Doctor MJ wrote: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,
Again, I'm talking about D during whole season, you about win-loss record during one month....
So if you really want to refute my argument about DeBuss you should show how good was Knicks defense month before DeBuss arrival and during the same season with him.
As for Reed's impact on D you didn't refute anything.
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.
When team is elite and two all stars join, then that kind of drop off is huge.
Besides, applying here your "Knicks without Reed advanced to the finals" logic I could say: with Reed they won championship, so how huge is difference between winning title and not winning it? ;]
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.
Ok, but that's a lot of assumptions here. Remember, I'm not arguing Reed was defensive anchor on level of Ewing or Russell. I'm arguing his impact on D was bigger than Frazier's. So even if Reed wasn't great shot blocker he was good enough to have big impact on D. Add to that his post D (that was big men league, so post D was extremely important!) and mobility and I don't see why he couldn't have bigger impact than Frazier (even during G7 1970 finals, when he was injured he led the Knicks in good defensive plays). And again - in/out data confirms that.
And that's before you even consider that we know what the strength of this defense was - it was the perimeter
How we know that?
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 stat tracked one Knicks game (1970 finals G7) and Frazier was almost as bad defensively as Barnett. Gambling or losing his man (he sometimes simply didn't care about his man), really awful stuff. I also watched some other games and no way he was so good defensively as his reputation suggest. Some time ago we were talking about West's defense and you provided one example of playoffs series when Jerry limited opposing star (Hudson). That was good argument, maybe you could provide something like that with Frazier?