vote: Gary Payton
nominate: Chris Paul
Coin flip right now between Paul and Reggie Miller for me. Going to default to my pattern of siding with peak...and I'd probably have CP3 higher up a draft board (with the benefit of the doubt going to him that at year 7 he won't shut down). I've made 3 fairly long, detailed post on Miller, so I just want to sum up why I think so highly of him, despite a borderline all-nba peak:
(1) Tremendous longevity and consistency. He's giving you potentially 13 seasons (!) in that peak play range.
(2) Offensively, he makes the game easier for his teammates (namely, bigs and other shooters) by the angles on his screens and attention subtly drawn to him off the ball bc of his shooting. This is highly efficient offense, and indeed he consistently played on excellent offensive teams.
(3) Do we judge him more on his PS play? I think so, in the sense that there was something about his game/style that allowed for consistently excellent postseason results on offense, which are reflected in his team's playoff performances over and over and over...
(4) Just like with Ray Allen, he's very valuable and easy to build around because (a) he doesn't need the ball and (b) is so deadly as a shooter. I love teams with guys like this, even in supporting roles.
(5) Turns out his raw offensive numbers, despite the aforementioned notes about his non-statistical, team effect, are still excellent as a scorer.
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I'm also fascinated at this point in the project by how diverse the opinions are. (Wish we had a different voting method now more than ever.) People are mentioning guys I have in the 60s or lower. I get really confused when basically no one has mentioned Bob Lanier, but Wes Unseld is being discussed. It's like the bizarro universe in here.
Dantley and Iverson
And I can't disagree more with the AI vs. Dantley comment by Penbeast. Dantley was arguably a negative because there's no stat for "ball-holding that kills an offensive possession." I'm still looking into Dantley's career in detail, but I've defended Iverson in the past because people have become obsessed with efficiency in a vacuum and have overlooked context:
http://www.backpicks.com/2011/05/23/mor ... ive-teams/http://www.backpicks.com/2011/02/12/var ... s-part-ii/Note that in a season like 2005, Philly's offense was 106.1 with AI and just 97.4 without him. The following year, one of AI's best arguably, they were 109.8 with him and 99.1 without him. This supports
Iverson's Law -- that despite looking like a chucker, he was actually helping that team because they literally had no other players to generate offense. Without AI, they had to generate offense off turnovers, OREB or in the team offensive sets...none of which are atrocious at an NBA level, but they weren't cracking a point per pos either (bad). It doesn't make Iverson Steve Nash, but it certainly makes him a
positive offensive force.
(People give AI a bad rap then for not fitting as well in a mutlipolar setting...but in his defense, again, he played one full year in Denver, his efficiency saw an expected increase and the team's offense went to elite with him on the court -- from 104.5 to 112.5.)
McAdoo/Mourning/Howard
Weighing in on McAdoo (who I do have next to Walton right now), I liken him to Amare.
http://www.backpicks.com/2011/01/18/ama ... -position/ You are losing something defensively by basically playing him out of position, which is what happened in Buffalo. But his offense *was* awesome and impacting by all accounts...and his scoring rate, I believe, was the highest in NBA history before the merger (like 26.7 pts/75 in 1975).
But Howard and Mourning are coming up for me and a great debate right now. Actually, Howard, Lanier, Hayes and Mourning are all jammed together for me. All this negative talk about Hayes is a little nonsensical...his biggest flaw was shot selection; He was prone to taking a bad 18-footer once or twice a game, which hurt his efficiency. But do those shots, and subsequent small dent to the offense, nullify all the good he does (scoring, rebounding, good help defense)? No way. He was a top-10 player for many years, was he not?
On topic, I like Howard's offense more than Zo's. I'm not really that smitten by Zo's offense -- it's like a worse version of Ewing's laboring post game. Then again, Zo's an amazing defender, and I've really come around on him lately. I'll take Howard's peak, but after that it's close. I'd love a good statistical argument for Mourning...
PS I wish we'd really never mention PER for the duration of this project as anything more referential than ppg.