DavidStern wrote:And evidence we have suggests that 70s Knicks defense was so good mainly because of Reed and Debusschere. And Ewing was much, much better in terms of defensive impact than Frazier. Saying Frazier was not too far behind Ewing on defensive end is just like saying Kobe wasn't too far behind Duncan on D....
To my mind I've been refuting your assertions about Reed & DeBuss quite well.
Consider the original DeBuss argument:
If the Knicks' transformation came not when DeBuss arrived, but a month before he arrived, then any rationale based on the transformation actually argues strongly against DeBuss. When you consider that that was also the year where Frazier emerged as a star, and a lock for All-Defense accolades, that only makes the narrative of Frazier's importance all the more plausible.
I'm fine admitting that there's more to the story, and this doesn't prove Frazier's the defensive star, but at the very least I've batted back your assertion to the point where applying that kind of logic should put you on the Frazier side of things. I think that's quite a lot to get us started.
DavidStern wrote:They did slightly better (not even one point...) on offense without Reed and much worse on D!. Overall they also regressed a lot.
Sure, they advanced to the finals, but that was overachieving. Look at the SRS:
1971 +5.1
1972 +2.3
1973 +6.1
And it wasn't like no one come in Reed's place. Lucas and Monroe joined Knicks in '72, but they still regressed a lot without Reed and then again improved with him.
But as I've already stated, dropping off by an SRS of 3 points is not exactly huge. Beyond that, you talk about '73 as if Reed put things back to the status quo, when in fact by that point he'd dropped down to a role player playing slightly more than half his peak minutes, and scoring far less per minute than he had in his prime. To attribute all of the team's improvement to Reed's return as if the story was "With Reed AMAZING! without Reed meh" is simply not nuanced analysis.
DavidStern wrote:I don't understand. You're on the anti-Frazier side of this argument.
Anti-Frazier in a sense that he wasn't better defensively than Reed and DeBuss and that he was much worse defensively than Ewing.
I understand that. I still don't understand your previous statement where you said "that's not my point" if it wasn't mean to argue along these lines.
DavidStern wrote: I know that Frazier got tons of defensive praise himself.
So show some data which will support that Frazier was great defender, better than Reed and DeBuss, not much worse than Ewing.
Okay well:
The Reed point is easy to combat. What makes a big a defensive anchor?
Most typically shotblocking. Was Reed a master shotblocker? No.
Was he known for his super-agility that let him influence large swathes of court on defense? No.
Did he get lots of steals? (Which might counter act that reputation?) No.
Was he a master rebounder? No. He wasn't in Wes Unseld's league, and Unseld was not Russell/Wilt.
Was he known as a brilliant defensive quarterback? I've never heard this.
Reed was a smart man defender of bigs, and that's a good thing. In an ensemble cast one might argue that that could be enough for him to be the best defender on the team, but most definitely, this isn't a case where it makes sense to assume that the big must be the anchor. When you add in Reed really only got accolade credit for his defense in '69-70 when people decided to anoint him as MVP following the Knicks' great season (which only made narrative sense if Reed was a great defender), and that when people talk about the Knicks defense they don't tend to talk about Reed as the focal point, there are just a ton of reasons to give credit elsewhere.
And that's before you even consider that we know what the strength of this defense was - it was the perimeter - which points attention firmly away from Reed.
Frazier vs DeBusschere. This is trickier. We just don't have stats beyond what's already been talked about. While Frazier always got more attention, you can find tons of great things about both of them from the same people, and I've never seen much pushing one down in favor of the other although people talking about Frazier leading the defense is common.
For me the key thing is that the Knicks' defensive pressure meant causing turnovers. Yes they were trying to make every shot the defense took a tough one, and yes they were trying to get rebounds, but literally this was a team that swarmed and stole the ball. You can see it in games where opponents just look overwhelmed by this. And who was the player on the team people talked about as the master thief? Frazier, without any question. You can find coach Red and other talking about him as an unprecedented artist at this, as someone with incredible anticipation, and as someone who actually got in people's heads. To me then it all seems to fit that Frazier was the most important defender on the team.
I'll also note that the whole notion that shotblocking is far more important than thieving is a league-dependent thing. In leagues with lesser ball control and weaker decision making, a ballhawk can easily be the most valuable defender around. I'm not saying that stealing the ball was more important that blocking shots back then, but I don't really have any doubt that it was a bigger force then than it is now.
So when I see this great defense, based around this particular skill, used with a level of success that probably can't be matched any more simply because offenses are more adept, and that Frazier is the one most often singled out on the team, and always the one singled out for the flagship skill of the team, to me that says "defensive anchor". And if the man was a defensive anchor, well then I don't think it's any kind of given that Ewing's defense was so drastically more valuable as to end the conversation.
By contrast, the man defense & solid but not unreal rebounding of DeBuss, I'd say that hasn't really changed that much from then to now. To me he seems like the kind of smart, solid defender that can really help round out your team, but I can't really picture the scenario where he has defensive anchor impact.