I think it'll be a while before KG/Nash defenders can be truly vindicated - we'll have to wait for better stats or something so we can analyze better.
ElGee wrote:Texas Chuck wrote:ElGee wrote:All these points still boil down to context. One group ignores context. Then they present a bunch of context-free arguments to a group of people who adjust everything with nuance depending on the context. It's two entirely different discussions.
I asked G35 to explain the other side's argument because there is so much misrepresentation that it seems like anti-Nash/KG posters don't understand the argument for these players. To be more specific, just picking posts in the last day from this thread:
Seems a tad condescending to make a statement suggesting all people who think less of either Nash or KG must ignore context while those who love them must be using nuance and context.
I could cherry pick some ridiculous pro-Nash and pro-KG posts from this board in an attempt to paint their supporters with a negative broad brush, but to what end? What does that achieve?
I think its possible to have some real criticisms of just about every player ever including the two in this thread and to do so intelligently and using context. Making this a "our group is smarter and looks deeper than their group" is a real turn off. Its also why I have personally refrained from making any real commentary on the heart of this thread.
*Just to provide clarity: It's the difference between saying "KG can't get out of the 1st round -- ergo he can't be as good as [arbitrary level I decree]" and asking, in earnest, "I'm really hung up on KG not getting out of the 1st round -- but I don't understand why it isn't a problem for you??" I think its possible to have some real criticisms of just about every player ever including the two in this thread and to do so intelligently and using context.
I'm genuinely baffled by this. Have you read the posts on these two players from RPOY, Top 100 or Peaks projects?
ElGee, you've always been in the shortlist for GOAT posters, and this distinction is an exemplification of why it is so. This is EXACTLY what I feel posters, from both sides, miss! the former is bad logic, the latter opens the floor to meaningful discussion!
Pretty much all my "deeper" knowledge about ball is second-hand (from ElGee/drza/mysticbb/Doctor MJ/fatal9/tsherkin/etc. posts, especially on this subject), but here's my shoddy attempt at a summary of the relevant points that always get brought up in this debate:
Note: I'm assuming we've done away with "RINGZZZZ" (teams win games, not individuals!) and the false dichotomy of "eye-test vs. stats!" (you need both!)
Re: Team Success.
The first, and probably most important hurdle to get past, is the thinking that the "stats" people don't care about team success. Wrong; in fact, in a sense,
that is all they care about!Let's say we have a pool of 1000 random teams: player A maximizes his impact (+10) on 999/1000 of them, while player B's (also +10) is maximized on 900. If you're a GM, you take player A every time, right?
But it's not that easy. We see the impact of a player BEFORE we arrive at an approximation of how many teams he will see his impact maximized on. So let's say we see player A on the one team he doesn't maximize his impact on: he's only +5, while player B is a +10 one of the 900 theoretical teams. Do we look at this and say "player B is the better player?"
No, of course not. This is the entire point of using the eye-test and statistics to determine impact, of using context to determine how much circumstances affects the outcome of games, seasons, playoff series, etc. It's why LeBron has answered pretty much every question about him - his ultra ball dominant, "dribble at the top of the key and generate a high percentage look at the basket/open look for my teammate" style gradually evolved to where he is now: someone who doesn't need the ball that much (but can still be the primary ball-handler when necessary) because of an extremely refined offensive game, and having a huge defensive responsibility.
Other players simply aren't fortunate enough to have such a "smooth" set of samples to determine just how well they impact team success: KG being the poster boy of this. When drza/ElGee/Doc defend KG, they're not hand-waving away his team's playoff failures, pretending like it didn't happen - it's there, well-documented, it happened. What they're saying is his impact should not be defined by these failures, because everything we've seen points to Garnett being able to carry teams to dizzying heights, if given a more beneficial set-up.
I suppose it can come off as hand-waving because of how utterly rare it is that someone on the tier they think KG belongs to have such a long stretch of playoff failures. Critics always say "well, Dirk had a similar situation", or "LeBron had a similar situation, but he made it out of the first round every time!", not considering: timely performances, often above their real talent levels, from the supporting cast (2002-2003 Duncan), matchups/seeding (LBJ, who is most probably clearly better than KG anyway, enjoyed this somewhat in the weak East)
I'm not sure why there's a lot of confusion around that: it is very clear that KG does have flaws, and it doesn't help that he's one of the only members of the "best player on a championship team" club who wasn't/wasn't perceived to be the first option on offense (leaving this open for debate) - really, Russell's the only other one.
Perhaps it's due to the mathematical / teambuilding ideology/approach of rating players? Essentially, if you applied the same rigor of analysis to players you're about to draft, then obviously, when you've got two players who have similarly huge impacts, the deciding factor is how often you will be able to build a team around them, assuming the same context/circumstances/luck, etc. And that means stripping away at what a player can/can't control, among other things.
I'm tired, that may have all been a giant load of crap. Feel free to tear me a new one, but yeah, I guess that's what it all comes down to. Approach to analysis, the end in mind of this analysis, fundamental differences that can't really be reconciled.