Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots

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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#61 » by ReggiesKnicks » Fri Oct 3, 2025 1:01 pm

Djoker wrote:9. 2008 Kobe Bryant
10. 2014 Kevin Durant
11. 2020 Anthony Davis
12. 2011 Dirk Nowitzki



The last spot was also tough. It's between Davis and Dirk for me. The thing is... in the 2020 playoffs, AD was shooting so well that he was Dirk-like. 55% from long midrange and 38% from 3pt land is elite shooting. And compared with DIrk, he was also deadly near the basket and more importantly, an elite player on the other end of the court too. I do consider Dirk's intangibles to be better and his shooting gravity cannot be understated but I still feel like 2020 Davis is better than any version of Nowitzki as a basketball player. Certainly not a lot better but he's at least reasonably close offensively while being an elite defensive big man. That combo is tough to beat. He co-led the 2020 Lakers with Lebron so he flies a bit under the radar but he played like a first option, no doubt about it regardless of if you think Lebron was better than him that year. And I don't think his shooting is a total fluke. In the 2023 playoffs, he again shot 59% from long midrange and 33% from 3pt land over 16 games. Ben and Cody discussed on the podcast how AD somehow shoots orders of magnitude better in the PS and that it might be noise but this project is about 1-year peaks. I can't pretend like Davis shot poorly when he in fact shot the lights out. For his entire Lakers' run, the man shot 51% from midrange and 33% from 3pt in the playoffs over 47 games.

I also considered AD over guys like KD but ultimately I don't think he has the same advantage on defense over those guys that he does on Dirk. And more importantly, those KD's defensive weaknesses are IMO easier to shore up in a team concept compared to DIrk's.


I don't think simply citing shooting percentages is the best way to conclude that they are similar. The way Dirk and AD leave an imprint on an offense differs.

For example, how does AD's skill set and shooting actually impact an offense?

In 2020, here are some interesting data points that can shine some light on the true impact AD was having. For reference, here are Dirks.

Dirk eFG%: +4.6%
Dirk Oreb%: +0.5%
Dirk AST%: +0.1%
Dirk TOV%: -0.7%
Dirk FTA/100: +5.0
Dirk Ortg: +10.1

AD eFG%: -0.1%
AD Oreb%: -1.5%
AD AST%: +6.9%
AD TOV%: +0.3%
AD FTA/100: +2.5
AD Ortg: -1.1

If you look at the postseason, you will get similar results, in a much smaller sample, of course.

Now, before I proceed, I want to point out that Anthony Davis' 4-year ORAPM and RAPM (you can select any multi-year sample, yielding similar results).

Year/ORAPM/RAPM

2015: 28 (55)
2016: 51 (89)
2017: 97 (59)
2018: 174 (52)
2019: 410 (132)
2020: 177 (28)
2021: 91 (22)
2022: 94 (28)

And Dirk's

2002: 3 (10)
2003: 3 (5)
2004: 2 (4)
2005: 3 (5)
2006: 5 (4)
2007: 5 (5)
2008: 5 (8)
2009: 6 (9)
2010: 8 (10)
2011: 5 (4)
2012: 6 (4)

I understand that this is just one metric, but when combined with ORTG On/Off and eFG% On/Off, we have these significant signals that indicate Dirk is significantly impacting the offense, while AD isn't a very impactful player in this regard. AD just sort of melds into an offense and doesn't have a large impact, but all of a sudden, he has 30 points on 21 shots, and you assume he must be experiencing an incredible lift in efficiency, but he isn't.

What I also don't like about Dirk is that he's a 7 footer than isn't a rim protector. Basically you have to pair him up with a great defensive C and that is tough in terms of roster construction. Basically, as good as Dirk is, I do feel like his prototype of player is limiting.


Yeah, this is a bit satirical, no? AD had an outlier post-season run in 2020, but I am not going to say we should exclude it, because it did happen. However, you are literally saying it is difficult to build around Dirk when he dominated in the NBA, far more than AD, for far longer, with different roster constructions. Meanwhile, AD had his only season which could hold a candle to Dirk and his teammate was...LeBron FREAKING James!

You can't actually be honest when you say "Dirk is a limiting prototype which saw his teams have incredible post-season success for a decade" and then compare that to Anthony Davis, who was struggling to make the post-season and played in 11 post-season games before joining up with LeBron James. It is really hard to take that argument seriously when one player is one of the best offensive anchors for a decade, and the other wears Looney Tunes shirts in a season he gives up on.

But hey, maybe LeBron James is a more likely teammate than a rim-protecting Center :crazy:

With Kobe it basically comes down to box score dominance and maybe even more importantly empirical data regarding team success. Even though impact metrics don't love him, teams with him on the floor consistently had very good offenses, including post-Shaq, with pretty standard level offensive support. I believe the diversity of his skillset along with excellent playoff resilience makes him better in high leverage situations compared to multiyear RS impact metric show. He has four finals runs (three titles) with individual stats that can rival anyone in this era except Lebron and Jokic.

2008 PS:

30.4 IA Pts/75
+4.9 rTS
9.6 Box OC
8.5 cTOV%
49.2 Load

+7.9 rORtg ON Court

2009 PS:

30.6 IA Pts/75
+3.6 rTS
10.3 Box OC
6.5 cTOV%
50.5 Load

+8.4 rORtg ON Court

He has a pretty elite profile. High volume, moderately good efficiency, strong creation, low turnovers... Kobe is the best offensive player left in the project. On defense, I'm satisfied with calling him a slight positive.


Now compare that to Dirk.

2011 PS:

29.3 PTS/75 (I am unsure of the method to convert to IA)
+6.8 rTS

I am unsure what exactly is making Kobe better offensively than Dirk here. Could you expand on that, since you are stating Kobe is the best offensive player left?
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#62 » by homecourtloss » Fri Oct 3, 2025 1:56 pm

2011 Dirk (> 2006): provided high end lift for nearly his entire career that reached some real highs with his rather unique skill set of efficient scoring on high difficult shots and overall + defense. +7.8 rORtg and -6.8 rDRtg, +14.6 rNRtg on court in the 2011 playoffs (-14.2 rORtg and -4.9 rDRtg without him). Frankly, I trust Dirk’s playoffs offense more than anyone else’s anything in the playoffs out of those left.

2. 2009 Kobe (>2008): Kobe has become underrated as a reaction to some ridiculous positions taken by the diehard Kobe fandom, but 2008-2010 Kobe away from Shaq was anchoring resilient offenses. 2009 Kobe’s run is underrated. +8.4 rORtg, -6.2 rDRtg on court through the 2009 playoffs after a very good regular season.

3. 2015 CP3: Playoff success is a concern and that’s what holds him back from even higher but there was no situation in which he didn’t bring high end impact due to zero weaknesses and almost all strengths in his game. In 2015, you saw a highly dominant team with him on court and nothing without him. His teammates weren’t awful, but they weren’t going to do anything without him they were mostly one way players. Their widely acknowledged 2nd best player, Griffin, was doing absolutely nothing without CP3.

4. 2014 KD (>2016>2017>2018>2013 He could honestly could be higher but a lack of playmaking, defense mostly underwhelming keep him back and he makes for a case study for limitations on ceiling of an ultra efficient scorer without playmaking chops.

I like AD’s 2020 playoffs run, but his medicore regular season on a dominant team when LeBron was off court hold me back as well as his generally underwhelming impact relative to physical tools.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#63 » by Owly » Fri Oct 3, 2025 3:53 pm

One_and_Done wrote:Why do career stats even matter in a peak project?

Assuming this is a response to the post immediately preceding it the answer should be obvious. in the context above the line of argument being offered was a thing was not fluky and the full career playoff number was offered in support of that. There are arguments one can make about this, but the purpose of the data in this context is very clear.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#64 » by Djoker » Fri Oct 3, 2025 4:57 pm

ReggiesKnicks wrote:
Djoker wrote:9. 2008 Kobe Bryant
10. 2014 Kevin Durant
11. 2020 Anthony Davis
12. 2011 Dirk Nowitzki



The last spot was also tough. It's between Davis and Dirk for me. The thing is... in the 2020 playoffs, AD was shooting so well that he was Dirk-like. 55% from long midrange and 38% from 3pt land is elite shooting. And compared with DIrk, he was also deadly near the basket and more importantly, an elite player on the other end of the court too. I do consider Dirk's intangibles to be better and his shooting gravity cannot be understated but I still feel like 2020 Davis is better than any version of Nowitzki as a basketball player. Certainly not a lot better but he's at least reasonably close offensively while being an elite defensive big man. That combo is tough to beat. He co-led the 2020 Lakers with Lebron so he flies a bit under the radar but he played like a first option, no doubt about it regardless of if you think Lebron was better than him that year. And I don't think his shooting is a total fluke. In the 2023 playoffs, he again shot 59% from long midrange and 33% from 3pt land over 16 games. Ben and Cody discussed on the podcast how AD somehow shoots orders of magnitude better in the PS and that it might be noise but this project is about 1-year peaks. I can't pretend like Davis shot poorly when he in fact shot the lights out. For his entire Lakers' run, the man shot 51% from midrange and 33% from 3pt in the playoffs over 47 games.

I also considered AD over guys like KD but ultimately I don't think he has the same advantage on defense over those guys that he does on Dirk. And more importantly, those KD's defensive weaknesses are IMO easier to shore up in a team concept compared to DIrk's.


I don't think simply citing shooting percentages is the best way to conclude that they are similar. The way Dirk and AD leave an imprint on an offense differs.

For example, how does AD's skill set and shooting actually impact an offense?

In 2020, here are some interesting data points that can shine some light on the true impact AD was having. For reference, here are Dirks.

Dirk eFG%: +4.6%
Dirk Oreb%: +0.5%
Dirk AST%: +0.1%
Dirk TOV%: -0.7%
Dirk FTA/100: +5.0
Dirk Ortg: +10.1

AD eFG%: -0.1%
AD Oreb%: -1.5%
AD AST%: +6.9%
AD TOV%: +0.3%
AD FTA/100: +2.5
AD Ortg: -1.1

If you look at the postseason, you will get similar results, in a much smaller sample, of course.

Now, before I proceed, I want to point out that Anthony Davis' 4-year ORAPM and RAPM (you can select any multi-year sample, yielding similar results).

Year/ORAPM/RAPM

2015: 28 (55)
2016: 51 (89)
2017: 97 (59)
2018: 174 (52)
2019: 410 (132)
2020: 177 (28)
2021: 91 (22)
2022: 94 (28)

And Dirk's

2002: 3 (10)
2003: 3 (5)
2004: 2 (4)
2005: 3 (5)
2006: 5 (4)
2007: 5 (5)
2008: 5 (8)
2009: 6 (9)
2010: 8 (10)
2011: 5 (4)
2012: 6 (4)

I understand that this is just one metric, but when combined with ORTG On/Off and eFG% On/Off, we have these significant signals that indicate Dirk is significantly impacting the offense, while AD isn't a very impactful player in this regard. AD just sort of melds into an offense and doesn't have a large impact, but all of a sudden, he has 30 points on 21 shots, and you assume he must be experiencing an incredible lift in efficiency, but he isn't.

What I also don't like about Dirk is that he's a 7 footer than isn't a rim protector. Basically you have to pair him up with a great defensive C and that is tough in terms of roster construction. Basically, as good as Dirk is, I do feel like his prototype of player is limiting.


Yeah, this is a bit satirical, no? AD had an outlier post-season run in 2020, but I am not going to say we should exclude it, because it did happen. However, you are literally saying it is difficult to build around Dirk when he dominated in the NBA, far more than AD, for far longer, with different roster constructions. Meanwhile, AD had his only season which could hold a candle to Dirk and his teammate was...LeBron FREAKING James!

You can't actually be honest when you say "Dirk is a limiting prototype which saw his teams have incredible post-season success for a decade" and then compare that to Anthony Davis, who was struggling to make the post-season and played in 11 post-season games before joining up with LeBron James. It is really hard to take that argument seriously when one player is one of the best offensive anchors for a decade, and the other wears Looney Tunes shirts in a season he gives up on.

But hey, maybe LeBron James is a more likely teammate than a rim-protecting Center :crazy:

With Kobe it basically comes down to box score dominance and maybe even more importantly empirical data regarding team success. Even though impact metrics don't love him, teams with him on the floor consistently had very good offenses, including post-Shaq, with pretty standard level offensive support. I believe the diversity of his skillset along with excellent playoff resilience makes him better in high leverage situations compared to multiyear RS impact metric show. He has four finals runs (three titles) with individual stats that can rival anyone in this era except Lebron and Jokic.

2008 PS:

30.4 IA Pts/75
+4.9 rTS
9.6 Box OC
8.5 cTOV%
49.2 Load

+7.9 rORtg ON Court

2009 PS:

30.6 IA Pts/75
+3.6 rTS
10.3 Box OC
6.5 cTOV%
50.5 Load

+8.4 rORtg ON Court

He has a pretty elite profile. High volume, moderately good efficiency, strong creation, low turnovers... Kobe is the best offensive player left in the project. On defense, I'm satisfied with calling him a slight positive.


Now compare that to Dirk.

2011 PS:

29.3 PTS/75 (I am unsure of the method to convert to IA)
+6.8 rTS

I am unsure what exactly is making Kobe better offensively than Dirk here. Could you expand on that, since you are stating Kobe is the best offensive player left?


Thank you for the numbers but I said this myself; that Dirk's gravity helps the team's offense more than Davis' shooting. AD making shots is nice but the defense is giving him those shots. So it's different. So yes Dirk's offense is considerably better than Davis'. We're in total agreement there and the numbers you post it bear that out. Of course there is that other end of the floor where Davis quite simply mops the floor with Dirk.

Davis' teams in New Orleans were not as talented as Dirk's teams for most of his Dallas tenure. AD's situation is akin to Garnett's situation in Minnesota where he had little to work with. So saying AD played 11 playoff games compared to however many Dirk played isn't an apples to apples comparison. Are we sure AD wouldn't do really well with the 2003 Mavs roster where he'd have Nash, Finley...?

As for Kobe, I have him over Dirk as an offensive player. He's a considerably better playmaker and his offenses even post Shaq are more resilient in the postseason. I definitely prefer Kobe.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#65 » by Jaivl » Fri Oct 3, 2025 5:06 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:(...)

Let’s look at his career more holistically:

PER: 4th all-time, 5th all-time playoffs
WS/48: 15th all-time, 5th all-time playoffs
BPM: 17th all-time, 12th all-time playoffs

Does anything about that scream “guy who rode good shooting luck to a top 15 peak of the last quarter century?”

I'm probably voting Davis around #15, so not really...

I don't question the 25 ppg on 60 TS% part, but I absolutely question the shooting and spacing value that he had those playoffs. He's a rim runner (a MONSTER rim runner, one of the best ever at that) with some, but limited, range. A Stoudemire.

In fact, I'm probably the highest one here on bubble Davis. He was an all-timer for 21 games.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#66 » by ReggiesKnicks » Fri Oct 3, 2025 5:53 pm

Djoker wrote:
ReggiesKnicks wrote:
Djoker wrote:9. 2008 Kobe Bryant
10. 2014 Kevin Durant
11. 2020 Anthony Davis
12. 2011 Dirk Nowitzki



The last spot was also tough. It's between Davis and Dirk for me. The thing is... in the 2020 playoffs, AD was shooting so well that he was Dirk-like. 55% from long midrange and 38% from 3pt land is elite shooting. And compared with DIrk, he was also deadly near the basket and more importantly, an elite player on the other end of the court too. I do consider Dirk's intangibles to be better and his shooting gravity cannot be understated but I still feel like 2020 Davis is better than any version of Nowitzki as a basketball player. Certainly not a lot better but he's at least reasonably close offensively while being an elite defensive big man. That combo is tough to beat. He co-led the 2020 Lakers with Lebron so he flies a bit under the radar but he played like a first option, no doubt about it regardless of if you think Lebron was better than him that year. And I don't think his shooting is a total fluke. In the 2023 playoffs, he again shot 59% from long midrange and 33% from 3pt land over 16 games. Ben and Cody discussed on the podcast how AD somehow shoots orders of magnitude better in the PS and that it might be noise but this project is about 1-year peaks. I can't pretend like Davis shot poorly when he in fact shot the lights out. For his entire Lakers' run, the man shot 51% from midrange and 33% from 3pt in the playoffs over 47 games.

I also considered AD over guys like KD but ultimately I don't think he has the same advantage on defense over those guys that he does on Dirk. And more importantly, those KD's defensive weaknesses are IMO easier to shore up in a team concept compared to DIrk's.


I don't think simply citing shooting percentages is the best way to conclude that they are similar. The way Dirk and AD leave an imprint on an offense differs.

For example, how does AD's skill set and shooting actually impact an offense?

In 2020, here are some interesting data points that can shine some light on the true impact AD was having. For reference, here are Dirks.

Dirk eFG%: +4.6%
Dirk Oreb%: +0.5%
Dirk AST%: +0.1%
Dirk TOV%: -0.7%
Dirk FTA/100: +5.0
Dirk Ortg: +10.1

AD eFG%: -0.1%
AD Oreb%: -1.5%
AD AST%: +6.9%
AD TOV%: +0.3%
AD FTA/100: +2.5
AD Ortg: -1.1

If you look at the postseason, you will get similar results, in a much smaller sample, of course.

Now, before I proceed, I want to point out that Anthony Davis' 4-year ORAPM and RAPM (you can select any multi-year sample, yielding similar results).

Year/ORAPM/RAPM

2015: 28 (55)
2016: 51 (89)
2017: 97 (59)
2018: 174 (52)
2019: 410 (132)
2020: 177 (28)
2021: 91 (22)
2022: 94 (28)

And Dirk's

2002: 3 (10)
2003: 3 (5)
2004: 2 (4)
2005: 3 (5)
2006: 5 (4)
2007: 5 (5)
2008: 5 (8)
2009: 6 (9)
2010: 8 (10)
2011: 5 (4)
2012: 6 (4)

I understand that this is just one metric, but when combined with ORTG On/Off and eFG% On/Off, we have these significant signals that indicate Dirk is significantly impacting the offense, while AD isn't a very impactful player in this regard. AD just sort of melds into an offense and doesn't have a large impact, but all of a sudden, he has 30 points on 21 shots, and you assume he must be experiencing an incredible lift in efficiency, but he isn't.

What I also don't like about Dirk is that he's a 7 footer than isn't a rim protector. Basically you have to pair him up with a great defensive C and that is tough in terms of roster construction. Basically, as good as Dirk is, I do feel like his prototype of player is limiting.


Yeah, this is a bit satirical, no? AD had an outlier post-season run in 2020, but I am not going to say we should exclude it, because it did happen. However, you are literally saying it is difficult to build around Dirk when he dominated in the NBA, far more than AD, for far longer, with different roster constructions. Meanwhile, AD had his only season which could hold a candle to Dirk and his teammate was...LeBron FREAKING James!

You can't actually be honest when you say "Dirk is a limiting prototype which saw his teams have incredible post-season success for a decade" and then compare that to Anthony Davis, who was struggling to make the post-season and played in 11 post-season games before joining up with LeBron James. It is really hard to take that argument seriously when one player is one of the best offensive anchors for a decade, and the other wears Looney Tunes shirts in a season he gives up on.

But hey, maybe LeBron James is a more likely teammate than a rim-protecting Center :crazy:

With Kobe it basically comes down to box score dominance and maybe even more importantly empirical data regarding team success. Even though impact metrics don't love him, teams with him on the floor consistently had very good offenses, including post-Shaq, with pretty standard level offensive support. I believe the diversity of his skillset along with excellent playoff resilience makes him better in high leverage situations compared to multiyear RS impact metric show. He has four finals runs (three titles) with individual stats that can rival anyone in this era except Lebron and Jokic.

2008 PS:

30.4 IA Pts/75
+4.9 rTS
9.6 Box OC
8.5 cTOV%
49.2 Load

+7.9 rORtg ON Court

2009 PS:

30.6 IA Pts/75
+3.6 rTS
10.3 Box OC
6.5 cTOV%
50.5 Load

+8.4 rORtg ON Court

He has a pretty elite profile. High volume, moderately good efficiency, strong creation, low turnovers... Kobe is the best offensive player left in the project. On defense, I'm satisfied with calling him a slight positive.


Now compare that to Dirk.

2011 PS:

29.3 PTS/75 (I am unsure of the method to convert to IA)
+6.8 rTS

I am unsure what exactly is making Kobe better offensively than Dirk here. Could you expand on that, since you are stating Kobe is the best offensive player left?


Thank you for the numbers but I said this myself; that Dirk's gravity helps the team's offense more than Davis' shooting. AD making shots is nice but the defense is giving him those shots. So it's different. So yes Dirk's offense is considerably better than Davis'. We're in total agreement there and the numbers you post it bear that out. Of course there is that other end of the floor where Davis quite simply mops the floor with Dirk.


AD mops the floor defensively with Kobe as well; the same goes for 2014 KD.

Dirk is better offensively than both Kobe and KD.

Since you love these stats, do you have them for Dirk?

2008 PS:

30.4 IA Pts/75
+4.9 rTS
9.6 Box OC
8.5 cTOV%
49.2 Load

+7.9 rORtg ON Court

2009 PS:

30.6 IA Pts/75
+3.6 rTS
10.3 Box OC
6.5 cTOV%
50.5 Load

+8.4 rORtg ON Court


Davis' teams in New Orleans were not as talented as Dirk's teams for most of his Dallas tenure. AD's situation is akin to Garnett's situation in Minnesota where he had little to work with. So saying AD played 11 playoff games compared to however many Dirk played isn't an apples to apples comparison. Are we sure AD wouldn't do really well with the 2003 Mavs roster where he'd have Nash, Finley...?


This presents a lot of context, more than I have seen in the previous threads with you, so I do applaud you for thinking about context more than simply results-oriented thinking.

You want to bring up 2003?

2003 NBA +/- Leaders
1. Dirk Nowitzki +778
2. Michael Finley +649
3. Tim Duncan +554
4. Steve Nash +538
5. Doug Christie +523

2003 Mavericks On/Off
Dirk: +14.3 Ortg / -6.1 Drtg / +20.4 Net
Nash: +7.4 Ortg / +3.4 Drtg / +4.1 Net
Finley: 6.7 Ortg / -5.4 Drtg / +12.1 Net

Now, look at the minute totals
Dirk: 3121
Nash: 2713
Finley: 2641

Dirk is playing significantly more minutes than anyone else on the roster and is head and shoulders above the best player. A large part of the 2003 Mavericks' success was Dirk's ability to be active and effective defensively. It was one of his best seasons defensively, in part due to Shawn Bradley, but remember, Bradley only played a total of 1,700 minutes. Dallas had a backup Center, Raef LaFrentz, who wasn't exactly a world-beater defensively, and Dirk was still incredibly effective.

You can try to spin the 2003 Mavericks as having an incredible supporting cast compared to the Pelicans, but once again, we see Dirk having a GOAT-level impact (+20.4 Net is shared by few players in NBA History).

I highly doubt AD in place of Dirk would make the Mavericks better, considering how good Dirk was and how important he was for their success.

As for Kobe, I have him over Dirk as an offensive player. He's a considerably better playmaker and his offenses even post Shaq are more resilient in the postseason. I definitely prefer Kobe.


Are his offenses more resilient? You throw around this buzzword , but why aren't you simply posting the data that is drawing you to this conclusion?

Dirk rORTG per series in 2011
6
11.9
7.7
7
8.2 Average rORTG

Kobe rORTG per series in 2008
11.6
10
1.3
4.6
6.9 Average rORTG

Kobe rORTG per series in 2009
6.8
4.4
6.7
8.1
6.5 Average rORTG

Kobe rORTG per series in 2010
0.9
15.3
13.3
1.4
7.7 Average rORTG

Now, 2010 isn't exactly how I would define resilient, considering there were some high highs but lower lows.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#67 » by Cavsfansince84 » Fri Oct 3, 2025 7:00 pm

My main reservation(s) on AD in 2020 are: his likely reliance on LeBron to reach the level he did offensively and the semi quirkiness of that season/playoffs being spread out the way it was. As I recall, he was dealing with some injuries both times the season got halted which sort of helped him maintain health to the end. I can respect him being on anyone's ballot though because guys who are elite on both ends are very easy to win with and he was also doing things like hitting clutch game winners once or twice in that run. He was almost their go to guy on offense despite having near prime LeBron on the team.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#68 » by Djoker » Fri Oct 3, 2025 7:28 pm

ReggiesKnicks wrote:
This presents a lot of context, more than I have seen in the previous threads with you, so I do applaud you for thinking about context more than simply results-oriented thinking.

You want to bring up 2003?

2003 NBA +/- Leaders
1. Dirk Nowitzki +778
2. Michael Finley +649
3. Tim Duncan +554
4. Steve Nash +538
5. Doug Christie +523

2003 Mavericks On/Off
Dirk: +14.3 Ortg / -6.1 Drtg / +20.4 Net
Nash: +7.4 Ortg / +3.4 Drtg / +4.1 Net
Finley: 6.7 Ortg / -5.4 Drtg / +12.1 Net

Now, look at the minute totals
Dirk: 3121
Nash: 2713
Finley: 2641

Dirk is playing significantly more minutes than anyone else on the roster and is head and shoulders above the best player. A large part of the 2003 Mavericks' success was Dirk's ability to be active and effective defensively. It was one of his best seasons defensively, in part due to Shawn Bradley, but remember, Bradley only played a total of 1,700 minutes. Dallas had a backup Center, Raef LaFrentz, who wasn't exactly a world-beater defensively, and Dirk was still incredibly effective.

You can try to spin the 2003 Mavericks as having an incredible supporting cast compared to the Pelicans, but once again, we see Dirk having a GOAT-level impact (+20.4 Net is shared by few players in NBA History).

I highly doubt AD in place of Dirk would make the Mavericks better, considering how good Dirk was and how important he was for their success.


Honestly I don't even feel inclined to respond to your post after you say this is the first time you've seen me think about context. I find that comment insulting.

Describing every piece of context I'm considering when I evaluate players is prohibitively time consuming and honestly grading context is so subjective anyways that even I myself may have a different opinion on it on a different day. Context to me is broad brush strokes. I make statements all the time but I have little interest in debating them because it's also so relative and so slippery half the time.

We don't know how AD would fit on those Dallas teams in place of Dirk. We simply don't know. I think the range of possibilities is that AD could do worse, same or better and all guesses are reasonable and so you won't see me in engage in this philosophical exercise. Nor do I think it's useful because AD as a player has different strengths and weaknesses and Dallas would surely construct a different roster around him anyways.

Are his offenses more resilient? You throw around this buzzword , but why aren't you simply posting the data that is drawing you to this conclusion?

Dirk rORTG per series in 2011
6
11.9
7.7
7
8.2 Average rORTG

Kobe rORTG per series in 2008
11.6
10
1.3
4.6
6.9 Average rORTG

Kobe rORTG per series in 2009
6.8
4.4
6.7
8.1
6.5 Average rORTG

Kobe rORTG per series in 2010
0.9
15.3
13.3
1.4
7.7 Average rORTG

Now, 2010 isn't exactly how I would define resilient, considering there were some high highs but lower lows.


I think you're just posting general team rORtg. I'm looking at ON-Court numbers.

Season: rORtg ON Court

2008 Kobe: +7.9
2009 Kobe: +8.4
2010 Kobe: +8.4

2005 Dirk: +7.1
2006 Dirk: +7.7
2007 Dirk: -0.1
2008 Dirk: +2.8
2009 Dirk: +8.2
2010 Dirk: +1.1
2011 Dirk: +9.5
2012 Dirk: +6.2


Indeed 2011 Dirk is higher but that year is the highest in his career post-Nash.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#69 » by ReggiesKnicks » Fri Oct 3, 2025 7:43 pm

Djoker wrote:Season: rORtg ON Court

2008 Kobe: +7.9
2009 Kobe: +8.4
2010 Kobe: +8.4

2005 Dirk: +7.1
2006 Dirk: +7.7
2007 Dirk: -0.1
2008 Dirk: +2.8
2009 Dirk: +8.2
2010 Dirk: +1.1
2011 Dirk: +9.5
2012 Dirk: +6.2


Indeed 2011 Dirk is higher but that year is the highest in his career post-Nash.


This is helpful, thank you for the context.

It appears that we can group them in this way.

2011 Dirk
- - - - - - - - - -
2009 Kobe
2010 Kobe
2009 Dirk
2008 Kobe
2006 Dirk
- - - - - - - - - -
2005 Dirk

But the data clearly suggests Dirk had the best single season. Furthermore, it seems disingenuous to exclude 2011 Dirk but then pick 2020 AD over Dirk when AD had an even greater outlier in 2020. That seems inconsistent, don't you think?

RE: Why are you singling out Nash but not mentioning Gasol?

Here are the Regular Season Numbers.

2002-2004 Dirk+Nash: 114.7 Ortg (+11.1 rORTG)
2002-2004 Dirk, No Nash: 111.9 Ortg (+8.3 rORTG)

2008-2010 Kobe+Pau: 115.9 Ortg (+8.1 rORTG)
2008-2010 Kobe, No Pau: 111.5 Ortg (+3.7 rORTG)

The truth here is in the pudding. Dirk, without Nash, was similar to or better than Kobe was in 2008-2010, even with Pau Gasol. That's an incredibly important data point we should index on, isn't it?

Again, I have read every post in every thread of this project. Not once has data been presented to suggest that Kobe was better offensively than Dirk.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#70 » by One_and_Done » Fri Oct 3, 2025 9:21 pm

Owly wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:Why do career stats even matter in a peak project?

Assuming this is a response to the post immediately preceding it the answer should be obvious. in the context above the line of argument being offered was a thing was not fluky and the full career playoff number was offered in support of that. There are arguments one can make about this, but the purpose of the data in this context is very clear.

If someone has one outlier year, why would it even matter? Again, this is a peaks project, not a career project. Calling it 'flukey' misses the point; the guy still did it.

I don't have a problem saying that ADs 2020 playoff shooting is an outlier. I've said that before. I don't see why it would matter though. We're only judging what he did in 2020.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#71 » by One_and_Done » Fri Oct 3, 2025 9:34 pm

homecourtloss wrote:2011 Dirk (> 2006): provided high end lift for nearly his entire career that reached some real highs with his rather unique skill set of efficient scoring on high difficult shots and overall + defense. +7.8 rORtg and -6.8 rDRtg, +14.6 rNRtg on court in the 2011 playoffs (-14.2 rORtg and -4.9 rDRtg without him). Frankly, I trust Dirk’s playoffs offense more than anyone else’s anything in the playoffs out of those left.

2. 2009 Kobe (>2008): Kobe has become underrated as a reaction to some ridiculous positions taken by the diehard Kobe fandom, but 2008-2010 Kobe away from Shaq was anchoring resilient offenses. 2009 Kobe’s run is underrated. +8.4 rORtg, -6.2 rDRtg on court through the 2009 playoffs after a very good regular season.

3. 2015 CP3: Playoff success is a concern and that’s what holds him back from even higher but there was no situation in which he didn’t bring high end impact due to zero weaknesses and almost all strengths in his game. In 2015, you saw a highly dominant team with him on court and nothing without him. His teammates weren’t awful, but they weren’t going to do anything without him they were mostly one way players. Their widely acknowledged 2nd best player, Griffin, was doing absolutely nothing without CP3.

4. 2014 KD (>2016>2017>2018>2013 He could honestly could be higher but a lack of playmaking, defense mostly underwhelming keep him back and he makes for a case study for limitations on ceiling of an ultra efficient scorer without playmaking chops.

I like AD’s 2020 playoffs run, but his medicore regular season on a dominant team when LeBron was off court hold me back as well as his generally underwhelming impact relative to physical tools.

You say Kobe 'anchored' resilience offenses in 09 and 10, as though he wasn't playing with the best support cast in the league. The 2009 Lakers would have been a good offense, and won 55+ games, even without Kobe.

KD played on a team with a better offensive rating than the 09 Lakers ten times! The OKC Thunder in 2016 had a better Ortg than those Lakers, despite starting four guys who couldn't shoot 3s next to KD, and 2 guys who had no offensive game at all. Of Adams, Roberson, Westbrook, and Ibaka, Serge was their best shooter next to KD. That is insane.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#72 » by lessthanjake » Sat Oct 4, 2025 12:08 am

So I’m strongly considering voting for 2005 Ginobili in this thread. The more I look into Ginobili’s on-off data, the more impressive it is. Below is a string of data regarding Ginobili, which I think also serves to refute some potential things one might think of to downplay his great numbers:

Ginobili & Duncan had all-time net ratings together in 2005

1. In the 2005 season, Ginobili and Duncan had a +20.38 net rating in 1380 minutes on the court together. This is a crazy number. For reference, it is higher than the +19.89 net rating that Curry/Durant/Draymond had on the court together in the 2017 season, on the GOAT team. It is also higher than the +19.27 that Curry and Draymond had on the court together in the record-breaking 2016 season. I’m not aware of any star duo that actually had a higher net rating together in a season.

Ginobili & Duncan’s net ratings were incredible over larger samples too

2. Okay, but is that +20.38 net rating in 2005 just a product of a small sample size? Well, maybe to a small degree. But the Spurs had a still-massive +16.87 net rating with Duncan and Ginobili together in the three years from 2005-2007. That’s lower, but it’s still a massive number. And there’s reason to believe that 2005 being higher than the overall three-year span isn’t just noise, since Duncan fell off a bit as a player after 2005, while Ginobili had improved in 2005, so 2005 is really the one intersection of them both in the heart of their prime. Meanwhile, in their entire time together from 2003-2016, Ginobili and Duncan had a +12.18 net rating together. For reference, that’s really similar to the +12.56 net rating that Steph and Draymond have together (which will probably end up lower than the Ginobili/Duncan number when all is said and done—and obviously they also played with Durant for years).

Ginobili’s net ratings were fantastic even without Duncan

3. Okay, but that’s Ginobili *and* Duncan, and Duncan is a great player, so maybe that’s why the numbers are so good? Well, that’s part of it, of course. But the Spurs were really good in Ginobili’s minutes without Duncan. From 2005-2007, the Spurs were +8.52 when Ginobili was on and Duncan was off. And it was +8.10 in the playoffs in those years. In the 2005 regular season specifically, it was +9.88 with Ginobili on and Duncan off, and +10.27 in those minutes in the playoffs. Over the course of 2003-2016, it was +7.99 in the regular season and +5.69 in the playoffs. So yeah, obviously Duncan made them better, but Ginobili had the Spurs doing great even with Duncan off the court. It was particularly true in 2005, but was also just true across giant samples.

Ginobili’s non-Duncan net ratings were fantastic even against opposing starters

4. Okay, but Ginobili often came off the bench, so maybe his minutes without Duncan were just juiced by being against opposing bench players? Turns out that’s not the case. From 2003-2016, against 4 or 5 opposing starters and with Ginobili on and Duncan off, the Spurs were +8.60 in the regular season and +5.15 in the playoffs. These are fantastic numbers to have against starter-heavy units, and are actually virtually indistinguishable from the overall Ginobili-on/Duncan-off numbers. And from 2005-2007, these numbers were +9.84 in the regular season and +18.87 in the playoffs. In 2005 specifically, it was an absurd +17.24 in the regular season and +22.14 in the playoffs (though at this point we’re looking at a small 290 minute regular season sample and 81 minute playoff sample).

Ginobili’s non-Duncan net ratings were fantastic against opposing starters even without the rest of the Spurs’ best players

5. Okay, but the Spurs had other good players besides Duncan, so maybe these good net ratings in the non-Duncan minutes against opposing starters are just a product of playing with very good players like Tony Parker, Kawhi Leonard, and LaMarcus Aldridge? Again, we have strong indication that that’s not the case. If we look at 2003-2016, Ginobili played 587 regular season minutes and 46 playoff minutes against 4 or 5 opposing starters and without any of Duncan, Parker, Kawhi, or Aldridge on the court . The Spurs had a +7.03 net rating in those regular season minutes and a +18.79 net rating in the playoff minutes. Combining regular season and playoffs, that comes out to a +7.89 net rating.

It’s worth noting that this compares really favorably with the net ratings against starter-heavy units that top-tier all-time greats and others we might consider in this thread put up without their star teammates. Across RS+playoffs, LeBron had a +4.16 net rating against starter-heavy units in Miami without Wade or Bosh, and a -3.75 net rating on the second-stint Cleveland team without Kyrie or Love. Jokic from 2019-2025 had a +3.74 net rating against starter-heavy units without Murray. Steph had a +0.13 net rating from 2014-2023 without Draymond, Durant, or Klay. From 2001-2004 and 2008-2011 without Shaq or Gasol in these minutes, Kobe had a +1.70 net rating. For Durant, it was +0.36 in 2010-2016 without Westbrook and +2.55 from 2017-2019 without Steph, Draymond, or Klay. From 2012-2017, without Griffin or DeAndre Jordan, it was +2.72 for Chris Paul. From 2005-2010, without Amare or Marion, it was +5.67 for Nash. From 2015-2021 in Houston without Dwight, CP3, or Westbrook, Harden had a +1.62 net rating. And probably most interestingly, Duncan from 2003-2016 without Ginobili, Parker, Kawhi, or Aldridge had a -3.08 net rating. Granted, the sample sizes for a lot of these aren’t super high, but I do think the fact that Ginobili leads the way here highlights just how good the Spurs were with Ginobili as the main guy against the best the opponents had to offer.

Ginobili’s net ratings were fantastic when the Spurs had fewer starters on the floor than the opposing team

6. Okay, but that’s just specific starter states against starter-heavy opposition and the sample sizes aren’t enormous. Maybe Ginobili still farmed a lot of his great net ratings just from the Spurs farming bench units with more of their own starters. Well, it turns out that is definitely not the case, with the Spurs doing incredibly well with Ginobili on the court and the Spurs with fewer starters on the court than the other team. I wrote about this at length in the following thread: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?t=2386462. I won’t rehash things that are in that thread too much. But some highlights from that thread: From 2003-2017, the Spurs had a net rating of +9.40 at a starter disadvantage with Ginobili on the floor. It is +8.27 if we treat Ginobili as a starter for these purposes even if he came off the bench. That number was slightly higher than LeBron 2009-2020 at a starter disadvantage, as well as Giannis 2019-2024 and Jokic 2020-2024. Perhaps most pertinently, it is also above what the Spurs did from 2003-2016 at a starter disadvantage with Duncan on the floor.

And even if we narrowed this down to just Ginobili’s minutes at a starter disadvantage with Duncan, Parker, Robinson, and 2014-onwards Kawhi all off the court, the Spurs had a +6.00 net rating from 2003-2017 (note: I realize writing this post that there’s slightly different players being controlled for than what I did above for other data, but I’m just not bothering to re-run numbers to make the controlled-for players exactly the same—especially since PBPstats crashes a lot when I run these numbers, so it takes a long time to pull). I ran these numbers for Steph and LeBron at a starter disadvantage without their co-stars, and Ginobili’s numbers compare favorably. He also compares favorably with Giannis and Jokic if we go back far enough (which seems fair when comparing to 2003-2017 Ginobili). Most pertinently again, he compares favorably to Duncan himself here, who had a +2.64 net rating from 2003-2016 without Ginobili and all those same guys. Even if we add 2001 and 2002 to the mix, Duncan is still slightly behind. So basically, at a starter disadvantage without co-stars, Ginobili genuinely looks better than absolute high-end guys already voted in in this project.

The above-discussed numbers are better for Ginobili than Duncan and Ginobili had huge success outside the Spurs, so it’s not just a supporting-cast thing

7. Okay, but maybe all this is just a product of the Spurs having a great supporting cast? Well, to some degree that is surely the case. The Spurs did generally do a good job getting good role players. But, as detailed above, the Spurs did better against starter-heavy units and better at a starter disadvantage with Ginobili on and Duncan off than with Duncan on and Ginobili off. And Ginobili’s numbers look better even in more general terms. From 2005-2007 across regular season + playoffs, the Spurs had a higher net rating with Ginobili on and Duncan off (+8.44) than with Duncan on and Ginobili off (+6.66). In 2005 specifically, this was even more pronounced, with +9.94 with Ginobili on and Duncan off and +5.46 with Duncan on and Ginobili off. Meanwhile, over the course of 2003-2016, the Spurs did slightly better in the regular season with Ginobili on and Duncan off than vice versa (+7.99 vs. +7.54) and a lot better in the playoffs (+5.69 vs. -3.77).

I’d also just note as a quick point that Ginobili being amazing in that era definitely wasn’t contingent on Duncan or the Spurs supporting cast when he led Argentina to the 2004 Olympic gold medal. It’s not NBA basketball, but definitely feels like relevant context.

____________

Conclusion

So yeah, I think it is really interesting to see that 2005 Ginobili was both a part of possibly the most effective duo of stars ever (i.e. the +20.38 net rating with Duncan), while also functioning historically well on his own, even when against opposing starters or with the team at a starter disadvantage. It suggests an incredible level of both ceiling raising and floor raising.

Of course, one response to all of the above is that it’s granular data that all is just part of what goes into RAPM. I do think there’s value in granularity, though. And regardless, it’s not like there’s some negative nuance that RAPM is seeing that this data isn’t. According to NBArapm, Ginobili was #1 in the NBA in RAPM from 2005-2007 (not to mention being repeatedly top 5 in the NBA across a load of different timeframes in his career). He was #1 in TheBasketballDatabase’s three-year RAPM in 2005-2007 as well. The only guys who are in consideration here that have RAPM (whether peak or just overall) as good as Ginobili are Chris Paul and Steve Nash (and with Nash it’s only really a peak thing—Ginobili looks better at a longer-term level). He was also #1 in the NBA in 2005 in EPM—which is probably the best impact-box hybrid measure we have from that era.

Finally, talking purely of impact can obscure the importance of performance in specific high-leverage games—particularly the playoffs. And that is an area where 2005 Ginobili really shines as well. I think there’s a good argument that Ginobili was the best player in each of the Spurs playoff series that year. On paper, the one that’s probably most arguable for that not being the case is the Phoenix series, but I’ll just say that as a huge fan of the Suns in that era I came out of that series having a massive hatred for Ginobili, basically because I thought he’d been their best player in the series. And in the finals, against an incredible Pistons defense, Ginobili was just amazing, putting up a +13.2 rTS% in an incredibly defensive series. To put some additional data on this, the only people who have had a higher playoff EPM than Ginobili had in 2005 are players that have already been voted in. Given the larger-sample impact numbers and the playoff performances, I think there’s actually a pretty good argument that Ginobili was just straight up the best player on the NBA champion 2005 Spurs. Which feels like it would definitely deserve to make the ballot at this point.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#73 » by eminence » Sat Oct 4, 2025 12:53 am

lessthanjake wrote:So I’m strongly considering voting for 2005 Ginobili in this thread. The more I look into Ginobili’s on-off data, the more impressive it is. Below is a string of data regarding Ginobili, which I think also serves to refute some potential things one might think of to downplay his great numbers:

Ginobili & Duncan had all-time net ratings together in 2005

1. In the 2005 season, Ginobili and Duncan had a +20.38 net rating in 1380 minutes on the court together. This is a crazy number. For reference, it is higher than the +19.89 net rating that Curry/Durant/Draymond had on the court together in the 2017 season, on the GOAT team. It is also higher than the +19.27 that Curry and Draymond had on the court together in the record-breaking 2016 season. I’m not aware of any star duo that actually had a higher net rating together in a season.


Used BBref to search, so very slightly different numbers. +20.6 on there. '16 Steph/Dray next at +19.6 (many more minutes). Sheed+Ben were at +19.6 in only 1/4 of a season in '04.

But it's almost certainly the record for any duo of a teams top 2 players (any reasonable sample size at least).

Iguodala + one of the Steph/Dray/Klay in '16 would be above it if one didn't mean top 2 guys and accepted Iguodala as a star in '16.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#74 » by Owly » Sat Oct 4, 2025 9:23 am

One_and_Done wrote:
Owly wrote:
One_and_Done wrote:Why do career stats even matter in a peak project?

Assuming this is a response to the post immediately preceding it the answer should be obvious. in the context above the line of argument being offered was a thing was not fluky and the full career playoff number was offered in support of that. There are arguments one can make about this, but the purpose of the data in this context is very clear.

If someone has one outlier year, why would it even matter? Again, this is a peaks project, not a career project. Calling it 'flukey' misses the point; the guy still did it.

I don't have a problem saying that ADs 2020 playoff shooting is an outlier. I've said that before. I don't see why it would matter though. We're only judging what he did in 2020.

At the margin I think it would have been simpler to actually make this argument explicit in the first place rather than ask why it matters. It's clear why it matters to them, so you need to explicitly make the meta-argument.

I nearly got into this with a second post on the mid-range and 3s/TS% discussion ...

This part is simple enough that I'll attempt to recreate it ...

Criteria can and do differ. Some people will focus on season (and maybe also on playoffs) and luck can matter very little, or as perhaps to you not at all. Some people will focus on the underlying player ... this is probably harder and fuzzier because you're trying to generalize outside the specific known context ... (and maybe also larger regular season samples) and may see a significant difference between the value of what the player happened to produce over a small sample and what they view that player to be. And this probably more a continuum than a binary. Personally, I don't think one approach is "right". It can lead to talking past one another if you aren't clear.

If someone wants to say Walter Berry's peak is 1988 - that year shot 12/15 from the stripe in playoffs, he was an 80% free throw shooter, that's what I'm evaluating ... that's fine. If someone else wants to say ... he shot 192 of 320 for 60% in the RS and much closer to 60 than 80 percent for the season as a whole that year (or indeed gesture in the same directions for career) that's also fine. Ditto more generally for Tracy Murray. If one wants to say he had an exceptional '97 playoffs/series scoring very efficiently and noting how much better the Bullets did with him on the court (indeed has a positive "on" per 100 pos, though a negative +/- ; maybe he was on for more defensive possessions) that's true as it is that ... Murray wasn't typically that good. Similar ideas might apply '07 Baron Davis or Bernard King or Bobby Wanzer.


Fwiw on Anthony Davis specifically even the general scoring efficiency is running quite hot in the '20 playoffs. Even just looking at that rather than range, and even just looking at the playoffs ... he's at 118 TS+ for that run and 110 for his playoff career through to today. And that's with the '20 run baked in ... if the argument was that it isn't an outlier, we should arguably take it out looking for those purposes. And that run constitutes about 35% of his career playoff true shot attempts (actually 34.7649301%). So even just on scoring efficiency that run is a hot one, and my impression is more strikingly so with regard to scoring from distance.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#75 » by ReggiesKnicks » Sat Oct 4, 2025 1:53 pm

eminence wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:So I’m strongly considering voting for 2005 Ginobili in this thread. The more I look into Ginobili’s on-off data, the more impressive it is. Below is a string of data regarding Ginobili, which I think also serves to refute some potential things one might think of to downplay his great numbers:

Ginobili & Duncan had all-time net ratings together in 2005

1. In the 2005 season, Ginobili and Duncan had a +20.38 net rating in 1380 minutes on the court together. This is a crazy number. For reference, it is higher than the +19.89 net rating that Curry/Durant/Draymond had on the court together in the 2017 season, on the GOAT team. It is also higher than the +19.27 that Curry and Draymond had on the court together in the record-breaking 2016 season. I’m not aware of any star duo that actually had a higher net rating together in a season.


Used BBref to search, so very slightly different numbers. +20.6 on there. '16 Steph/Dray next at +19.6 (many more minutes). Sheed+Ben were at +19.6 in only 1/4 of a season in '04.

But it's almost certainly the record for any duo of a teams top 2 players (any reasonable sample size at least).

Iguodala + one of the Steph/Dray/Klay in '16 would be above it if one didn't mean top 2 guys and accepted Iguodala as a star in '16.


Garnett+Perkins were +18.9 in 2008
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#76 » by homecourtloss » Sat Oct 4, 2025 2:52 pm

ReggiesKnicks wrote:
eminence wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:So I’m strongly considering voting for 2005 Ginobili in this thread. The more I look into Ginobili’s on-off data, the more impressive it is. Below is a string of data regarding Ginobili, which I think also serves to refute some potential things one might think of to downplay his great numbers:

Ginobili & Duncan had all-time net ratings together in 2005

1. In the 2005 season, Ginobili and Duncan had a +20.38 net rating in 1380 minutes on the court together. This is a crazy number. For reference, it is higher than the +19.89 net rating that Curry/Durant/Draymond had on the court together in the 2017 season, on the GOAT team. It is also higher than the +19.27 that Curry and Draymond had on the court together in the record-breaking 2016 season. I’m not aware of any star duo that actually had a higher net rating together in a season.


Used BBref to search, so very slightly different numbers. +20.6 on there. '16 Steph/Dray next at +19.6 (many more minutes). Sheed+Ben were at +19.6 in only 1/4 of a season in '04.

But it's almost certainly the record for any duo of a teams top 2 players (any reasonable sample size at least).

Iguodala + one of the Steph/Dray/Klay in '16 would be above it if one didn't mean top 2 guys and accepted Iguodala as a star in '16.


Garnett+Perkins were +18.9 in 2008


Dray+Curry at +19.3 in over 2,450 minutes is going to be tough to beat.

Iggy+Draymond, 1,034 minutes, +22.9
Iggy+Klay, 852 minutes, +23.4
Iggy+Curry, 1,034 minutes, +21.5
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#77 » by ReggiesKnicks » Sat Oct 4, 2025 3:23 pm

homecourtloss wrote:
ReggiesKnicks wrote:
eminence wrote:
Used BBref to search, so very slightly different numbers. +20.6 on there. '16 Steph/Dray next at +19.6 (many more minutes). Sheed+Ben were at +19.6 in only 1/4 of a season in '04.

But it's almost certainly the record for any duo of a teams top 2 players (any reasonable sample size at least).

Iguodala + one of the Steph/Dray/Klay in '16 would be above it if one didn't mean top 2 guys and accepted Iguodala as a star in '16.


Garnett+Perkins were +18.9 in 2008


Dray+Curry at +19.3 in over 2,450 minutes is going to be tough to beat.

Iggy+Draymond, 1,034 minutes, +22.9
Iggy+Klay, 852 minutes, +23.4
Iggy+Curry, 1,034 minutes, +21.5


This is good stuff.

What's wild about this is that Duncan+Manu are completely additive. What does this mean?
Duncan On, Manu Off: +10.5
Manu On, Duncan Off: +9.9
Duncan+Manu: +20.4

Draymond On, Steph Off: +10.8 (under 400 minute sample)
Steph On, Draymond Off: +3.4 (Under 300 minute sample)
Steph+Draymond: +19.3

As we move to larger samples, I wonder what this can tell us.

For example, here is LeBron+Kyrie (2015-2017 RS)
LeBron On, Kyrie On: +10.4 (4900 minutes)
LeBron On, Kyrie Off: +10.2 (3000 minutes)
LeBron Off, Kyrie On: -1.8 (2000 minutes)

Dirk+Nash (2002-2004 RS)
Dirk On, Nash On: +9.0 (6600 minutes)
Dirk On, Nash Off: +7.4 (2200 minutes)
Dirk Off, Nash On: -5.7 (1500 minutes)

Even over a 3-year sample, Manu + Duncan are completely additive (2005-2007)

Duncan On, Manu On: +16.9 (4000 minutes)
Duncan On, Manu Off: +8.7 (3600 minutes)
Duncan Off, Manu On: +8.5 (2000 minutes)

Garnett+Pierce (2008-2010 RS)
Garnett On, Pierce On: +12.8 (5300 minutes)
Garnett Off, Pierce On: +3.6 (3000 minutes)
Garnett On, Pierce Off: +11.1 (900 minutes)

It appears that Duncan and Manu have a 100% symbiotic relationship, something rarely, if ever, seen in the NBA.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#78 » by iggymcfrack » Sat Oct 4, 2025 3:30 pm

I feel really good and locked in about Dirk and CP3 as my next 2 picks. After that’s when it starts to get really hard though. I feel like Manu, AD, KD, Kobe, and Draymond all have really good cases and whenever I think I’m starting to settle into 2 of them, I see really good head-to-head cases for the guys I’m not choosing.

I originally had Westbrook in this tier and I thought he was a deserved MVP in 2017, but it does seem like his impact stats are a little underwhelming compared to the other candidates.

Draymond I originally wasn’t considering for this tier, but the more I think about it, I can’t see why. Has the best impact stats of the group and is an incredible playoff riser.

Plus if we’re really trying to narrow in on peak, there’s just so many good things in his favor in the 2016 season:

- Shot 39% from three and 37% in the playoffs
- Best on/off of all-time
- Led the Warriors to a 6-2 record without Curry in the playoffs while greatly increasing his scoring volume
- Best Game 7 in NBA Finals history

Like what’s even the case against him?
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#79 » by eminence » Sat Oct 4, 2025 3:41 pm

Steph/Dray over the 15/16 two season sample look pretty additive as well. Approx +8 with each, and then +18 with both.

Gets tricky to measure after '16, as KD is certainly the level of player one should control for.

Shaq/Kobe and LeBron/Wade both look pretty additive ('01-'04 and '11-'14), just much less balanced than the TD/Manu duo.
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Re: Top 25 peaks of the 2001-25: #11-#12 Spots 

Post#80 » by ReggiesKnicks » Sat Oct 4, 2025 3:58 pm

eminence wrote:Steph/Dray over the 15/16 two season sample look pretty additive as well. Approx +8 with each, and then +18 with both.

Gets tricky to measure after '16, as KD is certainly the level of player one should control for.

Shaq/Kobe and LeBron/Wade both look pretty additive ('01-'04 and '11-'14), just much less balanced than the TD/Manu duo.


Good examples. Another one that isn't exactly additive is Westbrook/Durant.

CP3+Griffin is somewhat additive, but this approach runs into an issue where Blake Griffin is on the cusp of greatness (much like Kyrie).

CP3+Harden are excellent examples of not being additive or symbiotic.

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