My one man quest to make an enemy of everyone in the project (okay my comments on the thread so far
Chuck Texas wrote:colts18 wrote:Here is how certain players did with and without Nash. Nash showed huge impact on these players and it could be argued that Nash made them stars.
Marion:
Before Nash: .513 TS%, 107 O rating
Nash comes to Phx: .566 TS%, 116 O rating
08 w/Nash: .594 TS%, 119 O rating
08 after Nash: .503 TS%, 99 O rating
Amare:
Before Nash: .536 TS%, 102 O rating
Nash comes to Phx: .617 TS%, 121 O rating
with Nash 2010: .615 TS%, 117 O rating
after Nash 2011: .565 TS%, 109 O rating
Shaq:
08 before Nash: .577 TS%, 100 O rating
08 with Nash: .605 TS%, 103 O rating
09 with Nash: .623 TS%, 117 O rating
10 leaves Nash: .565 TS%, 104 O rating
IF you are going to do this, at least put Dirk in there for consistency. Especially if you are going to try and give Nash credit for Shaq-Daddy.
You'd also want to note that the league Ortg rose from 102.9 to 106.1 taking a chunk out of the player improvements. You'd want to note Amar'e's age (and the expected growth at that point); that Marion only matched his '03 offensive win shares and the pg situation from which Nash was an improvement (34 games of Marbury, then Eisley and Barbosa (not a pg)). Not that Nash didn't help, he clearly did, but "made them stars" would seem to be overstating things.
rich316 wrote:2) I'm not as high on Oscar as others. Chemistry/leadership is big for me, and that looks to be a big minus for him. Nonetheless, his all-around game suggests he would be very effective in many situations. His impact on the Bucks was big, but it's hard for me to take a guy who seems to poison team harmony. Are there any contrarian accounts of Oscar actually being a good teammate?
Good teammate? Depends what you mean. Is there something that makes him seem like a happy, fun guy? Probably not.
I had a post (not on this site) where there's a few quotes specifically about him elevating teammates but I can't locate it presently I may search again later if anyone's particularly interested, and there's obviously Jabbar in
Giant Steps talking about how much he made the game easier in Milwaukee and the suggestion in Tall Tales that he gifted teammate Adrian "Odie" Smith an All-Star Game MVP (at a time when wages weren't so great for lesser players and the MVP winner got a car).
In any case "poison team harmony" seems not only inaccurate in degree but incorrect (or just imprecise with language) in the manner of his influence (his -lesser- teammates were perhaps fearful-respectful; so not a case of causing disunity).
Baller2014 wrote:A lot of Oscar voters are using Oscar's results in games he missed with the Royals as their key argument. Just to give some perspective to that:
1) The evidence suggested Oscar was making the Royals 26 wins better. In contrast, Nash was making the Suns 30 wins better in games he missed v.s games he played from 05-11. Nash was doing even better if we exclude the 2009 disaster season, where coach Porter arrived and tried to run the offense through Shaq instead of Nash (the equivalent of Spo saying to Lebron this year: "you did well last year Lebron, but we're going to mix it up next season and try running the offense through Wade, and playing you off-ball more").
2) Oscar's sample size is highly problematic. Almost all the games missed come from 3 seasons out of 10, and those seasons are right at the beginning and end of his time with the Royals (and, of course, those are the seasons he tended to have the least help). In the other 7 seasons Oscar missed between 0 and 5 games, so we have no idea if those were just end of season games where the coach rested all the best players against the Celtics or what (in which case, of course they'd lose, but it wouldn't be because of Oscar's absence). It's interesting to note that a guy who was supposed to have a 26 win impact did not improve the Royals anything like 26 wins when he joined the team. Looking at the team record before and after his first season with the Royals, the win pace difference is significantly less (even if we factor in win pace in games Oscar played). Nash on the other hand certainly improved the Suns consistently with his with/without results (the Suns were not in the playoffs before he arrived, and became a juggernaut with him, then when Nash left the Suns they collapsed completely, even though he was no longer in his prime at the time).
3) Oscar played in a pretty weak era, and doesn't seem to have made his teams good in the way Nash did with the Suns in a tougher era.
Hasn't this been addressed already ...
Notanoob wrote:Bill Walton was a better player than David Robinson, IMO, but oh well.
I'd also suggest that Chuck had a better peak than the Mailman, and should get some consideration for being so utterly dominant on offense.
I’m not convinced he was a better player, but you’d struggle to get Walton in anywhere near soon if people are using or factoring in any variation of career value added.
90sAllDecade wrote:How was Karl's defense in younger years, how good was 80's and early 90's Malone's defense? How was his horizontal defense, like perimeter and on PnR?
Don’t have the books available to me atm, but here’s how he graded on Rick Barry and Jordan Cohn’s Scouting Bibles (scale went, D, C, B, A, AA, AAA with pluses and minuses for subtle differences, B is average, haven’t got all the grades on the computer but have most)
89-90 (written in 89): AA
90-91: A
91-92: A-
92-93: A-
93-94: B
To give you an idea of what that meant here are the other AA defenders from 89-90: Stockton, Rodney McCray, Craig Ehlo, Dan Majerle, Rick Mahorn, John “Hot Rod” Williams, Harold Pressley, Bill Hanzlik, Bobby Hansen, T.R. Dunn, Gary Grant, Elston Turner, Herb Williams, Wayne “Tree” Rollins, Larry Krystkowiak, Jon Koncak and Charles Jones (there were 19 AAA defenders).
Clyde Frazier wrote:Baller2014 wrote:Clyde Frazier wrote:
This is fairly inaccurate. He never had a "fantastic team" around him, and certainly nothing substantially better than what Dwight had in his 09 finals run. You make it seem like he had no playoff success beyond 94, where in reality they routinely lost to a bulls team that essentially no one beat in a span of 8 years.
The Ewing theory was based on a 36 year old semi-healthy Ewing, nothing close to prime Ewing, and he still played in part of that finals run, and had a positive impact.
I won't even comment on the super role player statement. That was just bizarre.
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On plenty of occasions Ewing had teams with multiple all-stars, and they still weren't contenders until they got even more stacked under Riley's coaching. Multiple all-stars is certainly a good support cast relative to the guys he is being compared to in the next 10-15 slots. Ewing is a good comparison to Dwight IMO. Not sure who I'd prefer.
If you're going to call starks and oakley legitimate all stars because they made 1 team each in careers that spanned 13 and 19 seasons respectively, there's nothing further to discuss.
It's a fact, yes, a fact that ewing never had a consistent 2nd option in his prime. Starks was a fan favorite and played with as much effort as you could ask for, but he easily flew off the handle and was prone to shot happy scoring droughts. From 92-95, starks had his 4 best seasons as a knick. During that span, he had 60 games where he scored 10 pts or less and shot 40% or less from the field:
http://bkref.com/tiny/EZjDDThe knicks still won more than half of those games during that span with him playing that poorly. This happened 16 times in the playoffs, and they still went 9-7:
http://bkref.com/tiny/Y3Yak::waits for the counter of "like i said they were so stacked, they won in spite of starks playing that poorly"::
Ewing never had a reliable offensive second option whilst he was in his prime (’88-‘97?). But his best teams did have some very strong defensive talent. Mason, Oakley, Starks and Harper were all excellent in that area.
Pointing out Oakley’s longevity (when talking about his ASG appearances) doesn’t help your case. And the Starks thing ignores that he took a lot of threes (and he was just very streaky), it also ignores that many of those “bad” games are just him being a reserve (27 games of the sample he played 24 minutes or less) and him not having enough shots for fg% to mean much of anything (21 games of 8 shots or less, meaning if he didn’t make 50% he had to be below 40%).
Not that I’d suggest Starks and Oakley are what you’d think of when you say all-stars (and I’m wondering if the “multiple” pre-Riley all-stars is counting Strickland –not technically an all-star - and Mark Jackson who were nice but redundant and for obvious reasons only one would be on court).
Big picture he had good talent there (factoring in D) in the mid-90s, though possibly a little more shooting/spacing would have helped. I don't see him on many people's radar until Robinson gets in.
Basketballefan wrote:BallerTed wrote:Chris Paul deserves some traction.
The NBA's all-time leader in offensive rating. The sixth all-time leader in PER and fourth all-time leader in WS/48 behind only Jordan, D-Rob and Wilt.
In comparison to a player like Kobe who is currently in the discussion for #12
Per 100
Player ---- Years ---- PPG ---- RPG ---- APG ---- eFG% ---- TS%---- ORTG----DRTG----WS/48----PER
Paul --- '08-'14 ---- 28.0 -----6.2. ---- 15.1 -----.521 -----.585 ---- 124 ---- 104 -----.267 ---- 26.6
Kobe----- '01-'07 ---- 37.8 ---- 7.6 ----- 6.9 ----- .486 ----- .557 ---- 113 ---- 105 ----- .199 ---- 25.1
As you can see Paul pretty much has a convincing advantage in all categories except two with Kobe's only coming in the form of volume scoring on less efficiency and rebounding. Paul's obviously wins in playmaking and his efficiency is much better than Bryant's. Defense is probably the closest category as both are good in this regard so I think it's pretty much a pick em depending on what you value most.
Playoff Per 100
Player ---- Years ---- PPG ---- RPG ---- APG ---- eFG% ---- TS%---- ORTG----DRTG----WS/48----PER
Paul --- '08-'14 ---- 28.5 -----6.7 ---- 13.4 -----.521 -----.575 ---- 117 ---- 109 -----.189 ---- 25.0
Kobe----- '01-'07 ---- 33.6 ---- 6.9 ----- 6.3 ----- .471 ----- .531 ---- 108 ---- 105 ----- .160 ---- 21.9
Playoffs wise Paul continues to enjoy a big lead across all categories except scoring with rebounding this time around being pretty much a wash. Kobe's scoring has dipped as well as assists for Paul. Both players efficiency have dipped but Paul still has a big lead in this regard. Bryant's defensive rating is a little higher than Chris' but Paul has a much bigger lead on the offensive side of the ball.
He doesn't deserve any traction yet.
He has good numbers but it hasn't translated to playoff success despite the fact that he's had plenty of help. Plus he's only played 9 seasons and none aside from 08 & 09 were truly at a legendary level. He needs more elite seasons and more playoff success before he's mentioned in the top 20 let alone 12th.
Which series has he lost that you’d have expected him to win (and what level of performance would you have liked in those series? Because otherwise. I’m not advocating Paul right now but given the “plenty of help” comment it would be interesting to see where exactly Paul had failed.
RayBan-Sematra wrote:Elliot Kalb and Pete Vecsey on Karl Malone.
Kalb :
In my opinion, Karl Malone (though close) was never the dominant or best player in the NBA.
He never took over the league. For almost two decades his play set a consistent standard of excellence. He led his team by example. He led his team well.
Barkley, on the other hand, for roughly two or three years in the early 90's was the best player in the league. Better then Jordan, Better then Karl. Sir Charles dominated the first Dream Team. Charles dominated the 1993 season.
Kalb is weird on Barkley. There’s the above “better than Jordan” and then he compares him with Elvis in a manner that’s supposed to be negative (they weren’t “serious”, which kinda sort of makes sense except both were legends anyway and you’re ignoring that), oh and he signs off “Barkley, love him tender” and has him four places behind Kobe already in 2003

.
ShaqAttack3234 wrote:Basketballefan wrote:Well between 88-91 Barkley avged 27 12 4 while Malone 29 11 3 with Barkley having a clear edge in efficiency on lesser volume, so i hear where you're coming from with the offense part, but when you factor everything else in i wouldn't say Barkley was "clearly better" i would say better but it's not a huge margin when all around games are considered. I don't think the gap is enough to make up for the longevity but that's just my opinion.
Yeah, but then there's Malone benefiting from Stockton, running the floor for easy baskets ect., things that were less effective in the playoffs.
As far as that time
Regular Season
Barkley- 26.7 ppg, 11.6 rpg, 3.8 apg, 3.3 TO, 0.8 bpg, 1.6 spg, 58.4 FG%, 74.5 FT%, 65.4 TS%
Malone- 29.2 ppg, 11.4 rpg, 2.8 apg, 3.6 TO, 0.8 bpg, 1.4 spg, 53.2 FG%, 75.1 FT%, 59.6 TS%
Playoffs
Barkley- 25.1 ppg, 13 rpg, 5.1 apg, 3.1 TO, 0.6 bpg, 1.3 spg, 57.5 FG%, 63.6 FT%, 61.8 TS%, 21 games
Malone- 29 ppg, 12.5 rpg, 2.2 apg, 3.2 TO, 0.9 bpg, 1.3 spg, 46.8 FG%, 77.9 FT%, 53.5 TS%, 28 games
Their TS% gap in the playoffs would be much larger except Barkley's FT% strangely dropped dramatically, but that has nothing to do with how well his game translated to the playoffs, and can likely be attributed to the sample size. While Malone's 53.5 TS% really isn't good for a big man in that era, much less in the West, which was known as more run and gun, especially Don Nelson's Warriors, who Malone's Jazz were upset by in '89, and every star, win or lose, put up bigger numbers than usual against them. Then you factor in that TS% came with Stockton. Stockton averaged 14 apg during the regular season during the stretch you brought up and 14.4 apg during the playoffs.
Malone actually shot free throws better in the playoffs during this time, but he was a shade below 47 FG% compared to over 53 FG% during the regular season. That's a much bigger decline than the usual decline in percentages from regular season to playoffs.
With that said, I don't even think '88-'91 was Malone at his best. I'd say Malone was at his best around '94-'98.
No offense but the free throw thing is an odd distinction. I mean I get that it isn’t an area where the game visibly changes (though you could argue it’s psychological, whether he was too amped or whatever) but ... if you judge on what actually happened then use what actually happened. If it’s hypothetical “how his skills translate” then you’d have to do that (“well it could be luck”) with every number. And note free throw shooting is one of, if not the, most stable factors in the stat line. If we say that’s luck why can’t we say the same of Malone’s shooting (and whilst Malone’s failures might be rationalised in terms of lacking a Moses, Erving, KJ, Olajuwon, Drexler albeit not general at their very best, to take attention away, Barkley’s free throw failure’s are entirely his own doing).
Okay, as for me I'm leaning Oscar. I'll leave it a while, see if anything persuades me otherwise.