New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone

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New Franchise?

Kevin Garnett
34
53%
Moses Malone
30
47%
 
Total votes: 64

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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#141 » by Jonny Blaze » Sun Jan 26, 2014 7:45 am

I think what people don't like about Garnett, which I think is unfair, is that his best asset is not volume scoring, and traditionally that's how most superstars are judged.


What I dont like about him is that his teams rarely won in the playoffs.

This is a thread about who to start a franchise with....right?

Minnesota built a franchise around Kevin Garnett and they were rewarded with a whopping two playoff victories.

Moses Malone took two different teams to the NBA Finals.


Moses Malone is also a more dominant scorer and a better rebounder.


In my world that makes the thread over.

If Kevin Garnett's whole playoff career was 2002-2004 then I wouldn't criticize him as much as I do, but those three years are the exceptions and not the norms. The rest of his career he is an average playoff performer.

If he was putting up monster stats every year and his teams were still losing (ala Lebron in Cleveland) then I wouldn't hold that against him.

When he was in the Western Conference he was consistently outplayed by the opposing teams superstar player in the playoffs.

If you analyze Kevin Garnett's career there are very few playoff series where he is the best player in the whole series.
Its not until 2004 that he is ever the best player in a series.

I could maybe buy what you KG fans try to sell (that his defense and intangibles makeup for the fact that he is not that great a scorer) if he had playoff success like the Spurs, Lakers or Mavericks.

In fact.....I take that back. I could buy what you KG fans try to sell if he had more playoff success period. Two playoff victories in 12 years as a franchise player tells me that his lack of scoring ability was a big issue.

I could maybe buy what you guys sell (that his "amazing" defense makes up for his lack of scoring) if he was on a Detroit or San Antonio type of team that was at the top of the league in defense every year, and had the playoff success to back it up.

The thing that truly weirds me out about KG fans is the extent that you all will try to disvalue scoring.

The goal of basketball is not to put up the best stats in the most categories....its to outscore your opponent.

I already know the retort from the KG fans:

But what about defense???? Defense is just as important as scoring
"

If KG's teams won as much as Detroit or San Antonio they I could maybe buy it.....but they did not. He won two playoff series in 12 years.

In those 12 years he was consistently outscored by the opposing teams top player. That tells me is defensive impact wasn't that dominant.


Make no mistake about it.....the best players in NBA history were also the most dominant scorers.

Hakeem Olajuwon and Tim Duncan can do everything KG can do on defense....but at their core they were dominant scorers.

Thats why those two have 5 NBA FInals MVP's between the two of them and KG has zero.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#142 » by ShaqAttack3234 » Sun Jan 26, 2014 8:28 am

G35 wrote:Your point about Moses and joining a stacked team would ring true if not for how Moses performed on those less than stacked teams in Houston.

1976-77 Malone joined a Rockets team that had missed the playoff's the previous year and they made the conference finals losing to those ill fated Sixers.

1977-78 Rockets missed the playoff's because Moses missed 23 games

1978-79 Lost in the first rd

1979-80 Lost in the semi's to the Celtics

1980-81 Beat Magic/Kareem who were champions at the time so they were the underdog. They made it all the way to the NBA finals losing to Bird/McHale/Parish/Maxwell/Archibald a pretty stacked Celtics squad.

Another telling point was that the year Malone was traded to the Sixers the Rockets went 14-68 which allowed the Rockets to get Ralph Sampson.

What Malone did was power his team to upsets; he over achieved with what he was given. That Rockets team upset a team with KAJ/Magic on it... how is this possible? Every time I ask why KG went out 7 straight times in the playoff's the excuse is he went up against better teams. Well isn't basketball won off of matchups? A team can be less talented but they can exploit one matchup and spam that to an upset. What I want to know is it possible in 7 years that KG didn't have one matchup that he could have exploited to lead his team to a playoff series win?

Look at the NBA now, the Heat are the best team because Lebron is a matchup no one can defend against. However, the Pacers can beat the Heat because Paul George can defend Lebron well enough for the rest of the Pacers to hold down the other Heat players. What is funny is that the Pacers do not match up as well against the Thunder because George can't defend Durant as well. But then the Thunder do not have anyone to defend Lebron.

See what I mean? KG does not have that type of game that causes mismatches. I can't remember a time when a team had to double KG and get the ball out of his hand. The ball doesn't go repeatedly to KG until the other team decides they have to double or foul. With KG, I believe teams will play him straight up and take their chances. He doesn't get to the FT line that much and he defers to his teammates quite a bit. It's funny how deferring is a benefit to some players but in others it's seen as a positive.

I personally can't think of any top 20 player all time that deferred as much as KG......


I'm talking about the talent Moses played with when he won a title. Moses was dominant and the best player in the game during that '83 run, but it is worth noting that he had such a good team already in place, and that they didn't even need to build around him. It was a unique situation because he was not only their best player, but the final piece.

As for the '81 LA series, I don't read much into that series since it was a best of 3 mini-series, which thankfully, the NBA did away with a long time ago. Not to mention, Magic arguably had the worst series of his career with averages of 17 ppg and 7 apg on 38.8 FG% and 3.7 TO while airballing the potential series-winning shot on a play designed for 3. Those things along with the fact that anything can truly happen in a best of 3 mini-series make it difficult for me to read too much into it.

Moses also had some disappointing playoff losses in Houston. He certainly didn't dominate in '82 vs Seattle like he had in the regular season. And in general, the '84 and '85 Sixers didn't have the success you'd expect with their talent or the success they'd had in '83. Moses had a subpar season in general before suffering the first round upset loss to the Nets in '84, but after a bounce back year in '85 with a really talented team, Philly again failed to win a title. In fairness, they lost to a Boston team with prime Bird, but Malone's play fell off considerably in the playoffs.

As I said, I don't feel strongly about this one. I think you can make good cases for and against both players.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#143 » by Brenice » Sun Jan 26, 2014 1:23 pm

It is common for current centers to go to Hakeem to help develop their game.

Hakeem went to Moses.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#144 » by mysticbb » Sun Jan 26, 2014 1:35 pm

MisterWestside wrote:mysticbb's data on the correlation between OReb% and wins is useful, but other studies show that it's bit of a layered issue that depends on team strategy and personnel: http://www.basketballprospectus.com/unfiltered/?p=954


Pelton was right saying that correlation doesn't mean causation. But I established the causation before. And overall the conclusion of Pelton and myself is the same.

Interesting thing regarding rebounding and defense: The Spurs last season explicitly decided to focus their defense more on positional defense and shot defense instead of being prepared for the defensive rebound. The result: a better defense in comparison to the year before. Overall I argued before that the most important part of the defense is actual positional defense, then rebounding then shot defense. We can't really deceiver whether the better positional or better shot defense of the Spurs led to a better defensive efficiency, but I might need to change my opinion on the importance of defensive rebounding in comparison to the shot defense. Unfortunately I haven't really come up with an idea to really test that, but the SportsVU data might give a pretty good database for that.

Overall I wrote up my opinion on Moses Malone multiple times (even cited here in this thread); he is overrated due to more impressive total numbers, adjusted for pace, minutes and league average he isn't as impressive anymore. Someone pointed out the 16/9 season in 1992 and implied that it would have made him the best C in the league right now, but that couldn't be more wrong. Malone was an even worse defender that season than usual, his offensive numbers weren't really that impressive. The Bucks were about 3 points worse than the previous season without Moses Malone, most of that came on the defensive end. I easily take the current Garnett at C over the 1992 Moses Malone.

Malone was a good player, hard worker, but not particular great skilled or blessed with a high basketball IQ, his passing was bad, his ball handling below average for a C, he was great at positioning himself underneath the opponents basket, never gave up on an offensive rebound opportunity, tried to make it fit underneath the own basket and had even sometimes the ability to limit better offensive players just by his pure will and hustle. But he was slow in transition defense, didn't cover much ground on the defensive end, slow at recover on the defensive end, and overall not a good team defender due to his lack of really understanding the defensive concepts. For a part of his career his was clearly a positive influence on the court, for the later part of his career he was not. He collected boxscore numbers, but he was far away from the impact elite players made. Even at his peak his impact was limited due to his limited skillset. In 1983 he gets the awards, but Erving turned out to be the more important player for the 1983 76ers.

Garnett is easily the choice here; much better at peak, better longevity (the guy had still elite impact last season, and since having a better role established for him on the Nets, his impact is again up there with the best in the league (the defensive numbers for January were already presented here in this thread). Yeah, Garnett was never the elite scorer, but his overall offensive skillset and versatility are more helpful for a team to establish a better offense than Moses Malone's. On the defensive end there is no question at all (at least there shouldn't be), that Garnett is the much better defensive player.

If someone really wants to disagree with that, I suggest looking at Garnett and his play, try to understand why the teams played so much better with Garnett on the court, it really helps to understand the overall basketball game better (talking strictly about 5on5 basketball here).
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#145 » by Brenice » Sun Jan 26, 2014 2:24 pm

Nobody is disputing who is better defensively. But sheer dominance, Moses on offense. He got it done. The game during his career was not stretching defenses and 3point shots, it was about getting as close to the rim as possible. It was up to your opponent to not let you establish and maintain position down low. They couldn't then and big men now wouldn't either. Garnett wouldn't, he'd need help. In today's game, Garnett ain't shooting 3's so there is no advantage from that aspect. With Garnett, you still need someone the defense can't stop.

With Moses, you get these results: he scores down low, he misses and rebounds, or he gets fouled, better than anybody in history using that combination. Dominance
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#146 » by MacGill » Sun Jan 26, 2014 2:44 pm

What I dont like about him is that his teams rarely won in the playoffs.


So you don't like KG because the 'entire team' rarely won in the playoffs? Makes sense :-?

Do you not have the ability to seperate KG's basketball ability and his teams performance?

I mean, if KG's career started in Boston where he and his team won the chip his first year and then had their dominate playoff/regular season run and then he got traded to the Wolves and had his earlier playoff performances with the same team, no one would be questioning him because finally, to those who say 'you have to win in the playoffs' would see that he did.

Just because KG wasn't as big of a volume scorer as other's doesn't mean he is any less valuable. Otherwise, I can list a whole bunch of big time volume scorers who couldn't get the job done as the man and who needed more help and fitment to get the job done.

'If my boxscore stats give the perception that I did all I could to help my team...I get the pass. If I can't really understand or break the game down any further than that and still have great boxscore statistics, the higher the ppg the more that person tried to will their team to victory. :roll:

Minnesota built a franchise around Kevin Garnett and they were rewarded with a whopping two playoff victories.


KG, was so lucky to have such fantastic teams built around him. I think at one point both Duncan and Shaq asked to be traded to Minny because they wanted to be part of a real future.

Moses Malone took two different teams to the NBA Finals.


He did? Amazing, all you need is Moses, you don't even need a team. Moses + current Celtics = trip to finals. The problem here is that you undervalue supporting casts and overvalue your perception of impact the perceived best player on the team has. It's been explained to you here many times already.

In my world that makes the thread over.


Yes, well at least your being honest here. It would just be nice for others to at least objectively look at soem of the facts presented here instead of locking themselves into the Matrix and watching their perceived reality.

If Kevin Garnett's whole playoff career was 2002-2004 then I wouldn't criticize him as much as I do, but those three years are the exceptions and not the norms. The rest of his career he is an average playoff performer.


This makes zero sense? You must really dislike MJ than, right? His earlier playoff failures. He scored more than almost anyone else yet as those valuable ppg that you luv so much couldn't push his team ahead. Oh, wait, because he won as the undisputed best player, you'll give him the pass, because it then falls on having the right mix. And even though the Bulls had a front office who made fantastic moves to get him the best fitting talent they could, it's like people can't imagine MJ that if they Bulls don't make those moves, his legacy could be much less. And well, the rest is history. Again, did you see the teams KG faced in those first rounds? And then he joins a better team in Boston and they win first year. The Heat didn't even accomplish that, so credit the man be being a huge piece of the teams success here.

If he was putting up monster stats every year and his teams were still losing (ala Lebron in Cleveland) then I wouldn't hold that against him.


Yes, as I mentioned above this is the problem here. What JonnyBlaze perceives to be valuable is and nothing else makes the cut. You know, we have seen in the past that hero ball isn't the most successful way to win in the game of basketball. TRoss just hit 51 last night in a lost. I am happy for him as a player but if you cannot see what it does to the rest of the team when someone gets in the zone like that than I don't know what to tell you. MJ's team used to just stand around and watch him go to work, great for him, but your team isn't in the flow as much. And if you don't have a balanced mix, sorry you're not making it too far. Look at the production LA is now getting from their players for example? Labelled overachievers yet most just never had a chance to flourish they way they currently are because of their role. Sure, it works when you have the right mix but look no further than SA to see what a great mix of players can do for you. Unless you're packing a Shaq Kobe 1, 2 punch, chances are this hero ball philosophy looses once you met up with a team who plays smart basketball as the Spurs did in 07 in 4. Hence why the Heat, once they trusted each other, and hieracy was established are so dominate. How some of Kobe's 30+ppg efforts went to losing the series etc. There are just as many times, I could question pass don't shoot versus don't pass and shoot. KG was unselfish but AGAIN if Boston didn't show you what he could do with the right mix of players, than you really do not understand the full body of basketball.

When he was in the Western Conference he was consistently outplayed by the opposing teams superstar player in the playoffs.


Do you want to name me who these players were? I think I might have a trend for you here ;)

If you analyze Kevin Garnett's career there are very few playoff series where he is the best player in the whole series.
Its not until 2004 that he is ever the best player in a series.


Who the hell was better than KG?

I could maybe buy what you KG fans try to sell (that his defense and intangibles makeup for the fact that he is not that great a scorer) if he had playoff success like the Spurs, Lakers or Mavericks.


Why don't you just say, I don't understand defensive impact and only care about scoring?

In fact.....I take that back. I could buy what you KG fans try to sell if he had more playoff success period. Two playoff victories in 12 years as a franchise player tells me that his lack of scoring ability was a big issue.


Well KG wasn't a franchise player out of the box, same as Kobe. It took them some years to get brought up to speed here. Duncan isn't a huge volume scorer but I bet you luv his game. I wonder if the Spurs never won how you'd change your impression on him. Title = Impact without understanding what it was because title takes away all the guess work.

I could maybe buy what you guys sell (that his "amazing" defense makes up for his lack of scoring) if he was on a Detroit or San Antonio type of team that was at the top of the league in defense every year, and had the playoff success to back it up.


Yes, because they only had one anchor on each of their teams :roll:

The thing that truly weirds me out about KG fans is the extent that you all will try to disvalue scoring.


I am not even a true KG fan but I can appreciate his game. All you care about is scoring so I could say you weird me out because you only understand one side of the game.

The goal of basketball is not to put up the best stats in the most categories....its to outscore your opponent.


Well no, not unless you're taking your 'team' deep into the post season all by yourself ;)

But what about defense???? Defense is just as important as scoring
"


Well, yeah it makes outscoring your team easier if you can stop the other team from doing so.

If KG's teams won as much as Detroit or San Antonio they I could maybe buy it.....but they did not. He won two playoff series in 12 years.


KG didn't have those teams, he had his. Again see Boston and 04. He showed with a good roster what he and the teams could do.

In those 12 years he was consistently outscored by the opposing teams top player. That tells me is defensive impact wasn't that dominant.


It tells me you do not understand defense because it doesn't involve putting the basket into the net. You seem to think that a defensive anchor should be able to act like a volume scorer, where you can see 35ppg in the boxscore. Defense doesn't work that way, it's a team effort, and if one moving piece doesn't work with the other, it all blows up. Or I guess you never seen Pop's call a time out for a blown defensive assignment. The great teams make it look effortless, and if your not, it can appear non exsistent. However, placing Duncan or Hakeem on KG's Minny teams, wouldn't make them any less defensive players even if teams were still scoring on them and them losing in the post season. Remember, both of them were legit 5's, where KG wasn't built for the same grind they could face.

Make no mistake about it.....the best players in NBA history were also the most dominant scorers.


Really, all of them? Show me.

Hakeem Olajuwon and Tim Duncan can do everything KG can do on defense....but at their core they were dominant scorers.


See this is where you just lose all credibility and are just arguing for the sake of arguing. It's like you don't know KG at all and how he played. And you certainly do not know the difference between Hakeem and Duncan. I mean, dominant scorers, at times sure but overall throughout their careers??...I'll just leave it at that.

Thats why those two have 5 NBA FInals MVP's between the two of them and KG has zero.


Fantastic logic here.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#147 » by Grandpa Waiters » Sun Jan 26, 2014 3:33 pm

"Garnett is an underachiever and is overrated."

- Scottie Pippen
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#148 » by Brooklyn_34 » Sun Jan 26, 2014 4:22 pm

TrueLAfan wrote:Moses was an unusual type of player. There was a comment earlier about how “Moses made everyone around him better.” That's ridiculous. It wasn't because he was selfish or anything, but Moses was not a team strategy sort of player. He had very little in the way of passing skills. He had poor hands, and that resulted in lots (and lots) of turnovers. He did not have a particularly high basketball IQ. He couldn't be part of a real offensive scheme because of that. And his defense was, well, better than average at his peak...but Moses was not a great defender.

So what did he do well? He was terrifyingly tenacious, got position on the offensive boards better than any C I've ever seen, and hustled constantly. I'm not sure how many of Moses' points resulted from offensive rebounds and putbacks, but I'd bet big money (and give big odds) that it's much higher than any other 20 ppg career scorer. Much much higher. He's the greatest offensive rebounder of all time. And he never averaged 2 assists a game. Where else could the ball go after one of his offensive boards? He's putting it back up and getting fouled a lot.



Excellent post. And1 for you sir.

Malone is one of the most puzzling players out there.

His career proves that sometimes how successful you are is about how tenacious you are--not about your skill level.

Truth be told, IMO, he is probably the LEAST skilled great player I know of.

He knew his limitations (which were many) and he figured out what he was good at.

No question Garnett is about 10 times more skilled than Malone.

But I would still take him over Garnett--for the reasons you indicated, actually.

His work on the glass and drawing fouls is too valuable to give up.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#149 » by Grandpa Waiters » Sun Jan 26, 2014 4:36 pm

Brooklyn_34 wrote:
TrueLAfan wrote:Moses was an unusual type of player. There was a comment earlier about how “Moses made everyone around him better.” That's ridiculous. It wasn't because he was selfish or anything, but Moses was not a team strategy sort of player. He had very little in the way of passing skills. He had poor hands, and that resulted in lots (and lots) of turnovers. He did not have a particularly high basketball IQ. He couldn't be part of a real offensive scheme because of that. And his defense was, well, better than average at his peak...but Moses was not a great defender.

So what did he do well? He was terrifyingly tenacious, got position on the offensive boards better than any C I've ever seen, and hustled constantly. I'm not sure how many of Moses' points resulted from offensive rebounds and putbacks, but I'd bet big money (and give big odds) that it's much higher than any other 20 ppg career scorer. Much much higher. He's the greatest offensive rebounder of all time. And he never averaged 2 assists a game. Where else could the ball go after one of his offensive boards? He's putting it back up and getting fouled a lot.



Excellent post. And1 for you sir.

Malone is one of the most puzzling players out there.

His career proves that sometimes how successful you are is about how tenacious you are--not about your skill level.

Truth be told, IMO, he is probably the LEAST skilled great player I know of.

He knew his limitations (which were many) and he figured out what he was good at.

No question Garnett is about 10 times more skilled than Malone.

But I would still take him over Garnett--for the reasons you indicated, actually.

His work on the glass and drawing fouls is too valuable to give up.



Stop. You're acting like Moses was a clutz who would've had a hard time scoring a basket in an empty gym. Dude won three MVP's in an era with all time greats (Kareem, Dr. J, Parrish, Walton, Magic, Bird etc). Dude averaged 31/15 at his peak and kicked Kareem's ass in the '83 Finals. You can't do that with two left feet. Watch some games from the early '80's and reevaluate your opinion. Also, Akeem used to train with Moses in Houston as a youngster to learn from the Jedi Master. Show Mo some love. Garnett was knocked out of the first round in seven consecutive playoffs. Hakeem lost in the first round NINE TIMES. The law of recency gives KG and Hakeem a pass and underrates Moses at the same time. Get real.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#150 » by Brooklyn_34 » Sun Jan 26, 2014 5:07 pm

Grandpa Waiters wrote:
Stop. You're acting like Moses was a clutz who would've had a hard time scoring a basket in an empty gym. Dude won three MVP's in an era with all time greats (Kareem, Dr. J, Parrish, Walton, Magic, Bird etc). Dude averaged 31/15 at his peak and kicked Kareem's ass in the '83 Finals. You can't do that with two left feet. Watch some games from the early '80's and reevaluate your opinion. Also, Akeem used to train with Moses in Houston as a youngster to learn from the Jedi Master. Show Mo some love. Garnett was knocked out of the first round in seven consecutive playoffs. Hakeem lost in the first round NINE TIMES. The law of recency gives KG and Hakeem a pass and underrates Moses at the same time. Get real.



Didn't I just say I would take Malone over Garnett?

Did I not call him a great player?

How the hell could I be underrating him then?

What a puzzling response....
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#151 » by G35 » Sun Jan 26, 2014 5:12 pm

mysticbb wrote:
MisterWestside wrote:mysticbb's data on the correlation between OReb% and wins is useful, but other studies show that it's bit of a layered issue that depends on team strategy and personnel: http://www.basketballprospectus.com/unfiltered/?p=954


Pelton was right saying that correlation doesn't mean causation. But I established the causation before. And overall the conclusion of Pelton and myself is the same.

Interesting thing regarding rebounding and defense: The Spurs last season explicitly decided to focus their defense more on positional defense and shot defense instead of being prepared for the defensive rebound. The result: a better defense in comparison to the year before. Overall I argued before that the most important part of the defense is actual positional defense, then rebounding then shot defense. We can't really deceiver whether the better positional or better shot defense of the Spurs led to a better defensive efficiency, but I might need to change my opinion on the importance of defensive rebounding in comparison to the shot defense. Unfortunately I haven't really come up with an idea to really test that, but the SportsVU data might give a pretty good database for that.

Overall I wrote up my opinion on Moses Malone multiple times (even cited here in this thread); he is overrated due to more impressive total numbers, adjusted for pace, minutes and league average he isn't as impressive anymore. Someone pointed out the 16/9 season in 1992 and implied that it would have made him the best C in the league right now, but that couldn't be more wrong. Malone was an even worse defender that season than usual, his offensive numbers weren't really that impressive. The Bucks were about 3 points worse than the previous season without Moses Malone, most of that came on the defensive end. I easily take the current Garnett at C over the 1992 Moses Malone.

Malone was a good player, hard worker, but not particular great skilled or blessed with a high basketball IQ, his passing was bad, his ball handling below average for a C, he was great at positioning himself underneath the opponents basket, never gave up on an offensive rebound opportunity, tried to make it fit underneath the own basket and had even sometimes the ability to limit better offensive players just by his pure will and hustle. But he was slow in transition defense, didn't cover much ground on the defensive end, slow at recover on the defensive end, and overall not a good team defender due to his lack of really understanding the defensive concepts. For a part of his career his was clearly a positive influence on the court, for the later part of his career he was not. He collected boxscore numbers, but he was far away from the impact elite players made. Even at his peak his impact was limited due to his limited skillset. In 1983 he gets the awards, but Erving turned out to be the more important player for the 1983 76ers.

Garnett is easily the choice here; much better at peak, better longevity (the guy had still elite impact last season, and since having a better role established for him on the Nets, his impact is again up there with the best in the league (the defensive numbers for January were already presented here in this thread). Yeah, Garnett was never the elite scorer, but his overall offensive skillset and versatility are more helpful for a team to establish a better offense than Moses Malone's. On the defensive end there is no question at all (at least there shouldn't be), that Garnett is the much better defensive player.

If someone really wants to disagree with that, I suggest looking at Garnett and his play, try to understand why the teams played so much better with Garnett on the court, it really helps to understand the overall basketball game better (talking strictly about 5on5 basketball here).



I would much rather have someone that is dominant in one or two areas that a player that is multi-facted but not dominant in any one area. For example comparing KG to Moses, Moses is dominant on the offensive glass and his positioning around the basket/drew fouls at an extremely high level and converted at a high rate for a big man. Another big man who didn't move around the court as well, was criticized for his defensive principles was Shaq. Shaq doesn't require defending as much because he is so dominant in certain areas. Shaq has several weaknesses: he doesn't have the best range so he doesn't spread the floor, he is terrible at the FT line, he doesn't like to show on pick and rolls, he isn't good at rotations preferring to stay in the paint. So he doesn't do a lot of those things either that you are talking about. Personally, I would prefer if my CENTER would provide more basket protection than being able to run all over the court.

I completely disagree with you that KG has a better skillset to establish a better offense. After the 2008 season the Celtics offense was HORRIBLE. Which probably will be blamed on either Pierce, Rondo, or Allen. Why, since KG has all this impact and great skillset to make a great offense.

I also would ask how much coaching makes a difference in KG. People want to blame Flip Saunders for those Minnesota teams but he made those Detroit Pistons teams very potent offensively and that's with having a Ben Wallace in the lineup. I think KG depends on coaching a lot more than the typical superstar since he is always blending into a team, he doesn't take over his skills blend. Tom Thibodeau's defensive principles are ALWAYS underrated when referencing the Celtics defense......
I'm so tired of the typical......
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#152 » by Grandpa Waiters » Sun Jan 26, 2014 5:15 pm

Brooklyn_34 wrote:
Grandpa Waiters wrote:
Stop. You're acting like Moses was a clutz who would've had a hard time scoring a basket in an empty gym. Dude won three MVP's in an era with all time greats (Kareem, Dr. J, Parrish, Walton, Magic, Bird etc). Dude averaged 31/15 at his peak and kicked Kareem's ass in the '83 Finals. You can't do that with two left feet. Watch some games from the early '80's and reevaluate your opinion. Also, Akeem used to train with Moses in Houston as a youngster to learn from the Jedi Master. Show Mo some love. Garnett was knocked out of the first round in seven consecutive playoffs. Hakeem lost in the first round NINE TIMES. The law of recency gives KG and Hakeem a pass and underrates Moses at the same time. Get real.



Didn't I just say I would take Malone over Garnett?

Did I not call him a great player?

How the hell could I be underrating him then?

What a puzzling response....


You're underrating his athleticism and skill. You can't put up the type of numbers he did on tenacity alone.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#153 » by Brooklyn_34 » Sun Jan 26, 2014 5:29 pm

Grandpa Waiters wrote:
You're underrating his athleticism and skill. You can't put up the type of numbers he did on tenacity alone.


Garnett had more to bring to the table skillwise than Moses. I really don't think anyone would question this.
He was a much better passer, ballhandler, shooter--you name it.

But he wasn't a better rebounder and he didn't draw fouls better.

This, again, is what gives him the edge over Garnett for me.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#154 » by G35 » Sun Jan 26, 2014 5:31 pm

MacGill wrote: Just because KG wasn't as big of a volume scorer as other's doesn't mean he is any less valuable. Otherwise, I can list a whole bunch of big time volume scorers who couldn't get the job done as the man and who needed more help and fitment to get the job done.


You probably could, however what you can't do is name those volume scorers and show how many times they are being compared to Tim Duncan...Moses Malone...Kareem...Dirk...Karl Malone. You are also being ambiguous when you say "getting the job done", what do you mean getting the job done? Getting to the playoff's? Getting out of the first round? Winning a ring? There are different levels of getting the job done. Because KG didn't "get the job done" for 12 years on a variety of levels.


MacGill wrote:'If my boxscore stats give the perception that I did all I could to help my team...I get the pass. If I can't really understand or break the game down any further than that and still have great boxscore statistics, the higher the ppg the more that person tried to will their team to victory. :roll:



I don't think this is the intention that people are saying when they talk about scoring and KG. The higher ppg doesn't mean better (even though Jordan, Kareem, Hakeem, Shaq, Kobe, Lebron, Dirk, Wade, should I go on? have established it is a pretty good indicator). Duncan is not a volume scorer, he facilitates the offense just as much as KG does, however the difference is that when the Spurs offense isn't clicking who did they turn to? Duncan. It wasn't anything complicated either, it was get on the left block and let him create something whether it was a bank shot, shot going to the basket, or getting fouled. Believe it or not that's the best coach in the game ordering that play calling. Popovich says give it to Duncan and get out of the way...how many other coaches have said that about Michael, Kareem, Wilt, Shaq, Lebron, Kobe, Dirk, Wade, Magic, Bird, Hakeem, Erving, and the list goes on. That's because your best player should be your best option to score. It's a nice simple hierarchy, with KG it's not so simple. He defers. Lebron get's criticized for not taking over...KG is praised for passing or whatever his skill set does to facilitate.


MacGill wrote:KG, was so lucky to have such fantastic teams built around him. I think at one point both Duncan and Shaq asked to be traded to Minny because they wanted to be part of a real future.



That's not the point. This is a comparison scenario...how do you know the same thing wouldn't happen somewhere else? What if KG went to Sacramento? Memphis? Charlotte? New Orleans? Washington? Stop acting as if Minnesota was the only incompetent franchise ever. They are hardly alone. Boston was an incompetent franchise until they traded their future away for Allen and Garnett. What if Seattle decides to pair up Durant with Ray Allen? How many titles do the Celtics get then?

MacGill wrote:Again, did you see the teams KG faced in those first rounds?


Were any of those teams better than Magic/Kareem? If they were I will give him a pass, if they weren't then why didn't KG dominate a playoff like Moses did.....
I'm so tired of the typical......
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#155 » by MisterWestside » Sun Jan 26, 2014 5:58 pm

mysticbb wrote:Pelton was right saying that correlation doesn't mean causation. But I established the causation before. And overall the conclusion of Pelton and myself is the same.


The conclusion that crashing the offensive boards hurts your defense/not crashing the offensive boards helps your defense is the same. The conclusion that crashing the boards hurts your team's ability to win games (measured by scoring margin) is not. I don't know where you established the causation in your study. Perhaps you did and I overlooked it, but Pelton's method is a bit clearer IMO and also more effective at addressing the issue, which you yourself admit in the corresponding thread on offensive rebounding on APBR.

Anyway, I stay out of these comparisons, and the back and forth here. There are posters who won't acknowledge KG's defense and how the box score misses out on that, and also posters who religiously adhere to +/- or its variants as a measure of global ability, which is not what they're there for. Personally, I'm way more interested in the the on-court video tracking data that explicitly shows what players are doing on the court than whatever new metric is created from the box score or +/-. I'm partial to KG, since I haven't seen Moses in his prime. But I'm not picking either way here.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#156 » by mysticbb » Sun Jan 26, 2014 6:02 pm

G35 wrote:I would much rather have someone that is dominant in one or two areas that a player that is multi-facted but not dominant in any one area.


If that means, it gives a team a better chance to win, I concur. Just that Moses Malone didn't help his team more than Garnett did in terms of creating a better chance to win.

G35 wrote:Personally, I would prefer if my CENTER would provide more basket protection than being able to run all over the court.


Well, then why do you choose Moses Malone?

G35 wrote:I completely disagree with you that KG has a better skillset to establish a better offense.


Sure, better at moving without the ball, better at handling the ball, better at passing, better as a shooter, why better at seeing the open teammate. And if Garnett would battle against Malone on the board, he would even win that battle. Garnett is just overall better than Moses Malone in terms of skill. I suggest: Watch both play the game and then come back.

G35 wrote:After the 2008 season the Celtics offense was HORRIBLE.


The Celtics at a team overall had a 105.9 ORtg from 2009 to 2013, which is 19th in the league. I wouldn't exactly call that "horrible", and especially wouldn't use caps given, that it would make me look like a fool. ;)
The Celtics with Garnett on the court had 109.8 ORtg during that time; only the Nuggets and the Spurs ended up with a higher overall ORtg for that timespan (and the Spurs by just 0.1 point).
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#157 » by MacGill » Sun Jan 26, 2014 6:09 pm

You probably could, however what you can't do is name those volume scorers and show how many times they are being compared to Tim Duncan...Moses Malone...Kareem...Dirk...Karl Malone. You are also being ambiguous when you say "getting the job done", what do you mean getting the job done? Getting to the playoff's? Getting out of the first round? Winning a ring? There are different levels of getting the job done. Because KG didn't "get the job done" for 12 years on a variety of levels.


Haha, enter the KG Hate commander 8-) . You must be in a good mood today, knowing that I didn't even quote you to be responding here. Read the quote I was responding to before making silly claims that have no meaning to the poster who I originally responded to. He was pretty clear in what he was saying and hence my response. Like you, it is a 'win the ring' or you suck mentality. I think you should know what getting the job done means G35. And you should know that I don't lower players rankings simply based off this accomplishment.

I don't think this is the intention that people are saying when they talk about scoring and KG. The higher ppg doesn't mean better (even though Jordan, Kareem, Hakeem, Shaq, Kobe, Lebron, Dirk, Wade, should I go on? have established it is a pretty good indicator). Duncan is not a volume scorer, he facilitates the offense just as much as KG does, however the difference is that when the Spurs offense isn't clicking who did they turn to? Duncan. It wasn't anything complicated either, it was get on the left block and let him create something whether it was a bank shot, shot going to the basket, or getting fouled. Believe it or not that's the best coach in the game ordering that play calling. Popovich says give it to Duncan and get out of the way...how many other coaches have said that about Michael, Kareem, Wilt, Shaq, Lebron, Kobe, Dirk, Wade, Magic, Bird, Hakeem, Erving, and the list goes on. That's because your best player should be your best option to score. It's a nice simple hierarchy, with KG it's not so simple. He defers. Lebron get's criticized for not taking over...KG is praised for passing or whatever his skill set does to facilitate.


I wasn't talking about people....I quoted one poster. Dude, I have no idea what you are talking about right now. If you can't see the correlation between the poster that I quoted and ppg, read it a few more times.

That's not the point. This is a comparison scenario...how do you know the same thing wouldn't happen somewhere else? What if KG went to Sacramento? Memphis? Charlotte? New Orleans? Washington? Stop acting as if Minnesota was the only incompetent franchise ever. They are hardly alone. Boston was an incompetent franchise until they traded their future away for Allen and Garnett. What if Seattle decides to pair up Durant with Ray Allen? How many titles do the Celtics get then?


I'm lost man, honestly here. Did you even read the comments that I quoted? You're coming at me like this is a brand new conversation and I just made some claims etc. I was responding to someone else's claims. As per your point, so much luck does goes into teammates and franchises. So I agree? :-?

Were any of those teams better than Magic/Kareem? If they were I will give him a pass, if they weren't then why didn't KG dominate a playoff like Moses did.....


*sigh*, dude, maybe it's best that you leave quoting me out as I think you're having a conversation with someone else. If your point is to say a Moses team beat a Magic/KAJ team and that KG's team never faced anyone as good as a Magic/KAJ I don't know what to say here. Maybe you are able to assess talent over different era's, different rules, pace and focuses but I don't see how any of this is relevant to what KG actually faced himself.

As an aside, I generally like you as a poster G35. Just think we are having to different conversations here. I was responding to a poster and his line of thinking and you to mine but with different context.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#158 » by mysticbb » Sun Jan 26, 2014 6:10 pm

MisterWestside wrote:but Pelton's method is a bit clearer IMO and also more effective at addressing the issue, which you yourself admit in the corresponding thread on offensive rebounding on APBR.


Indeed. Nonetheless, is up to interpretation of the results. One is inconclusive, the other one gives a pretty clear picture ... now, the pretty clear picture may just be coincidence. The issue can likely be resolved by the SportsVU data.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#159 » by Grandpa Waiters » Sun Jan 26, 2014 6:11 pm

mysticbb wrote:
G35 wrote:I would much rather have someone that is dominant in one or two areas that a player that is multi-facted but not dominant in any one area.


If that means, it gives a team a better chance to win, I concur. Just that Moses Malone didn't help his team more than Garnett did in terms of creating a better chance to win.

G35 wrote:Personally, I would prefer if my CENTER would provide more basket protection than being able to run all over the court.


Well, then why do you choose Moses Malone?

G35 wrote:I completely disagree with you that KG has a better skillset to establish a better offense.


Sure, better at moving without the post, better at handling the ball, better at passing, better as a shooter, why better at seeing the open teammate. And if Garnett would battle against Malone on the board, he would even win that battle. Garnett is just overall better than Moses Malone in terms of skill. I suggest: Watch both play the game and then come back.

G35 wrote:After the 2008 season the Celtics offense was HORRIBLE.


The Celtics at a team overall had a 105.9 ORtg from 2009 to 2013, which is 19th in the league. I wouldn't exactly call that "horrible", and especially wouldn't use caps given, that it would make me look like a fool. ;)
The Celtics with Garnett on the court had 109.8 ORtg during that time; only the Nuggets and the Spurs ended up with a higher overall ORtg for that timespan (and the Spurs by just 0.1 point).


KG would beat Moses in a battle on the boards? ROTFL.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#160 » by mysticbb » Sun Jan 26, 2014 6:16 pm

Grandpa Waiters wrote:KG would beat Moses in a battle on the boards? ROTFL.


So, why has Garnett the higher DRB% in his career and at peak level despite the fact that he played further away from the basket on the defensive end than Moses Malone? Quite curious, isn't it? But well ...

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