tsherkin wrote:C-izMe wrote:A great passer with crafty handles and a tendency for making crafty moves at any chance he got. Very Manu like IMO.
Not stylistically. He was an impact player, no question, but he's only superficially similar to Ginobili. Again, lacks the size, lacks the athleticism, lacked the kind of frenetic energy, not as dynamic off of the dribble (in part because of the difference in size and athleticism)...
Hornacek was a very good player. He was more measured in his approach, though, and a more dangerous scoring threat while he was on the floor, and is a better defensive presence as well. There's more total impact from Ginobili and significant differences in their approach to the game, it's a weak comparison.
you're saying Hornacek was a better DEFENSIVE presence ? I hope that's just some typo. anyway this comparison is flawed on every level. Hornacek didn't have borderline superstar impact like Ginobili had. Hornacek was an off ball perimeter shooter/passer, Ginobili is a huge threat off the dribble. different impact, different style. Hornacek is more like homeless version of Larry Bird playing combo guard. Ginobili is just a different type of player.
Dr Positivity wrote:Vote 93 Barkley
I definitely like Barkley over Moses. Barkley seems like clearly the better offensive player to me as a scorer, passer, etc., one of the true offensive giants. Moses has great offense for a C but he's no Barkley IMO. Defensively Moses looks a little better, but when positional weighting is put in (Barkley can be put beside a defensive center, harder to find a defensive PF) the gap doesn't seem massive to me. Enough that I'll side with the scarier offensive force
Barkley over Karl because I don't trust playoffs Karl
not sure if you read the comments about Barkley I re-posted. to me there's a pretty huge gap between Moses and Barkley on defense. Moses can actually be a good HCO defender/part of a good defensive team. Barkley just suck defensively, period. check out some of the averages of opposing PFs against Barkley. look at the 93 postseason of Kemp for a good measure:
14.8 ppg 52% FG vs Karl Malone in the 1st round
13.6 ppg 42% FG vs Hakeem in the 2nd round
20.6 ppg 59% FG vs Barkley in the WCFs
and it's not just Kemp either. everyone defended by Barkley posted monster stats, far better than vs anyone else in that postseason. Divac posted 18 ppg 5.6 apg in the 1st rd, Carr/Cummings combined together for 19.2 ppg at 54% FG in 36 mpg, Grant didn't have a great offensive series but he wasn't involved in the offense since MJ was rocking 40 ppg. Barkley is a huge liability on defense to me. especially in the playoffs when the game moves closer to the basket and protecting the paint becomes more important.
I'd like to see Philly's ORTG/DRTG for 83 RS + PS excluding the games when they were coasting late in the season. their SRS was about 9 so I expect them to be about top3 offense and top3 defense at the same time. I think Moses also improved his game in the playoffs (mystic said he was a +5 boxscore player in the RS but +7 in the PS). I see Moses 83 as clearly more impactful than Barkley's 93. that 1-6 record without Barkley means nothing to me. we've seen Suns playing years at about 6 SRS before Barkley joined that team. they were absolutely stacked.
I know Barkley was an offensive savant but was his offensive impact as good as his boxscore stats suggested ? it wasn't until he was paired with KJ that his offenses started to look like juggernauts...except that KJ was already leading elite offenses in the late 80s/early 90s without Barkley to begin with. Barkley's boxscore stats is really the only thing going for him. we've seen him miss extended period of time in 87 and 91 and it wasn't anything close to what you'd expect.
to me this is more about Moses vs Karl Malone than it is about Barkley vs either of them. I see Malones being a notch above Barkley. Karl Malone is indeed somewhat suspect playoff performer. ElGee defended him well but I can't get myself wrapped around one thing, his ORTG in 96-98 playoffs was 105. it only went down after that. I just don't see Malone as an efficient playoff performer in that timespan. I said this already to fatal, I think mid 90s Karl Malone was more aggressive, more likely to go to the basket instead of settling for jumpshots, he posted far more efficient postseasons in 92-95 and he was also at the age when most superstars have their best seasons. I don't see how he's more "polished" in the late 90s unless you're talking about shooting more jumpshots.
defensively Karl Malone is a huge upgrade over both Moses and Barkley. Moses is not that bad as a defender per se, he won't let his opponent score a bunch of pts against him and was even a good post defender against Kareem (imagine Barkley in that role, trying to contain a Dirk, doesn't pass the laugh test). but Moses style of play on offense was very bad for defense. as fatal pointed out - consistently the most turnover prone NBA C in the history, relentless on the ORB which took away his transition D. his impact on defensive rebounding is suspect to me as well but there's no question he was a very impactful rebounder in 83 as UAF was arguing in his defense. but Karl Malone has all of this and then some. his offense is more conductive to playing good defense. his defense itself is better than Moses as well. he's not just a good post defender, he's a borderline alltimer. what he did to D-Rob in 94/96/98, to Duncan in 04, to Shaq in the late 90s, he was a guy who could defend any elite post player in history. even though Malone lacks some impact in help-D to be a truly great all around defender, he's being compared to two guys whose help-D was poor at best.
offensively Malone does look worse in the playoffs but in his defense you have to consider Jazz team structure (ElGee's post I re-posted) which led to Malone taking on a very big offensive load, as well as his playoff opposition. in his prime in 92-98 Malone was consistently playing against top post defenders in history. he faced Hakeem 4 times, Shaq 2 times, Duncan once, D-Rob 3 times, Kemp 3 times, PTB frontlines with Buck Williams/Cliff Robinson like 2-3 times as well... that's some hard opposition to play against. I'm not that surprised his offensive numbers dropped in the PS.
his team offenses were elite in the playoffs though I'm reluctant to give Malone credit over Stock/Hornacek because it wasn't after Hornacek's addition that they started playing elite offense (they were kind of putrid before that) and Stockton's floor generalship was still a very valuable asset, even if his shot creation abilities were much-diminished come playoff time, let's not forget Utah struggled without Stockton on offense early in 98. but still, if Malone + some fitting pieces + role players gave you such great effects offensively, he deserves some credit as the #1 guy on the team.
I disagree with colts assessment of Malone's cast in his finals runs as bunch of scrubs. you need to understand the value of defensive role players and spot up shooters. this is the issue I've been discussing with mystic in this particular thread. Malone's teammates weren't big scorers but they had great off ball impact with spacing effect. they were also relentless on defense. some of his centers might seem like scrubs if you look at their raw numbers but they were also some of the best role players in the league. Ostertag in particular was a great post defender (check out him and Malone playing vs late 90s Shaq) and he was also putting up insane blk% numbers. you also have to consider how much those non-scorers benefited from Jazz offensive system. you didn't have to be a great isolation player because it was all about their off ball movement and screens.