Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots

Moderators: Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal

70sFan
RealGM
Posts: 30,011
And1: 25,333
Joined: Aug 11, 2015
 

Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#1 » by 70sFan » Tue Sep 9, 2025 11:25 pm

Welcome to the new iteration of the greatest peaks project with the new format! This time, we will rank the greatest 25 peaks of the last 25 seasons:

2000/01 - 2024/25.

Just to remind the rules:

1. Official ballots must include 4 different player seasons (name + year) with the (at least short) explanation for each of them. We will conclude the 2 best peaks in this thread based on the results of the voting, using Kemeny method.

2. The thread will be open for 7 days (up to August 31st), unless the longer period will be necessary. I am open to make it longer, but we have to make it through all the threads and all the eras.

3. The participation criteria are the following:

1. Account creation before August 2024.
2. At least 100 posts on RealGM forums.


Of course I recommend everyone who doesn't meet the criteria to contribute on these threads without voting, that would help us adding you in the later stages of the project.

Remember to pick the year for your choices and please, provide all the seasons worth the place IN ORDER - that would help us to conclude the year for a winning player.

The criteria are up to you, but you need to briefly explain it for the rest of the voting panel. It is good to take into account the data from surrounding seasons to evaluate players, but remember to pick a specific season.

Here is the voting panel:

Spoiler:
Djoker wrote:.

iggymcfrack wrote:.

Cavsfansince84 wrote:.

DraymondGold wrote:.

Doctor MJ wrote:.

ZeppelinPage wrote:.

One_and_Done wrote:.

tsherkin wrote:.

LA Bird wrote:.

Sign5 wrote:.

trelos6 wrote:.

lessthanjake wrote:.

Joao Saraiva wrote:.

f4p wrote:.

rk2023 wrote:.

homecourtloss wrote:.

Clyde Frazier wrote:.

babyjax13 wrote:.

TheGOATRises007 wrote:.

Jaivl wrote:.

TrueLAfan wrote:.


If anyone wants to join in, please let me know.

The list:


#1. 2008/09 LeBron James
#2. 2002/03 Tim Duncan

#3. 2022/23 Nikola Jokic
#4. 2016/17 Stephen Curry
User avatar
babyjax13
RealGM
Posts: 35,142
And1: 17,647
Joined: Jul 02, 2006
Location: Fresno, eating Birria
     

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#2 » by babyjax13 » Tue Sep 9, 2025 11:28 pm

I think we have the correct top 4. I have them in a slightly different order, but it has been so interesting seeing why people place players they way they do!
Image

JazzMatt13 wrote:just because I think aliens probably have to do with JFK, doesn't mean my theory that Jazz will never get Wiggins, isn't true.

JColl
lessthanjake
Analyst
Posts: 3,204
And1: 2,923
Joined: Apr 13, 2013

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#3 » by lessthanjake » Tue Sep 9, 2025 11:33 pm

I’m pretty set on three of my four votes this time being 2001 Shaq, 2006 Wade, and 2004 Garnett (in that order). The last spot is pretty up in the air. I’m inclined to give it to one of 2009 Kobe, 2011 Dirk, 2019 Kawhi, 2021 Giannis, or 2025 SGA. I would be really interested to see what other people have to say on those years, since I really don’t have a strong lean in any particular direction there.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,235
And1: 5,608
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#4 » by One_and_Done » Tue Sep 9, 2025 11:39 pm

For me, this exercise is all about assessing a players impact. How we do that is a trickier exercise, but you should be able to see indicators that strongly validate the claimed impact of a player, which survives logical scrutiny.

In the case of Jokic who just got in, it’s not that I think we shouldn’t have been discussing him soon, but for me it was just too early for him. We all know that various numbers say Jokic is amazing, and to a degree I agree he is, but in my mind there are indicators which strongly suggest his peak impact is a little overrated.

Looking at Jokic’s last 3 years, which people will use when citing his “peak” performance, we see his teams only won 53, 57, and 50 games, with middling SRS, and were bumped in the 2nd round twice (once by a team that was really nothing special). That should give us pause. Jokic’s advocates will say that it’s not his fault, and if you look at RAPMVORPCOPTER he was a god. In short, I don’t agree. I think Jokic has had plenty of help around him to achieve more. That may sound harsh, and if we were comparing him to the likes of Kobe or Karl Malone then it would indeed be a harsh assessment. But Jokic is being compared to the best of the best, guys like Duncan and Lebron who did indeed carry worse teams to better results. Of course, those 2 are in now, but I think plenty of remaining names show more capability to lift their teams than Jokic.

Yes, Shaq often had good teams around him, but then let’s look at the times that wasn’t so. The Lakers with Shaq and without Kobe from 00-04, and they play like a 60+ win team with Shaq and no Kobe (31-11), but are a sub-500 team with Kobe and without Shaq. Those Kobe-less support casts from 00-04 were far worse than anything Jokic played with. But then you look further. Shaq was always the best player on his team until 06, and you can see lots of samples that show his substantial lift. For instance, the 96 Magic were 40-14 with Shaq, and only 20-8 without him. The 97 Lakers were 38-13 with Shaq, but only 18-13 without him. The 98 Lakers were 46-14 with him, but only 15-7 without him. I could go on. Shaq in 2005 was the last legitimate year of full-time prime Shaq, and the Heat won 59 that year. The next year with Shaq’s drop off they fell to 52 wins, then 44, then 15, then 43. Obviously Wade was hurt in the 15 win season, but the clear drop off was largely due on the absence of a prime Shaq. The Magic dropped from 60 wins to 45 after he left. Even rookie Shaq saw his team improve 20 wins, and that was far from peak Shaq.

Shaq’s huge lift was there, and in the playoffs he was just as devastating. I look at Jokic’s team, and I find it hard to buy that his impact is as big as his numbers suggest when he has such good players around him. Jamal Murray has had his ups and downs, but when healthy he’s an all-star calibre guard. When Jokic did go all the way, Murray was healthy and looked unbelievably good. A.Gordon is a borderline all-star. Michael Porter is gone now, but he got a max for a reason. The dude is a good player, and we’ll probably be reminded of that now that he’s more of a focal point player for the Nets. There was usually a good 3&D guy to round out the starting 5 too, and sometimes a few good bench players. A player with one of the best peaks ever needs to be doing more with a team like that.

From a logical point of view, I have always been concerned about Jokic’s defensive issues, especially in the pick and roll, and it’s not a surprise that the one year he won a title he got a slate of opponents who couldn’t attack him there (no Boston, no OKC, no Dallas, not even a Memphis). Jokic got a run of West teams who the Nuggets matched up favourably with, and then in the finals the Heat ran out of gas (and had injuries) and were also a favourable match up. There was no pick and roll, 5 out spacing to kill Jokic. On the other hand, the Heat matched up exceedingly well with Boston, and edged them out. The day of the deciding game in the ECFs, the oddsmakers (quite rightly) had Boston as the title favourite over both Denver and Miami, because they knew if Boston got through they’d roll them. By Pelton’s statistical analysis the Nuggets were the 2nd weakest champs between 2000 and 2023, behind the Heat. Like Pelton, I think that’s a little unfair, and doesn’t account for a lot of factors, but like with the Heat I felt confident they weren’t repeating. In fact I posted vociferously at the time that the Nuggets were a good chance to lose in the 2nd round the next year, which they have done in both the following years.

I am more impressed by what Giannis did in 2021 than I am by Jokic’s best year. The carry-job was more significant. I think Curry’s 2022 title was also a more impressive carry job than any of Jokic’s runs. Curry had comparatively little around him that year. Kawhi is trickier, as his peak is so limited, but I don’t feel like I can punish him for getting a random injury in the 2017 WCFs, not when others are nominating people like 09 Lebron who only made it to the ECFs, or Jokic’s 25 and 24 runs, where he only made the 2nd round, or people who will nominate late 70s Kareem who did even worse. Those guys didn’t even make it to the conference finals to get injured, so how can I punish Kawhi for it? He was healthy enough.

In the case of Kawhi, I think he’s got fewer weaknesses than Jokic, while also having a similar (and more portable) lift. Kawhi just didn’t have much around him in 2017, and I think if he’d stayed healthy the Spurs might have actually won that series. Giannis similarly has fewer weaknesses (despite the lack of 3pt shooting), and like Kawhi kills it on both ends of the floor without warping your whole defence as Jokic does. Curry is only a decent defensive player at best, but he plays the position where defence matters the least, so he hurts you the least and is more portable also. Shaq just peaked higher, and had more impact on the floor, plus was less of a liability on both ends. I expect I’ll get no support for Kawhi, but I don’t care. He was insane in 2017, and basically had an out of body experience those playoffs (even moreso than in 2019).

With Curry getting in last time, my new 4th place vote getter is KG, though I was tempted by KD.

1. Shaq (2001)
2. Kawhi (2017, then 2019)
3. Giannis (2021)
4. KG (2004)

HM: KG, Jokic, Luka, KD, SGA, CP3, Harden, Nash, T-Mac, Wade, and Dirk.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
Top10alltime
Sophomore
Posts: 239
And1: 88
Joined: Jan 04, 2025
 

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#5 » by Top10alltime » Tue Sep 9, 2025 11:51 pm

How did KG not get in at 3? Pretty comfortably ahead of Jokic
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,235
And1: 5,608
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#6 » by One_and_Done » Yesterday 12:49 am

Top10alltime wrote:How did KG not get in at 3? Pretty comfortably ahead of Jokic

Even though I'd put KG over Jokic, it's close. They're similar levels of player, with different strengths and weaknesses. There were 2 guys who were in a class of their own (Lebron, then Duncan), and after that there were like 4 guys with a good case to be next.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
User avatar
eminence
RealGM
Posts: 16,972
And1: 11,816
Joined: Mar 07, 2015

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#7 » by eminence » Yesterday 1:00 am

Voted Shaq over KG last ballot, could see flipping those two, but assuredly my top two picks. Will be looking through a pretty wide list of names for the 3/4 spots this ballot.
I bought a boat.
trelos6
Senior
Posts: 590
And1: 256
Joined: Jun 17, 2022
Location: Sydney

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#8 » by trelos6 » Yesterday 1:08 am

First of all, congrats 70sFan. Always an exciting time.

I have Shaq and KG at the top here, but I've had a few days to think about Giannis at 7. Giannis is an intriguing player. His regular season impact is clear, 60 wins in 2019, followed by what would have been a 63 win season if it weren't cut short, and then several 50 win seasons. The Bucks 2019-21 SRS went 8.04, 9.41, 5.57.

His 4 year RAPM from 2018-2022 has him at a +7.3, and a 3 year RAPM for the years I have selected as his prime, 2019-2021 is a +6.2. He has gotten better offensively in 2025, as he has reduced the % of FGA from 3P significantly. Considering he was at best a 30% 3P shooter, there is no doubt his offensive impact has gone up in 2025. However, I think his defensive impact has suffered. He was once a top 3 defender in the league, and while he still has a strong defensive footprint, it’s not at the same level as say 2020.

There are some strong comparisons between Giannis and D Rob. Often in the playoffs they have failed to perform. In 2019, Giannis struggled offensively vs the Raptors once they walled off the rim and Kawhi turned back the clock on D. In 2020, Jimmy and the Heat showed up and Giannis hurt his ankle in G4. In 2022, the Celtics dominated G6 and G7, and then in the past 2 seasons, the Pacers have embarrassed the Bucks. But what Giannis has is one single playoff run where everything broke right. Kyrie and Harden were hurt, so they just got past the Nets, and the victory over the Hawks wasn’t that inspiring, but what happened next was astounding.

The 2021 finals was Giannis' crowning achievement. Capped off by the spectacular 50 pt 14 reb 5 block, going 17-19 from the FT line game.

Ultimately, I looked seriously at 9 players for the spots 7/8. These being Giannis, SGA, Kawhi, KD, Wade, Kobe, Nash, Dirk, and CP3. Of these, Giannis is by far the best defensively. His scoring is largely lacking in variety, though clearly effective. I had him mid pack for scoring and playmaking. He was one of the better regular season performers. Playoffs are tricky as it really depends on which year you select for each player. Wade 06 v 09, Kobe 06 v 08/09 v 01. Still, I think Giannis is mid pack in the playoffs.

On the other hand, Shai is the leader of the pack in regular season, plus regular season scoring. He has one of the weaker defense and playoffs of the group, but his playmaking was decent, and he is the NBA leader in drives per game since it's been recorded. Giannis and SGA both are elite at getting to the line. In what was a low year for him, Giannis in 2021 was 13.6 FTA/100, though upped it to 15.8 in the PS, while SGA was at 12.4 in 2025. The biggest difference being Giannis converts them at 64-69% while SGA is at 88-90%. Looking at other great peaks, only Shaq comes close with 13.4 FTA/100 in his 2000 campaign, and again, converting them at a paltry 52%.

I may change my mind for the order of the top 2, but as for now I have:

5. Shaquille O'Neal 2001 ('01 > '02 > '04)

6. Kevin Garnett 2004 ('04 > '03 > '08)

7. Giannis Antetokounmpo 2020-21 ('21 > '20 > '19)

8. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander 2024-25 ('25 > '24)
ReggiesKnicks
Veteran
Posts: 2,914
And1: 2,416
Joined: Jan 25, 2025
   

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#9 » by ReggiesKnicks » Yesterday 1:11 am

lessthanjake wrote:I’m pretty set on three of my four votes this time being 2001 Shaq, 2006 Wade, and 2004 Garnett (in that order). The last spot is pretty up in the air. I’m inclined to give it to one of 2009 Kobe, 2011 Dirk, 2019 Kawhi, 2021 Giannis, or 2025 SGA. I would be really interested to see what other people have to say on those years, since I really don’t have a strong lean in any particular direction there.


In 2019, Kawhi was load-managed a lot and joined a 56-win team. I get giving it to him over 2017, even though he was clearly better in 2017, but won in 2019, but frankly, I don't think he was as good as Kobe or Dirk in comparison when looking at 2019.

2017 Kawhi is more impressive than 2019, and they aren't particularly close.
lessthanjake
Analyst
Posts: 3,204
And1: 2,923
Joined: Apr 13, 2013

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#10 » by lessthanjake » Yesterday 2:00 am

ReggiesKnicks wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:I’m pretty set on three of my four votes this time being 2001 Shaq, 2006 Wade, and 2004 Garnett (in that order). The last spot is pretty up in the air. I’m inclined to give it to one of 2009 Kobe, 2011 Dirk, 2019 Kawhi, 2021 Giannis, or 2025 SGA. I would be really interested to see what other people have to say on those years, since I really don’t have a strong lean in any particular direction there.


In 2019, Kawhi was load-managed a lot and joined a 56-win team. I get giving it to him over 2017, even though he was clearly better in 2017, but won in 2019, but frankly, I don't think he was as good as Kobe or Dirk in comparison when looking at 2019.

2017 Kawhi is more impressive than 2019, and they aren't particularly close.


Yeah, 2019 Kawhi feels like probably the lowest one of that list for me, though I’m not 100% certain on that. I agree he was probably a better player in 2017, but I don’t think I can vote for a season in a greatest peaks list if the guy had a playoff-ending injury. I know it’s random and wasn’t his fault, but what happened is what happened and it’s just not an overly great year in those circumstances IMO, regardless of what came before it or what we think might’ve been in the absence of a freak injury.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
Top10alltime
Sophomore
Posts: 239
And1: 88
Joined: Jan 04, 2025
 

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#11 » by Top10alltime » Yesterday 2:10 am

One_and_Done wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:How did KG not get in at 3? Pretty comfortably ahead of Jokic

Even though I'd put KG over Jokic, it's close. They're similar levels of player, with different strengths and weaknesses. There were 2 guys who were in a class of their own (Lebron, then Duncan), and after that there were like 4 guys with a good case to be next.


KG is in the class of Duncan. Duncan on defense is similar to KG, because KG has everything on him except interior defense and roaming. Now, if you were an era-relative guy, I would understand KG below Duncan defensively, but you're a guy who evaluates players in a vacuum. So the only way to put Duncan over KG defensively, is by not watching games. (Which, is probably true of you).

Duncan has scoring, but KG has playmaking with excellent vision, able to fake out defender with his passing, etc. So it's probably a wash on offense. It's really tough for me to decide between the two, am still evaluating. (Think it is a wash for peak, prime, and career, used to lean Duncan clearly).

So, even though I'm not participating in the project, I'd say my top 10 (didn't decide later ones):
1. 2010 Bron
2. 2003 Duncan/2004 KG
3. 2004 KG/2003 Duncan
4. 2016 Steph
5. 2000 Shaq
6. 2023 Jokic
7. 2023 Embiid
8. 2025 Shai
9. 2017 Kawhi
10. 2009 Wade
ReggiesKnicks
Veteran
Posts: 2,914
And1: 2,416
Joined: Jan 25, 2025
   

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#12 » by ReggiesKnicks » Yesterday 2:21 am

lessthanjake wrote:
ReggiesKnicks wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:I’m pretty set on three of my four votes this time being 2001 Shaq, 2006 Wade, and 2004 Garnett (in that order). The last spot is pretty up in the air. I’m inclined to give it to one of 2009 Kobe, 2011 Dirk, 2019 Kawhi, 2021 Giannis, or 2025 SGA. I would be really interested to see what other people have to say on those years, since I really don’t have a strong lean in any particular direction there.


In 2019, Kawhi was load-managed a lot and joined a 56-win team. I get giving it to him over 2017, even though he was clearly better in 2017, but won in 2019, but frankly, I don't think he was as good as Kobe or Dirk in comparison when looking at 2019.

2017 Kawhi is more impressive than 2019, and they aren't particularly close.


Yeah, 2019 Kawhi feels like probably the lowest one of that list for me, though I’m not 100% certain on that. I agree he was probably a better player in 2017, but I don’t think I can vote for a season in a greatest peaks list if the guy had a playoff-ending injury. I know it’s random and wasn’t his fault, but what happened is what happened and it’s just not an overly great year in those circumstances IMO, regardless of what came before it or what we think might’ve been in the absence of a freak injury.


2019 is quite clearly Kawhi's weakest season of his best seasons. His 2020 and 2017 seasons eclipse his 2019 season by a large amount.

I know you value RAPTOR, so here is the RAPTOR for Kawhi's seasons.

2021: 7.8
2020: 9.6
2019: 6.6
2017: 9.3
2016: 9.8

Kawhi played in just 60 games in 2019. He wouldn't have even qualified for All-NBA this year! I think you are doing yourself a disservice considering 2019 Kawhi given how much better he was in the surrounding seasons.
ReggiesKnicks
Veteran
Posts: 2,914
And1: 2,416
Joined: Jan 25, 2025
   

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#13 » by ReggiesKnicks » Yesterday 2:30 am

Top10alltime wrote:So, even though I'm not participating in the project, I'd say my top 10 (didn't decide later ones):
1. 2010 Bron
2. 2003 Duncan/2004 KG
3. 2004 KG/2003 Duncan
4. 2016 Steph
5. 2000 Shaq
6. 2023 Jokic
7. 2023 Embiid
8. 2025 Shai
9. 2017 Kawhi
10. 2009 Wade


Embiid and Shai seem incredibly high.

The problem I have with Embiid is that his Peak Offense and Peak Defense don't overlap well.

The level Embiid played at in 2024 is as good or better than any Center in this time span, but he played just 39 regular-season games and 58 games in total. His defense also started to dip compared to his 2019-2022 levels, though Embiid was still impactful on the defensive end.

Shai wasn't as impressive as other traditional point guards like Nash and Paul in their best post-seasons, though Shai's regular-season performance and composite box-score present a daunting case for the Top 10.
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,235
And1: 5,608
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#14 » by One_and_Done » Yesterday 2:33 am

Top10alltime wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:How did KG not get in at 3? Pretty comfortably ahead of Jokic

Even though I'd put KG over Jokic, it's close. They're similar levels of player, with different strengths and weaknesses. There were 2 guys who were in a class of their own (Lebron, then Duncan), and after that there were like 4 guys with a good case to be next.


KG is in the class of Duncan. Duncan on defense is similar to KG, because KG has everything on him except interior defense and roaming. Now, if you were an era-relative guy, I would understand KG below Duncan defensively, but you're a guy who evaluates players in a vacuum. So the only way to put Duncan over KG defensively, is by not watching games. (Which, is probably true of you).

Duncan has scoring, but KG has playmaking with excellent vision, able to fake out defender with his passing, etc. So it's probably a wash on offense. It's really tough for me to decide between the two, am still evaluating. (Think it is a wash for peak, prime, and career, used to lean Duncan clearly).

So, even though I'm not participating in the project, I'd say my top 10 (didn't decide later ones):
1. 2010 Bron
2. 2003 Duncan/2004 KG
3. 2004 KG/2003 Duncan
4. 2016 Steph
5. 2000 Shaq
6. 2023 Jokic
7. 2023 Embiid
8. 2025 Shai
9. 2017 Kawhi
10. 2009 Wade

Yeh I don't agree. Duncan is on another tier to KG. I have Duncan as the greatest defensive player of all-time, with a more useful offensive skillset that you can actually build a team around. But Duncan is in, so not going to get into it further.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,235
And1: 5,608
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#15 » by One_and_Done » Yesterday 2:34 am

ReggiesKnicks wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:So, even though I'm not participating in the project, I'd say my top 10 (didn't decide later ones):
1. 2010 Bron
2. 2003 Duncan/2004 KG
3. 2004 KG/2003 Duncan
4. 2016 Steph
5. 2000 Shaq
6. 2023 Jokic
7. 2023 Embiid
8. 2025 Shai
9. 2017 Kawhi
10. 2009 Wade


Embiid and Shai seem incredibly high.

The problem I have with Embiid is that his Peak Offense and Peak Defense don't overlap well.

The level Embiid played at in 2024 is as good or better than any Center in this time span, but he played just 39 regular-season games and 58 games in total. His defense also started to dip compared to his 2019-2022 levels, though Embiid was still impactful on the defensive end.

Shai wasn't as impressive as other traditional point guards like Nash and Paul in their best post-seasons, though Shai's regular-season performance and composite box-score present a daunting case for the Top 10.

No Giannis also strikes me as ridiculous.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
User avatar
IlikeSHAIguys
Junior
Posts: 396
And1: 189
Joined: Nov 27, 2023
 

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#16 » by IlikeSHAIguys » Yesterday 3:45 am

1 - 2025 Shai
2 - 2004 Kevin Garnett
3 - 2000 Shaq
4 - 2021 Giannis

Shai won like 68 games and had great stats. He also was like +20 in the whole on/off thing and I'm sure his WOWY/RAPM would be pretty good and I think people aren't being fair with the playoffs. Yeah SGA's stats went down but so did everyone's because the refs definitely weren't calling things the same and Jokic's stats went down by more even if you look at points and true shooting. But Shai is the only person people are calling a playoff faller or whatever.

I know from retro KG kind of fries Shaq in the whole impact thing and he's a great two-way guy. Shaq does have better stats but KG's a way better defender and I think If I'm voting Shaq it would just be because he won not because I think he's better. There was also eyetest stuff from the peaks stuff showing Shaq's defense isn't that good so I think when you have to combine everything I'm kind of lower on Shaq.

I think Giannis might be higher if this was a more than one year thing but he had two great regular seasons and two great playoffs and they came separately.
One_and_Done
General Manager
Posts: 9,235
And1: 5,608
Joined: Jun 03, 2023

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#17 » by One_and_Done » Yesterday 3:53 am

Shai's RS carry job is pretty impressive, given how many players on the Thunder missed time. J.Will out for 13 games and isn't 100% for many of the rest. No Chet for 50 games. No Hart for 25 games. No Caruso for 28 games. I could keep going. They were playing J.Will as their 5 for a while, and just kept on winning.

I wouldn't vote Shai quite yet personally, but he's worthy of discussion. You also have to ding him for his PS drop a little.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
lessthanjake
Analyst
Posts: 3,204
And1: 2,923
Joined: Apr 13, 2013

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#18 » by lessthanjake » Yesterday 4:15 am

ReggiesKnicks wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
ReggiesKnicks wrote:
In 2019, Kawhi was load-managed a lot and joined a 56-win team. I get giving it to him over 2017, even though he was clearly better in 2017, but won in 2019, but frankly, I don't think he was as good as Kobe or Dirk in comparison when looking at 2019.

2017 Kawhi is more impressive than 2019, and they aren't particularly close.


Yeah, 2019 Kawhi feels like probably the lowest one of that list for me, though I’m not 100% certain on that. I agree he was probably a better player in 2017, but I don’t think I can vote for a season in a greatest peaks list if the guy had a playoff-ending injury. I know it’s random and wasn’t his fault, but what happened is what happened and it’s just not an overly great year in those circumstances IMO, regardless of what came before it or what we think might’ve been in the absence of a freak injury.


2019 is quite clearly Kawhi's weakest season of his best seasons. His 2020 and 2017 seasons eclipse his 2019 season by a large amount.

I know you value RAPTOR, so here is the RAPTOR for Kawhi's seasons.

2021: 7.8
2020: 9.6
2019: 6.6
2017: 9.3
2016: 9.8

Kawhi played in just 60 games in 2019. He wouldn't have even qualified for All-NBA this year! I think you are doing yourself a disservice considering 2019 Kawhi given how much better he was in the surrounding seasons.


Yeah, I agree it was his least good regular season in that timespan you list. That said, his playoff performance was very much in line with those years or better, while making a deeper and more successful run. And the question here is about “greatest” peaks, which I don’t interpret as just a question of how good the player was in a vacuum, but rather to also include an element of how much success the player had that year and how significant they were to that success.

I’m not really sure what other year for Kawhi I’d viably choose. As I’ve mentioned, I just am not going to choose a year where a guy had a playoff-ending injury as one of the “greatest” peaks. A year that ends in immense disappointment with the guy unable to help his team at all in the business end of the playoffs is not a particularly great year at all IMO, let alone one of the “greatest.” Even if it’s a freak accident that wasn’t the guy’s fault at all, that’s just the way the cookie crumbled. So yeah, 2017 and 2021 are just completely out for me for Kawhi (as are 2023 and 2024). So that leaves 2016 and 2020. But the thing is that Kawhi’s team got seriously upset in the playoffs both those years, with the 2020 one being particularly bad. I don’t think Kawhi was actually bad in either series they got upset, but it’s really hard for me to pick such disappointing years as a guy’s “greatest peak.” So yeah, that leaves 2019, where Kawhi was great in the playoffs and led his team to the title. It might’ve been his worst regular season of those years. But it’s similar to how I’d choose 2021 for Giannis, even though I think it was probably his worst regular season in the last 7 years. Or how I’d probably choose 2022 Steph over 2014, 2016, 2019, and 2021, even though I think he was clearly better in the regular season in those other years. Leading your team to the title carries a whole lot of weight for me in an assessment of how “great” a player’s year was.

Ultimately, for Kawhi, it’s just unfortunate for him that he didn’t put together the playoff achievement and significance in the same years that he had his best seasons. If he had had the 2019 playoff run and title grafted onto his 2016, 2017, or 2020 regular seasons, then I think he might’ve even made the end of my ballot in the last thread. I could say a somewhat similar thing about Giannis too, given that his title run is attached to what I think was one of his least impressive prime seasons.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
iggymcfrack
RealGM
Posts: 11,837
And1: 9,357
Joined: Sep 26, 2017

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#19 » by iggymcfrack » Yesterday 4:20 am

Voted Joker > KG > Curry > Giannis last time with Shaq being the next one I considered, but I’m wondering if I overlooked SGA a little bit on the vote. By xRAPM he clears everyone except Bron and Jokic. His postseason was a slight disappointment by the lofty standards he established during the regular season, but it was still pretty goddamn good. Comparing it to the other contenders here:

2001 Shaq: 6.5 BPM, +13.8 net rating, -0.3 on/off
2002 Shaq: 7.5 BPM, +7.5 net rating, +22.9 on/off
2004 KG: 6.5 BPM, +2.5 net rating, +26.7 on/off
2021 Giannis: 9.9 BPM, +8.4 net rating, +6.7 on/off
2025 SGA: 8.3 BPM, +9.6 net rating, +1.8 on/off

Now granted, the net rating probably overstates the Thunder’s dominance as they had some huge blowouts and tended to struggle in close games. But OTOH, SGA’s regular season easily clears everyone’s except KG’s and has a case vs. him as well. Not sure where I wanna put him yet.
Djoker
Starter
Posts: 2,210
And1: 1,938
Joined: Sep 12, 2015
 

Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #5-#6 Spots 

Post#20 » by Djoker » Yesterday 4:20 am

I honestly feel it's far too early to actually have 2025 Shai on the ballot. He had a nice RS but in the PS, it left much to be desired. Volume went down, efficiency nosedived, creation went down, turnovers went up. He went from prime MJ level in the RS to well below prime Kobe in the PS. Don't get me wrong. It's still a good peak. It will start to get consideration around the #10 spot due to how great the RS is but now is far too early when you've got way better playoff performers left to choose.

Return to Player Comparisons