RealGM Top 100 List #19
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RealGM Top 100 List #19
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RealGM Top 100 List #19
CENTERS
Moses has great longevity and 3 MVPs; George Mikan who is the only player left that was the undisputed best player in basketball for a reasonably long stretch of time (5 years +). But, his era was the last vestige of white only, no shot-clock basketball. Patrick Ewing and Artis Gilmore should get mentioned here as well.
FORWARDS
Pettit, Barkley, Baylor, McHale, Pippen, Havlicek, Rodman, and even Kevin Durant. For Barkley to go over the likes of Pettit or Baylor, he'd have to have a clear statistical edge. Since I have many times compared Pettit to Baylor, and it always comes out Pettit, I will compare the numbers for Pettit, Barkley, and throw in George Mikan -- all regularized to a standard year (I usually use 2000).
GUARDS
Wade or Frazier. Wade is the most explosive scorer and plays excellent defense, Frazier didn't score as much but was an even better defender and playmaker, and even more known for stepping up and dominating 2 NBA finals. This one is very close; I lean Frazier over Wade but willing to be convinced. I see Clyde as a step up over Nash and Stockton for his ability to take over games with both his scoring and defense, over Payton, Kidd, or Isiah for his scoring efficiency and superior all around game. Both Wade and Frazier do suffer a little from short or injury riddled primes.
To get an idea of Mikan and Pettit's impact, I am going to bring their numbers from one of their prime seasons up to the year 2000 by taking simple ratios. So, their points, rebounds, assists, and ts% will all be adjusted to numbers that would approximate their impact in year 2000 numbers (I will also add in Barkley for comparison).
Mikan
1951 28.4pts 14.1reb 3.0ast .428efg
2000 32.8pts 12.3reb 3.2ast .578efg Mikan's offensive dominance was Wilt like; more dominant than Shaq! Note that both Mikan and Pettit had massive foul draws of over 10/g with very good FT shooting so the ts% is even greater.
Pettit
1959 29.2pts 16.4reb 3.1ast .438efg
2000 26.3pts 10.4reb 3.5ast .530efg Pettit's rebounding numbers come down to earth while his efficiency shows as pretty decent. The key is that he was able to maintain them his whole career from the 50s all the way through the mid 60s while the NBA changed drastically around him. He's basically a nice guy predecessor of Karl Malone.
Barkley
1988 28.3pts 11.9reb 3.2ast .604efg
2000 25.5pts 11.8reb 2.8ast .590efg The average ppg for a team in 1988 was exactly the same as it was in 1959 interestingly enough. Mikan and Pettit both also had decent defensive reps; though playing in the 50s is the weakest era in NBA history.
Pettit and Barkley are close enough that I go with the classy team leader who worked hard on defense and has possibly the greatest finals game 7 4th quarter ever played rather than the more efficient but lazy and often obnoxious modern player. However, looking at Mikan's numbers, they are even stronger than I had thought and really do put him into play even with his play in a weaker era and issues with the shot clock.
Still, someone is going to have to talk me out of voting for Moses Malone; he's my default vote right now.
Moses has great longevity and 3 MVPs; George Mikan who is the only player left that was the undisputed best player in basketball for a reasonably long stretch of time (5 years +). But, his era was the last vestige of white only, no shot-clock basketball. Patrick Ewing and Artis Gilmore should get mentioned here as well.
FORWARDS
Pettit, Barkley, Baylor, McHale, Pippen, Havlicek, Rodman, and even Kevin Durant. For Barkley to go over the likes of Pettit or Baylor, he'd have to have a clear statistical edge. Since I have many times compared Pettit to Baylor, and it always comes out Pettit, I will compare the numbers for Pettit, Barkley, and throw in George Mikan -- all regularized to a standard year (I usually use 2000).
GUARDS
Wade or Frazier. Wade is the most explosive scorer and plays excellent defense, Frazier didn't score as much but was an even better defender and playmaker, and even more known for stepping up and dominating 2 NBA finals. This one is very close; I lean Frazier over Wade but willing to be convinced. I see Clyde as a step up over Nash and Stockton for his ability to take over games with both his scoring and defense, over Payton, Kidd, or Isiah for his scoring efficiency and superior all around game. Both Wade and Frazier do suffer a little from short or injury riddled primes.
To get an idea of Mikan and Pettit's impact, I am going to bring their numbers from one of their prime seasons up to the year 2000 by taking simple ratios. So, their points, rebounds, assists, and ts% will all be adjusted to numbers that would approximate their impact in year 2000 numbers (I will also add in Barkley for comparison).
Mikan
1951 28.4pts 14.1reb 3.0ast .428efg
2000 32.8pts 12.3reb 3.2ast .578efg Mikan's offensive dominance was Wilt like; more dominant than Shaq! Note that both Mikan and Pettit had massive foul draws of over 10/g with very good FT shooting so the ts% is even greater.
Pettit
1959 29.2pts 16.4reb 3.1ast .438efg
2000 26.3pts 10.4reb 3.5ast .530efg Pettit's rebounding numbers come down to earth while his efficiency shows as pretty decent. The key is that he was able to maintain them his whole career from the 50s all the way through the mid 60s while the NBA changed drastically around him. He's basically a nice guy predecessor of Karl Malone.
Barkley
1988 28.3pts 11.9reb 3.2ast .604efg
2000 25.5pts 11.8reb 2.8ast .590efg The average ppg for a team in 1988 was exactly the same as it was in 1959 interestingly enough. Mikan and Pettit both also had decent defensive reps; though playing in the 50s is the weakest era in NBA history.
Pettit and Barkley are close enough that I go with the classy team leader who worked hard on defense and has possibly the greatest finals game 7 4th quarter ever played rather than the more efficient but lazy and often obnoxious modern player. However, looking at Mikan's numbers, they are even stronger than I had thought and really do put him into play even with his play in a weaker era and issues with the shot clock.
Still, someone is going to have to talk me out of voting for Moses Malone; he's my default vote right now.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
penbeast0 wrote:Still, someone is going to have to talk me out of voting for Moses Malone; he's my default vote right now.
My thoughts as well.
I think it's interesting that we've basically enshrined all of the non-piston championship winners for the last 30 years already.
Maybe Ben Wallace and Isiah Thomas should be getting some traction here?
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
Vote: Steve Nash
-Greatest offensive player in history
-Great postseason performer
If Wade gets more support, I'll try to do a Nash vs Wade comparison
-Greatest offensive player in history
-Great postseason performer
If Wade gets more support, I'll try to do a Nash vs Wade comparison
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
I vote for Moses Malone. Dominant, championship-winning offense, and an outlier beast on the boards. I also give him some "historic" credit for being the first high school-to-NBA superstar. A defined cluster of seasons when he was the league's top dog, and the centerpiece of one of the most talented squads in NBA history. The early-80s 76ers sometimes get mentioned with the great teams, but not enough.
Given the conversations that have already happened in the #17 and #18 threads, this will probably be a shoo-in for Moses. We could start setting the table for who comes next - personally, I'm strongly leaning towards Barkley at #20, but I'm willing to bet that Nash will be getting a LOT of discussion soon. We are about to come up to a group of talented perimeter players who may or may not be good at all facets of the game, and we will have to weigh how much we value certain contributions over others.
- Frazier is obviously >>> Nash on defense - does that propel him over Nash? I think we will see real contentious debate over that choice, and it will be a true litmus test for what voters want to see in a player. A lot of the #10-18 discussion has sort of established that here, Great Defense + Good Enough offense > Great Offense, Bad Defense. The counterpoint: for guards, and point guards in particular, defense isn't that relevant. How do we feel about this claim? shutupandjam presented some very interesting data that seems to indicate that defense is relevant for every position to an extent not typically recognized. My eye test tells me that I would rather have Nash than Frazier, but I will admit I've seen much more of Nash. This thread, and subsequent ones, should look more at that stuff and decide if it's worth serious consideration.
How do people feel about Ben Wallace v. Steve Nash? Nash has more prime longevity, but consider this: Ben Wallace won DPoY 4 times in 5 years. If anybody has an argument for an all-defense player over Nash, the all-offense player, it might be him. He was the unquestioned tone-setter and best defensive player for those Pistons teams, who might be the equivalent of the Nash Suns in terms of dominance on one side of the ball.
Some quick +/- observations:
Nash has 4 seasons in the top 50 for RAPM.
Wallace doesn't show up until #215 in RAPM.
Nash has 5 of the top 12 offensive RAPM seasons.
Wallace has the 8th best defensive RAPM season, but his next best is down at #34.
How do we feel about that data? To me, it suggests that the ultimate offense-only PG was more valuable than the ultimate defense-only big man. Is that something that has any relevance at all to comparing other players, or is it totally context-dependent, and shouldn't be applied, to, say, Nash v. Frazier? I'm still new at this RAPM stuff, so cut me some slack if I'm butchering the data.
Given the conversations that have already happened in the #17 and #18 threads, this will probably be a shoo-in for Moses. We could start setting the table for who comes next - personally, I'm strongly leaning towards Barkley at #20, but I'm willing to bet that Nash will be getting a LOT of discussion soon. We are about to come up to a group of talented perimeter players who may or may not be good at all facets of the game, and we will have to weigh how much we value certain contributions over others.
- Frazier is obviously >>> Nash on defense - does that propel him over Nash? I think we will see real contentious debate over that choice, and it will be a true litmus test for what voters want to see in a player. A lot of the #10-18 discussion has sort of established that here, Great Defense + Good Enough offense > Great Offense, Bad Defense. The counterpoint: for guards, and point guards in particular, defense isn't that relevant. How do we feel about this claim? shutupandjam presented some very interesting data that seems to indicate that defense is relevant for every position to an extent not typically recognized. My eye test tells me that I would rather have Nash than Frazier, but I will admit I've seen much more of Nash. This thread, and subsequent ones, should look more at that stuff and decide if it's worth serious consideration.
How do people feel about Ben Wallace v. Steve Nash? Nash has more prime longevity, but consider this: Ben Wallace won DPoY 4 times in 5 years. If anybody has an argument for an all-defense player over Nash, the all-offense player, it might be him. He was the unquestioned tone-setter and best defensive player for those Pistons teams, who might be the equivalent of the Nash Suns in terms of dominance on one side of the ball.
Some quick +/- observations:
Nash has 4 seasons in the top 50 for RAPM.
Wallace doesn't show up until #215 in RAPM.
Nash has 5 of the top 12 offensive RAPM seasons.
Wallace has the 8th best defensive RAPM season, but his next best is down at #34.
How do we feel about that data? To me, it suggests that the ultimate offense-only PG was more valuable than the ultimate defense-only big man. Is that something that has any relevance at all to comparing other players, or is it totally context-dependent, and shouldn't be applied, to, say, Nash v. Frazier? I'm still new at this RAPM stuff, so cut me some slack if I'm butchering the data.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
Vote Moses Malone
As i said before, 3mvps, FMVP, best player in the game for several seasons, 31 ppg 15 rpg peak
Excellent playoff performer, one of the top rebounders of all time, dominated his matchups etc
The only other legitimate candidate i could see over him is Barkley, but i take Moses because he's the better defender. Wade and Petitt don't have enough longevity, while Hondo, Barry don't have a good enough peak to be argued over Moses.
As i said before, 3mvps, FMVP, best player in the game for several seasons, 31 ppg 15 rpg peak
Excellent playoff performer, one of the top rebounders of all time, dominated his matchups etc
The only other legitimate candidate i could see over him is Barkley, but i take Moses because he's the better defender. Wade and Petitt don't have enough longevity, while Hondo, Barry don't have a good enough peak to be argued over Moses.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
Hopefully moses gets voted in now. Outperforming kareem head to head from 1978-83, and outperforming hakeem olajuwon from 1985-1990 head to head. In those 12 game sample, he outscored, outrebounded and shot better than hakeem. He was the best player from 1979-83, went to the nba finals twice as the man and I think he would dominate certain players that were ranked above him because he was an excellent low post scorer, created his own buckets and would get physical in the paint. If he was put in better team situations and wasnt traded in 86, he likely ends up with more rings and playoff success.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
My vote again is for Moses Malone
Right now I will just compare him to Karl Malone.
For all of Karl's Longevity talk and Moses' relatively short career for the guys on this list, KM appeared in 14 all-star games and MM in 12. While a simplistic way to look at it, it still shows to me that maybe the gap might not be what one would perceive from reading these threads.
5 year playoff Peak per100
89-93 KM- 34.3/10.8(3.7)/3.1 on .567 TS%
79-83 MM- 31.0/18.1(7.5)/1.9 on .551 TS%
Career per100
KM- 34.4/13.9(3.3)/4.9 on .577 TS%
MM- 30.4/18.3(7.6)/1.9 on .569 TS%
Playoffs- Not sure KM's gap in scoring/assists/TS% matches MM's rebounding superiority, especially when you consider how much is coming form the offensive end.
Career- MM shows a lot more consistency… but whether that's good or bad is up to each individual voter. For me it shows that no matter the quality or intensity of the defense, MM was going to get his. For KM, I can't decide whether its because he falters under pressure, excels when games aren't as intense or just a result of defenses focusing in on him.
MM does have what KM doesn't that seems to play a lot into his legacy- a championship. And it wasn't as if MM joined a super team and became a 3rd option- he was finals MVP and is generally considered the playoff MVP that season. He out rebounded Kareem 72-30 (27-5) in that 4 game series, outscored him 103-94 and played 39.25 mpg. That's the guy who was ranked 2nd on this list. Not that one series defines a career but it certainly helps support it.
While Karl has the advantage defensively, I do not think MM's defense is as poor as people make it seem. From what I've been reading his man-to-man was solid (goes right along with his physical offensive nature) but his team defense is what brings him down. I would still like to see a little more about MM's defense.
But at this point, as I have stated before with my bias to offensive rebounds that no one else seems to really share, I have to vote Moses Malone.
Sorry, too lazy to start this all over again. Think of Karl Malone as my reasoning why he should be in now since Karl already is. If this doesn't suffice let me know but I am trying to get this out of the way because I'll probably be out of commission all day tomorrow and into sunday.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
How does Moses compare to Steve Nash offensively? We know Moses is a bad defender so he doesn't have a huge advantage over Nash in that category.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
colts18 wrote:How does Moses compare to Steve Nash offensively? We know Moses is a bad defender so he doesn't have a huge advantage over Nash in that category.
I would argue that. Moses was a good man to man center which is more than Nash can say. And, as many, many people have pointed out here, the center position has more impact on defense than the point guard position. So even if they were even, Moses would get the nod.
Okay Brand, Michael Jackson didn't come over to my house to use the bathroom. But his sister did.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
colts18 wrote:How does Moses compare to Steve Nash offensively? We know Moses is a bad defender so he doesn't have a huge advantage over Nash in that category.
With the offense thing aside, Nash was nowhere near a top 10 player before 05 so that's basically at least half his career that he was either a slightly above average player or a borderline all star. So he had what about 6 years as a top 10 player 05-2010?(i suppose you could stretch it out to '11 0r 12') Moses has far more dominant seasons and seasons as a top player, i think the gap in star longevity it far too large to even compare Nash to Moses. Moses also has the better peak and better accolades to go with it. I don't see how it's even debatable.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
rich316 wrote:We are about to come up to a group of talented perimeter players who may or may not be good at all facets of the game, and we will have to weigh how much we value certain contributions over others.
- Frazier is obviously >>> Nash on defense - does that propel him over Nash? I think we will see real contentious debate over that choice, and it will be a true litmus test for what voters want to see in a player. A lot of the #10-18 discussion has sort of established that here, Great Defense + Good Enough offense > Great Offense, Bad Defense. The counterpoint: for guards, and point guards in particular, defense isn't that relevant. How do we feel about this claim? shutupandjam presented some very interesting data that seems to indicate that defense is relevant for every position to an extent not typically recognized. My eye test tells me that I would rather have Nash than Frazier, but I will admit I've seen much more of Nash. This thread, and subsequent ones, should look more at that stuff and decide if it's worth serious consideration.
Speaking solely for myself, I will continue to refer to the preestablished criteria for this purpose:
First and foremost, the object of the game is to help your team win. Basketball is a job like any other, and a basketball player’s job is to help bring his team wins just as a salesman’s job is to make sales for his company. When a player is drafted, he’s drafted so that he can help that team win. When a player is signed, he’s signed so that he can help that team win. When a player is scouted, he’s scouted because the scouts hope to find in him a player who can help their team win. That’s the bottom line. A basketball player has more impact on the game than any player in any other team sport. Football is too specialized, with separate teams for offense and defense, and one player is one of 11 on the field for his team; in baseball, one man is only one of nine, and position players only come to bat 3-4 times a game. Pitchers have the most impact on a game, but only pitch once every five games. A basketball player can help his team win to a greater extent than football or baseball players are capable of due to the inherent constraints of their sports. Therefore, the most important thing for a basketball player to have is 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, the dedication to employ these abilities for the effectuation of said purpose, and the ability to effectively employ their respective abilities toward the purpose of helping their team win.
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.
The player who was better able to effectively utilize whatever respective abilities he brings to the table to help his team win is the player who will receive the higher ranking. That way any stylistic biases can be eliminated. The only thing I continue to ask of player advocates is to show how their chosen player utilized whatever it is he brought to the table to help his team win.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
rich316 wrote:I
How do people feel about Ben Wallace v. Steve Nash? Nash has more prime longevity, but consider this: Ben Wallace won DPoY 4 times in 5 years. If anybody has an argument for an all-defense player over Nash, the all-offense player, it might be him. He was the unquestioned tone-setter and best defensive player for those Pistons teams, who might be the equivalent of the Nash Suns in terms of dominance on one side of the ball.
Some quick +/- observations:
Nash has 4 seasons in the top 50 for RAPM.
Wallace doesn't show up until #215 in RAPM.
Nash has 5 of the top 12 offensive RAPM seasons.
Wallace has the 8th best defensive RAPM season, but his next best is down at #34.
How do we feel about that data? To me, it suggests that the ultimate offense-only PG was more valuable than the ultimate defense-only big man. Is that something that has any relevance at all to comparing other players, or is it totally context-dependent, and shouldn't be applied, to, say, Nash v. Frazier? I'm still new at this RAPM stuff, so cut me some slack if I'm butchering the data.
To the question you ask here: Nash is glaringly superior, and that relates to a general trend, that in modern basketball offensive stars typically have more impact than defensive stars.
As far as how that relates to Nash vs Frazier, well there's more to it and I'll try to get to later.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
Doctor MJ wrote:in modern basketball offensive stars typically have more impact than defensive stars.
This might have a little something to do with it:
Spoiler:
Spoiler:
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
I'm voting for Moses Malone. The man was a terror on the boards and under the basket. He's by far the most accomplished player left and he has the most impressive accolades of anyone left.
Also I hate when a thread ends halfway through you making a post. Still head to the 18 thread for some pro-Ewing postseason arguments (basically a post where I'm saying he played pretty well against top competition in the playoffs).
Also I hate when a thread ends halfway through you making a post. Still head to the 18 thread for some pro-Ewing postseason arguments (basically a post where I'm saying he played pretty well against top competition in the playoffs).
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
DannyNoonan1221 wrote:My vote again is for Moses Malone
Right now I will just compare him to Karl Malone.
For all of Karl's Longevity talk and Moses' relatively short career for the guys on this list, KM appeared in 14 all-star games and MM in 12. While a simplistic way to look at it, it still shows to me that maybe the gap might not be what one would perceive from reading these threads.
5 year playoff Peak per100
89-93 KM- 34.3/10.8(3.7)/3.1 on .567 TS%
79-83 MM- 31.0/18.1(7.5)/1.9 on .551 TS%
Career per100
KM- 34.4/13.9(3.3)/4.9 on .577 TS%
MM- 30.4/18.3(7.6)/1.9 on .569 TS%
Playoffs- Not sure KM's gap in scoring/assists/TS% matches MM's rebounding superiority, especially when you consider how much is coming form the offensive end.
Career- MM shows a lot more consistency… but whether that's good or bad is up to each individual voter. For me it shows that no matter the quality or intensity of the defense, MM was going to get his. For KM, I can't decide whether its because he falters under pressure, excels when games aren't as intense or just a result of defenses focusing in on him.
MM does have what KM doesn't that seems to play a lot into his legacy- a championship. And it wasn't as if MM joined a super team and became a 3rd option- he was finals MVP and is generally considered the playoff MVP that season. He out rebounded Kareem 72-30 (27-5) in that 4 game series, outscored him 103-94 and played 39.25 mpg. That's the guy who was ranked 2nd on this list. Not that one series defines a career but it certainly helps support it.
While Karl has the advantage defensively, I do not think MM's defense is as poor as people make it seem. From what I've been reading his man-to-man was solid (goes right along with his physical offensive nature) but his team defense is what brings him down. I would still like to see a little more about MM's defense.
But at this point, as I have stated before with my bias to offensive rebounds that no one else seems to really share, I have to vote Moses Malone.
Sorry, too lazy to start this all over again. Think of Karl Malone as my reasoning why he should be in now since Karl already is. If this doesn't suffice let me know but I am trying to get this out of the way because I'll probably be out of commission all day tomorrow and into sunday.
All of the above plus
outplayed Kareem 78-83
defeated Lakers twice,
best player on one of top teams in history,
3 time MVP
Best player in league from 1979-1983
VOTE FOR MOSES MALONE AT 19
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
rich316 wrote:How do people feel about Ben Wallace v. Steve Nash? Nash has more prime longevity, but consider this: Ben Wallace won DPoY 4 times in 5 years. If anybody has an argument for an all-defense player over Nash, the all-offense player, it might be him. He was the unquestioned tone-setter and best defensive player for those Pistons teams, who might be the equivalent of the Nash Suns in terms of dominance on one side of the ball.
Some quick +/- observations:
Nash has 4 seasons in the top 50 for RAPM.
Wallace doesn't show up until #215 in RAPM.
Nash has 5 of the top 12 offensive RAPM seasons.
Wallace has the 8th best defensive RAPM season, but his next best is down at #34.
How do we feel about that data? To me, it suggests that the ultimate offense-only PG was more valuable than the ultimate defense-only big man. Is that something that has any relevance at all to comparing other players, or is it totally context-dependent, and shouldn't be applied, to, say, Nash v. Frazier? I'm still new at this RAPM stuff, so cut me some slack if I'm butchering the data.
I would say that if you were going to do the all-defense player to compare to Nash, especially using +/- data, it would be Dikembe Mutombo. Mutombo also has 4 Defensive Player of the Years, and his RAPM scores are distinctly better than Wallace's. He in fact has the best defensive RAPM scores on record back through 1998, and that doesn't include two of his DPoY awards.
Offense only, Nash's top-3 O-RAPM scores averaged to +9.6 in Doc MJ's scaled PI RAPM spreadsheet (1998 - 2012). Defense only, Mutombo's top-3 D-RAPM scores averaged to +8.7 (all in the three seasons from '98 - 2000). That isn't a big difference, and it is certainly arguable that Mutombo may have had more seasons at that level or higher before '98. Mutombo's overall RAPM score from '98 is slightly higher than the best that Nash ever scored, but we don't have 2001 and only partial for 2002 and after he had declined. But I think one could make an interesting case for at least mentioning Mutombo around the time that Nash starts getting major traction.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
So far I've really only seen Moses votes. I'd think Barkley would at least get some traction, and I saw the start of some interesting stuff about Ewing last thread. Anyone else worthy of big mentions now?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
drza wrote:rich316 wrote:How do people feel about Ben Wallace v. Steve Nash? Nash has more prime longevity, but consider this: Ben Wallace won DPoY 4 times in 5 years. If anybody has an argument for an all-defense player over Nash, the all-offense player, it might be him. He was the unquestioned tone-setter and best defensive player for those Pistons teams, who might be the equivalent of the Nash Suns in terms of dominance on one side of the ball.
Some quick +/- observations:
Nash has 4 seasons in the top 50 for RAPM.
Wallace doesn't show up until #215 in RAPM.
Nash has 5 of the top 12 offensive RAPM seasons.
Wallace has the 8th best defensive RAPM season, but his next best is down at #34.
How do we feel about that data? To me, it suggests that the ultimate offense-only PG was more valuable than the ultimate defense-only big man. Is that something that has any relevance at all to comparing other players, or is it totally context-dependent, and shouldn't be applied, to, say, Nash v. Frazier? I'm still new at this RAPM stuff, so cut me some slack if I'm butchering the data.
I would say that if you were going to do the all-defense player to compare to Nash, especially using +/- data, it would be Dikembe Mutombo. Mutombo also has 4 Defensive Player of the Years, and his RAPM scores are distinctly better than Wallace's. He in fact has the best defensive RAPM scores on record back through 1998, and that doesn't include two of his DPoY awards.
Offense only, Nash's top-3 O-RAPM scores averaged to +9.6 in Doc MJ's scaled PI RAPM spreadsheet (1998 - 2012). Defense only, Mutombo's top-3 D-RAPM scores averaged to +8.7 (all in the three seasons from '98 - 2000). That isn't a big difference, and it is certainly arguable that Mutombo may have had more seasons at that level or higher before '98. Mutombo's overall RAPM score from '98 is slightly higher than the best that Nash ever scored, but we don't have 2001 and only partial for 2002 and after he had declined. But I think one could make an interesting case for at least mentioning Mutombo around the time that Nash starts getting major traction.
I've heard of these numbers for Mutombo (or, seen mention of them, more accurately). Where can they be found?
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
ThaRegul8r wrote:Spoiler:
Speaking solely for myself, I will continue to refer to the preestablished criteria for this purpose:Spoiler:
The player who was better able to effectively utilize whatever respective abilities he brings to the table to help his team win is the player who will receive the higher ranking. That way any stylistic biases can be eliminated. The only thing I continue to ask of player advocates is to show how their chosen player utilized whatever it is he brought to the table to help his team win.
It would seem to me that under these criteria, the clearly superior candidate is George Mikan. In the game of his day, using the tools he had, he contributed more to helping his team win than any other candidate by a fairly substantial margin.
Many of the rest of us, however, use some version of portability -- not how much you helped your team win but how much you would help teams win over the course of the NBA (and some only look at how much it would help a team win since 1990). Thus the questions about Mikan -- his athleticism, his skill set, his ability to adapt his game to the shot clock era -- become very real. I think he's a legitimate candidate here though.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #19
ThaRegul8r wrote:I've heard of these numbers for Mutombo (or, seen mention of them, more accurately). Where can they be found?
Doctor MJ's RAPM chronology spreadsheet.
viewtopic.php?f=344&t=1313139