WhateverBro wrote:Hornet Mania wrote:WhateverBro wrote:Instead of complaining about the results of the RealGM 100 - why don't you provide solid evidence that he is in fact not as good as some of his peers? I've been reading throught he whole project and thread after thread just keeps making Garnett stronger, while the majority of supporters of other players are whining about the results, rather than showing what makes other players a better choice than KG.
Just look at the thread for the 11th spot. I find it mind boggling that people can actually question KG at 11th place after the discussions held in that thread. He's a polarizing figure because he's not your typical all-time player (volume scoring, winning) but that does not mean that he isn't an all-time player. Tim Duncan would most likely suffer from the same thing if he was drafted by a team as poorly ran as Minnesota.
Because it's borderline-pointless. The only criticism one can have about Garnett is that, somehow, in spite of all his perceived statistical impact, his teams got spanked year after year in Minnesota. Somehow, in spite of all statistical evidence, the apparently 11th-greatest player of all time could only win more than one playoff game twice in seven years. Guys like Wade in 09 or Kobe in 2006 managed to pull similarly awful casts to Game 7, KG could only get to the final game (in that case Game 5, because it was the old format) a single time. His failure to actually produce wins is his only flaw as a player. But no one in that thread seems terribly concerned about discussing it so why scream into the wind?
There is no statistical argument against KG, because he obviously was a beast in that regard, and certain advanced stats (particularly RAPM) are even more glowing about his impact. If you are laser-focused on stats KG is a god. If you are focused on only wins KG is mediocre (in terms of all-time greats). I think when factoring in stats + how that translated into winning KG is somewhere in the latter part of the top 20, which seems to be the general consensus of this poll as well. But the voting group in the Top 100 project for the most part has disregarded whether the stats translated into wins because they just shrug and say "Minnesota's teams sucked, KG couldn't have done better" in spite of other greats actually doing as good or better with similarly poor rosters. That is their prerogative, of course, but I have seen no evidence to suggest they listen to anything but raw numbers when it comes to Garnett and in raw numbers KG is nigh untouchable.
Sorry if that seems a bit harsh. I've been reading the threads in the Top 100 project with great interest, and have learned quite a bit from them and appreciate the knowledge I've gained from it. But the KG discussion has almost wholly dismissed the disconnect between his advanced statistical impact and what actually occurred in reality for nearly a decade, and it has sort of put a damper on my enthusiasm. I'm sure it will pick back up as the project rolls on, since I was really looking forward to hearing of guys in the 21-100 range more anyway because those are the ones who rarely get lionized.
Ok, so exactly what happened when KG played in Boston? Did he simply learn how to translate his impact into wins? Did he improve as he aged? It seems like most of your concerns should disappear with what happened in Boston.
What do you believe KGs results wouldve been if he had played with Bostons 08-13 squads during his prime?
What do you believe any all time greats results would be if they played with 2 HOF's(Pierce/Allen)and an all star 4th player(rondo) in their primes?