drza wrote:ElGee wrote:And the SIO (a simple adjustment for strength of team) over multiple years:
Walton 77-78 41g 11.2
McGrady 06-07 46g 6.8
McHale 86, 88, 91 45g 6.1
Rodman 93, 95-97 100g 5.8
Mourning 94, 96-98 74g 4.7
McGrady 02-04 28g 4.7
KJ 90, 93-97 129g 4.2
Kidd 00, 04-05 46g 3.9
Cowens 75, 77 47g 3.0
Pierce 07, 10 46g 2.7
Ewing 87, 94-96 31g 2.6
Drexler 90, 93, 94, 96 90g 1.7
Wilkins 92-93 51g 1.4
Paul 07, 10 55g -0.2
Darn you, you're trying to make me nominate Walton, aren't you? I get it...I'm onto your game...but see, I have what is called...willpower...I can hold out at least another thread or two...
Few random thoughts while I have a second:
Walton is going to get a little bump up for me based on the medicine discussion. I tentatively have him 49...so I'm not going to be nominating him soon regardless. That said, Walton may literally be the most valuable player in NBA history (maybe with Russell as well). His fit on that team, at that time, with Ramsay's philosophy, was such a make or break deal for Portland. And then consider:
-Walton's backups played so admirably in replacing him they even had 20-20 games and they STILL had that decline. Further evidence that impact isn't consistently equatable to raw box stats, and can vary greatly.
-Portland was +9.3 MOV with Walton. That would match the 87 Lakers for 11th best all-time...only the Blazers did it in a parity driven league, in the two-year stretch of there was ONE sub-4 SRS team and one other plus-4 SRS team in each season. Does that make it more impressive or less impressive? For me, I find it *incredibly* impressive when someone stands out from heavy competition...be it in tennis, football, or the NBA (eg the 09 Cavs don't strike me as 9 SRS team in a more competitive conference...)
In a similar vein,
Alonzo Mourning was replaced by someone named
Ike Austin, who probably barely registers on most fans radars who watched the NBA regularly in 1997. Austin created a big stir in South Beach when he averaged 15-9 on 47% in place of Zo for 17 starts in 97 (earning him a big contract later). But Zo, a player I've warmed up to recently, wasn't Bill Walton...and in those 17 games Miami was only 0.8 pts worse than with Mourning (5.7 MOV down to 4.9).
I separated
Tracy McGrady for reasons hopefully obvious (clear stretch in Orlando vs. Houston), and he has really solid value in both. So again, hard to understand how people can suggest this guy didn't have big team impact. I recently rewatched some of the 03 series vs. Detroit...is everyone aware of that roster sans McGrady? (They were -10 MOV without T-Mac in 04.) It was a playoff team starting an assortment of journey men all year, and then in the PS Gooden, 34-year old Armstrong, Giricek and Andrew DeClercq/Pat Garrity. No, I didn't make that up.
KJ...just always had great offensive impact. Seems to be by both eye test, in/out, stats, etc. he was just a fantastic offensive player. His biggest black mark is the 1993 NBA Finals, and that kills your rep when you get one shot on the big stage and disappear a bit. But it's 6 games and not representative of his career.
Reggie Miller is coming up shortly for me...but so is
Marques Johnson.