trex_8063 wrote:fwiw, Quotatious, your assessment of Julius Erving has a sort of "luke-warm" tone about it. It's a relatively unflattering assessment which is nonetheless accompanying a 2nd ballot. It makes me wonder if it's more an affectation, rather than a strong opinion that Erving is actually better than Bird (+/- others).
Let me explain - the case I've made for Erving is sort of "luke-warm", because I wanted to be as reasonable and objective about him, without overrating him, as I could be. His stats and accomplishments that year are staggering, but I wanted to look at them in a more critical way right from the get go, because I knew that someone else would eventually do it, if I didn't.
Now, let's take a look at the points you made:
trex_8063 wrote:For those voting Dr. J so high, I’m curious how you rationalize having him above Bird. Here’s the way I see the comparison, sort of breaking it down by broad game components:
So:
trex_8063 wrote:Scoring
While I agree with 70sFan about the Doctor's mid-range game being underrated, Bird is in the conversation for GOAT mid-range shooter. Bird was also the far far far superior outside shooter (well ahead of his time from 3pt range; may well be considered among the GOAT’s in that category as well if he’d played nearer the modern era), one of the all-time great FT-shooters, had a superior post-game (was great at creating space around himself), was better off-ball (Bird was like an off-ball savant, really)..........really the only aspects of scoring that Erving has an edge at are as a finisher and transition scorer. He's a bit better at facing up and taking someone off the dribble, too (but he's not like Lebron James or Michael Jordan in this regard).
I'll disagree with you about one thing here - Erving was a devastating 1 on 1 player. I don't think there's a significant difference between him and Jordan/LeBron (or at least between him and LeBron, because Jordan is IMO the best 1 on 1 scorer of all-time, among perimeter players). I saw that RebelWithACause called Erving an "average" ball-handler several times, in other threads. I've always stratched my head when I hear that, because if you left Doc isolated on the weak side, it was almost automatic two points. His huge hands (even bigger than Jordan's) allowed him to control the ball in a way that very few players can, both in terms of dribbling and controlling the ball in air. He had a deadly first step, great shooting touch on close range shots, used the glass very well (he's among the very best in this regard, IMO).
To say that Dr. J was a "bit" better at facing-up, is a clear understatement. Erving was WAY more explosive and he could get layups or dunks where Bird would get contested jumpshots, pretty often. Bird was better in the post, but Erving was quite adept at that, too (I'd say that Bird's advantage in the post comes mainly from his superior passing/playmaking, more than scoring, because in terms of post scoring, Doc was quite close to him).
Anyway, to me, the only thing that really matters is how well a player is able to put the ball in the basket, not the way he does it.
trex_8063 wrote:Overall, though…..I can’t see an argument to label Erving the better pure scorer. Erving’s best season as a scorer (likely ‘76) he was going for 34.4 pts/100 poss at +5.2% rTS. Bird’s got at least two seasons (‘87 and ‘88) demonstrating better scoring numbers than that. And in an NBA era that [I don’t think anyone would contest this] is tougher/more competitive than the ‘76 ABA.
Short answer: Bird is the better pure scorer. I don’t think the margin is huge, but it’s nonetheless clear to me.
I disagree again.
Bird averaged 25.8 ppg on 58.0% TS in the RS (27.6% usage), 25.9 on 61.5% TS (only 23.3% usage) in the playoffs, while also facing less defensive pressure because he had other dangerous scoring options on his team (especially McHale).
Erving averaged 29.3 ppg on 56.9% TS (29.0% usage) in the RS, 34.7 on 61.0% TS (28.2% usage) in the playoffs, and he was facing more defensive pressure, similar to other GOAT level athletic wings like Jordan and LeBron. '76 Nets was really a "one man team" compared to the '86 Celtics.
Per 100 possessions, Bird averaged 32.2 in RS (34.4), and 29.5 in the playoffs (Erving 37.4, so the postseason gap is pretty big, and remember that their playoff scoring efficiency was almost the same, with Bird having 0.5% edge, which is basically no edge at all).
I'd say Erving was the better scorer. It's close, obviously, but numbers favor Erving (his explosiveness off the dribble at least makes up for Bird's superior shooting).
Or, we can make the distinction that I like to make, and say that Erving was the better scorer, Bird was the better shooter. You know, the same case that is true for LeBron/Bird or even Jordan/Bird.
trex_8063 wrote:Passing/Play-making
While I again agree with 70sFan that his playmaking is underrated, I disagree that he was “Lebron before Lebron”. From all I’ve watched of Erving, he doesn’t appear to have either the vision, or precision and willingness to find some of those more narrow openings to hit teammates with the pass (a la Lebron or Larry Bird).
His proficiency as a passer is more in league with someone like Elgin Baylor, imo. This isn’t a slam on Erving (Baylor’s passing goes underrated, too). But he’s [quite clearly, imo] a tier or two below guys like Lebron James or Larry Bird as a passing/facilitating SF.
Based on my eye-test, Erving was a very good passer, he just wasn't much of a point forward (certainly nowhere close to LeBron, I would disagree with 70sFan about that), but obviously Bird is clearly better. No argument here.
trex_8063 wrote:Rebounding
Bird rebounded at a significantly better rate. Some of that is how he was used defensively (typically guarding PF’s and C’s), but still…...rebounding is not by any means a factor that can be used against Bird in a comparison to Erving.
Where are you getting this from? Erving averaged 11.0 rpg in RS (12.9 per 100 possessions, 13.6% TRB), and 12.6 in the playoffs (13.6 per 100 possessions, 14.4% TRB), Bird averaged 9.8 in the RS (12.3 per 100 possessions, 14.2% TRB), 9.3 in the playoffs (10.6 per 100 possessions, 12.1% TRB).
Rebounding is a toss-up (although the playoffs gap in Erving's favor is a little bigger).
trex_8063 wrote:Defense
As always, this is the toughest one to scrutinize, as we don’t have reliable statistical measures (at least not in their era(s)). A typical young casual fan may suggest “Dr. J easily” or some such, fueled by nothing more than the usual “Bird sucks at defense” narrative and the fact that Erving got a fair number of steals/blocks. Here’s how I see them defensively…..
While it’s true Bird was often “hidden” down low, generally guarding the opposing PF (because he lacked the lateral quickness to be good defensively against opposing SF’s), there’s two catches to this criticism: 1) he was GOOD (excellent even, imo) as a low post defender--->he was outstanding at using his lower body to create space, and would fight guys off their spot, make entry passes difficult, he bodied up hard when they got the ball, hands straight up on shots, was fantastic on the defensive boards, etc. 2) While it’s true that having to shift him off his position defensively means it created a potential mis-match for his team (the Celtics were fortunate to have a PF---McHale---who was capable of doing a decent defensive job on a SF), the thing is that in nearly any other era (or even on some teams in his own era) Bird would likely be played as a PF anyway, thus not creating a defensive mis-match for his team.
And wrt to Bird’s perimeter defense…..
imo, he made up for some of his short-comings in lateral quickness with fantastic anticipation and hand/eye coordination. He made some truly remarkable strips, low elevation blocks, and picked off passes (evidenced in the video Quotatious previously provided). Was also excellent at sneaking over from the weak-side to strip the ball from a post player.
In short: I agree with Quotatious’ stance that Bird was definitely a positive defensively (at least thru the majority of his prime).
As to Erving’s defense……
tbh, I’m not impressed with what I see of his man defense (something the 70sFan even echoed in his above post). Not saying he’s a BAD man defender; but he’s…..well, completely average to my eye.
He is, however, excellent in transition defense and in some other help defense scenarios, excellent at playing passing lanes, etc.
So overall, I’m not sure who to give the defensive edge to. Whoever gets the edge doesn't get it by much, imo.
I'll agree with your assessment of Bird's defense, and I'll even agree with what you said about Erving's 1 on 1 defense (it was average, but still probably a bit better than Bird's, at least on the perimeter, where Larry really struggled against quicker, more explosive players), but the thing is, there's a bit more evidence in Erving's favor. Nets had the best defense in the ABA with Brian Taylor being the only notable defender on that team aside from Erving, he made the All-Defensive 1st team, while Bird didn't even make a second team in '86, and Parish/McHale/DJ were all more important for the Celtics defensively than Bird was. Erving's help defense seems to be superior than Bird's.
I'd say Doc gets the edge on D. It's not a big edge, but he gets the upper hand. It's hard to speak with conviction if we have so little game footage of '76 Erving compared to what we have for '86 Bird, though. At least I would agree with you that whoever gets the edge on D (to me it's Doc, like I've just said), doesn't get it by much.
trex_8063 wrote:So looking at all these factors combined: I’ve basically rated Bird the better scorer, passer, and rebounder, with defense being more or less a wash. As such, I’m very very comfortable rating Bird’s peak above Erving’s.
And I rated Erving as the better scorer, Bird the better passer, rebounding is about equal (marginal edge to Doc), and defense goes to Erving by a small margin...Overall, I give Erving the edge, but unlike you, I don't feel "very very comfortable" rating Erving's peak above Bird's. I think it's very close, but Dr J gets the edge based on my evaluation of their seasons.
For what it's worth, I would say Bird's edge in terms of passing is the biggest gap between them in any area, but...
How about advanced metrics?
Erving had higher PER, WS/48, BPM and VORP in both regular season and playoffs (well, Bird had higher playoff VORP, but he played 18 games compared to 13 for Doc, but RS + PS total VORP is slightly in Erving's favor, 11.7 to 11.1, with Bird playing 100 games and Erving 97).
Also, Doc had a bit higher total WS that year - 21.4 to 20.0, in less games played. That implies he made a bit higher impact.
Now, you can say - "but Bird played in a much better league" - sure, that would be true, but realistically, how much of a difference could that make, in terms of their numbers? Considering that Dr J put up by far the best numbers of his season against the best (on paper) team in the league, the Nuggets, in the highest pressure situation you can be in - the finals, I see no reason why Doc's stats would decline by any significant margin, if he played against stronger opponents on a regular basis (and the '76 Nuggets were easily better than an average NBA team in '86, I'm sure you would agree with that). Anyway, I'm still taking those numbers with a grain of salt - otherwise, I would argue for Doc right after Jordan and LeBron, because at face value, his numbers (especially playoff numbers) definitely warrant such a high ranking.
Besides, Bird played on a team with several very good scoring options - especially McHale, but even Parish, DJ and Ainge. That's one of the most stacked teams ever. So, Bird played in a much stronger league, but he had a much stronger team around him, as well. Erving played in a much weaker league, but he had a much weaker team around him, too. It evens out.
Oh, and getting back to my somewhat "luke-warm" description of Erving - well, my description of his finals performance was the furthest thing from "luke-warm", as I said he was every bit as good as 91-93 Jordan and 00-02 Shaq, he has a legit case for the GOAT finals performance (especially considering that his team was an underdog, while MJ's and Shaq's teams were the favorite every time).
I'm not sure if you would agree with that, but I think we are really splitting hairs here. I wouldn't have a big problem about Bird (or Magic) getting in before Doc, because it's very close, but right now I feel like Erving was a little bit better. In this particular case, we comparing two players who achieved almost everything you can possibly achieve - won RS MVP, playoffs/finals MVP, league title, made All-Pro 1st team...Erving also made All-Defense 1st team. Basically everything except for DPOY (which didn't exist in '76, but if it did, then Artis Gilmore probably would've won it).
Hell, I'm not even sure what my #1, 2 and 3 votes will look like, 5 spots from now. The gaps between peaks are clearly smaller than the career-wise gaps we were talking about in the top 100 project (and even those gaps were rarely big, to begin with...).