RealGM Top 100 list #33

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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#41 » by john248 » Thu Sep 25, 2014 6:22 pm

Chuck Texas wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:All of that exist for Ray Allen, and it's why he's a lock for Hall, and in general seen as a candidate for the Top 50. Bottom line is that a guy like that, who let's you use this lubricating role so well, doesn't come along that often.

But Miller's more than Allen on this front. He's better at losing his man, he's better at taking off balanced shots when he gets open, and he's crafty as a mofo at drawing fouls. All of this makes him a tier better as a player on a day in day out basis, but it's even bigger than that given what we've seen of him in crunch time.


Im not prepared at all to suggest that Miller is a tier above Ray Allen. I think we saw Ray Allen have to do more things because he played on some teams super dependent on him. And he showed quite capable of doing so. Then when he got to be more part of an ensemble like Miller did for much of his career, he was extremely effective in a reduced-volume off ball role. And again while Reggie's crunch moments tend to involve the Knicks and MSG and thus seem larger than life, I'm not sure he has that many more moments than Ray. I'd want to do more evaluation of both guys, but Ray Allen is also really really good.


Doctor MJ wrote:In general you'd expect a player with high efficiency and only middling volume to be getting that efficiency through caution in some sense. If forced to really take more shots, his efficiency would fall off rapidly. But of course that's not what happened with Reggie. Reggie was known for exploding when his team needed him. When the rest of the offense truly did get frozen, he would just keep moving around until he could get an opening. Hence the thing limiting his volume in more normal location was simply how successful his teammates were...which itself was allowed in part by the space he created. Up the pressure on them, and you might chip away at their effectiveness in spite of the help he was giving, but that only made it make more sense to rely on Reggie repeatedly, and he delivered.


Sure. I agree with this. Reggie played within the team concept and didn't force things and was absolutely helping to create better opportunities for his teammates. And when the situation called for it, he would put the team on his figurative back. He was without question a very good offensive player.


I like Ray Allen too and understand the arguments for him. In comparison to Miller in the eye test, he is more athletic, better with the dribble (which leads to more assists), and can be a better man defender. If we were to look at RS #s, Allen does pop out more given his 3 point shooting volume at similar percentages and higher scoring/assist totals. However, I do feel there is a rather clear separation in their overall offensive value where both Miller's floor and ceiling is higher in high pressure situations such as the playoffs. It's really no secret that Miller does kick it in an extra gear, and one IMO, that Allen doesn't match. So depending on criteria of how much someone weighs RS vs PS, I can see the point of contention.

If we were to compare them, Allen has some low points like 08 against the Cavs, 09 against Magic, and his 2010 run wasn't particularly outstanding. And this is him in the ensemble role, coming off a 26.4/4.5/4.1 in Seattle to more of an off-ball role similar to Miller, where he's had a series scoring under 10 or an ORTG under 100. Miller, at similar age 32-34, was better. He does have some mediocre series with a bit high turnovers agaisnt the Cavs 98, struggled with Jordan/Pippen in 98, 99 against Knicks. Actually had a good run in all of 2000. And Miller was still doing this as the primary threat at good volume and efficiency while aging more gracefully.

I've quoted ElGee in my vote for Miller since he explains things nicely. I like that he calls Miller's offense "resistant" to any kind of defense. And the numbers definitely show in elimination games and in series against strong defenses over his playoff career which include several deep runs.From here, I will just share what I got out of his analysis. We know Miller's singular clutch moments. But those moments happen due to Miller's GOAT shooting, off-ball, high BBIQ, and remarkable consistency...pretty much being "resistant" to any kind of defence. That consistency is shown in those singular clutch shots & 4th quarters, and to more plural moments over a series, over an entire playoff run, through his career, and against any defense.I haven't meantioned his clutch moments all that much simply because I see the consistent play in ANY moment. And those moments happen because Miller can recognize when he needs to take a scoring load and understands situations to give his team a chance to win. Doc MJ has talked about the effectiveness of what his off-ball game does.

I realize I'm weighing playoffs heavily here. He is an outlier though. In the RS, the efficiency is staggering and contributed to winning records. In the PS, volume goes up, at a star level, with little to no effect on his percentages.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#42 » by batmana » Thu Sep 25, 2014 7:56 pm

My vote for No. 33 goes to Kevin Durant.

I missed the previous vote for No. 32 but I'd have voted for Durant as well.

Despite still being so young and having probably the majority of his career in front of him, Durant has already had an impressive prime and a league MVP to go with it. He is in that group of guys that you can easily build a team around and be a competitor for as long as he is healthy. I believe he will cement his place as a centerpiece on a championship caliber team in the future.

Durant is already mentioned as one of the greatest scorers ever, with impressive volume of his scoring on amazing efficiency. He is a superb shooter, excellent off the ball but he has improved as a facilitator and is almost as dangerous initiating the offense. He is an underrated rebounder and defender and is still improving aspects of his game.

I believe his superb prime is already placing him above the other guys, and longevity is not so much of a factor. Durant is currently the guy I think has the best potential to rise in future rankings and I am a little surprised that Chris Paul was voted ahead of him.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#43 » by Texas Chuck » Thu Sep 25, 2014 8:04 pm

john248 wrote: I like that he calls Miller's offense "resistant" to any kind of defense. And the numbers definitely show in elimination games and in series against strong defenses over his playoff career which include several deep runs.From here, I will just share what I got out of his analysis. We know Miller's singular clutch moments. But those moments happen due to Miller's GOAT shooting, off-ball, high BBIQ, and remarkable consistency...pretty much being "resistant" to any kind of defence.



john,

Would you mind expounding a bit on why you believe his game is "resistant" to any defense? I'm not sure I'm completely following this idea.

Thanks
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#44 » by Destructor » Thu Sep 25, 2014 9:18 pm

penbeast0 wrote:Gary Payton -- penbeast0

Jason Kidd -- Doctor MJ, Chuck Texas

Isiah Thomas -- JordansBulls

Elgin Baylor -- trex_8063, Basketballefan, Clyde Frazier, Warspite, Jim Naismith

Reggie Miller -- john248

You missed FJS voting for Baylor
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#45 » by ThaRegul8r » Thu Sep 25, 2014 9:48 pm

Chuck Texas wrote:
john248 wrote: I like that he calls Miller's offense "resistant" to any kind of defense. And the numbers definitely show in elimination games and in series against strong defenses over his playoff career which include several deep runs.From here, I will just share what I got out of his analysis. We know Miller's singular clutch moments. But those moments happen due to Miller's GOAT shooting, off-ball, high BBIQ, and remarkable consistency...pretty much being "resistant" to any kind of defence.



john,

Would you mind expounding a bit on why you believe his game is "resistant" to any defense? I'm not sure I'm completely following this idea.

Thanks


People often say that in the postseason the defense gets tougher as they're able to lock in on an opponent, yet despite this, Miller continued to perform, and against the best defense of his era.

With Jordan, you are guessing what he’ll do to embarrass you. With Rice or Indiana’s Reggie Miller, you know the flood is coming, there’s just no sure way to hold it back. ‘With Michael, you wait until he gets the ball, then you go to work because you don’t know what he’s going to do,’ said [Steve] Smith. ‘But Reggie or Glen are running, ducking, moving (to get open) so you’ve got to work before they get the ball.’


Specific to the statement of being "resistant" to any defense, prior to the 2000 NBA Finals, Shaquille O'Neal said that “Reggie’s not really the kind of guy you can stop.” This is an NBA player saying this at the time, not an internet poster years after the fact, so it isn't a matter of revisionism. The 2000 Lakers were the best defensive team in the league, first in the league in defensive efficiency (98.2) and opponents’ field-goal percentage (41.6%), and Miller averaged 24.3 points on 58.8 percent true shooting against them in the Finals, 27.8 points on 47.7 percent shooting and 65.5 percent true shooting after an aberrational Game 1. Which, interestingly enough, is the exact opposite of what Ray Allen did in the 2010 NBA Finals against the Lakers (4th in the league in defensive efficiency [103.7], 26th out of 30 teams in opponents' field-goal percentage [44.6%]), in which he had the one hot game, but outside of the aberrational Game 2 shot 31.4 percent, 13.3 percent from behind the arc, averaging 11.7 points on 43.7 percent true shooting, and averaged 14.6 points on 36.7 percent shooting, 29.3 percent shooting from beyond the arc and 50.5 percent true shooting overall.

Others have posted Miller's numbers against the top defenses of his era, which I have, but I'll let somebody who's actually campaigning for him do it if they're so inclined. But I will repost this:

sp6r=underrated wrote:The New York Knicks, under Pat Riley, were easily, the best defensive team of the 90s. TMACFORMVP already ran the numbers:

TMACFORMVP wrote:91-92: Second in opponents points, fifth in opponents FG%
92-93: First in opponents points, first in opponents FG% (Knicks held opponents to .421 FG%, and the next closest team were the Bulls who held their opponents to an average .450 FG%. That's dominance defensively overall ALL their peers)
93-94: First in opponents points, first in opponents FG%
94-95: Second in opponents points, first in opponents FG% (including another 2% lead over 2nd place team)


A way of proving how great the Knicks were on defense is by looking at they defended at worst the second greatest playoff performer of all time, Michael Jordan.

A myth has grown that prime Jordan destroyed the Knicks in the playoffs the way he did Phoenix and other teams. This is inaccurate.

The NY Knicks, under Riley, were the only team during Jordan’s prime that were able to affect his production during the post-season.

MJ’s suffered decreases in most statistical areas against the Knicks in the playoffs during his prime.

MJ’s production from (91/92-92/93)

Code: Select all

                        Ppg   rpg    apg   spg   bpg   topg   fg%    efg  ts%
Regular Season:         32.49, 6.54, 6.14, 2.64, 1.03, 2.62, 0.529, 0.537, 0.592
Post Season (minus NY): 36.18, 6.71, 6.04, 2.07, 0.68, 3.07, 0.508, 0.529, 0.577
Post Season (NY alone): 29.91, 5.59, 5.22, 1.81, 1.02, 2.91, 0.441, 0.459, 0.531


MJ’s, per 40 minutes, production from (91/92-92/93)

Code: Select all

                        Ppg   rpg    apg   spg   bpg   topg   fg%    efg  ts%
Regular Season:         34.31, 6.90, 6.48, 2.79, 1.09, 2.77, 0.529, 0.537, 0.592
Post Season (minus NY): 35.18, 6.52, 5.87, 2.01, 0.66, 2.98, 0.508, 0.529, 0.577
Post Season (NY alone): 28.23, 5.27, 4.93, 1.71, 0.96, 2.74, 0.441, 0.459, 0.531


The Knicks were also the most successful team against Chicago. Riley led Knicks met the Chicago Bulls (w/Jordan) 13 times in the playoffs. The Bulls went 8-5, vs everyone else they went 22-6 during that span. This is despite having only an average offense. All their success came from their defense.


In 1993, Jordan struggled against the Knicks, 32.2 points on 40 percent shooting and 52.2 percent true shooting. Miller lit the same team up, to the tune of 31.5 points on 53.3 percent shooting from the floor, 52.6 percent shooting from beyond the arc on 4.8 attempts per game, 94.7 percent shooting from the line, 60.0 percent effective shooting and 68.7 percent true shooting. “Miller had a tremendous series,” wrote Clifton Brown of The New York Times (May 7, 1993). As sp6r=underrated said, those Knicks were the only team during Jordan’s prime that were able to affect his production during the post-season, yet Miller continually raised his production against the same team. The same team that was able to limit the production of the consensus GOAT was unable to do the same to Miller, an example of his "resistance" to elite defense. John Starks, who guarded both, said:

NBA Africa: You played against some of the best players in NBA history. Who was the most difficult for you to play against?

Starks: The hardest player to guard was Reggie Miller because he ran a lot. Michael Jordan obviously was the toughest of the tough, but he was easy to guard from a standpoint that he was not going to run off a lot of picks. He was just going to pretty much get the ball, set you up and ask “can you stop me?” You know, those two guys right there were probably the most difficult players for me to defend.


It isn't to be construed that Miller was better, and anyone who takes offense to it in that way is missing the point. Miller's style made him a tougher matchup, and to refer back to the above quoted article, with Miller you knew what was coming, but “there’s just no sure way to hold it back.” This was said at the time, so it isn't a matter of revisionism. (Which is the entire point of paying attention to what's said about players at the time they're actually playing.)

ElGee wrote:When you are one of the GOAT shooters, you can score from all over the court. Covering the 3-point line is roughly 75-feet of territory. Covering the rim is only a few feet of territory. It's not a weakness in the Knicks defense, but a strength in Miller.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#46 » by Texas Chuck » Thu Sep 25, 2014 9:55 pm

That's great information and I'm glad you posted it. It's certainly very telling. I wanted to know why they felt that way(and still do) but I've always put more weight in what gets accomplished rather than worrying about how.(hence my continued support for the unconventional Kidd).

Really appreciate you sharing.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#47 » by Quotatious » Thu Sep 25, 2014 10:37 pm

Anyone would like to explain to me why Reggie should be ranked over Gervin? Other than longevity, I don't really see any good arguments for Miller. Well, playoff success, too, but Iceman was a very good playoff performer, I wouldn't say Reggie was really better than him in this regard. More decorated? Yes. Better player who helps you win more games? Not really. Reggie was more efficient, but his scoring volume, shot creation abilities and usage% doesn't even compare to Gervin's.


I'm leaning towards Kidd here, just a little ahead of Baylor. I'd take Gilmore over both, but even though some people have him on their shortlist of candidates, he's not getting any votes, so it doesn't make sense to be the only person who votes for him.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#48 » by Owly » Thu Sep 25, 2014 11:11 pm

Quotatious wrote:Anyone would like to explain to me why Reggie should be ranked over Gervin? Other than longevity, I don't really see any good arguments for Miller. Well, playoff success, too, but Iceman was a very good playoff performer, I wouldn't say Reggie was really better than him in this regard. More decorated? Yes. Better player who helps you win more games? Not really. Reggie was more efficient, but his scoring volume, shot creation abilities and usage% doesn't even compare to Gervin's.


I'm leaning towards Kidd here, just a little ahead of Baylor. I'd take Gilmore over both, but even though some people have him on their shortlist of candidates, he's not getting any votes, so it doesn't make sense to be the only person who votes for him.

Off the top of my head (don't have time to delve here, not saying one should be above the other): D, portability, spacing, culture and longevity.

D: Self-explanatory. Gervin actually has okay boxscore numbers but a really lousy reputation. This links to culture point.

Spacing: Gervin was far from a bad shooter, but Reggie had deep range.

Portability: Or something like it. Gervin probably needed the ball to be successful (perhaps only fully emerged when Silas went down?) so may not play well with others. I think the perception based on playoff performance is that Miller could change (and scale up) his role, didn't demand an uber-high usage role etc. Other might put another spin on it (e.g. needs Davises, or similar rugged forwards, to free him for shots; can't sustain typical 1st option usage over a season). All the other points (spacing, culture and D) help here too.

Culture: Miller percieved as a gamer, Gervin repuatation as caring more about scoring, ended his career a druggie. Though I have seen questions on other boards about Miller as a leader.

Longevity: Self explanatory.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#49 » by tsherkin » Thu Sep 25, 2014 11:24 pm

Has anyone done a serious look at Baylor versus Durant/Gervin?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#50 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Sep 26, 2014 12:03 am

Chuck Texas wrote:I'm confused why you felt the need to include this in response to me. I'm pretty sure I have made a total of zero posts in this project promoting a player based primarily on scoring volume. It should be obvious that the primary goal for any player is to win the game and if we want to break down a little further, the goal of any player on offense should be to get the team the best shot possible within the constraints of the team's talent, the defense they are facing, the shot clock etc. I don't disagree with that at all. Sometimes that requires a player to score at volume--AI, Kobe come immediately to mind at various points in their career. Other times it doesn't--the Spurs are a great example of this. But to make blanket statements about it allowing the defense to relax or the offense to get passive--I can't get behind that. This certainly never came up when talking about Mike and certainly opposing defenses didn't relax.

I think Nique brings some things to the table that Miller doesn't that make them reasonably close as overall players, but sure I think Miller is a better offensive player.


It came to mind because of your characterization of Miller as the efficiency-is-king candidate. In general when people do this, they are seeing efficiency as a factor amongst a bunch of other factors, and it's not winning out for them, and when viewed from that perspective it makes plenty of sense: "I'm supposed to side with Miller here because he was more efficient than the other guys, but efficiency is easier when you carry a smaller load."

What I'm trying to convey is that I don't see Miller as "the efficiency guy". Yes he's efficient, and yes that helped me form my opinions of him, but what I really see him as is a force that tends to a facilitate an offense generally from an atraditional indirect position and which can scale-up volume remarkably well when needed.

I used the term "off-ball savant" with Bird and made clear I saw him as more than Miller at the time, because the term could easily apply to Miller. Both guys are really smart guys who base their attack on being off-ball where smart guys tend to be more on ball.

Were I to make a spectrum of such guys from on ball to off ball, I'd have Magic on one end and Reggie on the other, with Bird somewhere in the middle. Amongst these guys, I prefer the on-ball. I don't think Bird's peak offensive impact truly rivaled Magic because of this issue. The less you directly you dictate the play, the more limitation to your impact...but it's easy to exaggerate what that limitation means. Reggie's not in any serious debate with Magic or Bird for me, but when we compare Reggie to more mortal players, there aren't a lot I favor of Reggie on offense.

Chuck Texas wrote:Im not prepared at all to suggest that Miller is a tier above Ray Allen. I think we saw Ray Allen have to do more things because he played on some teams super dependent on him. And he showed quite capable of doing so. Then when he got to be more part of an ensemble like Miller did for much of his career, he was extremely effective in a reduced-volume off ball role. And again while Reggie's crunch moments tend to involve the Knicks and MSG and thus seem larger than life, I'm not sure he has that many more moments than Ray. I'd want to do more evaluation of both guys, but Ray Allen is also really really good.


Well, as always I start by separating Allen off-ball from Allen on-ball. They are two fundamentally different roles, and the reality is that Allen's a guy that gets talked about - and will keep getting talked about - based on the off-ball role. Young kid's growing up are taught about Allen, and it goes without saying when they do so they aren't talking about his playmaking.

So this is one of those things where some would look at his Seattle stats as his peak and start the comparison from there, but doing so completely missed what Allen's competitive advantage really was. If Allen had played the rest of his career that way, quite frankly, he might well have missed the Hall. As is, he's a mortal lock.

Coming then from the off-ball perspective, it's frankly hard for me to see where the debate really comes from. Miller was more efficient and was more proven in his ability to scale to extreme volume as needed.

I also think it needs to be emphasized Reggie's free throw generation. One of the issues with the off-ball role is that it doesn't necessarily rack up free throws. Typically if you want to get fouls called, you have drive toward defenders, and so popping out and hitting an open shot misses that.

This is why Ray Allen got only 1 free throw per every 3.9 field goal attempts, while Paul Pierce got one ever 2.2.

Reggie Miller played the Ray role, in an era where if anything it was harder to draw perimeter fouls, and he got a free throw per every 2.5 field goals.

So, Miller played the Ray role that him be much more efficient than a Pierce-level Pierce-type player, while drawing fouls much more like a Pierce than a Ray.

How did he do it? By using every trick in the book. No matter what he was doing, he was always looking for some little way to manipulate that defense. He had that extra level granular tactical sense, that plenty of smart player - like Ray - just don't have. And it's my opinion that the benefit you see in his free throws, is just one facet of the little things he was doing that made him a more dangerous player than Ray.

Last I"ll note that we now do have +/- data on these guys. We've got 3 years of Reggie in the late '90s, and they all surpass prime Ray Allen pretty cleanly, with the earliest. of the 3 years putting Reggie WAY out of Ray's range. (I will say Allen once lands in a range north of his prime (4-5) in 2010 on the Celtics. A single year like that I tend not to take very seriously.)
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#51 » by colts18 » Fri Sep 26, 2014 12:10 am

Top 15 in RAPM above average for 2001-2014:

Name Points above avg
Kevin Garnett 6303
LeBron James 5785
Dirk Nowitzki 5320
Tim Duncan 5147
Paul Pierce 4207
Steve Nash 3830
Kobe Bryant 3788
Vince Carter 3028
Baron Davis 2809
Manu Ginobili 2766
Dwyane Wade 2732
Tracy McGrady 2730
Chris Paul 2703
Jason Kidd 2585
Shawn Marion 2501


Pierce has to get a lot of mentions here. So does Vince Carter. Carter is the most underrated player in history.

Here is the same list just using replacement level as the baseline:

Name Points above Rep
Kevin Garnett 7603
LeBron James 7003
Dirk Nowitzki 6757
Tim Duncan 6450
Paul Pierce 5633
Kobe Bryant 5217
Steve Nash 5106
Vince Carter 4290
Shawn Marion 3931

Pierce is in the top 5 ahead of Kobe and Nash.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#52 » by ronnymac2 » Fri Sep 26, 2014 12:25 am

colts18 wrote:Pierce has to get a lot of mentions here. So does Vince Carter. Carter is the most underrated player in history.


I don't think that's an unreasonable statement. Even with McGrady's peak edge, I'm not sure his cousin has superior career value. Carter has done a great job reinventing himself as a valuable role player. He was underrated in New Jersey, too. I'm not sure if 2001 Carter is even Vince's peak.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 

Post#53 » by penbeast0 » Fri Sep 26, 2014 1:17 am

Gary Payton (1)-- SactoKingsFan

Jason Kidd (3)-- Doctor MJ, Chuck Texas, PCProductions

Isiah Thomas (2)-- JordansBulls, ronnymac2

Elgin Baylor (6) -- trex_8063, Basketballefan, Clyde Frazier, Warspite, Jim Naismith, FJS

Reggie Miller (1)-- john248

Kevin Durant (4)--RSCD3_, DQuinn1575, batmana, penbeast0


So that we can get the runoff started, I will switch my vote to Kevin Durant

BAYLOR v. DURANT

Now maybe we can finally get a Baylor fan to do a Head to Head comparison of Baylor v. Durant (or Gervin, or English, or someone)
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 -- Elgin Baylor v. Kevin Durant 

Post#54 » by Basketballefan » Fri Sep 26, 2014 1:33 am

Durant vs Baylor is an interesting comparison indeed.

If one were to take KD over Baylor it would be pretty obvious they value peak quite a bit.

For me, KD has an edge in peaks but it is not a large enough one to make up for the longevity edge in favor of Baylor.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 -- Elgin Baylor v. Kevin Durant 

Post#55 » by penbeast0 » Fri Sep 26, 2014 1:41 am

I may still change my vote; but just haven't seen the good arguments for Baylor that I have for other greats at this point.

I will say that I think Durant has been the beneficiary of rule and strategy changes that make the SF position appreciably more dominant compared to the C and PG's of Baylor's heyday.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 -- Elgin Baylor v. Kevin Durant 

Post#56 » by Quotatious » Fri Sep 26, 2014 2:00 am

A bit surprised to see Durant being in the run-off, thought it would be Baylor vs Kidd, and I have to admit that CP3 and Durant are getting in a bit earlier than I expected (I had them in the early 40s), but I can totally see why - their peaks and primes are terrific. Really prime level of play should probably be the most important factor when we're talking about the greatest players of all-time, but I'm just a little higher on longevity/consistent body of work at least on a borderline All-Star level, so I tend to rank some players that I admit are worse, a little higher than the better players with short primes. I feel like CP3 and KD still have a ton of great basketball ahead of them, and they'll definitely be top 30 players when it's all said and done (Durant's ceiling is IMO top 20, Paul's top 25).

Will really have to think more about Baylor vs Durant. Frankly, I'm leaning towards Durant because I'm relatively low on Baylor (I appreciate his historical importance, but he doesn't look that great when I compare him to some of the more modern players), and the difference in terms of minutes played (as a real star) is big, but I believe that KD is rather comfortably the better player, and I may alter my crtieria just a bit, seeing how you guys value primes that highly (and like I've said before, IMO for a good reason).

Should we start talking about Dwight Howard? I think most of us would agree that CP3 and Durant are better than him, but Howard's longevity is better than both, and he's not THAT much worse in terms of peak or prime play.
I really don't think Howard should get in before Gilmore, but his name is inevitably gonna come up if we've been talking about current stars lately.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 -- Elgin Baylor v. Kevin Durant 

Post#57 » by tsherkin » Fri Sep 26, 2014 2:21 am

I vote for Kevin Durant.

To me, I see a vastl superior scorer with superior individual accolades and no really compelling reason to select Baylor, who is known for scoring volume and making the Finals a ton (in an 8-team league). I have improving respect for his passing game and some marginal acknowledgement that his piss-poor absolute efficiency was notably above league average in a few years, though it didn't scale up super well and then injuries started to add up.

That said, I just can't fathom a reason to take him over a guy like Durant. In a few spots, yeah, but Durant is easily better in my mind and I'm still interested to see more on Gervin before voting in Baylor.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 -- Elgin Baylor v. Kevin Durant 

Post#58 » by Jim Naismith » Fri Sep 26, 2014 2:25 am

Vote: Elgin Baylor

Baylor obviously laps Durant in terms of longevity.

Even as far as peak goes, it's not clear that Durant has the edge, especially in the playoffs.

    Baylor Postseason PER
    1960: 25.2
    1961: 28.2
    1962: 26.5
    1963: 26.6


    Durant Postseason PER
    2011: 24.1
    2012: 27.5
    2013: 26.0
    2014: 22.6
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 -- Elgin Baylor v. Kevin Durant 

Post#59 » by tsherkin » Fri Sep 26, 2014 2:33 am

Jim Naismith wrote:Vote: Elgin Baylor

Baylor obviously laps Durant in terms of longevity.

Even as far as peak goes, it's not clear that Durant has the edge, especially in the playoffs.

    Baylor Postseason PER
    1960: 25.2
    1961: 28.2
    1962: 26.5
    1963: 26.6


    Durant Postseason PER
    2011: 24.1
    2012: 27.5
    2013: 26.0
    2014: 22.6


Pace adjust that rebounding, though, and what happens? He wouldn't be a double-digit rebounder in any of th last 35 years or so, which compromises those PER values.

As for longevity, he's got 12 meaningful seasons (one a half season due to the reserves), sure, but at notably inferior quality in the same role. Not too sure that's a valuable commodity here.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 list #33 -- Elgin Baylor v. Kevin Durant 

Post#60 » by penbeast0 » Fri Sep 26, 2014 2:34 am

tsherkin wrote:
Jim Naismith wrote:Vote: Elgin Baylor

Baylor obviously laps Durant in terms of longevity.

Even as far as peak goes, it's not clear that Durant has the edge, especially in the playoffs.

    Baylor Postseason PER
    1960: 25.2
    1961: 28.2
    1962: 26.5
    1963: 26.6


    Durant Postseason PER
    2011: 24.1
    2012: 27.5
    2013: 26.0
    2014: 22.6


Pace adjust that rebounding, though, and what happens? He wouldn't be a double-digit rebounder in any of th last 35 years or so, which compromises those PER values.

As for longevity, he's got 12 meaningful seasons (one a half season due to the reserves), sure, but at notably inferior quality in the same role. Not too sure that's a valuable commodity here.


I thought PER normed to the year so rebounding would be compared to similarly paced rebounders of his era
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.

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