lessthanjake wrote:Not sure what stats you’re looking at, but this is wrong. Magic definitely did not “averag[e] the same amount of assists” as Stockton in that series. Stockton had 6.1 more assists per game than Magic did!
He also played six more minutes per game.
PER36, Stockton averaged 2 fewer FGA and about 3.5 more assists, which is a little over half the gap you're trying to outline. Stockton had a great series, but he basically didn't shoot (which was sort of his custom) and the offense ran through him.
Stockton had two big assist-output performances in losses that series which really skew the averages, as well, both in games where he played 48 minutes. Also a bit of a difference in time-of-possession between the two guys based on team strategy. Stockton didn't dump it into guys for isos basically ever; it was pretty well always an immediate jumper or hook, or trailing dunk. It was not the same for Worthy, Kareem or Scott all the time.
So between that and it being literally one series, it's hard to draw a lot of useful information. Especially since Kareem was flaming ass in that series, which cut into Magic's assist production. The series before, when Magic was averaging almost 15 apg, Kareem shot 55% from the floor and averaged 17 ppg. Against Mark Eaton, 40 yo Kareem shot 38.9% FG and posted 12.4 ppg. That had nothing to do with Stockton, but definitely impacted this APG gap. Meantime, in for example the deciding game 7, Karl Malone was 14/21 from the field and Kareem was 4/10. A great many of Stockton's assists were relatively basic passes into Malone, who then turned and hit a fadeaway or a hook or something. So the bread and butter play was working for one guy, and not so much for the other guy. And in that particular game, Byron Scott was doing great and Worthy was getting to the line well, but not getting tons of three-point plays. So, excellent end result to the play, but not so hot for Magic's assist totals.
Worth thinking about.
Stockton was excellent in that series, of course; there's no question of that. He played great. It was also a good series for people who only remember him from 97 and onward to remind themselves of exactly how fast end-to-end Stockton was when he was a younger guy. When you play that long, it's easy to forget what a guy looked like in his athletic prime, but there? He was at his best, no doubt. And as you say, his defense was excellent in that series.
But just some things to consider when we're strictly comparing APG.