SA37 wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:SA37 wrote:
No, it shows 1) he just hasn't consistently been near the top and 2) that when he was it was almost a decade ago![]()
Off the top of my head, I'd tell you that in the last ~decade, the top assist guys have largely been Trae Young, Luka Doncic, Jokic, Westbrook, C Paul, LeBron, Rondo, Rubio, Haliburton, Harden, Lillard, John Wall....etc guys like that.
Even if I'd kept it to big men, I'd have said the top 5 have been Jokic, Sabonis, Ben Simmons, Giannis, and maybe Lamar Odom?
In any case, Green's rough average is ~15th in assists and ~30th in rebounds.
Let's see steals now:
14-15: 21st
15'-16': 27th
16'-17': 1st
17'-18': 28th
18'-19': 21st
19'-20': 17th
20-21: 4th
21-22: 19th
22-23: 56th
23-24: 49th
24-25: 16th
So again, 2 years in the top-5, 5 years in the top-20; So again, not even half the years (11 years total) has he been in the top-20. Rough average there of ~25th in steals.
Should we be expecting a guy who's 35 to still be at the top? Obviously this discussion is about his career as a whole and his best years. Jordan was terrible when he was on the Wizards. Doesn't mean we change how we talk about him either.
Edit
Remember you're the guy who's called Klay a star, who's finished 10th once in PPG and in no other major category.
I literally have omitted Green's 1st 2 years and looked at his career from age 24-36 or so. My point this entire time has been that Green has WAY MORE years as an undecorated role player than the 3-year peak you center on. 3 years is not a career. 3 years is an aberration when we're talking a 13-year career that will likely be 15-16 years once he actually retires. And we've seen stars be very good at Green's age, like Steph, Durant, LeBron, Chris Paul, Westbrook...etc.
As for Thompson, there are levels to stars. And as I explained in excruciating detail, he's Dan Majerle or Peja if he never plays for the Warriors. Part of the reason Thompson is held in such high consideration is because of his team success. Yes, he'd still be one of the greatest shooters of all time and he'd have a been a good (not great) scorer in the NBA regardless of where he played. But you'd basically have Zach Lavine with better defense. And we already know what you think of Lavine.
We can't say the same thing for Green necessarily. His output has been pretty uneventful over the majority of his career. Even at his 3-year peak, his numbers are pedestrian relative to stars (these are rough estimates): 12ppg 7apg 8 rpg 1.7 steals 1.4 bpg 44 fg% 33 3pt%.
As a point of comparison, I'll use Bam Adebayo and JJJ, who I consider tier 3 stars.
If we take Bam's last 6 years (his peak so far), we'd roughly get: 19ppg 9rpg 4apg .8 bpg 1.2 spg 53 fg% (he only just started shooting a relevant number of 3s last year, so this stat is useless for now).
If we take Jackson's last 4 seasons, we'd roughly get: 19ppg 6rpg 1.5apg 2bpg 1spg 45 fg% 33 3pt %
So you have a very comparable defenders to Green, but you get so much more production on the offensive end. And accordingly, both Adebayo and Jackson have gotten big-time star money
Klay fits the definition, you've set out, for a role player. He cannot create for himself like Thunder Dan or Peja. Peja for crying out loud peaked as an MVP candidate. Klay is a 3 and D guy. His high scoring was the result of playing with two actual stars in Draymond and Curry.
You keep wanting to go back to these per game stats but lets focus on aggregate stats so we don't have type so much.
Lets use 2015-2019 since that's their 5 year finals run.
BPM 3.7 vs 1.2
VORP 17.6 vs 10.6
PER 16.4 vs 17.9
WS/48 .151 vs 0.127
WS 38.2 vs 34.1
Playoffs - when the games get more important
BPM 5.0 vs 0.9
VORP 6.9 vs 2.8
PER 17.1 vs 14.8
WS/48 0.157 vs 0.100
WS 12.8 vs 7.9
So if you want to make an argument about their box score metrics, during their prime. There is no actual argument between the better box score guy. It's Dray and it's not close.
If you really break down Klay's stats, he really only had 1 really strong year despite being 3rd team ALL NBA twice. It was 2015 and you can argue that would at best, just talking box score, but Dray's 4th best season. Beyond 2015 there's really not even a good argument for Klay to be an allstar, beyond being on the warriors. Dray's stats by contrast are while not conventional with higher PPG, very much are in alignment with the kinds of BPM's and WS/48's we'd expect to see from an allstar.
What's far more telling of who's a star and who's not here. Dray's stats all go up in the playoffs while Klays all drop off in the playoffs.
For scale a 5.0 BPM which draymond had over 104 playoff games (which is a massive sample) is just below what Tatum did this season and significantly better than ANT this year.
So again, if you want to argue about box score stats. Dray had better box score stats over the warrior's 5 year run than Klay and it was significant. He then upped them significantly more in the playoffs while Klay's stats fell.
I'm not even going to bother with impact stats since they only make this gap more laughable.
You can't keep setting up criteria like "top 5 or 10 in categories" and then when it's pointed out guys you've called stars and better then dray, don't meet those criteria and blow it off.
And I know you don't think defense is part of basketball, but lets just keep in mind only 13 players ever have 9 or more all defensive team selections. The only two not in the hall are Dray and CP3 who will both be in there on the first ballot. So while you can try and argue that Dray was only a star 4 of his however many years. Keep in mind despite obviously coasting during the seasons during his 6 NBA finals runs, he was still good enough to make 9 defensive teams with the voters that you love to bring up.