RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
I echo the sentiments of GC Pantalones.
KG and Oscar is an interesting comparison. Their career paths are rather similar.. early statistical domination, combining in a dominant Playoff performance in '63/'03 and an MVP in '64/'04.
Team goes down the toilet and they suffer for several years until they get traded and help spearhead GOAT level teams in Milwaukee/Boston. An injury the year after the title and they're never really the same again.
I think Oscar is a markedly superior Playoff performer in their primes, but what KG gives you in '08 and '12 is interesting. '08 KG vs '71 Oscar is just an interesting debate overall too. Do the with-without wizards have any insight into that?
And man. It says something about how boring this World cup final has been that I'm browsing this thread right now
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KG and Oscar is an interesting comparison. Their career paths are rather similar.. early statistical domination, combining in a dominant Playoff performance in '63/'03 and an MVP in '64/'04.
Team goes down the toilet and they suffer for several years until they get traded and help spearhead GOAT level teams in Milwaukee/Boston. An injury the year after the title and they're never really the same again.
I think Oscar is a markedly superior Playoff performer in their primes, but what KG gives you in '08 and '12 is interesting. '08 KG vs '71 Oscar is just an interesting debate overall too. Do the with-without wizards have any insight into that?
And man. It says something about how boring this World cup final has been that I'm browsing this thread right now
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
colts18 wrote:SactoKingsFan wrote:I see LeBron and Shaq as the clear candidates at #6 for various reasons. Both are all-time talents that have displayed a rare level of physical dominance. None of the other players in the top 10 discussion (Hakeem, Magic, Bird, KG, Oscar) can match their combined peak, prime and physical dominance.
Prime RS:
LeBron (09-14): 30.2 PER, .613 TS%, 120 ORtg, 101 DRtg, 104.0 WS, .290 WS/48
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... m:advanced
Shaq (94-05): 28.5 PER, .584 TS%, 114 ORtg, 98 DRtg, 145.9 WS, .234 WS/48
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... m:advanced
Prime PS:
LeBron (09-14): 29.4 PER, .599 TS%, 119 ORtg, 102 DRtg, 26.3 WS, .270 WS/48
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... s_advanced
Shaq (94-05): 27.5 PER, .567 TS%, 112 ORtg, 103 DRtg, 28.7 WS, .202 WS/48
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... s_advanced
Prime RS Per 100 Poss:
LeBron Prime (09-14) RS: 38.5 PTS, 10.4 RB, 9.9 AST, 2.3 STL, 1.1 BLK, 4.6 TOV
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... m:per_poss
Shaq Prime (94-05) RS: 37.5 PTS, 16.3 RB, 4.1 AST, 0.9 STL, 3.4 BLK, 3.9 TOV
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... m:per_poss
Prime PS Per 100 Poss:
LeBron Prime (09-14) PS Per 100: 37.1 PTS, 11.3 RB, 8.1 AST, 2.3 STL, 1.2 BLK, 4.2 TOV
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... s_per_poss
Shaq Prime (94-05) PS Per 100: 35.8 PTS, 16.9 RB, 4.1 AST, 0.8 STL, 3.1 BLK, 4.1 TOV
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... s_per_poss
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I don't know if you realized it but you compared LeBron's 6 year prime to Shaq's 12 year prime. The key words in that sentence is 6 and 12. 12 is double 6. So Shaq's prime was double the length of LeBron's which should be taken into account.
If we're going to count '94 and '05 as part of Shaq's prime, I would frankly open up Lebron's prime to include everything from '04-05 season on (and said as much in a prior post). So that would look like.....
Prime RS:
LeBron (05-14): 28.8 PER, .590 TS%, 118 ORtg, 102 DRtg, 163.5 WS, .260 WS/48
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... m:advanced
Shaq (94-05): 28.5 PER, .584 TS%, 114 ORtg, 98 DRtg, 145.9 WS, .234 WS/48
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... m:advanced
Prime PS:
LeBron (05-14): 27.7 PER, .578 TS%, 116 ORtg, 101 DRtg, 33.8 WS, .242 WS/48
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... s_advanced
Shaq (94-05): 27.5 PER, .567 TS%, 112 ORtg, 103 DRtg, 28.7 WS, .202 WS/48
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... s_advanced
Prime RS Per 100 Poss:
LeBron Prime (05-14) RS: 37.9 PTS, 10.0 RB, 9.4 AST, 2.3 STL, 1.1 BLK, 4.4 TOV
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... m:per_poss
Shaq Prime (94-05) RS: 37.5 PTS, 16.3 RB, 4.1 AST, 0.9 STL, 3.4 BLK, 3.9 TOV
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... m:per_poss
Prime PS Per 100 Poss:
LeBron Prime (05-14) PS Per 100: 36.3 PTS, 10.9 RB, 8.4 AST, 2.2 STL, 1.1 BLK, 4.5 TOV
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... s_per_poss
Shaq Prime (94-05) PS Per 100: 35.8 PTS, 16.9 RB, 4.1 AST, 0.8 STL, 3.1 BLK, 4.1 TOV
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... s_per_poss
......Now we are comparing 12 seasons to 10 seasons, though more accurately (recognizing the lack of injury trouble Lebron has had, which cannot be said for Shaq): 801 rs games for Shaq vs. 763 for Lebron. That's more or less an apples to apples comparison, imo.
And as you can see there is NOTHING Lebron had the higher rating in from SactoKingsfan's analysis that he doesn't still have the lead in. That lead is just smaller in some places. And there are now two categories by which Lebron has the lead, where he didn't within SactoKingsfan's analysis (rs WS and post-season WS). Note Lebron now has the edge in every single post-season advanced stat category listed (and all except DRtg for rs).
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
acrossthecourt wrote:GC Pantalones wrote:colts18 wrote:KG did underachieve quite a bit in the playoffs:
97: -7.48
98: 0.53
99: 0.87
00: 4.37
01: 1.42
02: -6.26
03: -3.62
04: 3.96
Overall: 0.80 SRS
In his Minnesota playoff prime from 99-04 his teams O ratings were -1.0 relative to their opponent. He had a .513 TS%, 103 O rating, and 3.5 TOV/game in that span.
He certainly let his teammates down offensively in 2004. His teammates actually performed well in the playoffs offensively but KG's offense was bad: .513 TS%, 100 O rating, over 4 TOV/game.
00 Shaq, 11 Dirk, 03 Duncan, 04 KG, 94 Hakeem. This is what their top 6 playoff minutes getter averaged in the playoffs:Code: Select all
PTS TS% TRB AST
Shaq 9.8 0.511 4.0 2.6
Hakeem 10.5 0.536 4.4 3.3
Duncan 10.2 0.512 4.3 2.1
Garnett 10.7 0.551 3.5 2.3
Dirk 10.5 0.557 4.3 2.8Code: Select all
PER WS/48 O rating D rating Ortg - Drtg
Shaq 13.7 0.090 108.8 108.3 0.5
Hakeem 14.1 0.101 108.2 106.5 1.7
Duncan 13.1 0.111 103.5 98.7 4.8
Garnett 14.9 0.114 110.8 103.5 7.3
Dirk 15.9 0.134 113.8 107.0 6.8
If you take out Shaq and KG's contributions during their 04 series, KG's cast had a .528 TS% and 107 O rating compared to Shaq's .513 TS% and 104 O rating. That is Peak KG vs out of peak Shaq and he still got outplayed by Shaq.
Yeah I've been looking more into KG and the whole "bad supporting cast" argument and outside of the years he completely missed the playoffs (not counting 05 where he should've made the playoffs with that team), and 03 he should've won a lot more. I'm actually lower on KG's prime than ever before. I mean those teams around him weren't that bad in 02 (they were actually good this year and they had the best G rotation in the league next to the Mavs), 04, or 05 and they underachieved. I mean the front office was horribly incompetent but I'm not really buying into the TB/Chauncey/Wally/Cassell/Spree wasn't enough argument. Especially not when you consider their performances in those seasons.
The problem is that those guys didn't play for him very long or concurrently, and their cast behind them was horrid.
Cassell played for them for only two seasons. One of those he was at 1500 minutes. When healthy, they won 58 games.
And in 05 even when Cassell played the team still wasn't winning enough to make the playoffs.
Sprewell played of them for only two seasons as well. They were his last two seasons before retirement. He was sub-50 TS% and sub 15 PER, below average. He was an athletic forward in his mid-30's and offered little.
Sprewell was always a guy that put up mediocre to bad numbers (at best). Hell you almost described his career post 99 in that post. How about his 18 per, 20/4/4 performance in the 04 playoffs? He was a bit washed but still a good starter in 04. In 05 he was washed up but about average. I'd take Spree in those years over a few of Duncan's guards (and his 04 year is better than any guard play Duncan got in the early 00s).
Wally Szczerbiak was one of the worst all-star selections ever and was a limited player. His shooting was useful, but he was closer to a specialist than a star.
Wally was a good role player. Again he was clearly above average in any way and he's about as good as Nic Batum I'd say.
Billups, like those two, played only two seasons as well. This was before he broke out in Detroit. He was not an all-star player in Minnesota.
First off Wally played in Minny for awhile. Secondly this is false. Chauncey played his way into a good contract and a starting role in 02. He went from 16/4/7 per 36 in 02 to 19/4/4 in 03. Both years he was super efficient and he had a 18 PER that last year in Minnesota. He also put up 22/5/6 in the playoffs and he didn't take another leap in his game until after the rule changes. Seems more like he needed a shot (blame that on the coach) but he was still great when he played (and he played 29 minutes a night).
Brandon was great for them, but he only played 2.5 seasons for them. Mid-season trade and his last season was wrecked by injuries. He was a pretty good player but nothing spectacular.
Brandon was very good. He had a 21 PER with Minnesota and they might've only got 200 games out of him but that's 200 games with a high level PG and that mid season trade was half the season (he played 21 out of Minnesota's 50 games). He also averaged a 21 PER in the 3 series he played next to KG.
Yeah, what a great cast. And what was worse was the bench behind them. The fact that you listed Sprewell makes me wonder if you even looked at his supporting cast at all besides just reading the names.
No one said it was a great cast just that he should've done more because those teams weren't "that" bad. The starting lineups were often above average (along with a weak bench outside of 01 iirc).
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
This is impressive stuff. I have picked Shaq, but this is a good arguement that LeBron has the edge over Shaq. I'm strongly considering changing my vote.
I have changed my vote from Shaq to LeBron
Spoiler:
I have changed my vote from Shaq to LeBron
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
One critique of Shaq I see is that his injury concerns caused his teams to underachieve. In the last thread, I typed out the teams that defeated Shaq's squads in the playoffs in the years he missed significant time and did not win a title. Every single one of them was a Conference Champion. Many of them were NBA champions. Four played at an all-time level either the entire season or at least at the time they faced Shaq's teams in the playoffs.
An Unbiased Fan did answer. I want to thank An Unbiased Fan for at the very least considering the question of when did Shaq's non-title teams underachieve in the playoffs when he missed time in the REG SEA. I invite others to do the same.
A phenomenon I have observed regarding Shaquille O'Neal is that the evolution of his game is rarely considered. With other players, we have clear eyes in regards to how they changed their games, how they improved. Magic Johnson went from having little range to improving his outside jumper and eventually developing a potent 3-point shot (also see my post about Magic's 4 peaks). At first, Kevin Garnett was a gangly 7-footer with small forward handles. He moved to PF, developed an elite jumper, took on a volume scoring load, became the premier pick-n-roll scrambler in NBA history, and showed himself to be at a near savant level when it came to understanding spacing on both ends of the floor. Hakeem was raw Akeem with a ballistic motor on defense that sometimes caused his own foul trouble and was turnover-prone. He became the most complete defender since Bill Russell and was the foundational piece of the first ever "Dominant Big with 4 3-point shooters" strategy in part because of his improvement in reading where the help defense is coming from.
With Shaq, he was big and dunked when he came in, and he was big and he dunked when he was at his best. Simple game. Even easier to simplify one's understanding of his game that way. It's harder to parse out the weaknesses and strengths year-to-year.
This will be a qualitative analysis of Shaquille O'Neal's 5 vs. 5 game throughout his career and the evolution we saw in his game. Though the year-to-year and pre-prime to peak changes aren't as stark as with other players, they do exist, and I hope to shed some light on them. This is not my explanation for why I am voting for Shaq here, and to be honest, I don't care who actually wins.
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997-1999
2000-2004
2005-2006
2007-2008
Problems from 2006 are full-blown now. Still an offensive threat because of strength inside, passing, and spacial awareness, but not for prolonged periods.
2009
PHX medical staff does miracles.
2010-2011
He hurt Cleveland more than he helped. However, when he played with Boston, I thought their 5-man units with Rondo, Shaq, and the BIG 3 were best-in-the-league good. Shaq's disadvantages on defense were negated by Garnett and also Rondo's solid pick-n-roll defense, and he was a dominant finisher with Allen/Pierce/KG providing super spacing and Rondo's passing.
I do hope this helps better understand Shaq's career arc. He wasn't close to being the same player in 1993, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2005, and 2011. He dunked a lot each year, but he wasn't the same player.
An Unbiased Fan did answer. I want to thank An Unbiased Fan for at the very least considering the question of when did Shaq's non-title teams underachieve in the playoffs when he missed time in the REG SEA. I invite others to do the same.
A phenomenon I have observed regarding Shaquille O'Neal is that the evolution of his game is rarely considered. With other players, we have clear eyes in regards to how they changed their games, how they improved. Magic Johnson went from having little range to improving his outside jumper and eventually developing a potent 3-point shot (also see my post about Magic's 4 peaks). At first, Kevin Garnett was a gangly 7-footer with small forward handles. He moved to PF, developed an elite jumper, took on a volume scoring load, became the premier pick-n-roll scrambler in NBA history, and showed himself to be at a near savant level when it came to understanding spacing on both ends of the floor. Hakeem was raw Akeem with a ballistic motor on defense that sometimes caused his own foul trouble and was turnover-prone. He became the most complete defender since Bill Russell and was the foundational piece of the first ever "Dominant Big with 4 3-point shooters" strategy in part because of his improvement in reading where the help defense is coming from.
With Shaq, he was big and dunked when he came in, and he was big and he dunked when he was at his best. Simple game. Even easier to simplify one's understanding of his game that way. It's harder to parse out the weaknesses and strengths year-to-year.
This will be a qualitative analysis of Shaquille O'Neal's 5 vs. 5 game throughout his career and the evolution we saw in his game. Though the year-to-year and pre-prime to peak changes aren't as stark as with other players, they do exist, and I hope to shed some light on them. This is not my explanation for why I am voting for Shaq here, and to be honest, I don't care who actually wins.
1993
Spoiler:
1994
Spoiler:
1995
Spoiler:
1996
Spoiler:
1997-1999
Spoiler:
2000-2004
Spoiler:
2005-2006
Spoiler:
2007-2008
Problems from 2006 are full-blown now. Still an offensive threat because of strength inside, passing, and spacial awareness, but not for prolonged periods.
2009
PHX medical staff does miracles.
2010-2011
He hurt Cleveland more than he helped. However, when he played with Boston, I thought their 5-man units with Rondo, Shaq, and the BIG 3 were best-in-the-league good. Shaq's disadvantages on defense were negated by Garnett and also Rondo's solid pick-n-roll defense, and he was a dominant finisher with Allen/Pierce/KG providing super spacing and Rondo's passing.
I do hope this helps better understand Shaq's career arc. He wasn't close to being the same player in 1993, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2005, and 2011. He dunked a lot each year, but he wasn't the same player.
Pay no mind to the battles you've won
It'll take a lot more than rage and muscle
Open your heart and hands, my son
Or you'll never make it over the river
It'll take a lot more than rage and muscle
Open your heart and hands, my son
Or you'll never make it over the river
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
magicmerl wrote:This is impressive stuff. I have picked Shaq, but this is a good arguement that LeBron has the edge over Shaq. I'm strongly considering changing my vote.
Why don't you read this post I made earlier regarding Shaq VS Lebron.
It is a pro-Shaq argument based primarily around playoff performance and overall longevity.
Keep in mind that I stopped at 9 years because Lebron has only had 9 playoff appearances.
Playoff PER
Lebron
Top 5 years : 29.1
Top 9 years : 27.7
Shaq
Top 5 years : 29.9
Top 9 years : 28.9
Shaq's average production over his first 9 years is greater then Lebron's.
Even looking at a shorter 5 year Peak span Shaq still has the clear edge.
He also has a sizable advantage when it comes to consistency which is addressed through the PER stat below and the elimination series stat further below it.
Number of years with a playoff PER above 26
Shaq : 9
Lebron : 5
_______________________________
Number of failures or disappointments in playoff elimination series.
Lebron : 5 (over an 9 year span)
Shaq : 2 (over a 13 year span)
Number of elite Finals performances
Shaq : 4 in 6 appearances.
Lebron : 2 in 5 appearances.
-------------
Shaq was clearly a significantly better playoff performer through their first 11 years.
Beyond that Shaq still has a 4 year edge in overall quality years.
Lebron is amazing and the sky still appears to be the limit for him career wise however let us not overrate him in the present.
Shaq was a significantly better playoff performer through their first 9-11 years and still has a sizable edge in true longevity.
For that reason I think it is entirely unreasonable to consider putting Lebron over him at this point.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
RayBan-Sematra wrote:magicmerl wrote:This is impressive stuff. I have picked Shaq, but this is a good arguement that LeBron has the edge over Shaq. I'm strongly considering changing my vote.
Why don't you read this post I made earlier regarding Shaq VS Lebron.
It is a pro-Shaq argument based primarily around playoff performance and overall longevity.
Keep in mind that I stopped at 9 years because Lebron has only had 9 playoff appearances.Playoff PER
Lebron
Top 5 years : 29.1
Top 9 years : 27.7
Shaq
Top 5 years : 29.9
Top 9 years : 28.9
How did you calculate these? Because based on BBR, if you average their PER for their top 5 years I get
LeBron Top5 Years (09-10, 12-14) Playoff PER 31.1 (the five year AVERAGE is better than Shaq's BEST year)
Shaq Top5 Years (97-00, 03) Playoff PER 30.0
Or if you make it a weighted by minutes played:
LeBron Top5 Years minute weighted Playoff PER 30.79
Shaq Top5 Years minute weighted Playoff PER 30.22
So I don't agree with your numbers, and they don't support the conclusion you are trying to reach (i.e. that Shaq produced more than LeBron in the playoffs).
I'm also uncomfortable about rating PER too highly. I think that Win Shares are a better all-in-one stat. And LeBron CRUSHES Shaq in a similar Win Share comparison:
Year Shaq Playoff WS/LeBron Playoff WS
#1 4.7/5.8 - LeBron wins
#2 3.9/5.2 - LeBron wins
#3 3.8/4.8 - LeBron wins
#4 3.7/4.3 - LeBron wins
#5 3/3.8 - LeBron wins
#6 2.4/3.7 - LeBron wins
#7 2.1/2.3 - LeBron wins
#8 1.6/2.2 - LeBron wins
#9 1.5/1.7 - LeBron wins
RayBan-Sematra wrote:Shaq's average production over his first 9 years is greater then Lebron's.
Even looking at a shorter 5 year Peak span Shaq still has the clear edge.
Please disclose your methodology for calculating 5 year PERs, as I was unable to reproduce your results.
RayBan-Sematra wrote:Number of failures or disappointments in playoff elimination series.
Lebron : 5 (over an 9 year span)
Shaq : 2 (over a 13 year span)
I think that the 'disappointment' narrative for LeBron is entirely overblown. Quite frankly, I don't care about it unless it relates to actual winning. So for me, that means the 2011 finals, and that's basically all. Even then, before the season started that year I decided that making the finals would be my 'expected result' for the heat, so as a team they met my expectations for that year.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
acrossthecourt wrote:Well I'm open to things. I'm leaning toward Magic or LeBron or maybe Shaq. Anyone got more info on Shaq pre-00?
93: The Magic improve by 8 SRS points when Shaq comes even though he is the only major change
xRAPM: +4.2 (8th in the league)
94: Averages 29/13, 60 FG%, improves team to 50 wins
xRAPM: +6.8 (2nd)
95: Magic improve again to 57 wins and the finals. Averages 29/11 (leads league in scoring). He becomes the only guy who beats prime Michael Jordan head to head in the playoffs. Outplays peak Hakeem 1 on 1 in the finals.
xRAPM: +6.4 (2nd)
96: Shaq misses a lot of games but was still impactful. The Magic had a 7 SRS in the games he played. In the playoffs he averaged 27/11, 64 FG% against the GOAT 72 win Bulls. He completely tore apart the greatest team in history.
xRAPM: +5.8 (2nd)
97: Misses a lot of games (31). Worst prime year. Averages 26/13
xRAPM: 1st overall
RAPM: 17th
98: Best non-peak year. Was the best player in the NBA when he played. Averaged 28/11, 29 PER. In the playoffs he steps his game up and averages 31/10, 61 FG%, 31 PER (his best career playoff PER). Beats a 61 win Sonics in the playoffs. He was better than Michael Jordan in this season both in the regular season and the postseason.
xRAPM: 2nd
RAPM: 1st
99: Lockout year. Relative down year but he was still productive. On first glance his numbers in the playoffs vs SA look mediocre. 24/13, 49 FG% but he was doing that against the greatest frontline in history. Opposing centers averaged just 41 FG% against them so Shaq's FG% was like +8 against them.
xRAPM: 3rd
RAPM: 2nd
He was still very productive pre prime and was a really good playoff performer. In the playoffs during that span he averaged 27/11/3, 57 FG%, .573 TS%, 28 PER.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
drza wrote:Garnett's defense
I debated holding off on this post for a thread or two, but I think I better get it in now. Unfortunately (and fortunately) I'm going to be limited in my posting for much of the next week. The good thing is that I'm going to Vegas to check out the Summer League. The bad part is that I won't have much time to post the way I like in here. So, I guess now is the best time for me to post this.
[...]
This is in response to the [...] post by ThaRegul8r that pointed out how Robinson, Olajuwon and Garnett are all compared to Russell and he asks how KG fits into that comparison. He notes that he didn't watch much of KG in Minnesota, cites some opinions that KG's defense wasn't actually as impactful as the others, and asks for a more complete scouting report/review of KG's defense. You've made it a point in all of your posts so far that you want to be told both sides of the story. I try to do that here. I'm brutally honest about areas where I feel like KG isn't as strong on D, but I also cover in a lot of depth where I think that he's uniquely strong. Bottom line, my evaluation is that KG might just be the prototype for maximum defensive impact in the modern post-rule-changes version of the NBA. Without further ado (and be warned, this is LONG. I got my teeth into this one, and tried to go in depth over a career that spans two decades).
Let's start with the Russell comparisons. In some ways those comps make sense because Russell and KG share some traits: excellent lateral movement, length/speed over power, excellent defensive IQ. However, as a straight stylistic comp there are clear differences as well. Russell was a much better shot-blocker than Garnett's ever been. Garnett's defense is even more horizontal than Russell's, at times out beyond the 3-point line. Defense of the on-ball pick was a much bigger part of Garnett's era than Russell's, while 1-on-1 post defense was a bigger part of the earlier era than it is today. So the direct comparison of Russell to Garnett on defense isn't a perfect fit...I'd say, in fact, that Olajuwon or Robinson might share more stylistic similarities to Russell than KG does.
Where I do think the Russell/Garnett comparisons are apt, though, are in the sense that each used their blend of length and athleticism in ways that previously weren't the norm. In Russell's time, the convention was that big men weren't supposed to jump to block shots...then Russell showed that blocking shots was another, even better way to dominate on defense. Ironically, by Garnett's time the convention was that the best way for a big man to play defense was to block shots and protect the paint...then Garnett showed that going horizontal and hindering the offenses percentages in the mid-range could be a different way to achieve defensive dominance. Garnett also shares Russell's appreciation for the mental aspects of defense...knowing everyone's role on defense and where they should be, knowing everyone's role on the OFFENSE and knowing where they want to go, playing mental games with opponents...it is here that Garnett clearly followed in Russell's footsteps. So while Garnett doesn't mirror Russell stylistically, I think that he's the closest that we've seen to the evolutionary version of who Russell was as a defender.
So, let's now look closer at what Garnett brought to the table on defense.
One important point is that Garnett's defensive skills and approach changed over time. There were definite eras of KG defense, if you will. And this could work either to KG's advantage or disadvantage, in this type of evaluation session, because there were different strengths and weaknesses at each time.Let's start with his 1-on-1 defense through the eras.
KG's 1-on-1 defense through the eras:
Early 1-on-1 wing defense:Spoiler:
Prime 1-on-1 big man defense:Spoiler:
Late Garnett 1-on-1 defense:Spoiler:
KG's help defense through the eras
Young KG (Up through 2001) played during the time before the illegal defense rule change.Spoiler:
2002 gets its own category. Starting for the 2002 season, the NBA changed the rules to allow zone defenses.Spoiler:
Peak KG (2003, 2004).Spoiler:
The lost years (2005 - 2007):Spoiler:
The late-prime Celtics years (2008 + 2009).Spoiler:
From 2010 - 2013, after the knee injury, KG had lost his fastball.Spoiler:
Bottom line: KG's defense has changed a lot through the years, as his roles have changed. At every iteration he was a hugely impactful defender, and at his best he was the most impactful defender of the post rule-changes era in the NBA. His absurd combination of PnR defense, middle linebacker abilities, defensive IQ, length/athletic ability ratio, mind games and aggressiveness make him a unique beast. He isn't perfect. in his prime he could have (and did) guard pretty much anyone between Jordan and Shaq, but you wouldn't have actually wanted to put him on Jordan or Shaq (though in his career he actually was the primary defender for both Jordan and Shaq at different times). His mind games often work, but sometimes they backfire. When Flip Saunders asked him to play the closest that I've ever seen to a 1-man team defense, he eventually came up short against a team with too many offensive weapons. And while he measured out as one of the best defensive players of his era while in his offensive peak, his defensive peak came later in a situation that was more conducive to defensive impact. So there were limits. But those limits were very few, very far between, and surrounded one of the most brilliant defensive careers that the NBA has seen. Was KG the evolutionary Bill Russell? Not for me to say. But I will say that he's the best defensive player that I've ever watched live action, and he certainly has an argument that he could walk in Russell's shoes. Which is about as big of a compliment as any defensive player can receive.
(I tried to spoiler the post, but apparently there's a limit as to how many spoilers can be within a spoilered post.)
Outstanding! This is the kind of post I'd like to see more of in this project.
Doctor MJ wrote:First off, just wow drza! What I would give to see breakdowns of everyone else in such detail.
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I have the votes as follows:
Shaq 13 -- penbeast0, RSCD3, colts18, Heartbreak Kid, ronnymac2, batmana, Narigo, MacGill, therealbig3, DQuinn1595, Ray Ban-Sematra, Mutnt, rich316
Magic 7 -- TrueLAFan, andrewww, basketballefan, GC Pantalones, JordansBulls, Clyde Frazier, ardee
LeBron 4 -- baller2014, trex8063, SactoKingsFan, magicmer1
Hakeem 3 -- Gregoire, fpliii, 90sAllDecade
Bird -- Warspite
RUNOFF -- SHAQ v. MAGIC
Shaq 13 -- penbeast0, RSCD3, colts18, Heartbreak Kid, ronnymac2, batmana, Narigo, MacGill, therealbig3, DQuinn1595, Ray Ban-Sematra, Mutnt, rich316
Magic 7 -- TrueLAFan, andrewww, basketballefan, GC Pantalones, JordansBulls, Clyde Frazier, ardee
LeBron 4 -- baller2014, trex8063, SactoKingsFan, magicmer1
Hakeem 3 -- Gregoire, fpliii, 90sAllDecade
Bird -- Warspite
RUNOFF -- SHAQ v. MAGIC
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
GC Pantalones wrote:acrossthecourt wrote:GC Pantalones wrote:Yeah I've been looking more into KG and the whole "bad supporting cast" argument and outside of the years he completely missed the playoffs (not counting 05 where he should've made the playoffs with that team), and 03 he should've won a lot more. I'm actually lower on KG's prime than ever before. I mean those teams around him weren't that bad in 02 (they were actually good this year and they had the best G rotation in the league next to the Mavs), 04, or 05 and they underachieved. I mean the front office was horribly incompetent but I'm not really buying into the TB/Chauncey/Wally/Cassell/Spree wasn't enough argument. Especially not when you consider their performances in those seasons.
The problem is that those guys didn't play for him very long or concurrently, and their cast behind them was horrid.
Cassell played for them for only two seasons. One of those he was at 1500 minutes. When healthy, they won 58 games.
And in 05 even when Cassell played the team still wasn't winning enough to make the playoffs.Sprewell played of them for only two seasons as well. They were his last two seasons before retirement. He was sub-50 TS% and sub 15 PER, below average. He was an athletic forward in his mid-30's and offered little.
Sprewell was always a guy that put up mediocre to bad numbers (at best). Hell you almost described his career post 99 in that post. How about his 18 per, 20/4/4 performance in the 04 playoffs? He was a bit washed but still a good starter in 04. In 05 he was washed up but about average. I'd take Spree in those years over a few of Duncan's guards (and his 04 year is better than any guard play Duncan got in the early 00s).Wally Szczerbiak was one of the worst all-star selections ever and was a limited player. His shooting was useful, but he was closer to a specialist than a star.
Wally was a good role player. Again he was clearly above average in any way and he's about as good as Nic Batum I'd say.Billups, like those two, played only two seasons as well. This was before he broke out in Detroit. He was not an all-star player in Minnesota.
First off Wally played in Minny for awhile. Secondly this is false. Chauncey played his way into a good contract and a starting role in 02. He went from 16/4/7 per 36 in 02 to 19/4/4 in 03. Both years he was super efficient and he had a 18 PER that last year in Minnesota. He also put up 22/5/6 in the playoffs and he didn't take another leap in his game until after the rule changes. Seems more like he needed a shot (blame that on the coach) but he was still great when he played (and he played 29 minutes a night).Brandon was great for them, but he only played 2.5 seasons for them. Mid-season trade and his last season was wrecked by injuries. He was a pretty good player but nothing spectacular.
Brandon was very good. He had a 21 PER with Minnesota and they might've only got 200 games out of him but that's 200 games with a high level PG and that mid season trade was half the season (he played 21 out of Minnesota's 50 games). He also averaged a 21 PER in the 3 series he played next to KG.Yeah, what a great cast. And what was worse was the bench behind them. The fact that you listed Sprewell makes me wonder if you even looked at his supporting cast at all besides just reading the names.
No one said it was a great cast just that he should've done more because those teams weren't "that" bad. The starting lineups were often above average (along with a weak bench outside of 01 iirc).
Hm? In 2005 they were at 44 wins; Memphis was at 45 and made the playoffs. He played ten minutes less than the previous season. You're saying a healthy Cassell playing more minutes won't give them another win or two? If you're saying that, then you're saying he's not a valuable player, which refutes your own point.
If you want to try to win with old Sprewell trying to feed his family, go ahead. But there's no evidence he's a great player. He can score a lot because he can take a lot of shots. That's it. If we're all about PPG, then let's make sure Carmelo is top 20 or 30.
Okay so Wally is as good as Batum (completely different player with a more varied skillset, but ok.) So what? Batum isn't very good. He's not a game-changer.
I don't know why I'm supposed to be impressed by an 18 PER and 29 minutes a night.
When KG has a legitimate all-star caliber player, he wins 58 in 2004. Brandon was close to that, although he only made the all-star team years when he was younger and Garnett was 20 and 21, respectively, when they played together.
I have no idea why people think these casts are so great.
Since his critics use PER a lot, I'll use that to show how many wins his teammates were worth in 2003, which is a year brought up fairly often regarding when he "underachieved."
Here's the method: estimate the PER strength of his teammates by using their adjacent season PER. Only use a PER from a different team. I'm doing this to eliminate any interaction between Garnett and the player. Using an adjacent season gives a good rough guess at the PER because it's only a one season change. The only player who stayed with Minnesota long enough that I had to use a season far removed was Szczerbiak. However, he was much younger in 2003, and I used his rating when he was closer to a prime age. If I used an aging curve, it would have helped Garnett's case even more.
Here are the PER's I used:
Troy Hudson 15.3
Rasho Nesterovic 15.3
Anthony Peeler 11.8
Kendall Gill 11.1
Wally Szczerbiak 17.2
Gary Trent 13.8
Joe Smith 16.6
Marc Jackson 13.2
Rod Strickland 14.9
Loren Woods 9.9
Mike Wilks 9.1
Igor Rakocevic 8.4
Reggie Slater 19.2
Then I use Hollinger's formula for wins.
Spoiler:
(For replacement level since this is a slightly different era, I just use the average of all those positions: 10.82. The differences are really minor.)
The sum of their estimated wins? 26.3.
Which implies Garnett was worth 24.7 wins....
But yeah, the supporting cast wasn't the problem.
Twitter: AcrossTheCourt
Website; advanced stats based with a few studies:
http://ascreamingcomesacrossthecourt.blogspot.com
Website; advanced stats based with a few studies:
http://ascreamingcomesacrossthecourt.blogspot.com
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
- RayBan-Sematra
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
magicmerl wrote:How did you calculate these? Because based on BBR, if you average their PER for their top 5 years I get
Lebron's best 5 year stretch going by PER in the playoffs was from 09-13.
His playoff PER over those 5 years is 29.1
-Lebron's playoff PER over his entire 9 year playoff career is 27.7
Shaq's best 5 year stretch going by PER in the playoffs was from 97-01.
His playoff PER average over those 5 years is 29.9
-Shaq's playoff PER over his best 9 year stretch is 28.9
You can confirm this all by going to BBR.
So when looking at their best 5 year stretch or even Shaq's best 9 years VS LBJ's entire playoff career (which is 9 years) he clearly comes out well ahead in average production.
Then we can see that beyond that Shaq was far more consistent.
Number of years with a playoff PER above 26
Shaq : 9
Lebron : 5
I think that the 'disappointment' narrative for LeBron is entirely overblown. Quite frankly, I don't care about it unless it relates to actual winning.
Performance in elimination series is VERY important when it comes to winning.
If a player is consistently playing poorly in the playoffs in elimination (usually when facing a tough opponent or a tough defense) then that is certainly a big deal and will be held against them.
So for me, that means the 2011 finals, and that's basically all.
He also underperformed in 07 VS the Cav's, 08/10 VS Boston and 11/13 VS the Mavs and the Spurs.
So Shaq was a more productive and consistent playoff performer over his first 11 years or his first 9 playoff appearences and he performed far better in elimination & Finals series.
Add to that that Shaq has 2 more dominant years + 2 quality years in longevity and I don't see any case for Lebron.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
penbeast0 wrote:Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I have the votes as follows:
Shaq 13 -- penbeast0, RSCD3, colts18, Heartbreak Kid, ronnymac2, batmana, Narigo, MacGill, therealbig3, DQuinn1595, Ray Ban-Sematra, Mutnt, rich316
Magic 7 -- TrueLAFan, andrewww, basketballefan, GC Pantalones, JordansBulls, Clyde Frazier, ardee
LeBron 4 -- baller2014, trex8063, SactoKingsFan, magicmer1
Hakeem 3 -- Gregoire, fpliii, 90sAllDecade
Bird -- Warspite
RUNOFF -- SHAQ v. MAGIC
Ok, in the runoff, I change my vote back to Shaq

Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6 -- Shaq v. Magic
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6 -- Shaq v. Magic
Shaq can't even hold Magic jock strap.
This is Magic easily.
Count me in as Magic being better than Shaq
Again, this is a discussion thread. A post like this doesn't add anything
This is Magic easily.
Count me in as Magic being better than Shaq
Again, this is a discussion thread. A post like this doesn't add anything
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
penbeast0 wrote:Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I have the votes as follows:
Shaq 13 -- penbeast0, RSCD3, colts18, Heartbreak Kid, ronnymac2, batmana, Narigo, MacGill, therealbig3, DQuinn1595, Ray Ban-Sematra, Mutnt, rich316
Magic 7 -- TrueLAFan, andrewww, basketballefan, GC Pantalones, JordansBulls, Clyde Frazier, ardee
LeBron 4 -- baller2014, trex8063, SactoKingsFan, magicmer1
Hakeem 3 -- Gregoire, fpliii, 90sAllDecade
Bird -- Warspite
RUNOFF -- SHAQ v. MAGIC
I voted for Magic.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6 -- Shaq v. Magic
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6 -- Shaq v. Magic
Exodus wrote:Shaq can't even hold Magic jock strap.
This is Magic easily.
Count me in as Magic being better than Shaq
Try to be objective and keep personal bias out of your votes.
Or atleast make it less obvious.

Anyway... that is all I will say about that.
Further reminder to all that votes must be accompanied by an explanation/analysis.
I believe simple "I vote for x player" type votes won't be counted.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
RayBan-Sematra wrote:magicmerl wrote:How did you calculate these? Because based on BBR, if you average their PER for their top 5 years I get
Lebron's best 5 year stretch going by PER in the playoffs was from 09-13.
His playoff PER over those 5 years is 29.1
-Lebron's playoff PER over his entire 9 year playoff career is 27.7
Shaq's best 5 year stretch going by PER in the playoffs was from 97-01.
His playoff PER average over those 5 years is 29.9
-Shaq's playoff PER over his best 9 year stretch is 28.9
You can confirm this all by going to BBR.
I'm guessing MagicMerl (and perhaps other LeBron advocates (and others) might question you on the virtue of having your best playoff years consecutively. Is there a special signficance to this that makes your career better. If not wouldn't the best 5 years to use when citing a players best five years be that players best five years no matter where they came in their career? Particularly as the term "stretch" is only just being introduced to the conversation.
RayBan-Sematra wrote:Performance in elimination series is VERY important when it comes to winning.
If a player is consistently playing poorly in the playoffs in elimination (usually when facing a tough opponent or a tough defense) then that is certainly a big deal and will be held against them.So for me, that means the 2011 finals, and that's basically all.
He also underperformed in 07 VS the Cav's, 08/10 VS Boston and 11/13 VS the Mavs and the Spurs.
The question here would be, what are "elimination series"? Because by the expected definition (series in which you are eliminated) how you played is irrelevent to winning (because, by definiton in those series, you were in fact eliminated, thus you could have performed excelently but for it to be counted you must have lost, and had you played even better and turned the series, it wouldn't be counted in this sample because it wouldn't be an elimination series. Then too aren't you punishing a player for carrying a team through a team it shouldn't have gotten by, e.g. Pistons '07, if the next series is slightly below par. Would it have been better to have lost earlier?)
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
RayBan-Sematra wrote:magicmerl wrote:How did you calculate these? Because based on BBR, if you average their PER for their top 5 years I get
Lebron's best 5 year stretch going by PER in the playoffs was from 09-13.
His playoff PER over those 5 years is 29.1
-Lebron's playoff PER over his entire 9 year playoff career is 27.7
Shaq's best 5 year stretch going by PER in the playoffs was from 97-01.
His playoff PER average over those 5 years is 29.9
-Shaq's playoff PER over his best 9 year stretch is 28.9
You can confirm this all by going to BBR.
Ok, I see you are using contiguous 5 year blocks, not their best 5 years. Your numbers still appear to me to be wrong. Shaq's 5yrPER is 29.6. LeBron's is ..... 29.6. Why is this evidence that Shaq is better?
In addition, an arguement that I have seen cited multiple times is how transcendant Shaq was in 2000. Certainly he had a dominating performance, leading the playoffs in both offensive and defensive win shares, on .556TS%, with 30.5PER. The thing is, LeBron's 2012 campaign is arguably even better. He has a similar number of games/minutes/PER as Shaq, but his win shares just blow Shaq out of the water, and he has the edge in .576TS%, as well as ORtg and DRtg.
RayBan-Sematra wrote:I think that the 'disappointment' narrative for LeBron is entirely overblown. Quite frankly, I don't care about it unless it relates to actual winning.
Performance in elimination series is VERY important when it comes to winning.
I think it's better just to win, than it is to perform well while losing.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6 -- Shaq v. Magic
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6 -- Shaq v. Magic
My run-off vote goes to Shaq since I have him over everyone other than LeBron in the 6-10 tier.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #6
Owly wrote:I'm guessing MagicMerl (and perhaps other LeBron advocates (and others) might question you on the virtue of having your best playoff years consecutively. Is there a special signficance to this that makes your career better. If not wouldn't the best 5 years to use when citing a players best five years be that players best five years no matter where they came in their career? Particularly as the term "stretch" is only just being introduced to the conversation.
I don't know it just seemed logical to me.
When people look at a players Peak years they are usually in some consecutive time period.
00-02 for Shaq or 98-03
93-95 for Hakeem
06-09 for Kobe etc...
Plus none of that really lessens my argument since I also compared Lebron's entire 9 year playoff career to Shaq's best 9 year stretch and in that comparison Shaq still has a huge edge in productivity & consistency.
The question here would be, what are "elimination series"?
An elimination series is the last playoff series of the year a player takes part in.
If a team keeps losing in the playoffs with the star player performing poorly in elimination then that is something to worry about and something that should be held against him.
magicmerl wrote:Ok, I see you are using contiguous 5 year blocks, not their best 5 years. Your numbers still appear to me to be wrong. Shaq's 5yrPER is 29.6. LeBron's is ..... 29.6. Why is this evidence that Shaq is better?
Are you using regular-season numbers?
Otherwise I don't see how you are getting different results.
I made sure to test out every possible 5 year block to make sure I selected the best one for each player.
In addition, an arguement that I have seen cited multiple times is how transcendant Shaq was in 2000.
The thing is, LeBron's 2012 campaign is arguably even better.
I don't think so.
Lebron went through a weaker conference, had better support from his cast and didn't have near the kind of defensive impact that Shaq had which won't show up in PER.
Plus Lebron was playing in a league that changed its rules to benefit his style of play while Shaq had no such luxury.
One can argue that the Barkley rule which was put in place around 99 actually made life harder on him.
I think it's better just to win, than it is to perform well while losing.
I think it is important to play well in victory or defeat.
Maybe if you played better in defeat then the defeat would have been a victory.
How a player performs in elimination especially if said series are usually coming against tougher competition is very important.
If they can't remain individually effective when the going gets tough well... that is gonna hold them back against other legends who did.
I mean if I have to coach a Finals series against the 2013 Spurs and I have my pick of 00 Shaq or 13 Lebron who do you think I am gonna pick?