rich316 wrote:ElGee's graph comparing playoff performances v. strong and weak defenses of some greats is very informative. Dirk just doesn't care who is guarding him, he scores as well as ever in the playoffs, versus great defenses. Not only that, he gives his team a market advantage over the rest of the league when it comes to team-building.
This actually relates to something I was writing, and is a nice segue. As I already finished it, I'm just going to post it as I wrote it before reading that:
I'm going to take a moment to talk about some of the criterion from my list and how it relates to players that I look at. Perhaps this will spark further discussion as I apply specific criteria that I'm looking for, and relate it to some of the candidates on the board. Representatives for those players can then help me see how well they meet that criteria. Perhaps the resulting discussion will also help me to further refine my own criteria. Perhaps the process of explaining it will help me to realize something. Explaining something to someone can help further one's own understanding rather than the idea simply sitting in one's head.
I'll start with my first criterion:
ThaRegul8r wrote:1. The ability to integrate oneself and whatever respective abilities one brings to the table with the rest of the players on one’s team in order to enhance the whole for the facilitation of the ultimate objective of winning, and the dedication to employ these abilities for the effectuation of said purpose.
The means by which a player helps his team are inconsequential. What is important is the end. The player in question should use whatever skills he brings to the table to help his team win. As different players have different abilities, the means employed will vary. The only thing that matters are results. No one way of helping one’s team is inherently valued more than another.
When looking at a player, firstly, I want to know: What is it that a player does? What does he bring to the table? Different players have different abilities, so I don't care what it is in as far as saying one way is better than another, I just want to identify it. There are many roads one can take in order to reach a destination. I just want to know what a player's strengths are, what positive things they can do.
Secondly, I then want to know how a player employs the answer to the above question in order to help his team win. After identifying whatever it is that a player brings to the table, how does he use it to help his team win? Nothing a player does on a court has any worth to me if it doesn't help his team win. For
me, that is my sole concern.
ThaRegul8r wrote:5. The ability to rise to the occasion during big games and crucial moments in order to bring about the ultimate objective of winning, and the mental fortitude to do so.
This criterion is relevant in that I want to know if a player is able to effectively employ whatever it is he brings to the table in important moments in his team's quest for a title. Can he still do whatever it is that he does in big games? Players who can, that is a positive in my evaluation, causing them to move up in my rankings. If, for whatever reason, they cannot, that devalues them in my eyes. Whatever it is they bring to the table won't be of much use if they can't do it—whatever "it" is—when his team needs it most. This is what I'm getting at if when I want to know how a given player performs in the postseason. How well did he employ what he brings to the table in the postseason?
To that effect, being able to employ whatever it is that he brings in varying situations and against varying opponents is relevant. He needs to be able to do what he does against whatever opponent his team may face. Every player may have particular bad matchups, but a player who has less of these is more valuable to his team. I'm going to call it "matchup independence." The degree to which the ability of a player to employ whatever he bring to the table to help his team win isn't diminished by particular matchups. Greater matchup independence is a positive. For you may run up against your bad matchup in the postseason, and thus your ability to effectively employ what you bring to the table to help your team win can be diminished, for some, drastically.
Just as anything a player does on a court for me only has relevance if it helps his team win, anything a player
can't do only has relevance for me if it hinders his team's ability to win, or, worse yet, helps his team
lose. For example (from my notes on Durant this last season):
“One thing I criticize about Kevin Durant’s game, he still hasn’t learned to post up the little guys that guard him,” Charles Barkley said during the Sprint Halftime Report of Game 6 of the Western Conference Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs. “My criticism of Durant has always been the same,” Barkley said on the postgame show. “He lets little guys guard him.” This was a problem for Dirk Nowitzki at one point, and this hindered his team's ability to win. It hindered his ability to effectively employ what he brought to the table to help his team win. But Dirk rectified this, and this helped his team win. Which brings me to:
Any improvement a player makes is only relevant to me if it increases his ability to employ what he brings to the team to help his team win. Dirk's addition of a post game helped his team win, which is the only thing that matters to me.
Longevity was brought up, and I've revised my criterion to reflect my current thoughts:
ThaRegul8r wrote:11. The object of the game is to help your team win. Nothing else matters. Thus longevity is only relevant as far as when evaluating a player, the question is: how much did that player help the team(s) he played on during his career win, from draft day to retirement? This encompasses more than just a player’s peak/prime, it encompasses the moment he plays his first NBA game to the moment he announces his retirement, not an arbitrarily selected portion of his career. A player can help his team win before reaching his peak/prime (e.g., Magic Johnson), and can continue to do so after passing it. These years will not be excluded simply because they didn’t fall inside the period labeled as that player’s peak/prime.
A player does not cease to help his team win after passing his peak/prime. He may not be able to make as large a contribution as he formerly did due to age, but continuing to contribute to team wins to the extent one is able is still valuable to the team he plays for and helps the team obtain the ultimate objective. A player’s career consists of more than just his peak, as he won’t be at his peak for his entire career. The mere fact that one player “peaked” higher than another at one point in his career does not mean that he helped the team(s) he played for win more from draft day to retirement.
Longevity only has any meaning insofar as the length of time a player can continue to effectively employ whatever skills he brings to the table at whatever degree he is able to at that point in time to remain a positive contributor to team success. Post-prime longevity only matters when adding extra value. That is to say, if a player failed to effectively employ whatever abilities he brings to the table to help his team win during his prime, then simply outlasting the competition long enough to luck into a favorable situation is not adding extra value. Post-prime longevity cannot make up for the failure to meet Criteria #1 and #5 during one’s prime. Only seasons in which a player helped his team win will be considered in the overall evaluation (Criterion #7).
Tim Duncan is an easy recent example. Duncan helped his team win four NBA championships during his prime, and then helped his team reach the NBA Finals and win an NBA title in back-to-back seasons after his prime. Helping his team reach those Finals—winning one—is
extra value Duncan provided beyond the four championships he helped them win during his prime.
Kareem also provided extra value in his post-prime longevity by continuing to help the Lakers win and be an instrumental part of their success after his prime, helping them win in 1985 with a performance that garnered him the Finals MVP award (for my rankings though, the award is irrelevant. The
performance is what matters). One of the things Kareem brought to the table was the most unstoppable shot in the history of the game, and even after he'd passed his prime, the Lakers continued to go to him when they needed a basket. That's extra value.