Post#102 » by lessthanjake » Sat Sep 13, 2025 12:03 am 
            
            
            My Vote
1. 2001 Shaquille O’Neal
2. 2006 Dwyane Wade
3. 2004 Kevin Garnett
4. 2011 Dirk Nowitzki
The first two are just the last two guys on my ballot in the last thread.  I’ve talked about them a fair bit already so I won’t spend too much time discussing them.  
Shaq didn’t have his best regular season in 2001, but he and the Lakers were totally dominant in the playoffs, and honestly I just think he’s also just the greatest player left here and this is in the heart of his greatest years.
As for 2006 Wade, I spoke a lot about him in the last thread.  Basically, I think he had one of the best playoffs ever, dragging a team that really had no business winning a title to a title.  He faced really good teams and just eviscerated them.  In the regular season, he wasn’t clearly the best player in the league, but he was in the running.  And I’m so impressed by his incredible playoff performance that he goes in this spot.  In a sense, I think if Wade had been on a better team then I probably wouldn’t have him this high.  What really does it for me that is that I just really feel like that team was not at all championship level, and so going crazy in the playoffs and winning a title with them anyways is just super high on the greatness scale.
2004 Garnett goes next for me.  Basically, I just think he was a more impactful player than anyone else left at this point (probably including even 2001 Shaq).  He didn’t get past the conference finals, and I do think he dipped a bit in quality in the playoffs, but I also think he was at a level during the season that probably was more impactful than anyone left. On this front, I am admittedly convinced by multi-year impact data, which tends to be extremely high on Garnett.  Multi-year data doesn’t exactly get to the question of someone’s peak quality, but this is an example of a guy with amazing multi-year data and a single year that was his clear box peak, so I’m quite convinced he was tremendously impactful that year.  The fact that he didn’t win a title is a hit on his “greatness” compared to a lot of the other years I’m considering, but at a certain point I do just have to bite on the guy I think played the best in general. 
The final vote on my ballot is currently going to 2011 Dirk, but I am really torn on this and am not at all opposed to changing my vote after reading things from others.  The bottom line is basically that I’m most convinced by his combination of regular season and playoff performance, especially given the strength of the teams he faced in the playoffs.  The other candidates here for me are 2009 Kobe, 2025 SGA, 2019 Kawhi, and 2021 Giannis.  Looking at some impact data, I think Dirk was probably a little better than all but SGA during the regular season, and I think he was clearly better than SGA in the playoffs and not outdone by any of the other guys in the playoffs.  I do think that Dirk wasn’t amazing in the Finals.  2021 Giannis was for sure much better in the Finals.  But Giannis missed games in the conference finals, which seems important to me, and also just wasn’t as good before the Finals, while I think Dirk was also better in the regular season (note: I think Giannis’s best regular seasons are above 2011 Dirk’s regular season, but 2021 was a down year for Giannis in the regular season).  I’m open to 2009 Kobe over 2011 Dirk, but I guess I’m just guided by a general notion that Dirk looks more impactful in multi-year data than Kobe and I don’t think Kobe was actually better in the big moments than Dirk was in 2011 (note: I earlier posted some stats on how these guys all did in the biggest moments of their playoff runs, and 2011 Dirk looked second only to 2006 Wade IMO).  I think I could get 2025 SGA over 2011 Dirk if I weighed regular season more highly.  It’s a tempting conclusion, to be honest.  But I do just feel like the accomplishment of winning a title with the stacked 2025 OKC team is pretty far from the achievement of winning a title with the deep-but-not-overly-talented 2011 Mavs team, especially given the gauntlet the Mavs faced and the relative ease with which they dispatched their opponents.  As for Kawhi, I kind of think Kawhi was maybe even a better player in a vacuum than Dirk, but he did miss 22 regular season games, so that seems like as good a tiebreaker as any.
            
                                    
                                    OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.