trex_8063 wrote:penbeast0 wrote:Gary Payton v. Isiah Thomas
Longevity: Payton 16 years, Thomas 13 years
Years over 20PER: Payton 8, Thomas 3 (surprising dominance for Payton)
Scoring: Payton career 24.0/100 possessions at .528 TS%
Thomas career 25.7/100 possessions at .518 (roughly even)
Payton Peak 29.6/100 possessions at .545 TS%
Thomas Peak 27.2/100 possessions at .525 TS% (advantage Payton)
Playmaking: Payton career 9.9ast/100 possessions v. 3.3 turnovers
Thomas career 12.4ast/100 possessions v. 4.1 turnovers (slight advantage Thomas)
Rebounding: Payton career 5.8reb /100 possessions
Thomas career 4.7reb/100 possessions (advantage Payton)
Playoffs: Payton career 21.3pts/100 possessions at .506 ts% for a 15.6 PER
Thomas career 27.6pts/100 possessions @.520ts% for a 19.8 PER (Strong advantage Thomas)
though to be fair, Payton had a lot more playoff games out of his prime
Payton peak 1996 (21g) 25.9pts/5.3reb/6.5ast/100 possessions @ .568 ts%
Thomas peak 1989 (17g) 26.4pts/6.2reb/12.0ast/100 possessions @ .560ts% (slight advantage Thomas)
Defense: Payton 9 times 1st Team All Defense, 1x Defensive Player of the Year (1996)
Thomas (none)
So, comparing the two using simple metrics . . .
Payton is the better regular season player.
Thomas is clearly the superior at stepping up in the playoffs
Payton has a massive defensive edge
Basically, about what was expected. If you value PG defense as I do (and our advanced metrics have shown that, other than Garnett, Duncan, and the center position, all 4 of the other positions have roughly equal defensive importance) then Payton has a strong edge over the course of their careers. If you value playoffs appreciably more than regular season (I tend to value them similarly, the greater sample size of the one balancing the greater importance of the other though there are exceptions), then Isiah has that edge though Payton had some great defensive playoffs, v. Kevin Johnson where he got the nickname "Glove", v. Michael Jordan even.
For me, the choice is still Gary Payton over Isiah Thomas. Since I value him over Kidd as well, I rate Gary Payton first among the remaining PGs. I don't have a clear decision over whether I value Payton over Artis Gilmore or the top SFs yet though and am open to being convinced.
Nice comparison breakdown, although as you mentioned, Payton's playoff numbers take a BIG hit because so many of his playoff games came in his twilight as he bounced around (including two stops with finals participants: '04 Lakers and '06 Heat); whereas ALL of Isiah's playoff games came in his prime. I don't think it's fair to hold Payton's longer career AGAINST him in that fashion.
If we were to compare only prime Payton (say....'94-'03) vs. prime Isiah in the playoffs:
Isiah
Per 100 possessions: 27.6 pts, 6.4 reb, 12.1 ast, 4.5 tov on .520 TS%
19.8 PER, .143 WS/48, 110 ORtg/105 DRtg (+5); 12.5 total WS
Payton ('94-'03)
Per 100 possessions: 27.2 pts, 6.2 reb, 9.0 ast, 3.4 tov on .528 TS%
19.4 PER, .130 WS/48, 111 ORtg/109 DRtg (+2); 7.9 total WS
So for playoff performance it's still advantage to Thomas, but it's now apparent it's not such a big gulf.
Speaking for myself, the longevity factor also adds some career value to Payton (only bring it up because you didn't mention it in your closing remarks); for me that puts a touch more distance between them. Generally agree with your assessment, though (except that I rate Payton marginally behind Kidd).
Well, by your measures playoff boxscore Isiah has an advantage. I think the boxscore (particularly DWS but also PER through steals) overcredits Isiah's D (and undercredits non-boxscore defenders, particularly Rodman, Dumars and Mahorn). If you consider your span a fair sample (some might say if we're getting to pick and choose Payton years Isiah should be able to lop off his last two playoff years, with Payton able to lop off an additional two years too, which might open up Isiah's advantage a little more; but I'd venture not enough to negate my coming point - not for my tastes anyhow) I'd suggest Payton's defensive superiority, beyond just the boxscore, might negate Thomas' playoff stats advantage.
































