Clyde Frazier wrote:Spoiler:
Heh, it seems volume scorers, no matter how well they play can't catch a break sometimes…
(And I know you didn't specifically say they had bad seasons, although i did catch the "yikes that's too high" comment before you edited it out)
No, not saying they're bad. Rather I'm providing a list of guys to compare because the point is to find one example where a 34 PPG guy is rated below a 19/10 guy (like Walton over Gervin.) And yeah, Carmelo was too high. I forgot he was third and someone voted for him instead of LeBron.
And no, it's not a moot point. The question was phrased as, can there *ever* be a 19/10 player over a 34 PPG player?
trex_8063 wrote:acrossthecourt wrote:
Myth 7: Garnett's teammates in 2006 or 2005 were comparable to Duncan in the early 00's
See myth 6 or ...
Tony Parker Not until '02, and not even remotely like the Parker we know today until '05
Bruce Bowen
Stephen Jackson 2 years, both pre-prime or at least early prime, and one of which he mostly missed or was benched.
Malik Rose
David Robinson Post-prime and/or twilight years.
Manu Ginobili Not until '03, and not the star-level Ginobili until '05.
Steve Smith Post-prime (age 32-33).
Steve Kerr Not that he was EVER a stud, but post-prime (age 33+).
versus...
Trenton Hassell
Marko Jaric
Wally Szczerbiak
Ricky Davis
Rashad McCants
Eddie Griffin
Marcus Banks
Mark Blount
So anyway, not saying KG had an equal supporting cast in Minny during the years specified; but it's not the large gap that it appears you're trying to imply with name recognition (look: Parker and Ginobili!). Both Parker and Ginobili weren't there until at least 2-3 years into the "early 00's", and weren't particularly noteworthy players until AFTER the "early 00's". And everyone else listed except for Bowen and Rose was either pre-prime or post-prime/twilight.
Post-prime, pre-peak, post-modern, proto-punk, etc. Robinson/Parker/Manu are still much better than the level of support Garnett had, and I don't think it's close. The support level only gets close when Cassell and Wally Z are healthy, but rarely happened at the same time. Bowen's a better version of Hassell, Szczerbiak is pretty limited but honestly young Ginoibli was at least as good (Szczerbiak had issues staying on the court, so it's not a simple minutes argument.) Then things get really dire. Relying on Ricky Davis on offense. Guys like Mark Blunt and Mark Madsen are significant rotation pieces. And when Cassell was healthy, they did go to the WCF.