#9 Highest Peak of All Time (Duncan '03 wins)

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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#161 » by bastillon » Mon Aug 20, 2012 9:29 am

ElGee wrote:The 2008 Celtics, controlling for Ray Allen (72g) and throwing out final game:

Garnett In (64g): 9.5 SRS
Garnett Out (8g): 3.9 SRS

2009 Celtics Celtics
Garnett In (57g): 9.3 SRS
Garnett Out (24g): 3.3 SRS

That's with Glen Davis and some Leon Powe backing up Garnett. The 2009 Celtics PS SRS was 2.9. In 2008, it was 7.5 in 2008. Of course, that's assuming the 08 Lakers a "7.3" team...since the 08 Lakers with Gasol were 10.5 SRS to close the year and 11.7 SRS in the WC playoffs. The offense with Gasol in (42g) to that point was 115.7...which would be the GOAT offense. They scored 103.8 pts/100 pos against Boston. That's a freaking lockdown.


I brought up 09 long ago but nobody responded to me. you should also adjust for the games in which Garnett played post his injury (around 20 mpg). anyway looks like the Celtics were sub-50W team without KG and 67W team with KG playing.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#162 » by bastillon » Mon Aug 20, 2012 9:44 am

colts18 wrote:If you factor in injury, The Spurs were a +10 SRS team in the games Duncan played in 2005. Duncan was the main catalyst of that team. That team went 13.9 SRS in the games Ginobili missed and 7.2 in the games he played. In the games Duncan/Ginobili played, I estimated their SRS at about 10.4. So they were an elite team before injuries struck in the 2nd half of the season.


yeah Spurs were elite before the injuries, but Duncan never really regained his form that year. Spurs PS was still great. that Pistons team was phenomenal, they lucked out a bit with that game 5 but it was still impressive. Larry Brown's Pistons get extremely underrated. they killed everybody when they wanted to.

Stern wrote:So it still doesn't prove bastillon's point - that LeBron was better jump shooter during 2012 post season.


I was arguing a point someone else made that LeBron 12 didn't have a jumpshot. oh yes he did have a jumpshot.

therealbigthree wrote:And you also think that the 08 Hawks and 08 Cavs are up there too, right? I like how the narrative about that Celtics team has become "they dominated everyone on their way to a title"...they played at least 6 games against every opponents, and they "lucked" out in game 4 against the Lakers. There could have been a different result if the Lakers held on in game 4.


Hawks series wasn't even close. they were outscored by 12 ppg for the series. they won close games at home and were no threat whatsoever on the road. 7 games is very misleading here. Cavs were a legit threat but as I said, with Ray Allen able to hit any open shot that series would've ended in 5 games tops. Ray Allen was going through personal problems (mortally sick child iirc) and I don't think that's very representative of this team's strength. as I said, Celtics ended the PS 7-3 against 2 championship caliber teams (those Pistons are very underrated too, much better than 06-07 Pistons).
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#163 » by mysticbb » Mon Aug 20, 2012 10:30 am

bastillon wrote:you don't think James improved from 2011 to 2012?


He slightly improved, but not to the extend that he was able to overcome the decrease in playing level of the team around him.

bastillon wrote:Lakers were definitely not a 6 SRS team. they were 2-5 to finish the season (2 wins came against Spurs who have secured the top spot and Sacramento) and it's common knowledge Kobe's knee was nowhere near good.


Sorry, but that is incredible shortsighted to use the last 7 regular season games. The Lakers against the Hornets were +8.45 SRS! After the trade deadline and before the series against the Mavericks the Lakers had in average 6.76 SRS. That Lakers team was much stronger than people want to believe. That is a clear hindsight bias, adjusting the strength of the Lakers down to fit the narrative that the Mavericks didn't play legit competition.
Bryant's knee was much less of an issue than the usual Mavericks defensive scheme against him since 2007/08. Bryant, in the previous 10 games against the Mavericks had 22 points on 52 TS% in average, he scored 23 points on 52 TS% during the playoff series. That was normal Bryant against the Mavericks showing up, a Bryant who had always trouble against the Mavericks for the last 3 seasons. The difference was Nowitzki being able to contain Pau Gasol to a degree not seen before. The Lakers when Nowitzki on the court had 94.6 ORtg, they had 107.2 when Nowitzki was on the bench. Somehow, the Lakers were doing much better when Nowitzki was on the bench, the biggest difference of any Mavericks player during that series on the defensive end. But well, when I read Doc MJ's post he tries to imply that Nowitzki had nothing to do with the Lakers struggle, not realising that the Mavericks with Nowitzki on the court played MUCH better defense than without him, that Gasol was scored 24 points per 36 min on 57 TS% when not with Nowitztki on the court, while being a 11 points per 36 min scorer on 45 TS% when Nowitzki was on the court. Oh well ...
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#164 » by drza » Mon Aug 20, 2012 10:40 am

bastillon wrote:
drza wrote:Vote: 2004 Kevin Garnett


I love KG but his postseason comes up short in comparison to LeBron 12. the latter had to overcome major obstacles as well but he delivered. I remember KG having some poor shooting games, particularly against the Kings. he had some monster performances as well but his offense was inconsistent. defensive gap was still pretty big no doubt, even though LeBron was guarding all 5 positions very well in those playoffs, but definitely there was a bigger gap on offense. Garnett couldn't singlehandedly take over games offensively


Few things.

1) LeBron '12s playoff obstacles were nowhere near Garnett '04s. An attenuated Wade is arguably as good as Cassell at his best...and as I already pointed out, Cassell was struggling with injury long before he started sitting out. KG had much less to work with on offense against the Kings than LeBron did at any point in these playoffs, and of course in the Lakers series it got ridiculous. Point is, LeBron's "delivery" in 2012 doesn't equate to a better chance of success for the '04 Wolves.

2) You mention KG having some poor shooting games against the Kings and him not "singlehandedly taking over games offensively". OK, then you have to acknowledge that he was "singlehandedly taking over games on defense" against the Kings. Over the 7 game series the Kings averaged 93 points on 41% FG for a team O-Rtg of 100.1...they averaged 102.8 points on 46.3% shooting on the year for a team O-Rtg of 110.3 (2nd in league). A -10.2 effort on the 2nd best offense in the league has to be considered dominant, right?

3) In fact, it can go further. In the Wolves' 4 wins over the Kings, they held them to 89 ppg on 38.5% FG (one of the games was OT) for a 94.3 ORTG (-16 from their season average). In those same 4 wins KG averaged 14.8 boards, 4.8 blocks and 2.5 steals.

In addition to the defensive dominance, KG also "chipped in" with 28.3 points on 56.2% TS in the victories. In those 4 games KG's average game score was over 25, capped with the legendary game 7 with a game score of 32.3! On his "weak" side of the ball.

It seems to me that KG had to be Superman at both ends of the floor for the Wolves to even have a shot to beat the Kings...and he did. That doesn't count as "delivering" like '12 James? LeBron was doing more than that to lead the '12 Heat to wins? If so, I must have missed it.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#165 » by bastillon » Mon Aug 20, 2012 10:45 am

mysticbb wrote:Sorry, but that is incredible shortsighted to use the last 7 regular season games. The Lakers against the Hornets were +8.45 SRS! After the trade deadline and before the series against the Mavericks the Lakers had in average 6.76 SRS. That Lakers team was much stronger than people want to believe. That is a clear hindsight bias, adjusting the strength of the Lakers down to fit the narrative that the Mavericks didn't play legit competition.


fair enough. I forgot it was actually the SECOND round, not the first. but 8.45 SRS is very misleading because Hornets were playing without David West. why do you think the Lakers struggled so much at the end of the RS ? it's not like they weren't fighting for the top spot. they just collapsed. why was that ?
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#166 » by bastillon » Mon Aug 20, 2012 10:53 am

drza wrote:Few things.

1) LeBron '12s playoff obstacles were nowhere near Garnett '04s. An attenuated Wade is arguably as good as Cassell at his best...and as I already pointed out, Cassell was struggling with injury long before he started sitting out. KG had much less to work with on offense against the Kings than LeBron did at any point in these playoffs, and of course in the Lakers series it got ridiculous. Point is, LeBron's "delivery" in 2012 doesn't equate to a better chance of success for the '04 Wolves.

2) You mention KG having some poor shooting games against the Kings and him not "singlehandedly taking over games offensively". OK, then you have to acknowledge that he was "singlehandedly taking over games on defense" against the Kings. Over the 7 game series the Kings averaged 93 points on 41% FG for a team O-Rtg of 100.1...they averaged 102.8 points on 46.3% shooting on the year for a team O-Rtg of 110.3 (2nd in league). A -10.2 effort on the 2nd best offense in the league has to be considered dominant, right?

3) In fact, it can go further. In the Wolves' 4 wins over the Kings, they held them to 89 ppg on 38.5% FG (one of the games was OT) for a 94.3 ORTG (-16 from their season average). In those same 4 wins KG averaged 14.8 boards, 4.8 blocks and 2.5 steals.

In addition to the defensive dominance, KG also "chipped in" with 28.3 points on 56.2% TS in the victories. In those 4 games KG's average game score was over 25, capped with the legendary game 7 with a game score of 32.3! On his "weak" side of the ball.

It seems to me that KG had to be Superman at both ends of the floor for the Wolves to even have a shot to beat the Kings...and he did. That doesn't count as "delivering" like '12 James? LeBron was doing more than that to lead the '12 Heat to wins? If so, I must have missed it.


great response. I know it was impossible to win a title for KG that year. LeBron wouldn't have done it either. my point was that LeBron was playing legendary offense and was still a great defender in that postseason. while Garnett rocked the world defensively, he was inconsistent offensively because his jumpshots were not always falling down. I don't know, maybe it's because he had so much responsibilities that he couldn't maintain his efficiency ? either way, I know he had some disappointing shooting games at the beginning of the Wolves series, when he didn't have to do everything by himself yet. those defensive stats are monstrous though... 15/5/2.5 anchoring -16 DRTG ? wow. I guess I have to re-watch that series.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#167 » by drza » Mon Aug 20, 2012 12:13 pm

bastillon wrote:
drza wrote:Few things.

1) LeBron '12s playoff obstacles were nowhere near Garnett '04s. An attenuated Wade is arguably as good as Cassell at his best...and as I already pointed out, Cassell was struggling with injury long before he started sitting out. KG had much less to work with on offense against the Kings than LeBron did at any point in these playoffs, and of course in the Lakers series it got ridiculous. Point is, LeBron's "delivery" in 2012 doesn't equate to a better chance of success for the '04 Wolves.

2) You mention KG having some poor shooting games against the Kings and him not "singlehandedly taking over games offensively". OK, then you have to acknowledge that he was "singlehandedly taking over games on defense" against the Kings. Over the 7 game series the Kings averaged 93 points on 41% FG for a team O-Rtg of 100.1...they averaged 102.8 points on 46.3% shooting on the year for a team O-Rtg of 110.3 (2nd in league). A -10.2 effort on the 2nd best offense in the league has to be considered dominant, right?

3) In fact, it can go further. In the Wolves' 4 wins over the Kings, they held them to 89 ppg on 38.5% FG (one of the games was OT) for a 94.3 ORTG (-16 from their season average). In those same 4 wins KG averaged 14.8 boards, 4.8 blocks and 2.5 steals.

In addition to the defensive dominance, KG also "chipped in" with 28.3 points on 56.2% TS in the victories. In those 4 games KG's average game score was over 25, capped with the legendary game 7 with a game score of 32.3! On his "weak" side of the ball.

It seems to me that KG had to be Superman at both ends of the floor for the Wolves to even have a shot to beat the Kings...and he did. That doesn't count as "delivering" like '12 James? LeBron was doing more than that to lead the '12 Heat to wins? If so, I must have missed it.


great response. I know it was impossible to win a title for KG that year. LeBron wouldn't have done it either. my point was that LeBron was playing legendary offense and was still a great defender in that postseason. while Garnett rocked the world defensively, he was inconsistent offensively because his jumpshots were not always falling down. I don't know, maybe it's because he had so much responsibilities that he couldn't maintain his efficiency ? either way, I know he had some disappointing shooting games at the beginning of the Wolves series, when he didn't have to do everything by himself yet. those defensive stats are monstrous though... 15/5/2.5 anchoring -16 DRTG ? wow. I guess I have to re-watch that series.


The thing is, it wasn't just that series. One of the fun things about these projects is I always end up learning something new. After going through the Kings '04 series more in depth, I decided to look at all of peak KG's wins over the elite competition ('03 Lakers, '04 Kings, '04 Lakers). The Wolves won 8 out of 19 games over those 2 series. Here are the results from those 8 wins:

The opponent averaged 90.5 points on 39.5% FG in those 8 games for an ORtg of 96.9. The Kings (4 games, season ORtg 110.2), '03 Lakers (2 games, season ORtg 105.5) and '04 Lakers (2 games, season ORtg 107.2) had a weighted average ORtg of 108.3. That's a composite -11.4 on defense for the Wolves in the 8 wins. (And both of those Lakers teams performed at higher levels than their season averages when their core guys were healthy, which they were against the Wolves. ElGee can give you the specifics on how much better). By the way, those Wolves had no other elite defenders except KG, and they were playing in a Flip Saunders system with zero defensive focus.

In those 8 wins, Garnett averaged 29.4 points on 56.9% TS, 15.4 boards, 3.8 assists, 2.1 steals, 3.3 blocks, and an average game score of 26.0. And remember, this is all at very low paces historically. The Wolves' pace was around 90, while the '77 Blazers were at 108 and the 60s were faster still. If we pace adjusted to those times, we'd be looking at scoring on the order of Wilt's or Kareem's career playoff highs.

And it should be noted that of the 8 wins, 5 of them were by 5 points or less and 2 were in overtime. So they were BARELY winning...KG had to perform at this level for them to even squeak out wins over elite opponents.

So in summary, for those Wolves to win, KG had to score like Wilt, play defense like Russell, and run his team's offense from the high-post like Walton (if not running the PG outright).

NOBODY in history was doing that. If he could have pulled off that level of play in that many areas every night it would have been by far the best peak in NBA history. That he was able to do it in almost half of the playoff games against elite opponents at his peak is absurd.

KG went into every one of those playoff games knowing that if he even wanted a CHANCE to win he had to go for 30 and 15 while completely shutting down the opposing team single handedly (and yes, this is a fair time to use that term) while also running the offense and getting his teammates in position to score as well. If he was only "super elite" his team was getting beat...if he was only perfect in two or three of those areas, his team was getting beat. He had to go "best that ever played" mode across the board for them to even have a shot. And he almost did it, dominating in multiple of those areas every game and succeeding in hitting perfection across the board about once every other game. No way LeBron '12 (or '09) is touching that level of dominance at both ends of the floor and all aspects of the game. Neither is Walton '77 or Dr. J '76. KG was a monster at his peak.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#168 » by mysticbb » Mon Aug 20, 2012 12:16 pm

bastillon wrote:fair enough. I forgot it was actually the SECOND round, not the first. but 8.45 SRS is very misleading because Hornets were playing without David West.


True. But how much do you think was the difference here, if we account for Paul being at better shape than during the regular season in average? 2 pts? 3 pts? I doubt that West made some 5 point difference. At worst I would say the Lakers were at their usual average level against the Hornets.

bastillon wrote:why do you think the Lakers struggled so much at the end of the RS ? it's not like they weren't fighting for the top spot. they just collapsed. why was that ?


No idea, maybe some sort of overconfidence after them winning 9 straight games including a blowout win against the Mavericks? Keep in mind that they went 17-1 before those last 7 games. It can also be just normal variance within a season. I guess you can find a similar bad stretch of 7 games for a lot of 6 SRS teams.
And it is not like the Lakers played just bad basketball against the Mavericks, from my impression game 1 and game 3 was pretty good in terms of quality of play, just that they played not good in game 2 while being really bad in terms of perimeter defense in game 4. The Mavericks played out the Lakers weakness all season long, the issue with work against high screens and perimeter ball movement, while at the same time played really good post defense especially against Gasol. And that all worked best when Nowitzki was on the court. Keep also in mind that the Lakers were heavy favorites before the series started. Acting now as if the Lakers were just a weak team, does not reflect the reality here.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#169 » by ardee » Mon Aug 20, 2012 4:32 pm

drza wrote:
bastillon wrote:
drza wrote:Few things.

1) LeBron '12s playoff obstacles were nowhere near Garnett '04s. An attenuated Wade is arguably as good as Cassell at his best...and as I already pointed out, Cassell was struggling with injury long before he started sitting out. KG had much less to work with on offense against the Kings than LeBron did at any point in these playoffs, and of course in the Lakers series it got ridiculous. Point is, LeBron's "delivery" in 2012 doesn't equate to a better chance of success for the '04 Wolves.

2) You mention KG having some poor shooting games against the Kings and him not "singlehandedly taking over games offensively". OK, then you have to acknowledge that he was "singlehandedly taking over games on defense" against the Kings. Over the 7 game series the Kings averaged 93 points on 41% FG for a team O-Rtg of 100.1...they averaged 102.8 points on 46.3% shooting on the year for a team O-Rtg of 110.3 (2nd in league). A -10.2 effort on the 2nd best offense in the league has to be considered dominant, right?

3) In fact, it can go further. In the Wolves' 4 wins over the Kings, they held them to 89 ppg on 38.5% FG (one of the games was OT) for a 94.3 ORTG (-16 from their season average). In those same 4 wins KG averaged 14.8 boards, 4.8 blocks and 2.5 steals.

In addition to the defensive dominance, KG also "chipped in" with 28.3 points on 56.2% TS in the victories. In those 4 games KG's average game score was over 25, capped with the legendary game 7 with a game score of 32.3! On his "weak" side of the ball.

It seems to me that KG had to be Superman at both ends of the floor for the Wolves to even have a shot to beat the Kings...and he did. That doesn't count as "delivering" like '12 James? LeBron was doing more than that to lead the '12 Heat to wins? If so, I must have missed it.


great response. I know it was impossible to win a title for KG that year. LeBron wouldn't have done it either. my point was that LeBron was playing legendary offense and was still a great defender in that postseason. while Garnett rocked the world defensively, he was inconsistent offensively because his jumpshots were not always falling down. I don't know, maybe it's because he had so much responsibilities that he couldn't maintain his efficiency ? either way, I know he had some disappointing shooting games at the beginning of the Wolves series, when he didn't have to do everything by himself yet. those defensive stats are monstrous though... 15/5/2.5 anchoring -16 DRTG ? wow. I guess I have to re-watch that series.


The thing is, it wasn't just that series. One of the fun things about these projects is I always end up learning something new. After going through the Kings '04 series more in depth, I decided to look at all of peak KG's wins over the elite competition ('03 Lakers, '04 Kings, '04 Lakers). The Wolves won 8 out of 19 games over those 2 series. Here are the results from those 8 wins:

The opponent averaged 90.5 points on 39.5% FG in those 8 games for an ORtg of 96.9. The Kings (4 games, season ORtg 110.2), '03 Lakers (2 games, season ORtg 105.5) and '04 Lakers (2 games, season ORtg 107.2) had a weighted average ORtg of 108.3. That's a composite -11.4 on defense for the Wolves in the 8 wins. (And both of those Lakers teams performed at higher levels than their season averages when their core guys were healthy, which they were against the Wolves. ElGee can give you the specifics on how much better). By the way, those Wolves had no other elite defenders except KG, and they were playing in a Flip Saunders system with zero defensive focus.

In those 8 wins, Garnett averaged 29.4 points on 56.9% TS, 15.4 boards, 3.8 assists, 2.1 steals, 3.3 blocks, and an average game score of 26.0. And remember, this is all at very low paces historically. The Wolves' pace was around 90, while the '77 Blazers were at 108 and the 60s were faster still. If we pace adjusted to those times, we'd be looking at scoring on the order of Wilt's or Kareem's career playoff highs.

And it should be noted that of the 8 wins, 5 of them were by 5 points or less and 2 were in overtime. So they were BARELY winning...KG had to perform at this level for them to even squeak out wins over elite opponents.

So in summary, for those Wolves to win, KG had to score like Wilt, play defense like Russell, and run his team's offense from the high-post like Walton (if not running the PG outright).

NOBODY in history was doing that. If he could have pulled off that level of play in that many areas every night it would have been by far the best peak in NBA history. That he was able to do it in almost half of the playoff games against elite opponents at his peak is absurd.

KG went into every one of those playoff games knowing that if he even wanted a CHANCE to win he had to go for 30 and 15 while completely shutting down the opposing team single handedly (and yes, this is a fair time to use that term) while also running the offense and getting his teammates in position to score as well. If he was only "super elite" his team was getting beat...if he was only perfect in two or three of those areas, his team was getting beat. He had to go "best that ever played" mode across the board for them to even have a shot. And he almost did it, dominating in multiple of those areas every game and succeeding in hitting perfection across the board about once every other game. No way LeBron '12 (or '09) is touching that level of dominance at both ends of the floor and all aspects of the game. Neither is Walton '77 or Dr. J '76. KG was a monster at his peak.


That is an incredible post, sir.

:clap:

You have established for sure that KG was reaching rarefied heights in some of those games... However, just allow me to play Devil's advocate here, if you don't mind.

In those 19 games you mentioned, there were 11 losses.

In those losses, he averaged 21.5 ppg and 14.5 rpg on just 48% TS, with 1.1 SPG and 1.4 BPG.

So, obviously when he had it going he was unreal, but he didn't always have it going. In fact, when he was off, he was nowhere near what he was usually capable of. We have to reward consistency. LeBron, throughout the '09 Playoffs, had two games with a game score of 22 or lower.

Just for the heck of it, LeBron in his 10 wins in the '09 Playoffs averaged 33.5 ppg, 9.6 rpg, 7.1 apg and nearly 2 spg on 63% TS. Average game score of 29.8. In game 3 vs. the Hawks he had that ridiculous 47/12/8 game (Game Score of 43.8), with Josh Smith opposite him.

In the four losses, he averaged (prepare yourself) 39.8 ppg, 8 rpg, 7.8 apg on 59% TS!!! Average game score of 30... HIGHER than when his team won.

LeBron brought it every night whether his team won or lost. Can you imagine how bad his team was when he was performing at THAT kind of level and they were still losing?

Garnett was incredible, no doubt, but seriously, LeBron's level of domination in terms of his scoring, distribution and all-around play are on an unheard of level, we might literally never see a Playoffs like that again.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#170 » by ElGee » Mon Aug 20, 2012 5:10 pm

drza wrote:In those 8 wins, Garnett averaged 29.4 points on 56.9% TS, 15.4 boards, 3.8 assists, 2.1 steals, 3.3 blocks, and an average game score of 26.0. And remember, this is all at very low paces historically.


I found this to be very interesting because of the notion of variance, which is something I've touched upon before. I believe, when laying out his best seasons (4 clear contenders), 2011 is Dwyane Wade's best year. Now, this is mostly because I think his SG defense is at an all-time level, but his offense comes in huge explosions. When he's on, his "on" is ridiculously good.

For Garnett, and being in a one-man situation of sorts, I find the numbers you post really compelling. It's only 8 of 19 games, but it says

(a) KG needed to be on for Minnesota to have a chance bc his teams were so weak
(b) KG's "on" was, well, it was something extraordinary

Out of curiosity, I looked at Duncan's 16 wins in 2003:

23.9 ppg 58% TS 16.6 rpg 6.0 apg 3.4 TOV 4.0 blck 24.4 GmSc

And their 8-best games period of the 24 we're discussing:

Duncan 03: 32.6 ppg 65.0%$ TS 17.0 rpg 5.9 apg 3.4 TOV 3.9 Blck 32.0 GmSc (vs. 101.5 DRtg)
KG 03-04: 30.5 ppg 58.6% TS 15.0 rpg 5.1 apg 3.0 TOV 3.1 Blck 27.6 GmSc (vs 103.8 DRtg)

Of course, Duncan's on a better team (as you'll notice by how much weaker his numbers were in wins, for example), which you can argue helps his scoring stats AND helps his rebounding (because KG has a 31 to 27% DRB% edge). You can argue that KG would have done work against Kenyon Martin despite New Jersey's 98.1 DRtg or that his numbers would look nicer if he played Dallas and Phoenix. You can argue that Duncan had to spend less energy on defense. Etc. But note Duncan's statistics.

You brought up pace too. Just so people can understand what we're looking at here:
Wilt 1962 28.7 pts/75 (estimated)
KG (03-04 PS) 27.4 pts/75
Duncan 03 PS 26.6 pts/75

The notion that Kevin Garnett wasn't a scorer, or capable of being a big scorer, is just absolutely fallacious.

Finally, Ardee has brought up LeBron -- I don't think there's any question what LeBron did in Cleveland is the GOAT unipolar act on a bad team. But again, do you think that he has that impact on an average -3 or -1 SRS team? Do you think that was a true 9 SRS team? I don't, and I've explained why before in great detail, so I hope everyone would understand that his video-game statistics come with that caveat.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#171 » by lorak » Mon Aug 20, 2012 5:47 pm

therealbig3 wrote:Updated count:

03 Duncan - 5 (PTB Fan, C-izMe, Josephpaul, Dr Positivity, SDChargers#1)

09 LeBron - 4 (colts18, therealbig3, Doctor MJ, ardee)

12 LeBron - 2 (ElGee, DavidStern)


Duncan takes the lead, with 09 and 12 LeBron splitting votes.


I think you missed JordanBulls vote (Duncan 03).

And LeBron supporters - or we all agree on one year, or James again will not be voted in ;/
(Maybe try look at this like me: impact wise there's no difference between '09 and '12 LJ, but winning matters after all, so if we have two equal seasons then the one when player won title counts more in projects like that, of course IMO...)
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#172 » by JordansBulls » Mon Aug 20, 2012 7:01 pm

DavidStern wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
03 Duncan - 4 (PTB Fan, C-izMe, Josephpaul, Dr Positivity)



So tell me PTB Fan, C-izMe, Josephpaul and Dr Positivity - why Duncan 03 over LJ 09 or 12?


He was dominant on both ends of the floor. He also dethroned the 3x defending champs Lakers. He had a historic finals as well and he was also the only allstar on his team. Also I would chose Lebron 12 over Lebron 09. In all honestly it is a pick em between the two.


1. ardee - Lebron 09
2. Doctor MJ - Lebron 09
3. C-izeMe - Duncan 03
4. colts18 - Lebron 09
5. DavidStern - Lebron 12
6. DrMufasa - Duncan 03
7. drza - ???
8. ElGee - Lebron 12
9. JordansBulls - Duncan 03
10. Vinsanity420 - ???
11. therealbig3 - Lebron 09
12. Josephpaul - Duncan 03
13. ThaRegul8r - ???
14. PTB Fan - Duncan 03
15. bastillon - ???
16. SDChargers#1 - Duncan 03
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#173 » by lorak » Mon Aug 20, 2012 7:07 pm

mysticbb wrote:
Do you honestly think that people care? Nobody is talking about the clear drop in average playing level in the league from 2011 to 2012. Do you see anyone mentioning it? And yet, the team which was worse against worse competition is now considered better even though TWO of their Top3 players showed a clear drop in performance level (Wade and Bosh). It just fits the narrative, that the 2011 Heat lost, because James faltered. Nothing else. All of the sudden James improved so much, and we now consider it an reasonable explanation despite trying to convince people that Nowitzki in 2009 or 2010 was the same as in 2011. A clear bias, not seen by those who consider themselves unbiased.


So true.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#174 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Aug 20, 2012 7:35 pm

DavidStern wrote:And LeBron supporters - or we all agree on one year, or James again will not be voted in ;/
(Maybe try look at this like me: impact wise there's no difference between '09 and '12 LJ, but winning matters after all, so if we have two equal seasons then the one when player won title counts more in projects like that, of course IMO...)


DS, I think at the very end of votes, people will get practical. I'm not too worried about it. But forget about my role as project runner here, just me as a poster, I'm not going to switch simply to have consensus when I'm on the majority side ever. I don't know why anyone would do that.

Re: same impact. I don't agree with that. LeBron's impact in Cleveland was drastically larger than it what it will probably ever be in Miami.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#175 » by colts18 » Mon Aug 20, 2012 7:58 pm

mysticbb wrote:
colts18 wrote:The Blazers were a 1.84 SRS, but that team was actually stronger than that. They got Wallace in the middle of the season and had a +4.83 MOV in games he played (+7.1 when he started) with Portland. Camby and Roy also missed time that season and came back for the playoffs healthy. That's an elite team right there and a few predicted that they would beat Dallas. I would put that team close to the level of the 04 Kings.


The Blazers after the trade had a 5.35 SRS (excluding the last game, in which they did not play their best players). The Thunder after the trade (Perkins for Green) had 6.58 SRS (excluding the last game against the Bucks, when Durant&Co. played 20 min in a OT game). The Lakers were a +6 SRS team, as you mentioned, the Heat for the last part of the season were a nearly +10 SRS team. That is not an easy path to the title at all.


How did you get 6.58 SRS for the Thunder after the trade? In 16 games (doesn't include the final), I got OKC with a 7.77 SRS in the games Perkins played (8.5 MOV, -0.73 SRS). Either way, the Thunder were an elite team. In the playoffs, they had a 7.13 SRS. So if you combine together, in the 29 games with Perkins, I got a total of 7.22 SRS entering the Thunder series. The Mavs beat close to 4 Elite teams in their run while being heavy underdogs during the playoffs. The more context there is, the better Dirk looks.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#176 » by C-izMe » Mon Aug 20, 2012 9:12 pm

Serious question to some voters:
What's Lebron 12's argument over Dr. J, TMac, Wade, Dirk etc. Seems like the worst year to be mentioned so far by a distance IMO.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#177 » by therealbig3 » Mon Aug 20, 2012 9:21 pm

C-izMe wrote:Serious question to some voters:
What's Lebron 12's argument over Dr. J, TMac, Wade, Dirk etc. Seems like the worst year to be mentioned so far by a distance IMO.


I'm confused, why is it the worst by a distance? He was doing everything for the Heat...their best offensive player, and their best defensive player...and the Heat were top 10 in both categories. Wade/T-Mac/Dirk can't claim that.

In the playoffs, he took it up another level, and he was guarding and slowing down every big time wing (except for Durant, who didn't do nearly as well against him as he did against Battier or Wade).

All the while, the Heat supporting cast was not very good. Bosh was out for a significant amount of time, and when he came back, he wasn't all that great. The role players sucked, and Wade was playing like crap. LeBron carried that team big time, and I'm not sure you can point to a "bad" game that he had throughout those playoffs. And he had two of the best playoff games of all time in that run (game 4 against Indiana, game 6 against Boston). And unlike 2009 and 2010, he could still dominate without having a jump shot. 2010 LeBron struggled when his jump shot went missing.

That was more impressive than any of those guys' peaks to me. I still side with 09, but I definitely see 12's case.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#178 » by drza » Mon Aug 20, 2012 9:42 pm

ardee wrote:
drza wrote:In those 8 wins, Garnett averaged 29.4 points on 56.9% TS, 15.4 boards, 3.8 assists, 2.1 steals, 3.3 blocks, and an average game score of 26.0. And remember, this is all at very low paces historically. The Wolves' pace was around 90, while the '77 Blazers were at 108 and the 60s were faster still. If we pace adjusted to those times, we'd be looking at scoring on the order of Wilt's or Kareem's career playoff highs.

And it should be noted that of the 8 wins, 5 of them were by 5 points or less and 2 were in overtime. So they were BARELY winning...KG had to perform at this level for them to even squeak out wins over elite opponents.

So in summary, for those Wolves to win, KG had to score like Wilt, play defense like Russell, and run his team's offense from the high-post like Walton (if not running the PG outright).

NOBODY in history was doing that. If he could have pulled off that level of play in that many areas every night it would have been by far the best peak in NBA history. That he was able to do it in almost half of the playoff games against elite opponents at his peak is absurd.

KG went into every one of those playoff games knowing that if he even wanted a CHANCE to win he had to go for 30 and 15 while completely shutting down the opposing team single handedly (and yes, this is a fair time to use that term) while also running the offense and getting his teammates in position to score as well. If he was only "super elite" his team was getting beat...if he was only perfect in two or three of those areas, his team was getting beat. He had to go "best that ever played" mode across the board for them to even have a shot. And he almost did it, dominating in multiple of those areas every game and succeeding in hitting perfection across the board about once every other game. No way LeBron '12 (or '09) is touching that level of dominance at both ends of the floor and all aspects of the game. Neither is Walton '77 or Dr. J '76. KG was a monster at his peak.


That is an incredible post, sir.

:clap:

You have established for sure that KG was reaching rarefied heights in some of those games... However, just allow me to play Devil's advocate here, if you don't mind.

In those 19 games you mentioned, there were 11 losses.

In those losses, he averaged 21.5 ppg and 14.5 rpg on just 48% TS, with 1.1 SPG and 1.4 BPG.

So, obviously when he had it going he was unreal, but he didn't always have it going. In fact, when he was off, he was nowhere near what he was usually capable of. We have to reward consistency. LeBron, throughout the '09 Playoffs, had two games with a game score of 22 or lower.

Just for the heck of it, LeBron in his 10 wins in the '09 Playoffs averaged 33.5 ppg, 9.6 rpg, 7.1 apg and nearly 2 spg on 63% TS. Average game score of 29.8. In game 3 vs. the Hawks he had that ridiculous 47/12/8 game (Game Score of 43.8), with Josh Smith opposite him.

In the four losses, he averaged (prepare yourself) 39.8 ppg, 8 rpg, 7.8 apg on 59% TS!!! Average game score of 30... HIGHER than when his team won.

LeBron brought it every night whether his team won or lost. Can you imagine how bad his team was when he was performing at THAT kind of level and they were still losing?

Garnett was incredible, no doubt, but seriously, LeBron's level of domination in terms of his scoring, distribution and all-around play are on an unheard of level, we might literally never see a Playoffs like that again.


s
ElGee wrote:
drza wrote:In those 8 wins, Garnett averaged 29.4 points on 56.9% TS, 15.4 boards, 3.8 assists, 2.1 steals, 3.3 blocks, and an average game score of 26.0. And remember, this is all at very low paces historically.


I found this to be very interesting because of the notion of variance, which is something I've touched upon before. I believe, when laying out his best seasons (4 clear contenders), 2011 is Dwyane Wade's best year. Now, this is mostly because I think his SG defense is at an all-time level, but his offense comes in huge explosions. When he's on, his "on" is ridiculously good.

For Garnett, and being in a one-man situation of sorts, I find the numbers you post really compelling. It's only 8 of 19 games, but it says

(a) KG needed to be on for Minnesota to have a chance bc his teams were so weak
(b) KG's "on" was, well, it was something extraordinary

Out of curiosity, I looked at Duncan's 16 wins in 2003:

23.9 ppg 58% TS 16.6 rpg 6.0 apg 3.4 TOV 4.0 blck 24.4 GmSc

And their 8-best games period of the 24 we're discussing:

Duncan 03: 32.6 ppg 65.0%$ TS 17.0 rpg 5.9 apg 3.4 TOV 3.9 Blck 32.0 GmSc (vs. 101.5 DRtg)
KG 03-04: 30.5 ppg 58.6% TS 15.0 rpg 5.1 apg 3.0 TOV 3.1 Blck 27.6 GmSc (vs 103.8 DRtg)

Of course, Duncan's on a better team (as you'll notice by how much weaker his numbers were in wins, for example), which you can argue helps his scoring stats AND helps his rebounding (because KG has a 31 to 27% DRB% edge). You can argue that KG would have done work against Kenyon Martin despite New Jersey's 98.1 DRtg or that his numbers would look nicer if he played Dallas and Phoenix. You can argue that Duncan had to spend less energy on defense. Etc. But note Duncan's statistics.

You brought up pace too. Just so people can understand what we're looking at here:
Wilt 1962 28.7 pts/75 (estimated)
KG (03-04 PS) 27.4 pts/75
Duncan 03 PS 26.6 pts/75

The notion that Kevin Garnett wasn't a scorer, or capable of being a big scorer, is just absolutely fallacious.

Finally, Ardee has brought up LeBron -- I don't think there's any question what LeBron did in Cleveland is the GOAT unipolar act on a bad team. But again, do you think that he has that impact on an average -3 or -1 SRS team? Do you think that was a true 9 SRS team? I don't, and I've explained why before in great detail, so I hope everyone would understand that his video-game statistics come with that caveat.


These are both great responses, and literally what I expected/hoped to see in response to what I had written because it lets me further clarify what I meant before. Notice, my initial post on this subject came in response to Bastillon's comment about '12 LeBron "stepping up in the face of adversity". This also dovetails with the themes of some of my previous posts in the threads about how bad the '04 Wolves were once Cassell started hobbling. The level that KG was having to "step it up to", when you factor in both teammate support and opponent, was higher than what LeBron '09 or Duncan '03 had to face.

a) Supporting cast: None of the '09 Cavs, the '03 Spurs, nor the '04 Wolves (with healthy Cassell) were overly talented. But what all of them had was enough support for the team to build a strong identity around the mega star. Now, that identity (and the team outlook) would be crap if the mega star wasn't on the court to pull it, but WITH the mega star the whole could be stronger than the parts.

The '09 Cavs' support was built around having two centers on the floor at all times (3 man rotation, 2 of which were strong defenders) and a everyone else shooters, which (coupled with LeBron's awesome talents) let them have a strong inside-out defensive/rebounding team as well as a floor-spreaded offensive squad that was strong as long as the treys were falling.

The '03 Spurs support was built around having excellent defensive players from 2 - 5 in a strong defensive system, which was keyed of course by Duncan's defensive strengths. Then on offense, they ran the kind of committee-around-Duncan approach that ElGee did a good job of detailing in a recent post.

The '04 Wolves support was essentially built around a scoring guard's ability to play offense off of Garnett in a 2-man game, and with Spree and Hassell no longer getting completely torched on the perimeter (the way that Wally and Peeler used to) it allowed KG's help defense to make the defense formidable as well. (I say "scoring guard" above because that offense worked and was strong whether that scoring guard was '02 Billups, '03 Hudson, '04 Cassell, or '05 Hudson/Cassell...but with '04 Cassell able to do more of the team set-up as well as being the most consistent scorer of that group as well, his 2-man game with KG made for frighteningly consistent offense even on a team with very little other offensive talent.

While these support systems couldn't have made it out of the lottery on their own, they were each strong enough to a) build something special around the mega star and b) allow that mega star to specialize a bit. LeBron was able to just be a strong cog on the defense, and he had others to help on the boards and knock down the 3s to keep the floor stretched..."all" he had to do was focus on generating offense for himself and his shooters, and just do a good job on defense. Similarly, Duncan was able to lead the dominant defense (instead of BEING the defense), which was good enough to keep them in any game, and let him then focus more on offense. And with Cassell's help Garnett was able to lead the offense (instead of being the offense), which let him focus more on his defense (not coincidence this was his peak defensive season in the Flip Saunders era).

For '09 LeBron and '03 Duncan, the scenario described above was also true in the postseason. But for Garnett, with Cassell limping and then eventually out, the cast was no longer strong enough in any area to let him specialize in any way. He had to BE the offense AND also BE the defense, for his team to have any chance against strong competition. On a level that '09 LeBron and '03 Duncan never had to...they never had to stop specializing and go into scramble mode, the way that '04 KG had to.

b) The opponents. The other aspect is the opponent. And this is a key...neither the 2003 Spurs nor the 2009 Cavs ever faced a situation where the opponent was lopsidedly more talented. I mentioned this in a previous post, but it doesn't even matter so much whether the opponent's talent is mainly offense or mainly defense, just that the opponent is clearly (much) better. The '09 Cavs faced 2 easy opponents, and the a Magic team that was not more talented than them. Again, this is important. The talent around Howard was roughly equivalent to the talent around LeBron, and both teams were somewhat gimmick squads around their star (Cavs with 2 starting centers and shooters, Magic with all shooters around the dominant big). So it's not that the Magic were just better than the Cavs...it's just that their gimmick made the Cavs' gimmick ineffective.

Similarly, the '03 Spurs never faced an opponent that clearly outgunned them. The Lakers had the worst year of the Shaq/Kobe prime era, and Kobe was playing hurt. The Mavs were playing them to a standstill before Dirk got hurt, and afterwards the Spurs had the clear advantage. And the Nets just weren't on the level of the top teams in the league...the East was just weak.

Garnett's Wolves, on the other hand, were facing the Shaq/Kobe/old Malone/old Payton Lakers and the Webber/Peja/Bibby/Miller Kings. Teams (especially the Lakers) that likely would have been more talented than even a Wolves squad at full strength, but that dramatically outgunned KG with limping (or absent) Cassell.

Conclusion: Put (a) and (b) together, and Garnett is in a situation where he a) doesn't have the team anymore that would let him maximize his own production, but b) requires MORE than his previous MVP-level of production to even have a shot at a win. This isn't a comparable situation to '09 LeBron or '03 Duncan, so a straight box score-for-box score comparison won't give you an accurate sense of what was going on.

Interestingly, in the years AROUND their peak seasons, we got to see both LeBron and Duncan in these more outgunned situations in the postseason. In '08 LeBron was outgunned against the Celtics and in '10 it certainly appeared that he was again, though that wasn't the expectation coming in. Similarly, in '02 Duncan was completely outgunned against the Lakers with Robinson hurt, and in '04 it was at least an even battle. Their numbers in these two situation?

LeBron vs. '08/'10 Celtics: 13 games (5 wins, 8 losses), 26.8 points (51.3% TS), 7.8 reb, 7.4 ast, 2.2 stl, 1.3 blk, 4.9 TO

Duncan vs 02/04 Lakers: 11 games (3 wins, 8 losses), 24.4 points (52.3% TS), 14.5 reb, 3.9 ast, 1 stl, 2.2 blk, 4.60 TO

Now I know in this project we're focusing on a single year, and I respect that. But in the effort to actually figure out what's going on, this is instructional. When peak LeBron and peak Duncan faced strong playoff foes in situations where their casts weren't necessarily as strong, both of their scoring efficiencies regressed to exactly where we saw Garnett's and their turnovers went nuts as well. I'd be curious about the breakdown between win/loss like I did with Garnett, but the point stands. KG was doing massive lifting for those Wolves, at least as much as we were seeing from peak LeBron or Duncan, and he hit that "perfect" zone in the face of being outgunned with more regularity.

I reiterate. KG was a monster at his peak.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#179 » by therealbig3 » Mon Aug 20, 2012 10:18 pm

^Great post drza.

But I would like to point out that it's been noted that Duncan got "support by committee" when his team won games in 03, but what about KG?

In the two wins against LA in 03, yes, KG had monster games, but he also got strong support from Troy Hudson (don't know why he's so maligned, he seemed to play well) and Wally, and he got strong support from Marc Jackson off the bench.

Their averages in those two wins:

KG: 34.0 ppg, 17.0 rpg, 5.5 apg, 3.0 TOpg, 60.8% TS

Hudson: 32.0 ppg, 2.0 rpg, 7.0 apg, 2.5 TOpg, 64.6% TS
Wally: 17.0 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 2.0 apg, 5.0 TOpg, 63.6% TS
Jackson: 12.0 ppg, 8.5 rpg, 2.0 apg, 1.5 TOpg, 60.1% TS


In the 4 wins against Sacramento in 04:

KG: 28.3 ppg, 14.8 rpg, 3.0 apg, 4.0 TOpg, 56.2% TS

Cassell: 13.5 ppg, 3.8 rpg, 6.3 apg, 2.0 TOpg, 49.7% TS
Sprewell: 22.0 ppg, 6.0 rpg, 4.3 apg, 4.3 TOpg, 54.8% TS

And yeah, Cassell was struggling a bit in this series with his injury, but Sprewell seemed to pick up the slack. Also, Cassell had very strong games in the games 2 and 7 wins, while Sprewell played very well in the games 3 and 5 wins.


In the 2 wins against LA in 04:

KG: 27.0 ppg, 15.0 rpg, 3.5 apg, 1.0 TOpg, 54.0% TS

Sprewell: 22.5 ppg, 3.5 rpg, 6.5 apg, 1.0 TOpg, 58.4% TS

Meanwhile, Hoiberg stepped up in the game 2 win, while Wally stepped up in the game 5 win.


I know Garnett generally had less support than Duncan or LeBron in the 04 playoffs, but in these wins, it seems that he got generally solid support from his teammates, and wasn't singlehandedly winning games either, like he's getting credit for.
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Re: #9 Highest Peak of All Time (ends Mon 9:00 PM Pacific) 

Post#180 » by C-izMe » Mon Aug 20, 2012 11:33 pm

therealbig3 wrote:
C-izMe wrote:Serious question to some voters:
What's Lebron 12's argument over Dr. J, TMac, Wade, Dirk etc. Seems like the worst year to be mentioned so far by a distance IMO.


I'm confused, why is it the worst by a distance? He was doing everything for the Heat...their best offensive player, and their best defensive player...and the Heat were top 10 in both categories. Wade/T-Mac/Dirk can't claim that.

In the playoffs, he took it up another level, and he was guarding and slowing down every big time wing (except for Durant, who didn't do nearly as well against him as he did against Battier or Wade).

All the while, the Heat supporting cast was not very good. Bosh was out for a significant amount of time, and when he came back, he wasn't all that great. The role players sucked, and Wade was playing like crap. LeBron carried that team big time, and I'm not sure you can point to a "bad" game that he had throughout those playoffs. And he had two of the best playoff games of all time in that run (game 4 against Indiana, game 6 against Boston). And unlike 2009 and 2010, he could still dominate without having a jump shot. 2010 LeBron struggled when his jump shot went missing.

That was more impressive than any of those guys' peaks to me. I still side with 09, but I definitely see 12's case.

The league was super weak this year due to the lockout and he led the 4th ranked team. His regular season performance wasn't very impressive and it's definetly the weakest to be mentioned so far.

I've already expressed how I feel about the competition he had in the PS.

And people talk about how weak his team was but this is the same team that came up big constantly. Wade to end the Pacers series, Bosh to end the Celtics series, and everyone in the Finals. They all held their own when needed.

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