Baller2014 wrote:ThaRegul8r wrote:Baller2014 wrote:I don't think West has a case here over Dr J or Karl Malone.
Putting aside West for the moment, what's Malone's case over Dr. J? Your "Dr. J vs. Malone" post was actually preoccupied with Kobe, and didn't actually compare Erving and Malone (go figure). Dr J peaked higher, brought his team closer to the ultimate goal of winning than Malone did (succeeding three more times than Malone did), performed better in the Finals when he got his teams there, and showed he could help his teams win as a first option or a second option. Longevity in and of itself doesn't bring an advantage if you don't do as much to help your team win.
Good question. Dr J peaked higher than Karl Malone, but I feel Malone's peak is being slept on a lot. It's lower, but not that much lower. Combine that with his insane longevity and consistency, and I think Malone edges Dr J out on this (though it's horrendously close). I just think Malone's career impact is greater (and more likely to let you build title teams overall), albeit by a miniscule margin.
Erving had a GOAT tier peak. Malone didn't. Simple as that. We can cut through the "but Malone's wasn't a slouch" or anything to that effect which is irrelevant to that fact. For those who are enamored with carry-jobs, it has that. For those who like "stepping up when it counts," it's there.
For those that value it, Erving was a better Finals performer than Malone:
David Friedman wrote:Erving was an outstanding clutch perfomer who generally played his best in the biggest games; he averaged 24.2 ppg in his regular season career but increased that number to 28.1 in 33 NBA/ABA Finals game, winning three championships in six appearances. Erving’s career scoring average of 25.5 ppg in the NBA Finals is the eighth best of all time and he scored at least 20 points in 21 of his 22 Finals games, including his first 19, a streak that still stands among the longest ever. In his two trips to the ABA Finals, Erving averaged 33.4 ppg, scored at least 20 points in 10 of 11 games, topped 30 points eight times and had three 40 point games.
I'm not even going to count his championship seasons to show it isn't winner's bias:
ThaRegul8r wrote:As the #1 option in the NBA, Erving led the 76ers to three NBA Finals appearances, averaging a series-high 30.3 points on 54.3 percent shooting from the floor and 85.7 percent shooting from the line, 6.8 rebounds, 5 assists and 2.67 steals in 41.3 minutes per game in the 1977 NBA Finals against the Portland Trail Blazers; 25.5 points on 52.2 percent shooting from the floor, 70.8 percent shooting from the line and 57.0 percent true shooting, 7 rebounds, 5 assists and 2 steals in 40.7 minutes per game in the 1980 NBA Finals against the Los Angeles Lakers; and 25 points on 54.3 percent shooting from the floor, 72 percent shooting from the line and 59.1 percent true shooting, 8.2 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 1.83 steals and 1.33 blocked shots in 38.3 minutes per game in the 1982 NBA Finals against the Lakers. His cumulative averages for those Finals is 26.9 points on 53.6 percent shooting from the floor, 76.2 percent shooting from the line and 58.9 percent true shooting, 7.3 rebounds, 4.4 assists, 2.17 steals and 1.5 blocked shots in 40.1 minutes per game.
As the #1 option, Malone led the Jazz to two NBA Finals appearances, averaging 23.8 points on 44.3 percent shooting from the floor, 60.3 percent shooting from the line and 48.5 percent true shooting, 10.3 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 1.67 steals in 40.8 minutes per game in 1997; and 25.0 points on 50.4 percent shooting from the floor, 78.9 percent shooting from the line and 55.3 percent true shooting, 10.5 rebounds, 3.8 assists and 1.67 steals in 40.5 minutes per game in 1998. His cumulative averages for those Finals is 24.4 points on 47.3 percent shooting from the floor, 67.7 percent shooting from the line and 51.1 percent true shooting, 10.4 rebounds, 3.7 assists, 1.33 steals and 0.75 blocks in 40.8 minutes per game.
Simply comparing them both as #1 options in non-title winning runs, Erving performed better than Malone did. That caliber of performance goes further toward helping a player's team win than Malone's. That's not counting anything in the ABA. And when the Sixers won in 1983, it was Erving who put the capper on the championship:
In his first NBA postseason, Erving averaged 27.3 points (9th in the playoffs) on 52.3 percent shooting from the floor, 82.1 percent shooting from the line and 57.7 percent true shooting (10th), 6.4 rebounds, 4.5 assists, 2.16 steals (4th) and 1.21 blocked shots (9th) in 39.9 minutes per game, and led the postseason in points, field-goals attempted, field goals made, free throw attempts, free throws, offensive win shares, win shares, and finished second in PER and win shares per 48 minutes. In his first NBA Finals he averaged 30.3 points on 54.3 percent shooting from the floor, 85.7 percent shooting from the line and 60.4 percent true shooting, 6.8 rebounds, 5 assists and 2.67 steals in 41.3 minutes per game against a team led by peak Bill Walton, who had the GOAT rebounding Finals grabbing 24.7 percent of all available rebounds and 38.8 percent of all available defensive rebounds. That >>> Malone's first NBA Finals appearance. And this was done on a team that was a bad fit and a bunch of selfish ballhogs.
As I said in the beginning, Dr J peaked higher, brought his team closer to the ultimate goal of winning than Malone did (succeeding three more times than Malone did), performed better in the Finals when he got his teams there, and showed he could help his teams win as a first or a second option.