70sFan wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:70sFan wrote:Another thing that is very important to mention is about his consistency - f4p is right that Manu was quite mediocre for basically half of the series. I see people talking about this 2005 finals performance like he did things similar to 2006 Wade but that's just not true. He was really good considering the context, but it's not some kind of all-time performance. He had some really rough games in that series and as we shouldn't just look at them only, we shouldn't focus just on the good ones either.
So I've been meaning to touch on this specifically within the project - I think you've already seen my post on this some so thank you for your forbearance 70s.
Because legacy is determined in modern NBA circles by playoff success, and because the playoffs are played in series, game-to-game consistency is considerably less important than it would be if it were a single elimination tournament.
Becoming the champion in the modern NBA is about being able to beat four opponents in a row at least 57% of the games, and this allows for teams and players to pace their efforts.
The 2005 finals was one of the craziest in history in terms of the way the teams seemed to be reserving energy to "hold serve" at home through the first 4 games of the series in which every single game was won by 15 or more points, and Game 4 saw the Spurs lose by 31 points... only to win 2 of the last 3 and thus take the series.
Fine to say it wasn't exactly the most dominant Finals performance in NBA history, but it did the trick.
And how was said trick done? In the 4 games the Spurs won, here were the totals for the Spurs Big 3:
Duncan 168 MP, 93 Pts, 58 Rbds, 8 Asts, 10 Blks, +36
Parker 152 MP, 49 Pts, 9 Rbds, 11 Asts, +10
Ginobili 150 MP, 91 Pts, 23 Rbds, 22 Asts, 6 Stls, +60
Had people been in the habit of thinking of things more in these terms, rather than by overall averages, I believe they'd have voted for Ginobili for Finals MVP.
Now, in the name of consistency as a virtue folks can disagree with me on this, but I'd ask more than anything else that people ruminate on the idea that it's actually smart in a best-of-7 for players to allocate their efforts.
One can say "That's fine, but I'd rate higher the guys doing all Ginobili did, but without the down days.", but that player doesn't exist. Ginobili has the impact data he does with his worst days factored in just as much as his best days, just like everyone else, and when we do that, he looks incredible, and incredible particularly in the playoffs, and in the process of his career, it was a vital component of 4 NBA champions to say nothing of everything else the guy accomplished playing here, there, and everywhere.
I realize that a project like this means we have to nitpick, and it is right to knock Manu for playing less minutes, but I think we need to recognize that what Ginobili did, resulted in astonishing success for his teams in a way that frankly isn't true to for all the other guys we're talking about.
Ginobili's career gives us something truly unique to consider.
I am glad that you mentioned that we are forced to nitpick in this project, because I don't want to be called out a Manu hater or anything like that. Manu was an amazing player throughout his whole career and I know about that as well as anyone, being a Spurs fan during their glory days.
I also don't want to discredit 2005 finals performance as not worthy the FMVP. Unlike some others, I don't find Duncan's choice a robbery (his defense was critical for the Spurs success), but Manu was certainly the best offensive player of the series and the Spurs needed him badly.
My point is just that this wasn't an ultra-dominant performance like Wade the year after. Now sure, Wade is already in, but I think there are other players left that have their own amazing performances.
About consistency - it's true that you don't need to win every game to win the series. The less variability your performance has, the more likely you are to get the win on the road though. I don't deny, this is just my personal preference and I don't have anything to back it up, but I prefer players who deliver every game. That's why things like RS performance, injuries, inconsistency matter to me. This is why I haven't voted in CP3 yet, that's why I don't push Shaq inside top 5 all-time. That's also why I don't have Manu as top 15 player of this century. His RS just isn't on that level and the postseason run, although fantastic, doesn't scream like something that would push him above players who I just believe are better in bigger samples.
Good food for thought.
On: "wasn't an ultra-dominant performance like Wade the year after".
First let me acknowledge and also assert that Wade's already in, and so arguing for Manu over Wade isn't on the menu, but let's de-construct what "dominance" means here. Here's the raw +/- for the guys on the champions in '04-05 (Spurs) & '05-06 (Heat) - and folks should remember that both played 23 games:
1. Ginobili (SAS) +169
2. Wade (MIA) +134
3. Horry (SAS) +114
4. Posey (MIA) +107
5. Duncan (SAS) +73
I think it's worth asking what makes Wade's performance "dominant" and Ginobili's not, given that this metric sees them both as similar types of outliers.
If the answer is Wade's consistency, well, Ginobili's down days are factored in here and he still looks dominant.
If the answer is Ginobili playing less, well, those are factored in by such a metric as well.
If the answer comes down to Wade's first-option-ness, okay, but what about those of us who aren't looking to give additional credit to first options beyond what their impact indicates?
If the answer is just that a deeper dive in impact data favors Wade, cool, but as noted, Wade's already voted in and there aren't that many guys who did what Wade did.
Now, over in the thread about #1 options, I said that the relevance to me is one of robust vs fragile impact. If a player is the clear cut first option, then I'm confident that whatever the player's impact is, it is robust in the sense that whatever "squish" of impact the opponents are capable of squishing on him, they're already doing it. Whereas, a player with less primacy may not actually have the opponent's attention, and hence when they need to, the opponent may be able to squish his impact down.
Circa 2005, I was essentially penalizing Ginobili with this thinking, but the thing is, Ginobili's impact indicators lasted for basically forever. Opponents had well over a decade to find a solution Ginobili's impact, and especially playoff impact, and they never did. Maybe that was incompetence on their part, but I've seen enough that my conclusion is that this was about Ginobili having robust impact. Pace & space, on & off ball, both sides of the ball, Ginobili shined in all of these ways.
Let me also make clear when I talk about "Ginobili's down days", I don't mean to imply here that I think he was egregiously inconsistent in his efforts.
I would say that in the 2005 Finals we pretty clearly saw both teams punt games once they got down by a lot in the first 4 games of the series. That's not the same thing as going into the game with the intent to lose, but rather about how "all in" the team is about coming back once they're behind. Are you going to hit the nitro to desperately try to come back in a road game you don't actually need to win the series and accept the cost of this by being less ready to go for the next game? Basketball teams generally say "No" here.
Let's take a look at Ginobili's 4th quarters for the games in the series by True Shooting Attempts because I think they really show how this tends to work::
Game 1: 6.88 (high quarter)
Game 2: 6.40 (high quarter)
Game 3: 1.00 (low quarter)
Game 4: 1.00 (low quarter)
Game 5: 7.44 (high quarter)
Game 6: 5.00 (2nd quarter behind Q3)
Game 7: 5.76 (high quarter)
I think it's pretty easy to see how Ginobili's 4th quarters were drastically different when the game was already a blowout loss, and while we see something of a similar trend for Duncan, it's not quite so extreme. While Duncan has more 4th quarter TSA in the series than Ginobili, If we just consider the 5 games of the series other than the two blowout losses, Ginobili has 33.48 TSA while Duncan only has 29.48. Meaning that when we're in crunch time of a game being decided, Ginobili's effectively acting as first option.
Then if we just consider what those TSA produced: Duncan scored 25 points on those 29.48 attempts, while Ginobili scored 42 on his 33.48. (ftr, Parker scored 8 points total in those 5 4th quarters.)
So basically what I'd argue is that even before pace & space, offenses tended to become perimeter dominated in crunch time, and Pop let Ginobili could in that time frame after building the offense around Duncan the rest of the game, and so that meant that in games where it didn't make sense to let Ginobili cook late in the game, well, he might have gotten no cook-time at all.
And in comparison with the Wades of the world, that's going to exaggerate their difference, because those guys get to be the first option TSA's from the first quarter, and Ginobili's not getting the 4th quarter spike he'd get in a close game.
70sFan wrote:When we have guys with very well defined peaks, I sometimes try to go away from this best scenario situation and ask myself - where would I put his 2nd best year on that list? I did that with Anthony Davis and I realized I should wait a little more for him. I am doing that with Manu and I definitely wouldn't consider 2007 for top 20. Is there really that massive gap between 2005 and 2007? I don't think so.
What are your thoughts on that?
Okay, wanted to break this out separately.
First, the fact that Ginobili never topped his '04-05 run is really noteworthy, and I should note that many of us thought he'd get better after that, and he really didn't. We were thinking of this in terms of a young guy breaking out particularly over the playoffs, and so we expected to see him then transition to a higher primacy and maybe get stats more like a traditional volume scoring star.
The obvious thing to point out is that Ginobili was already 27 at that point, and a 27 year old peak is pretty normal, so really we were thrown off to some degree by Ginobili getting a late start in the NBA because he was foreign.
Now, I know you're not actually saying he got worse after that. You're saying he was probably about the same a couple years later, but didn't look as impressive, so maybe we're over-sampling on flukiness if we elevate '04-05 too much.
However, the fact that Ginobili continues to have a massive impact footprint, particularly deep in the playoffs, for basically his whole career is very much relevant here. We're not talking about a fluky impact year, we're talking about a guy who was regularly huge by impact, but his overall season candidacy just isn't popping the same way.
Now why is that? Well, we start with the fact that it was '07-08 & '10-11 where Ginobili had bigger minutes and led the team in Win Shares, and so while I'm fine with saying that Ginobili was in essence about the same player the whole time through, I'm not so sure that we should be looking at '05-06 or '06-07 as the #2 year.
Of those two, the one that I think has the most Manu-POY potential was '10-11. There you had the Spurs shocking the world and developing an offense that made all Duncan-led offenses look incompetent in comparison because now they embraced pace & space - which Ginobili embodied while co-stars Duncan & Parker did not. They had the #2 ORtg in the league (111.8) with them being considerably better than that with Ginobili on the floor, and this led them to having the best regular season record in the league without relying on prime Duncan-led defense, because that no longer existed.
Had that playoffs gone for SA like their RS - or more like the '13-14 playoffs - I expect that Ginobili would have been a serious candidate for my POY... but instead he was injured, and since the Spurs without Ginobili leading them weren't actually that good, they got upset by the 8 seed.