So as good as Duncan was, which at minimum a top 10 player, why hasn't he won a dpoy award?
Cheers guya

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ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
UcanUwill wrote:I think he deserved DPOY many years, but thats not saying he was robbed.
I remember backlash over Cambys DPOY, but I am not expert on how great or not great Camby was, I was not a religious NBA follower back then. But over the decades, rim protection was either worshiped or dismissed completely, so I am not sure if Camby complains were legitimate. Maybe he was that good?
UcanUwill wrote:Also. TIm Duncan is a center. he was a center, I am convinced people only think of him as PF cause NBA.com and video games listed him as PF.
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
Texas Chuck wrote:He was a PF then transformed into a center. And what's super funny is that we never make this argument about Dirk yet Dallas employed lower level centers prior to Tyson Chandler and so Dirk was closing games for years as a center but nobody ever tries to insist he was a center. Because there is no agenda like there always is with Tim.
Texas Chuck wrote:UcanUwill wrote:Also. TIm Duncan is a center. he was a center, I am convinced people only think of him as PF cause NBA.com and video games listed him as PF.
I mean he played next to David Robinson (and Will Perdue, so at times he was playing SF(like for real playing SF). Then Rasho.(and Nazr). So we have to get all the way to the 06-07 season to make any kind of case that Duncan was the center as opposed to Elson/Oberto, but when you look at Elson, well he's only a center so the case there is still pretty weak.
Now from 07-08 on I think most would agree Duncan was mostly a center. But a big chunk of his career, it makes way more sense to label him the PF than the bigs he was playing with.
But whats even stranger than people attempting to re-write history and say Duncan was always a center, is how much effort they put into making this a narrative still. Like why does it matter? I know there is a huge KG contingent on this board pretty desperate to have him be named the GOAT PF, so I know they run with this agenda (so glad my fellow Dirk homies don't engage in this nonsense and accept Duncan is the GOAT and that's okay it doesn'd diminish Dirk(or KG) in any way to acknowledge Timmy was just better.
He was a PF then transformed into a center. And what's super funny is that we never make this argument about Dirk yet Dallas employed lower level centers prior to Tyson Chandler and so Dirk was closing games for years as a center but nobody ever tries to insist he was a center. Because there is no agenda like there always is with Tim.
He played both. A lot. He was absolutely a legit PF for years.
dhsilv2 wrote:They called it from day one, twin towers because they ran two centers. I'll never get why this is hard to understand. It's like the Suns with KJ and Kidd...and Nash too. They ran 2 point guards. I get we like to put people into nice boxes but that's just not how the Spurs actually played. Duncan was the post up scorer and he did it like a center. But he also could step out and take guys off the dribble...like Hakeem or Ewing. We can call that a power forward spot but a lot of centers liked that area.
Robinson even at his best often wanted to play more in the 4 zone than the 5.
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
Bloodbather wrote:07 is the obvious pick. Absolute travesty that he didn't win, for me the biggest award robbery ever. Spurs had the #1 rated defense and he was obviously the anchor.
In other seasons there's always a legit candidate against him. Big Ben, Mutombo, etc. But not 07. Camby had a gaudy BPG and helped the Nuggets to a middling defense instead of a bad one.
IIRC, voters actually gave Bruce Bowen more votes than Duncan. I think there was a general lack of understanding among voters regarding defense back then, BPG and SPG and perimeter defense were overvalued.
Bloodbather wrote:IIRC, voters actually gave Bruce Bowen more votes than Duncan. I think there was a general lack of understanding among voters regarding defense back then, BPG and SPG and perimeter defense were overvalued.
bonita_the_frog wrote:Bloodbather wrote:IIRC, voters actually gave Bruce Bowen more votes than Duncan. I think there was a general lack of understanding among voters regarding defense back then, BPG and SPG and perimeter defense were overvalued.
Bruce Bowen only averaged 0.8 steals and 0.4 blocks in his career, and even during 2001-2008 he only averaged 0.9 steals and 0.4 blocks.
Texas Chuck wrote:UcanUwill wrote:Also. TIm Duncan is a center. he was a center, I am convinced people only think of him as PF cause NBA.com and video games listed him as PF.
I mean he played next to David Robinson (and Will Perdue, so at times he was playing SF(like for real playing SF). Then Rasho.(and Nazr). So we have to get all the way to the 06-07 season to make any kind of case that Duncan was the center as opposed to Elson/Oberto, but when you look at Elson, well he's only a center so the case there is still pretty weak.
Now from 07-08 on I think most would agree Duncan was mostly a center. But a big chunk of his career, it makes way more sense to label him the PF than the bigs he was playing with.
But whats even stranger than people attempting to re-write history and say Duncan was always a center, is how much effort they put into making this a narrative still. Like why does it matter? I know there is a huge KG contingent on this board pretty desperate to have him be named the GOAT PF, so I know they run with this agenda (so glad my fellow Dirk homies don't engage in this nonsense and accept Duncan is the GOAT and that's okay it doesn'd diminish Dirk(or KG) in any way to acknowledge Timmy was just better.
He was a PF then transformed into a center. And what's super funny is that we never make this argument about Dirk yet Dallas employed lower level centers prior to Tyson Chandler and so Dirk was closing games for years as a center but nobody ever tries to insist he was a center. Because there is no agenda like there always is with Tim.
He played both. A lot. He was absolutely a legit PF for years.
Texas Chuck wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:They called it from day one, twin towers because they ran two centers. I'll never get why this is hard to understand. It's like the Suns with KJ and Kidd...and Nash too. They ran 2 point guards. I get we like to put people into nice boxes but that's just not how the Spurs actually played. Duncan was the post up scorer and he did it like a center. But he also could step out and take guys off the dribble...like Hakeem or Ewing. We can call that a power forward spot but a lot of centers liked that area.
Robinson even at his best often wanted to play more in the 4 zone than the 5.
I'm cool with anyone who wants to say the Spurs played two centers. Because it really shouldn't matter his label, but if we are going to go with the traditional labels we were still using for the bulk of Duncan's career, he would be the PF the first half of his career.
tsherkin wrote:bonita_the_frog wrote:Bloodbather wrote:IIRC, voters actually gave Bruce Bowen more votes than Duncan. I think there was a general lack of understanding among voters regarding defense back then, BPG and SPG and perimeter defense were overvalued.
Bruce Bowen only averaged 0.8 steals and 0.4 blocks in his career, and even during 2001-2008 he only averaged 0.9 steals and 0.4 blocks.
And he got 22 first-place votes and 206 total points (Duncan had 15 and 158) because the voters were eating too much wall candy that year, for sure. With him, it was all about rep on perimeter stars, though where that rep was over his first half-decade or so in the league, I couldn't tell you. It was only when he had Duncan behind him, cleaning up his mistakes, that his utility really shot through the roof.