semi-sentient wrote:What do you mean by huge impact? In his prime (tail-end, at least), the Wolves were among the worst offensive teams in the league (05-06, 06-07), and in prior years the main difference is that he had some guys that could create and/or shoot (Cassell, Sprewell, Wally, Brandon, etc.). What does it say about his impact when the Wolves fall from a top 5ish offense to worst 5ish with him being the only constant from one year to the next? His stats where nice and all, but I don't see a player as having a huge impact if their teams are that horrible offensively with them being the primary option.
Minny's ORtg actually improved significantly in '04-05 with Cassell missing huge time with injury (playing less than half Garnett's minutes) and seeing his PER fall out of his prime range. Again and again, when we try to make some kind of statement of "Maybe Minny teammate X was actually AMAZING!" it falls apart.
The regular stats tell us Garnett was by far the star of this team, the advanced stats tell us Garnett was by far the star of this team, the +/- stats tell us Garnett was by far the star of the team. The only thing we have indicating otherwise is just the fact that the team was quite bad in the last two years.
Common sense tells us that one man can't do it alone, but when we see a star actually on a struggling team, it's as if we just can't believe it. Like it's a 1-in-a-million chance that a star could actually have that bad a luck. In reality, the odds of a star having a couple bad team years is a hell of a lot more likely than that. And when a player is on a small market club, receiving a death penalty for rule breaking by the league, and then faces a lot of injuries (from himself and teammates), we should expect that team to struggle.