More overrated: Garnett or Nash

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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#221 » by mysticbb » Mon Feb 3, 2014 12:10 pm

G35 wrote:The belief that I do not like stats/numbers/quantification. This is not entirely true.


That's not what I said. I actually wrote: "From my perspective your focus is way too much on the numbers which are in disagreement with your view and you try to hard to discredit the numbers rather than understanding the made argument."

That is something very, very different from what you perceived.

G35 wrote:The one topic I do not trust numbers is sports.


Somehow you put a lot of trust in the amount of individual and team accomplishments, which in fact are also presented as numbers ...

Btw, the game is decided by the scoring margin, which is a single number. You don't trust the results either? ;)

G35 wrote:Maybe I need it dumbed down even more but when I hear the term "impact" I equate that to achievement, accomplishment. When I read that Nash has more offensive impact than almost any other player, I want to see the results of that impact. Reading, "5.6" does nothing for me. Boiling it down to a number does nothing for me. Now I do comprehend that Nash (or KG) may be at the top of many of these lists over and over and over again. Yet, I don't see where that equates to impact. In my mind it shows that he excels at that particular metric but it does not mean it will result in a positive result for his team.


Yeah, that's what most people likely got from your posts; you don't understand the arguments made.

G35 wrote:I know that PPG means nothing, it's points per possession that matters, running an efficient offense. I understand that. I UNDERSTAND THAT. But I (and others) do not have to believe in that.


That makes actually zero sense. In a game where in almost all cases the teams involved have the same amount of possessions in a game, the team which uses a possession in average more efficient will win the game. That is not something you can or can not believe in, that is just a simple fact. The only situation where a possession more is generated is when a team starts a quarter by having the ball and also is having the ball at the end of the quarter. And even in such a case, given that each teams has about 94 possessions in a game (taking the average in this season) a team needs to be incredible close in terms of efficiency to the other team to win the game despite being worse in terms of points per possession. To illustrate that further, we can pick an even easier example in which a team has 100 possession and scores exactly 1 point per possession. Now we assume that the opponent scores 1.01 points per possession and has the maximum amount of 2 possessions less in that game (a team can have up to 2 possessions more in a game, because they only can start two quarters with the ball, the other team will have the ball at the start of the other two quarters). In that case the game ends 100 to 99, meaning, the team with the 2 more possession can win the game by 1 point despite being 0.01 points worse per possession than the opponent.
As you can see, that is not a point of belief or not, the ability to use the possession more efficient than the opponent is vital in order to win the game in almost all cases.

G35 wrote:The problem that I have in particular with Nash/Suns offense is that offense is NOT independent of defense.


Nobody is arguing against that; in fact I just wrote and you even cited it: The resulting scoring margin was the key statistical argument, not the offense alone.

The Suns with Nash outscored the opponents by a big margin, that's what happened.

G35 wrote:Amare Stoudemire is heavily criticized for his defense but his contributions to the offense is minimized.


We went through that before, seriously, we showed you exactly the effect Nash had on Stoudemire's scoring efficiency and turnover rate. We all saw how Stoudemire played without Nash. Yes, he had offensive impact, no doubt about that, but his high efficiency was enabled by Nash, and there is more than enough evidence to support that, you just have the odd behaviour to ignore the facts.

G35 wrote:I have not seen anyone who has disagreed with this but for all this advanced thinking why is this not considered in overall evaluation of Nash's production?


It is, and there were examples brought up of better defensive teams with Nash playing, somehow completely debunking your idea that a team can't play good defense with Nash. And the other part and I repeat myself: The resulting scoring margin was the key statistical argument, not the offense alone.

G35 wrote:I mean I bet the 2011 Mavericks would have been a more potent offense with this lineup all year:

PG Barea
SG Terry
SF Kidd
PF Marion
C Dirk

That team could have been in contention for the #1 offense but their defense would have been in shambles.


And that's a perfect example of you making a claim out of thin air, but having a strong belief that you are right. The Mavericks played Barea-Terry-Kidd for 205 minutes in 2011, they had in average a 107.5 ORtg. No, such lineup was not a good idea offensively. And on the other hand: The Mavericks were actually killing the opponents offensively with their lineup of Terry-Kidd-Marion-Nowitzki-Chandler. The Mavericks had 112.9 ORtg and 106.3 DRtg, they didn't won the title, because they played incredible defensively, but because they played incredible offensively. And no, they didn't create a lot of turnovers for fastbreak opportunities, they killed the other teams in halfcourt with p&r/p action as well as ball movement. Exactly what Nash and the Suns did.

G35 wrote:Instead they compromised by having Terry/Barea come off the bench and they had Deshawn Stevenson/Chandler in the starting lineup, two players that clearly hurt their offense.


Chandler did not hurt the offense at all, in fact, he had a profound positive impact on offense due to his ability to catch and convert underneath the basket.
Stevenson was used as a starter, because the Mavericks had the strategy to bring instant offense from the bench, using Terry as the 6th man instead of having him in as a starter. If they would have had a better player than Stevenson overall, they would have used that player instead, but they hadn't.

G35 wrote:Now from my perspective and what I have seen offense, especially very potent offenses, do not necessarily guarantee success in the playoff's.


Teams with really good defense, but rather below average offense don't have success in playoffs either. In average the championship team is as good offensively as it is defensively. But we have seen both other cases winning as well. It is about the scoring margin in the end, not about being good or not good offensively/defensively.

G35 wrote:- the Mavericks traded Nash


A perfect example of you making up some stuff in order to fit your narrative. The Mavericks didn't trade Nash, Nash signed as a FA with the Suns, because the Suns offered more guaranteed salary. The Mavericks didn't have a concern about Nash's quality as a player and made basically the same offer as the Suns in terms of yearly salary, just that they didn't want to guarantee the whole salary for the last season, because they felt that Nash could break down anytime soon. That was based on the fact that Nash in the previous seasons always was ran out of gas in the playoffs and couldn't handle the minutes.

The defensive issues of the Mavericks came from the fact that they had no center in 2004; instead had 3 PF with Nowitzki, Walker and Jamison. Thus, they played an offensive minded PF as center basically all the time.
The decision to trade Jamison came completely independent from Nash, and the plan was all along to bring in another defensive center (Dampier in that case) to play the minutes not covered by Bradley. They also wanted to trade Walker anyway, that had also nothing to do with Nash.

G35 wrote:However, I still think using .44 is still too arbitrary a number and gives too much weight to FT's.


Honestly, that is either stupidity or intellectual dishonesty, no idea how to express that in another way, but claiming you understood where the 0.44 is coming from and then going forward by proclaiming that number is supposed to be "arbitrary" can only be either of that. To explain it again: the 0.44 is in there, because one FTA is equivalent to 0.44 FGA. That is based on the facts, that is not a "arbitrary number" at all. If you think that this approximation is not correct for all players, you can actually count the true shooting attempts via pbp. Doing that for a couple of players will make you realize that using the formula instead is much easier and awfully close to the reality.


I better stop here, because it should be sufficient evidence that this is going nowhere ...
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#222 » by bbms » Mon Feb 3, 2014 3:20 pm

If you call him overrated, there might be someone calling him underrated. If you think these guys are overrated by RealGM nerds, the RealGM nerds think they are underrated by mainstream public and media. Who's got the truth, then?

I say nobody, but I tend to agree with RealGM nerds. Public perception tends to align a lot with team exposition, and I tend to think the team's limitations should add positive value to a player's legacy, because of the hypothetical production a player can get if placed on a better team. It all comes out to what you value more, (1) the possibilities a player can offer for a team, (2) or what the player actually gave for their teams.

Better question imo would be: how many rings would Nash + Garnett get if they were paired together.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#223 » by G35 » Mon Feb 3, 2014 8:03 pm

mysticbb wrote:
G35 wrote:The belief that I do not like stats/numbers/quantification. This is not entirely true.


That's not what I said. I actually wrote: "From my perspective your focus is way too much on the numbers which are in disagreement with your view and you try to hard to discredit the numbers rather than understanding the made argument."

That is something very, very different from what you perceived.

G35 wrote:The one topic I do not trust numbers is sports.


Somehow you put a lot of trust in the amount of individual and team accomplishments, which in fact are also presented as numbers ...




You're right this is going nowhere, because we will eternally go back and forth when you decide to interpret something literally and not use context and then the next point decide to use context.

Maybe you believe in something across the board but I tried to explain to you that nothing is 100%. Tony Parker has 3 rings and Nash has zero, that doesn't mean I think Tony Parker is better than Nash but you are trying to push that agenda.

The only team accomplishment that matters in then end is how much you won. However, that doesn't appease many people, I'm sure it's upsetting to many people that their favorite player didn't get a ring so they have to rate on a different scale.

Now let's get literal since you decided to do that to every statement I made.

And that's a perfect example of you making a claim out of thin air, but having a strong belief that you are right. The Mavericks played Barea-Terry-Kidd for 205 minutes in 2011, they had in average a 107.5 ORtg. No, such lineup was not a good idea offensively. And on the other hand: The Mavericks were actually killing the opponents offensively with their lineup of Terry-Kidd-Marion-Nowitzki-Chandler. The Mavericks had 112.9 ORtg and 106.3 DRtg, they didn't won the title, because they played incredible defensively, but because they played incredible offensively. And no, they didn't create a lot of turnovers for fastbreak opportunities, they killed the other teams in halfcourt with p&r/p action as well as ball movement. Exactly what Nash and the Suns did.


They played Barea-Terry-Kidd for 205 minutes? A whole 205 minutes? Really...wow well that's like 4 whole games! Wait...is that a big enough sample size?...but that 107.5 ORtg is actually impressive for just 3 players on the floor. Oh wait...you didn't add the Mavericks best offensive weapon in Dirk or their best transition player in Marion. That would be like saying Nash/Barbosa/QRich couldn't be an effective offensive lineup. I don't know where you were going with that.

Further, the Mavericks were not dominant defensively or offensively. No one said they were. They won with timely shooting and timely defense. They played strong defense when they had to against BETTER teams, HIGHER ranked teams. The Mavericks did things the Suns would never be able to do. The Suns never shut down a team defensively like the Mavericks did. I would love for you to show me where the Suns ever played great defense and lost.

The Mavericks were able to win offensively against a great defense and clamp down and slow down the best team in the league. Honestly, debating with you is pointless because you need a number, you want a number to explain why something happens on the court. There has to be an excuse or reason for Nash (or KG ) failed because it can't be their fault. But many, many, many times it isn't about that. It's about making a play or series of plays when the situation calls for it. It's funny how this board is so good at many things but the essence, the soul, the spirit of sports is CONSISTENTLY missed looking for quantification.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sports/dallas ... story1.ece

“Everybody in the world was calling us the one-and-done boys,” owner Mark Cuban said. “But this team has so much heart and so much determination.”

They won it with a delicious mix of grit, resourcefulness and relentless, aggressive play that took apart one of the NBA’s best defenses with 50-percent shooting, even though Nowitzki was just 9-of-27 from the field.


The Heat faltered because of a slew of missed free throws (they made only 20 of 33) and they never seemed to solve the Mavericks’ defense, which forced 17 turnovers for 27 points, 17 more than the Heat scored off 14 Mavericks miscues.


They beat the #1 team in the league, on their home court, by forcing TO's and confusing the Heat's offense.

http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/sports/b ... itle_n.htm

But whom they did it with makes their six-game triumph against the Miami Heat, led by superstars Dwyane Wade and LeBron James, even more remarkable.

The Mavs' defensive anchor was Tyson Chandler, a 7-1 center who was saddled with foot and leg injuries in the previous two seasons and was acquired from the Charlotte Bobcats last summer for almost nothing.


Everyone wants to champion Tyson Chandler like he is some sort of savior and the Nash could have won if they would have had him. Well they could have since he was coming off injuries and not playing well in Charlotte.


"I give Mark a lot of credit. He's stuck with me through thick and thin," Nowitzki says. "He brought all the right players. Always tried to spend money and make this organization better. Mark's the best."


Complaining about owners; a sad excuse because Cuban let Nash go, replaced him Jason Terry and Jason Kidd. You say I put a lot of faith in team success, a ring validates every move you made.

The coach is reluctant to take credit for the masterpiece, but the Mavericks overcame the loss of two starters and a key reserve to win the championship.

Roddy Beaubois was projected to be the starting shooting guard, but he broke his left foot before the season and never played at full strength. He played 28 games and didn't appear in the playoffs.

Butler had season-ending surgery after injuring his right knee Jan.1.

Backup 7-0 center Brendan Haywood had a right hip pointer that effectively ended his Finals participation after Game 2.


Using injuries as an excuse. Sad.

Trusting Kidd: After losing the opener 92-84, the Mavericks went into a "flow" offense, which means lots of pick-and-rolls and on-the-fly decision making by Kidd. He engineered the best way to attack based on the Heat's defensive sets, but it was Carlisle who loosened the reins to allow it.

Carlisle also did that on the defensive end. Instead of using a clenched fist to signal a 2-3 matchup zone, which can appear to be a man-to-man, he allowed his floor leaders to do that. It confused Miami, which had 17 turnovers in Game 6 that led to 27 points for Dallas.


Nash is not some unique savant that can control and offense; there are other PG's that have a unique impact on the game. Kidd directed that Maverick offense to attack the Heat defense. The Heat had only lost 3 games in 3 playoff series. They were ready to start a dynasty, this wasn't luck it was skill.

Those Maverick teams beat two teams with an SRS over <6 during that playoff run. The Nash led Suns never beat one team with an SRS of 6 or greater. They didn't deserve to play for a ring.


When you say the Mavericks didn't win playing incredible defense, I know you and I look at the game differently. You do not have to play lock down defense the whole game to play great defense. I would rather have timely defense and offense than assume I can assert my will over a whole game. Basketball is a game of runs, momentum and that is what Dallas did and the Suns never did. Here is a refresher for you:

Game 2 Finals
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=II41DAyo794[/youtube]

The Mavericks ended the game with a 22-5 run. They were down by 15 points with 6 minutes remaining. No they didn't create fast break points but their defense still created offense as Dirk mentioned post game at 6:48:

"Offensively when we get stops, we can move, we can play off the flow, they (the Heat) really were doing agood job on our set offense...I think the stops and the run outs made the game easier for us."

I know, Dirk, players, coaches don't know what is going on during a game, they aren't a good source to determine what really happened.

Game 5
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEVLRAsnEPQ[/youtube]

Mavericks go on a 15-3 run to end the game. Once again a timely run that you just can't quantify or predict.

You know I feel your frustration because after doing all this writing and you feel like the other side just doesn't get it. I'm comfortable with that, we don't have to agree on everything. I respect your opinion and your methods but you're right we have argued this to a point that it's not going to change anything.....
I'm so tired of the typical......
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#224 » by mysticbb » Mon Feb 3, 2014 8:36 pm

G35 wrote:I'm sure it's upsetting to many people that their favorite player didn't get a ring so they have to rate on a different scale.


My favorite player is Michael Jordan, I like Dirk Nowitzki more than Steve Nash (actually way more) and I actually dislike Kevin Garnett somewhat. Really, you are arguing from a point where you wrongly assume something about me; you really don't get that my argument is much more based on an objective view on the players, not about how much I like those players ...

G35 wrote:I don't know where you were going with that.


Marion wasn't the best transition player of the Mavericks nor did it help much to play Nowitzki with those 3. The Mavericks didn't play that unit, because they had better options at their hand for the OVERALL SCORING MARGIN! That's what I judge a player on: By how much does he change the scoring margin per 100 poss, while trying to eliminate the circumstances and find the "inherent goodness" of a specific player. More than once I pointed out that I don't care where the impact (the change of the scoring margin) comes from, whether it is from offense, from defense or from both doesn't matter. There is an inherent connection between offense and defense (which you know of and pointed out, I guess something we agree on), separating those things is only useful to understand the individual player better, but when comparing the overall player impact it doesn't matter to me. The only thing which matters to me then is the overall impact to the game result.

G35 wrote:Mavericks go on a 15-3 run to end the game. Once again a timely run that you just can't quantify or predict.


Which is well within the typical range of runs in such games ... It looks amazing when you watch the game, but when you evaluate the situations in order to try to evaluate the performance level of the individual players, judging that with emotions is just going to hurt the quality of your evaluation. That doesn't mean that the Mavericks didn't play incredible well in so-called clutch situations during that playoff run, but overall (meaning in average) the Mavericks beat the other teams with better offense than defense. That is just based on facts. Maybe those "numbers" are taking the fun out for some people, maybe that is the real issue here, but for me it is important to quantify things, because it gives me a much better understanding and therefore a much better basis for predictions.

G35 wrote:You know I feel your frustration because after doing all this writing and you feel like the other side just doesn't get it. I'm comfortable with that, we don't have to agree on everything. I respect your opinion and your methods but you're right we have argued this to a point that it's not going to change anything.....


Another thing we can agree on! We really found some common ground. :)
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#225 » by tsherkin » Mon Feb 3, 2014 10:18 pm

For the record, I want to thank G35 for acknowledging that I never championed PER as a useful tool for direct comparison of players in the same tier with specific mention...
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#226 » by Notanoob » Mon Feb 3, 2014 10:53 pm

I might be having a tough time following the arguments, but it appears to me that G35 and MysticBB are straying slightly from the point and spending too much time dissecting examples for the purpose of dissecting them.

Maybe you two should start over? You know, post a one sentence thesis and work from there.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#227 » by Texas Chuck » Mon Feb 3, 2014 10:58 pm

For the record, I want to thank G35 for being willing to take a beating in the name of getting another viewpoint in front of this board. Its not easy to be the guy who goes against the powerful and popular, but he does bring up things that should not be overlooked.

I dont by any means agree with all of his content, nor anyone's for that matter, but I respect the hell out of the guy for continuing to bring a different viewpoint even as he is constantly insulted, berated, mocked, and attacked on all sides.

He is clearly a thinking poster and the board is a better place for him.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#228 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Feb 3, 2014 11:56 pm

G35 wrote:at this is the best forum for discussing basketball. However, I would caution at genuflecting at the altar so easily. The reason why we are even having this thread is because many hear the arguments made and then it automatically becomes gospel. I like the debates, I like hearing everyone's opinion but I like the free exchange of ideas compared to an Illuminati environment where a few control the thoughts and ideas of many.


All for you having your own opinion, but it rubs me the wrong way when you assert that there's this weird combination of people taking on the opinions of others without thinking and yet they don't seem to do that with your opinions.

Obviously the implication is that people bow down to the big name people on the board, but that would imply that the source of those opinions is the big name people. That's just clearly not the case with Garnett. It wasn't me or any other PC mod who first made the points that started the trend. Sure the fact that I and some others were persuaded helped with the momentum of it, but that's hardly grounds for alleging mass mind control.

When you express your own thinking I don't have a problem with it, but when you describe others it's just all so sinister sounding, and I'm just left wondering what we could possibly do for you not to see it that way. The narrative you give relies on both the fact that we sometimes have our minds changed and sometimes we don't as part of some unthinking brainwashing, and yet those are the only two things any of us could do. There doesn't seem to be anyway then where you could see us as actually thinking clearly and objectively...except if were convinced by you to think as you think.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#229 » by Doctor MJ » Tue Feb 4, 2014 12:28 am

Quotatious wrote:First of all, let me say that - maybe it's just me, but I feel like there's just something about the way you express yourself, Doc, that makes people respect you, even if you don't actually say anything really insightful in this or that particular post (but you usually do, so that's a purely hypothetical talk here :wink: ). It's to the point that I actually felt bad about being so harsh with the way I phrased my last reply, concerning Wilt's place on all-time lists (I'm not saying 'the' all-time list, because you're right that there are many, depending on criteria). I was a longtime regular on this board as a reader, before I started posting here, and I know that you're one of the guys who are pretty low on Wilt, and you have him outside of your top 10 (in the 13-16 range, IIRC), and you have KG over him, and I can easily grasp the argumentation for that. Wilt basically never proved that he could be an all-time great first option in the postseason, and his defensive impact was inconsistent, as were the other parts of his game and his attitude and approach ot the game. His scoring efficiency also differed a lot, depending on his role on a team. His teams' record against Russell's Celtics isn't as good as it should be, considering that Wilt actually had a lot of good teams around him. These are the argument against WIlt that I know, and it's hard to disagree with any of those. Any other, perhaps?

Anyway, I'm not sure whether the criteria for making all-time lists that you named here are random or deliberately chosen, but IMO all of these things (peak, era dominance, general impact on basketball's development over the years, ability to thrive in the modern game), are REALLY in Wilt's favor. I just don't know what your intentions when you listed those 'ingredients of greatness', so to speak. As an 'anti-Wilt' poster (I know you're unbiased, but I said it just for the purpose of this conversation), it's somewhat baffling to see that you've decided to mention specially these categories. Maybe you wanted to guess what were my, according to which I was able to say what I actually said about Chamberlain here? :) You know, I'm just trying to find some common ground here, so we could continue this conversation.

I certainly understand that Wilt may not be ranked too high if you choose to evaluate players according to the impact they had on their teams though. It's clear to me that Wilt's career pales in comparison to some other players who are routinely debated against him, mainly the consensus top 10 guys. I suppose that my criteria for ranking players may be a bit more holistic so that's why Wilt turns out to be a better player than he is from your point of view. I admit that I'm not always able to be as impartial as I would like to be. I'm saying so because I'm sure that my approach isn't all that 'scientific'. I guess I'm somewhere in the middle of the road between guys like you, and posters like Grandpa Waiters. :lol: Which means that the so-called 'popular consensus' still affects my perception to a certain degree. I guess it depends who I'm discussing with - when you put something grey next to something white, it seems to be black, and if you put it next to something black, it looks white...You know the story.

That being said, I may have to rethink my criteria because it haven't led me to being able to actually put together an all-time list, which is sometimes helpful in discussions on this board...The thing that prevents me drom it may be the fact that I actually overcomplicate my outlook on this matter, while it may be better to create seperate lists based on diffrent criteria, just as you suggest.


Gracious words from the start. You should know that I too sometimes feel bad about being too harsh. I tend to go through bouts of being the above-the-fray facilitator of discussion and then go through others where I really am too snide. It's hard for me to feel bad about being a bit of a jerk to people like the OP here however in appropriate it may seem, but I hate to think that legit posters get shut down by me in such a mood.

When I see a post such as your last one that's clearly sincere, I'd like to think I always respond with appropriate maturity. I won't claim that's necessarily the case, but I try. The thing for me is that I really have a ton of patience for anyone looking for sincere conversation even if I think their opinions are extremely naive. It's not about the opinion for me, it's the attitude. One can get up to speed quickly if they simply recognize what one doesn't know, but those who come in assuming craziness of anyone with a non-standard view never get anywhere except to cause trouble, and I've just dealt with so so many people like that on these boards over the years.

Anyway I digress - I didn't mind your post at all. I liked it.

Re: criteria random or deliberately chosen. Well remember when I tried to do the Peak 50 project in 2012? That was my attempt to spread out into other lists. I suppose it wasn't a total failure given that we got most of the way through the 50, but when you're used to being able to get to 100, it's disappointing. The issues were clear from the start though. The reality is that people just aren't that comfortable comparing different types of players from different points in history peak vs peak. This doesn't mean that any other novel list would be doomed to the same issues, but the style of the Top 100 projects was chosen with potential for objective comparisons in mind.

Re: Ingredients of greatness. Well I wouldn't look at them as ingredients, because that implies that they all tie in to some master list, and my point is that there is no master list. I bring up some items that I fully agree Wilt plays really well in specifically to show that it's not some blind anti-Wilt thing going on. With the Top 100 list, there's an issue with Wilt, and it's there because Wilt had issues. Those issues don't impact every part of his legacy, but they are real, and it really shouldn't be seen as suspicious that they have consequences depending on what we're really looking at.

Re: stuff about yourself. 'sall good. I would encourage you to do what you can to make distinct all-time lists because I think it's a good exercise. In the end none of this stuff is live-or-die importance so it's not a big deal, but I think it's good whatever your interests are to have a real sense of how you're actually judging things. Something I seem to see in you - which may or may not be there, I can't know - is a kind reverence for the sacred. Kinda "If you're going to go through the trouble of telling the story of basketball through one player ranking scheme, and in the process you end up simply hating on the greatest folk hero in the history of the sport, what's the point? Who cares about these quibbling details if we only have one story to tell?". And of course my argument would be that there isn't only one story to tell, but the story we've told here is one story worth telling.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#230 » by rrravenred » Tue Feb 4, 2014 12:31 am

This is really turning into a group hug thread. :)
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#231 » by barborous » Tue Feb 4, 2014 2:54 am

Texas Chuck wrote:For the record, I want to thank G35 for being willing to take a beating in the name of getting another viewpoint in front of this board. Its not easy to be the guy who goes against the powerful and popular, but he does bring up things that should not be overlooked.

I dont by any means agree with all of his content, nor anyone's for that matter, but I respect the hell out of the guy for continuing to bring a different viewpoint even as he is constantly insulted, berated, mocked, and attacked on all sides.

He is clearly a thinking poster and the board is a better place for him.


I think you and he should continue to espouse your views in depth as well, but this persecution/victim complex and posturing is pretty ridiculous and detracts from the content of what you're saying.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#232 » by G35 » Tue Feb 4, 2014 5:57 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:For the record, I want to thank G35 for being willing to take a beating in the name of getting another viewpoint in front of this board. Its not easy to be the guy who goes against the powerful and popular, but he does bring up things that should not be overlooked.

I dont by any means agree with all of his content, nor anyone's for that matter, but I respect the hell out of the guy for continuing to bring a different viewpoint even as he is constantly insulted, berated, mocked, and attacked on all sides.

He is clearly a thinking poster and the board is a better place for him.



Thanks TC, it is difficult because I do realize there are valid points on the other side. I understand that they have a lot of support to their pov. The overall problem that I have is similar for many people that are overrated is that anything contrary to their all encompassing greatness is shouted down. Because when you argue a point against Nash it's not just the big talkers, it's the guys who post:

"50/40/90...greatest ever!"

"TWO MVPS's! Greatest ever!"

"Led the greatest offenses ever!"

So then you have two fronts, the Nash/KG supporters are not all advanced stats guys, they have fans that like to shout out platitudes also like Kobe-stans, Lebrons-stans, Jordan-stans. KG is a different argument because he is a completely different style player (I know that Dr. MJ) and his greatest impact is on the defensive side of the ball. So then it gets really murky and deep into the statistical impact of when he's on the floor compared to when he is not. Further, because he didn't have much team success in Minnesota the narratives come out i.e.

Management
Teammates
Coaching
No Draft Picks

Nash also has those excuses used for him, the only exception being the draft picks. Now the opposition is frustrated because they feel these are valid reasons for these two great players not achieving more success. And I agree, I really do agree that all of those reasons contributed (a few others) to not advancing further. However what I can't understand is how do you hold someone who did achieve great success? How are you going to penalize Karl Malone/Stockton for getting to the finals twice? How do you penalize Duncan for building the Spurs organization? How do you not give credit to Isiah for leading the Pistons to three consecutive NBA finals? How do you penalize Barkley's lack of defense and not KG's inability to take over a game? How do you rationalize Nash's lack of defense but penalize Stockton's unwillingness to take over a game?

I was listening to SVP and Russillo breakdown the Super Bowl yesterday and I was so curious at how people were going to rationalize Peyton Manning and his legacy. I heard the damage control before the game that if Manning loses the Super Bowl that it wouldn't change how great a player he is.

I like Ryen Russillo because he keeps it real, no BS talk and when he was asked about Manning's legacy he said and I'm paraphrasing, "Manning is still a great QB, and no one game doesn't change how good a player is and he didn't wake up Super Bowl morning and become a worse QB. However, you do have to take in account how a player performs on the field. Especially in the biggest of games. That has to be taken in account for how you will judge him."

That's my take on players. A player doesn't get better or worse off one game or one playoff series. Saying that, how they actually perform must be taken into account. If they didn't play well then it has factored in. You can't just ignore it and say well all the other times they played well or that their numbers say they have a high degree of impact.

I also disagree with the fantasy idea of, "If player X was in a different scenario or if they had these teammates they could accomplish Y." That is illogical and irrelevant. Not that you can't feel that way but when you rate a player you have to use what is really there. This is not a plug and play situation. You can't take hard statistics and plug it into a fantasy computer and expect everyone to agree with the results.

Who predicted the rout the Seahawks put on Denver? Even better who predicted that the Bronco center would snap the ball early essentially nailing the Bronco's coffin shut? Statistics are such a small part of sports that I look at them to see what happened after the game is over.

Too many times statistics give a false impression. Many said that the Seahawks had never faced an offense like Denver, well apparently Denver had never faced a defense like Seattle's and that was never brought up by all the smartest guys in the room.

Actually it was that 2005 Suns team (and my 2002 Oakland Raiders getting smashed by Tampa Bay) that changed my mind about statistics. I would have bet anything that those Suns would have ran the Spurs off the floor. That they didn't have chance vs Steve Nash. The greatest offense in the NBA since Showtime? What's not to like. I know people say the offense was effective, but in my mind it wasn't. What it DIDN'T do was exert it's influence over the Spurs. The Suns offense didn't do to the Spurs what it did to every other team and that's break them. The Suns couldn't get the Spurs to adapt to their game and get their best defenders off the court to match them on offense. To me that would show impact. The Spurs took the Suns out of their offense more than the Suns affected the Spurs. So I know I'm probably wrong but that tells me the Suns offense was not effective.

Another point that Richard Sherman made about Manning that I think is telling:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... -play.html

The other problem that plagued Manning was that he didn't switch up the system after realizing that it wasn't working.
'Now, if Peyton had thrown in some double moves, if he had gone out of character, we could’ve been exposed,' Sherman said.



Some players are ATG when everything is working the way they want it to. But when it's not they turn pedestrian. Being able to adjust is just as important as anything else you do on the court. Some players can only play one way to be effective, but that is not easily quantified......
I'm so tired of the typical......
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#233 » by WhateverBro » Tue Feb 4, 2014 8:19 pm

G35 wrote:
"50/40/90...greatest ever!"

"TWO MVPS's! Greatest ever!"

"Led the greatest offenses ever!"


Who has said this? I haven't read any pro-Nash arguments ending with his back-to-back MVPs. And Btw, the last point, he did lead the greatest offense ever so I don't see the problem with that statement.

G35 wrote:However what I can't understand is how do you hold someone who did achieve great success? How are you going to penalize Karl Malone/Stockton for getting to the finals twice? How do you penalize Duncan for building the Spurs organization? How do you not give credit to Isiah for leading the Pistons to three consecutive NBA finals? How do you penalize Barkley's lack of defense and not KG's inability to take over a game? How do you rationalize Nash's lack of defense but penalize Stockton's unwillingness to take over a game?


Who has penalized Malone/Stockton for reaching the finals back-to-back? Who has penalized Duncan for being being a vital part in Spurs building a successful organization? Who has not given credit to IT for reaching the NBA finals? I haven't read a single person penalizing each of these players for these situations. You don't penalize players by placing them in their context, which is what I've seen people do with Duncan for example (including myself). When discussing Duncans career and what he's achieved, it is relevant to also discuss the Spurs organization, just as it is relevant to discuss the Timberwolves organization when talking about Garnetts career. It's just contextualizing a discussion, it's not penalizing them for their career.

Barkleys lack of defense gets penalized because he wasn't a good defender, this is not the same thing as your other examples. And why people doesn't penalize Garnetts inability to take over games is most likely due to the fact that it's not true.

And btw, I've never read anyone penalizing Stockton his unwillingness to take over a game. Is this a thing?

What is even take over a game? What does that even mean?
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#234 » by Texas Chuck » Tue Feb 4, 2014 8:28 pm

WhateverBro wrote:What is even take over a game? What does that even mean?



Not sure how serious you are. But this is a part of the discussion that I personally find frustrating. You likely know what he means by "take over a game". Its not like that phrase hasnt long been a part of basketball lexicon. But I understand some posters really value precision and so they are interested in spending lots of amount of time and effort into defining every last term. Others find that to be getting lost in the minutiae.



Oh and yeah its a thing with Stockton. Go look at any Stockton v Nash thread and you will see that very idea being used against Stockton by at least a couple prominent posters here. I actually think its a fair argument to use as long as in the case of KG, you understand why that may be the case.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#235 » by WhateverBro » Tue Feb 4, 2014 8:36 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:
Not sure how serious you are. But this is a part of the discussion that I personally find frustrating. You likely know what he means by "take over a game". Its not like that phrase hasnt long been a part of basketball lexicon. But I understand some posters really value precision and so they are interested in spending lots of amount of time and effort into defining every last term. Others find that to be getting lost in the minutiae.



Oh and yeah its a thing with Stockton. Go look at any Stockton v Nash thread and you will see that very idea being used against Stockton by at least a couple prominent posters here. I actually think its a fair argument to use as long as in the case of KG, you understand why that may be the case.


I actually don't understand what G35 means by "taking over the game". Because according to him, Garnett isn't able to take over games. So by his own words, I really don't understand what he means by taking over a game. I've seen enough Garnett games to know that whatever I associate with taking over games, is clearly not what G35 is talking about.

I also find the argument pretty stupid in the first place, because I'm not interested in narrative driven arguments like taking over a game and clutch but that's another discussion.

I didn't know it was a thing with Stockton, I'll have to read up on that. Re KG; why do you believe it's a fair point against KG? I actually don't understand why that may be the case.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#236 » by Texas Chuck » Tue Feb 4, 2014 8:43 pm

In terms of taking a game over offensively in the PS I think its a fair question to ask about KG. You say he's done it and I don't doubt that he has done it. But has he done as consistently as other players of his caliber? Id need to see the evidence of that. It doesnt match what I watched him do nor does it match up with the box score data logs of his PS performance.

Now much like Stockton proved capable of doing it at times, so did KG. He certainly wasnt completely incapable of doing to. But he didnt do it at the level of some of his peers(again imo--I welcome evidence to the contrary).

But do I think KG "took over games" defensively? Yes, I watched him do in Boston many times, postseason after postseason. I hope G35 just failed to mention he was speaking primarily about taking over games offensively and even more specifically taking over games as a scorer.

so to conclude a post longer than I intended:

1. KG takes over games--no question
2. Mainly that's defensively
3. Has certainly show he can do it offensively at times
4. Has done it far less often as a scorer (not really his game tho he was a great scorer and I don't hold this against him in evaluating his play--I do believe it makes it harder to build a contender around him tho)
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#237 » by WhateverBro » Tue Feb 4, 2014 10:19 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:In terms of taking a game over offensively in the PS I think its a fair question to ask about KG. You say he's done it and I don't doubt that he has done it. But has he done as consistently as other players of his caliber? Id need to see the evidence of that. It doesnt match what I watched him do nor does it match up with the box score data logs of his PS performance.

Now much like Stockton proved capable of doing it at times, so did KG. He certainly wasnt completely incapable of doing to. But he didnt do it at the level of some of his peers(again imo--I welcome evidence to the contrary).

But do I think KG "took over games" defensively? Yes, I watched him do in Boston many times, postseason after postseason. I hope G35 just failed to mention he was speaking primarily about taking over games offensively and even more specifically taking over games as a scorer.

so to conclude a post longer than I intended:

1. KG takes over games--no question
2. Mainly that's defensively
3. Has certainly show he can do it offensively at times
4. Has done it far less often as a scorer (not really his game tho he was a great scorer and I don't hold this against him in evaluating his play--I do believe it makes it harder to build a contender around him tho)


Well, the argument wasn't if Garnett was able to "take over games" offensively in the playoffs, it was; Garnett isn't able to take over games, period. And that's all I'm arguing against and it seems like you agree that KG actually could take over games.

Also, I never said Garnett took over games offensively in the playoffs.. so there you go again putting words in other peoples mouths :wink: .
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#238 » by Texas Chuck » Tue Feb 4, 2014 10:38 pm

my bad.....
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#239 » by SDChargers#1 » Wed Feb 5, 2014 12:05 am

My issues with the Garnett and Nash arguments mostly boils down to consistency. I see some arguments cherry picking some stats, but then when comparing to others all of a sudden a different stat or situation is given more weight.

At some point, the results do matter. Advanced stats are great, but should never be used in a vacuum (I see far too many people on this board using RAPM like it is gods gift to basketball). If at any point (and this applies to both sides of the argument) you are dismissing data, or arbitrarily giving weight to one stat and not to others, then you are doing something wrong.

As someone who studies statistics for a living, I can say wholeheartedly that many on this site use perfectly valid stats in the completely wrong way. Every individual stat measures whatever that individual stat is meant to measure...that is it. Any conclusion from said stat that isn't about what the stat specifically measures is merely an opinion.

Example: PPG - It only measures points per game. Period. Not how good someone is on offense, not how good someone is at scoring. It merely measures how many points a certain player (or team) scores per game. Nothing else. We can all come to conclusions based on that data, but that conclusion is not what PPG measures.

The same applies to every statistic in existence.

I don't want to get involved in a big debate on this subject (I prefer to lurk anyway). Just keep the above in mind when arguing your points. Especially when debating the GOATs. People will be nit picking. Just be consistent about it.
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Re: More overrated: Garnett or Nash 

Post#240 » by ElGee » Thu Feb 6, 2014 3:59 am

A good discussion with some good points I didn't want to leave hanging...

G35 wrote:Nash also has those excuses used for him


SDChargers#1 wrote:At some point, the results do matter.


This, to me, is that gap I was talking about. I think, G35, that you're saying something needs to be "excused." This is the top-down approach I referenced -- I don't see anything as needing to be excused or blamed. I wonder what makes you think there is something to excuse -- if Usain Bolt runs his leg of the 4x100 relay in 9.6 seconds, and his team loses to a new breed of Russian steroid mutants, what is there to "blame?" They just performed as they performed...

Similarly, individual results (i.e. the quality or goodness of an individual's play) is what really matters in these discussions, do you not agree? All the individual results are considered: what did that player do on every play he played? (The team result confounds this because the extra variables make it harder to determine the value of one guys actions.)

Some teams may be a +4...which might be amazing given what they would be without their star. Then they meet a +6 team and it's goodnight, even if they still have the best player. But if the star player joined that +6 team, they might be +11. (!) Only they meet the 96 Bulls, and it's goodnight again. None of this changes the results of the individual.

G35 wrote:I have seen more ATG offenses made to absolutely terrible in all sports. Tonight we saw an amazing, record breaking offense get humiliated by the best defense. This is where my trust in numbers begins to wain is that I have seen too many instances where a great offense that isn't balanced with a relatively equal defense finds that their offense can't overcome their lack of defense. My point? Offensive impact should tempered against great defenses. Many great offensive players have to contribute in other ways other than offense to impact the game. This is where I penalize Nash heavily is because he can't impact the game on defense. Now I'm sure this is the point where I'm being labeled as ignorant, not taking the time to understand the metric, etc.


I suggest to you that this is a confirmation bias and that it's worth revisiting. You are only remembering when the defenses stop the offenses and not the other scenarios. Robert Mays (http://grantland.com/the-triangle/a-his ... per-bowls/) did an analysis before this game of elite offense vs. elite defense in the Super Bowl, and the results were a coin flip. This echoes what we see in basketball. Sometimes the offense wins, sometimes the defense does...it probably really just depends on the matchup, and frankly, there's probably a lot of variance involved (why we see close to 50/50 splits) because the overall quality of the teams is so close.

[Note, Barnwell broke down the best offenses ever with a normalizing metric here http://grantland.com/features/a-tale-of-two-cities/ :

13 Den (lost SB by 35)
01 Stl (lost SB by 3)
94 SF (won SB by 23)
07 NE (lost SB by 3)
99 Rams (won SB by 7)
93 49ers (lost Final 4)
97 Den (won SB by 7)
83 Was (lost SB by 29)
98 Min (lost Final 4)
12 NE (lost Final 4)]

I also would like to exchange ideas on an old axiom, that defense creates offensive opportunities. That in the playoff's there are times when your offense may not be working on all cylinders and you may have to jump start it. The Suns did not have that option since they only had one or two players that created TO's and that was Marion.


Excellent topic to consider. Defense and offense are connected (in football too), and it's something that must be taken into account. Dirk Nowitzki's low TOV% increases his "defensive" value because it limit easy transition opportunities. I put that in quotes because the overall, net margin is still what matters by definition -- calling it "defense" or "offense" is moot. If Nash were better on offense, he could be the GOAT...without improving his middling defense at all. Bill Russell is considered to some the GOAT, because his defensive impact was monstrous...but his offense was pedestrian.

Player A = +10 Offense, -2 Defense
Player B = +4 Offense, +4 Defense
Player C = -2 Offense, +10 Defense

These players are all GOAT level players, they just skin the cat differently. I understand you aren't comfortable with representing performance by margin of victory (SRS = Opponent adjusted margin of victory), but this is really something we "know" -- there's no uncertainty here.

We know that a team that scores the same as it allows will win right around 50% of its games in the long run. Making them 8 points better, as the above fictional players do, will win that team around 76% of its games, or make it a 62-63 win team. That maps very very well...it actually predicts performance better than wins because wins involve luck in close games and don't account for opponent strength. This is why people talk about team strength in terms of points.

To expound on this, I suggest a book on randomness in place of my lengthy musings. Something like Drunkard's Walk. http://www.amazon.com/The-Drunkards-Wal ... 0307275175
Check out and discuss my book, now on Kindle! http://www.backpicks.com/thinking-basketball/

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