Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe

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Better Prime

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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#21 » by Jaivl » Mon Jun 23, 2025 4:19 pm

tsherkin wrote:
Black Feet wrote:Kobe is underrated and this post is probably rage bait , borderline top 10? only elite at scoring? Anyway the younger generation didn’t even Watch prime Kobe if anything most of them underrate him


Maybe he means "of all-time?"

Some people consider him a back-end Top 10 All-Time player, while others have him anywhere from 11th to like 25th or so, give or take to whom you're speaking.

I'm generally lower on Kobe than many (especially all-time), but even I couldn't even imagine an argument suggesting he was borderline top-10 in the league during his prime, let alone at his peak.

And you consider it for Dirk?
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#22 » by tsherkin » Mon Jun 23, 2025 4:30 pm

Jaivl wrote:
tsherkin wrote:
Black Feet wrote:Kobe is underrated and this post is probably rage bait , borderline top 10? only elite at scoring? Anyway the younger generation didn’t even Watch prime Kobe if anything most of them underrate him


Maybe he means "of all-time?"

Some people consider him a back-end Top 10 All-Time player, while others have him anywhere from 11th to like 25th or so, give or take to whom you're speaking.

I'm generally lower on Kobe than many (especially all-time), but even I couldn't even imagine an argument suggesting he was borderline top-10 in the league during his prime, let alone at his peak.

And you consider it for Dirk?


None of what I just said has anything to do with Dirk.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#23 » by Cavsfansince84 » Mon Jun 23, 2025 5:32 pm

tsherkin wrote:
Black Feet wrote:Kobe is underrated and this post is probably rage bait , borderline top 10? only elite at scoring? Anyway the younger generation didn’t even Watch prime Kobe if anything most of them underrate him


Maybe he means "of all-time?"

Some people consider him a back-end Top 10 All-Time player, while others have him anywhere from 11th to like 25th or so, give or take to whom you're speaking.

I'm generally lower on Kobe than many (especially all-time), but even I couldn't even imagine an argument suggesting he was borderline top-10 in the league during his prime, let alone at his peak.


I think that post was meant to be satire since the same reasoning that the original poster used to say Dirk was borderline top 10 most years just as easily could apply to Kobe if someone wanted to make a terrible argument.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#24 » by tsherkin » Mon Jun 23, 2025 6:06 pm

Cavsfansince84 wrote: I think that post was meant to be satire since the same reasoning that the original poster used to say Dirk was borderline top 10 most years just as easily could apply to Kobe if someone wanted to make a terrible argument.


That would also make more sense than actually believing it.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#25 » by LakerLegend » Mon Jun 23, 2025 7:15 pm

Jaivl wrote:
LakerLegend wrote:Please don't ever insult Kobe by mentioning Dirk in the same breath with him again.

The younger generation has overrated Dirk to an unbelievable degree.

He was a borderline top 10 player most of his career, had two historical playoff meltdowns in 2006 and 2007 and was only elite at one thing: scoring and there were routinely multiple players in the league better than him at that.

You do realize that, applying the same heavy-handed and reductionist wording, that statement could also apply word for word to Kobe, right? (except for the playoff meltdown in 2007, but you could swap 2004 for that).

The younger generation has overrated Kobe to an unbelievable degree.

He was a borderline top 10 player most of his career, had two historical playoff meltdowns in 2004 and 2006 and was only elite at one thing: scoring and there were routinely multiple players in the league better than him at that.

No, applying this to Kobe is far more out of left field and outside the norm of thinking. When they were playing no one considered dirk anywhere near Kobe’s stratosphere.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#26 » by LakerLegend » Mon Jun 23, 2025 7:17 pm

AEnigma wrote:
Black Feet wrote:
Jaivl wrote:You do realize that, applying the same heavy-handed and reductionist wording, that statement could also apply word for word to Kobe, right? (except for the playoff meltdown in 2007, but you could swap 2004 for that).

The younger generation has overrated Kobe to an unbelievable degree.

He was a borderline top 10 player most of his career, had two historical playoff meltdowns in 2004 and 2006 and was only elite at one thing: scoring and there were routinely multiple players in the league better than him at that.

Kobe is underrated and this post is probably rage bait , borderline top 10? only elite at scoring? Anyway the younger generation didn’t even Watch prime Kobe if anything most of them underrate him

Dirk was also not “borderline top 10” and “only elite at scoring”, so looks like that went over your head.

Both are true. What was dirk elite at besides scoring? Bad defender, weak rebounder for a big man, average to below average passer.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#27 » by lessthanjake » Mon Jun 23, 2025 7:53 pm

LakerLegend wrote:
Jaivl wrote:
LakerLegend wrote:Please don't ever insult Kobe by mentioning Dirk in the same breath with him again.

The younger generation has overrated Dirk to an unbelievable degree.

He was a borderline top 10 player most of his career, had two historical playoff meltdowns in 2006 and 2007 and was only elite at one thing: scoring and there were routinely multiple players in the league better than him at that.

You do realize that, applying the same heavy-handed and reductionist wording, that statement could also apply word for word to Kobe, right? (except for the playoff meltdown in 2007, but you could swap 2004 for that).

The younger generation has overrated Kobe to an unbelievable degree.

He was a borderline top 10 player most of his career, had two historical playoff meltdowns in 2004 and 2006 and was only elite at one thing: scoring and there were routinely multiple players in the league better than him at that.

No, applying this to Kobe is far more out of left field and outside the norm of thinking. When they were playing no one considered dirk anywhere near Kobe’s stratosphere.


Kobe was definitely considered a tier above Dirk when they were both playing. I think some people here may not have watched basketball in the 2000s, so they might not understand that. Dirk got an MVP award when his team won 67 games, and he made a bunch of all-NBA first teams, but he just wasn’t thought of as really in the top tier in the era. He was akin to Jayson Tatum in terms of his stature in the league—a guy that makes all-NBA first teams and has a consistently good team but isn’t really seriously considered in the conversation for the league’s best player. Meanwhile, Kobe really was considered right in the middle of that conversation.

You’re definitely right about that. And I can understand bristling at people bringing up a comparison that people didn’t think was a contest at the time. But I think the question is whether that contemporaneous perception was right. Contemporaneous perception typically is going to be right, but it doesn’t have to be. And I do think we have more data now (including RAPM data, for instance), such that we can look back on things and see that Dirk probably deserved to be right in the conversation for the league’s best player, and that Kobe was probably a bit overrated in that regard.

I thought Kobe was better than Dirk back then (though I was a bit lower on Kobe than most were at the time—albeit maybe not after 2008-2010, since that really impressed me). And I do think Kobe had a greater career than Dirk did. But, with the data we have now, I would find it hard to conclude that Kobe was actually a better and more impactful basketball player than Dirk.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#28 » by AEnigma » Mon Jun 23, 2025 9:42 pm

:roll:

Yes, only those of us who watched basketball in the 2000s could possibly understand that Kobe was a more celebrated figure than Dirk. Surely Mr. “LakerLegend” must be sincerely flummoxed at all these “young” posters who must have never truly watched Kobe — ignoring that the vast majority of this thread has featured posts from people who have been around for a decade, when Kobe was still a locked in all-star starter simply by existing. Surely that is what explains the disconnect. Pay no heed to how Dirk preceded that 2007 MVP by finishing third in each of the prior two seasons, both times ahead of Kobe — no, we should definitely pretend he was just another Tatum, who has one (edit: now two) top five MVP finish and no top three finishes, because what all of us who paid attention to the state of the sport in the mid-2000s were thinking was just how amazing support Jason Terry and Josh Howard were, and how fortunate Dirk was to be reaping the accolade benefits of that stacked supporting cast.

Why stop at Dirk. After all, only posters who never watched Kobe would pick Garnett’s peak/prime/career. Only posters who never watched Kobe’s explosive outputs against the Spurs would ever place Kobe above the retroactively crowned Duncan. It is simple history!
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#29 » by Cavsfansince84 » Mon Jun 23, 2025 10:01 pm

LakerLegend wrote:Both are true. What was dirk elite at besides scoring? Bad defender, weak rebounder for a big man, average to below average passer.


Most atg's are only going to be elite at one thing. Having said that, Dirk was a solid to good rebounder whose numbers were lower due in part to how he played mostly away from the basket. Then in the playoffs he steps it up a lot and had 11 series where he averaged over 11.3 rpg. His defense also improved and he was good at using his gravity to get the ball to someone else. It might take an extra pass but he was the anchor of teams that were almost always top 5 in offense and #1 like 4 times. So he not only scored 23-27ppg on high efficiency but it obviously also translated well to team offense and wins since his teams averaged like 55 wins for 11 years. Also a career 8.4 tov% which is extremely low. All in all he was top 5-6 for most of his prime imo. Kobe was perceived as better and had an army of fans behind him but Dirk had a stretch from 05-08 where was in the convo for best player then came back in 11 and might have been the best that year with his playoff run.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#30 » by LakerLegend » Mon Jun 23, 2025 10:27 pm

AEnigma wrote::roll:

Yes, only those of us who watched basketball in the 2000s could possibly understand that Kobe was a more celebrated figure than Dirk. Surely Mr. “LakerLegend” must be sincerely flummoxed at all these “young” posters who must have never truly watched Kobe — ignoring that the vast majority of this thread has featured posts from people who have been around for a decade, when Kobe was still a locked in all-star starter simply by existing. Surely that is what explains the disconnect. Pay no heed to how Dirk preceded that 2007 MVP by finishing third in each of the prior two seasons, both times ahead of Kobe — no, we should definitely pretend he was just another Tatum, who has one top five MVP finish and no top three finishes, because what all of us who paid attention to the state of the sport in the mid-2000s were thinking was just how amazing support Jason Terry and Josh Howard were, and how fortunate Dirk was to be reaping the accolade benefits of that stacked supporting cast.

Why stop at Dirk. After all, only posters who never watched Kobe would pick Garnett’s peak/prime/career. Only posters who never watched Kobe’s explosive outputs against the Spurs would ever place Kobe above the retroactively crowned Duncan. It is simple history!

Your 2007 mvp analogy is the exact reason why I said people who didn’t watch then shouldn’t be commenting because you brought that up without understanding any of the context.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#31 » by LakerLegend » Mon Jun 23, 2025 10:29 pm

Cavsfansince84 wrote:
LakerLegend wrote:Both are true. What was dirk elite at besides scoring? Bad defender, weak rebounder for a big man, average to below average passer.


Most atg's are only going to be elite at one thing. Having said that, Dirk was a solid to good rebounder whose numbers were lower due in part to how he played mostly away from the basket. Then in the playoffs he steps it up a lot and had 11 series where he averaged over 11.3 rpg. His defense also improved and he was good at using his gravity to get the ball to someone else. It might take an extra pass but he was the anchor of teams that were almost always top 5 in offense and #1 like 4 times. So he not only scored 23-27ppg on high efficiency but it obviously also translated well to team offense and wins since his teams averaged like 55 wins for 11 years. Also a career 8.4 tov% which is extremely low. All in all he was top 5-6 for most of his prime imo. Kobe was perceived as better and had an army of fans behind him but Dirk had a stretch from 05-08 where was in the convo for best player then came back in 11 and might have been the best that year with his playoff run.

Dirk was a joke of an offensive rebounder for a player his size.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#32 » by AEnigma » Mon Jun 23, 2025 10:32 pm

LakerLegend wrote:
AEnigma wrote::roll:

Yes, only those of us who watched basketball in the 2000s could possibly understand that Kobe was a more celebrated figure than Dirk. Surely Mr. “LakerLegend” must be sincerely flummoxed at all these “young” posters who must have never truly watched Kobe — ignoring that the vast majority of this thread has featured posts from people who have been around for a decade, when Kobe was still a locked in all-star starter simply by existing. Surely that is what explains the disconnect. Pay no heed to how Dirk preceded that 2007 MVP by finishing third in each of the prior two seasons, both times ahead of Kobe — no, we should definitely pretend he was just another Tatum, who has one top five MVP finish and no top three finishes, because what all of us who paid attention to the state of the sport in the mid-2000s were thinking was just how amazing support Jason Terry and Josh Howard were, and how fortunate Dirk was to be reaping the accolade benefits of that stacked supporting cast.

Why stop at Dirk. After all, only posters who never watched Kobe would pick Garnett’s peak/prime/career. Only posters who never watched Kobe’s explosive outputs against the Spurs would ever place Kobe above the retroactively crowned Duncan. It is simple history!

Your 2007 mvp analogy is the exact reason why I said people who didn’t watch then shouldn’t be commenting because you brought that up without understanding any of the context.

I watched; if you thought Dirk was a borderline top ten player, you were a comically out-of-touch minority, and what is worse is that you have not improved your understanding with time.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#33 » by Cavsfansince84 » Mon Jun 23, 2025 10:40 pm

LakerLegend wrote:Dirk was a joke of an offensive rebounder for a player his size.


Kind of strange to make that your big criticism when he led top offenses so many times. Dirk provided more value playing away from the basket.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#34 » by LakerLegend » Mon Jun 23, 2025 11:57 pm

Cavsfansince84 wrote:
LakerLegend wrote:Dirk was a joke of an offensive rebounder for a player his size.


Kind of strange to make that your big criticism when he led top offenses so many times. Dirk provided more value playing away from the basket.

He led top offenses because Cubans checkbook ensured his teams were routinely the deepest teams in the league.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#35 » by Cavsfansince84 » Tue Jun 24, 2025 1:05 am

LakerLegend wrote:He led top offenses because Cubans checkbook ensured his teams were routinely the deepest teams in the league.


No offense, but you really just come off as a big time Dirk hater. So I'll leave you to it.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#36 » by lessthanjake » Tue Jun 24, 2025 1:13 am

AEnigma wrote::roll:

Yes, only those of us who watched basketball in the 2000s could possibly understand that Kobe was a more celebrated figure than Dirk. Surely Mr. “LakerLegend” must be sincerely flummoxed at all these “young” posters who must have never truly watched Kobe — ignoring that the vast majority of this thread has featured posts from people who have been around for a decade, when Kobe was still a locked in all-star starter simply by existing. Surely that is what explains the disconnect. Pay no heed to how Dirk preceded that 2007 MVP by finishing third in each of the prior two seasons, both times ahead of Kobe — no, we should definitely pretend he was just another Tatum, who has one (edit: now two) top five MVP finish and no top three finishes, because what all of us who paid attention to the state of the sport in the mid-2000s were thinking was just how amazing support Jason Terry and Josh Howard were, and how fortunate Dirk was to be reaping the accolade benefits of that stacked supporting cast.

Why stop at Dirk. After all, only posters who never watched Kobe would pick Garnett’s peak/prime/career. Only posters who never watched Kobe’s explosive outputs against the Spurs would ever place Kobe above the retroactively crowned Duncan. It is simple history!


Dude, this is just such an unnecessarily aggressive post—as is sadly typical from you. I wasn’t talking to you and made no reference whatsoever to you, but since you made it about you, I am actually aware that you’ve probably been watching basketball for a while. Your account may say you joined RealGM in 2022, but that’s only because your original account was permanently banned years ago. So you’ve definitely been watching basketball longer than that. You may even have been watching basketball in the 2000s! If you were, then you’d know that I’m absolutely right about how Dirk and Kobe were perceived at the time. And to the extent you think that that perception at the time was wrong in retrospect, you’ll find that you simply agree with the conclusion of my post.

Your argument to the contrary about contemporaneous perception appears to involve drawing a huge distinction between getting 3rd in MVP voting and getting 4th. We can use arbitrary MVP vote-rank cutoffs all we want. For instance, at age 26, Tatum already has been top 6 in MVP voting as many times as Dirk was in Dirk’s entire career! Advantage Tatum, right? But, in reality, MVP voting doesn’t really give us more than a general ballpark idea of how players were perceived, because MVP vote ranks depend so much on other factors—such as the team success and health of other top guys in a given year.

One rough way to gauge how a player was perceived is to look at whether other players placed ahead of a guy even though those other players had the same or worse record. Finishing ahead of a guy in MVP voting when your team does better could mean you were considered a better player, or it could mean that the team success factor got you ahead of players that people nevertheless thought were better than you. So we can’t tell much from that scenario. However, if a guy finished higher than another guy despite having a worse team record, then they were likely considered the better player at the time. It’s definitely not a perfect gauge and it glosses over some season-specific context so probably isn’t all that useful at a micro-level, but is a good way to use MVP voting to actually retroactively get a rough sense of contemporaneous perception in an era if you were not around to actually recall what people thought back then. If you look at that, you’ll find that in the 2002-2012 timeframe when Dirk got MVP votes every year, Dirk averaged being behind 2.2 players per year that had the same or worse record than him (and that’s not even including being tied with Baron Davis in MVP voting in 2004, despite Dirk’s team winning 11 more games). For Tatum the last four years, he has averaged 3 players per year. For Kobe, this was only like 0.75 per year from 2002-2013. So this analysis of MVP voting does suggest Tatum has maybe been seen slightly lower in the pecking order than Dirk was (a conclusion I don’t have any problem with), but it also suggests Dirk is closer to Tatum than to Kobe in this regard. I’ll give you that Dirk did have two years where no one with a worse record finished ahead of him—2005 and 2007. And Tatum has never had a year like that (Kobe had 6, by my count). And there certainly is something to be said for the fact that Dirk won MVP in 2007 and Tatum didn’t win the 2024 MVP. Dirk won it because his team did so well, not because he was actually considered the best player, but Tatum wasn’t close to winning it when his team did similarly well. So, again, I’ll grant you Dirk’s stature was a bit higher (or at least it was for a few years there—after he was in the heart of his prime, but before the 2007 playoff disaster reset perception down a peg). But I think Tatum probably is the best current-day analogy, even if it’s underselling Dirk’s stature a little bit. I could buy a comparison of Dirk’s stature as being somewhere between Tatum and Luka, though. I think it was closer to Tatum most of the time, but maybe it was more Luka-like in those few years in the mid-2000s, prior to the 2007 playoffs.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#37 » by Special_Puppy » Tue Jun 24, 2025 1:29 am

Kobe’s career MVP voteshare is 4.2 to Dirk’s 1.8 which does support the idea that Kobe was viewed as the better player at the time.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#38 » by Primedeion » Tue Jun 24, 2025 2:17 am

2002-2011 RAPM:

Kobe: +6.1
Dirk: +5.6

Dude said prime Dirk clearly looks better by the data lmao.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#39 » by AEnigma » Tue Jun 24, 2025 2:19 am

lessthanjake wrote:
AEnigma wrote::roll:

Yes, only those of us who watched basketball in the 2000s could possibly understand that Kobe was a more celebrated figure than Dirk. Surely Mr. “LakerLegend” must be sincerely flummoxed at all these “young” posters who must have never truly watched Kobe — ignoring that the vast majority of this thread has featured posts from people who have been around for a decade, when Kobe was still a locked in all-star starter simply by existing. Surely that is what explains the disconnect. Pay no heed to how Dirk preceded that 2007 MVP by finishing third in each of the prior two seasons, both times ahead of Kobe — no, we should definitely pretend he was just another Tatum, who has one (edit: now two) top five MVP finish and no top three finishes, because what all of us who paid attention to the state of the sport in the mid-2000s were thinking was just how amazing support Jason Terry and Josh Howard were, and how fortunate Dirk was to be reaping the accolade benefits of that stacked supporting cast.

Why stop at Dirk. After all, only posters who never watched Kobe would pick Garnett’s peak/prime/career. Only posters who never watched Kobe’s explosive outputs against the Spurs would ever place Kobe above the retroactively crowned Duncan. It is simple history!

Dude, this is just such an unnecessarily aggressive post—as is sadly typical from you. I wasn’t talking to you and made no reference whatsoever to you, but since you made it about you, I am actually aware that you’ve probably been watching basketball for a while.

I did not make it about me; my only prior involvement in the thread was to point out a pretty obvious reverse hyperbole, and at no point did I weigh in on the actual debate at hand. But I was paying enough attention to the rest of the thread to notice that those who did express a preference for Dirk were overwhelmingly people who would have based that opinion off watching both in their prime. Go back to 2012 and you can find the same community, and perhaps even some of the same voices, voting Kobe as the 15th best peak and Dirk as the 18th. The idea that the two are in the same tier is not some recent revelation and has been around since both were in their primes, in much the way that the public perception of Kobe continues to be well ahead of Dirk, yet you went with the baseless suggestion that stances to the contrary relied on lack of contemporary familiarity. But that mix of unsubstantiated speculation and unmerited self-confidence is “sadly typical” — as is the subsequent outpouring of hundreds of words on an irrelevant self-promoted tangent that does nothing to advance the discussion topic. If the question were about perception, it would immediately have a definite answer, because without watching a single basketball game, one could and in the U.S. almost certainly would be aware that Kobe is a more celebrated figure than Dirk.
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Re: Better prime: Dirk vs Durant vs Kobe 

Post#40 » by Masigond » Tue Jun 24, 2025 8:11 pm

Special_Puppy wrote:Kobe’s career MVP voteshare is 4.2 to Dirk’s 1.8 which does support the idea that Kobe was viewed as the better player at the time.

In 2001 Iverson was voted MVP over both Shaq and Duncan. Was he a better player than them in this season?

Confusing voters thinking that a player was "more valuable" than another with that they were thinking that the player was "better" than the others is a sign of quite a flawed perception. As it is so often the case with comparing players by their accolades.

All that should matter is: Did one player really make his teams win more than another? There are some ways to determine that, but in the end it's team sports and no player can make his team win on his own. At the bottom line Dirk's Mavs did win quite a lot of games. Did he have good teams around him? Of course. Did he have the same kind of help Kobe had when the Lakers were winning championships (which cemented Kobe's reputation of being a winner)? And thus how do they compare in terms of contributing to their teams' respective successes? That's debatable and needing quite a more profound analysis than just counting MVP voting shares.

LakerLegend wrote:Dirk was a joke of an offensive rebounder for a player his size.

You don't seem to understand the concept of players taking on roles for the benefit of their team. Do you think that the Mavs would have been better with Dirk playing closer to the basket (thus bringing him into a position to get more offensive rebounds) instead of using his gravity, stretching the floor and opening space for his teammates? How the heck do you think players like Terry thrived at his side?

Dirk had playoffs series averaging 2.6 offensive rebounds per game like in 2003-04 or even 4.2 ORPG like in 2006-07 when the Mavs actually played him at center for long stretches of the games (for what effect? Early exits...). The argument that Dirk was a weak rebounder is simply wrong. He wasn't elite compared to some ATGs and some of his contemporary rivals. He himself said that he wasn't a "great rebounder", but overall he was far from being a joke of a rebounder on both sides of the floor. Rebounding was not one of his weaknesses.

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