so Dirk was injured. Kobe, in fact, was injured too... but he didn't miss any games because of that and still vastly helped his team after the injury. that's where he edges Dirk. when you're limited by injury, it's one thing. when you're flat out unable to play, I'm gonna punish you severely.
Semi wrote:bastillon - Do you have any issues with Dirk or McGrady being picked over Garnett, or just Kobe? Just curious.
I'd have issues with Dirk because of his injury in the playoffs. other than that I could live with Dirk over KG as this is supported by something. I do believe Garnett seperated himself from Nowitzki, but I give much value to +/- numbers and I've been extremely impressed by how Nowitzki measures out in this decade as we've moved through this project. also, Mystic convinced the crap out of me and whereas I was extremely sceptical of Nowitzki > KG before this project (and I actually argued passionately against this notion in the past), I'm now comfortable with someone taking Dirk ahead of KG... but there were some years when Garnett was clearly better player than Nowitzki based on several factors and I think 2003 is one of these (2004 and 2008 being others). this, IMO, was Garnett's THE best year as an individual. he flat out did some amazing things aforementioned by drza, and I don't believe Dirk could match them in 2003... but the real, clear seperation is the injury. that's kind of a knock-out thing for me and I already responded to Mystic in depth about this soo...
as for McGrady, I could live with him over Garnett. again, KG was IMO clearly better player, but this is hardly an easy call. you really have to go in-depth to see this. what hurts T-Mac is how easily his contributions can be limited. we can talk about his versatility all we want but unless he's scoring at all time level, he won't have THAT kind of impact. now McGrady was epic scorer during the course of that season but when it really mattered rookie Tayshaun locked him up and IIRC he struggled against his defense heavily the last 3 games (and I believe he blew 3:1 lead in that series). so T-Mac's impact, unlike Garnett's, can be vastly reduced when you take away one aspect of his game. that's not happening with KG. passing, rebounding, shot altering, orchestrating offense... (I could go on) he had it all. you can't limit him as you can T-Mac. this is where I think Garnett decisively edges him.
Ronnymac,
your argument for Kobe over Garnett was based on three things:
1) coaching
2) iso scoring and offense
3) clutchness
1.I do understand your argument and I still think Flip did a good job with this Wolves team. he wasn't great by any means but he did well. he recognized Garnett's passing ability and was able to capitalize on that with his scheme which resulted in top ranked offenses year in year out. I give him credit for that. I'd like to point out, though, that there was a big gap between '03 Wolves and '06 Wolves. '03 were scrub role players that fit well within their system and understood their place. later Minny consisted of primadonna chuckers that had absolutely no f*ckin clue about the concept of team-ball or winning. '03 Wolves could at least hit 3P shots when left open. late Wolves were nothing short of useless. drza already pointed out in 07 thread how bad they were, you can go check on that. I'd like to give you example of Ricky Davis that not only was an important player in Minnesota (meaning the coach relied upon him), but was made their GTG and primary facilitator. he had a big role in that team. now that being said, look at results of his teams:
Cleveland - LeBron James
Boston - Al Jefferson
Wolves - Roy (traded for Foye)
Heat - Beasley
Clippers - Griffin
Ricky Davis managed to lead his teams to two TOP1 finishes, one TOP2, another TOP5 finish and then another finish in TOP14. and these are not MVP finishes, nor they are season standings. I'm talking about lottery finishes. you can't win when your WHOLE team is built of such parts. other then a lottery-talisman, Ricky Davis is completely, absolutely useless as a basketball player. he's a definition of a loser.
now having said that, I understand that Flip still had some impressive results with those Wolves teams and I give him credit for that....
but how is this even relevant to this discussion if the guy you're defending plays alongside offensive genius that is vastly superior to Saunders ? if anything coaching was CLEARLY in Kobe's favor meaning that it's Garnett who would get advantage in our discussion in this area. you can't give Flip the benefit of the doubt here while at the same time Phil is being overlooked. that ain't right.
3.clutchness - someone pointed out that Garnett measured better than Kobe in this area in 2003. I'm not sure if that's true so I'll try to run some numbers later.
if these two points don't sway things in Kobe's favor, then your whole argument is based on scoring/offense. I see no reason to think Kobe was vastly better offensive player (which he would have to be in order to match Garnett's defensive impact).
ORtg
Lakers 107.2 (4th)
Wolves 106.1 (5th)
Lakers were marginally better offensively that year and Garnett didn't have Shaq on his team who was pretty big factor, both literally and figuratively. with that gap being so small and one player having decisive edge in terms of supporting cast, I think Garnett actually should get the edge here. I simply doubt Kobe could achieve similar results had he been given similarly bad cast. in fact, Lakers without Shaq and with Kobe were clearly worse offensive team (at least I think so based on their 5-10 record or whatever).











