RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
They both had good teams, but they both had good results too, so comparing team results is difficult (and I've largely avoided doing so). I agree Karl almost always had good teams in terms of depth and talent, but the 5 times Kobe won a ring he had better support casts too (just by virtue of having prime Shaq you've got a superior support cast in the star powered NBA). On the other hand, the team results Kobe had with bad teams (his 38 win pace without Shaq playing from 99-04, his 34-45 win seasons from 05-07) really don't stack up to what Karl Malone was doing either, so it's not a like for like comparison at all.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
- RayBan-Sematra
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
I think 13 would be a nice spot for Kobe however currently I don't feel he belongs over West.
Scoring -
West is more efficient and scores at equal or higher volume.
I realize some will use pace to lower Jerry's volume but given his elite efficiency, his excellent shot creation ability and his ability to drop huge numbers on a GOAT defensive team (Boston) I don't necessarily feel that is warranted.
West holds the NBA record for the highest points per game average in a playoff series with 46.3.
Also in the last thread charts were posted which showed that Kobe tended to struggle against better defensive teams while roasting weaker ones.
This is I think a point against Bryant and maybe one in West's favor given his ability to at times roast the Russell led C's who were the best defensive team of his era.
Passing -
Edge to West.
He was able to really excel at the PG role late in his career which is a role I am not convinced Kobe could handle.
Defense -
Edge to West (probably).
West is probably on the short list of candidates for the GOAT help defender at the guard positions.
At the age of 35 while only playing 30mpg he averaged nearly 3spg / 1bpg.
Last but not least longevity -
West = 12 elite years (61-73 minus 67 due to injury)
Kobe = 11 elite years (00-10 minus 13 due to injury)
Kobe also has 11 & 12 but I felt he was a very low impact guy and not elite those two years.
Kinda like a +2 on offense while being a -1 on defense.
Either way even if I was to give him those years that only gives him a negligible 1 year edge in total longevity.
Him having one extra low value season is certainly not enough for me to give him the edge if West was as I currently believe the better player during their Prime/Elite years.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
West's Career
Regular-season = 27ppg
Post-season = 29.1ppg
NBA Finals = 30.5ppg
The Playoff Performer
2 year Peak : (25.1 PER) --- 31 / 5 / 7apg on 57%TS -- .277 WSP48
5 year Peak : (25.3 PER) --- 33 / 5 / 6apg on 56%TS --- .247 WSP48
11 year Prime : (23.1 PER) - 29 / 6 / 6.4apg on 54%TS --- .204 WSP48
Highest Scoring Average in NBA Finals (min 10 games)
(10 games) Rick Barry : 36.3ppg
(20 games) Shaq : 34.2ppg (out of date stat)
(35 games) Jordan : 33.6ppg
(55 games) Jerry West : 30.5ppg
West averaged 31ppg in the Finals over his career without the benefit of the 3pt shot.
Jordan made almost 42 treys in his 35 NBA Finals games. West had at least Jordan's range.
It is reasonable to say that West would have approached Jordan's 33ppg in the Finals if he had the 3pt shot.
He scored 53 points in Game 1 of the 1969 Finals and had a 45-point game in both the 1965 Finals and the 1966 Finals.
Chick Hearn called Jerry "Mr. Clutch," and the name was appropriate.
Regarding West defensively.
I am thinking that West was one of the greatest help defenders ever at the guard position.
He had underrated athletic ability combined with ultra long arms and amazing timing.
Even at age 35 while only playing 30mpg he averaged nearly 3spg/1bpg.
He was probably a lock for 3+spg / 1+bpg in his actual Prime.
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So for now I am leaning strongly towards West.
Scoring -
West is more efficient and scores at equal or higher volume.
I realize some will use pace to lower Jerry's volume but given his elite efficiency, his excellent shot creation ability and his ability to drop huge numbers on a GOAT defensive team (Boston) I don't necessarily feel that is warranted.
West holds the NBA record for the highest points per game average in a playoff series with 46.3.
Also in the last thread charts were posted which showed that Kobe tended to struggle against better defensive teams while roasting weaker ones.
This is I think a point against Bryant and maybe one in West's favor given his ability to at times roast the Russell led C's who were the best defensive team of his era.
Passing -
Edge to West.
He was able to really excel at the PG role late in his career which is a role I am not convinced Kobe could handle.
Defense -
Edge to West (probably).
West is probably on the short list of candidates for the GOAT help defender at the guard positions.
At the age of 35 while only playing 30mpg he averaged nearly 3spg / 1bpg.
Last but not least longevity -
West = 12 elite years (61-73 minus 67 due to injury)
Kobe = 11 elite years (00-10 minus 13 due to injury)
Kobe also has 11 & 12 but I felt he was a very low impact guy and not elite those two years.
Kinda like a +2 on offense while being a -1 on defense.
Either way even if I was to give him those years that only gives him a negligible 1 year edge in total longevity.
Him having one extra low value season is certainly not enough for me to give him the edge if West was as I currently believe the better player during their Prime/Elite years.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
West's Career
Regular-season = 27ppg
Post-season = 29.1ppg
NBA Finals = 30.5ppg
The Playoff Performer
2 year Peak : (25.1 PER) --- 31 / 5 / 7apg on 57%TS -- .277 WSP48
5 year Peak : (25.3 PER) --- 33 / 5 / 6apg on 56%TS --- .247 WSP48
11 year Prime : (23.1 PER) - 29 / 6 / 6.4apg on 54%TS --- .204 WSP48
Highest Scoring Average in NBA Finals (min 10 games)
(10 games) Rick Barry : 36.3ppg
(20 games) Shaq : 34.2ppg (out of date stat)
(35 games) Jordan : 33.6ppg
(55 games) Jerry West : 30.5ppg
West averaged 31ppg in the Finals over his career without the benefit of the 3pt shot.
Jordan made almost 42 treys in his 35 NBA Finals games. West had at least Jordan's range.
It is reasonable to say that West would have approached Jordan's 33ppg in the Finals if he had the 3pt shot.
He scored 53 points in Game 1 of the 1969 Finals and had a 45-point game in both the 1965 Finals and the 1966 Finals.
Chick Hearn called Jerry "Mr. Clutch," and the name was appropriate.
Regarding West defensively.
I am thinking that West was one of the greatest help defenders ever at the guard position.
He had underrated athletic ability combined with ultra long arms and amazing timing.
Even at age 35 while only playing 30mpg he averaged nearly 3spg/1bpg.
He was probably a lock for 3+spg / 1+bpg in his actual Prime.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
So for now I am leaning strongly towards West.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
Moses Malone

Awards
3 MVP's (more than any other player left)
1 Finals MVP (no centers under consideration have won this)
won MVPs against Bird, Dr. J, Magic, Kareem
4x First Team, 4x Second Team
1x Defensive 1st Team, 1x Defensive 2nd Team
Rebounding and Scoring
Chairman of the Boards: Top rebounder for 6 years
Elite offensive rebounder:
Strong Peak and Prime, Long Career
5-year peak: 26.8 ppg /15.4 rpg
13-year prime: 23.8 ppg /13.4 rpg
21-year career: 20.3 ppg /12.3 rpg
Major Impact
Led sub-.500 team (1981 Rockets) to NBA finals
Led 1983 Sixers to championship:

Awards
3 MVP's (more than any other player left)
1 Finals MVP (no centers under consideration have won this)
won MVPs against Bird, Dr. J, Magic, Kareem
4x First Team, 4x Second Team
1x Defensive 1st Team, 1x Defensive 2nd Team
Rebounding and Scoring
Chairman of the Boards: Top rebounder for 6 years
Elite offensive rebounder:
- #1 in Career ORB
had 5 of the top 10 ORB seasons, including #1, #2, and #3 seasons
Strong Peak and Prime, Long Career
5-year peak: 26.8 ppg /15.4 rpg
13-year prime: 23.8 ppg /13.4 rpg
21-year career: 20.3 ppg /12.3 rpg
Major Impact
Led sub-.500 team (1981 Rockets) to NBA finals
- eliminated Kareem-Magic Lakers (reigning champs)
Led 1983 Sixers to championship:
- Fo-Fo-Fo: Lost only one game during playoffs
Swept Kareem-Magic Lakers (reigning champs who had beaten 1982 Sixers 4-2)
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
Purch wrote: Barkley
Any reason you're choosing not to vote?
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
For me this pick is going to come down to Kobe vs Karl. DrJ and the admiral are also options, but David's career is so short in comparison to the others that it's hard not to penalise him for his relative lack of longevity. And DrJ has a similar problem, in that he had two mini-primes in his career, which just seems less sustained and less impressive than a solid contiguous prime of 6-8 years.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
Jim Naismith wrote:Moses Malone
Awards
3 MVP's (more than any other player left)
1 Finals MVP (no centers under consideration have won this)
won MVPs against Bird, Dr. J, Magic, Kareem
4x First Team, 4x Second Team
1x Defensive 1st Team, 1x Defensive 2nd Team
Rebounding and Scoring
Chairman of the Boards: Top rebounder for 6 years
Elite offensive rebounder:#1 in Career ORB
Great scorer: Top 5 scorer for 5 years, Top 10 scorer for 8 years
had 5 of the top 10 ORB seasons, including #1, #2, and #3 seasons
Strong Peak and Prime, Great Career
5-year peak: 26.8 ppg /15.4 rpg
13-year prime: 23.8 ppg /13.4 rpg
21-year career: 20.3 ppg /12.3 rpg
Major Impact
Led sub-.500 team (1981 Rockets) to NBA finalseliminated Kareem-Magic Lakers (reigning champs)
Moses-less Houston, after trading him away in 1982, won 32 fewer games
Led 1983 Sixers to championship:Fo-Fo-Fo: Lost only one game during playoffs
Swept Kareem-Magic Lakers (reigning champs who had beaten 1982 Sixers 4-2)
I think Moses is great and the 3 time mvp to me supports my belief that he probably has best 5-6 year stretch.
I think to pick moses I need to be convinced that he was close to Karl and Kobe in their 6-12 best years
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
As I mentioned last thread, it seems like analysis is often deeper and more relevant when two players are compared as opposed to just focusing on any one player. So, I'm all for making 1-on-1 cases for different players under consideration in this area. Last thread I started off with Kobe vs Dirk. I'll re-post that here, then in my next post I've got a big Karl Malone vs David Robinson comp. Next I'm hoping to do either Mo Malone vs Barkley, or Dr. J vs West.
Dirk vs Kobe
In the vein of the 1-on-1 matchups I described , I decided to start with the two best current/modern day players still on the board: Dirk Nowitzki and Kobe Bryant. This is a very interesting, potentially epic comparison, that in my experience pretty much never gets made (not including this project, of course, where Reservoir Dogs has taken a crack at it). But outside of here, there are a million Kobe threads and Dirk is pretty popular on this board too, but rarely (if ever) do I see Dirk vs. Kobe. I think part of that is due to perception...before 2011 it was considered ridiculous around here to put Dirk on Kobe's level (I remember ranking 2003 Dirk over 2003 Kobe in the 2010 RPoY project, and it was NOT well received). After 2011 people felt better about giving Dirk his due, but he generally gets compared with great frontcourt players. When in reality, I think he and Kobe make one heck of a match-up. So, let's start digging in and see where it goes.
The boxscores
"The style makes the fight"
Chronology and the story outside of the box scores: the infamous RAPM
The playoffs
Dirk and Kobe both have reputations for performing on the big stage. There have been box score numerical analyses done in this project to either argue for or against Kobe's performance based on scoring efficiency, and those arguments are worth absorbing and filtering. Kobe apparently did have some efficiency blips through the years against good defenses, which we didn't see with Dirk (who maintains an absurd volume/efficiency ratio from the regular season right into the postseason). I don't really think that individual scoring efficiency is nearly as important as many make it out to be, but for players that are primarily offensive and more specifically primarily scorers, scoring efficiency has to at least be considered. On the other hand, Kobe has also faced off against some of the best defenses in history throughout his time, and that can certainly affect the old true shooting percentage.
(Aside on playoff on/off +/-)
Interestingly, for those that give any credence at all to playoff on/off +/-, it's Kobe (even with his lower scoring efficiencies) that tends to look more impressive than Dirk. Dirk's best postseason mark of his career (obviously) came in 2011 with an impressive +16.8 per 100 possessions, and this capped off a run of three positive double-digit marks in four years (thought the first two were for relatively short runs and thus I give them next-to-no weight as single seasons). However, outside of that period his playoff on/offs are pretty pedestrian compared to the other greats of this generation. He was +6.9 in the 2006 run, but pretty meh else for a career playoff on/off mark (from 2001 - 2014) of +1.8.
Kobe measured out with a positive playoff on/off +/- in every playoff run of his career (at least since 2001) in which his team made at least the 2nd round. His best career mark came in 2003 (+17.4), but he was also really strong in 2001 (+14.2 vs. Shaq's -0.3, lending credence to those that say that Kobe was driving the bus for that postseason run) and 2009 (+12.4 vs Pau's +6.8, though Odom measured out best at +16.7). Kobe was also +8.9 in 2008 and +7.6 in 2010, and sports a career-mark of +8.3 that's right in line with Shaq, Duncan and LeBron.
Bottom line:
As I figured before I got started, this is an epic comparison. It's almost a toss-up, a "what do you like"? Stylistically, in the box scores, and in the +/- stats for both the regular and postseason it's hard to find a consistent advantage for either of them. I hope and expect that their placements on this list should reflect that similarity, regardless of which goes in first.
Dirk vs Kobe
In the vein of the 1-on-1 matchups I described , I decided to start with the two best current/modern day players still on the board: Dirk Nowitzki and Kobe Bryant. This is a very interesting, potentially epic comparison, that in my experience pretty much never gets made (not including this project, of course, where Reservoir Dogs has taken a crack at it). But outside of here, there are a million Kobe threads and Dirk is pretty popular on this board too, but rarely (if ever) do I see Dirk vs. Kobe. I think part of that is due to perception...before 2011 it was considered ridiculous around here to put Dirk on Kobe's level (I remember ranking 2003 Dirk over 2003 Kobe in the 2010 RPoY project, and it was NOT well received). After 2011 people felt better about giving Dirk his due, but he generally gets compared with great frontcourt players. When in reality, I think he and Kobe make one heck of a match-up. So, let's start digging in and see where it goes.
The boxscores
Spoiler:
"The style makes the fight"
Spoiler:
Chronology and the story outside of the box scores: the infamous RAPM
Spoiler:
The playoffs
Dirk and Kobe both have reputations for performing on the big stage. There have been box score numerical analyses done in this project to either argue for or against Kobe's performance based on scoring efficiency, and those arguments are worth absorbing and filtering. Kobe apparently did have some efficiency blips through the years against good defenses, which we didn't see with Dirk (who maintains an absurd volume/efficiency ratio from the regular season right into the postseason). I don't really think that individual scoring efficiency is nearly as important as many make it out to be, but for players that are primarily offensive and more specifically primarily scorers, scoring efficiency has to at least be considered. On the other hand, Kobe has also faced off against some of the best defenses in history throughout his time, and that can certainly affect the old true shooting percentage.
(Aside on playoff on/off +/-)
Spoiler:
Interestingly, for those that give any credence at all to playoff on/off +/-, it's Kobe (even with his lower scoring efficiencies) that tends to look more impressive than Dirk. Dirk's best postseason mark of his career (obviously) came in 2011 with an impressive +16.8 per 100 possessions, and this capped off a run of three positive double-digit marks in four years (thought the first two were for relatively short runs and thus I give them next-to-no weight as single seasons). However, outside of that period his playoff on/offs are pretty pedestrian compared to the other greats of this generation. He was +6.9 in the 2006 run, but pretty meh else for a career playoff on/off mark (from 2001 - 2014) of +1.8.
Kobe measured out with a positive playoff on/off +/- in every playoff run of his career (at least since 2001) in which his team made at least the 2nd round. His best career mark came in 2003 (+17.4), but he was also really strong in 2001 (+14.2 vs. Shaq's -0.3, lending credence to those that say that Kobe was driving the bus for that postseason run) and 2009 (+12.4 vs Pau's +6.8, though Odom measured out best at +16.7). Kobe was also +8.9 in 2008 and +7.6 in 2010, and sports a career-mark of +8.3 that's right in line with Shaq, Duncan and LeBron.
Bottom line:
As I figured before I got started, this is an epic comparison. It's almost a toss-up, a "what do you like"? Stylistically, in the box scores, and in the +/- stats for both the regular and postseason it's hard to find a consistent advantage for either of them. I hope and expect that their placements on this list should reflect that similarity, regardless of which goes in first.
Creator of the Hoops Lab: tinyurl.com/mpo2brj
Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
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Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
Contributor to TYTSports: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTbFEVCpx9shKEsZl7FcRHzpGO1dPoimk
Follow on Twitter: @ProfessorDrz
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
So is Kobe is the first player yet to lose in multiple run-offs? Interesting.
Anyway I think David Robinson deserves some consideration.
He has the greatest impact defensively of anyone left on the board and is also the best two-way player left.
Robinson joined a Spurs 21 win Spurs team for the '89-'90 season and they improved by 25 wins from the previous one. One of the best 2-way bigs of all-time. 2nd All-Time in WS Per 48 behind only Michael Jordan and the 4th all-time leader in PER behind only Jordan, Lebron and Shaq.
In comparison to a player like Karl Malone who is currently in the discussion for #13
Per 100
Player ---- Years ---- PPG ---- RPG ---- APG ---- eFG% ---- TS%---- ORTG----DRTG----WS/48----PER
D-Rob ---- '90-'98 ---- 34.0 -----15.8 ---- 4.1 -----.525 -----.590 ---- 118 ---- 97 -----.261 ---- 27.8
Malone ----- '90-'98 ---- 36.9 ---- 14.6 ---- 4.9 ---- .536 ----.594 ----117 ----102 ----.234 ---- 26.0
D-Rob leads in most categories and where Malone wins out it's relatively close. Offensively I give Malone the overall edge with more points and greater efficiency, but not by a whole lot. Keep in mind D-Rob didn't have the privilege of having a Stockton type player to feed him buckets. On the other side of the ball it's Robinson by a good margin as Malone simply didn't have that type of impact defensively. Malone obviously wins out in longevity and durability, having a longer prime. Peak wise I go with D-Rob as few players in history have had the two-way impact that he had at his apex.
Playoff Per 100
Player ---- Years ---- PPG ---- RPG ---- APG ---- eFG% ---- TS%--- ORTG----DRTG----WS/48----PER
D-Rob ---- '90-'98 --- 31.0 ---- 16.1 ---- 3.8 -----481 ----- .549 ---- 112 ---- 100 -----.188 ---- 24.1
Malone---- '90-'98 ---- 35.5 ---- 14.9 ---- 4.2 ---- .466 ----.532 ---- 109 ---- 103 -----.168 ---- 23.2
Both players have reputations of performing below their normal standards in the playoffs and by looking at the stats you can clearly see why. Malone's has the greater drop-off in efficiency and D-Rob has the bigger drop-off in points. Overall in the playoffs Robinson wins in all categories except assists (0.4 difference) and scoring with Malone's 4ppg lead coming on noticeably less efficiency, not enough imo to make up for the defensive and rebounding advantages that D-Rob enjoys.
Anyway I think David Robinson deserves some consideration.
He has the greatest impact defensively of anyone left on the board and is also the best two-way player left.
Robinson joined a Spurs 21 win Spurs team for the '89-'90 season and they improved by 25 wins from the previous one. One of the best 2-way bigs of all-time. 2nd All-Time in WS Per 48 behind only Michael Jordan and the 4th all-time leader in PER behind only Jordan, Lebron and Shaq.
In comparison to a player like Karl Malone who is currently in the discussion for #13
Per 100
Player ---- Years ---- PPG ---- RPG ---- APG ---- eFG% ---- TS%---- ORTG----DRTG----WS/48----PER
D-Rob ---- '90-'98 ---- 34.0 -----15.8 ---- 4.1 -----.525 -----.590 ---- 118 ---- 97 -----.261 ---- 27.8
Malone ----- '90-'98 ---- 36.9 ---- 14.6 ---- 4.9 ---- .536 ----.594 ----117 ----102 ----.234 ---- 26.0
D-Rob leads in most categories and where Malone wins out it's relatively close. Offensively I give Malone the overall edge with more points and greater efficiency, but not by a whole lot. Keep in mind D-Rob didn't have the privilege of having a Stockton type player to feed him buckets. On the other side of the ball it's Robinson by a good margin as Malone simply didn't have that type of impact defensively. Malone obviously wins out in longevity and durability, having a longer prime. Peak wise I go with D-Rob as few players in history have had the two-way impact that he had at his apex.
Playoff Per 100
Player ---- Years ---- PPG ---- RPG ---- APG ---- eFG% ---- TS%--- ORTG----DRTG----WS/48----PER
D-Rob ---- '90-'98 --- 31.0 ---- 16.1 ---- 3.8 -----481 ----- .549 ---- 112 ---- 100 -----.188 ---- 24.1
Malone---- '90-'98 ---- 35.5 ---- 14.9 ---- 4.2 ---- .466 ----.532 ---- 109 ---- 103 -----.168 ---- 23.2
Both players have reputations of performing below their normal standards in the playoffs and by looking at the stats you can clearly see why. Malone's has the greater drop-off in efficiency and D-Rob has the bigger drop-off in points. Overall in the playoffs Robinson wins in all categories except assists (0.4 difference) and scoring with Malone's 4ppg lead coming on noticeably less efficiency, not enough imo to make up for the defensive and rebounding advantages that D-Rob enjoys.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
- RayBan-Sematra
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
BallerTed wrote:So is Kobe is the first player yet to lose in multiple run-offs? Interesting.
No. Shaq lost in run-offs to both Wilt & Duncan.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
RayBan-Sematra wrote:BallerTed wrote:So is Kobe is the first player yet to lose in multiple run-offs? Interesting.
No. Shaq lost in run-offs to both Wilt & Duncan.
Ok, gotcha.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
David Robinson vs Karl Malone
I don't know if I'll be able to get to all of the contemporary 1-on-1 matchups I mentioned, but here is part 2. Earlier I did Dirk vs Kobe, and they essentially fought each other to a draw. Now I want to look closer at the Admiral vs the Mailman.
Background thoughts
Longevity
Suddenly, Robinson's longevity looks EXACTLY like Bird's to me. And if Bird's career length is the gate-keeper for being ranked this high, suddenly Robinson is eligible. If his prime is strong enough. So let's get away from quantity, and look at quality.
Who's best at their best?
Box Score Statistics
Available +/- data
Playoffs
Bottom line
Robinson and Malone are two of the best big men left on the board. Malone was an awesome offensive threat in the regular season for a lot of years, and a still strong presence in the postseason. His 1-on-1 defense was rugged, but at least late in his career did not appear to be moving the needle as much as I'd have thought in terms of defensive impact. Robinson was an awesome 2-way threat early in his career in the regular season, and a ridiculous defensive player who was strong as a secondary scorer in both the regular and postseason at the end of his career.
Karl Malone played forever at a really high level. But I tend to feel that Robinson was the better player during his prime, and upon further examination I'm seeing that productive prime stretch for Robinson at closer to 10 years than the 6.5 I previously credited him with. In theory, Robinson should have also been a better postseason performer than Malone because his defense should translate better, but I'd like to look into that further before finalizing that conclusion.
On the whole, at the moment, I'm leaning Robinson over Malone (just like I had them pre- RPoY project). But, just like with those projects, I'm still willing to listen and learn and could be talked into changing my mind.
I don't know if I'll be able to get to all of the contemporary 1-on-1 matchups I mentioned, but here is part 2. Earlier I did Dirk vs Kobe, and they essentially fought each other to a draw. Now I want to look closer at the Admiral vs the Mailman.
Background thoughts
Spoiler:
Longevity
Spoiler:
Suddenly, Robinson's longevity looks EXACTLY like Bird's to me. And if Bird's career length is the gate-keeper for being ranked this high, suddenly Robinson is eligible. If his prime is strong enough. So let's get away from quantity, and look at quality.
Who's best at their best?
Box Score Statistics
Spoiler:
Available +/- data
Spoiler:
Playoffs
Spoiler:
Bottom line
Robinson and Malone are two of the best big men left on the board. Malone was an awesome offensive threat in the regular season for a lot of years, and a still strong presence in the postseason. His 1-on-1 defense was rugged, but at least late in his career did not appear to be moving the needle as much as I'd have thought in terms of defensive impact. Robinson was an awesome 2-way threat early in his career in the regular season, and a ridiculous defensive player who was strong as a secondary scorer in both the regular and postseason at the end of his career.
Karl Malone played forever at a really high level. But I tend to feel that Robinson was the better player during his prime, and upon further examination I'm seeing that productive prime stretch for Robinson at closer to 10 years than the 6.5 I previously credited him with. In theory, Robinson should have also been a better postseason performer than Malone because his defense should translate better, but I'd like to look into that further before finalizing that conclusion.
On the whole, at the moment, I'm leaning Robinson over Malone (just like I had them pre- RPoY project). But, just like with those projects, I'm still willing to listen and learn and could be talked into changing my mind.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
Jim Naismith wrote:Moses
Any reason you're choosing not to vote?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
I'm a huge Spurs fan, and I love D.Rob to death, and find Karl Malone to be an awful human being. That said, Karl Malone's longevity advantage is just too large for D.Rob to be fairly ranked over him. Even some of D.Rob's "sidekick" years are pretty dubious. I have seen a lot of people credit him for helping the Spurs take down the Lakers and win the 99 title. In the 99 playoff series v.s the Lakers D.Rob was averaging 13-6 in 28mpg. Pretty bad looking for a sidekick. He was the 3rd best player on those teams, even behind young Kobe. It was Duncan's huge impact that led to the title that year, not D.Rob.
Now peak to peak D.Rob is one of the highest remaining guys, right up there with Walton and Dr J.
Now peak to peak D.Rob is one of the highest remaining guys, right up there with Walton and Dr J.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
Clyde Frazier wrote:Jim Naismith wrote:Moses
Any reason you're choosing not to vote?
I'm not sure if I have the time (and knowledge) to read all the posts.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
drza wrote:Who's best at their best?
Box Score Statistics
Regular season, 10 year primes per100 possessions
Karl Malone (1990 - 1999): 36.8 pts (59.3% TS), 14.5 reb, 5 ast, 4 TO
David Robinson (90 - 2000): 33.3 pts (58.8% TS), 15.9 reb, 4 ast, 3.9 TO
Playoffs, 10 year primes per 100 possessions
Karl Malone (1990 - 1999): 35 pts (52.9%), 15 reb, 4.4 asts, 3.7 TO
David Robinson (90 - 2000): 30 pts (54.6%), 16.1 reb, 3.8 ast, 3.7 TO
Curious why you're leaving out blocks and steals, Robinson's primary advantages in the box score...
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
colts18 wrote:Clyde Frazier wrote:
Oscar has already been voted in, and I know we don't have a ton of information on him defensively, but I don't see how claiming he only had a "slight defensive lead" over nash is accurate. The suns defensively were merely average to slightly below average during nash's prime, but he's always been a weak defender. I don't think there's any question about that.
Oscar's teams were consistently among the worst defensively of that era. Nash's teams were average defensively during his peak years (05-07)
They were slightly below average for 2 of those 3 seasons (team DRTG rank below):
05 -- 17th
06 -- 16th
07 -- 13th
As for oscar, when there are 8-10 teams in the NBA for the majority of his tenure in cinci as opposed to 30, ranking below average is far less significant. The drastic difference in sample size should be noted. Not to mention the fact that very few perimeter players can impact an overall team's ability defensively.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
David Robinson is by all accounts one of the best defensive players in league history. With his combination of elite rim protection and elite big man quickness that enabled him to cover ground as well as anyone, he has a legitimate argument for top 2 ever imo. He was also clearly a great offensive big - way above average at the very least. Given that, where do the remaining players make up the difference?
If it's longevity we're worried about, why was Bird voted in? Or do we believe he has a large peak advantage on Robinson (and if so where)? Robinson has 12 quality years - he didn't score a lot in the later years, but he was still very productive, particularly on defense, and played the role he was asked to play (i.e., he took a backseat in scoring to the guy who's number 5 on this list) in order to achieve greater team success.
Regarding Robinson's playoff struggles, which I think we've established are overblown, how much of this can we attribute to a) coaching, and b) teammates. He didn't have great coaching during his absolute peak - was Bob Hill unable to properly adjust during the playoffs? His teammates were poor for his entire career before Duncan (something that Robinson seems to get less of a pass for than guys like Hakeem and Garnett). How much did this enable other teams to zero in on him during the playoffs without sacrificing his production elsewhere?
If it's longevity we're worried about, why was Bird voted in? Or do we believe he has a large peak advantage on Robinson (and if so where)? Robinson has 12 quality years - he didn't score a lot in the later years, but he was still very productive, particularly on defense, and played the role he was asked to play (i.e., he took a backseat in scoring to the guy who's number 5 on this list) in order to achieve greater team success.
Regarding Robinson's playoff struggles, which I think we've established are overblown, how much of this can we attribute to a) coaching, and b) teammates. He didn't have great coaching during his absolute peak - was Bob Hill unable to properly adjust during the playoffs? His teammates were poor for his entire career before Duncan (something that Robinson seems to get less of a pass for than guys like Hakeem and Garnett). How much did this enable other teams to zero in on him during the playoffs without sacrificing his production elsewhere?
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
I'm sticking with Karl Malone. I really can't say that he's a better player than Dirk or Kobe at their best, because he's really not...I see a clear separation offensively, even if Malone holds the defensive advantage.
However, you can't argue with not just the longevity, but the durability as well.
Dirk has an 11-year prime (01-11), and then 2 years where he's still a star, but not on the same level he was during his prime (12 and 14). So that's 13 years of being a very relevant player imo.
Kobe has a 10-year prime (01-10), and then 5 years where he's still a star, but not on the same level he was during his prime (99, 00, 11-13). So that's 15 years of being a very relevant player imo.
Malone has an 11-year prime (88-98), and then 6 years where he's still a star, but not on the same level he was during his prime (87, 99-03). So that's 17 years of being a very relevant player imo.
And personally, I don't really give Kobe much credit for 13, since he completely missed the playoffs.
Vote: Karl Malone
However, you can't argue with not just the longevity, but the durability as well.
Dirk has an 11-year prime (01-11), and then 2 years where he's still a star, but not on the same level he was during his prime (12 and 14). So that's 13 years of being a very relevant player imo.
Kobe has a 10-year prime (01-10), and then 5 years where he's still a star, but not on the same level he was during his prime (99, 00, 11-13). So that's 15 years of being a very relevant player imo.
Malone has an 11-year prime (88-98), and then 6 years where he's still a star, but not on the same level he was during his prime (87, 99-03). So that's 17 years of being a very relevant player imo.
And personally, I don't really give Kobe much credit for 13, since he completely missed the playoffs.
Vote: Karl Malone
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
DQuinn1575 wrote:
I think Moses is great and the 3 time mvp to me supports my belief that he probably has best 5-6 year stretch.
I think to pick moses I need to be convinced that he was close to Karl and Kobe in their 6-12 best years
I think of Moses as a forerunner of Shaq in several respects. Perhaps Shaq at a 15% discount.
They have great 5-6 year peaks. They have over 10 years of prime. It might not have been as consistent as Karl Malone, but they were still very good. (Shaq was on the All-NBA 1st or 2nd team 10 times, Moses was 8 times.)
They're known for their unstoppable offense and sometimes faulted for their defense. Yet both were good defenders in their peak (and were on the All-NBA Defensive Team).
Much regard for Shaq comes from his peak physical dominance.
I believe Moses is worthy of a similar regard.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #13
Honestly these David Robinson arguments are moving the needle for me.
I know DRob has the better peak, but if someone would like to breakdown if the gap is huge or smaller in comparison I'd appreciate it. Or even if Karl had a better peak.
I hold peak and longevity equally and of course I'm a big individual two way impact person, particularly defense at the interior positions.
Another thing for DRob advocates, I think approaching him like others did successfully for Garnett would help.
His offense got worse in the playoffs, but if folks could prove his defense got better postseason it would help him imo.
I know DRob has the better peak, but if someone would like to breakdown if the gap is huge or smaller in comparison I'd appreciate it. Or even if Karl had a better peak.
I hold peak and longevity equally and of course I'm a big individual two way impact person, particularly defense at the interior positions.
Another thing for DRob advocates, I think approaching him like others did successfully for Garnett would help.
His offense got worse in the playoffs, but if folks could prove his defense got better postseason it would help him imo.