GC Pantalones wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:People asked about Robinson vs Ewing:
To be honest the debate confuses me. Every one knows that if we went simply by regular season Robinson tops not only Ewing but Olajuwon, so the argument against Robinson is the playoffs. And people then take that, link that with Robinson's style, and seem to come to conclusions that he's not a "true" big.
But if you look at playoff stats, Robinson still has a pretty big edge in the playoffs. .
Ewing had a playoff PER north of 22 once, Robinson did it 9 times.
Well that's offensively and it doesn't account for Robinson killing bad teams while underperforming against good teams. In 90 and 91 he was great in elimination. In 92 he missed the playoffs. In 93 he was fine but immediately after that you have 94 (19/9, 41%), 95 (24/11, 44%, killed by Hakeem), 96 (19/9, 47%), and 98 (19/13, 39%). He never played great defenses in the playoffs before these defenses were making him look very bad (he also had a better offensive supporting cast).
Ewing on the other hand has 1990 against Detroit (27/10, 47%), 91 against Chicago he was bad, 92 he played very good against Chicago (20/10, 47%), in 93 against Chicago he was amazing (26/11, 53%), 94 has been talked about ad nauseum but Pat was great against a very good Chicago defense (23/12, 53%) and he played great defense along with terrible offense in the Finals, in 95 they played Indy and fell one layup short (19/9, 53%), in 96 they played the GOAT Chicago squad (23/11, 47%), and in 97 they played the top ranked Miami defense (24/11, 49%).
Looking at that I'd take Ewing in the 90 playoffs over any Robinson season and Ewing in the playoffs every year over Robinson in the playoffs from 92-98. In that stretch of 7 seasons Robinson only played well once (in 93). Pat can at least say he has more than 3 great postseason performances.
All the normal disclaimers apply about PER not being a perfect stat, but for anyone who was thinking "yeah, but Robinson falls off in the playoffs", eliminate that from your rationale. Statistically there's basically no comparison between the two ever except for that one seasons ('89-90).
I'd say Pat is over Robinson in 90, 92, 96, and 97. That's 4 out of the 8 years they both played in their primes. That is before considering the level of opponents the two had (Pat played a ton of top 10 defenses in these seasons and Robinson played 3 while playing horribly 2 of those 3 times).
So then the question becomes, is there really something that can push Ewing over the top is you DON"T start with the assumption that Robinson's so suspect that you should ignore his general performance?
Some might be thinking of how good the Ewing Knicks were at defense, and that's cool, but there's zero doubt that Robinson was capable of huge defensive impact.
Huge defensive impact sure but we have no idea how much more impactful he could've been than Ewing (or less impactful). I do know that man to man he's not going to be as good as Pat and that Pat successfully led the greatest post Russell defenses mainly due to his ability to guard the great centers of the 90's mostly one on one (rewatch the 94 Finals and notice how little Hakeem was doubled).
I know people tend to focus on the Hakeem series, but I think people tend to focus on the individual stats rather than the team performance too much given that the Spurs made a choice to play the Rockets as they did rather than swarm Olajuwon at all times. Take a look at the ORtgs of Houston in the series they played that year:
1st - 120.6
WCSF - 115.9
WCF - 110.6
Finals - 117.1
The Spurs were the only team to hold Houston under GOAT-ish levels.
Now, I would still expect Ewing's Knicks to do an even better job because it was a stellar team offense - and Ewing was certainly a big part of it - but the notion that Robinson was exposed in that series as RS only defender is silly. That Rocket team caught fire, frankly more than they ever did the previous year.
The Rockets catching fire is not saying much to me considering the reason they lost was that Hakeem dominated Robinson and that the Rockets only played one above average defense in 95 (the Jazz - who had possibly the worst centers in the league) outside of Robinson (the Magic were 13th and the Suns 19th out of 27). Against the Knicks Houston had a 100.1 ORTG and Hakeem individually had his worst series in his peak offensively (before considering who he was up against).
And it wasn't just Hakeem but also Zo. As a rookie Pat held him to 20 pp36 down from his regular season 22 average and 52TS/98ORTG down from 59TS/112ORTG. In his first Miami campaign he held him to 19 pp36 down from 20 and 50TS/90ORTG down from 58TS/106ORTG.