ardee wrote:ElGee wrote:Woah. Ardee -- why Kobe over Wade? McGrady? Robinson? West? Barkley? I mean, I could list a lot of players but just the wings I mentioned -- why Kobe over Wade or Mac??
And I'd like to clarify something about Jerry West because apparently no one read it or they didn't understand it:
The Lakers were a SUB .500 team in 31 games without West in 1968 (no other significant injuries or roster flux), With West, they were better than an 8 SRS team with basically the best offense in basketball history to that history, and an offense that was maybe matched once in the next 20 years. Individually, West was nearly 10% better than league average on HIGH VOLUME...then he improved on that in the PS and was a major catalyst in pushing the Celtic team that just clipped the "shoulda been a dynasty" 76ers. (When West's ankle didn't hold for G6, the team was finally blown out...)
West also basically owns the record for In/Out value in surrounding seasons, constantly missing between 12 and 30 games and effecting his teams greatly whether they had prime Baylor, post injury Baylor, no Baylor, a bunch of guards, Wilt Chamberlain, different coaches, etc. This wasn't a fluke, this was a peak.
For me I'm having a battle of Wade v West at the 15 spot, but I'm also afraid these kinds of debates will fly by the wayside like KG-Duncan did or Kareem-anybody did. Hopefully they don't...
Ok, this is going to be a bit long, ElGee.
The main premise for my putting Kobe this high is the offensive heights he led that Laker team to. They were posting 114+ ORtgs when Gasol was playing, and even though he only played 27 games they were still about 111-112 for the season I believe.
Now look at that Laker team: aside from Gasol, everyone relies on Kobe's creation.
Look at the shooter's numbers: Vujacic and Farmar had career shooting years, massive outliers compared to their other seasons.
Fisher experienced a pretty surprising rejuvenation thanks to the offensive attention Kobe was drawing. Gasol's efficiency skyrocketed when he came to the Lakers.
Breaking down the players you mentioned:
Kobe vs. Robinson: I love DRob more than anyone on the board I think, but the Playoffs are relevant. I think '94 is his best season, but he performs rather not up to the standards he set in the regular season when being guarded by Malone. 20-11 on 41% shooting is well... Not that good. That '94 regular season has an argument for being a top 5
regular season of all time, though. Meanwhile Kobe averaged 32-6-6 on 60% TS against quality opponents in '08, destroying a 7.4 SRS Jazz team to the tune of 33-7-7 with no less than Andrei Kireilinko on him.
Kobe vs. McGrady: The '03 McGrady season seems quite similar to '06 Kobe to me in terms of narrative. A putrid offensive supporting cast, Kobe/Mac has to go for 33-35 ppg on decent efficiency to keep them relevant. The difference, to me, however, is that Kobe's 06 team overachieved massively. Starting Smush Parker at PG and Kwame Brown at C, they still managed the 7th best SRS in the league.
The narrative continues. It's astounding really. The team makes the first round and is pitted against a 1st/2nd seed. They jump out to a shock 3-1 lead behind great play from their superstar. Then, it all falls away. Mac averaged 26 ppg on just 36% shooting in the last three games, all losses. And here's the thing: that Detroit team, they weren't very good. They were the 1st seed in the EC with just a 50-32 record, and they were just a 2.9 SRS team. I don't see '08 Kobe, or even '06 Kobe for that matter, struggling so much against them.
When someone loses in round 1, you can give them credit if they go all out and burn their opponents like Wade '10. But Mac really underperformed as compared to the regular season. Can't rank him over Kobe '08 the same reason I can't rank Kobe 06 over Kobe 08.
Kobe vs. Wade 09: The best statistical season by a non-Jordan 2-guard. My personal pick as his peak. The reason I can't separate it from Kobe's '06-'08 peak is that despite all those incredible numbers, the Heat still had only the 22nd best offense in the league.
Break it down further. Remove Kobe and Wade from the '06-'07 Lakers and the '09 Heat. Odom probably stands out as the best offensive player of the lot. Then after that, Wade has Marion, Haslem, Beasley and Chalmers. Kobe has.... Kwame and Smush.
Even with a comparable or even maybe a slightly better supporting cast, Wade in 09 was unable to replicate Kobe's offensive performances in terms of team offense, or even really come close (7th offense vs. 22nd offense).
Plus, Wade dropped off from his regular season against a very, very average Hawks team. This was the same Hawks team that LeBron all of disemboweled in the very next round.
Its the same story as T-Mac's 03 and to some extent Kobe 06/07. I'd say Wade's playoff performance in 09 was probably better than T-Mac's in 03 and about as good as Kobe in those two years, but Kobe's 08 WC Playoffs were on a different level: those three rounds before he played the GOAT defense were on an MJ/LeBron level.
Kobe vs. West: Now this.... This is hard. Why? Because I can't pinpoint a peak year for West.
'65: The highest scoring Playoffs ever. 40.6 ppg with Baylor out. Destroys the Bullets to the tune of 46.3 ppg (!).
'66: Drags an awful supporting cast with Baylor mostly on one leg or injured to the Finals once more. 31-7-6 regular season, sets an all-time record with 840 free throws made. Scores less but is far more efficient. 34-6-6 on 58% TS is Jordan-esque. Now this year I might have to reconsider.
However, I think everyone will agree Kobe was demonic on the defensive end in '08. Arguably his best year defensively since 2001. I don't know if we can say West had the same defensive impact. He was good at playing the passing lanes, but was he as good a man-defender and help-defender as Kobe?
2008 was a really monster defensive year for Kobe. He finished 5th in DPoY voting and played some incredible man defense. There's a video on youtube of a game when Miami was visiting Staples, and he just ruined Wade. This was Wade in his athletic prime: 26 years old, and Kobe wasn't letting him breathe.
Not using that one game as an argument but just an example of how disruptive Kobe was during that year at times.
To me, honestly, the two players I have a hard time separating from Kobe are Oscar and Barkley.
Oscar's offensive impact in those early 60s years was crazy as others have shown, plus he had some truly kickass Playoff performances.
'93 Barkley has the same narrative as Kobe. Leads a kick-ass offensive regular season team, and some monster Playoff performances. In particular, during the WCF, he was just unstoppable.
Again, these are nearly perfect seasons. Some bare separation. I would for sure put Kobe 08 over Wade's 09 and Robinson's 94, but I'm open to argument with Barkley '93, West '66 and Oscar '63/'64, and most notably Erving '76.
The last is probably the closest one for me, and I would like to hear someone's take on Erving vs Kobe.