RSCD3_ wrote:Need your thoughts PC BOARD on Malone Vs Davis
Davis compares favorably to Malone based on boxscore metrics, but honestly, I don't think he had as much impact as Karl had. Brow had great numbers against the Warriors, but I didn't think his impact was as high as his 31.5/11/2 on 61% TS might suggest.
Also, Karl gives you a lot more RS games. If you replace Davis with Malone on last season's Pelicans, you probably get 50 wins.
So, this is Karl for me.
2006 Elton Brand vs Davis is a great comparison. I think Brand is much closer to Malone than most people would like to admit (and he also gives you 11 more RS games than Davis, so I'd probably argue that he's more valuable, even if he's slightly inferior on a per-game basis). Peak Brand was the closest thing to prime Malone that we've seen so far, in terms of skill-set as well as size and production (for what it's worth, EB is a way better shotblocker than KM, which is important for a bigman). Also, he was excellent in the playoffs (and quite honestly, I don't think Brand was far behind Kobe or LeBron in '06, that's how good he was - similar boxscore metrics, similar RS and playoff success, all three guys had mediocre supporting casts).
Brand vs McHale is extremely close, IMO.
RSCD3_ wrote:and who the best of Carter, Miller and Harden is In Your Opinion
I'd go with:
2015 Harden
2001 Carter
1994 or 1995 Miller
I think Harden is clearly the best among them. He may be the worst defender among them, but none of them was a major impact player on D (Reggie was mediocre, Vince was solid but above average at best), and remember that Harden's defense wasn't that bad for most of last season (at least a clear improvement over '13 and '14 in the RS), and I think his advantage in terms of playmaking over the other two guys is just huge. Harden also has the best numbers.
Carter over Miller simply because he's a more well-rounded and dominant player. Reggie played relatively better in the playoffs compared to how good he was in the RS, but he played on a considerably stronger team. He had a mediocre series in the winning effort against the Knicks (3rd best defense in the league that year), and an absolutely terrific series against the Sixers in the losing effort, so contrary to what you might believe at first glance (I mean, him playing on a "one man team" so to speak, so theoretically, there should be high correlation between his own performance and the performance of his team), it's not like you can equate his team's success with his own performance. Carter's all-around statline against the Sixers (also a top 5 defensive team, anchored by DPOY Mutombo and they also had very good wing defenders like McKie and Lynch, to put on VC) is pretty amazing:
30.4 ppg
6.0 rpg
5.6 apg
1.9 spg
2.0 bpg
only 7.4% TOV (extremely low for a perimeter player, that's even lower than prime Jordan had)
56.7% TS (league average that year was 51.8% TS in the regular season, and probably even lower in the playoffs)
47/42/84 shooting splits
That series compares favorably to just about any series that Kobe had in his prime. Amazing. I don't think Reggie was capable of playing such a well-rounded game against an elite team, and average 30 ppg on great efficiency, to boot.
His performance in game 7 was mediocre because his shot didn't fall (only 6/18 from the field), but he was still pretty good in other areas - 7 rebounds, 9 assists, 3 steals, 2 blocks, ZERO turnovers, and he was still aggressive going to the basket (8/9 from foul line).
Honestly, as I analyze his performance in that series, I think it's much closer between Carter and Harden than I previously thought, but I'd still give James the edge (but another thing to consider is that Carter played in a much tougher defensive league than Harden).
Oh, and one more thing about those SGs - I think you definitely have to include '01 Ray Allen, '05 Manu and '09 Brandon Roy in this comparison. I wouldn't take any of them over Harden, but they are very much in the conversation with Carter and Miller.