RealGM Top 100 List #2

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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#141 » by MisterWestside » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:11 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:I think you are missing the point, the point isn't that Wilt should not have kept playing, the point is that when the game was at its most competitive focus wise, Wilt would get out played by Bill Russell. It is not like Chamberlain made a lot of come from behind victories against the Celtics.

Also, let's not dive into hyperbole, Chamberlain has had teams that were better than any of Bill Russell's. Wilt has been through many different teams, some not good, some super stacked and he's still only beaten Russell once.


I'm not talking about the relative talent levels of teammates or supporting casts. I'm talking about the collective wholes of both squads.

But just because you can play well when the games are close doesn't that your play matters less in a blowout. Unless you're referring to rare exceptions in which one team has mathematically elminated the opponent from contention, playing crappy defense helps your opponent to make the game competitive again, which is not desired.

Because he couldn't, Wilt Chamberlain is an all time great player. The fact that Russell could lock Wilt down at all much less consistently is the impressive feat.


It wasn't consistent. We shouldn't play up the times in which he did that when the game was close, then play down the times in which he didn't (which did happen). Even if you take stock in Russell locking down Chamberlain "when it counted", you also have to take stock in Chamberlain also getting his, against the arguble defensive GOAT, "when it counted".
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#142 » by DQuinn1575 » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:21 pm

90sAllDecade wrote:
DQuinn1575 wrote:
90sAllDecade wrote:
So although Kareem has a much better TS% and passing in the regular season, he's actually a worse scorer, rebounder, stealer, shot blocker than Hakeem in the RS. Pace inflated his raw numbers and skewed perception.




Your analysis is flawed as you are excluding the years of Kareem before 1974 - which were his best as a shot blocker and rebounder as well as high scoring for him -

Also in looking at TS% we need to look at that compared to the league average, as well as the fact that Kareem had higher usage than Hakeem.

You are comparing Hakeem to Kareem, but taking away 4 of Kareem's best years.


There is no per100 data before 1974 and we're talking about a man who had a 20 year career of the greatest longevity.

His peak and very best year is regarded as 77' and Hakeem is better even if you compared KAJ's peak 77' numbers. It's very likely Kareem improved as a player when he hit his peak, he also had Oscar Robertson helping his numbers during that time unlike 77'.

If your comparing best years and comparing both sides of the ball Hakeem wins the peak battle imo.

If adjusted those earlier years numbers for pace they'd go down as well. You also have to look at the fact Kareem achieved that dominance in a league that whose talent was split between the NBA and ABA. The teams in the league double or tripled considering the ABA, that type of expansion is huge compared to post merger competition.

Not only stars like Julius Erving affect the power balance, but also rotation players from the ABA, coaches, the three point line etc. all affect competition level on a team scale.


1 Kareem was as good in 71-73 as he was in 77 - maybe better
2 Hakeem was a better rebounder and defensive player - but the gap is less if you don't take away Kareem's best shot blocking and rebounding years

3 You also took away 4 of his 5 highest scoring years, and then say Hakeem is even with Jabbar
4 The big difference in the ABA and NBA was the center position. Almost all of the good centers were in the NBA - Lanier,McAdoo,Unseld,Hayes,Cowens,Reed,Wilt,Thurmond were all better than Mel Daniels and Zelmo Beaty. Artis was comparable to the NBA guys and he dominated the ABA.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#143 » by 90sAllDecade » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:26 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
90sAllDecade wrote:Now, lets compare KAJ with Olajuwon.

Guys like KAJ, Wilt and Russell's raw stats were amazing. KAJ has to be better right? But if you put their raw stats into context with pace, it tells a completely different story.

KAJ vs Hakeem Raw stats adjusted for pace:
(insert stat breakdown)....


Interesting stuff, thanks for posting it.
I do think it's worth noting, however, that the pace-adjusted numbers are not available for what would probably be 3 of Kareem's top 5-6 seasons ('71-'73), including what are arguably/probably his two best seasons ('71 and '72). So we're not exactly comparing apples to apples here.


Good point, fair enough. Let's compare unadjusted raw numbers for both for their entire careers.

Hakeem vs KAJ Raw Stats Unadjusted for Pace Inflation:

Hakeem RS Raw

Image

Image

KAJ RS Raw

Image

Image

Now KAJ is a better scorer, passer., TS%, rebounds are a wash and Hakeem is still a better stealer, shot blocker and overall defender despite a large unadjusted pace disadvantage (as well as competition, rules and career team support). If KAJ's number are all adjusted for pace, his scoring and passing advantage decreases and his rebounding likely goes in Hakeem's favor.

Hakeem Raw PO

Image

Image

KAJ Raw PO

Image

Image

KAJ is a better passer, but even given a huge unadjusted pace disadvantage using raw stats, Hakeem is still a better scorer, rebounder, shot blocker, stealer, overall defender with TS% as a wash as it translates regardless of pace. Hakeem also still has a higher peak, less team support and greater competition.

I personally value playoff career numbers over RS because it's against better winning teams, tougher defenses and they game plan against your for an entire 5-7 game series.

Hakeem was already regarded as the best two way center all time, before this comparison. He should be moved up in the rankings imo and I wanted to bring objective facts and numbers so people understand this isn't hyperbole. The strong evidence is there to challenge these long held media influenced beliefs.

I acknowledge where the comparison is KAJ's or others advantage, I just hope people have open minds about new objective data questioning the status quo perception.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#144 » by ardee » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:34 pm

You don't need to look too deep into the numbers to determine Kareem was better than Hakeem by a good margin.

Hakeem didn't always have the finely crafted post game people remember from his peak years. In the 80s he was more of a leaper, and attacked the basket faceup: like David Robinson, who, of course gets villified for his offensive skill. Hakeem also lacked passing skills for a while, which improved under Tomanojvich.

Kareem from his rookie year was basically a perfect scorer. I mean, if you're putting up 35 ppg on 60+% TS against Reed and DeBusschere, you're pretty good I think. He had the perfect balance of skill and athleticism and used both well. His career TS is .590, including the time he was 38+, while Hakeem's was .550 or thereabouts. That's a bigger difference than LeBron and Melo for their careers.

The offensive gap is pretty big to me. Hakeem has a big enough edge on defense to make up for it only during his peak years: when his own offense caught up. It's not like Kareem was some defensive slouch either. He was a beast of a rim protector, averaged 5 combined steals/blocks on the regular, and if with-without is your thing check the Bucks in 1975 when he got injured. Or just wonder how the 1977 Lakers were ok on defense at all with the roster they had.

The only argument Hakeem has his peak. But the difference in the rest of their careers is so big that Kareem arguably has 7 of the top 10 seasons between them, possibly 10 or 11 of the top 15.

That's why I'll be voting Jabbar at 4 behind Wilt and Hakeem at 11. No comparison in my eyes.

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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#145 » by ardee » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:40 pm

Oh and out of curiosity..

When does Mr James enter the argument for you fellas?

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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#146 » by colts18 » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:44 pm

ardee wrote:Oh and out of curiosity..

When does Mr James enter the argument for you fellas?

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After Shaq, I think LeBron can be argued against anyone left though I have him around 8 or so.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#147 » by therealbig3 » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:45 pm

ardee wrote:Oh and out of curiosity..

When does Mr James enter the argument for you fellas?

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I've got him around #8...depending on how convinced I end up being about Russell (I don't think I will be, not to sound close-minded...I just think I'm interpreting things differently than the Russell supporters, but neither of us are "wrong")...he could be #9. I think he's certainly debatable with pretty much anyone after Jordan and Kareem, though. But I'm probably not going to seriously discuss him until after Jordan, Kareem, Shaq, and Hakeem, as I've got the latter 2 with a slight but clear edge as of right now.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#148 » by DQuinn1575 » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:52 pm

90sAllDecade wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:
90sAllDecade wrote:Now, lets compare KAJ with Olajuwon.

Guys like KAJ, Wilt and Russell's raw stats were amazing. KAJ has to be better right? But if you put their raw stats into context with pace, it tells a completely different story.

KAJ vs Hakeem Raw stats adjusted for pace:
(insert stat breakdown)....


Interesting stuff, thanks for posting it.
I do think it's worth noting, however, that the pace-adjusted numbers are not available for what would probably be 3 of Kareem's top 5-6 seasons ('71-'73), including what are arguably/probably his two best seasons ('71 and '72). So we're not exactly comparing apples to apples here.


Good point, fair enough. Let's compare unadjusted raw numbers for both for their entire careers.

Hakeem vs KAJ Raw Stats Unadjusted for Pace Inflation:

Hakeem RS Raw

Image

Image

KAJ RS Raw

Image

Image

Now KAJ is a better scorer, passer., TS%, rebounds are a wash and Hakeem is still a better stealer, shot blocker and overall defender despite a large unadjusted pace disadvantage (as well as competition, rules and career team support). If KAJ's number are all adjusted for pace, his scoring and passing advantage decreases and his rebounding likely goes in Hakeem's favor.

Hakeem Raw PO

Image

Image

KAJ Raw PO

Image

Image

KAJ is a better passer, but even given a huge unadjusted pace disadvantage using raw stats, Hakeem is still a better scorer, rebounder, shot blocker, stealer, overall defender with TS% as a wash as it translates regardless of pace. Hakeem also still has a higher peak, less team support and greater competition.

I personally value playoff career numbers over RS because it's against better winning teams, tougher defenses and they game plan against your for an entire 5-7 game series.

Hakeem was already regarded as the best two way center all time, before this comparison. He should be moved up in the rankings imo and I wanted to bring objective facts and numbers so people understand this isn't hyperbole. The strong evidence is there to challenge these long held media influenced beliefs.

I acknowledge where the comparison is KAJ's or others advantage, I just hope people have open minds about new objective data questioning the status quo perception.


Kareem's 12 best years were 1970-1981 - which has 93 of his 237 playoff games - about 40%
In Hakeem's 12 best years 1986-1997, are 126 of his 145 playoff games - about 85%.

Kareem is penalized because in the 70s when he was at his best there weren't 4 rounds of playoffs -

So, accidentally you keep showing numbers skewed against Jabbar.

Kareem was a better scorer and passer - Hakeem was better defensively and rebounder.
But each was good at the other - Kareem was a good rebounder and defender, while Hakeem was a good scorer and passer.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#149 » by ceiling raiser » Tue Jul 1, 2014 7:56 pm

ardee wrote:Oh and out of curiosity..

When does Mr James enter the argument for you fellas?

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After MJ and the 5 GOAT centers are off the board I think. I do think he's be a couple spots lower though.
Now that's the difference between first and last place.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#150 » by Jim Naismith » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:00 pm

ardee wrote:Oh and out of curiosity..
When does Mr James enter the argument for you fellas?


I think LBJ's prime is comparable to KAJ's prime in terms of accolades and 2-way play (good defense, great offense).
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#151 » by RayBan-Sematra » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:03 pm

ardee wrote:Hakeem didn't always have the finely crafted post game people remember from his peak years. In the 80s he was more of a leaper, and attacked the basket faceup: like David Robinson, who, of course gets villified for his offensive skill.


While I agree that Hakeem became more skilled as his career progressed young Hakeem was still fairly skilled and a freakish athlete.
I don't really think the Robinson comparison is necessarily fair because while Robinson often struggled to score well in the playoffs a younger Hakeem usually scored just fine in the post-season which is why his playoff scoring numbers (volume + efficiency) over his extended Prime compare just fine to guys like Kareem & Shaq.

Hakeem also lacked passing skills for a while, which improved under Tomanojvich.

Did he lack the skills or did he just play for incompetent coaches who forced him into an off-ball type role which didn't let him display his passing ability?
Passing and court vision are usually innate skills which a player either has or doesn't have.
For Hakeem to magically put up amazing passing numbers in a new system and display excellent looking passing skill makes me question if young Hakeem actually lacked passing skill.

Can you name me any other C's who started out their careers as terrible passers and then magically became amazing ones late in their careers?
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#152 » by Purch » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:03 pm

ardee wrote:Oh and out of curiosity..

When does Mr James enter the argument for you fellas?

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I assume around #9 there will be a huge Lebron vs Hakeem debate
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#153 » by TrueLAfan » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:09 pm

This is going to end up supporting Bill Russell. I don’t care. Like I said, I’m fine with ranking Russell over Kareem. I don’t agree with it, but I get it.

My point here is talk about Kareem’s D. I’m not sure what people want said about Kareem’s defense. People keep acting like there’s nothing there. This confuses me. We don’t have many advanced statistics to use for his Bucks years, but some people try to make some hay with the statistics we do have from the time period. Those stats and metrics say Kareem was great. Among players that played at least 400 games in the decade, Kareem is

#1 in Defensive Rating
#1 in Blocked Shots
#2 in Defensive Win Shares
#3 in Defensive Win Shares/48

He led the league in defensive win shares twice and was second three other times. Individually, it’s hard to say he isn’t a great defender.

That DWS/48 isn’t as high as, for instance, Hakeem. But it’s in line with a lot of other great defenders. Looking at the 10 best years from some other Cs and some selected other players:

Code: Select all

Russell       .1642
Duncan        .1138
Hakeem        .1124
DRob          .1122
Ben Wallace   .1118
Ewing         .1023
Wilt          .0993
D12           .0970
Rodman        .0936
Kareem        .0933
Garnett       .0919
Cowens        .0910
Mutombo       .0905
Unseld        .0898
Zo            .0894
Artis         .0893
Walton        .0891 (Career)
Mel Daniels   .0880 (Career)
Dr. J         .0872
Bobby Jones   .0846
Sikma         .0842
Thurmond      .0837
Parish        .0825
MJ            .0820
Shaq          .0796
LeBron        .0778
Laimbeer      .0745
Moses         .0626


An average player is somewhere around .045.

By this metric—and, look, this is not perfect or close to perfect (Tom Boerwinkle scores super high on this)—Kareem is not a super elite defensive C. The guys right near or above .10 DWS.48 are in that group … Hakeem, DRob, Ben Wallace, Ewing and Wilt. The next group is Dwight Howard, Kareem, Cowens, Mutombo, Unseld, Zo, and Artis. Those are all great defensive players. Kareem is in that group. Is that 100% correct? No. But does this indicate that Kareem seems to be a very good to great defensive player? Absolutely.

But, just for a second, look at Bill Russell. Jesus. If you’re thinking that this has something to do with pace or possessions—no. No player from the 1950s or 1960s is close to Russell. No player in history is close to Russell. The difference between Russell and Tim Duncan is as great as the difference between Duncan and Moses. Moses was not a great defender, but he tried hard within his limitations and had a couple of good years.

It’s hard to comprehend that level of defensive play—but you look at the results and you have to kind of say, yeah, I get it. The Celtics were not a particularly good offensive team. They didn ‘t shoot that well. They didn’t score all that much even though they were a running team. (Okay, they scored well in the Cousy years. But after 1960—no.) They won with D—and they won 70% of their games while Russell was there. And that means they won because of Bill Russell.

The questions bounces back to is the difference between Russell and Kareem on defense enough to offset Kareem’s advantages on offense and in longetivity? I go with Kareem, but I totally get the support for Bill Russell. My main point here is to ask why people ask for evidence of Kareem’s defense. The numbers we have and the accolades received and the contemporary observations aren’t enough? Really?
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#154 » by RayBan-Sematra » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:16 pm

Continuing with my Hakeem passing argument.

Hakeem from 85-89 had a very low usage rate (around 25%) which is far lower then the average usage rate for a guy like Shaq or Kareem who were usually around 30-31%. I actually don't have the usage rate numbers for a Kareem pre-78 but I am assuming they were close to 30%.

In 93 the first year Hakeem really took on a high usage role (28+%) his AST% rate rose to near 16% which is excellent and on-par with most years from Kareem.
Then in 94 and 95 as his usage rate crept up even further his AST% rate also crept up into the 17-18% range.

So this is further evidence that Hakeem's passing numbers were deflated due to a low usage role.

Obviously I have not yet come to any conrete conclusions when it comes to young Hakeems passing ability (I need to watch much more tape) but these stats are still interesting.

For the record I do think Shaq & Kareem > Hakeem as passers but I question how big the gap actually is. It could be much smaller then people think.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#155 » by 90sAllDecade » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:34 pm

I'll be posting to others responses as time and notes permit. But I had this on hand so I'll post it regrarding comparing players defensively based on Winshares, which is a team based stat that is inflated by team support or lesser competition (like Mikan) or PER which is an offensive stat.

This I disagree with for comparison purposes as PER is a flawed stat used primarily for grading offensive players and is especially poor when comparing great defensive players.

Problems With PER

PER largely measures offensive performance. Hollinger freely admits that two of the defensive statistics it incorporates -- blocks and steals (which was not tracked as an official stat till 1973) -- can produce a distorted picture of a player's value and that PER is not a reliable measure of a player's defensive acumen.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Player_efficiency_rating

Win-shares are also bad because they are team based stats that can be dependent of roster strength to increase total team wins and boost win-share totals. They also don't account for beating lesser competition.

WS/48
Win Shares Per 48 Minutes (available since the 1951-52 season in the NBA); an estimate of the number of wins contributed by the player per 48 minutes (league average is approximately 0.100).

Please see the article Calculating Win Shares for more information.

Calculating Win Shares
1.In James's system, one win is equivalent to three Win Shares. In my system, one win is equivalent to one Win Share.

2.James made team Win Shares directly proportional to team wins. In his system, a baseball team that wins 80 games will have exactly 240 Win Shares, a baseball team that wins 90 games will have exactly 270 Win Shares, etc. In my system, a basketball team that wins 50 games will have about 50 Win Shares, give or take.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/about/ws.html

Criticism of win shares
One criticism of this metric is that players who play for teams that win more games than expected, based on the Pythagorean expectation, receive more win shares than players whose team wins fewer games than expected. Since a team exceeding or falling short of its Pythagorean expectation is generally acknowledged as chance, some believe that credit should not be assigned purely based on team wins. However, team wins are the bedrock of the system, whose purpose is to assign credit for what happened.

Win shares are intended to represent player value (what they were responsible for) rather than player ability (what the player's true skill level is).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Win_shares

In other words they can be inaccurate with the playoffs especially bad. Look at the yearly playoff win-share leaders below, they clearly don't indicate the best player accurately every year. ex. Jamaal Magloire in 02', Marcus Camby 99' , Hardaway and Smith over Jordan in 97'-98' etc.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/leaders/ws_per_48_yearly_p.html

Another example is (in 2013) Tiago Splitter is 8th in the league for WS48 over Blake Griffin, Russell Westbrook and Duncan himself. Chauncey Billups was over LeBron in 07-08', I could go on. Check the top 10 yearly RS WS48 link below.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/leaders/ws_per_48_top_10.html

Advanced stats are often based on weighted box score stats too (which weighting is of the creators subjective discretion), so box scores while flawed can actually be more accurate at times and vice versa. Basketball has so many more variables per play than Baseball where win shares originated from.

They are useful when your understand their context and flaws for comparing players within a team within a season, but not different team players in different seasons imo. They are bad for comparing defensive impact, let alone across eras imo.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#156 » by sp6r=underrated » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:37 pm

I'll repeat what I wrote before. Supporter of Hakeem or Shaq or other recent bigs are engaging in pace adjustment. I actually think that is important. Pace isn't perfect but it is important to take into account the number of possession in a game.

However, you can't look at that factor in isolation. Here is league wide drtg.

74: 97.7
75: 97.7
76: 98.3
77: 99.5
78: 100.9

91: 107.9
92: 108.2
93: 108
94: 106.3
95: 108.3

One player played in a defensive era while the other played in an offensive. This is something that needs to be addressed. Especially if you're in the camp hammering in on pace.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#157 » by drza » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:50 pm

Man, this project moves fast. I haven't been able to post in this thread until now, and we're already 8 or 9 pages in. I'm enjoying the Kareem talk in this thread, but like Macgill (I think it was Macgill) I'd like to see a bit more effort put into fleshing out his impact. There have been several posts in this thread asking what he was looking for in exploring Kareem's strengths and weaknesses.

I can only speak for me, but as I pointed out in the #1 thread, it was really the Retro Player of the Year project that made me really start to look harder at Kareem's impact. Particularly, it was the 1977 and 1978 threads that piqued my attention, especially as they were the preamble to a decade of Wilt vs Russell threads that really cemented home the concept that box scores really, really don't capture everything. There is some good info in the box scores for offense, but even that is incomplete. And the gap in defensive box scores are borderline laughable. As such, even though Kareem (or Wilt) might have blown away Walton (or Russell) in the box score stats, the arguments started looking more and more convincing to me that Walton (or Russell) were really the ones making a much bigger impact on the fortunes of their teams. And, importantly, it didn't seem like a case where one should start with the box score stats and round one way or the other...instead, it seemed that the "lesser" (said another way, more defensive and other impact) players in the comparisons were actually just fundamentally having a larger impact almost independent of the story the box scores tell us.

So. In the #1 thread I encouraged folks to go back and read the 1977 and 1978 threads from the RPoY project. Here, I'll start posting some of the posts that really caught my eye and made me start re-thinking. The somewhat ironic thing is that in the RPoY project, it seems very clear to me that the vast majority of those presenting information came into the project higher on Kareem than on Walton. The tone of most of the posts is "Walton did all these amazing things...but we all know Kareem's the best so I should vote for him." But it's the information in the posts that I think are worth considering, here. Some of it is based on observation/anecdote. And some of it is more quantitative, with analysis and commentary. In this post, I'll put some of the more qualitative posts, then follow up with the quantitative stuff. Hopefully this does a better job of getting across what I'm talking about when wanting to look further into Kareem. I'm not questioning his scoring ability or the fact that he was obviously an outstanding player. I'm looking more for if his impact is Karl Malone or Michael Jordan.

One last note pre-quotes: some of the people I'll be quoting here are posting in these threads. If you are, feel free to disagree with my interpretation of what you wrote before and/or modify it since I'm quoting things 4 years old. My purpose here is to spark discussion, not put words into anyone's mouth.

TrueLAfan wrote:This, for me, is a fun year to look at. I was old enough to be paying attention to basketball and to know (kind of) what was going on terms of intangibles and value beyond statistics. There were a lot of injuries to major players; at least 3 or 4 players that played less than 65 games would have gotten more support and higher ranking if they had played more. And the championship teams had weird years. So my initial thoughts, before I vote, are: (snip)

Bill Walton. The obvious question. He missed so much of the season…how much do you take that into account? Well, you have to give it some weight. This is not a guy missing 15 games, or a guy that plays 2500 minutes. Bill Walton played less than 2000 minutes. He missed almost all of the playoffs. But when he played…wow. When Walton went down in February, the Blazers were 50 and 10. They had a reasonable shot to match or surpass the (then) league record of 69 wins. They went 8 and 14 the rest of the way without Walton.

Here’s how great Bill Walton was in 1978. I think that an MVP level player is worth 15-20 wins to his team. Walton was worth that much in 1978 even though he only played 58 games. Without Walton, I think the Blazers would have been lucky to be .500. Maybe they would made it to that level; maybe they wouldn’t. It’s a good spot for the over under. And that means that Bill Walton was worth 20 wins over a replacement level player. So he’s up near the very top.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Well, Kareem missed games this year. The Lakers were 8-12 in the games he missed, and 37-25 when he played. And it took Kareem a while to get untracked. The Lakers were 19-24, and Kareem was “only” averaging 24.5 points and 11.6 rebounds. He got it into grear in the last 39 games to the tune of 26.6 points and 13.7 rebounds a game. The Lakers weren’t a .500 team without Kareem; they were more like a .400 or .350 team. Even thought he only played 62 games, Kareem was responsible for around 15-20 wins. So he’s in the mix. (snip)

2. Walton. Again, I kind of can’t believe I’ve got him over Kareem. But the bottom line is that I think Bill Walton got more wins for his team than any of the other players


My spin: I think it's clear from TLAF's tone and his other posts in the thread, that he considered Kareem to be the better player. But in his view of the season, he felt that Walton in 1978 was having a bigger impact.

fatal9 wrote:1. Walton
2. Kareem
3. Gervin
4. Thompson
5. Hayes

Putting Walton over Kareem is tough because he just isn't a better player. Both were extremely valuable to their teams which is shown by their team record with and without them. I just think this year, Walton was more important to his team. If you ever catch a Blazers game from '77 and '78, you will notice several things that don't show up on the stat sheet for Walton, 1) no other player to me (aside from Russell who has very limited footage available) contested more shots than Walton. Key word is contested, not blocking. Walton would jump out at perimeter players 15 feet out if he thought he could change their shot. His activity on defense during the '77 finals is unbelievable. 2) He was the coach on the floor, not Ramsay. Most of the time when the team is running up the floor, Walton is the one reading the situation, throwing up signals to call the plays. And on defense, you can see him positioning his teammates to where they should be. That type of leadership is invaluable. 3) The entire "team" philosophy of those Blazer teams started and ended with Walton. They were a talented sure (Maurice Lucas still led them to 45 wins and playoffs the following season without Walton), but it was Walton's presence which brought the ball movement that got everybody involved (striking guards on cuts, directing ball to Lucas when he had good position etc).


My spin: Another person who clearly believes Kareem to be the better player, but felt that in 1978 Walton was having more impact on his team results. Interestingly, the underlined gives some examples of "tangible intangibles" that Walton could have been using to have that massive impact. Note point (1) is a textbook example of the kind of horizontal defense that Russell was known for; 2) being a "coach on the floor" was a literal thing for Russell; and 3) The Team before Me mantra is one of the tenets of the Russell vs. Wilt debate.

ThaRegul8r wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:Is Kareem to blame for the fact that his teams never jelled? I don’t think so. But, when you are talking about the GOAT and comparing him with players whose teams always played well around them (Russell, Magic, etc.), it’s fair to give him little credit for leadership.


Lenny Wilkens said, “You must have someone on your team who demands the respect of the players and has earned that respect by what he does on the court. The coach can only do so much; then its up to the players. Kareem was one of the greatest players ever, but he was not that guy. He won a title with Milwaukee in 1971, when an aging Oscar Robertson came in to join him, and he didn’t win again until Magic arrived in 1980. Kareem is a thoughtful, quiet man. He is not the kind of vocal leader who can inspire a team, despite his greatness on the court.”


I almost didn't include this, because a) there's more than one way to be a leader, b) it's not clear if something like this even plays into on-court impact, and if so to what extent, and c) it's not like Lenny Wilkens is the authority on all things winning. But this quote does speak to those that suggest that Oscar and later Magic had bigger roles in making those teams champions than what the box scores imply due to their leadership. I'll let folks make of this what they will, or nothing at all.

fatal9 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:Kareem's numbers throughout the 70s were astronomical. My problem with Kareem is that those numbers and the talent around him routinely translated into less of a TEAM than you would expect.

Again, if he doesn't have his second or third best players injured in three deep playoff runs ('72, '74, '77), we would not be having this conversation.

Kareem's impact on win-loss speaks for itself. In the 70s, he missed time significantly only twice ('75 and '78), and the perfromance of his teams with/without him is night and day. Played with just one all-star from the '73-'79 stretch. They went from NBA finalists to worst team in the league without him in just one off season when he was injured (record without him in '75: 3-14, with him: 35-30), and were at the bottom of the conference again in '78 without him. Look at this comparatively with other legends. Lakers were 52-25 in all the games Magic missed from '80-'85. Celtics still a .500+ team without Bird (in '89). Bulls still a 55 win team without Jordan (that's with Pippen missing 10 games too). You have a guy who is on teams that can't keep themselves from being bottom feeders year in year out without him, while other players you recognize as "winners" are on teams that have no problem winning 45-50+ without them. See the problem here? The perception of "winning" exclusively depends on supporting casts.

And again, if he does get any sort of a team around him, his key players become injured during the deep playoff runs. No one wins when that happens. How did the Celtics manage when their team was injured in '87 and '88? How did Lakers manage without Worthy in '83? Sixers without Cunningham in '68? Bulls without Grant in '95? When your second or third best players get knocked out of a series (or in Grant's case, leave), you're not going to win, especially when your teams aren't that strong to begin with.

To say essentially that Kareem couldn't get his stats in the framework of a team is pretty ridiculous. Makes me question if you've ever seen him play. Could do anything you wanted him to in order to win, anchored historically great defenses in his Bucks days, led centers in assists year after year (and it's not liked he was passing to boost assist stats like Wilt was), is in the argument for greatest scorer to ever play...certainly the most unstoppable with the ball, an excellent rebounder during all of the 70s. He was the most successful college player of all time. Had a 35/17/5 season on a 60+ win team (probably best statistical season ever posted on a 60+ win team). Turned an expansion team into a contender over night. Won a championship with them in just his second year, and came one game from doing it again couple of years later. Was traded to a team at the bottom of the conference (who on top of that traded away key players the very same off season), and turned them into a respectable playoff team. Led the league in scoring the same year he won a championship (MJ and Shaq are the only others to do this right?). Has 4 rings (2 of them while being dominant statistically) as the best player despite his prime being wasted on poor teams.


That post was from the 1977 thread, and was almost entirely pro-Kareem. I included it in its entirety because I'm trying to paint a complete picture here, not argue against Kareem. I'm certainly open to being convinced that Kareem really was having Walton-level (or Russell-level) impact in his peak seasons. I just want more analysis of this type to help me cement that.

I'll actually end this post here, and start another with some of the more quantitative arguments about the 1977-78 Kareem/Walton debates.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#158 » by D Nice » Tue Jul 1, 2014 8:52 pm

I'm voting for Bill Russell.

I'll edit in a response later or make a new later tonight post once I've had time to digest the thread. I missed the deadline for #1 (very stupid of me not taking advantage of Sunday) so I'm just doing this to make sure my vote is at least recorded this time. My analysis will get more granular starting at 4, 1-3 are pretty clearly Jordan, Russell, and Kareem, so my post will be geared in such a manner that the primary point of concern will be establishing why I favor Russell over Kareem.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#159 » by MisterWestside » Tue Jul 1, 2014 9:06 pm

drza wrote:


Some nice commentary, drza. The only issue is that this talks more about what WALTON did on defense (on tape), and not Abdul-Jabbar.

Can others provide insight on what they watch on defense for Abdul-Jabbar? I provided some quick thoughts on his defense earlier, but I'll go back and review some tape.
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Re: RealGM NBA Top 100 List -- #2 

Post#160 » by penbeast0 » Tue Jul 1, 2014 9:29 pm

The question about most of the greats isn't about their individual greatness. Wilt was probably the individually greatest player in NBA history, Kareem, Shaq, and Hakeem are as close as anyone gets. Bird and Magic had incredible numbers even on incredibly stacked squads.

The question for me is how much this individual brilliance translates into team success . . . what you might call synergistic success. Wilt has been rated lower and lower by many for just this issue; his teams seemed to underperform both in terms of team statistics (Ortg, SRS . . . although Drtg makes Wilt still look dominant) and in terms of titles relative to talent. I want to know not how great the numbers or accolades were (unless, like the Hakeem post above, you think those numbers aren't being correctly evaluated) but how this greatness made his teams perform relative to the talent around him.

My case for Russell is that he took good but frequently overrated talent (playoff choker Cousy, low efficiency Heinsohn and Havlicek, defensive role players KC and Satch, etc.) and took it much further than expected. We had a thread about Wilt on the Celtics and I believed he might have gotten four or five titles but not 11 . . . and that's a player I have had in my top 4 all-time with the greatest stats (arguably) in NBA history. I want to know about the synergistic effect on team winning performance FOR A TEAM CAPABLE OF WINNING A TITLE (I don't care how good he would be on a talentless expansion team like rookie Walt Bellamy). I want to know this for:

Wilt
Kareem
Shaq
Mikan
Hakeem
Duncan -- the Spurs are arguably the 3rd most successful dynasty of all time. How much of that is about Duncan?
Bird
LeBron
Magic -- I've always felt it was no coincidence that Kareem didn't turn into a bigger winner than Wilt until Magic showed up but I'm willing to be convinced otherwise
Kobe -- I always thought Kobe was overrated . . . until he won titles with Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom as his best supporting players. I guess his synergistic value to his teams is underrated by even his spectacular stats.

For that matter I'd like to know it for any player we look at but those are guys I could be convinced are top 5 all-time if, like Russell, I can be convinced that their synergistic effect is appreciably greater than their numbers.

On the other hand, I think some of these guys have synergistic effects appreciably less than their numbers. Wilt's habit of walking up the court and seeming inability to focus on team goals outside of his individual ones; Kareem's and Artis Gilmore's withdrawn personalities and Kareem's Muslim identity (but only to the effect that it divided his teams or that he played individual ball in his last Milwaukee years trying to force his way out of town like Carmelo in Denver -- IF HE DID); Hakeem's early disaffected years in Houston where it looked like DRob was the better player until 1994; Mikan's supporting case (Mikkelson, Pollard, Slater Martin -- were they all the best or close to it in their era or are their reps inflated by being on a dynasty like Sanders and Heinsohn?). Don't want to step on anyone's toes with these comments but these are questions that affect how we look at a player like Wilt whose numbers are clearly GOAT level and they are the missing piece for evaluation.
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