TrueLAfan wrote:KG and Doc is closer … but I don’t think it’s possible for people who weren’t there to understand the extra impact Julius Erving had on teams/teammates simply be being Julius Erving. We are talking about one the top 5 players of all time in the NBA in terms of respect, admiration, and genuine liking. This is very different from being a great player or being a nice guy. When Moses Malone—not exactly a friendly or emotional guy—says “This was for the Doc. I wanted to be able to say that I played on a world championship team with Dr. J." it tells you something. This is not a case where players thought “Gee, it would be nice if Julius Erving won an NBA title.” Julius Erving got players to play better by dint of personality and respect. I am not saying that Kevin Garnett (or Karl Malone) did not have those qualities. I am saying that didn’t have them to (nearly the) same degree.
There are times and players where individual qualities transcend statistics, and this necessarily weakens numerical analysis. That transcendency is something that is recognized, if not quantified. And if everything else was even—which, IMO, it isn’t; I still have Julius Erving with the best peak, best postseason play, longest run of post season success, and a super long peak period—I think that alone would put Julius Erving ahead.
This is an interesting point, and one I would like to explore a bit more. Doctor J was my first favorite player, and Kevin Garnett is my current favorite player. I'd like to think that I recognize the "transcendency" that you mention in both of them. In fact, this is the kind of intangible that doesn't show up in the stats, and is best heard in the words of contemporaries who get to witness the off-court things that we as a public don't get to see. Other such intangibles are leadership, mentoring, and building a strong locker room. I won't try to compare KG to Doc J in this area, but I will say that this is most definitely a big strength of his. But I won't make you take my word for it, here are some things that his contemporaries and teammates have said about him through the years.
TranscendencePaul Pierce: "Let's face it: Without Kevin we can't win a championship. I'm replaceable, Ray's replaceable, Rondo. But you can't replace Kevin." --
http://www.redsarmy.com/home/2010/05/yo ... able-.html
Paul Shirley in 2007 (pre Boston trade): " Having spent a similar amount of time in the semi-intimate company of both men, I can say confidently that two people couldn't be more different. Kevin Garnett is one of the most impressive humans I've ever been around. Kobe Bryant isn't. As a strict contrarian, I wish it weren't so. But in this case, there have been no mischaracterizations. Garnett is noble, loyal, and larger-than-life. And, again, Bryant isn't." ... "Garnett is a throwback superstar, a Bill Russell for the modern age. When some people conjure up Russell they visualize the consummate winner, a man who led his teams to 11 NBA championships. But I link the two men by personality. By all reports, Russell shares Garnett's intelligence, grace, and intensity." --
http://www.slate.com/id/2169154/pagenum/all/#p2
76ers assistant coach Jim Lynam and Doc Rivers: "That guy," Jim Lynam said, speaking of Boston's Kevin Garnett, "it's easy to say you like him because his talent is that obvious. But he's got something else, something special about how he comes at you. Something almost Birdlike." He said the last part quieter, as if it should be more solemn than the rest. It is not something the Sixers assistant coach says lightly, or often. "No," Lynam agreed. "It is not."
"The other night, I felt like we won by 1,000 points, and I was worried about this one," Boston coach Doc Rivers said. "It's the kind of game that can be a trap against a team that plays as hard as Philly. But the reason I didn't have to worry was I knew Kevin would not let them let down." Rivers was given the Bird analogy, for fierceness of play, for sheer competitiveness, and he nodded. "Yes," Rivers said, "and Russell. He's got that demeanor. Bird and Russell." --
http://lexnihilnovi.blogspot.com/2008/0 ... n-mvp.htmlLeadershipCeltics legendary announcer Mike Gorman, who has been with team since Bird's rookie year, on leadership: "Sometimes, you love your job, but there is one part of it that you don' t like," Gorman relates. "That's how I see Pierce. With Garnett, Paul does not have to do that anymore. Paul tried to be the vocal leader, but it is not in his nature to stand up and speak in the locker room. Ray Allen is a great leader, but he is not very demonstrative. Garnett would give me a glare if he heard me say this, but ultimately, he will be the defining guy on this team." --
http://www.patsfans.com/molori/display_ ... ry_id=3181"I don't think there is any question Kevin is the leader of the team," Gorman said..."Garnett is such a once-in-a-lifetime character. I've been doing this for 27 years. I've seen players have equally intense moments as Kevin Garnett has had, but I've never seen a player who has so many of them. It's been remarkable to be around him. He just raised the bar for everybody." --
http://www.boston.com/sports/other_spor ... n/?page=2#Garnett makes Pierce follow: Early in the season, the Celtics were running suicides in practice. Garnett was hustling ahead of the group, quickly becoming the leader Celtics brass knew he could be and the team needed. Many wondered how Pierce, the titular head of a previously bad team, would respond. He didn't seem jealous, but this day he was in one of his typical Joe Cool moods, languidly running the drill. Garnett stopped as he hit midcourt and yelled back at Pierce: "Are you going to run with me?!"
A tone was set for everyone to hear. --
http://www.sportingnews.com/nba/article ... z0vkefbJHBBrian Scalabrine in 2008: I try to get a sense of what ethereal elements might have altered the chemistry of the Celtics, but I am told that the difference is not intangible; it's tangible, and it's not complicated. "This is my seventh year in the N.B.A. I've been to the finals twice, and those teams were great. But they were not like this team," Scalabrine says. "And the reason why is Kevin Garnett. The media perception about Garnett is real. When Kevin walks into the facility and the weight room, he jokes around and makes fun of guys. But then about 15 minutes before practice, it's all focus. It's all work. If he is not clear about something, we don't move on until we are all clear. He solves a lot of problems. I mean, I've played with good players. I played with Jason Kidd, and Kidd is an incredible gamer. But he was never as demanding of his teammates the way Kevin is. Not half as much. Not a quarter as much.
He is also, by all accounts, an ideal teammate. He's uninterested in media opportunities and goes out of his way to distract self-adulation. Though Garnett is clearly the club's highest-profile commodity, Pierce, the team captain, remains the last player announced over the P.A. when the Boston starters are introduced; this is the kind of gesture that has no practical application, but it symbolizes a lot within the insular society of the team. It's especially significant to someone like Pierce
"Look, I can keep saying a million clichés, but those clichés are going to be true," Scalabrine says. "Are we more focused? Yes, we are more focused. That is true. But here's the basic thing: Basketball involves only five guys, playing both offense and defense. The impact of one person can be immense. It's much larger than in any other sport. So when you add Kevin Garnett, the defensive intelligence he brings is huge. It's not just that he's adding 20 points and 10 rebounds a night. There are other guys who can get you 20 and 10 who are not the player that he is. He demands a different level of focus from everybody. So that sounds cliché, but it's the truth. It's the truth." --
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/02/sport ... ref=sloginWe talkin' about practice!: In the middle of the Celtics' scrimmage, head coach Doc Rivers toots his whistle and tells Garnett to take a blow. Turkish big man Semih Erden reluctantly tags out KG. Reluctantly, because this minor event can resemble going to the dentist: It's something you do only when you have to. Erden proceeds to allow a crisp pass to fly off his hands and out of bounds.
Meanwhile, rather than take a seat or a swig, Garnett, who is 34, but has played more minutes than all but 13 players in NBA history, breaks into wind sprints on the sideline. Up. Back. Up. Back. Up. Back. Touching the end line every time, like a ninth-grader trying to make JV. "Never seen another NBA player do that," says Phil Galvin, the facility's basketball director. And Galvin has seen a lot: Not only is the Olympic Club the oldest such facility in the country, it's where most NBA teams practice when they drop into the Bay Area.
As the pink glow of sunset pours through the 40-foot-high window along the baseline, Garnett continues to run. Up. Back. Up. Back. Sweat rains off his dome. After 10 round-trips, each one all out, Rivers has seen enough. He motions his star back onto the court. As the 6'11" power forward passes by his coach, he says, "I hate f--ing sittin' out, Doc! Let's go!" Rubbernecking Sky Gym staffers watch from the sideline, mouths agape.
No wonder the typical Celtics workout lasts barely an hour. As Rivers says later, "The only way to get KG to rest is to end practice." --
http://espn.go.com/blog/BostonCeltics/p ... ce-message
Mentoring the youngstersDoc Rivers: "Kevin's a great teacher," Celtics coach Doc Rivers said on Thursday. "Actually, the best teacher that I've ever coached, by far." --
http://espn.go.com/blog/boston/celtics/ ... ad-classesAvery Bradley: "He's one person -- not to say I don't look up to everyone else -- but he's one person that I look at . . . he's the person that makes me want to work harder than everybody, every single day," Celtics rookie Avery Bradley told CSNNE.com. "Just to see the things that he does, he comes in every day, every single day and works hard. Our fans don't notice that, but he does it every single day. Only a few people get to see that, and I'm one of them, and I appreciate it. Me being a young guy, that's what I want to be like playing in this game. I really look up to him. He just gives his all on both ends of the floor."
http://www.csnne.com/12/27/10/Garnett-i ... eedID=4022
Randy Foye on missing Garnett: "'One thing I miss about him is, he just let me go. That's why I was so successful my rookie year,' said Foye, who has sputtered in the season-plus since. 'No matter what happened, if I made a mistake, I'd look at him and he'd go [Foye balls up a fist and pumps it], like 'It's all right. Keep your head up.' It makes you feel better. It'd be like that for anyone in their work, if there was a legend who pumped you up. For a young player, that just boosted my confidence. Sometimes, in my rookie year, I felt like an All-Star out there because he let me do what I wanted and when I got it going, he let me go.' In games, Foye said, it was like having your big brother there to hold your coat in a schoolyard fight. 'There was a swagger,' he said. 'KG would come out and hit a shot, and it was like, 'Everybody, we're in this together. I'm patrolling it, but everybody who's got a white jersey on, we're in it together.'' --
http://coachcooley.blogspot.com/2008/11 ... kevin.htmlFormer 12th man Gabe Pruit: "I remember when we were overseas I got a call and it said come to Glen (Davis') room. So [the rookies] went to Glen's room and there was a guy with two suit racks. KG walks in and is like, 'Pick out three suits, it's on me.' We looked at each other like, 'Whoa' and started shopping through them and picked out three suits. They're really nice suits from Italy and that was my first time really getting a suit like that because I don't really wear suits. But I was pumped that he said that when I walked in and saw the selection and they custom made everything -- the shoes, the jacket, all that stuff -- so I was pretty excited about that." "For the most part he's always full of energy and full of stories. Every day you come looking forward to another story that happened to him these past years. When he comes in you're looking forward to it and he stops and sits down and you get into it, it's like 'I wonder what's next.' There's always something that makes you say, 'Oh wow,' something crazy like that. He's always full of energy, always keeping spirits up. If you're down, he's somebody who will pull you to the side and talk to you. He's a real clam off the court and on the court he's energetic and crazy, but he's a really good guy both ways. He really helps me out when I need help or times when stuff comes up, he's the guy I go to and talk to." --
http://www.hoopsworld.com/Story.asp?story_id=7841