Post#22 » by tsherkin » Tue Nov 11, 2014 2:08 am
My take on Oscar, the player.
Big guy who knew how to use his size. Good range, popped 18- to 20-footers like it was nothing, like any good shooter we see now. Weird release, but he was able to get it off in traffic and off of the dribble with a hand in his face. High arc, good range. GREAT strength. He'd be listed at 6'6-ish today, and probably like 220 or 230, maybe? I dunno, I'm weak at evaluating player weight by sight, but he had a sturdy frame. I mean that as a compliment, since clearly he wasn't a fat guy.
Anyway, he was a fundamentally sound player in most senses. Hell, when I was getting serious about basketball in my late teens, his Art of Basketball was my Bible, and it was a good one. You can see him in the footage we have angling for shots closer and closer and closer. Given his predilection for using the post and how well he handled contact, I think he'd have done well ITO FTR in the contemporary NBA. Solid handle, too; not flashy, but he had Pierce-ish handles, those deceptive change-of-direction and hesitation things that you can do into your old age to screw with younger, more athletic defenders. With the threat of his shot and his ability to put his butt on your hip and move you, it made for a dangerous combination.
Oscar had good vision and good passing. He wasn't Magic, and his assists at the time were inflated by minutes he wouldn't see today, but even with that, he was an 8.1 AST36 guy on his career (peaking at 9.2) and in the one season for which we have the data (73-74, his age 35 season), he was an 8.2 AST100 guy. Magic, of course, was a course 14.5 AST100 guy and posted 11.9 AST100 during his comeback in 96, for point of reference at a similar stage in his career.
Oscar was a scorer first. He was a good passer, but he wasn't the same as Magic. Now, does that matter? Different styles, different efficacy. Well-rounded, efficient 2-guards have been the hub for a lot of title contention over the past 30 years. Jordan, Kobe and Wade have all made legendary accounts of themselves in that sort of role.
Even into his old age, he was a 6-7% TRB player, which is good. Imaging the general age curve for a player, especially a wing, as a rebounder, you can assume he was at least a little better at his peak. Someone may have better data for that than BBR, but for example, Jordan was a 9.4% TRB player in Chicago and 9.6% over his two seasons in Washington. Magic was an 11.1% TRB player on his career, and during his 96 comeback at age 36. He peaked at 13.7%. He was bigger into rebounding at the beginning and end of his career, based on his role and the relevance of Kareem, etc. He was a better rebounder than Oscar, which is hardly surprising, given his size. He'd still be a good wing rebounder today.
Good fade. Good pump fake. Good elevation on his J. More of a left hand and better handles than West, IMO. Created space on the ground pretty well, setting up his fade. Reminds me some of Old Jordan or post-07 Dirk in this regard. Not just getting the contested J, but clearing the space to get the cleaner look. Wicked mid-air body control. Didn't elevate like MJ, but when he went up, you didn't really DO anything to him, he just powered through you and did his thing. Didn't stun with his athleticism mostly, but honestly, I've seen another player who reminds me a fair bit of Oscar, and that's Brandon Roy... and he had athleticism that you didn't realize. 42" vert, but he only ever jumped as high as he had to, kind of like Oscar. Not that I'm saying Big O could do that, per se, but that he had more than he showed.
Loved the baseline. Loved the elbow. Loved the post. Loved both sides of the floor. Basically, where did you send him if you wanted to make life harder? Answer? The bench. Actually had a pretty nice in-out, right-to-left crossover. Don't think I ever saw him do it the other way, but that's not a move that the 60s saw from basically anyone. And he did it quickly, too. Stopped and popped very well. Loved screens, using them to find space for a J or PnR'g. Loved to post at the foul line. Again and again and again, you saw him going to certain spots and busting defenders who clearly knew what was going on. He had that quality that the really good scorers evidence, where they're just going to do what they do and good luck to ya.
I would say the gap, if there is one, between the two as scorers is smaller than people may want to believe because Magic was a stunning beast even when he was scoring in the low-mid 20s. Oscar was clearly a better shooter and was able to do his thing against smaller guys and guys his size as well, so I think he'd translate as well as anyone. He has almost none of the "haha, look at his handles" issues we see from so many players in the pre-merger era, and a couple of moves that sort of surprise you if you go into it thinking he was as limited as the rest in that regard.
But Magic was a better rebounder and playmaker, and himself quite a good scorer by the prime of his career. I think Magic, who was a fine scorer in college and showed all kinds of signs early on that he could score well enough, could have developed differently had the situation called for it, but either way, I wouldn't propose the idea that the gap is huge in either direction. More an issue of style than anything else, I suppose.
Honestly, between these two, I think the biggest deal is stylistic preference. I'm a Magic guy to the core, but even I am impressed a lot by Oscar. I think he leans more towards a 25/5/7 type guy than anything else in today's game, but given the efficiency he'd likely post, you're basically looking at Wade with more range (and a much better chance of developing at least a 33% shot from 3), which is a truly nasty player. I'd take Magic over him anyway, because I like the way he plays the game and feel he scores enough anyhow, but you can't overlook Oscar. He was very, very good.