FrodoBaggins wrote: Beautiful breakdown. I was waiting for your input, seeing as how you've tracked a lot of these post-up greats.
IIRC, Dipper's tracking had 93-95 Hakeem's post-up scoring at 1.12 ppp on 16.5-17.0 poss/g & 69-80 Kareem's at 1.09 ppp on similar volume. 98, 00, 01 playoff Shaq at 0.98 ppp on 17.6 poss/g. 64-72 Wilt's was 1.18 ppp. Incredibly small samples for Chamberlain and Abdul-Jabbar. 88-96 Barkley was 1.64 ppp on like 4.5 poss/g. Absolutely insane efficiency on lower volume. 90-93 MJ around 1.2 ppp on similar volume, I think.
Based on Dipper's numbers, I'd say Kareem's is the most impressive. 1.09 ppp in arguably the most defensive era in NBA history, with no Illegal Defense Guidelines or three-point line. A simple comparison of league average ORtg ÷ (post-up ppp x 100) x poss/g would show this.
That being said, Synergy-style post-up play-type stats can't account for post positioning and how it segues into other play types, like rolls, cuts, lobs, and putbacks. Even z-bounds/rebounding one's own missed FGAs. Shaq and, to a lesser extent, Dwight are the best examples of this. Edey at Purdue, too. I guess this is the off-ball component of post play.
I do have numbers for z-bounds (not for post-ups only, but overall), so I will try to get some data from my harddrive later.
Dipper data is similar to mine for Hakeem and Shaq. I think Kareem looks a bit better in my sample, which is much larger than his. Wilt's completely different because Dipper relied mostly on 1970s games that were available back then, now I added quite a lot of footage from his prime era.