Doctor MJ wrote:ReggiesKnicks wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
Re: Gobert & Mutombo. I think a conversation comparing these two next to Ben (and Dwight for that matter) makes a lot of sense.
I do think the big thing to consider is that Ben has an entirely different body than the talls. That's absolutely a traditional reason to consider him a worse defender, and when you add his offensive limitations, makes sense to prefer the other guys.
But Ben was also considerably more mobile than Gobert & Mutombo while quite possibly being stronger than them. I always remember a play where LeBron drove to the hoop against the Pistons and got fouled seemingly by all of Ben's teammates which accomplished nothing at all other than giving him a guaranteed trip to the charity stripe due to LeBron's superior strength, and then finally Ben comes in as the final boss and when gets his hand on the ball LeBron's trying to dunk cleanly, LeBron was stopped cold. Literally, if the other Pistons had just decided to not do anything at all to stop LeBron, Ben would have stopped LeBron by himself, but because they tried to stop him, all Ben could do is prevent the And-1.
Ben Wallace was more mobile than Gobert & Mutombo, but comparing Gobert and Mutombo in the same sentence in terms of mobility is incorrect.
I still don't see the argument for Ben Wallace over Rudy Gobert in this thread, but I am open to seeing it being presented.
Are you suggesting that the gap between Ben & Rudy's mobility is small compared to Rudy & Deke?
No.
I see Rudy as a guy whose mobility limitations have everything to do with why his team's success tended to choke in the playoffs.
It was Rudy's lack of mobility which is the sole reason for the Utah Jazz's inability to defend the perimeter at a high level in the postseason. I can't get behind that.
Rudy Gobert is an easy player to dislike, from NBA Players themselves clowning him in multiple interviews to Gobert's out-of-touch comments regarding the global pandemic, to the Utah Jazz being a dominant regular-season team that falls short in the postseason, similar to the 1980s and early 1990s Jazz.
Defensively, a team with Bojan Bogdanovic, Mike Conley, and Royce O'Neale isn't going to be capable of stopping good offenses in the postseason. Of course, we saw an older Rudy Gobert join up with the likes of Jaden McDaniels, Anthony Edwards, and Karl-Anthony Towns and have a historically dominant postseason series against an Offensive GOAT in Nikola Jokic, holding the Suns to -7.1 Ortg (Compared to their RS) and Denver to -10.4, all while Minnesota produced a great offense against Phoenix and mediocre against Denver, before eventually crashing and burning against Dallas. We then see Gobert in 2025 hold up incredibly well against Luka in isolation.
It is clear that Gobert has defensive blemishes in the postseason, unlike Ben Wallace, but that's where this offensive gap comes into play. We are also trying to hone in on one season, a season in which we saw Gobert dominate in a way Ben Wallace simply never did, on both ends of the court. However, the season ended in a disappointing fashion due to outlier shooting performances, which is why playoff sample sizes are always tricky to evaluate.
2021 LAC Round 1: 37.3 3P%
2021 LAC Round 2: 43.3 3P%
2021 LAC Round 3: 35.3 3P%
Again, I know you adore +/-, even just raw +/-. I have read your posts, and you often use raw +/- in them to articulate your viewpoint on players or situations. In fact, your ability to diagnose +/- and extrapolate your thoughts and opinions through it is incredibly valuable to me, as I too adore +/- as a rudimentary analysis that is far more valuable than other box-score-specific counting stats.
This isn't a gotcha moment, but a post of yours from about two years ago in a discussion regarding Luka, Manu, and +/-points.
Doctor MJ wrote:
(Snip regarding Luka)
In the end, I tend to focus on base impact (in the sense of +/-, though we don't always have enough data to know what that is) and scalability to greater team play with such a role as my north star here. If Player X is having more impact and playing more in a style that seems to fit on a champion than Player Y, I'm probably not going to be overly focused on whether Player X could do what Player Y does. Rather, I'll be asking myself how Player Y would do in a scenario like Player X.
(Snip regarding Manu)
Before I move off from +/-, I'm going to mention something I've mentioned before that I know a lot of people don't like, but here we go:
We are now in Year 5 of Luka's career, and as things stand, he's once again not leading his team in raw +/-.
As I've acknowledged before: Raw +/- is a super-simple metric that by no means should be taken by itself as proxy for how good a player is. I use leading a team in raw +/- as something to share because:
1. Everybody (almost) understands what raw +/- actually is and should be capable of discussing what they think is happening, whereas more sophisticated metrics make that trickier.
2. When we're talking about players who are supposed to be outliers, we generally expect them to be able to separate themselves from their peers in most years unless they have fellow outliers on their team.
3. In the case of Luka, who is often talked about as a player that hasn't been built around with suitable supporting talent, there are no outliers that have gotten in the way.
RE: Player X and Player Y Roles
What if we did swap Gobert and Wallace? I understand the general consensus (with which I agree) that Ben Wallace was an incredibly passionate and strong leader, whereas Gobert wasn't. But what exactly would Chauncey Billups and the Detroit offense achieve with a P&R threat as effective as Rudy Gobert? We saw Mike Conley have historically great +/- at the tail-end of his prime running P&R next to Gobert, imagine the boon this provides Chauncey and Detroit.
How does Utah's offense look with Ben Wallace at the helm of a P&R attack? Probably pedestrian, though given their shooting (4-out spacing) it would still be effective, but I have my doubts they could be the #1 offense in the NBA like they were in 2021.
To reiterate, simply swapping players 15 years apart in different league environments isn't something I personally place great value in, but Detroit had better pieces, relative to their era, compared to what Utah was working with around Gobert, and I don't see that as particularly debatable.
RE: +/-
Rudy Gobert is an outlier in terms of +/-
2021 Rudy Gobert: +728 (1st in NBA)
2021 Mike Conley: +548
2020 Anthony Davis: +240
2020 LeBron James: +442
2009 Dwight Howard: +550
2009 Rashard Lewis: +582
2010 Dwight Howard: +620
2010 Vince Carter: +497
2004 Ben Wallace: +440 (10th in NBA)
2004 Chauncey Billups: +413
2005 Tayshaun Prince: +437
2005 Rip Hamilton: +425
2005 Rasheed Wallace: +375
2005 Chauncey Billups: +352
2005 Ben Wallace: +343 (24th in NBA)
2006 Tayshaun Prince: +647
2006 Rasheed Wallace: +615
2006 Ben Wallace: +599 (3rd in NBA)
My Napkin math says Ben Wallace is still first in +/- between 2004 and 2006 for Detroit, but he is lumped together with his other teammates. Rudy Gobert, on the other hand, is going to be head-and-shoulders ahead for a 3-year sample of 2020-2022.
Gobert was head and shoulders above the best player on a 9 SRS team, where Rudy Gobert led the league in +/-rating. This should matter for something here.