Post#208 » by drza » Thu May 6, 2010 8:31 pm
Coming into this thread, my rankings probably would have been KG, Duncan, Shaq, Dirk, Manu 1 - 5, with Nash and Wade both getting honorable mentions.
As this thread has gone along I have added TMac to the discussion, but he still couldn't get past honorable mention. Nash has moved up a bit, because I do see some interesting similarities between what he did in Phoenix in '05 and what KG did in Boston in '08, but I think on the whole KG's '08 was a bit better across the board so it didn't move Nash beyond where he landed. Manu has also moved up a bit, after I was reminded of just how strong he was that year and I decided how to mentally put him into context. Shaq and Dirk both slid due to their postseason struggles, while Wade moved up because of his postseason brilliance. In the end, here are my rankings:
1) Kevin Garnett. He was the best player in the league entering the season, and he did nothing in '05 to dissuade me from that. He was the offensive focal point for his team in a way that few forwards have ever been, as only LeBron and Bird have surpassed both his scoring and assist numbers from '05 in a single season since 1980. He was also one of the best defensive players in the league as well as the rebound champ. Overall, he led a team of old, injured chuckers to one of the better offenses in the league and a respectable defense against the odds while carrying a team with a whole lot wrong with it to 44 wins. Since we're going chronologically backward in this project, Garnett in '05 is the first player we've encountered to lead the league in PER, Win Shares, and Wins Produced in the same season.
2) Tim Duncan. As I said before, I think KG and Duncan were just clearly the two best players in the world in 2003 and 2004, and according to the advanced stats they were still 1-2 in '05. Not going to penalize either of them just because one of them got ouchy injured (but still was able to lead a team to the title) and the other was surrounded by garbage. Even with the injury that slowed his production late and the questions that some had about his Finals MVP, Duncan had enough of a gap over the rest of the league that I still have him solidly at second.
3) Manu Ginobili. One of the most underrated players of this era IMO, because his role isn't to carry the team alone. But I think he's the best #2 option since Kobe, and if you consider Kobe really a #1b then Manu is the best #2 since Pippen. He is knocked for not playing a lot of minutes, but he played almost as many as Nash and beat him convincingly across the body of advanced stats (box score and APM) in the regular season. In the postseason he picked it up even further, arguably leading his team to a title as he dominated the postseason advanced stats even over Duncan and he led the whole NBA in postseason on/off +/-.
4) Dwyane Wade - The arrival of Shaq that season obscured from many just how good Wade was during the regular season, but he burst onto the scene and made it obvious that the Heat was his team in a postseason that included keying a second round win with Shaq missing half of the games. Was magical when healthy, but got injured at the wrong time and team lost the conference finals in 7. If he'd stayed healthy I think they'd have beaten the Pistons and taken on the Spurs in the Finals, and that likely would have been enough to get him ranked over Manu. So, he drops one spot in deference to his ill-timed injury.
5) Steve Nash - Gets the boost for being the centerpiece in a huge turnaround, as well as the corresponding intangibles. Continued to be strong into the playoffs, especially in a dominating performance in the second round over his old team. I don't believe he was actually as good of a player as some of his competition (including at least one, if not both of the guys that got pushed to my HM list), but the pro-Nash argument in this thread got him into my top-5.
HM:
Dirk - Was just a step behind Garnett and Duncan statistically, led a great team for first time without his old cohort, but wasn't that special in the playoffs. Still was top-5 worthy, but Wade and Nash moving into the top-5 pushed Dirk and Shaq out.
Shaq - Like Nash, got a big boost for triggering a huge turnaround. Also measured out slightly better in the advanced stats in the regular season than did Nash and would have gotten my regular season MVP vote over Nash for that reason. Was injured in the postseason, which hurt, but he did play in every game against the Pistons and put up solid numbers. Nash in the postseason was better, though, and Wade's ascension on my list cost Shaq a spot
TMac - Was very good. As I pointed out earlier in the thread, KG may have been the only forward besides LeBron and Bird to average at least 22 and 5.7 in the last 30 years...but only if you don't count McGrady as a forward. If you do, he would also join that list. He played very well in '05, he just couldn't break into what turned out to be a pretty strong group in front of him.