ellobo wrote:To me, Reggie is clearly the best out of this group. For individual efficiency, consistently driving team offensive efficiency, and for maintaining his efficiency in the playoffs. He really was the shooting guard precursor to Curry, using his gravity on and off the ball to warp defenses. There are a bunch of numbers below, but by the eye test, having seen his whole college and pro careers, he was the most dominant. Although there is definitely a faction out there of Reggie Miller appreciators, I feel like a lot of people who didn't watch him don't appreciate how many different ways he had to score and inaccurately think of him as a one-dimensional player, and even people who did watch him often don't appreciate his overall impact on team offense.
6th all-time in career offensive rating (and 1st in career offensive rating among all retired players).
10th all-time in offensive win shares.
18th all-time in total win shares.
He was a great shooter from all ranges and the free throw line.
.614 TS% (15th all-time, 7th among retired players) and .601 in the playoffs (14th all-time, 8th all-time among retired players)
He was more than just a jumpshooter.
.402 Free throw rate and .411 in the playoffs (higher than Jordan and Kobe, for example, not to mention Tracy McGrady and Vince Carter). Reggie drew way more fouls than Ray and was about equal to Manu (Reggie had a slightly higher free throw rate, but slightly lower free throw attempts per 100).
22nd all-time in VORP
To me, Ray and Manu are very close overall, although their styles were very different. Ray was more similar to Reggie in that his biggest strengths were off-ball movement and shooting, whereas Manu's strength was wild on-ball creativity.
I love and appreciate all three guys. As a Knicks fan, Reggie was a feared and hated rival, Manu was one of my favorite players to watch and I was usually rooting for his team (when they weren't playing the Knicks), and as a UConn fan, I followed Ray's whole career and mostly rooted for his teams as well.
I think Miller's shot creation gets minimized because so much of his work happened off the ball and on the perimeter whereas Allen and Manu could dominate the ball and drive into the teeth of the defense with ease. A more traditional look for an offensive player. Miller was constantly in motion and that got him open. He also had a hairpin trigger that he could pull off of lateral movement and a master of the pump fake. Also, Miller was one of the best actors the game has ever seen and actually won an Oscar for Best Off Ball Performance in 1996. He got a lot of free throws for a guy that barely drove for embellishing contact coming around screens.


































