lessthanjake wrote:eminence wrote:Peregrine01 wrote:I suspect Thinking Basketball is going to have LeBron on multiple times in the top 25 peaks project. Otherwise, it's hard to make a case that there's been 19 other players with better peaks than Harden.
It's absolutely 1 per player.
25. Kidd
24. Tatum
23. Green
22. Howard
21. Manu
20. Harden
Shaq, Duncan, KG, McGrady, Nash, Dirk, Kobe, LeBron, Wade, Chris Paul, Durant, Curry, Kawhi, Davis, Giannis, Jokic, Embiid, Luka, SGA the remaining 19 (not mentioned in the HMs and guys who absolutely would've been).
I do think Harden was very low, though not quite past what I'd call his 'I'll stop taking you seriously if you have a guy outside of this range' #.
McGrady/Davis/Embiid over Harden notably weak arguments imo.
Yeah, I think there’s probably roughly 5 or 6 guys that you list there that I’d have Harden above in terms of peaks (at least McGrady, Durant, Davis, and Luka, with a few others I’m on the fence about). So it’s a bit low on Harden IMO, but it’s not completely crazy, since I don’t really think there’s anyone there where it’s completely crazy to have them above Harden.
One thing to note on Harden that can get lost in the gut response to seeing the actual ranking ("How dare he rank Harden so low!?!??" says the Rockets fan) is the uncertainty range.
Thinking Basketball said at the beginning of the Harden discussion that their mean interpretation of their value had them in a "group of players" above Manu, with "a little bit of a jump" going from Manu to Harden. So even if they're ranked next to each other, and even if their most-favorable possible evaluation of Manu puts him ahead of Harden, his normal evaluation of Harden does have a gap between #21 Manu and #20 Harden. They don't say exactly how high they could get on Harden, but they do say a high-range evaluation would get him into the Top 15s range (so maybe 15th–12th or something like that?), and that a regular-season only list could have them 10 spots higher (Top 10, although it's unclear if this is the mean evaluation or high-end evaluation).
In terms of pros, they mention
-being possible top 10 offensive player all time (particularly in regular season and early playoffs), with the combined pressure of the scoring and playmaking
-being a great passer, particularly in the left hand, in pick and roll
-being one of the great foul drawers ever
-being one of the great three point shooters ever, and being potentially underrated at that aspect
-great use of tempo and craft and change of pace
-on defense, underrated post strength and hands... when he tries and is attentive on defense
They do spend some time discussing the pros, but I'll spend less time on summarizing them here, since I suspect people here are well aware of Harden's pros.
In terms of things they mention that make them lower than most, just to clarify the concerns, they mention...
-Playoff decline.
In a study of box stats (e.g. scoring volume, efficiency, assists, turnovers), Harden has perhaps largest drop-off going from games 1–3 in a playoff series to 4–7 of any player in the top ~25. They mention some of this is noise and tiny sample size, but it also reflects what they see on film, which is an ability to be schemed against more than the other top 20 peaks.
For instance, on film they see: a reliance on foul baiting being more easily schemed against as you go later in the playoffs, as opposing defenders get practice against it; refs tighten their whistles in the playoffs, which limits the value of seeking free throws; a reliance on isolation mismatch hunting becomes harder as defense quality improves later in the playoffs; Harden having a lower motor may make it harder for him to sustain his all-time offensive impact against harder defenses without a drop-off somewhere (on offense or defense); an increase in turnovers as more predictable style of offenses play multiple games against better defenses.
They say he does have great playoffs (e.g. 2018). But they also call out specific late series moments where he underperformed (2017 against kawhi-less Spurs; 2019 against Durant-less Warriors). So combining a late-series decline in box stats, a decline in the effectiveness of certain skills in their film analysis, and an underperformance that fits the perceived on-film decline in specific memorable moments, they think there is something real to the playoff decline.
-D'Antoni effect.
They mention that D'Antoni is a great coach, perhaps the best coach Harden could get to maximize the effectiveness of that Harden-ball style, and a coach who was a little ahead of his time in terms of three point volume and spacing and pace, and other strategic innovations like that. They say that LeBron would definitely be better playing the heliocentric style under D'Antoni, and that peak Steve Nash (at least offensively) and peak Chris Paul might be better in the system too.... whereas they wonder if Harden's reputation and box impact would decline in other systems under worse coaches.
-Concerning Defense
They point out despite his strengths on defense, he has a variety of concerning plays too, where his angles and positioning is off, where he lacks awareness to back cuts or players off ball, where he lacks effort to defend his man in isolation. For example, after a series of good defensive plays in 2019 Warriors vs Rockets game 5 (the key game where Durant went down), he had a defensive play where old Iguodala blows by him like he's not even there, while he's looking off in the distance at the stands... and that there were a number of head-scratching plays that lacked defensive effort/awareness as the game went on. They hypothesize this may relate to Harden's limited motor (as it takes a lot of energy, both physically and mentally, to play heliocentric ball).
They also call out plays where Harden fails to get back on defense, after complaining to refs about a non-call, which leads to opponent 5-on-4 transition opportunities. And they mention the team-building difficulties of having a player who's a poor defense... with only ~2/3 other players in the series having an argument for being worse defenders than Harden.
-Limited plus-minus impact of most stars in the heliocentric style.
They've said before that at least some of the most heliocentric stars lack as large of a plus minus impact signal as you'd expect compared to the incredible box signal, when playing the heliocentric style. For Harden, they've said before that his plus minus peak in the playoffs appears to come in his earlier years before he becomes so heliocentric (noting playoff plus minus is noisy).
In this podcast, they note his regular season ON/Off in peak 5-year stretches is roughly ~ +6.0 and his regular season ON peak is also ~ +6.0 from 2014–2018... which is pretty good! Definitely all-star/all-nba worthy. But definitely a drop from what you'd expect based on his box impact, which would suggest he's competing for best in world. (as above, notice this spans some of his non-heliocentric years rather than what they consider his true peak to be in 2018–2020... although they point out Chris Paul was playing backup for Harden in some of the 18/19 lineups may have damped some of his impact, and that he's more impactful if we look at the non-Paul lineups)
Speaking of Paul, when the Rockets had Chris Paul, they note Rockets had a better ON rating with Chris Paul Only > Harden + Paul > Harden only > neither. In particular, the defense drops off with Harden only. Now (healthy) Chris Paul is one of the great guards ever, so it's no shame for Harden. But looking worse in Harden + Paul minutes than Paul-only minutes is not particularly complementary to Harden's heliocentric plus-minus impact. And also indicates Harden may have negative scalability when playing alongside other offensive stars
...
Up to you how convincing these arguments are. I know f4p, for instance, has argued the perceived playoff decline is overrated (and that Harden actually is a great playoff performer if one looks at long enough samples of p.lus minus data... although peak vs prime comes into question as we look at longer samples). But those are the concerns they mentioned for why Harden's not like the ~10th best peak of the century. Personally, I definitely do have him higher than 20th, though I haven't counted exactly where. I do think D'Antoni was a great fit for Harden, but I have less concerns about lowering him because he was in a good scenario -- plenty of great players happened to be in a good scenario. But I do share some of the same concerns about playoff resilience, scalability, defense, and impact in a heliocentric role.