One_and_Done wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:One_and_Done wrote:It seems like a weird term to use for a guy almost nobody thought was the best player in the league at that time, and has been retrospectively elevated by some due to advanced stats that are often wrong (and yes, I'm including plus minus, regardless of whether you want to call it advanced or not).
I just have to interject here with the historiography:
The consensus was literally that Garnett was the best player in the world during the '03-04 season and that's why he won the MVP in a blow out. That's not to say he'd ended the debate with Duncan generally, but rather that it was very much a Duncan vs Garnett debate.
It was the last years in Minnesota that re-classified Garnett as something a tier below Duncan, and why was that? Not because of a direct re-evaluation of Garnett based on his play, but based on the fact that his team wasn't good and everybody "knew" that that meant he couldn't be as good as Duncan whose teams were always good.
Regardless of whether that re-classification is something you judge to be right or wrong, that's literally what happened. Garnett went from a guy that people really weren't skeptical of to a guy that people were skeptical of from the span of '04 to '07, rather than an actual criticism of his play in '02-03 or '03-04.
To be clear, that doesn't mean people thought Garnett was as good as prime Shaq, because prime Shaq was considered in a tier separate from Duncan & Garnett, but just in terms of Garnett & Duncan, it really wasn't until '05-06 and especially '06-07 that they became perceived as being in different tiers with Garnett relegated to a tier below where Duncan by then was perceived.
And also to be clear: I was right there with everyone else in that time frame for the most part with the main exception being that I made clear that I had uncertainty about Garnett's placement because I wasn't sure how much of Minny falling off a superstar should have been able to prevent. When he got moved to Boston, I absolutely did not predict the success he would have there, but I did acknowledge that if he had major success that might re-frame my assessment of his Minnesota years... and of course that's eventually what happened.
No, KG won the MVP in 2004 because:
1) voter fatigue, after 2 consecutive MVP wins by Duncan
2) Duncan playing only 69 games that year, and working his way back from a foot injury, and
3) narrative reasons, e.g. “KG is due an MVP” and “Wolves finished higher”
I don’t even think casual fans thought KG was better than Shaq at this point, and many discerning fans still had him below Duncan.
The Spurs were 51-18 in games Duncan played, and only 6-7 in games he didn’t. If Duncan plays a full season like he did the previous 2 years, the Spurs win more games and he gets 3 straight MVPs.
I’m sure KG had many fans, I know he did because I followed the commentary at the time, but he was not the consensus best player in the world in 2004. No more than Dirk was when Dirk won an MVP in 2007. Voters said “well, nobody else has a bullet proof case, and the Mavs had a great record, and Dirk is kind of due, let’s give it to him”.
In short, I don’t agree with the narrative you have presented. Maybe for you that was the narrative, but it certainly wasn’t mine at the time, or many others. To describe it as “the consensus” strikes me as wrong. People did not expect the Wolves to win the title, the thought (correctly) that the Lakers were going to roll them. A big reason for that was KGs limitations. You can’t run the post-centric offense through him, and he can’t guard Shaq 1v1 like Duncan can, or act as the team’s defensive anchor. Not that he didn’t “anchor” the Wolves (and Celtics) D, he absolutely did, but he did it through his versatility, etc, and not rim protection which is more valuable.
While I appreciate you putting other reasons below, the fact you began with voter fatigue is just so problematic to start it speaks to taking shortcuts in process.
The term "voter fatigue" came into vogue to describe years in which voters still felt like the prior MVP had a strong case, but just enough of them went with someone new to swing the tally to the new guy.
So with Malone topping Jordan in 1997 or Embiid topping Jokic in 2023, Jordan & Jokic still got first place votes.
But Duncan in 2004 got no first place votes at all, and when you look at b-r's voting table and see Garnett & Duncan's stats, you see Garnett led Duncan in PPG, RPG, APG & SPG while not being far behind in BPG. He led by all the all-in-one metrics, and yeah, he led the better team.
Did we back then note that Duncan missed some time and wasn't quite at his best that season? Sure, as I said, the Garnett vs Duncan debate continued.
Did people generally feel like Duncan would have won the MVP if not for voter fatigue? Absolutely not, and when you assert otherwise, I have to question your memory.
Re: 2007 Dirk "voters said". This is a season where it is more appropriate to argue that voter fatigue was a factor, and you can tell because the guy who won the prior two MVPs got 44 first place votes rather than the zero that Duncan got in 2004. As noted, the rule is that people only consider it "voter fatigue" when there are voters going in the other direction, because it's largely the people who lobbied for the "fatigued" candidate who make the allegation.
I will say, as a general pro-Nash guy, I didn't see the 2007 vote as being actually determined by fatigue. I think Dirk wins that MVP regardless of who won the prior MVPs, and if I were to point to a single factor it would be the team record. Now, it's certainly a thing for people to question whether a player was winning the MVP simply because his team had the best record, and thus there is a path generally to say that the MVP wasn't seen as the best player of that season, but when a player has overwhelming box score advantage - as Garnett did over Duncan in '03-04 - this isn't a thing that people say.
The pro-Duncan side in 2004 wasn't about arguing that he should win MVP because he played better, or played better per game - else he'd certainly have gotten actual 1st place MVP votes - but that when he was 100% healthy and available he was the better player.
Last "people didn't expect Wolves to win the title, they thought the Lakers would". Well of course that's what they thought. The Lakers were expected to win in '02-03 as well and the general feeling was that the only reason anyone could beat the Lakers was because Shaq let himself get obese.
Such was the perceived unbeatability of the Shaq-Kobe Lakers that even after they got utterly annihilated by a Pistons' defense, people still thought that the Lakers should have won if they were healthy and playing their best. The fact that the Piston D had essentially rendered the Laker offense built around Shaq in the post obsolete wasn't understood by fans then... though to be fair, it's probably not well understood by them now either.