Doctor MJ wrote:Wow, that's a lot.
Quantity versus quality?
Utah was a fantastic defensive team before Malone was even on the team.
Yet Malone's presence in this season, along with Stockton's, immediately changed the perception surrounding the team.
And with good reason. Utah was not doing anything, really, close in the playoffs to what they did here, before Malone/Stockton.
That's my point. To treat this as meaningless, or even a negative, while Barkley is seen as a hero for a 36 win season is what I find confounding.
I consider Eaton the clear top reason for the Jazz great defense. Forced to pick one, yes I prefer Malone's defense, but I do think Barkley gets something of a bad rap here. It's not like Barkley never played on a good defense.
My point would only be who fit better, and thus the question of why Barkley would be seen as a player that out-flanks Malone in impact for this type of team, or overall. The best that can be said about Barkley's defense, most years, is that it wasn't detrimental.
I do think his freakish athleticism would cover for him much of the time, early on. But Malone's ability was far better even at this point -- when Malone was still developing, and Barkley was close to his best defensively.
If Malone's defense is only a slight positive (again, seemingly being underrated) over Barkley, then I can't see how Barkley's offense was that much better than Malone's, if at all.
Also, I didn't say Barkley was a better fit for Utah than Malone, I was talking generally about talent and design of supporting cast. The 76ers were clearly quite poorly designed.
My point was design as well, in that Malone was arguably a better fit for Utah than Barkley would have been.
It was curious to me that you thought Malone was a worse fit for Utah than Barkley. It still is.
As for Utah versus the Sixers, they were better, yes, but the idea that they Utah was very well designed is not something I agree with.
Rockets took the Lakers to 7 last year.
The question would be, how do you individuate that value? When the other team's best player is Ron Artest, I think we enter into apples versus oranges territory.
Certainly, I've seen great players be praised many times in this project for playing on a team that pushed a superior opponent. I've also seen Karl Malone and John Stockton's worth questioned when they lost to an inferior opponent early.
I don't believe that a 47 win team that takes the champs to 7 should be considered to be a 60 win team when measuring the team success of a player.
I think there's plenty of room to give credit within that variance.
Your initial statement seemed to imply that this meant very little. My question remains, why is it somehow more of a positive to be on a 36 win team, than to change the landscape and perception of a franchise while pushing the best team in the league to the limit?
Right there is an example of Stockton/Malone's impact. Yet they get, seemingly, no credit for this.
Re: coherence. C'mon, you know what happened. When faced with explaining a tough choice between two options, it's human nature to defend the negatives of the one you pick, and attack the positives of the one you didn't pick. It's for this reason that many times in this project I've "apologized" to a player because most of my comments about him are negative due to my wish to explain my choice, and it doesn't seem fair to the guy since he wouldn't be mentioned at all if he weren't great.
Broadly, I have no problem with the Barkley choice. But I do question its justification, and I have broadly gotten the feeling that Malone/Stockton, maybe because of the very fact that they were a tandem, take more negatives on team failures than other stars.
When they also get so little credit, again seemingly, for a relatively good year in team success when looking at the regular season+playoffs -- wherein the lack of more than 47 wins is focused on, and the fact that they pushed the eventual champs seven is, contrasted, dismissed -- I see a lack of over-arcing fairness and base logic in that.
When it's then claimed that Utah wasn't that effected by their combined or individuated presence(s), even considering that this was easily Utah's best season ever, I really question what the underlying standard is for them, and why it seems so much higher than a Barkley or Olajuwon.
All that conflated, we're left with one last questionable point: you state that Utah wasn't that close to the championship on a talent level, yet somehow it's expected that Utah should have done better than win 47 games and push the Lakers to 7.
My argument or issue, then, is not with the number of words used but the argument expressed in them, and how it doesn't seem to cohere between players. 50/100/however many more words aren't likely to change that finding.
Again, it counts, the question is how much it should count. Should I treat the team like they won 60 games?
I think it should count at least as much in the positive column as the loss to Golden State was treated as a negative. Just as a base standard. But that doesn't seem to be the case -- in both seasons, the simple assumption seems to be that Malone and Stockton were low-impact paper tigers, no matter the evidence.
That was and is my problem with the argument.
Hakeem, still almost made my top 5, but this RS was his low point until his pouting fiasco a few years later. Now, he put up fantastic numbers in the PS - in a first round exit where his team didn't even hold serve. As we've seen, opponent's can come up with strategies to let the star get his that are very successful. I can't let his PS sway me that strongly.
Does this mean that Akeem was a low-impact superstar? Or, could it be that the Rockets just weren't very good?
I'm leaving the quote from me in this one because your comment seems so off. My comment has nothing to do with blaming the Rockets for being bad. My comment is all about how much you much weight you give a few games where a player looks way better than normal but his team loses.[/quote]
My question was a broadly technical one. When a star performs well, yet goes down early and easily on a team basis, is he low-value? That was the assumption as to Stockton and Malone's worth against Golden State -- even as they both played great -- so I figured the same value may apply here.
On both counts, I would highly disagree.
What I would say this returns to is the difficult task of parsing superstar impact on a team, year to year. Is Jordan really only worth three wins for the 94 Bulls?
I don't think these are easily answered questions, but at the same time I would hope that we could find a standard that fits coherently when analyzing all these players, instead of a system that rewards some for team failure and negates team success for others.
That's what I saw here.