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#181 » by Okada » Mon Jan 27, 2014 12:33 am

NO-KG-AI wrote:It only seems selective because it blows up your pre-conceived notions.


LOL.

Uh...no. Unfortunately the only thing I've seen that's even a little supported is that KG was a better defender and passer. That much is obvious. You'd have to be insane though, to think that that somehow closes the gap in Moses advantages in scoring, rebounding, and playoff performance and success, not to mention the 3 MVPs over tougher competition. It doesn't even come close.

nikomCH wrote:Once you stop thinking your preconceived notions are always correct, you'll learn a lot more


Oh hey, look at that, I already don't think my preconceived notions are always correct.

Now let me check again...

Yep, Moses is clearly a better choice than KG.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#182 » by NO-KG-AI » Mon Jan 27, 2014 1:04 am

You must have checked raw PPG/RPG with no context. Good call :thumbsup: . You'll have plenty of backers on this board if you like to back yourself up with little to no substance, and cherry pick. Maybe you all can teach the simpletons of this board like tsherkin/Doctor MJ/MysticBB/ElGee and the various other Boston/Minnesota homer like them to read a box score.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#183 » by Okada » Mon Jan 27, 2014 1:11 am

NO-KG-AI wrote:You must have checked raw PPG/RPG with no context. Good call :thumbsup: . You'll have plenty of backers on this board if you like to back yourself up with little to no substance, and cherry pick. Maybe you all can teach the simpletons of this board like tsherkin/Doctor MJ/MysticBB/ElGee and the various other Boston/Minnesota homer like them to read a box score.


Mmm. Because looking at all the statistics of both players across the entire span of their careers is totally cherry picking.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#184 » by Brenice » Mon Jan 27, 2014 2:05 am

What version of KG could you replace for Kareem in 83 and defeat the Moses led Sixers in the Finals?
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#185 » by Grandpa Waiters » Mon Jan 27, 2014 2:13 am

Brenice wrote:What version of KG could you replace for Kareem in 83 and defeat the Moses led Sixers in the Finals?



The version of KG needed to replace '83 Kareem in order to defeat Moses and the Sixers hasn't been invented yet.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#186 » by Brenice » Mon Jan 27, 2014 2:51 am

Grandpa Waiters wrote:
Brenice wrote:What version of KG could you replace for Kareem in 83 and defeat the Moses led Sixers in the Finals?



The version of KG needed to replace '83 Kareem in order to defeat Moses and the Sixers hasn't been invented yet.


Who would be Finals MVP?

Now swap Moses with Bynum against the KG championship Celtics.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#187 » by G35 » Mon Jan 27, 2014 4:13 am

This is what the KG argument has come to is:

KG detractors don't understand the statistics being used in support of KG, it's "too advanced" because it shows how obvious KG's superiority is over just about anyone not in the top 10. What irks those not entranced by these stats is that when other players do things...like win playoff series, win titles, win MVP's, win Finals MVP's that all pales to one single metric that KG look all powerful. Which is why I make this statement:

To end this hypocrisy, there should not be Lord of the Rings mentality in that one metric/measurement rules all. We should not just use stats, nor the eye test, nor rings, nor PER, nor efficiency, nor MVP's/Awards, nor a narrative to compare players. They should all be on the table and they are not part of a metric; you can't give stats a +2 and the eye test .44 or awards a .88. Everyone has a preference and changing how you measure one player to the next is...a logical fallacy. It's very difficult to accept KG's impact statistics and then also this:

bastillon wrote:
let me repeat one more time. it is not enough for you to show the Celtics record without any context whatsoever. numbers have a different meaning once they are put in the proper context.


bastillon wrote:G35, you are operating under the assumption that individual drtg has any value. it is trying to measure defense with boxscore stats. it's dividing the credit for team defense based on boxscore stats. KG's defensive impact is non-boxscore stuff (contesting shots, help-D, pnr D, QBing the defense). you are misinterpreting the results.


NO-KG-AI wrote:Probably because people use context. Like the fact that Moses played 42 minutes. Or that the Rockets offense wasn't that great, despite how "dominant" he was. That's why every metric shows KG as a better player. Except ppg/rpg.



WhateverBro wrote:
Another good question is why Garnett is knocked for scoring too little when him and Duncan were basically neck and neck scoring wise for most of their careers. Why is this logic only applied to KG?



drza wrote:The argument is circular, whether it's the regular season or the playoffs. You and your crew will hold up boxscore stats, often scoring, and scream that these are the most important things. We'll point out that there are aspects of the game, especially on defense but including offensive creation and distribution, that aren't measured well (or at all, in some cases) by the boxscores and that the best current measures for entire games are the +/- stats. Your side disregards the +/- stats or even the approach that would value what those stats could tell us. Which leaves us in a debate with no common ground, and in which all either side can do is spit a bunch of words at each other. I don't have the patience or time to try to win arguments that way anymore. THAT'S why you haven't seen me very much in this or other topics recently, not because of some fear of speaking about the playoffs. I actually love talking about KG's playoffs, because they're still so under-appreciated or misunderstood by so many.



All of these quotes are saying that KG needs efforts need context. I mean there is one argument that Moses only did better because he played more minutes. But I NEVER hear that argument when people compare KG to Duncan. Duncan stopped being a big minutes guy after 6 years in the league. Everyone knows how much Pop likes to manage minutes/games. Duncan's minutes went down to 33-34 mpg in in 2004/05 taking off 5-6 mpg. However, Duncan still put up comparable scoring/rebounding numbers. Not one single KG supporter ever talks about how many minutes KG plays that was a HUGE boost to his box score numbers.

Another CONTEXT point is that throughout NBA history the greatest statistical seasons are typically when that player is surrounded with a poor supporting cast; Jordan, Wilt, Barkley, Robinson, Moses, Kobe all had monster numbers when they had to carry their teams. KG played a ton of minutes, had a TERRIBLE supporting cast (just ask anyone) and KG only posted one really memorable season and that's when he had help.

However, all that can be attributed to MY OPINION which I am entitled to. What KG supporters don't get is that when they INTERPRET the impact of KG's play on the court is just their interpretation. There are a thousand different factors in a basketball, they can all tell you something about how the game was played, but at the end of the day the best stat that shows impact is winning. When KG fans pontificate about how great KG is to THEM that's ok but don't make the mistake of saying that it's OBVIOUS how great he is when others disagree. KG has a huge back log of evidence showing how much he failed.

That KG would have realized his potential if he had been in Duncan's place in SA.....I wonder if Chris Webber, Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, David Robinson, Rasheed, Ewing, or Hakeem would have been better in the Spurs system that Duncan helped to CREATE. What's funny is that people think that system was in place before Duncan was drafted to the Spurs; it wasn't the Spurs did a horrible job putting talent around Robinson and developing any sort of continuity. So when I read that KG would have been so much better if he was in the place of Duncan I can't take it seriously. KG didn't create anything lasting in Minnesota, what makes people think Garnett would have built anything in SA? You mean because of Popovich? Are you saying that COACHING makes the difference in a players development because I don't hear anything from KG fans about the coaching he got in Boston. It's pretty quiet on that front.....
I'm so tired of the typical......
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#188 » by mysticbb » Mon Jan 27, 2014 11:40 am

Jonny Blaze wrote:No.


Well, only because you believe that is the case, doesn't make it so. ;)

Jonny Blaze wrote:I actually head a poster say that Garnett had a higher peak then Malone......WTF?????

When did Kevin Garnett ever come close to averaging 31 and 14 in a season?


If we use per 75 poss numbers for both:

Malone 1982: 27.5 Pts, 12.9 Trb, 1.5 Ast, 0.8 Stl, 1.4 Blk, 3.2 Tov, +3.8 TS%
Garnett 2004: 24.9 Pts, 14.3 Trb, 5.1 Ast, 1.5 Stl, 2.2 Blk, 2.7 Tov, +3.1 TS%

So, with the exception of the scoring Garnett beats out Malone in every other boxscore stats. And now we add the fact that Garnett was not just the better individual defender but also the superior help and team defender. Garnett got more rebounds, more assists, more steals, more blocked shots while having less turnovers ... no idea, but maybe you shouldn't be so convinced that Moses Malone was actually better?

Jonny Blaze wrote:Has Kevin Garnett ever been an NBA Finals MVP?

Does Kevin Garnett have 3 NBA MVP's?

Did Kevin Garnett ever take two different teams to the NBA Finals?


Did Moses Malone ever won a DPOY?

Does Moses Malone have 12 All-Defense team selections?

Did Moses Malone ever won the All-Star game MVP award?

I hope you see that we can find multiple arbitrary things for each player the other didn't accomplish.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#189 » by mysticbb » Mon Jan 27, 2014 11:51 am

G35 wrote:I don't know if that number is always a good indicator because KG has his highest DRB% this year at 31.6%...are you saying this is KG's best year as a rebounder?


No, I would say he has a career high in DRB%, which is exactly what the data tells you. Nonetheless, Garnett presents to be better than Malone in terms of DRB% for his entire career, despite the fact that Garnett played further away from the basket. Now, either Garnett was just incredible lucky and Malone unlucky, or Garnett is actually able to fight better for defensive rebounds. Now, the task underneath the own basket is essentially the same, unlike on the offensive end, where the strategy of either crashing the board or going back on defense makes a difference as well as the offensive usage of the player.
Sure, Moses Malone grabbed more offensive rebounds, but mainly because he was in that position, because he was incapable of playing more outside, being the playmaker and was weak in terms of transition defense. The best bet with him was: Let him crash the offensive board, in that way he may even be helpful.

G35 wrote:So while KG does have a greater DRB% he would get killed by Moses on the offensive boards BY DESIGN. Especially considering how lightweight KG is, Moses probably would look forward to battling him. Let KG stay on the perimeter...Moses will dominate on the inside.....


That is beyond the point. If both going up for rebounds against each other; both in the same range around the basket, Garnett would grabbed more than 50% of the rebounds directly against Moses Malone. Garnett was quicker on his feet, had better lift, the longer arms and therefore overall better length as well as better hands. Moses Malone has the strength on his side, but not by that much given Garnett lower body strength, which is more important for the task at hand. Now, maybe Malone outworks Garnett a bit, but it is not like Garnett is someone who plays without intensity or hustle, quite the opposite.
Garnett is just better skilled for the task, and that's why he grabbed a higher percentage of defensive rebounding opportunities despite the fact that by design he was further away from the optimal position for the defensive rebound in his career in comparison to Moses Malone. (And yeah, that reasoning is based on watching those two players play, not just looking at stats.)
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#190 » by mysticbb » Mon Jan 27, 2014 12:39 pm

Grandpa Waiters wrote:Huh? You're crediting Garnett for "creating a better chance (team) to win" even though he STILL lost more than Moses? What? You're saying that Garnett gave his teams a better chance to win? Well, how do you explain his teams losing MORE?


Fun facts:
Moses Malone played 1329 games in the NBA, 603 times the team he was playing for lost the game.
Kevin Garnett played 1360 games in the NBA so far, 577 times the team he was playing for lost the game.

Seems like your memory isn't as good as you think. And well, your argumentation is obviously also flawed, because the NBA game is about playing 5on5, which means whether a team overall wins does depend on the teammates as well. We have the numbers how the teams played with the respective player missing (Moses Malone and Kevin Garnett in that case) and how the team played when both were playing. And those numbers are making it a no-contest, because Garnett made a way bigger difference. Well, maybe the few games you watched live of each of those players aren't quite as good as an indicator as you believe?
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#191 » by Grandpa Waiters » Mon Jan 27, 2014 1:10 pm

mysticbb wrote:
Grandpa Waiters wrote:Huh? You're crediting Garnett for "creating a better chance (team) to win" even though he STILL lost more than Moses? What? You're saying that Garnett gave his teams a better chance to win? Well, how do you explain his teams losing MORE?


Fun facts:
Moses Malone played 1329 games in the NBA, 603 times the team he was playing for lost the game.
Kevin Garnett played 1360 games in the NBA so far, 577 times the team he was playing for lost the game.

Seems like your memory isn't as good as you think. And well, your argumentation is obviously also flawed, because the NBA game is about playing 5on5, which means whether a team overall wins does depend on the teammates as well. We have the numbers how the teams played with the respective player missing (Moses Malone and Kevin Garnett in that case) and how the team played when both were playing. And those numbers are making it a no-contest, because Garnett made a way bigger difference. Well, maybe the few games you watched live of each of those players aren't quite as good as an indicator as you believe?


Here's a fun fact for you: KG got bounced in the first round of the playoffs for seven consecutive years. All of the mindless, arbitrary stats you dredge up isn't gonna change that fact or my opinion of him. I saw both of their careers in its entirety and it's not even close. Moses was a better, more dominant, more effective player than Garnett. Believe what you want.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#192 » by mysticbb » Mon Jan 27, 2014 1:40 pm

Grandpa Waiters wrote:Here's a fun fact for you: KG got bounced in the first round of the playoffs for seven consecutive years.


Not really, the facts are that the Timberwolves lost as a team in the first round; Garnett was part of the team which actually faced a better team 7 times in a row. Those things happen.

Grandpa Waiters wrote:All of the mindless, arbitrary stats you dredge up isn't gonna change that fact or my opinion of him.


I actually presented facts. You were saying that Garnett lost more (while emphasizing the more by using caps, mind you) while in reality Moses Malone was part of the team which lost more games (not just in total, but even more in terms of the percentage). That fact just simply proves that nikomCH is right and your proclaimed advantage in terms of judging the players by using your memory is a flawed idea. I know you take pride in that, but your misplaced pride is not going to change the facts.

Grandpa Waiters wrote:Moses was a better, more dominant, more effective player than Garnett.


Why? What exactly did Moses Malone better than Garnett despite grabbing more offensive rebounds and scoring more points based on getting more putbacks and some more FT? I showed that in general he was the worse rebounder; there shouldn't even a debate about the defensive part at all and Garnett was the far superior passer and ball handler. Now, scoring some more points while being worse (in some parts way worse) in every other aspect of the game really make someone the "better, more dominant, more effective player"?
What you are presenting here is a simply case of nostalgia accompanied by the belief that your memory is actually working way better than it really does. You are lousy at player evaluation, because you are preferring your personal belief over better information.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#193 » by Okada » Mon Jan 27, 2014 4:04 pm

MysticBB, did you know that Moses has 3 times as many MVPs as KG? Kinda weird, huh.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#194 » by mysticbb » Mon Jan 27, 2014 4:27 pm

Okada wrote:MysticBB, did you know that Moses has 3 times as many MVPs as KG? Kinda weird, huh.


Well, I probably knew that given the fact I just cited a guy writing it? Or maybe not? I let you try to figure that one out. ;)

If Garnett has the similar circumstances in 2008 as Malone had in 1979, he would have won that MVP award. What do I mean? Well, Garnett had 53.2% of the possible MVP voting points in 2008; Malone got 52.1% in 1979. A similar thing is true for 2002 for Garnett and 1982 for Malone, when Garnett got 73.2% of the possible points while Malone got 73.5%. Well, in both cases Malone got those MVP awards, because the other possible candidates didn't have the neccessary case outside of the playing level (because there were better players in the league in both of those seasons), while Garnett went against Duncan in 2002, who had the team success being in favor of him as well going against the "Bryant needs an MVP award narrative" in 2008. Bad luck for Garnett in those cases regarding the MVP award or just luck for Moses Malone.

In the end, people thought Moses Malone would be better than he really was, because they had the idea that PPG and RPG are enough to consider a player incredible good. What worked well for Moses Malone? Well, "hard working" even though failing is somehow still considered to be "good defense", while in reality hustling is not necessarily a good way to play defense. So, at the end, the voters assumed Malone would play good defense while adding his blown up boxscore stats (only PPG and RPG to tell you the truth here).

In the end individual awards don't change the fact that Garnett was the better ball handler and playmaker and far better defender. Why not address that at all?
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#195 » by Okada » Mon Jan 27, 2014 4:40 pm

Only a small minority of people thought Garnett deserved MVP in 2008. He only got 15 out of 126 1st place votes. It's stuff like this where your arguments fall flat to me. You genuinely come off like you're arbitrarily picking out whatever random advanced stat makes your case sound best because all the other stats don't work for you. I'm sure you'll try and convince me otherwise but I don't care, there's no defense of using MVP percentages as opposed to just looking at the damn votes. It's not complicated and just because you try to make it more complicated doesn't mean you're right either. Garnett finished 3rd, only got 15 out of 126 first place votes, and most people didn't consider him the MVP. That's all there is to it. It's that simple. Using percentages is just you awkwardly attempting to make what I just said sound better than it really was. And I'm not totally trying to trash MVP shares either but when you just say, in a vacuum, that he got 53.2%, you're trying to make it sound like he was thisssssss close to winning when the guys ahead of him had 70.6% and 87.7%. Quite a relevant gap.

I have straight up conceded that Garnett was a better passer, ball handler, and defender from the very start. At this point it's starting to seem like your definition of a player's quality is just checking off boxes for specific skills. I don't judge players that way.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#196 » by Okada » Mon Jan 27, 2014 4:49 pm

To add to that, you threw out that 52.1% stat for Malone which is also extremely misleading. So for 2008, yeah, KG had 53.2% and in 1979 had 52.1%. Look at the rest of that voting. KG was 3rd to guys with 70.6% and 87.7% with 15 of 126 first place votes. In 1979, Moses was 1st with 52.1% and 112 of 214 first place votes, and the 2nd and 3rd guys had 16.3% and 13.0%. Again, misleading statistic cherry picking.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#197 » by mysticbb » Mon Jan 27, 2014 5:05 pm

Okada wrote:You genuinely come off like you're arbitrarily picking out whatever random advanced stat makes your case sound best because all the other stats don't work for you.


The fun fact is that basically all really relevant stats to determine a player's actual playing level are speaking for Garnett. But then, you picked the individual accolade in which Moses Malone got more due to circumstances than Garnett. Why not judging it about DPOY awards? Or All-Defense teams? Seems as logical as a choice as the MVP award to me.

Okada wrote:I have straight up conceded that Garnett was a better passer, ball handler, and defender from the very start. At this point it's starting to seem like your definition of a player's quality is just checking off boxes for specific skills. I don't judge players that way.


So, I'm the one who argues that Garnett has the better overall skills and had the bigger impact on the game based on actually describing the skills; while you are the one sticking to points, offensive rebounds and MVP awards. Yeah, I really judge a player differently than you, because I actually care how he really played. Sorry for doing that, but I actually think that this is the right way to do it.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#198 » by Okada » Mon Jan 27, 2014 5:14 pm

mysticbb wrote:The fun fact is that basically all really relevant stats to determine a player's actual playing level are speaking for Garnett. But then, you picked the individual accolade in which Moses Malone got more due to circumstances than Garnett. Why not judging it about DPOY awards? Or All-Defense teams? Seems as logical as a choice as the MVP award to me.


Your definition of relevant statistics is, whatever statistic you can pick out of the scrap heap to make KG sound better.

An MVP is obviously a more important that DPOY or All-Defense teams. And for the 3rd or 4th time, I've admitted from the start that KG is the superior defender so you can stop the broken record act now.

There's no case for Malone getting more MVPs by circumstance. You tried to make a really bad case, I showed why it made no sense, and that's that.

So, I'm the one who argues that Garnett has the better overall skills and had the bigger impact on the game based on actually describing the skills; while you are the one sticking to points, offensive rebounds and MVP awards. Yeah, I really judge a player differently than you, because I actually care how he really played. Sorry for doing that, but I actually think that this is the right way to do it.


Uh...no? I'm saying I don't believe in judging a player like a checklist. Just because a player is decent at two things doesn't mean he's better than a guy who was amazing at one thing. Get it? I don't know what you're complaining about anyways, it's obvious that you've never seen a game of basketball in your life.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#199 » by Grandpa Waiters » Mon Jan 27, 2014 5:21 pm

mysticbb wrote:
Grandpa Waiters wrote:Here's a fun fact for you: KG got bounced in the first round of the playoffs for seven consecutive years.


Not really, the facts are that the Timberwolves lost as a team in the first round; Garnett was part of the team which actually faced a better team 7 times in a row. Those things happen.

Grandpa Waiters wrote:All of the mindless, arbitrary stats you dredge up isn't gonna change that fact or my opinion of him.


I actually presented facts. You were saying that Garnett lost more (while emphasizing the more by using caps, mind you) while in reality Moses Malone was part of the team which lost more games (not just in total, but even more in terms of the percentage). That fact just simply proves that nikomCH is right and your proclaimed advantage in terms of judging the players by using your memory is a flawed idea. I know you take pride in that, but your misplaced pride is not going to change the facts.

Grandpa Waiters wrote:Moses was a better, more dominant, more effective player than Garnett.


Why? What exactly did Moses Malone better than Garnett despite grabbing more offensive rebounds and scoring more points based on getting more putbacks and some more FT? I showed that in general he was the worse rebounder; there shouldn't even a debate about the defensive part at all and Garnett was the far superior passer and ball handler. Now, scoring some more points while being worse (in some parts way worse) in every other aspect of the game really make someone the "better, more dominant, more effective player"?
What you are presenting here is a simply case of nostalgia accompanied by the belief that your memory is actually working way better than it really does. You are lousy at player evaluation, because you are preferring your personal belief over better information.



This reminds me of a great scene in the film Good Will Hunting. Here's the quote from Sean McGuire (Robin Williams)

"So if I asked you about art, you'd probably give me the skinny on every art book ever written. Michelangelo, you know a lot about him. Life's work, political aspirations, him and the Pope, sexual orientation, the whole works, right? But I'll bet you can't tell me what it smells like in the Sistine Chapel. You've never actually stood there and looked up at that beautiful ceiling. Seen that."

Statistics are great but they are not the end all that some posters would have you believe. Then again, neither is the eye test. However, the two combined outweigh either one on its own. I've been all over the world (Paris, London, Spain, Vietnam etc) and believe me, memorizing stats about a country vs seeing it with your own two eyes is not the same thing. Not even close. I'm not sure if you witnessed Moses in his prime or not but if you didn't then you're doing yourself a disservice by only using stats to justify your position. However, if you want to go on believing KG was better than Moses based on cherry picked stats than go for it. Makes no difference to me.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#200 » by mysticbb » Mon Jan 27, 2014 5:27 pm

Okada wrote:Your definition of relevant statistics is, whatever statistic you can pick out of the scrap heap to make KG sound better.


Why should I do that when my main argument is actually about the skills? Do you believe that I have a personal agenda here? Do you believe that I'm just a crazy Garnett fan?

Okada wrote:An MVP is obviously a more important that DPOY or All-Defense teams.


It is? Why should that be? I tell you something: Either award is actually not important in order to determine the overall impact of a player. Iverson got the MVP award over O'Neal and Duncan just for one specific reason: He scored more points while taking a lot of more shots attempts while the main reason the 76ers won was the defense. Well, and Camby got the DPOY while not even being the best defender on his own team. Both awards are flawed, and I really don't care about the awards when evaluating players.

Okada wrote:And for the 3rd or 4th time, I've admitted from the start that KG is the superior defender so you can stop the broken record act now.


So, why doesn't it reflect in your judgement here? Or in another way: By how many points do you think changed Garnett's superior defense the game result? Do you honestly believe that Malone scoring a few points more while being less of a distributor and more turnover-prone can overcome that difference to proclaim that Malone was clearly the superior player?

Okada wrote:Uh...no? I'm saying I don't believe in judging a player like a checklist.


I'm not doing that either. But how does it feel to argue a strawman?

Okada wrote:Just because a player is decent at two things doesn't mean he's better than a guy who was amazing at one thing.


I completely agree, and I said so in a previous post in this thread already. So, you are bringing something up to create a strawman, nothing else.

The matter of fact is that Garnett is way better as a defender and his superior playmaking ability equalized the offensive rebounding and therefore better scoring by Malone on the offensive end. Garnett isn't just better at specific skills, he is the better overall player due to his skills and the level of his skills.

Okada wrote:I don't know what you're complaining about anyways, it's obvious that you've never seen a game of basketball in your life.


Interesting ...

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