close because of him, and frankly they probably could’ve won if he had been even a neutral player.

Anyways, you say you don’t see much reason that he was any worse as a player when he was in Utah. But after his rookie year, Jeff Malone had a -0.5 BPM on the Bullets, and then he proceeded to have a -2.4 BPM on the Jazz (and that slipped even more in his limited post-Jazz career). That certainly indicates he was worse. Either way, though, I don’t see his time on the Bullets as indicative of him being a positive-impact player anyways.

Hornacek was the best of all of these guys; an underrated player at the time, who would maybe even be a fringe all-star today still. He also complemented both Stockton and Malone very well. I won’t get into Thurl Bailey, but he was also a solid player who is being slandered. He would be out of position playing the 3 in today’s game, but for that era it was fine. He didn’t always hit his shots in the playoffs, but he gave them size and offensive rebounding to make up for it. It’s also a weak criticism to focus on this series or that series where the Jazz 4th best player didn’t show up. Like, he’s their 4th best player. Why should we be so focused on what he’s doing in a playoff series, when he performed fine in the RS and the team was still only a low 50s win team or worse? The 88-91 Jazz, when Bailey was around, won 47, 51, 55, and 54 games. They were not some powerhouse contender.


Again, Hornacek is good, but the Jazz actually had a great team when they had Hornacek, so that is irrelevant to the argument you’re trying to make. You are talking about the pre-Hornacek years.

As for Thurl Bailey, saying “he gave them . . . offensive rebounding” is definitely a real stretch, to the point of falsity. In the years in question with the Jazz (i.e. from 1988-1992), Thurl Bailey had a 5.4% offensive rebounding rate, and it was a virtually identical 5.8% in the playoffs. In an era in which the league’s offensive rebounding rates averaged around 32-33%, that’s objectively not good at all for a forward (especially one who spent a good bit of time at PF). There’s a much better argument that he was an offensive-rebounding liability than that he was making up for his other deficiencies with offensive rebounding.

And I mention Thurl Bailey’s playoff woes to emphasize that while he was a negative player in general, he had playoffs where he was even worse than he was in the regular season. You ask why we should be focused on what he’s doing in a playoff series, but you’re literally criticizing Stockton/Malone for the results of playoff series! For instance, you specifically invoked the 1989 series against the Warriors as a major part of your argument. It’s certainly relevant to what happened in that series that Thurl Bailey took almost 15 true shot attempts a game and had a 44.3% TS%! Yeah, he wasn’t quite that bad in the regular season, but your argument was, in substantial part, focused on playoff results. So I noted that the playoff performances for Thurl Bailey were sometimes even more brutal than the regular season performances.

Ultimately the supposed talent or Stockton and Malone should have been sufficient to do much more than they did. The conclusion I draw is that Stockton was pretty overrated, but you are free to blame his coach or Malone if you prefer.


I think if two great players are surrounded with an entire team of all negative BPM players, then typically winning like 50-55 games and averaging a second-round playoff exit is actually pretty good. Star players matter a lot in the NBA, but the rest of the team matters a lot too. Think of it like the Lakers this year or last year. They’ll have had two all-NBA guys both years. Last year, they even had a past-all-star volume shooter that previously led a negative SRS playoff team (sound familiar?). And they’ve actually been even worse than that era’s Jazz were. Lakers fans will tell you the big reason for them not being all that good is that the supporting cast is bad (not sure I fully agree with everything Lakers/LeBron fans say on this, but let’s just accept that premise for these purposes). Of course, we might say that a guy like Karl Malone is supposed to be better than old LeBron, and that’s true, but it’s also true that the Jazz averaged like 2.5 better SRS than the Lakers did the last couple years and didn’t always lose in the first round, so there’s room to think that Karl Malone is significantly better than old LeBron and still see a clear parallel. LeBron the last couple years could be amped up to produce an extra 2.5 SRS for his team (a very significant upgrade), and the result for LeBron + AD/Luka would just be similar to what the Malone/Stockton Jazz achieved in the era you’re talking about.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#49 » by One_and_Done » Thu May 8, 2025 6:18 am

I'd reply, but I'm not sure there's much point. I led with 'I don't give any real weight to BPM', and half you post just repeats BPM over and over.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#50 » by giberish » Thu May 8, 2025 6:37 am

lessthanjake wrote:
Of course, there’s also a slew of pretty clearly bad players that you do not mention. But I just want to be clear about something. Every significant player in the Utah Jazz supporting cast from that pre-Hornacek era has a negative career BPM, and mostly by a good margin. You had a guy like Bob Hansen—who had a career BPM of -2.4. Blue Edwards with a career BPM of -1.6. A post-injury Darrell Griffith who had a career BPM of -1.4. Mike Brown, with his career BPM of -3.6. Thurl Bailey’s career BPM was -0.9, Jeff Malone’s was -1.5, and Mark Eaton’s was -0.2. They had Marc Iavaroni for some years, and he had an -3.6 career BPM. Delaney Rudd had an -3.9 career BPM. David Benoit had a -2.0 career BPM. And that was pretty much the team in those years. They all have negative career BPMs, and often by a lot. This is something you don’t even see from Garnett’s terrible supporting casts on the Timberwolves! So yeah, while BPM isn’t everything, I feel very comfortable saying that the Jazz had a genuinely awful supporting cast, until those Hornacek years. And, of course, when they stopped having an awful supporting cast, they put up some great years and probably would’ve gotten a title if they’d not overlapped with the Bulls dynasty. Even with two genuinely great players, I don’t think we can expect much more than some solid 50-55 win seasons and averaging about a second-round exit, if the rest of the team is all negative players.


I think there's some circular reasoning at work. People see that guys like Edwards and Jeff Malone were starters on a regular playoff team and assume that they were good players. But they were only in the playoffs because Stockton and Malone dragged a crap supporting cast to 50 or so wins.

Again, the most telling part is that when Utah finally had a credible (though not overwhelmingly stacked) supporting case around them (Hornacek as a solid 3rd guy, Russell and Ostertag as 4th/5th starters that made sense) they regularly won 60+ games and made the finals twice after not getting close during the time when Stockton and Malone were probably at their best.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#51 » by jjgp111292 » Thu May 8, 2025 10:08 am

Just adding to the discussion that the record of Utah teams, much like with Denver, have to be taken with a sliiiiiiiight grain of salt due to the very tangible altitude advantage. They were always a few games worse than their actual record entailed. I think 95, 97 and 98 were the only times their home/road splits were actually consistent with a typical team of their win total

(It's not an exact science since home/road splits in general were a little more extreme in the old days but Utah and Denver were the only teams with a consistently wild swing every year)
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#52 » by Jaivl » Thu May 8, 2025 10:11 am

giberish wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
Of course, there’s also a slew of pretty clearly bad players that you do not mention. But I just want to be clear about something. Every significant player in the Utah Jazz supporting cast from that pre-Hornacek era has a negative career BPM, and mostly by a good margin. You had a guy like Bob Hansen—who had a career BPM of -2.4. Blue Edwards with a career BPM of -1.6. A post-injury Darrell Griffith who had a career BPM of -1.4. Mike Brown, with his career BPM of -3.6. Thurl Bailey’s career BPM was -0.9, Jeff Malone’s was -1.5, and Mark Eaton’s was -0.2. They had Marc Iavaroni for some years, and he had an -3.6 career BPM. Delaney Rudd had an -3.9 career BPM. David Benoit had a -2.0 career BPM. And that was pretty much the team in those years. They all have negative career BPMs, and often by a lot. This is something you don’t even see from Garnett’s terrible supporting casts on the Timberwolves! So yeah, while BPM isn’t everything, I feel very comfortable saying that the Jazz had a genuinely awful supporting cast, until those Hornacek years. And, of course, when they stopped having an awful supporting cast, they put up some great years and probably would’ve gotten a title if they’d not overlapped with the Bulls dynasty. Even with two genuinely great players, I don’t think we can expect much more than some solid 50-55 win seasons and averaging about a second-round exit, if the rest of the team is all negative players.


I think there's some circular reasoning at work. People see that guys like Edwards and Jeff Malone were starters on a regular playoff team and assume that they were good players. But they were only in the playoffs because Stockton and Malone dragged a crap supporting cast to 50 or so wins.

Again, the most telling part is that when Utah finally had a credible (though not overwhelmingly stacked) supporting case around them (Hornacek as a solid 3rd guy, Russell and Ostertag as 4th/5th starters that made sense) they regularly won 60+ games and made the finals twice after not getting close during the time when Stockton and Malone were probably at their best.

True. But, on the other hand, they were only able to make the Finals when the league became extremely weak on the late 90s. It's a complicated situation to parse.

Spoiler:
Seriously, how the hell are the Cavaliers a perennial +3 SRS team on the late 90s? How were the Bullets and THE CLIPPERS ever playoff teams??? Have you seen those rosters? The Hornets and the pre-Shaq Lakers around 55 wins?? Hello??
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#53 » by lessthanjake » Thu May 8, 2025 4:11 pm

One_and_Done wrote:I'd reply, but I'm not sure there's much point. I led with 'I don't give any real weight to BPM', and half you post just repeats BPM over and over.


A lot of my post had nothing to do with BPM. But I also reject the premise that it makes sense to not put weight on BPM. BPM is probably the best box stat we have, and we don’t have virtually any impact data from this era. So there’s not really better data to look at to assess these supporting-cast players. If you’re not willing to look at information that is counter to your conclusion, then of course you will end up with the conclusion you want. Your position basically seems to be to say that there’s no other explanation for what occurred except that Malone/Stockton are overrated, while simply handwaving away other obvious explanations that actually have significant support in the data we have.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#54 » by OhayoKD » Thu May 8, 2025 4:32 pm

lessthanjake wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:I'd reply, but I'm not sure there's much point. I led with 'I don't give any real weight to BPM', and half you post just repeats BPM over and over.

while simply handwaving away other obvious explanations that actually have significant support in the data we have.

"The data" is a weird way to frame "outputs of a made-up formula".

That and "if you see this footage i'm too lazy to breakdown this defender who by reputation was good actually sucked" might have worked here a few years ago. It's unlikely to convince anyone now.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#55 » by lessthanjake » Thu May 8, 2025 4:43 pm

Jaivl wrote:
giberish wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
Of course, there’s also a slew of pretty clearly bad players that you do not mention. But I just want to be clear about something. Every significant player in the Utah Jazz supporting cast from that pre-Hornacek era has a negative career BPM, and mostly by a good margin. You had a guy like Bob Hansen—who had a career BPM of -2.4. Blue Edwards with a career BPM of -1.6. A post-injury Darrell Griffith who had a career BPM of -1.4. Mike Brown, with his career BPM of -3.6. Thurl Bailey’s career BPM was -0.9, Jeff Malone’s was -1.5, and Mark Eaton’s was -0.2. They had Marc Iavaroni for some years, and he had an -3.6 career BPM. Delaney Rudd had an -3.9 career BPM. David Benoit had a -2.0 career BPM. And that was pretty much the team in those years. They all have negative career BPMs, and often by a lot. This is something you don’t even see from Garnett’s terrible supporting casts on the Timberwolves! So yeah, while BPM isn’t everything, I feel very comfortable saying that the Jazz had a genuinely awful supporting cast, until those Hornacek years. And, of course, when they stopped having an awful supporting cast, they put up some great years and probably would’ve gotten a title if they’d not overlapped with the Bulls dynasty. Even with two genuinely great players, I don’t think we can expect much more than some solid 50-55 win seasons and averaging about a second-round exit, if the rest of the team is all negative players.


I think there's some circular reasoning at work. People see that guys like Edwards and Jeff Malone were starters on a regular playoff team and assume that they were good players. But they were only in the playoffs because Stockton and Malone dragged a crap supporting cast to 50 or so wins.

Again, the most telling part is that when Utah finally had a credible (though not overwhelmingly stacked) supporting case around them (Hornacek as a solid 3rd guy, Russell and Ostertag as 4th/5th starters that made sense) they regularly won 60+ games and made the finals twice after not getting close during the time when Stockton and Malone were probably at their best.

True. But, on the other hand, they were only able to make the Finals when the league became extremely weak on the late 90s. It's a complicated situation to parse.

Spoiler:
Seriously, how the hell are the Cavaliers a perennial +3 SRS team on the late 90s? How were the Bullets and THE CLIPPERS ever playoff teams??? Have you seen those rosters? The Hornets and the pre-Shaq Lakers around 55 wins?? Hello??


A few things on this:

1. The chronology and suddenness with which the Jazz became a much better team strongly suggests it was about changes in the supporting cast that coincided with the Jazz becoming much better, rather than the league becoming “weak.”

2. While the late-90s did include some league expansion and therefore of course had some weak teams at the bottom for a bit, I think it’d be really hard to argue that this resulted in the Jazz having remotely easy routes to the Finals. In 1997, the Jazz had to beat Shaq’s Lakers (with Eddie Jones and other good supporting players), and the Hakeem/Barkley/Drexler Rockets in easily their best year as a group. In 1998, the Jazz had to beat the Rockets again (albeit a diminished version, but this was still not a team you want to see in the first round), the Duncan/Robinson Spurs, and Shaq’s Lakers again. I think one could perhaps argue that the regular-season win totals might’ve been a little higher due to league expansion, but I think it’s hard to argue that they had easy roads to the Finals. They played against really talented teams on their way to the Finals. And not only did they win, but they mostly won easily (they only lost a total of 6 games in the Western Conference playoffs in 1997 and 1998 combined).

3. On the examples you gave in a spoiler, I think people can make those sorts of arguments about any era. I think today’s era is strong. But the Pacers are probably going to make the ECF for the second year in a row. Will people ask in the future how this Pacers team could possibly have made two conferences finals? Probably. Will they ask how the Trae Young Hawks made the conference finals a few years ago? Probably. Will people ask how this year’s Heat could ever be a playoff team? Or how this year’s Rockets could possibly have been the #2 seed? Or how the Kings could’ve been the #3 seed a couple years ago? There’s always teams that do surprisingly well. Usually it’s a result of randomness, guys having good years, a good roster fit, and/or good coaching. But it happens.

4. As a factual matter, I will also note that the late-90s Cavaliers were not a “perennial +3 SRS team.” Starting in 1995, their SRS’s were as follows: +0.55, +2.49, +2.32, +3.06, and -0.94. So they only had an +3 SRS one time. And, as is often the case with teams where we might look at the roster and be a bit confused as to how they did as well as they did, the answer is team defense. For instance, the one year they actually had a +3 SRS, they had the league’s #1 defense. Those late-90’s Cavaliers usually had genuinely bad offenses. But Mike Fratello was a really good defensive coach! A not-so-talented team playing great team defense can actually do pretty well in any era!

5. You mention the Clippers. It’s surprising that 1997 team made the playoffs, but they also only won 36 games and had a -2.66 SRS. It’s not like they actually did well. Even 36 wins and a -2.66 SRS does feel like a bit much for that team, but they also had 17 wins and a -7.53 SRS the next year, and 29 wins and a -3.46 SRS the year before. Overall, from 1995-1999, the Clippers won at like a 23-win pace and averaged a -6.2 SRS. So it’s not like this was a bad team that actually did well. This was a bad team that generally did awfully, but happened to have one year where they were merely pretty bad and barely snuck into the playoffs.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#56 » by lessthanjake » Thu May 8, 2025 4:49 pm

OhayoKD wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:I'd reply, but I'm not sure there's much point. I led with 'I don't give any real weight to BPM', and half you post just repeats BPM over and over.

while simply handwaving away other obvious explanations that actually have significant support in the data we have.

"The data" is a weird way to frame "outputs of a made-up formula".

That and "if you see this footage i'm too lazy to breakdown this defender who by reputation was good actually sucked" might have worked here a few years ago. It's unlikely to convince anyone now.


You’re welcome to break down the footage if you’d like. I’m confident you will conclude it was bad, since I just watched the entire game a few days ago. I’m not going to watch it over again (after just spending hours watching it earlier this week) and painstakingly break it down, just to make a point that I think should be obvious to anyone who watches it (especially when that point would only go to a very minor part of the overall discussion). The footage is there for anyone to see. And, of course, my conclusion from watching it is also consistent with the fact that Utah’s defense experienced a total collapse in the series and DPOY Eaton somehow only had 2 blocks in the series. If someone wants to argue that Eaton was actually a good defender in the series despite that, then I welcome them to break down the footage and explain themselves.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#57 » by One_and_Done » Thu May 8, 2025 10:42 pm

So circling back to the Jazz support cast.

Let’s begin with Eaton. Your arguments against him don’t really make sense. We began this discussion by me pointing out that Eaton was both an all-star and DPOY in 1989. Your argument in response was “but his offense was bad”. I explained that’s moot, because he wasn’t an all-star based on his offense. Your new argument is that “he was old and his block numbers went down”. Firstly, block numbers don’t measure defense, which you know, so we can toss that to one side. More importantly, the league clearly still thought Eaton was a great defensive player. We know this because, well, he won DPOY again. Like, he was 32, but plenty of players are still great at 32 so I’m not sure why we’d assume he wasn’t one of them.

Eaton had made the Jazz the #1 defense in the NBA before Malone got there, back in 1985, and he remained their center the following 7 years with Malone and Stockton. During that time the team’s defense was ranked 3rd, 1st, 1st, 1st, 5th, 6th, and 7th. So you can see the D tail off as Eaton got older, which makes sense, but you can also see they were still the top ranked defense as late as 1989, which I think Eaton would get most of the credit for. Once Eaton couldn’t play anymore in 1993, the Jazz dropped to 13th in defense, so it certainly looks like he had a lot to do with it. After Eaton was gone the Jazz Drtg from 94-98 was 7th, 8th, 8th, 9th and 17th. The comparison couldn’t be more stark.

Even if we took the view that Eaton was letting the team down in the playoffs, the Jazz were not a legit contender in those years in the RS despite having RS Eaton. So the argument doesn’t really hold up. The same problem is apparent for other guys like Bailey. Even if we focused on 1989 where he shot below average from the field in their 1st round sweep, he was shooting just fine in the RS (and most of the playoffs he was in) so that concern shouldn’t exist outside of specific instances like the 89 first round. Yet the Jazz were not a legit contender, despite all this talent around them.

I always see this argument of “well, this star had to play the Showtime Lakers/legendary team in the 1st round, so tough to criticise them for losing”. It’s actually very easy to criticise them, because if superstar X was really as impactful as his fans thought then why did his team win so little that they had to play the Showtime Lakers in the 1st round to begin with? Stockton and Malone are 24 and 25 in 1988. They are both supposedly top 10 type players, top 25 of all-time guys to hear Stockton’s fans talk. They have a DPOY at the 5, and Thurl Bailey is there dropping 20-7 on 492 FG% in the RS. Why are you only winning 47 games? I don’t care who the rest of the team was, that should have been more than enough. Why is the offense, led by this supposedly transcendent point guard, ranked 16th?

Just while we’re on Thurl Bailey, his FG% was good in the playoffs most years. From 87 to 90 he shot 476, 488, 353, and 489. So it’s really only 1989 that stands out as below average shooting, and sometimes guys are going to shoot below average. On the whole though, his PS FG% in those years (474.) was almost identical to his RS shooting (477.), but he was scoring much more (19.8ppg to 16.7ppg). The talk of Bailey being to blame for the PS woes is completely overstated.

Let’s turn to Jeff Malone though. Your main criticism is BPM, which I don’t care about. Your observations that the Bullets weren’t a great team completely miss the point. Of course they weren’t great. Their best or second best player was probably Jeff Malone, who was a fringe all-star better suited to being the 3rd best player on a good team. He was miscast as a lead guy, but should have been perfectly cast as the 3rd best scorer on the Jazz (which is the role he had for them). I don’t agree with your assessment that Ruland or Gus were better (Ruland only played 30 games anyhow), and Moses only got there in 1987 (after Jeff Malone had already led the team to the playoffs the previous year). I don’t think the Stackhouse or Lavine comparisons are unfair, but if Stackhouse is your 3rd best player in the 80s or 90s then you’re in good shape (his miserable shooting didn’t matter as much then). Similarly, if Lavine is your 3rd scorer today and he’s healthy, then you’re in pretty good shape (and I emphasise the healthy aspect).

The bottom line is that the Jazz underachieved in both the RS and the PS from 88-94, despite having quite a lot of help relative to the roles of the guys we’re talking about.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#58 » by lessthanjake » Fri May 9, 2025 12:01 am

One_and_Done wrote:So circling back to the Jazz support cast.

Let’s begin with Eaton. Your arguments against him don’t really make sense. We began this discussion by me pointing out that Eaton was both an all-star and DPOY in 1989. Your argument in response was “but his offense was bad”. I explained that’s moot, because he wasn’t an all-star based on his offense. Your new argument is that “he was old and his block numbers went down”. Firstly, block numbers don’t measure defense, which you know, so we can toss that to one side. More importantly, the league clearly still thought Eaton was a great defensive player. We know this because, well, he won DPOY again. Like, he was 32, but plenty of players are still great at 32 so I’m not sure why we’d assume he wasn’t one of them.

Eaton had made the Jazz the #1 defense in the NBA before Malone got there, back in 1985, and he remained their center the following 7 years with Malone and Stockton. During that time the team’s defense was ranked 3rd, 1st, 1st, 1st, 5th, 6th, and 7th. So you can see the D tail off as Eaton got older, which makes sense, but you can also see they were still the top ranked defense as late as 1989, which I think Eaton would get most of the credit for. Once Eaton couldn’t play anymore in 1993, the Jazz dropped to 13th in defense, so it certainly looks like he had a lot to do with it. After Eaton was gone the Jazz Drtg from 94-98 was 7th, 8th, 8th, 9th and 17th. The comparison couldn’t be more stark.


I think you’re misunderstanding what I said. I said the Eaton’s prime defensive years didn’t overlap “a whole lot” with the years Malone and Stockton were star players. That obviously suggests they did overlap at least a bit. Which I thought I made further clear by specifically talking about 1989 and 1988. Eaton was still a very strong defensive player in those years. The problem is just that, in 1989, he laid a complete defensive egg in the playoffs. And in 1988, while Eaton was still a great defensive player and didn’t actually lay a playoff egg, the Jazz simply lost to the Lakers in a very close series. More on those issues below. But the point about Eaton getting old and being not as good defensively was more related to the subsequent years after that. Eaton had fallen off a lot defensively in those years (perhaps it had already started by the 1989 playoffs actually), and when we combine that with his awful offense, he was pretty clearly a negative player in those years. And you can try to fight the fact that his defense fell off a lot by saying blocks stats aren’t perfect, but they’re certainly indicative of something. And when his blocks fall off a lot *and* he wasn’t making all-defensive teams anymore *and* he was getting pretty old *and* the team’s overall defense fell off significantly, I think the defensive fall-off from Eaton is pretty obvious.

Also, I want to note that your attempt to suggest the Jazz defense got worse when Eaton left was just…false. You say the Jazz “dropped to 13th in defense” “[o]nce Eaton couldn’t play anymore in 1993.” But Eaton played 65 games in 1993! He didn’t play in 1994, and the Jazz had the 7th ranked defense after having been ranked 13th the year before with Eaton. More generally, the Jazz’s rDRTG in Eaton’s last four years there were: -2.7, -2.8, -2.6, and -0.6. Their rDRTG in the next four years were: -2.2, -2.6, -1.6, and -2.7. I struggle to see how you are looking at that and trying to make an argument that we can see some difference between Eaton and no Eaton.

Even if we took the view that Eaton was letting the team down in the playoffs, the Jazz were not a legit contender in those years in the RS despite having RS Eaton. So the argument doesn’t really hold up. The same problem is apparent for other guys like Bailey. Even if we focused on 1989 where he shot below average from the field in their 1st round sweep, he was shooting just fine in the RS (and most of the playoffs he was in) so that concern shouldn’t exist outside of specific instances like the 89 first round. Yet the Jazz were not a legit contender, despite all this talent around them.


I get your point here, but the Jazz actually had a good regular season and they were actually given +500 title odds going into the 1989 playoffs (the 5th best of any team, and very close to all but the top 2). So their regular season was strong enough that they were considered serious contenders (which is important, since your argument is largely premised on the idea that the Jazz in those years were “not a legit contender”). Of course, they didn’t live up to that in the playoffs, but that’s when Eaton and Bailey were horrific.

And the fact that Eaton and Bailey were worse in the playoffs doesn’t mean they were very good pieces in the regular season. Eaton was a great defender, but an all-time-level bad offensive player, so the net effect of him that year was probably not more than slightly positive. Meanwhile, as I’ve explained a lot already, Thurl Bailey was not actually a positive player in general—he just happened to be even more negative in those playoffs. And then the rest of the roster was filled with negatives—most of them being massive negatives. I think when two stars have a roster that has one slightly positive player (Eaton), one slightly negative player (Bailey), and a slew of quite negative players, having a strong enough regular season to have +500 title odds going into the playoffs is a good showing. They were considered legitimate title contenders despite not having much of anything to work with outside of a pure defensive specialist!

I always see this argument of “well, this star had to play the Showtime Lakers/legendary team in the 1st round, so tough to criticise them for losing”. It’s actually very easy to criticise them, because if superstar X was really as impactful as his fans thought then why did his team win so little that they had to play the Showtime Lakers in the 1st round to begin with? Stockton and Malone are 24 and 25 in 1988. They are both supposedly top 10 type players, top 25 of all-time guys to hear Stockton’s fans talk. They have a DPOY at the 5, and Thurl Bailey is there dropping 20-7 on 492 FG% in the RS. Why are you only winning 47 games? I don’t care who the rest of the team was, that should have been more than enough. Why is the offense, led by this supposedly transcendent point guard, ranked 16th?


Umm…the 1988 Jazz didn’t play the Lakers in the first round, dude. They beat Drexler’s Blazers in the first round, before getting the Lakers in the second round. So your entire argument on that is just based on a factual inaccuracy.

But yeah, I’ll grant you that 47 wins and a 2.96 SRS isn’t lighting the world on fire when Eaton was actually still a positive player that year, even accounting for the fact that the rest of the supporting cast was pretty awful. It’s fine, but it’s pretty akin to what we’ve seen from the Lakers star duos the last two years, in a similar situation of two stars with a rough roster and perhaps one definitely positive player. But, as with those Lakers teams, it wasn’t actually the star duo’s best years. It was basically Stockton/Malone’s first year as real stars, and was actually only Stockton’s first year as a starter. If you want to argue that Malone and Stockton weren’t both already playing at the level of top 20 all-time greats throughout the 1988 season, then I’d probably be inclined to agree with you. They were star players that were really good, but they weren’t at their best yet. So I hardly think it makes sense to extrapolate much about these two in general just from how well the Jazz did in that season in particular.

What’s interesting here is that, with two guys both in their first year as stars, we would expect them to have grown and gotten better as the season went on. And the team results certainly bear that out. The Jazz started the season 18-22, and ended the season 47-35, meaning they finished the season 29-13, which is a 57-win pace. They then proceeded to beat Drexler’s Blazers fairly easily in the first round and almost upset the Showtime Lakers in the second round. So, by the end of the latter half of their first year as stars, Stockton and Malone had the Jazz playing like a genuine contender (despite having a pretty rough team around them except for Eaton). Which means your whole point here is basically entirely dependent on what happened in the first half of Malone/Stockton’s breakout season, because the argument doesn’t work at all for the second half the season or the playoffs that year. If you think that the first half of great players’ breakout season is genuinely indicative of how good they were in their best years, then I just think you’re clearly wrong.

Just while we’re on Thurl Bailey, his FG% was good in the playoffs most years. From 87 to 90 he shot 476, 488, 353, and 489. So it’s really only 1989 that stands out as below average shooting, and sometimes guys are going to shoot below average. On the whole though, his PS FG% in those years (474.) was almost identical to his RS shooting (477.), but he was scoring much more (19.8ppg to 16.7ppg). The talk of Bailey being to blame for the PS woes is completely overstated.


This is really misleading, and I think you know that. You left off 1991, where Bailey put up a 45.3% TS% in the playoffs. And you include 1987 despite it being outside the purview of this thread (and despite Stockton not even being a starter that year). Bailey had four playoffs with the Jazz during the time period where Malone/Stockton were both stars (leaving aside Bailey later coming back in 1999). And in two of those years, Bailey shot terribly. In two of those years he didn’t shoot terribly, but didn’t shoot well either. So yeah, out of four playoffs, Bailey was awful in two of them, and was around his normal level (i.e. not a positive player) in two of them. Definitely pretty bad overall!

Let’s turn to Jeff Malone though. Your main criticism is BPM, which I don’t care about. Your observations that the Bullets weren’t a great team completely miss the point. Of course they weren’t great. Their best player was probably Jeff Malone, who was a fringe all-star better suited to being the 3rd best player on a good team. He was miscast as a lead guy, but should have been perfectly cast as the 3rd best scorer on the Jazz (which is the role he had for them). I don’t agree with your assessment that Ruland or Gus were better (Ruland only played 30 games anyhow), and Moses only got there in 1987 (after Jeff Malone had already led the team to the playoffs the previous year). I don’t think the Stackhouse or Lavine comparisons are unfair, but if Stackhouse is your 3rd best player in the 80s or 90s then you’re in good shape (his miserable shooting didn’t matter as much then). Similarly, if Lavine is your 3rd scorer today and he’s healthy, then you’re in pretty good shape (and I emphasise the healthy aspect).


I think you don’t care about BPM here because it does not support your conclusion. It’s not perfect—no NBA stat is. But for a time period when we have almost no impact data, the best box measure available is definitely a very good place to start in terms of evaluating players. And it tells us that Jeff Malone and the rest of the Jazz supporting cast in that pre-Hornacek era were all somewhere between absolutely awful and slight negatives.

Anyways, if you don’t think the Stackhouse or LaVine comparisons are unfair, then I think you’re most of the way to getting there on this, but just need to look up those guys’ RAPMs (or D’Angelo Russell’s—who is another guy I alluded to in my post, who made an all-star game and was a volume scorer that led a negative-SRS playoff team). Guys like this are typically negative-impact players—often significantly so. It’s possible Jeff Malone was different than what these sorts of guys typically are, but nothing really indicates that (and the team improving a lot when Hornacek replaced him is certainly consistent with him being this type of negative-impact player).
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#59 » by One_and_Done » Fri May 9, 2025 2:34 am

Your argument is just offbase.

Eaton technically played in 1993, but he was playing only 17 mpg in those 64 games, and was now 36 years old. It was his last year in the league, and he was clearly washed. The previous 8 years his minutes per game were 34, 32, 32, 33, 36, 28, 32 and 25. Now I noted, I agree that Eaton was falling off towards the end, but the point is that from 88-90 Eaton helped make them the 1st, 1st and 5th ranked defence, and those were marks that the Jazz never reached from 94-98 when they were ranked 7th, 8th, 8th, 9th and 17th. So while Eaton’s prime didn’t overlap entirely with Stockton and Malone, in the years that it did we aren’t seeing the results we’d expect from 2 supposed top 10 players being paired with a DPOY.

I’d add that while Stockton didn’t start in the RS in 87, he actually did start in the playoffs and 24 year old Stockton and almost 24 year old Malone were rolled in the 1st round that year by the Sleepy Floyd and Joe Barry Carroll Warriors (a 42 win team). This was despite having prime Eaton still, and Bailey, etc.

You describe Eaton as a “marginally positive” player, and Bailey as “slightly” negative, views that appear to be based on nothing. Eaton was the DPOY and was in his prime for at least 88-90. In those years prime Stockton & Malone led the Jazz to records of 47, 51, and 55, with first or second round exits each year. I reject the idea that +500 title odds (assuming that’s even correct) somehow means that the Jazz performed well in the RS in 89 (or any of those years). The West was the weaker conference back then, and the Jazz were nothing special. Their SRS ranged from 2.96 to 4.82. As noted, their D was 1st, 1st and 5th (thanks in large part to Eaton), but they were 16th, 17th and 10th in offense. They did not have the profile of a contender, because they were not. If you put two top 10 players together, and a DPOY candidate, they should be a contender.

To again come to Bailey’s aid; the average TS% from 88-90 was 537-538 TS%. Bailey’s TS% in the RS from 88-90 was 541. He was a perfectly acceptable scoring option, who was averaging 19.6, 19.5, and 14.2 those three years (mostly off the bench), while averaging a healthy 5-6.5rpg. He was a solid player. Nobody has come out and said he was a world beater, but he was good enough to get a lot of 6th man buzz and was not a “negative” player as you suggest. Nobody was suggesting Bailey was a bad player in the 88 playoffs for example, when he was putting up 23-6 on 488. FG%, which included a series where Bailey performed well against the Lakers. Bailey’s D wasn’t amazing, but it wasn’t bad, and he served as a major contributor for some of the best defences in the NBA in earlier seasons as I noted already. He’d have been a 4 today, but for the era he was in he served as a 3 just fine. Pundits certainly though he was good, he was runner up 6th man in both 88 and 89. So you have a 6th man of the year candidate as well, and yet the Jazz still don’t look like a real contender.

You do finally try to address this by comparing the 88 Jazz to the 2025 Lakers. This seems a misguided comparison. Firstly the Lakers 2nd star is 40 years old and clearly past his prime. Stockton and Malone are in their primes. The Lakers also didn’t have a DPOY on their team. Their playoff run would have looked very different with such a player at the 5. The Lakers were also a team that was cobbled together mid-year due to trades, without the chance to properly balance the roster or to let the team figure out how to play together in training camp. The Jazz roster was the picture of continuity, with 2 stars who complemented each other well (unlike Luka and 40 year old Lebron, who both want the ball). And with all that, the Lakers still won 50 games in a much tougher league with Lebron and Luka/AD playing 70 games each between them, and playing with injuries through the year. Malone and Stockton were healthy as can be.

The attempt to say the Jazz “turned the corner” in the latter half of 88 doesn’t make much sense because the Jazz won 51 and 55 the next 2 seasons, and were still not a contender. Sometimes teams have hot streaks and cold streaks during the year; trying to extrapolate a stretch where they played like a 57 win team isn’t sensible given the receipts from the following years.

You say nothing indicates Jeff Malone was a positive impact player, but I already told you what did; that he led 2 teams to the playoffs, and was clearly a big driver of their success. Healthy Lavine and Stackhouse did much the same by the way. The Jazz getting better when Hornacek arrived doesn’t prove Jeff Malone was bad, it proves Hornacek was even better. If you want to talk about underrated players who would be better today, Hornacek is among them for sure. It’s criminal he only made 1 all-star team, and honestly his impact was closer to Stockton than Stockton’s impact was to Karl Malone.

The Jazz from 88-94 had the following to support their supposed two top 10 players.

88- a DPOY quality player, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 47 wins, out in the 2nd round.

89- a DPOY quality player, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 51 wins, out in the 1st round.

90- a DPOY quality player, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 55 wins, out in the 1st round.

91- an elite defensive 5, an all-star guard, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 54 wins, out in the 2nd round.

92- a solid defensive 5, an all-star guard, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 55 wins, out in the WCFs.

93- an all-star guard; Result: 47 wins, out in the 1st round.

94- an all-star guard (upgraded to an even better one during the season); Result: 53 wins, out in the WCFs.

Their SRS those years was 2.96, 4.01, 4.82, 3.18, 5.70, 1.74, and 4.10. They do not have the profile of a contender, and there is really no analog in NBA history for a team with this much help, and supposedly having two top 10 players on their team, underachieving to this level.
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Re: How many finals should the Jazz have made from 88-99’? 

Post#60 » by sp6r=underrated » Fri May 9, 2025 2:58 am

One_and_Done wrote:Your argument is just offbase.

Eaton technically played in 1993, but he was playing only 17 mpg in those 64 games, and was now 36 years old. It was his last year in the league, and he was clearly washed. The previous 8 years his minutes per game were 34, 32, 32, 33, 36, 28, 32 and 25. Now I noted, I agree that Eaton was falling off towards the end, but the point is that from 88-90 Eaton helped make them the 1st, 1st and 5th ranked defence, and those were marks that the Jazz never reached to from 94-98 when they were ranked 7th, 8th, 8th, 9th and 17th. So while Eaton’s prime didn’t overlap entirely with Stockton and Malone, in the years that it did we aren’t seeing the results we’d expect from 2 supposed top 10 players being paired with a DPOY.

I’d add that while Stockton didn’t start in the RS in 87, he actually did start in the playoffs and 24 year old Stockton and almost 24 year old Malone were rolled in the 1st round that year by the Sleepy Floyd and Joe Barry Carroll Warriors (a 42 win team). This was despite having prime Eaton still, and Bailey, etc.

You describe Eaton as a “marginally positive” player, and Bailey as “slightly” negative, views that appear to be based on nothing. Eaton was the DPOY and was in his prime for at least 88-90. In those years prime Stockton & Malone led the Jazz to records of 47, 51, and 55, with first or second round exits each year. I reject the idea that +500 title odds (assuming that’s even correct) somehow means that the Jazz performed well in the RS in 89 (or any of those years). The West was the weaker conference back then, and the Jazz were nothing special. Their SRS ranged from 2.96 to 4.82. As noted, their D was 1st, 1st and 5th (thanks in large part to Eaton), but they were 16th, 17th and 10th in offense. They did not have the profile of a contender, because they were not. If you put two top 10 players together, and a DPOY candidate, they should be a contender.

To again come to Bailey’s aid; the average TS% from 88-90 was 537-538 TS%. Bailey’s TS% in the RS from 88-90 was 541. He was a perfectly acceptable scoring option, who was averaging 19.6, 19.5, and 14.2 those three years (mostly off the bench), while averaging a healthy 5-6.5rpg. He was a solid player. Nobody has come out and said he was a world beater, but he was good enough to get a lot of 6th man buzz and was not a “negative” player as you suggest. Nobody was suggesting Bailey was a bad player in the 88 playoffs for example, when he was putting up 23-6 on 488. FG%, which included a series where Bailey performed well against the Lakers. Bailey’s D wasn’t amazing, but it wasn’t bad, and he served as a major contributor for some of the best defences in the NBA as I noted already. He’d have been a 4 today, but for the era he was in he served as a 3 just fine. Pundits certainly though he was good, he was runner up 6th man in both 88 and 89. So you have a 6th man of the year candidate as well, and yet the Jazz still don’t look like a real contender.

You do finally try to address this by comparing the 88 Jazz to the 2025 Lakers. This seems a misguided comparison. Firstly the Lakers 2nd star is 40 years old and clearly past his prime. Stockton and Malone are in their primes. The Lakers also didn’t have a DPOY on their team. Their playoff run would have looked very different with such a player at the 5. The Lakers were also a team that was cobbled together mid-year due to trades, without the chance to properly balance the roster or to let the team figure out how to play together in training camp. The Jazz roster was the picture of continuity, with 2 stars who complemented each other well (unlike Luka and 40 year old Lebron, who both want the ball). And with all that, the Lakers still won 50 games in a much tougher league with Lebron and Luka/AD playing 70 games each between them, and playing with injuries through the year. Malone and Stockton were healthy as can be.

The attempt to say the Jazz “turned the corner” in the latter half of 88 doesn’t make much sense because the Jazz won 51 and 55 the next 2 seasons, and were still not a contender. Sometimes teams have hot streaks and cold streaks during the year; trying to extrapolate a stretch where they played like a 57 win team isn’t sensible given the receipts from the following years.

You say nothing indicates Jeff Malone was a positive impact player, but I already told you what did; that he led 2 teams to the playoffs, and was clearly a big driver of their success. Healthy Lavine and Stackhouse did much the same by the way. The Jazz getting better when Hornacek arrived doesn’t prove Jeff Malone was bad, it proves Hornacek was even better. If you want to talk about underrated players who would be better today, Hornacek is among them for sure. It’s criminal he only made 1 all-star team, and honestly his impact was closer to Stockton than Stockton’s impact was to Karl Malone.

The Jazz from 88-94 had the following to support their supposed two top 10 players.

88- a DPOY quality player, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 47 wins, out in the 2nd round.

89- a DPOY quality player, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 51 wins, out in the 1st round.

90- a DPOY quality player, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 55 wins, out in the 1st round.

91- an elite defensive 5, an all-star guard, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 54 wins, out in the 2nd round.

92- a solid defensive 5, an all-star guard, and a 6th man candidate; Result: 55 wins, out in the WCFs.

93- an all-star guard; Result: 47 wins, out in the 1st round.

94- an all-star guard (upgraded to an even better one during the season); Result: 53 wins, out in the WCFs.

Their SRS those years was 2.96, 4.01, 4.82, 3.18, 5.70, 1.74, and 4.10. They do not have the profile of a contender, and there is really no analog in NBA history for a team with this much help, and supposedly having two top 10 players on their team, underachieving to this level.


I agree with your big picture take but I will defend them on 88. The history of the NBA is ripe with younger talented teams losing to a championship team. Losing in the 2nd round there isn't a big failure to me. I see it someone like the 2010 Thunder losing to LA.

That said it is a big failure to me that there was no launch in future years which you articulated quite well.

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