Malinhion wrote:Defense wins championships.
And what does that mean in this conversation where both are considered stars because of their offense?
Moderators: Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier

Malinhion wrote:Defense wins championships.
Doctor MJ wrote:[
League average:
'89-90 53.7% TS, 108.1 team ORtg
'95-96 53.6% TS, 106.2 team ORtg
It's really important to understand precisely when changes happened. Isiah didn't peak in an era dominated by defense, that was the NEXT era. 80s NBA is actually known for offensive ease, and ridiculous assist numbers. It was the 90s where hand checking started to get really abused, which eventually resulted in the last of many clarifications. (Hand checking was never supposed to allow you to impede the offensive player, the league kept trying to crack down to make sure that players didn't use it as such until they finally snapped and had the epiphany "Wait a minute, the main reason anybody hand checks is to impede, let's just cut that out altogether)
The bottom line is that Isiah was never a guy who made shots with strong efficiency. Isiah tends to hover around the 50th percentile on that front, while Nash is at about the 99th despite uping his volume significantly when the game is on the line.

Brenice wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:[
League average:
'89-90 53.7% TS, 108.1 team ORtg
'95-96 53.6% TS, 106.2 team ORtg
It's really important to understand precisely when changes happened. Isiah didn't peak in an era dominated by defense, that was the NEXT era. 80s NBA is actually known for offensive ease, and ridiculous assist numbers. It was the 90s where hand checking started to get really abused, which eventually resulted in the last of many clarifications. (Hand checking was never supposed to allow you to impede the offensive player, the league kept trying to crack down to make sure that players didn't use it as such until they finally snapped and had the epiphany "Wait a minute, the main reason anybody hand checks is to impede, let's just cut that out altogether)
The bottom line is that Isiah was never a guy who made shots with strong efficiency. Isiah tends to hover around the 50th percentile on that front, while Nash is at about the 99th despite uping his volume significantly when the game is on the line.
So Isiah played in an era where you couldn't put a hand on the man facing you up? I wonder what Dennis Johnson was doing in Boston. I clearly remember Michael Cooper hand-checking too. Magic had to put a hand on you, he had no choice.
NBA.com wrote:Clarification added to prohibit hand-checking through “rigid enforcement” of rule allowing a defensive player to retain contact with his opponent so long as he does not impede his opponent’s progress.
Jimmy76 wrote:except Russel had a lot more to do with the Celtics defense than Isiah had to do with the Pistons defense
If Isiah was anchoring the defense I'd change my mind
Laimbeer wrote:Jimmy76 wrote:except Russel had a lot more to do with the Celtics defense than Isiah had to do with the Pistons defense
If Isiah was anchoring the defense I'd change my mind
From a strategic standpoint, of course. But defense is as much about attitude and wanting to as being able. The team culture drives that, is what I'm saying. Talent wise, the Pistons had no business being that good a team.
Doctor MJ wrote:Brenice wrote:Well what did Nash do in any playoff that compared to anything Isiah did in the playoffs?
1. Playoff scoring record for a quarter, on a bad ankle to boot.
2. Finals MVP - Embarassed opposing guards who tried in vain to defend him(see Terry Porter), his eyes got big like Drexler's eyes when Jordan was embarassing him. Scored 22 in 1 quarter in Portland.
3. Finals average 27pts, 8 assists, 5 rebounds
Career Average:
Isiah - 20pts, 9.3 assists, 3.6 rebounds, 2.11 steals, 3.76 turnovers,
best year for assists was 13.9, with 21.2 pts, and 4.5 rebounds
Nash - 14.6pts, 8.3 assists, 3 rebounds, 0.8 steals, 2.79 turnovers
best year for assists was 11.6, with 18.6 pts, and 3.5 rebounds
Isiah in an embarassing landslide
What has Nash done in the playoffs? Well you're right he doesn't have a great finals performance, since he's never been there. Of course, nobody gets there with out their teammates.
Nash did have a 30/14 series that was pretty mind blowing though. Let's also consider these guys best playoff years statistically. I'll use PER just because a composite stat make that easier:
Best playoffs between these two:
1. Nash '05 23.4
2. Isiah '85 22.7
3. Isiah '87 22.6
4. Nash '10 22.5
5. Nash '07 21.9
6. Nash '06 21.3
7. Isiah '86 21.1
8. Isiah '90 21.0
9. Isiah '88 20.7
10. Isiah 84 20.6
Not saying Nash blows him out of the water here, but it's certainly not a landslide for Isiah.
Your mentioning of career stats seems strange. Generally I don't put much stock in career stats, but I understand if others do. Nash's stats are hurt by his first few years where he wasn't given a chance to play, and since he's not 36 and still going strong, he's clearly had enough time as a starter for us to at least only use that when trying to a career-ish stat comparison.
If you take their 10 best years:
Isiah 20.1 PPG on 52.2% TS with 9.7 APG
Nash 16.8 PPG on 61.3% TS with 9.6 APG
Who wins from that comparison? Debatable.

HomoSapien wrote:Warspite, the greatest poster in the history of realgm.


Warspite wrote:I certainly understand Jimmys POV what I dont get is the slimmy lawyering of DrMj. An absolute hachet job of ingoring the truth, facts and the video tape.

DragicTime85 wrote:[Ric Bucher] has a tiny wiener and I can prove it.

DragicTime85 wrote:[Ric Bucher] has a tiny wiener and I can prove it.
Warspite wrote:
I fully acknowledge that Nash is the better shooter/scorer. He might be the better player since Isiah is little past his prime and worn down from battles with Bird, Magic, MJ. What I dont know why Nash being the better scorer is that great of a good thing for a PG.
Warspite wrote:
In a 1on1 game Nash would most likely win.
Brenice wrote:Warspite wrote:
In a 1on1 game Nash would most likely win.
I have a hard time picturing Nash beating Isiah 1-on-1. Isiah would do a better job defending Nash than Nash would defending Isiah.
I do think Nash does a better job running an offense as a pure point guard. But Isiah's aggression on both ends of the court vs one end for Nash can't be ignored.

JordansBulls wrote:Brenice wrote:Warspite wrote:
In a 1on1 game Nash would most likely win.
I have a hard time picturing Nash beating Isiah 1-on-1. Isiah would do a better job defending Nash than Nash would defending Isiah.
I do think Nash does a better job running an offense as a pure point guard. But Isiah's aggression on both ends of the court vs one end for Nash can't be ignored.
Isiah is from Chicago he would rough up Nash in a one on one.