RealGM Top 100 List #5

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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#401 » by Baller2014 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:15 am

therealbig3 wrote:
Baller2014 wrote:Real, the argument is just not logical. You were saying "if KG hadn't played so many minutes, maybe he would have been able to hold up better than Duncan as he aged". But Duncan played more minutes than KG once we factor in the playoffs. A lot more. And his body still held up better. So it's just obviously an invalid argument.


Not true. Combine the RS and PS minutes, KG comes out ahead by about 1700 minutes. That's not insignificant.


Not true. Duncan has a total of 54.5K and KG is sitting at 54.1K. Plus, a lot of KG's minutes come after his body started breaking down. Basically there is no argument for KG on longevity grounds whatever.

EDIT: excuse me, Duncan has 52.5K v.s 54.1K (didn't carry the 2). So he's slightly behind, but again- KG's body broke down a while ago, so KG broke down long before he reached the 52.5K mark Duncan has withstood to date (with no breakdown).
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#402 » by therealbig3 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:15 am

Purch wrote:Also consider the fact that for every playoff run you make.. The less time you have to heal up for and recover for the next season. So you'd expect Duncan to be injured more, because there's less time between competing in the playoffs and camp next season. This time decrease the deeper each run you make is. Post season minutes impact you in multiple ways that regular season minutes don't.


But that's all compensated for and then some when Duncan is being managed so well by Pop...it's why Duncan has become known for starting years off slow, and then turning it up later on.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#403 » by Purch » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:16 am

therealbig3 wrote:
Purch wrote:And here's the thing.. I don't value regular season minutes on the same level as post season minutes. I don't think the intensity is as high.. The offensive workload is as high.. The defensive pressure is as high.. I dont think teams play as seriously and I know teams are willing to give away games. But once you get into the post season and you're playing well into the summer where every game matters, I think it's a different kind of toll on your body


Except KG never showed signs of being physically incapable of playing the playoff minutes that Duncan did (which Duncan still got easier than most other superstars, because Pop still kept him under 40 mpg every playoff run since 05), he just never had the opportunity to.


What does that even mean? Duncan from the moment he came into the league as a rookie was playing well into the summer. Of course it took a higher physical toll on him. You can't compare the physical toll of playing in the first round to making deep playoff runs.

Youre being dishonest
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#404 » by therealbig3 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:18 am

Baller2014 wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
Baller2014 wrote:Real, the argument is just not logical. You were saying "if KG hadn't played so many minutes, maybe he would have been able to hold up better than Duncan as he aged". But Duncan played more minutes than KG once we factor in the playoffs. A lot more. And his body still held up better. So it's just obviously an invalid argument.


Not true. Combine the RS and PS minutes, KG comes out ahead by about 1700 minutes. That's not insignificant.


Not true. Duncan has a total of 54.5K and KG is sitting at 54.1K. Plus, a lot of KG's minutes come after his body started breaking down. Basically there is no argument for KG on longevity grounds whatever.


Kevin Garnett: 48,910 RS minutes + 5283 PS minutes = 54,193 minutes

Tim Duncan: 43,605 RS minutes + 8902 PS minutes = 52,507 minutes
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#405 » by Baller2014 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:19 am

I edited my post, but the point still stands. KG has no argument on these grounds.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#406 » by Quotatious » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:24 am

therealbig3 wrote:Kevin Garnett: 48,910 RS minutes + 5283 PS minutes = 54,193 minutes

Tim Duncan: 43,605 RS minutes + 8902 PS minutes = 52,507 minutes

Yeah, but it has to be mentioned that KG played 2293 of these minutes in his rookie season, when he was still rather irrelevant (at least not even close to any of Duncan's seasons). 2014 KG (1109 RS minutes and 250 PS minutes) doesn't really belong, either.

They're pretty much equal in terms of longevity.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#407 » by Purch » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:25 am

Duncan's first time playing in a short playoff run in which he was eliminated in the 1st round was 2009, 11 years into his career.


Garnett's career started out with 7 straight first round eliminations.. 1 deep playoff run, and 3 years of not making the post season....How can you honestly sit here and compare their ability to handle post season minutes?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#408 » by therealbig3 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:33 am

Purch wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
Purch wrote:And here's the thing.. I don't value regular season minutes on the same level as post season minutes. I don't think the intensity is as high.. The offensive workload is as high.. The defensive pressure is as high.. I dont think teams play as seriously and I know teams are willing to give away games. But once you get into the post season and you're playing well into the summer where every game matters, I think it's a different kind of toll on your body


Except KG never showed signs of being physically incapable of playing the playoff minutes that Duncan did (which Duncan still got easier than most other superstars, because Pop still kept him under 40 mpg every playoff run since 05), he just never had the opportunity to.


What does that even mean? Duncan from the moment he came into the league as a rookie was playing well into the summer. Of course it took a higher physical toll on him. You can't compare the physical toll of playing in the first round to making deep playoff runs.

Youre being dishonest


I'm not being dishonest. I never denied that Duncan playing deep into the playoffs wasn't harder on him. But RS minutes add up too. And Duncan was allowed to take it easy in the RS after only 7 years. Not a lot of superstars get that opportunity, especially not KG. You can say that playoff minutes are harder, and that Duncan has 3000 more minutes than KG in the playoffs...but KG has over 5000 more minutes than Duncan in the RS. I'm not sure how you quantify just how much more tiring a PS minute is compared to a RS minute.

Also when you're a lone superstar carrying a bad team and are forced to play 40 mpg...those aren't easy minutes. Those are basically playoff games, because you have to push yourself just to put your team in a position to win.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#409 » by therealbig3 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:34 am

Purch wrote:Duncan's first time playing in a short playoff run in which he was eliminated in the 1st round was 2009, 11 years into his career.


Garnett's career started out with 7 straight first round eliminations.. 1 deep playoff run, and 3 years of not making the post season....How can you honestly sit here and compare their ability to handle post season minutes?


I didn't know Garnett losing in the playoffs or not making the playoffs measured his ability to handle playoff minutes.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#410 » by Purch » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:41 am

Youre being frustrating. It's not about winning or losing. It's about how far into the summer your team is consistently playing, and every round takes more of a toll on your body. If you need more proof just listen to interviews from The Miami heat during the past 4 years or the Detroit pistons during their 6 conference finals apperances.

How can you project that he can handle playoff minutes better when Garnett's only had three deep playoff runs in his entire career, whiles Timmy's had that toll on his body since his rookie year.

Hmm, it doesn't matter if you're carrying a bad team or not.. Regular season games aren't nearly as intense as post season games. Because teams are not locked in over 82 games.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#411 » by therealbig3 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:45 am

magicmerl wrote:
therealbig3 wrote:
Baller2014 wrote:Real, the argument is just not logical. You were saying "if KG hadn't played so many minutes, maybe he would have been able to hold up better than Duncan as he aged". But Duncan played more minutes than KG once we factor in the playoffs. A lot more. And his body still held up better. So it's just obviously an invalid argument.


Not true. Combine the RS and PS minutes, KG comes out ahead by about 1700 minutes. That's not insignificant.

It's stupid. Garnett was killing himself on those sota teams even when he'd been mathematically eliminated from the playoffs. Those minutes were 'wasted', cutting short his championship window in Boston. Should he get 'credit' for that?


Well, the Wolves missed the playoffs by 1 game in 05. So he should have pushed himself.

I don't think the Wolves were mathematically eliminated in 06 until there were like 6-7 games left.

And I don't think they were mathematically eliminated in 07 until there were like 5 games left.

KG was right to push himself, as long as his team had a chance.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#412 » by Purch » Thu Jul 10, 2014 10:53 am

Also, going back to their missed playoffs here's how I look at it.

Duncan missed one playoff run due to injury out of 17 years he went to the playoffs, whiles going deep into the playoffs nearly every year(only losing in the 1st round twice).

Garnett missed one playoff run due to injury out of 14 years he went to the playoffs, whiles only playing 3 runs past the 1st round


So what about that indicates Garnett can handle post season minutes better?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#413 » by rico381 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 11:06 am

Baller2014 wrote:I get the Lebron love, I do. But even if his peak was a little better than Duncan, he's still got only 11 total seasons, only 7 of which can really really be called prime years. I don't see how that can stand up to the comparable peak of Duncan, who has a 10 year prime, and a consistent 17 year career. I mean, even in his non-prime years he's still an amazing, all-nba franchise big. Even if Lebron's 7 prime years were twice as valuable as Duncan's best 14 seasons, he'd still be coming up short because Duncan's remaining 3 seasons had him playing at a higher level than non-prime Lebron's 4 other seasons... and of course, Lebron's 7 prime years were nowhere close to being twice as valuable as Duncan's best 14 years.

I'm assuming the 7 prime years you're referring to are 08-14. I totally get discounting his rookie year; 20-5-5 his nice, but .488 TS% takes away from that, and Cleveland didn't even really know what position to put him at yet. The other three years may not be at the level of his 08-14, but I don't want to punish him for setting unreasonable standards later in his career, as LeBron's 05-07 years would be valued prime years for most players. Just because they look bad compared to the rarefied air he's occupied later in his career doesn't mean they can't still knock the pants off the 8th-10th best years of most other players.

05-06 is probably the best of the bunch. He averaged 31.4 ppg, 7.0 rpg, and 6.6 apg on .568 TS% with a +10.4 on/off split, good for a 28.1 PER and 16.3 Win Shares. For comparison, Duncan's career-high PER is 27.1, and he's exceeded that amount of Win Shares twice in his career, with his third-best total being 13.2. He led Cleveland to 50 wins, with his second-best player being Ilgauskas, and Eric Snow ranking second on the team in minutes played (.444 TS%, 10.9 USG, 98 ORTG, 8.1 PER). LeBron finished #2 in the MVP race that year (Duncan was 8th), and earned an all-NBA first-team nod, relegating Duncan to 2nd team. In the playoffs, he had some turnover problems, but was still very strong. He led his team past Washington in the first round, averaging 35.7-7.5-5.7 on .599 TS%, hitting a game-winning shot down 1 in game 3 with 5 seconds left, and another game-winner down 1 in game 5 with 0.9 seconds left, with both shots giving his team the series lead. He struggled more against the #1 seed Pistons, but still averaged 26.6-8.6-6.0 on .516 TS% and took them to 7 games. Overall, this doesn't look that different from, say, prime Kobe, and remember: this is his 8th-best season.

06-07 was a small step down from that year, but averages of 27.3-6.7-6.0 on .552 TS% are nothing to sneeze at. He led Cleveland to 50 wins again, had a 24.5 PER and 13.7 WS, finishing 2nd in RAPM and 5th in MVP voting. What really stood out was his playoff performance, though, where he led Cleveland to the finals and led the league in WS. Most memorable, of course, was the upset of Detroit where he scored 29 of his team's last 30 points to win game 5 of a tied series on the road in overtime.

04-05 stands up to scrutiny pretty well, too. He averaged 27.2-7.4-7.2 on .554 TS%, good for a 25.7 PER and 14.3 Win Shares, with a +8.8 on/off split. Believe it or not, the guard corps of Jeff McInnis, Ira Newble, and Eric Snow didn't work out, and the team only won 42 games, which somehow wasn't enough for a playoff spot (who says the East was weak? :p), but he finished 6th in the MVP race and made 2nd-team all-NBA. Nothing groundbreaking or anything, but this is his 10th-best season, and his top 5 or so are all best-player-in-the-world level. Duncan only has two seasons with more Win Shares; Hakeem's has one that beats it and one that ties; Shaq has three that beat it; and Bird and Magic have four each, but they've got no longevity edge, nor did they peak as high as LeBron did for 4 or 5 seasons.

Maybe you don't believe Win Shares 100%; in fact, I'd be worried if you did. They do mean something, though, and I can't ignore a gap that huge. Considering that some of the things we know from +/- statistics and from clutch statistics indicate that LeBron is even better than the box score tells us, I have a hard time believing that we would instead go the other way and try to shrink the massive statistical gap between LeBron and others. We've seen his dominance first-hand; don't let his current greatness blind you to the fact that he's been putting up seasons that many greats would be proud of for a decade now.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#414 » by therealbig3 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 11:08 am

Purch wrote:Youre being frustrating. It's not about winning or losing. It's about how far into the summer your team is consistently playing, and every round takes more of a toll on your body. If you need more proof just listen to interviews from The Miami heat during the past 4 years or the Detroit pistons during their 6 conference finals apperances.

How can you project that he can handle playoff minutes better when Garnett's only had three deep playoff runs in his entire career, whiles Timmy's had that toll on his body since his rookie year.

Hmm, it doesn't matter if you're carrying a bad team or not.. Regular season games aren't nearly as intense as post season games. Because teams are not locked in over 82 games.


I'm not denying that. Yes, playoff runs are intense, and tiring, but what's tired out the Heat hasn't been the playoff runs, it's been the 82 game seasons in addition to the playoff runs. And playoff runs by their nature are small sample sizes. They're short, intense bursts. The RS is a marathon. It's during the RS that you'll find players getting burned out and succumbing to fatigue, not the PS. Playing way more minutes during the RS trying to carry your team to wins and then losing in the 1st round/not even making the playoffs has a higher chance of burning you out than coasting through most of the RS and then playing 10-25 games of intense basketball.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#415 » by Baller2014 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 11:16 am

rico381 wrote: don't let his current greatness blind you to the fact that he's been putting up seasons that many greats would be proud of for a decade now.

Your post basically ignores the central point I make, namely that no reasonable person could believe Lebron's best 7 years were more valuable than Duncan's 14 best, each Lebron season would literally need to be twice as valuable (and then some). I'm not blind to Lebron's greatness at all, I'll be voting for him very soon, but he's being compared to a guy who has 17 years to his 11, a guy with a 10 year prime to Lebron's 7 year prime, and with an amazing level of play in the 7 non-prime years (where he's still arguably the best big in the NBA for a bunch of them, he made an all-nba 1st team just last year, and he was basically just as good this year but missed out due to being rested a little). Even if you give Lebron the edge for peak, that's too much to compensate for. Lebron was indeed good in 05-07, but his performance over those years is still clearly worse than the 3 worst years Duncan had (after we take out the top 14, for the purposes of illustrating the longevity effect as I did earlier). I would really urge you to consider Duncan here. A time will come for Lebron, but come on man, how can the impact of his 7 prime years (one of which is frankly not on the same level as the other 6), 3 significantly worse years, and rookie year, compete with what Duncan did over 17? It can't.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#416 » by Purch » Thu Jul 10, 2014 11:29 am

therealbig3 wrote:
Purch wrote:Youre being frustrating. It's not about winning or losing. It's about how far into the summer your team is consistently playing, and every round takes more of a toll on your body. If you need more proof just listen to interviews from The Miami heat during the past 4 years or the Detroit pistons during their 6 conference finals apperances.

How can you project that he can handle playoff minutes better when Garnett's only had three deep playoff runs in his entire career, whiles Timmy's had that toll on his body since his rookie year.

Hmm, it doesn't matter if you're carrying a bad team or not.. Regular season games aren't nearly as intense as post season games. Because teams are not locked in over 82 games.


I'm not denying that. Yes, playoff runs are intense, and tiring, but what's tired out the Heat hasn't been the playoff runs, it's been the 82 game seasons in addition to the playoff runs. And playoff runs by their nature are small sample sizes. They're short, intense bursts. The RS is a marathon. It's during the RS that you'll find players getting burned out and succumbing to fatigue, not the PS. Playing way more minutes during the RS trying to carry your team to wins and then losing in the 1st round/not even making the playoffs has a higher chance of burning you out than coasting through most of the RS and then playing 10-25 games of intense basketball.

The only reason teams like Miami coast in the regular season is because they played in the previous year so deep into the playoffs, and they know that they have to prepare their bodies for another long post season run. You don't have to coast and rest in the regular season if you're not making deep runs. Don't you think the heat would prefer if they could play at their highest level for 82 games and get home court advantege? Of course. But it's not realistic if they wanna handle a deep playoff run.

The regular season isn't about intensity, it's about length.

The playoffs is about intensity and a long summer
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#417 » by rico381 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 11:45 am

Baller2014 wrote:
rico381 wrote: don't let his current greatness blind you to the fact that he's been putting up seasons that many greats would be proud of for a decade now.

Your post basically ignores the central point I make, namely that no reasonable person could believe Lebron's best 7 years were twice as valuable than Duncan's 14 best. I'm not blind to Lebron's greatness at all, I'll be voting for him very soon, but he's being compared to a guy who has 17 years to his 11, a guy with a 10 year prime to Lebron's 7 year prime, and with an amazing level of play in the 10 non-prime years. Even if you give Lebron the edge for peak, that's too much to compensate for. Lebron was indeed good in 05-07, but his performance over those years is still clearly worse than the 3 worst years Duncan had. I would really urge you to consider Duncan here. A time will come for Lebron, but come on man, how can the impact of his 7 prime years (one of which is frankly not on the same level as the other 6), 3 significantly worse years, and rookie year, compete with what Duncan did over 17? It can't.

I'm not ignoring your central point, I'm just arguing against it. To be 100% clear: I strongly disagree that LeBron's performance from 05-07 is clearly worse than the 3 worst years Duncan had. Furthermore, I believe, and presented evidence to indicate, that those years actually compare favorably with some of Duncan's best years.
To reiterate,
06: higher PER than any year of Duncan's career, 2nd in MVP voting (6 spots ahead of Duncan), 1st-team All-NBA, (ahead of Duncan). You're trying to tell me that is "still clearly worse than the 3 worst years Duncan had"? Looks to me like it was better than 06 Duncan by a fair margin, which had pretty poor shooting efficiency but still looks like a prime year to me. Come on, man, the hyperbole is making me feel like nothing you're saying is credible.

05 and 07: Each with more Win Shares than all but 2 of Duncan's seasons. LeBron's 9th and 10th seasons in the top 6 in MVP voting, where Duncan has 9 years total (most of them farther down in the rankings than LeBron's finishes, hence LeBron's 6.1 MVP shares to Duncan's 4.28)

The question isn't, "are LeBron's top 7 seasons twice as valuable as Duncan's best 14?". That was the question in 2011, sure, but now LeBron has 10 great seasons. And the question is: does 08-14 Duncan, as a borderline top-10 player in the league at best, moving the championship odds needle a few percent each year, offer enough to make up for LeBron's advantages in having a better peak season, a better second-best season, and so on down to the 10th season? Since the difference in championship odds between a +8 player and a +10 player is so much bigger than what a +2 player gives, I've got LeBron ahead in this comparison.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#418 » by Baller2014 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 12:06 pm

In my hypothetical it only matters if Lebron's 05-07 impact is greater than Duncan's worst 3 seasons if you believe that Lebron's 7 prime years are worth double the impact of Duncan's best 14. I have no idea how you can make this argument. To call Duncan a "borderline top 10 player at best" in some of those years also strikes me as wholly inaccurate. He just made an all-nba 1st team in his 16th year, and was even more impressive in the playoffs that year. Lebron's not going to win this round though, so I guess my question is whether you have Duncan next up if/when it comes to a run off.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#419 » by penbeast0 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 12:16 pm

Some excellent LeBron posts (and Garnett posts for that matter). Although my vote was for Duncan, I'm still open to change and it's not clear to me the way the last 3 were.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #5 

Post#420 » by DQuinn1575 » Thu Jul 10, 2014 1:03 pm

Baller2014 wrote:. I have also counted Don Quinn's vote for Shaq, although I'm unsure if he voted officially (or provided sufficient reasoning in his post). Pen will have to determine this stuff obviously.



I don't know anyone named Don Quinn.

I am assuming you are refering to me.
Please let me know if you are one judging the reasoning of the votes.

Thank you,

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