theonlyclutch wrote:E-Balla wrote:theonlyclutch wrote:
Maybe I've missed something, but why Ewing 1990 over say..these seasons by two-way bigs:
-2011/09 Dwight
-2015 Davis
-2000 Mourning
Dwight and Zo aren't on his level offensively and Davis is so far behind all of these guys defensively that I don't see him as a serious candidate until Zo and Dwight are off the board. He's on the Gilmore/McHale level IMO (better than them both but on that level).
Fair enough w.r.t Davis, but what exactly makes Dwight worse offensively than Ewing?
Laugh at his post game all you want, but peak Dwight's scoring prowess has proven to be far more resilient than Ewing's. In exchange for slightly less volume (36.2 vs 32.0 per 100), Dwight is:
- Appreciably more efficient (61.6% vs 59.9% TS)
- Draws significantly more fouls (12 FTA vs 8 FTA)
- Is a much better offensive rebounder, without sacrificing defensive rebounds, in an era where crashing O-boards is less encouraged
- Is better attracting "gravity" off-ball due to being a massive threat off the PnR with his length, size and athleticism
This is probably a good factor in why the ORL with Dwight have always been clearly better offensive teams than NYK with Ewing..
Although Dwight has higher TS%, Ewing is less turnover prone which is reflected in his edge in ORTG at 115 to 113. I am more unimpressed by Dwight's 2011 passing numbers than Ewing. Not only are his numbers bad on their own at 1.3 assists per 36 minutes compared to Ewing at 2.1 per 36 but I think the context matters. I said before I'd have liked to see Ewing's passing numbers if he was playing on a team like 94 Rockets with the shooters on the outside waiting for his passes. Well the 2011 Magic are the opposite of that context. With Jameer, Redick, JRich, Ryno, Hedo, Lewis, Pietrus, Vince, etc. outside of Bass and Gortat their entire supporting cast is guys waiting to hit a spot up 3. They are probably the all time 3pt shooters around a star big man supporting cast and true inside out big like Hakeem or Shaq would've had a field day on that roster assists wise. Dwight's assist numbers are pretty much pathetic in that context. In addition to that Dwight playing with all that spacing is likely to affect his scoring numbers/efficiency also
As for "gravity" - are we sure Ewing wasn't drawing more doubles? I'm not sure. I also believe that part of Ewing's gravity is the spacing of his midrange jumper that Dwight doesn't have. As for Dwight - I remember what I took from the 2010 ECF is that Boston had the perfect gameplan against the Magic by letting Dwight get his and covering the 3pt shooters. And that that it was surprising it took the league so long to figure out that's how you should play the SVG Magic. The next year Dwight averages the most PPG of his career but the Magic offense overall falls off. His assist numbers go down. So while I can't say I was watching the Magic enough in that era to know for sure, is it possible the league figure out how to defend the SVG Magic by throwing less double teams at Dwight and guarding the shooters more?
Finally the main reason I like Ewing over Dwight offensively is I'm about judging skillsets more than numbers in the context of building a team, and Ewing's just flat out impresses me more in terms of post polish, shooting from the outside and more capable passing compared to Dwight's game, and if I'm picking one for me team I'd be happy to not have to worry about hack a Dwight also. And although Dwight's results defensively in ORL are amazing for that roster, if I didn't know those team results I'd have guessed Ewing is better defender as the more focused and disciplined player. I treat team offense and defense ranks as less important than everyone else does apparently because I see both sides as connected because of players needing to decide which side to spend their energy on, and I'm confident there have been situations like Flip Saunders system making the Wolves offense better than their talent and their defense worse than a team with KG should be, or the opposite for defense first coaches like Thibs and Frank Vogel or whatever. In 2011 inexplicably the Andrea Bargnani and DeMar Derozan led Raptors team had a better ORTG than a Chris Paul Hornets team almost the whole season (fell just behind at 20th to the Hornets' 19th after tanking the last few weeks) and my best explanation for how that happened is that Jay Triano was probably the most offense-only coach of this generation, the Raptors finished back to back 30th in DRTG (by a lot, 1.5 DRTG pts behind 29th in 2010, 1.1 pts behind in 2011) but had better offensive results than they should've including 5th in ORTG in 2010 which sometimes people use as an example of how good Chris Bosh was and then a league average offense until the last few weeks in 2011 with no talent. Meanwhile the Hornets were near last in pace and had some signs of a defensively orientated team. Another example is I think the Warriors last year had the best defensive roster since the Big Ben Pistons but they had worse DRTGs than some recent seasons like Bulls and Pacers because they were way more of an offensively orientated team system wise. To me Draymond and Bogut is as much top end defense as George/Hibbert or Noah/Deng and then I don't see those teams having an Iggy or the defensive depth after that the Warriors did. I care about the net W/L more than the offensive vs defensive split almost all of the time