DraymondGold wrote:One thing I'd note with the offensive prime is that it doesn't align with Kawhi's defensive prime. People probably have his overall several-year peak somewhere in 2016-2021, so 2017-2021 is a fine 5-year stretch to pick (+5.6 offensively, +6.9 overall).lessthanjake wrote:In my view, Kawhi’s offense is pretty great, even without being a very good playmaker. The volume scorer + low turnover archetype is just very effective offensively IMO.
For reference, if we look at Kawhi’s ORAPM, his 5-year RAPM according to NBArapm in his prime offensive years (which I’d say started in 2017, meaning 2017-2021 would be the first span) range from 5.1 to 5.9. The average of his various five-year ORAPM values since that time has been 5.6. For reference, Chris Paul peaks slightly higher (his highest is 6.3), but his values for his prime (which I define as 2008-2018) is 5.5. Dirk’s five-year ORAPM values from 2002-2011 average 5.3, with a peak of 5.9. Kobe’s five-year ORAPM values from 2001-2011 average 5.6, with a peak of 6.5. Durant’s prime five-year ORAPM values peak out at 5.6 and average like 4.8. Kawhi slots in very well with this group, and actually looks amongst the best of the group (though they’re all very close). The very best offensive engines are above Kawhi, but those guys are all either already voted in or are significant negatives defensively (Nash and Harden). If Kawhi were a great passer, he’d surely be in that zone, but I think he is still a great offensive player even without it.
But Kawhi develops quite a bit in his offense and defense over these years, so while a longer-term RAPm might most accurately get his average quality, it may miss some of the changes in the actual player. While he probably gets better as an offensive player going ahead toward 2021 e.g. with his playmaking development, he gets better as an overall defender going back to 2014/2016 with his younger speed and motor. I think 2017-2021 is probably more weighted towards the 2019 version of Kawhi. For estimating 2017 specifically, 2016-2020's probably a better estimate (+4.6 offensive, +6.4 overall). (side note: 2014-2018's +4.0 offensively, +7.5 overall, so he looks better overall in a smaller role when he was younger... and will end up looking best overall per-possession in 2020-2024 when his health is utterly unreliable).
This separation between offensive and defensive peaks also affects Kobe (although not according to nbarapm's rapm estimation). I probably would have had Kobe and Kawhi at the top of my previous ballot and in the conversation in the ballot before that, if either of them had combined their offensive and defensive peaks simultaneously.
I think if we use the 2017 season Kawhi is possibly at his best offensively and close enough to his best on defense. Even if the increased load on offense had made him not as good on the defensive end, this is still before he'd had any major injuries and he had the best physical tools of any perimeter player maybe bar LeBron. Then on top of that he is a career 39% 3p shooter which increases to 40% in the ps. So I'm not too concerned with the idea of his off&def not aligning that well in say 2019. To me he was the same guy in 2017 except he plays more games and is better on both ends. I also rewatched that game 1 of the wcf and was impressed with his athleticism. He literally had 3 awesome dunks where he attacked from near the 3 pt line in that game and I was also impressed with how SA would battle back each time GS tried to make a run. They built the 25 pt lead early in the 2nd qtr and then GS made 3 runs where they cut it down to like 15 and each time SA would just push it back to 25. Which is where it was when Kawhi got injured. So I personally have no qualms right now about putting him at the top of my ballot. Especially when we are forced to use lesser rs's for both Kobe and Dirk which aren't close to Kawhi's 2017.