Jim Naismith wrote:Dr Spaceman wrote:Hakeem is another interesting one, and I’m not sure how to contextualize his offense. I don’t think his defense was on the level of David, and as I’ve explained David was a ridiculous offensive player in his own right. hakeem’s offensive impact looks terrible in his later years, and I don’t think it’s a stretch to say it wasn’t all THAT in his peak years.
I'm afraid I need more evidence to be convinced that 1995 Robinson > 1995 Hakeem.
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hW4uXlRGAF0[/youtube]
This is video with cherry-picked clips and narrative designed to put a particular spin on the story.
I think Dr Spaceman addressed a lot of this series pretty well already (I'll highlight the portions I find particularly relevant):
Dr Spaceman wrote:What about his playoff performance?
Yes, it is an issue, although how big I’m not sure. When we talk about Robinson in the playoffs really his big flaw was that he didn’t have a back-to-basket game, and thus had really no way to create reliable offense. Teams that sent aggressive help could stifle his dribble attacks, and he didn’t have many counters.
That’s not to say he wasn’t effective in the playoffs; on the contrary, he put up 25/12/3 in his 1995 playoff run. His efficiency wasn’t great, but for a guy who gets murdered for his performance this year there’s really nothing supporting that. Even in the series against Hakeem he put up 24/11/3… where exactly is this reputation coming from?
Look, I’ve brought this up a little bit before, but look at the dude’s usage level on offense. And think about the role he played on defense. And now think about the fact he averaged 42 MPG in the playoffs after averaging 38 in the regular season, and consider that his peers Hakeem and Shaq were notorious for taking regular seasons off. Is his playoff run starting to make a bit more sense now?
And let’s not sugar coat this: Robinson’s cast was BAD. His best teammte in 1995 was Sean Elliot. Ive pulled up a comparison to give you an idea of who exactly Elliot was as a player:
http://bkref.com/tiny/sLYXM
Again, this is Robinson’s best teammate. What about Rodman, you say? Dennis Rodman played 49 games total this season, and started ony 26. During the offseason,he was arrested twice: once for carrying a loaded shotgun with an “introverted note” (he denies it was a suicide attempt) and again after he drove a motorcycle while intoxicated and sustained serious injuries.
Hell, Rodman can tell his story of the 1995 season far better than I can:It started to fall apart in the Western Conference Semifinals against the Lakers. In Game 3 of the series, which we lost, I came out of the game in the second half and took my shoes off on the sideline. This was no different than most other games. I didn't see a place for me to sit, so I lay down to the press table that ran behind the baseline. So there I was, shoes off, towel over my head, kicking back watching the game.
Then, during a time-out, I didn't get up. I didn't join the huddle. I sat where I was, watching.
I didn't play any more in that game. Nothing was said to me; I guess it was just supposed to be understood that I wasn't going back in. After we lost that game, we still led in the series, two games to one, and the Spurs decided to suspend me for Game 4. They said the suspension was for "insubordination". Then, after we won that game, they decided I wasn't going to start Game 5.Players started deciding I wasn't worth the trouble, that the team would be better off without me.The Rockets went seven games to beat the PHoenix Suns, and the last game of that series was May 20, two days after we finished off the Lakers. I wanted to go to Las Vegas during that time off, so I did. I went with my friend Dwight Manley and Mike Silver, an reporter from Sports Illustrated. This, of course, drove everyone crazy. They didn't know where I was, and they were worried that I'd just bailed on the team.
Jack Haley called me in Las Vegas and told me everyone was panicking. He told me I had to get back to San Antonio that Saturday Night, May 20, to attend a team dinner with everybody and their wives. Then Bob Hill called and told me I better be there - or else..They asked me to guard Olajuwon, and I refused. Bob Hill came up to me and asked if I would take Hakeem in the first half, and I said noDavid asked me for help, and I told him right to his **** face, "I am not going down there." I was not going to help him.
They asked me to double-team Olajuwon, and I refused.so they'd throw it out to the shooter - Horry - and he killed us on three-pointers. We made Horry a star in that series.
Guess who was guarding Robert freaking Horry?
look, I’m not going to say Robinson doesn’t deserve some criticism for that series. But that’s become the series that defined his entire career, and that’s entirely unfair, considering he didn’t play badly, and he was simply one of many, many problems for that team, which frankly far overachieved for its talent level. Olajuwon was brilliant, of course, but not so much so that it should be the end-all be-all.
Let’s take a step back for a second and evaluate Robinson’s role again: he was carrying a devastatingly heavy role. he was rocking Michael Jordan levels of offensive usage in addition to performing his duties as one of the greatest defensive anchors we’ve ever seen. The Spurs had no perimeter players save Elliot who could create a shot from the perimeter, and Elliot wasn’t even good. Rodman was a soul-destroying monster who openly sabotaged the coach and team. And Robinson found himself right in the middle.
I don’t think you’ll find another example of a player carrying that kind of load, and I don’t think it’s close. So when we talk about Robinson’s offense and his playoff struggles, we should be boiling this down to one key point: he simply wasn’t good enough to drag a team to a title playing the role of Michael Jordan on offense and Bill Russell on defense.
How do you feel about criticising him now?
Also, if we're comparing '95 versions of both, I'd note a couple other rs tidbits:
Robinson
29.1 PER, .273 WS/48, +8.4 BPM
RAPM (colts18's data): +7.42
Olajuwon
26.0 PER, .181 WS/48, +5.3 BPM
RAPM: +4.47
'95 Rockets DRtg: -0.9 to league avg (12th of 27 teams)
'95 Spurs DRtg: -2.9 to league avg (5th of 27)