cupcakesnake wrote:Peregrine01 wrote:falcolombardi wrote:
The idea of shaq always has been a bit better than the reality of shaq and there was some lazyness imo involved (it was easy to just say he was "most dominant ever" without actually comparing him to peers in deptg)
I must admit, when I was watching Shaq during my teen years and just watch him catch deep and dunk the ball again and again my first and deepest impression was: "this isn't fair". The visual of that was so strong that it overwhelmed a lot of his shortcomings on the court - namely his statuesque defense and inability to really do anything outside of 10 feet from the basket.
Defenses then look primitive to what they look like now and didn't really obstruct him much from operating within that 10 ft radius. I'll always remember the 2001 Finals when Shaq would obliterate Mutombo under the basket and dunk on him again and again. Yet Mutombo would still run down the court dutifully positioning himself behind Shaq and let him get sealed all over again. The Sixers were coached by Larry Brown no less and still had probably the worst strategy possible against Shaq.
There is just no way the defenses of today would let that happen. Instead, they'd put a beefier center like Ratliff on Shaq, having Mutombo roam on the weak side, and have a phalanx of wings denying the post entry. When Shaq had to face a much more active team defense like he did against the Blazers in 2000 or the late 90s Jazz, he had a lot more trouble implementing the "catch and dunk" strategy.
To be fair to Larry Brown, he coached the 2004 Pistons to a much more optimal Shaq strategy (against an admittedly lesser version of Shaq), but those Pistons had an insane personnel compared to those Sixers.
Ratiliff was injured and traded, but also wasn't bulkier than Dikembe. He was listed at 235lbs and was drafted 10 pounds lighter than that. Dikembe was listed at 260lbs. that year. There's no real track record of bulky centers having success against Shaq, but it was something teams constantly tried. Todd McCullough played real minutes againt Shaq in 2 different finals for 2 different teams.
I agree with everything you're saying about more active defenses, but Shaq was uniquely good at sealing guys. Lakers did all kinds of things to make Shaq a less stationary target so defenses couldn't load up on him. Shaq was unusually good at sneaking and powering into seals under the rim, where he's then a huge target to pass to, and he had elite catching mits.
Even though today's defenses are way better at making post-ups less efficient, Shaq has advantages that no one else ever has. He'd be used in pick & roll way more today, but I think those Shaq ducks in work in any era (after the 1970s or whenever they started allowing more contact from the offensive player).
And teams did do a lot to stop him in his peak. But it wasn’t strategic as much as it was instinctive. Similar to Curry’s gravity but more extreme.
Bigs wouldn’t help off Shaq on drives because, unlike Giannis, LeBron, or anyone you can think of, ever, Shaq was truly automatic on put-backs and as a lob threat.
Nobody could move him out of position on these, no one could explode with him. And no one could today.
On top of that they’d be in foul trouble half the time and couldn’t afford to rotate with conviction.
It’s kind of easy to ignore but Shaq put up incredible numbers in postseasons while actually getting the most attention in NBA history. There’s not much more defenses could’ve done on a possession to possession level than they naturally did. Double and triple teams off ball. On ball. Playing 4 on 4 & 4 on 3 just to know where he is. Maxing out fouls.
Like you said, now a coach would just move him and around in the screen game more creatively and he’d still get his duck in and seals out of that.
Shaq’s playoff offenses are peak Magic and Nash level and nothing lower.
He probably led the greatest playoff team performance in league history in 2001, that to this day, I still don’t fully understand how or why they played at that level. But he was the biggest reason for it. I think Shaq’s playoff dominance once he paired with Phil gets easy to overlook.
It wasn’t normal. But overall his entire prime from 94-03, he was enabling extremely high level offense in a way Giannis never has or could on talented teams. The level of gravity and pressure on defenses is completely different. His play style is also much much more natural and team-friendly.
Swinging for the fences.