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#221 » by MacGill » Tue Jan 28, 2014 12:55 pm

Brenice wrote:
MacGill wrote:
Brenice wrote:I want to know if you replace Kareem with any version of KG does KG lead the Lakers past Moses and Philly for the championship in 83?

And

If you replace Bynum with Moses in 08 can Moses lead the Lakers past KG and the Celtics?


The whole team dynamic changes :-? Replacing either players means you may have in fact made other moves to better compliment. Who knows how well they would actually play because it never happened. I don't see what this is suppose to prove?


This whole comparison where you match people up by stats to determine who is better is useless because they never matched up. A lot of people felt Mike Tyson would beat Holyfield...until they fought.

So since you avoided my question by making excuses, I'll take it that you are reluctant to answer the question because of lack of confidence in the matchup posed in the question.


Ummm, you can easily judge what players did in their own era's against who they actually faced and how good they were at the game of basketball. GOAT lists are based on individuals....not teams. Or are MJ's Bulls or Russell's Celtics the GOAT. You on the other hand are trying to assess a whole team dynamic here by changing main pieces of each team. Knock yourself out if you think you know how a full team plus coaching staff would react to a completely different player and how well or worse these teams would do :lol:

The premise of your imagination scenario to prop up Moses was just silly to begin with. And last time I checked, Tyson or Holyfield didn't have 4 other starters or a bench to help back them up in their fight. Unless of course, you meant Survivor Series ;)
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#222 » by Brenice » Tue Jan 28, 2014 3:08 pm

MacGill wrote:The premise of your imagination scenario to prop up Moses was just silly to begin with. And last time I checked, Tyson or Holyfield didn't have 4 other starters or a bench to help back them up in their fight. Unless of course, you meant Survivor Series ;)


Again, then the whole comparison of players is meaningless because you can't match them up. You can't put them on identical teams where the only difference is KG and Moses. They will always be other factors. So everything we do on Realgm is SILLY, everything. Especially when grown folks get in their feelings and criticize someone because they view something differently.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#223 » by MacGill » Tue Jan 28, 2014 3:33 pm

Brenice wrote:
MacGill wrote:The premise of your imagination scenario to prop up Moses was just silly to begin with. And last time I checked, Tyson or Holyfield didn't have 4 other starters or a bench to help back them up in their fight. Unless of course, you meant Survivor Series ;)


Again, then the whole comparison of players is meaningless because you can't match them up. You can't put them on identical teams where the only difference is KG and Moses. They will always be other factors. So everything we do on Realgm is SILLY, everything. Especially when grown folks get in their feelings and criticize someone because they view something differently.


*Sigh*, it's like you're not reading here. Look, what you're doing is trying to create a very biased point to try and show that because one player led a team to a chip, if you changed him with another (KG) he maybe couldn't therefore Moses is > than KG :roll:

If you want to say, how would a KG led 83 Sixer's team fare against what they actually went through, ok, go nuts, but that's not what you are doing and again it is only a hypothetical answer. Just like if we dropped Moses in any of those 3-peat Jordan teams as the man, or replace, Magic with Moses, or LBJ etc. You still judge him on what he actually accomplished and you don't detract based on a hypothetical on how you think he would do. The angle you are hinting at here is that KG on the 83 Sixer's doesn't win or get as far hence why Moses is superior, which again is silly. The thread isn't team related, it is KG vs Moses. Obviously, it is a team game so overall lift of that team from the said player is a great indicator but not how you are postioning it here, especially as you can't in no way determine how well KG actually would have played in that era. Most poster's can effectively breakdown the value of each player, based on how they played the game in their time, and like many here have been trying to show, to say this is why said player is better.

You're not doing that....you choose to use, my dad can beat up your dad and surely could of beaten up your dad 20+ years ago so my dad has to be stronger.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#224 » by bastillon » Tue Jan 28, 2014 6:08 pm

Brenice wrote:
MacGill wrote:The premise of your imagination scenario to prop up Moses was just silly to begin with. And last time I checked, Tyson or Holyfield didn't have 4 other starters or a bench to help back them up in their fight. Unless of course, you meant Survivor Series ;)


Again, then the whole comparison of players is meaningless because you can't match them up. You can't put them on identical teams where the only difference is KG and Moses. They will always be other factors. So everything we do on Realgm is SILLY, everything. Especially when grown folks get in their feelings and criticize someone because they view something differently.


:rofl: you can't even understand what drza and MacGill are saying. man, you're not doing it right. you're ADDING Moses to 2008 Lakers and Garnett is REPLACING Kareem on the 83 Lakers. whatever you've been trying to prove, it is absurdly stupid way to do so. yeah, I mean there is a difference between replacing team's best player and just adding somebody to the roster (replacing a guy who doesn't play is the same as just adding somebody).

it is unbelievable that this ridiculous issue is even being discussed. but this example is illustrating you just how pointless it is to continue this debate. when you start making comparisons like that, it screams of desperation. I see Moses backers are trying to move the discussion from Moses to KG like the issues we had with Moses were somehow supposed to disappear. what surprises me is your inability to respond to the weaknesses we pointed out in Moses games. all you can do is cite points and rebounds like we didn't know those numbers. then you start making lopsided comparisons when one guy is replacing team's best player and the other guy is added to the loaded roster as if it was even remotely close. apart from the idiocy of this comparison (congratulations dude, I don't even know how you came up with something like that), even if it was fair (say you added KG to 83 Lakers and added Moses to 08 Lakers), it's completely pointless. of course you are going to say Moses is gonna make more impact and we are going to say KG makes more impact. what would you expect? so once again, as I've said many times in this thread, most of Moses followers posts are a complete waste of space on the internet because you are not moving the debate any further.

answer those alerts about Moses game:

-horrendous defensive impact throughout his career for an all-time big. it's not just team defenses he was playing on, it's more about his style of play on both ends that just doesn't make much impact defensively, camping for rebounds in the paint sacrificing help defense, abusing offensive glass sacrificing transition defense and what made it even worse is that Moses didn't seem to be in hurry getting back on defense, he was definitely one of the worst transition defenders I've seen in my life, unbelievably low motor on defense for a guy who was supposedly one of the most active players in history, nonexistent help defense on the perimeter from Moses (I've never seen him contest a perimeter shot or come out to defend a pick and roll).

-offensive game that doesn't allow you to run the offense through him. it's been beaten to death so I don't know what else to say. but there is no doubt you can't just put 4 shooters around Moses a la Shaq/KG/Duncan/Olajuwon and expect good results because Moses is a blackhole on offense. this hurts his offensive portability quite a lot because he needs elite shot creation on the team to make the team better instead of himself being the offensive anchor.

that's the stuff you haven't even discussed despite many posts mentioning those aspects. don't give me "but KG didn't" because it doesn't respond to any of those points. it's not even about whether KG was better than Moses, it's more about Moses having his own problems with making impact on teams throughout his career. it's also quite obvious just how clueless some of you are when it comes to Moses teams. somebody even said Moses had worse teammates than KG in Minnesota. this shows me you have no idea what you're talking about. the problem with those Rockets was never their talent because nobody ever questioned whether they had a talented roster. the problem was they were consistently underperforming as a team. you gotta be completely ignorant not to know those Rockets had talented players.

btw, I also hate how 04 Wolves cast is always being celebrated for no reason whatsoever. everyone mentiones Cassell/Spree but let's not forget that come playoff time, after Cassell got injured, Wolves started Darrick Martin (an actual d-league player), Trenton Hassell and Micheal Olowokandi. show me a team - any team in NBA history - which had 3 starters this bad on the conference finals level. if Wolves had been healthy, there's a good chance they would've won the title that year.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#225 » by Brenice » Tue Jan 28, 2014 6:21 pm

MacGill wrote:
Brenice wrote:
MacGill wrote:The premise of your imagination scenario to prop up Moses was just silly to begin with. And last time I checked, Tyson or Holyfield didn't have 4 other starters or a bench to help back them up in their fight. Unless of course, you meant Survivor Series ;)


Again, then the whole comparison of players is meaningless because you can't match them up. You can't put them on identical teams where the only difference is KG and Moses. They will always be other factors. So everything we do on Realgm is SILLY, everything. Especially when grown folks get in their feelings and criticize someone because they view something differently.


*Sigh*, it's like you're not reading here. Look, what you're doing is trying to create a very biased point to try and show that because one player led a team to a chip, if you changed him with another (KG) he maybe couldn't therefore Moses is > than KG :roll:

If you want to say, how would a KG led 83 Sixer's team fare against what they actually went through, ok, go nuts, but that's not what you are doing and again it is only a hypothetical answer. Just like if we dropped Moses in any of those 3-peat Jordan teams as the man, or replace, Magic with Moses, or LBJ etc. You still judge him on what he actually accomplished and you don't detract based on a hypothetical on how you think he would do. The angle you are hinting at here is that KG on the 83 Sixer's doesn't win or get as far hence why Moses is superior, which again is silly. The thread isn't team related, it is KG vs Moses. Obviously, it is a team game so overall lift of that team from the said player is a great indicator but not how you are postioning it here, especially as you can't in no way determine how well KG actually would have played in that era. Most poster's can effectively breakdown the value of each player, based on how they played the game in their time, and like many here have been trying to show, to say this is why said player is better.

You're not doing that....you choose to use, my dad can beat up your dad and surely could of beaten up your dad 20+ years ago so my dad has to be stronger.


Nope, I'm saying if Moses was matched up with KG in those scenarios, he would win. Period. If the great KG can defend, stop Moses. I think KG is underrated and I get the issues surrounding his Minnesota teams. I think he is in the conversation with Dirk and Duncan of his era. I really do. I just don't buy that he would be able to slow Moses down. I don't think he would be able to keep him from his strength, offensive rebounding until he scores. He needs a bodyguard(Perkins) to be most effective defensively. But offensively, I prefer the a dominant style post player. That's Moses. I don't care about percentages if he puts up more shots. You got to keep him away from the basket. If you can do that, fine. With Moses, who could? KG couldn't. KG is a great help defender, but he is not a dominant defender. If he could help as well as lock down the post, I'd be more for him. If Moses and his style of play were not dominant, he would not have gotten 3 MVP's, especially with Magic and Bird were playing in the NBA.

What may be happening is we both are overrating...

Here are 2 more questions:

Why did Moses get those 3 MVP's?
If KG was playing during that era, would he have gotten 3 MVP's?
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#226 » by MacGill » Tue Jan 28, 2014 6:25 pm

:banghead: :banghead: :banghead:

Carry on man!
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#227 » by bastillon » Tue Jan 28, 2014 7:01 pm

MacGill wrote::banghead: :banghead: :banghead:

Carry on man!


the guy is a waste of time...

1. nobody is saying KG would be slowing down Moses or even the he would be the one guarding him.
2. nobody is denying whether Moses could score points or be a dominant post player with his offensive rebounding.
3. nobody is denying whether Moses won MVPs in his career. the question is if he deserved them but that's another topic.
4. KG has been equally effective defensively without Perkins - statement like that compromises your credibility. it's not even about your opinion, but more about your knowledge when it comes to KG. either way, nobody was using KG's man defense as an argument to begin with, so why derail the main issue with irrelevant subjects?

so what it all comes down to, you are not responding to the points we made. it was a waste of time.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#228 » by Brenice » Tue Jan 28, 2014 8:05 pm

MacGill wrote::banghead: :banghead: :banghead:

Carry on man!


You shouldn't have responded in the first place cause the frustration goes both ways.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#229 » by Brenice » Tue Jan 28, 2014 8:17 pm

bastillon wrote:
MacGill wrote::banghead: :banghead: :banghead:

Carry on man!


the guy is a waste of time...

the feeling is mutual

1. nobody is saying KG would be slowing down Moses or even the he would be the one guarding him.
2. nobody is denying whether Moses could score points or be a dominant post player with his offensive rebounding.
3. nobody is denying whether Moses won MVPs in his career. the question is if he deserved them but that's another topic.
4. KG has been equally effective defensively without Perkins - statement like that compromises your credibility. it's not even about your opinion, but more about your knowledge when it comes to KG. either way, nobody was using KG's man defense as an argument to begin with, so why derail the main issue with irrelevant subjects?

so what it all comes down to, you are not responding to the points we made. it was a waste of time.


You said nothing. That's what the waste of time is. Stop whining. Also, KG is not as effective without somebody to put a body on the opposing muscle, be it Perkins, or anyone else. If KG is the muscle, he can be exposed. He is long in the post, but not strong in the post. Sure he can show range on the perimeter and provide help defense, nobody is saying he can't do that. Nobody is saying KG can't score.

Anyway, I won't waste my time with y'all either.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#230 » by drza » Tue Jan 28, 2014 10:06 pm

Brenice wrote:
drza wrote:
Brenice wrote:I want to know if you replace Kareem with any version of KG does KG lead the Lakers past Moses and Philly for the championship in 83?

And

If you replace Bynum with Moses in 08 can Moses lead the Lakers past KG and the Celtics?


Wait...your scenario is for KG to replace one of the best players of all-time, while Moses gets to replace a player that didn't even play?

So what you're asking is, would a KG for Kareem swap make as big of a positive impact on the '83 Lakers as just ADDING Moses to the '08 Lakers?

And you think this is a reasonable hypothetical?


I said replace Kareem with ANY VERSION of KG. Kareem was what, 36 at the time? He was not playing on a GOAT level at that time.


I tried to give you an out to say that you had made a mistake putting the hypothetical together, but you doubled down on it. Kareem, at 36, was still the Lakers' leading scorer (21.8 ppg in the season, 27.1 ppg in the playoffs) and one of the better players in the league. You can't possibly imagine that replacing him with KG is equivalent to just adding Moses to an already elite team. At the very least, to make it within even the outer realm of reasonable, let's have Moses replace Gasol on those Lakers. I'm not sure what (if anything) this thought project would mean to the topic at hand, but it could be fun to flesh it out a bit so I'll bite.

1983 Lakers with Garnett instead of Kareem

That team lacked another big outside of Kareem, so KG is going to be playing more center. Let's go with a version of KG from the 2003 - 2006 time period, after he'd gotten his weight up into the 250s but before his stamina started to wane.

The '83 Lakers are now starting Magic, Norm Nixon, Wilkes, Rambis and Garnett with old McAdoo and Cooper as the main guys off the bench (young Worthy was out of the post-season).

Stylistically, how would those Lakers be different? Garnett was slightly shorter than Kareem, but size-wise there are some similarities. Garnett was much more athletic than Kareem was by that stage in his career, was a much better rebounder with more ability to run the floor, but probably didn't have quite as aggressive a scoring mentality nor was he proven to be as efficient of a finisher. But with a backcourt of Nixon/Magic, Garnett would have fewer playmaking responsibilities than he ever had at that portion of his career and he would have been set up with easier shots (both on the break and in the half-court), so it is realistic that his efficiency would have gone up. Volumewise he had demonstrated the ability to score at a similar rate to '83 Kareem, especially if you factor in pace in any way.

So theoretically, the Lakers' offense wouldn't look dramatically different. Garnett could remain the leading scorer, and by that time Kareem was scoring a lot more from the mid-range with that hook, so he could have even operated from largely the same areas of the court. As I look at that team, though, all of the other top-7 rotation players except for Rambis and Cooper were natural scorers. Worthy was out, but Wilkes and McAdoo were professional scorers and both Magic and Nixon were very good scorers as well. So I wouldn't be shocked if Garnett scaled back slightly in his offensive energy and let them take a bit more slack there, with Garnett putting in relatively more energy on the defensive/rebounding portions of the game.

Thus, I'd expect the biggest change for the '83 Lakers to be an improved defense and better board-work for those Lakers with a similar caliber offense. Would that have been enough to make a difference in that '83 Finals? It's hard to say. The Sixers swept the Lakers-that-were, but outside of game 3 (17-point loss) the other games were within a more reasonable margin. Garnett certainly would make a difference on the glass, which could have been big in that series (The Sixers won the rebound battle 3 - 0 with one tie, with the rebound margin decently predictive of the actual scoring margin). Garnett's defensive rebounding ability would have also freed up the other Lakers to release more on the break, which would have played into an obvious strength of the team. His defense/rebounding also may have allowed McAdoo to get more run with respect to Rambis, which also could have increased the Lakers' offensive abilities without compromising defense or toughness. Would have made for a much more interesting series, at the least.

2008 Lakers with Moses instead of Gasol:


In some ways, this is the more interesting thought process because it calls for a genuine appraisal of ability vs. fit. Peak Moses Malone was a multiple MVP-winner, so the consensus would be that he was a better player than Pau Gasol. On the other hand, the '08 Lakers were running the Triangle offense, of which Pau was a critical component. There's a reason that the offense went through the roof when he came on-board in '08...with his skillset and passing ability, Gasol was almost made to be the big-man component of the Triangle. But Moses? In my opinion, Moses would have been a disaster in the Triangle offense. It just doesn't suit his skills at all. This offense would actually amplify his inability to pass, and would really crash the system. So I have to feel like the '08 Lakers wouldn't even try to utilize Moses as a main offensive cog in that offense...instead I feel like they'd use Kobe, Odom and the other perimeter players more extensively while running plays and allow Moses to just camp out in his office around the rim and be a garbageman.

I honestly don't know what the overall impact would be on that offense, especially as it relates to the '08 Celtics' defense. The offense would run much less smoothly and efficiently, I'd think, but Moses' biggest offensive strength is his work on the glass so perhaps his ability to keep more possessions alive would mitigate some of that loss in efficiency. Garnett was a strong rebounder even in '08 (13 rpg in the Finals), and Perkins would actually be the one tasked most often with trying to body Moses up and keep him away from the boards so that KG could swoop in. But still, Moses was likely to get his share of the offensive boards and try to change the game in that way. Plus, the Celtics' defense in '08 spent much more effort on containing Kobe than worrying about Gasol, so if Perkins had to completely stick to Malone on the box it could have compromised some of their other rotations.

On defense, though, I think that Moses in place of Gasol would have really hurt those Lakers. Because Perkins was a complete non-entity on offense, Gasol was able to use his mobility to really help out on defensive rotations. In particular, the Lakers employed a 5-on-3 defensive set pretty regularly in '08. When KG posted, depending on ball/player placement, either Gasol and Odom would hard-double KG pre-entry (leaving Perkins alone) or Kobe would sag completely off of Rondo into KG's lap to prevent the entry. This strategy left their wing defenders 1-on-1 with Ray and Pierce (which helped them have their best offensive series of that postseason), but it's overall effectiveness required that the man doing the doubling be mobile and quick in his rotations. Again, Moses would have been a disaster at this role. His strength as a defender was using his body to lean on his opponent, pushing them off their spots and keeping them off the glass. Quick rotations would have been his kryptonite, which means that the either Odom would have had to play KG straight up (historically a bad option for him, including during that '08 Finals) or else the other Lakers perimeter defenders would have had to leave even more openings for Pierce and Allen to thrive.

Also, the '08 Celtics in those Finals found success with a KG + Posey + Pierce + Ray + House line-up. I think this would have been even more effective against a Lakers team featuring Moses, because that line-up would have forced Moses away from the rim on defense and left him in very uncomfortable surroundings.

Bottom line:

All told, I don't believe that the '08 Lakers come any closer to beating the '08 Celtics with Moses replacing Gasol. On the other hand, a near-peak Garnett replacing old Kareem in '83 likely at least turns a sweep into a competitive series, and perhaps could have led to a Lakers victory.

That's my take. How do you think it would have played out?
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#231 » by Brenice » Tue Jan 28, 2014 10:43 pm

If you replace Gasoline with Moses, I think the Lakers win. But yes, it is an unfair swap.

However, Kareem at 36 did have a high average, but he was not great at other aspects at that point in his career and I said replace him with any version of KG. And Kareem and Magic never had a big sidekick for Kareem. But neither did Moses.

I do respect your response. These other guys take this too serious.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#232 » by Bar Fight » Tue Jan 28, 2014 11:59 pm

Brenice wrote: Also, KG is not as effective without somebody to put a body on the opposing muscle, be it Perkins, or anyone else. If KG is the muscle, he can be exposed. He is long in the post, but not strong in the post. Sure he can show range on the perimeter and provide help defense, nobody is saying he can't do that. Nobody is saying KG can't score.


Then how did he anchor the number one ranked defense in 2012 (at 36 years old) starting at center?
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#233 » by Brenice » Wed Jan 29, 2014 12:40 pm

Bar Fight wrote:
Brenice wrote: Also, KG is not as effective without somebody to put a body on the opposing muscle, be it Perkins, or anyone else. If KG is the muscle, he can be exposed. He is long in the post, but not strong in the post. Sure he can show range on the perimeter and provide help defense, nobody is saying he can't do that. Nobody is saying KG can't score.


Then how did he anchor the number one ranked defense in 2012 (at 36 years old) starting at center?


Weak era of post players, especially in the east.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#234 » by G35 » Wed Jan 29, 2014 4:24 pm

MacGill wrote::banghead: :banghead: :banghead:

Carry on man!



Been meaning to say I read your post towards me and I agree with a lot of it. I don't think there is any animosity but I think there is a lot of frustration because what is apparent to some is not to others and vice versa.

Many times I think in these passionate arguments it's similar to a cultural difference. From reading it's not as if people are seeing two completely different things, but small differences of opinion about what a player is doing or capable of creates a huge gulf.


bastillon wrote:1. nobody is saying KG would be slowing down Moses or even the he would be the one guarding him.
2. nobody is denying whether Moses could score points or be a dominant post player with his offensive rebounding.
3. nobody is denying whether Moses won MVPs in his career. the question is if he deserved them but that's another topic.
4. KG has been equally effective defensively without Perkins - statement like that compromises your credibility. it's not even about your opinion, but more about your knowledge when it comes to KG. either way, nobody was using KG's man defense as an argument to begin with, so why derail the main issue with irrelevant subjects?

so what it all comes down to, you are not responding to the points we made. it was a waste of time.



The biggest problem with bastillion is his attitude creates animosity. Saying "absurd", "stupid", etc you are attacking a posters competence and whether you agree with their point or not writing like that is going to create further conflict and not recognizing the other's points.

Adressing your points:

1. If KG is this GOAT elite big man anchor then why woudn't he be guarding Moses? He is bulit like Demarcus Cousins. Moses is only 6'10, why wouldn't KG be on him? I'll tell, because he doesn't have the weight to guard the bigger C's/PF's that's why. Which is why I put Duncan's defense ahead of KG because Duncan, Hakeem, Dikembe, DRob all went head to head vs the biggest guy on th eblock and that's Shaq. That's one reason I never believed that the Wolves could have beaten the Lakers in 2004 regardless of health. KG couldn't matchup to Shaq. So how good is his rotational defense then? Shaq is powering through double teams, especially one with a 220lb beanpole like KG.

2. Several people have questioned Malones playing style as if it was a detriment to a team. Offensive rebounding was just a part of his repetoire, it wasn't his whole game. Moses could run the floor, post up, and he had a nice 15ft jump shot. Nobody is going to average 31ppg on putbacks alone. You need to give Moses his due. KG with all of his versatility capped out at 24 ppg and that was mythical 2004 season. Moses did that 6 times.

3. There are several other players (Nash) that you could question before you get to Moses. When a player leads his team to two NBA finals as the best player the questions better be legit.

4. The only reason that the Celtics were able to put KG at center is because the East is so deficient at that position. Have you ever wondered why the Heat can get away with playing a skinny PF like Chris Bosh at the center position.


Your closing comment makes it seem as if you should just go get a forum where everyone thinks like you then you will be less frustrated.....
I'm so tired of the typical......
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#235 » by bastillon » Wed Jan 29, 2014 5:15 pm

G35 wrote:The biggest problem with bastillion is his attitude creates animosity. Saying "absurd", "stupid", etc you are attacking a posters competence and whether you agree with their point or not writing like that is going to create further conflict and not recognizing the other's points.

Adressing your points:

1. If KG is this GOAT elite big man anchor then why woudn't he be guarding Moses? He is bulit like Demarcus Cousins. Moses is only 6'10, why wouldn't KG be on him? I'll tell, because he doesn't have the weight to guard the bigger C's/PF's that's why. Which is why I put Duncan's defense ahead of KG because Duncan, Hakeem, Dikembe, DRob all went head to head vs the biggest guy on th eblock and that's Shaq. That's one reason I never believed that the Wolves could have beaten the Lakers in 2004 regardless of health. KG couldn't matchup to Shaq. So how good is his rotational defense then? Shaq is powering through double teams, especially one with a 220lb beanpole like KG.

2. Several people have questioned Malones playing style as if it was a detriment to a team. Offensive rebounding was just a part of his repetoire, it wasn't his whole game. Moses could run the floor, post up, and he had a nice 15ft jump shot. Nobody is going to average 31ppg on putbacks alone. You need to give Moses his due. KG with all of his versatility capped out at 24 ppg and that was mythical 2004 season. Moses did that 6 times.

3. There are several other players (Nash) that you could question before you get to Moses. When a player leads his team to two NBA finals as the best player the questions better be legit.

4. The only reason that the Celtics were able to put KG at center is because the East is so deficient at that position. Have you ever wondered why the Heat can get away with playing a skinny PF like Chris Bosh at the center position.


Your closing comment makes it seem as if you should just go get a forum where everyone thinks like you then you will be less frustrated.....


I'm just responding to the points about KG and Moses. I really could care less whether you think I'm being aggressive or whatever the case may be. we're not here to dispute that. the matter of subject is Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone so let's stay with that. let me be clear though, I stand by what I said - Brenice came up with the example that WAS in fact idiotic. adding a player to a team vs replacing team's best player with somebody is not the same. that much should be clear.

back to the topic at hand, your points 1) 3) and 4) have no relevance whatsoever in terms what I've been saying in this thread (along with tons of people I've quoted on page 2 or so). we are not questioning whether Moses could score, whether he could hit a jumpshot from time to time, or whatever you've been alluding to. look, the concerns about Moses offense are that you can't run the offense through him and he needs elite shot makers around him for the offense to be any good. as much as Moses scored, he wasn't even his team's first option offensively (that would be Toney).

but what's more important - and let me highlight this once again because this is something you have been ignoring all along in this thread despite multiple times it has been mentioned - is Moses defensive impact. his mediocre to bad help defense in HCO, the fact that he sacrificed his positioning defensively to get rebounds, the fact that he didn't really make that much difference on the defensive glass on a team level - check out his team's records on the defensive glass, they gave up a lot of offensive boards and were really mediocre in that regard most of the time, the fact that Moses didn't even bother defending the pick and roll because he camped out in the paint 24/7, the fact that Moses' energy on the defensive end was one of the worst ever for an all-time great big, the fact that his transition defense was horrendous (not just turnovers and effort on the offensive glass but overall effort in getting back on defense).

you are just citing stuff right from the boxscore. let me just tell you right now that whenver you are mentioning that Moses could score a lot of points, you are wasting your time (and mine, too). we all know he could score. we all know he was a beast on the offensive glass and that he was dominant inside the paint. how about help defense? transition defense? pick and roll defense? why didn't he contest perimeter shots? I could care less whether it's Kevin Garnett he is being compared to, or Dave Cowens/Bill Walton. what matters is tons of arguments against Moses impact are non-boxscore type of stuff. you have not responded to those in any way.

let me say one more thing. you are trying to push the debate from Moses to KG. let's resolve problems with Moses first. there were tons of thread about KG and stuff you brought up has been discussed time and time again. we can talk about that later. first, focus on the stuff that I mentioned here and in previous posts, concerns about Moses non-boxscore impact. we're not going anywhere until we solve that.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#236 » by G35 » Wed Jan 29, 2014 6:45 pm

bastillon wrote:
G35 wrote:The biggest problem with bastillion is his attitude creates animosity. Saying "absurd", "stupid", etc you are attacking a posters competence and whether you agree with their point or not writing like that is going to create further conflict and not recognizing the other's points.

Adressing your points:

1. If KG is this GOAT elite big man anchor then why woudn't he be guarding Moses? He is bulit like Demarcus Cousins. Moses is only 6'10, why wouldn't KG be on him? I'll tell, because he doesn't have the weight to guard the bigger C's/PF's that's why. Which is why I put Duncan's defense ahead of KG because Duncan, Hakeem, Dikembe, DRob all went head to head vs the biggest guy on th eblock and that's Shaq. That's one reason I never believed that the Wolves could have beaten the Lakers in 2004 regardless of health. KG couldn't matchup to Shaq. So how good is his rotational defense then? Shaq is powering through double teams, especially one with a 220lb beanpole like KG.

2. Several people have questioned Malones playing style as if it was a detriment to a team. Offensive rebounding was just a part of his repetoire, it wasn't his whole game. Moses could run the floor, post up, and he had a nice 15ft jump shot. Nobody is going to average 31ppg on putbacks alone. You need to give Moses his due. KG with all of his versatility capped out at 24 ppg and that was mythical 2004 season. Moses did that 6 times.

3. There are several other players (Nash) that you could question before you get to Moses. When a player leads his team to two NBA finals as the best player the questions better be legit.

4. The only reason that the Celtics were able to put KG at center is because the East is so deficient at that position. Have you ever wondered why the Heat can get away with playing a skinny PF like Chris Bosh at the center position.


Your closing comment makes it seem as if you should just go get a forum where everyone thinks like you then you will be less frustrated.....


I'm just responding to the points about KG and Moses. I really could care less whether you think I'm being aggressive or whatever the case may be. we're not here to dispute that. the matter of subject is Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone so let's stay with that. let me be clear though, I stand by what I said - Brenice came up with the example that WAS in fact idiotic. adding a player to a team vs replacing team's best player with somebody is not the same. that much should be clear.

back to the topic at hand, your points 1) 3) and 4) have no relevance whatsoever in terms what I've been saying in this thread (along with tons of people I've quoted on page 2 or so). we are not questioning whether Moses could score, whether he could hit a jumpshot from time to time, or whatever you've been alluding to. look, the concerns about Moses offense are that you can't run the offense through him and he needs elite shot makers around him for the offense to be any good. as much as Moses scored, he wasn't even his team's first option offensively (that would be Toney).

but what's more important - and let me highlight this once again because this is something you have been ignoring all along in this thread despite multiple times it has been mentioned - is Moses defensive impact. his mediocre to bad help defense in HCO, the fact that he sacrificed his positioning defensively to get rebounds, the fact that he didn't really make that much difference on the defensive glass on a team level - check out his team's records on the defensive glass, they gave up a lot of offensive boards and were really mediocre in that regard most of the time, the fact that Moses didn't even bother defending the pick and roll because he camped out in the paint 24/7, the fact that Moses' energy on the defensive end was one of the worst ever for an all-time great big, the fact that his transition defense was horrendous (not just turnovers and effort on the offensive glass but overall effort in getting back on defense).

you are just citing stuff right from the boxscore. let me just tell you right now that whenver you are mentioning that Moses could score a lot of points, you are wasting your time (and mine, too). we all know he could score. we all know he was a beast on the offensive glass and that he was dominant inside the paint. how about help defense? transition defense? pick and roll defense? why didn't he contest perimeter shots? I could care less whether it's Kevin Garnett he is being compared to, or Dave Cowens/Bill Walton. what matters is tons of arguments against Moses impact are non-boxscore type of stuff. you have not responded to those in any way.

let me say one more thing. you are trying to push the debate from Moses to KG. let's resolve problems with Moses first. there were tons of thread about KG and stuff you brought up has been discussed time and time again. we can talk about that later. first, focus on the stuff that I mentioned here and in previous posts, concerns about Moses non-boxscore impact. we're not going anywhere until we solve that.


I agree that responding to the post is the most important thing; your personal feelings on the message are irrelevant. Because many of your posts can be amazingly asinine but I tend to just focus on the content and not how wrong your points are.

Your response is wrong since you are only choosing to reference posts from those that agree with your (still wrong) points. That two different teams were able to make it to finals is enough for me to make him the centerpiece. What is interesting is how Kg had Pierce and Allen and the best Ortg he could create was 10th. Further, the Celtic offense got progressively worse with KG as the focal point. Garnett cannot anchor a defense and provide high level offense. He hasn't shown he can at any phase of his career. Btw not one boxscore quoted so you can get rid of that garbage argument you seem to rely on.

For me I combine production as well as team results....KG's team results are incredibly less than desired and his efficiency is great.... for a perimeter player. No boxscore quoted there either, straight advanced stats on KG's record. I mean has there been a team that had a #1 option with a TS% of .524 that won a title? That's KG's career playoff TS%, it was worse in Minnesota when he had to carry a superstar load. When Kg stopped doing so much offensively then he became better on that side of the ball. Isn't that the argument made against Stockton that once he became a smaller part of the offense the Jazz made it to the finals. I think that applies to KG as well......
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#237 » by bastillon » Wed Jan 29, 2014 7:03 pm

well once again, you are not responding to any of my points so I'm guessing you're giving up on defending Moses here? I have issues with KG's playoff offense too and that part of your post is understandable (though only partly correct, Boston's offense got worse when KG STOPPED being its focal point, to say otherwise would be purely a lack of knowledge about those Celtics, everybody knows that Rondo was becoming more of a focal point after KG's injury in '09 - that injury along with Rondo's bigger role is exactly the reason why they regressed). but you're missing the point. look, G35, I'm trying to debate Moses' impact on his own teams. get away from KG for a moment and answer the points I've made about Moses offensive & defensive weaknesses and then we can get to Garnett (who has been over-discussed on this PC board anyway). what you are saying about KG isn't anything new, all kinds of people have come in here questioning Garnett's offense (and sometimes his defense too), and whether that is a criticsm KG deserves is another story (I'm saying no but I'm not gonna get into that right now). what I am saying - and I've been saying this for months/years - is that Moses didn't really have as much impact on his teams as first-glance at boxscore would suggest. it's good that you have gone away from citing boxscore stats because that was the reason why this debate has been so stagnant. but what's most important in this thread, and what you've been continuously ignoring, is Moses non-boxscore weaknesses.

so once, again, respond to this part of my post:
we are not questioning whether Moses could score, whether he could hit a jumpshot from time to time, or whatever you've been alluding to. look, the concerns about Moses offense are that you can't run the offense through him and he needs elite shot makers around him for the offense to be any good. as much as Moses scored, he wasn't even his team's first option offensively (that would be Toney).

but what's more important - and let me highlight this once again because this is something you have been ignoring all along in this thread despite multiple times it has been mentioned - is Moses defensive impact. his mediocre to bad help defense in HCO, the fact that he sacrificed his positioning defensively to get rebounds, the fact that he didn't really make that much difference on the defensive glass on a team level - check out his team's records on the defensive glass, they gave up a lot of offensive boards and were really mediocre in that regard most of the time, the fact that Moses didn't even bother defending the pick and roll because he camped out in the paint 24/7, the fact that Moses' energy on the defensive end was one of the worst ever for an all-time great big, the fact that his transition defense was horrendous (not just turnovers and effort on the offensive glass but overall effort in getting back on defense).


I have never seen Moses fan (where the hell are you Warspite?) respond to this criticsm. it's something that you will see on Moses footage, it's something people have alluded to during Moses prime, and most importantly - it is exactly the reason why Moses is less celebrated than other top players and why in view of some posters - like myself - Moses is not even a top 20 player of all-time. I don't know the reason why you haven't responded to this yet. you have to grow some guts at some points. don't run away from legitimate debate with another "but KG didn't" because this prolem is not going anywhere. whether KG could anchor offense is completely irrelevant when it comes to Moses weaknesses. so, really, man up and answer to those points.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#238 » by G35 » Wed Jan 29, 2014 10:54 pm

bastillon wrote:well once again, you are not responding to any of my points so I'm guessing you're giving up on defending Moses here? I have issues with KG's playoff offense too and that part of your post is understandable (though only partly correct, Boston's offense got worse when KG STOPPED being its focal point, to say otherwise would be purely a lack of knowledge about those Celtics, everybody knows that Rondo was becoming more of a focal point after KG's injury in '09 - that injury along with Rondo's bigger role is exactly the reason why they regressed). but you're missing the point. look, G35, I'm trying to debate Moses' impact on his own teams. get away from KG for a moment and answer the points I've made about Moses offensive & defensive weaknesses and then we can get to Garnett (who has been over-discussed on this PC board anyway). what you are saying about KG isn't anything new, all kinds of people have come in here questioning Garnett's offense (and sometimes his defense too), and whether that is a criticsm KG deserves is another story (I'm saying no but I'm not gonna get into that right now). what I am saying - and I've been saying this for months/years - is that Moses didn't really have as much impact on his teams as first-glance at boxscore would suggest. it's good that you have gone away from citing boxscore stats because that was the reason why this debate has been so stagnant. but what's most important in this thread, and what you've been continuously ignoring, is Moses non-boxscore weaknesses.

so once, again, respond to this part of my post:
we are not questioning whether Moses could score, whether he could hit a jumpshot from time to time, or whatever you've been alluding to. look, the concerns about Moses offense are that you can't run the offense through him and he needs elite shot makers around him for the offense to be any good. as much as Moses scored, he wasn't even his team's first option offensively (that would be Toney).

but what's more important - and let me highlight this once again because this is something you have been ignoring all along in this thread despite multiple times it has been mentioned - is Moses defensive impact. his mediocre to bad help defense in HCO, the fact that he sacrificed his positioning defensively to get rebounds, the fact that he didn't really make that much difference on the defensive glass on a team level - check out his team's records on the defensive glass, they gave up a lot of offensive boards and were really mediocre in that regard most of the time, the fact that Moses didn't even bother defending the pick and roll because he camped out in the paint 24/7, the fact that Moses' energy on the defensive end was one of the worst ever for an all-time great big, the fact that his transition defense was horrendous (not just turnovers and effort on the offensive glass but overall effort in getting back on defense).


I have never seen Moses fan (where the hell are you Warspite?) respond to this criticsm. it's something that you will see on Moses footage, it's something people have alluded to during Moses prime, and most importantly - it is exactly the reason why Moses is less celebrated than other top players and why in view of some posters - like myself - Moses is not even a top 20 player of all-time. I don't know the reason why you haven't responded to this yet. you have to grow some guts at some points. don't run away from legitimate debate with another "but KG didn't" because this prolem is not going anywhere. whether KG could anchor offense is completely irrelevant when it comes to Moses weaknesses. so, really, man up and answer to those points.


Your points have no logical basis, when you finally understand and explain your reasoning I will....see how that works. You can just make any claim during an argument to sidestep the actual argument.

What everybody really knows is that KG cannot and has never anchored a great offense. Anything you say to the contrary is just you using box scores without context. You keep wanting to focus on defensive impact because KG cannot compete with Moses on the offensive end. Good move because your argument looks silly any other way.

Why would Moses have to step out on the pnr when that was not spammed nearly as much as it is now. PnR is used now because it's the easiest way to create mismatches and get past the initial defender. That's not how the game was played when Moses was on the court. The most likely answer is you haven't seen Moses play and you are pulling at straws.

You say that some posters here don't think that Moses is top 20 all time? And their opinion holds more weight than whose? Because I can link you 10+ sites that have KG outside the top 20 all time.

Here is Bill Simmons top 96
http://www.bareknucks.com/bill-simmons9 ... ayers-ever

24. Scottie Pippen

23. Isiah Thomas

22. Kevin Garnett

21. Bob Cousy

20. LeBron James

19. Charles Barkley

18. Karl Malone

17. Bob Pettit

16. Julius Erving

15. Kobe Bryant

14. Elgin Baylor

13. John Havlicek

The Pantheon

12. Moses Malone

11. Shaquille O’Neal

10. Hakeem Olajuwon

9. Oscar Robertson

8. Jerry West

7. Tim Duncan

6. Wilt Chamberlain

5. Larry Bird

4. Magic Johnson

3. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

2. Bill Russell

1. Michael Jordan

This is coming from a Celtics fan in 2010 who saw all of KG's run in Boston. KG is as overrated as it gets. Now please go with some irrational statement like, "But some posters on REALGM said KG is #1!" Your irrational revision of history is not going to change how overrated KG is......
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#239 » by WhateverBro » Wed Jan 29, 2014 11:52 pm

G35: you defend Moses defense by saying the pick-n-roll wasnt running as much in his day. Why arent you doing the same with KGs defense? You're the one arguing that Garnett is below Duncan defensively because he cant guard bigger PF/Cs (ridiculous statement btw). Well if it is a pick-n-roll league why are you putting emphasis on KG being able to guard Shaq?

There was only one Shaq in the league and basically no one could guard him. So if you're giving Moses a pass for not defending the pnr, because it wasnt used as much... Why are you not giving the same pass to KG for not guarding bigger PF/Cs when they barely exist in this perimeter based league?

Cant have it both ways.
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Re: New Franchise: Kevin Garnett vs Moses Malone 

Post#240 » by bastillon » Thu Jan 30, 2014 12:17 am

WhateverBro wrote:G35: you defend Moses defense by saying the pick-n-roll wasnt running as much in his day. Why arent you doing the same with KGs defense? You're the one arguing that Garnett is below Duncan defensively because he cant guard bigger PF/Cs (ridiculous statement btw). Well if it is a pick-n-roll league why are you putting emphasis on KG being able to guard Shaq?

There was only one Shaq in the league and basically no one could guard him. So if you're giving Moses a pass for not defending the pnr, because it wasnt used as much... Why are you not giving the same pass to KG for not guarding bigger PF/Cs when they barely exist in this perimeter based league?

Cant have it both ways.


you don't understand him. he isn't trying to be persuasive, he's just saying whatever he can to make his case. I have repeatedly asked him to reply to the points about Moses defensive and offensive weaknesses and what he's doing is he's trying to push the debate away from Moses to KG, as if Garnett's offensive game had anything to do with huge shortcomings Moses had on defense.

this debate has been a waste of time. arguments of Moses backers are nothing new to this board. it has been said in the past and debunked by guys like therealbigthree, fatal9 and mysticbb. G35 said NOTHING we didn't know. I think this board is so great because you can learn something new. but the debate with guys like Brenice and G35 is pointless. you will learn nothing because they don't even know what to say to defend their boy so they will try to push the debate away from the main subjects.

as far as I'm concerned, Moses followers (Warspite how comfortable it is for you to disappear when question marks about your homeboy are being raised) on this board has to respond to the question marks about Moses defensive impact. the data that we have right now - team defenses, teams playing with and without Moses, red flags concerning effort, help defense, camping out for boards instead of contesting shots etc. all of that points to Moses as being a bad defender in an all-time sense.

we should not go for troll attempts to derail the subject at hand. you can't respond to his points about KG because he's just trying to hide Moses' weaknesses by pushing debate in another direction. this is why it's a waste of time.
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