nate33 wrote:There are some valid points here, but I think you are thinking of "Phoenix Barkley", not "Philly Barkley". Those .650 TS% seasons took place in Philly. Phoenix Barkley did indeed back people down a la Mark Jackson and sometimes killed the offensive flow. But Philly Barkley did no such thing. Philly Barkley was so explosive that he just blew past guys and dunked on them. Opposing PF's were too slow to stay in front of him, and opposing SF's just couldn't deal with Barkley's strength.
Philly Barkley was quite explosive, yes. He was also epic fail about protecting the ball for a large chunk of his Philly career, averaging 3.8 - 4.7 tpg for almost 40% of his time in Philly (3 of 8 seasons).
But even if you ignore that (which is legit, because Olajuwon had 1 season like that but generally replaced turnover problems with 9 seasons at 3.7+ fpg), the bigger problem is that Barkley's offense didn't translate across his whole career.
He got worse much sooner than did Hakeem. Sir Charles was especially efficient and awesome and what-not for 7 seasons. Then he turned 29, went to Phoenix, and was considerably less efficient from then on out and absolutely less valuable than Olajuwon.
By contrast, Olajuwon maintained his baseline level of offensive production for 13 consecutive seasons, including a 4-year peak in his early 30s... trending exactly OPPOSITE to Barkley. For four seasons from 30 to 33, Olajuwon averaged 27 ppg over 306 games. In the same period, Barkley (who was experiencing a 6%+ drop in his field goal efficiency and a notable drop in his offensive rebounding) declined from being an explosive 25-28 ppg scorer to scoring 25.6, 21.6, 23, 23.2 and 19.2 ppg (from 29 to 33).... although the 19 ppg was alongside Olajuwon in Houston (Dream averaged 23.2 ppg).
The problem? Overreliance on athleticism. Olajuwon's 6'10 and that means he's considerably more valuable offensively over a longer period of time. You get a peak from Sir Charles that has a higher TS%, sure... but then it goes away... rapidly. In 92-93, at 29, in Phoenix, he still posted a TS% of over 59%, which is great... but then he was never higher than 58.5% and only went higher than 57.2% twice... and under that in the other 4 remaining years of his career as his volume and efficiency decreased.
I don't know, again, I think that Barkley's offense was great and everything, even when he was an explosive, undersized 4 as opposed to a large-arsed undersized 4 with an improved jumper, but I'd rather rely on Olajuwon's post offense because of what it meant for floor spacing and because it was more reliable long-term.
A classic post scorer will almost always be superior to a more efficient wing scorer because of where a dominant low-block guy will drag the defense and how he warps the spread of the floor.