JordansBulls wrote:kaima wrote:
Well, he certainly had better numbers against Robinson in their series.
Yes he did, I acknowledged that. But Robinson still had better playoff numbers than Malone. Higher PER, and better WS/48 minutes.
So, does this mean that you conclude that Robinson played better, and that he was the better player in the Jazz/Spurs series, or simply that, by virtue of these aggregates, he must be placed over Malone?
If we're talking about regular seasons, then the point returns to your own standards as regards prior regular seasons versus post-seasons.
That's the the central piece of your argument against Malone v. Jordan (which I agree with).
Big difference. Robinson was 2nd in MVP voting while Malone was 7th. It wasn't like he was top 3-4 in MVP voting.
So, is your voting pattern primarily based on counting up awards shares?
Further, if you're big on matchups defining value, the Robinson/Malone beatdown is a more logical exploration and exclamation as far as standard and point.
That is, on a logical basis.
And yet Malone played better defense than Robinson in their matchup.
Malone's post defense was often underrated.
If this is a roundup of season awards, then by definition Robinson's post-season doesn't matter.
Didn't say Malone wasn't a good defender, I said both Robinson and Hakeem made both all nba and all defense teams.
See the bold.
I'll trust my own lying eyes. Malone was better than Robinson in the playoffs.
He was better in the series head to head, I completely agree.
And considering this directly lead to SA's ouster, I think that's a rather big deal.
If Malone having a worse Finals than Jordan knocks him down to 2 in other seasons, why shouldn't Malone's head to head play against Robinson carry similar weight?
I don't think that helps your argument.
Yes it shows Hornecek produced more so than Malone for the Jazz success that Postseason.
Which shows the measurement has serious flaws.
Kind of my point.
The measurement is not placing a fair value on Malone demolishing the guy you think was the second best player in the league, nor does it take into account what Malone's presence did for Hornacek's numbers.
The system Utah ran was perfect for Horny. He was perfect within it. But it was DOA without Malone at the center of it.
If you truly believe that Malone contributed so little to Utah's post-season success, then he shouldn't be in your top 10, let alone 5.
I think the difficult thing here is how to measure Malone. I mean finishing 7th in MVP voting makes it kinda difficult to rank someone #2 in a season. If he were #4 or better I probably would have done so.
So this all comes down to award shares, explicitly.
And there's an interesting clash: you value WS and PER, yet they don't agree with the MVP vote.
Bit of a problem.
According to WS and PER in the regular season, Malone should have been number 3 in MVP votes.
Something's got to give.
What is your argument here? Are you saying Malone should have been #2?
Considering what he did to your number 2 in the playoffs, and his overall run in that post-season? Yes.
And I really don't see the argument for Olajuwon over Malone.