magicmerl wrote:Warspite wrote:Chuck Texas wrote:
Thats simply not true. He is a victim of style/era bias. The fact that he is a one of a kind outlier that doesnt fit into the stat geeks style in which they grew up watching is what is holding him back.
That's not the case for me.
Part of the reason I'm not voting Moses as highly as I might have 10 years ago is because I have a different appreciation of the value of offensive rebounds, which is Moses signature skill.
I used to think that offensive rebounds were a true signal of the rebounding ability of a player, and thus should be valued more highly than defensive rebounds (which have a definite team positional component to them). But over time I've become more aware of players like Duncan who are essentially eschewing offensive rebounding opportunities in order to play better transition defense. I don't know the exact numbers on the value of offensive rebounding vs transition defense, but I'm prepared to take on faith that if the Spurs consistently do something different from the rest of the league, it's because of information asymmetry (they are right.
So, back to Moses. His signature skill that makes him great (offensive rebounding) is not as important as we thought it was at the time. Plus, he pursued this skill at the cost of team defense, which is already a knock. That to me *really* takes the gloss of his 3x MVPs.
The spurs are not doing something different, virtually nobody is going to the off boards these days.
But Moses was a unique player who was a much much offensive rebounder than Duncan . He stopped the fast break by not letting his opponents get the ball to fast break.
Teams didn't run against Houston or Philly because they never got the ball. Moses's man would be trying to block him out.
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