RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
I am thrilled to see Timmy getting discussion already and even a vote. I think he absolutely belongs and I would encourage those dismissing him on numbers to take a broader look.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
eminence wrote:Winsome Gerbil wrote:Spoiler:
I'm sure we've gotten into this more than once before, but points/rebounds/assists don't even begin to adequately account for production on the basketball court in my book.
And1 to that. And I should think the things ThaRegul8ar posted on at length in post #166 itt are in no small part a component of Duncan's candidacy, too. I mean after all, someone in this thread mentioned that "old saw that the point of playing is to win titles".

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
1. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
Both Jordan and LeBron have multiple seasons better than Kareem's best but Kareem's ability to churn out star quality seasons into his late 30s puts him ahead of both on my all time list. He dominated the 70s more than any other player did for a decade and if we were to ignore level of competition, Kareem should be far and away the #1 GOAT in my opinion. The most complete offensive center in the history of the game and improved his scoring resiliency against tougher defenders after his first few seasons to such a degree that he still remained a potent half court offensive player even when much older. His defense as a Lakers was somewhat disappointing given his potential to be an all time great defensive anchor as displayed in Milwaukee but he still accumulated a near top 10 defensive career just being a solid defender for so many seasons. There is a larger gap in Kareem's favor on defense than in Jordan/LeBron's favor on offense and his advantage in longevity is enough to offset the weaker peak and prime.
2. LeBron James
I previously had Jordan ranked second on my list but after updating with 2017 playoffs data, LeBron has passed Jordan 1 year earlier than expected. Jordan has the better peak and comes out ahead by very small margins in a pairwise comparison of the two's top seasons but lack of longevity is starting to hurt him. Only 11 full seasons as a Bull is a short career compared to James who at this point has a 27/7/7 year as his 13th best season. Jordan's edge in better prime is not enough to overcome LeBron's longevity.
Both Jordan and LeBron have multiple seasons better than Kareem's best but Kareem's ability to churn out star quality seasons into his late 30s puts him ahead of both on my all time list. He dominated the 70s more than any other player did for a decade and if we were to ignore level of competition, Kareem should be far and away the #1 GOAT in my opinion. The most complete offensive center in the history of the game and improved his scoring resiliency against tougher defenders after his first few seasons to such a degree that he still remained a potent half court offensive player even when much older. His defense as a Lakers was somewhat disappointing given his potential to be an all time great defensive anchor as displayed in Milwaukee but he still accumulated a near top 10 defensive career just being a solid defender for so many seasons. There is a larger gap in Kareem's favor on defense than in Jordan/LeBron's favor on offense and his advantage in longevity is enough to offset the weaker peak and prime.
2. LeBron James
I previously had Jordan ranked second on my list but after updating with 2017 playoffs data, LeBron has passed Jordan 1 year earlier than expected. Jordan has the better peak and comes out ahead by very small margins in a pairwise comparison of the two's top seasons but lack of longevity is starting to hurt him. Only 11 full seasons as a Bull is a short career compared to James who at this point has a 27/7/7 year as his 13th best season. Jordan's edge in better prime is not enough to overcome LeBron's longevity.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
ElGee wrote:trex_8063 wrote:ElGee wrote:Spoiler:
Excellent points (nice that it's fairly concise with concrete examples, too). Thanks for taking the time.
btw, since you're participating anyway, are you sure you wouldn't care to be added to the panel and cast some votes, too? Not to lay on the flattery too heavily, but I feel the credibility of the list/project as a whole only increases for having your name attached to it.
Thanks for the invite and appreciate the compliment.Unfortunately, I have inconsistent availability.
If you're refining your GOAT-list and don't feel comfortable enough with your rankings to contribute by way of voting, that's your call. But fwiw, inconsistent availability doesn't change my opinion at all wrt wanting your involvement (whenever you're able).
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
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"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
- Winsome Gerbil
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
trex_8063 wrote:eminence wrote:Winsome Gerbil wrote:Spoiler:
I'm sure we've gotten into this more than once before, but points/rebounds/assists don't even begin to adequately account for production on the basketball court in my book.
And1 to that. And I should think the things ThaRegul8ar posted on at length in post #166 itt are in no small part a component of Duncan's candidacy, too. I mean after all, someone in this thread mentioned that "old saw that the point of playing is to win titles".
That would be more amusing if I had not posted it purely to pander to the sensibilities of at least some of the peeps in these threads.
You'll also find me occasionally posting tripe like win shares, VORP, and a variety of other nonsense which truth be told doesn't factor one iota in any analysis I ever conduct myself. All such mentions are purely for illustrative purposes to people who value such things.
So, winning is everything, its all about the ringgzz huh? Cool. Jordan's can't all fit on one fist, and he was the man for every one of them. No other player in the modern history of the NBA can make that claim. For everybody with a ring fetish and analytical integrity, it should be a winning argument.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
- Clyde Frazier
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
Vote 1 - Michael Jordan
Vote 2 - Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
I was hoping to have time to break down some footage of early, mid and late career Jordan, but doesn’t look like that’s going to happen.
As more and more seasons pass and the game evolves, it makes sense that Jordan’s assumed status as GOAT would be tested. I still feel as though Kareem is the only one who has a clear case against him given his overall resume. As for Russell, i’m in the camp of judging his success in his era slightly lower than that of a Jordan or Kareem. He’ll certainly be in my top 5, and possibly 3rd as I continue to evaluate.
Jordan came into the league and had an immediate impact both statistically and team improvement: 28.2 PPG, 6.5 RPG, 5.9 APG, 2.4 SPG, .8 BPG, 59.2% TS, 118 ORTG, .213 WS/48, 27 wins to 38, 23rd in SRS to 14th. Few players produce at an all NBA level right out of the gate, so you knew you had something special in jordan.
The things that stuck out with jordan early in his career was the speed in the open floor, amazing body control in the lane, and of course his overall elite athleticism. However, even at a young age he seemed in control of that skill and continued to hone it with an inside out game, always keeping the defense on their toes.
Taking a look at jordan’s deep playoff runs pre-championship, it was really his teammates who didn’t provide enough support to get over the hump against the pistons.
ECF vs. DET in 89 (6 games): http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1989-nba-eastern-conference-finals-bulls-vs-pistons.html
ECF vs. DET in 90 (7 games): http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1990-nba-eastern-conference-finals-bulls-vs-pistons.html
Jordan was excellent in both series as the main focal point of the defense. As we look at Jordan’s first 3 title runs, he faced formidable opponents in all 3 series, where the lakers, blazers and suns ranked 3rd, 2nd and 3rd in SRS respectively. Jordan continued his elite production (taking it to another level). Be it a great look off penetration to a shooter, a key defensive stop, or a bucket when you needed it most, he had the entire package.
91 Finals: http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1991-nba-finals-lakers-vs-bulls.html
92 Finals: http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1992-nba-finals-trail-blazers-vs-bulls.html
93 Finals: http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1993-nba-finals-bulls-vs-suns.html
Of course, this coincided with his teammates stepping up as well, which is what a superstar ultimately needs to win a championship in this league, even if they’re doing the bulk of the scoring.
As for his retirement / come back season, I look at it similarly to him missing the majority of his second year. It makes sense that he's going to be rusty and not as effective as he once was. I do think the fact that he returned to form and even changed his game to still be effective as he aged was super impressive. The second 3 peat had to take a toll on his body, playing in all 82 games each of those 3 seasons at 38.1 MPG, increasing to 41.5 MPG in the playoffs. While his efficiency dipped somewhat vs. his 1st 3 peat, his overall production was still stellar.
I’ll end with saying that during those 6 seasons, it really did seem as though Jordan and the bulls were unbeatable. Even if they faltered or showed signs of weakness, ultimately Jordan was going to come through in the clutch and take them home. I’m not sure you can say that for many other players other than russell, which is why I feel comfortable as Jordan still remaining GOAT.
Vote 2 - Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
I was hoping to have time to break down some footage of early, mid and late career Jordan, but doesn’t look like that’s going to happen.
As more and more seasons pass and the game evolves, it makes sense that Jordan’s assumed status as GOAT would be tested. I still feel as though Kareem is the only one who has a clear case against him given his overall resume. As for Russell, i’m in the camp of judging his success in his era slightly lower than that of a Jordan or Kareem. He’ll certainly be in my top 5, and possibly 3rd as I continue to evaluate.
Jordan came into the league and had an immediate impact both statistically and team improvement: 28.2 PPG, 6.5 RPG, 5.9 APG, 2.4 SPG, .8 BPG, 59.2% TS, 118 ORTG, .213 WS/48, 27 wins to 38, 23rd in SRS to 14th. Few players produce at an all NBA level right out of the gate, so you knew you had something special in jordan.
The things that stuck out with jordan early in his career was the speed in the open floor, amazing body control in the lane, and of course his overall elite athleticism. However, even at a young age he seemed in control of that skill and continued to hone it with an inside out game, always keeping the defense on their toes.
Taking a look at jordan’s deep playoff runs pre-championship, it was really his teammates who didn’t provide enough support to get over the hump against the pistons.
ECF vs. DET in 89 (6 games): http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1989-nba-eastern-conference-finals-bulls-vs-pistons.html
ECF vs. DET in 90 (7 games): http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1990-nba-eastern-conference-finals-bulls-vs-pistons.html
Jordan was excellent in both series as the main focal point of the defense. As we look at Jordan’s first 3 title runs, he faced formidable opponents in all 3 series, where the lakers, blazers and suns ranked 3rd, 2nd and 3rd in SRS respectively. Jordan continued his elite production (taking it to another level). Be it a great look off penetration to a shooter, a key defensive stop, or a bucket when you needed it most, he had the entire package.
91 Finals: http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1991-nba-finals-lakers-vs-bulls.html
92 Finals: http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1992-nba-finals-trail-blazers-vs-bulls.html
93 Finals: http://www.basketball-reference.com/playoffs/1993-nba-finals-bulls-vs-suns.html
Of course, this coincided with his teammates stepping up as well, which is what a superstar ultimately needs to win a championship in this league, even if they’re doing the bulk of the scoring.
As for his retirement / come back season, I look at it similarly to him missing the majority of his second year. It makes sense that he's going to be rusty and not as effective as he once was. I do think the fact that he returned to form and even changed his game to still be effective as he aged was super impressive. The second 3 peat had to take a toll on his body, playing in all 82 games each of those 3 seasons at 38.1 MPG, increasing to 41.5 MPG in the playoffs. While his efficiency dipped somewhat vs. his 1st 3 peat, his overall production was still stellar.
I’ll end with saying that during those 6 seasons, it really did seem as though Jordan and the bulls were unbeatable. Even if they faltered or showed signs of weakness, ultimately Jordan was going to come through in the clutch and take them home. I’m not sure you can say that for many other players other than russell, which is why I feel comfortable as Jordan still remaining GOAT.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
Clyde Frazier wrote:I’ll end with saying that during those 6 seasons, it really did seem as though Jordan and the bulls were unbeatable. Even if they faltered or showed signs of weakness, ultimately Jordan was going to come through in the clutch and take them home. I’m not sure you can say that for many other players other than russell, which is why I feel comfortable as Jordan still remaining GOAT.
This is a point that kind of bugs me. I've seen the unbeatable/winning aura point brought up a few times and while it's mostly true, how much of it is influenced by MJ's baseball break? Most people already kind of just write off the 95 Magic loss, but it's not inconceivable that they could've lost in 1994 either after coming off 4 deep playoff runs...and they most likely wouldn't have won 8 in a row since they were running on fumes in 1998. Would he have this aura had he stayed with Bulls in 94/95 but lost in like 97/98? I know this kind of thing is a hypothetical, but this "aura" argument was created by simply not playing for 1.75 years. He didn't lose, but he certainly didn't give his Bulls a chance to win a title either.
Is that fair? Obviously it worked out for his career, but it's not as if he was untouchable in the playoffs.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
drza wrote:.
Wanted to touch base wrt to the per 100 possession comparisons of Kareem/Duncan/(Garnett), and add in the relative TS% (as I believe Joao Saraiva had suggested).
As you noted, per 100 possessions is not a perfect leveler across eras; increased pace will not have a linear relationship to scoring opportunities for the high usage/iso-heavy stars (and perhaps especially for iso-heavy BIGS).
Likewise, I'll acknowledge rTS% is not a perfect leveler. I don't believe, for instance, that Oscar Robertson would be scoring at ~63-65% TS year after year in the modern era (because that's what his rTS% would suggest). He was just a bit ahead of the curve in how well he could convert from the mid and close ranges. I think his rTS% probably goes down a bit in the modern era (but his pts/100 possessions probably go up a little).
Kareem was simply a bit ahead of the curve, too (and now some of the rest of the league has caught up). So perhaps his rTS% goes down marginally in a later era; however, his pts/100 possessions likely take a small step up in some contexts (especially in an era such as the 1990's). ****Although for the purposes of this comparison, league avg TS% barely matters, as in the early 2000's (around Duncan/Garnett's peak) it fell to lower than what it was in the late 1970's.****
Was re-watching some of the 1974 NBA finals, as well as a rs Laker game from '80, and I'm noting there are some aspects of his life (as a low-post scorer) which would get easier in later eras. In '74, he can hardly even bring the ball down to heart-level after catching an entry pass, because the guy guarding the entry passer sags down and is swiping. There's often so little room for him to work in the absence of outside shooters or a 3pt line. Anyway, just putting that out there before moving on to the comparisons. I'll use some of the same years you had, but add in a couple others (I have per 100 estimates for pre-1974 player seasons, btw). Mostly wanting to focus on the scoring aspect, as you were sort of singling that out, but will include some of the other stats, too....
Year 1
'70 Kareem per 100 poss: 27.7 pts, 14.0 reb, 4.0 ast @ +4.14% rTS in 43.1 mpg
'98 Duncan per 100 poss: 29.3 pts, 16.6 reb, 3.8 ast, *3.5 blk, *4.7 tov @ +5.38% rTS in 39.1 mpg
*Kareem avg >3.5 blk/100 every year from '74-'82, collectively averaging 3.9; Kareem never----in any of the years it was recorded----averaged as many as 4.7 turnovers (his highest was 4.4, avg 3.9 from '78-'86)......I mention these by way of possible proxy for here and in years below.
Year 18
'87 Kareem per 100 poss: 26.4 pts, 10.1 reb, 3.9 ast, 1.9 blk, 3.6 tov @ +5.92% rTS in 31.3 mpg (now into league avg TS% that are completely comparable to modern/recent era, too, btw)
'15 Duncan per 100 poss: 24.6 pts, 16.2 reb, 5.3 ast, 3.5 blk, 3.0 tov @ +2.55% rTS in 28.9 mpg
'13 Garnett per 100 poss: 26.0 pts, 13.7 reb, 4.1 ast, 2.0 stl, 1.6 blk, 2.8 tov @ +0.03% rTS in 29.7 mpg
Peak(ish) Scoring Years ('02 is Duncan's single-best season as scorer, by clear margin)
'02 Duncan per 100 poss: 33.5 pts, 16.7 reb, 4.9 ast, 3.3 blk, 4.2 tov @ +5.60% rTS in 40.6 mpg
'03 Duncan per 100 poss: 31.6 pts, 17.5 reb, 5.3 ast, 4.0 blk, 4.2 tov @ +4.43% rTS in 39.3 mpg
'04 Garnett per 100 poss: 33.2 pts, 19.0 reb, 6.8 ast, 3.0 blk, 3.5 tov @ +3.10% rTS in 39.4 mpg
'77 Kareem per 100 poss: 32.7 pts, 16.6 reb, 4.8 ast, 4.0 blk @ +9.76% rTS in in 36.8 mpg
'71 Kareem per 100 poss: 33.4 pts, 16.9 reb, 3.5 ast @ +10.57% rTS in in 40.1 mpg
'72 Kareem per 100 poss: 34.0 pts, 16.2 reb, 4.5 ast @ +9.83% rTS in in 44.2 mpg
Gonna cherry-pick some other years for greater spotlight on the middle years, so we're not just looking at peakish seasons and some book-ends......
Year 9
'06 Duncan per 100 poss: 28.9 pts, 17.2 reb, 4.9 ast, 1.4 stl, 3.2 blk, 3.9 tov @ -1.25% rTS in 34.8 mpg
'78 Kareem per 100 poss: 32.0 pts, 16.0 reb, 5.4 ast, 2.1 stl, 3.7 blk, 4.2 tov @ +7.40% rTS in 36.5 mpg
Year 14
'11 Duncan per 100 poss: 26.4 pts, 16.4 reb, 4.9 ast, 3.5 blk, 2.9 tov @ -0.41% rTS in 28.4 mpg
'83 Kareem per 100 poss: 31.2 pts, 10.7 reb, 3.6 ast, 3.1 blk, 3.6 tov @ +8.75% rTS in 32.3 mpg
Year 15
'12 Duncan per 100 poss: 28.3 pts, 16.4 reb, 4.9 ast, 3.5 blk, 2.9 tov @ +0.40% rTS in 28.4 mpg
'84 Kareem per 100 poss: 30.3 pts, 10.4 reb, 3.7 ast, 2.5 blk, 3.9 tov @ +6.54% rTS in 32.8 mpg
'10 Garnett per 100 poss: 25.2 pts, 12.9 reb, 4.7 ast, 1.7 stl, 1.4 blk, 2.6 tov @ +2.66% rTS in 29.9 mpg
Obviously I'm not going to try to argue Kareem's defense or rebounding in his later years vs. that of Duncan or Garnett (though you can see in his peak physical years, he wasn't THAT far behind in rebounding, and was a more than capable defender).
Passing/playmaking too I think he's probably 3rd of the three (though again not a huge gap imo, as it's a much under-appreciated aspect of his game, partially evidenced by the assist rates above; saw him make some fantastic interior passes to cutters in that '80 Lakers game I was watching today).
But when we include the rTS% Kareem clearly emerges as the significantly superior scorer (particularly over Garnett), even though I think Duncan's prowess as a scorer is at times criminally under-credited. Note Kareem was typically playing slightly more mpg in most of those analogous seasons, too.
I know I've singled out a couple seasons above in which Duncan was struggling a bit with nagging injuries (plantar fasciitis one year, iirc); but I did so on purpose to better illustrate Kareem's remarkable durability and consistency (as it all sort of falls under the broad umbrella of longevity to me).
Kareem only missed 80 rs games TOTAL in a 20-year career, and didn't really have seasons (to my knowledge) where he was being significantly hindered by nagging injuries; only missed 1 playoff game in 20 seasons.
Duncan missed 118 rs games in a 19-year career (despite two hold-out seasons: if those had been full length, I think it's fair to assume he'd have missed at least a few more), missed the entire playoffs in '00 (which is significant as it instantly turned SA from contender to 1st-round fodder), and had a couple other seasons where he was less than 100%. KG missed 214 rs games in a 21-year career (though most of them in his post-prime); missed all of the '09 playoffs.
Anyway, I think I'll stop there. The above was all just to illustrate that yes, I think Kareem was a significantly better scorer than Duncan or Garnett, and yes, his longevity (+ durability/consistency) was better as well.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
penbeast0 wrote:cpower wrote:...
1. His dominance on the defensive end. You and other peers have stated enough on how dominant he was in his era so I am not going to more details here.
2. His teammates. His teammates lead the WS in 5/11 championship runs and to say they had a super team is a understatement.
3. Fewer playoff series. 8/11 of the champions came in 2 series. I have developed a simple mathematical model to demonstrate this: To win a championship through 4 series , given the odds of winning each is (90%, 80%, 65%, 55% respectively), the overall odds is 26% for a single year. To win a championship through 2 series , given the odds of winning each is (80%, 65% respectively), the overall odds is 48% for a single year, the odds is basically doubled.
4. Luck, The Celtics won game 7 - five times and 4 of 5 had been less than 3 points. While winning close games is amazing, we have to acknowledge how rare is it to win multiple g7 games within such small margin.
in reverse order:
4. Is it luck or clutch performance? When MJ wins close games, it's always the narrative that he is the reason. When Russell wins close games, it's not? And yet, Russell consistently elevates scoring in the playoffs and is known for setting up opponents for failure with mental exercises that lead them into making the wrong play. Just something to think about.
I think its both. Especially when you win g7 5 times and no matter how great you played in closeout games,
there were so many factors (missed call, your teammate making shots and opponents missing shots.. etc)
3. That's why I didn't talk about titles won, I talked about series won. Russell won 93% of his playoff series; Jordan 79%, Kareem something below that. It's not about less series to win, it's about winning the series that you do play. Jordan DID win 90% plus once Phil Jackson came to Chicago and convinced him to play more team oriented ball rather than hero ball . . . but Russell had the focus on winning rather than individual performance from the very beginning.
But MJ didn't have Sharman or Cousy level of offensive player to start with, so it would have been unfair to compare their early days. On the contrary, Duncan's early days have been more impressive than both players
4. Instead of just saying "superteam" it would be much more helpful if you actually compared the teams that they played on and looked at their teammates.
Russell played on basically 2 teams (with some transition between them). The first was with Cousy, Sharman, Lotscutoff/Ramsey, Heinsohn, and him. This is a "superteam" only in terms of guys who scored a lot. Cousy and Heinsohn were below average efficiency scorers, Sharman and Ramsey only average, Lotscutoff not a scorer (Auerbach did do a good job of getting deep bench, especially compared to Wilt's Warriors teams). Other than Lotscutoff (a pretty average defensive specialist), there isn't any stud defender there to help Russell either.
Compare to Jordan's 1st 3-peat team: Pippen (better than any Celtic in terms of efficiency and certainly in terms of defense), Grant (again, better defensively than any of the Celtics and a good solid efficient scorer without volume . . . I'd certainly take him over Heinsohn on any team ever), Armstrong (one time questionable all-star, solid PG with MJ there to draw off attention but didn't do much beyond that) not up to Sharman level but considering Cousy's consistent record of miserable shooting in the playoffs in the Russell years, hardly a gaping hole, Cartwright/Perdue/King (certainly the equivalent of Lotscutoff, though Ramsey was a great step up from Perdue/King for the offensive half of the platoon).
Compare to Kareem's 71 to 73 Bucks: Oscar (again, Way better offensively than Cousy or anyone on the Celtics), Dandridge (better defensively than any early Celtic, better offensive efficiency relative to league than the likes of Heinsohn too), McGlocklin/Lucius Allen (solid but not spectacular guards) not in the Sharman/Ramsey category as scorers though again, efficient, Curtis Perry/Greg Smith (and Bob Boozer/Terry Driscoll for the scoring end) again, rough equivalent to Lotscutoff but not up to the Ramsey standard.
Compare to 80-82 Lakers: Magic Johnson at the 2 (already a great player though injured in 81), Jamaal Wilkes (very good scorer and defender, was the 2nd best player on the Warriors championship in 75, clearly better than any early Celtic relative to league), Norm Nixon (excellent distributing point with decent scoring skills) again, compared to Cousy's playoff woes, I'd take Nixon for this part of Cousy's career, Rambis/Kupchak/Michael Cooper (superior defensive play to Lotscutoff, not Ramsey level offensively though they did have McAdoo too). This is the real superteam . . . only 1 ring (Tragic Johnson!) but much more talent relative to the league (expansion watered league v. 8 teams, at least 6 of whom had 2 or more HOF players).
Early Russell is clearly NOT playing with the level of talent relative to his league as Kareem or even Jordan; just a lot of HOF players that were either 50s stars who weren't keeping up with the change in the NBA (Cousy, Sharman) or mediocre players who were overrated due to a limited skill set (Heinsohn, Lotscutoff).
LATE Boston is a stronger case, though you have the Greer/Walker/Jackson/Cunningham/Jones Sixers, plus a few teams with 2 greats (West and Baylor, Oscar and Lucas, etc.).
Russell played with John Havlicek (the consensus #2 player, a very good defender and below average shooter who did improve into the 67-69 seasons into an average or even above average one but whose real superstar offensive seasons were in the 70s), Sam Jones (very good scorer, particularly playoffs, average defender and playmaker), KC Jones (the Ben Wallace of PGs, hard to think of a PG who did less offensively but great defensive rep), and Bailey Howell/Satch Sanders (Sanders the defensive specialist, Howell the low post scorer that worked with Russell in the high post -- both undersized but with Russell there for rebounding and rim protection, they were very good fits).
Compare to 2nd 3peat Bulls where Jordan played with: Pippen (compare to 65-69 Havlicek, Pippen is more impressive on both sides of the ball though they are very comparable), Rodman (GOAT rebounder and capable of great defense) for most teams a player preferable to Sam Jones if his antics didn't destroy your team chemistry which they didn't on the Bulls, Harper/Kerr (Harper not KC Jones on the defensive end but more capable offensively, Kerr the 3 point specialist), Longley/Kukoc (Longley an underrated player, good passer and average offense/defense . . . I'd take him over Sanders but not close to Howell as a player, Kukoc more comparable to Howell though Howell's scoring more valuable than Kukoc's scoring/playmaking in their eras). Reasonably comparable talent levels; I'd put Chicago first but not by much.
Compare to post Nixon Showtime: Magic (takes over for Kareem as best player pretty clearly), Worthy (like Sam Jones, known for clutch play though weak rebounder; better defensive rep than Jones), Scott/Cooper (offense/defense pairing with stronger defense, less offense than Howell/Sanders), AC Green (defender with little offensive responsibility similar to KC Jones though less defensive rep and better offense).
So, of the 3 main GOAT candidates, who played with the superteams? Kareem in LA clearly had the most talent. Boston had a lot of big names early but I would argue for unimpressive play/impact . . . low efficiency gunners don't win many championships. Boston late had talent equal to that of Jordan's Bulls, better than Kareem's Bucks but hardly enough to say Russell played with superteams in comparison to the other GOAT contenders. Unless you just add up points and rep (ignoring pace and efficiency).
Yes some of the Celtics gunners were inefficient , but they also played in a up and down style and they had multiple gunners to throw at the opponents. The Celtics won on a high pace high scoring game and their scorers must have something to do with it. I think we should evaluate offensive players differently across the era and even they may not make to today's game , they could have made decent impact back then (WS supports it too).
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
- THKNKG
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
I've spoilered part one of my post if you want to read it here
Alright part 2. Here goes:
HOW TO ASSESS GREATNESS
As with any sort of analysis, I feel when analyzing a player, it’s vital to go from macroscopic levels to microscopic levels. Therefore I feel this is important ordering:
ERA > TEAM > PLAYER > MISCELLANEOUS
So, I’ll start with era. There are 2 primary components of era that I think are important when assessing greatness – era context and era translation.
Era context – this is simply analyzing the strengths/weaknesses of the era in which a player played, as well as defining influences/rules involved. Examples of these are race issues in the 60s, hand checking in the 00’s, illegal defense in the 90’s. Another example is Kareem Abdul-Jabber – he played in what was one of the weakest eras of basketball due to expansion and two leagues, yet the opposing big men he faced were a gauntlet of hall of famers – both of those factors must be considered. I hope that all are familiar with this portion of context, so I will not go into detail on this, except to make note of significant things or to bring something up towards someone else.
Era translation – this is the act of “transporting” a player’s skillset into a variety of eras and seeing how well they translate – a form of “best player in a vacuum” type test. Believe me, I’m not typically a fan of assumptions, but I think analyzing their skillsets proves to be an effective way to do this. I know some people exclusively look in era, but if we *only* look in era, it becomes another form of “best career,” so I think both are important.
Next is team. There are two factors, team makeup and team contribution.
Team makeup is the act of determining how the team is made up, and how that affected the player’s role/impact. For example, playing on a garbage team and not winning should not be negatively viewed (unless they are the cause); however, playing on a good team and not winning (11 Lebron, 95 Jordan) cannot be excused. If they forced players out of their team, or enabled a solid team to be built around them, those are factors to consider as well.
Team contribution is simply how much they contributed to the team that surrounded them. Did they maximize 1) their impact and 2) the team’s potential?
Next is player level. As I’ve said before, the goal of analyzing players is to try to determine their level of impact in team/era context as much as possible, and determine how that impact contributed to winning. I’ve already touched on intangibles and portability/scalability so I won’t mention them too much here.
One distinction I make when analyzing offensive/defensive skills is by making distinct categories. I don’t do it for the purpose of arbitrarily drawing lines, but rather making sure no part of someone’s game is missed. Here are those categories:
Offensive:
Shooting
Creating (2 sub-categories – playmaking and scoring)
Off-ball (including shooters a la Reggie Miller, and things like screen setters a la KG)
Offensive rebounding
Gravity
Defensive:
Defensive rebounding
Vertical (rim protection/shot contesting/etc.)
Horizontal (perimeter D/lateral movement/etc.)
Help defense
Anti-gravity
The biggest unknown of that list is the gravity/anti-gravity combo. Hopefully, I can expound on it here a little bit, and continue discussing later in the project – especially around the 8-15 spots. I know many have mentioned gravity before me – according to my definition, it is the ability of a player to warp a defense around them, thus providing potential for more offensive efficacy (NOTE: I distinguish between the amount/efficacy of gravity, as well as distinguishing the fact of gravity from the efficacy of gravity – more on this later). Gravity can be combined with creation in a formula with creation:
Gravity + Creation = 1
That 1 is theoretically equal to the perfect offensive player – one who has the most gravity/most effective gravity, and who takes advantage of it most effectively.
Now, some semantics… First, I would like to distinguish between amount and efficacy of gravity. Case in point: a recent thread about Shaq vs. Curry in terms of gravity. Many argued for Shaq having “greater” gravity, whereas I argued he merely had “more,” because for me, the efficacy of the gravity is even more important. Shaq commanded double and triple teams even without the ball, so there’s no question who had the most gravity (he and Kareem probably had more than any in history). However, his gravity is not the most useful gravity for a team (which also falls into the perimeter O > big man O category I had in a prior post). His gravity is not more useful than Steph’s for a team’s offense. Shaq operated exclusively in the paint, so the defense was sucked into the lane. This certainly opened passing lanes to the outside, but it meant that any shots at rim (besides his) were likely to be more contested.
Compare that with Steph. He could not command as much gravity, but his was more useful, because it better spaces the floor, and allows for more effective creation, whether through cuts to the goal, shots on the perimeter, etc. However, the player I feel has/had the most effective gravity of all is Dirk Nowitzki. The reason is that he draws the defense out to the midrange, or even the three point line a la Steph (though to a lesser level) and the defense that he draws out is big men, thus meaning clear lanes to the goal, open 3’s, less rim protection, etc. Theoretically, a stretch big with low post ability and great playmaking could have the most gravity of all.
Next it’s important to distinguish between actually *having* gravity, and *doing* something with that gravity. That means any arguments about Shaq being a guaranteed 2 points fall into the latter category.
Here are my top few players by gravity:
1. Dirk Nowitzki
2. Stephen Curry
3. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
4. Shaquille O’Neal
5. Michael Jordan
Now to anti-gravity. Anti-gravity is the capacity of a defender to warp an offense, simply due to their presence. A perfect example of this is Bill Russell – there were players literally afraid to come into the paint, and he struck fear into them. Offenses clearly shifted as a result of him. Anti-gravity can be described in a formula as well:
Anti-gravity + Disruption = 1
1 = perfect defender. Again, there is a difference in the *warping* effect of a defender, and the *actual* disruptions (rim protection, blocked shots, tipped passes, etc.). There is not as much of a difference between the amount and efficacy of gravity on defense, except that warping in the paint is more valuable than elsewhere. Something I’d like to do at a later time is an RAPM study of value, so I can compare bigs/wings/etc. (the same way I did with just offense vs defense). The list would currently rank like this:
1. Vertical + Horizontal bigs
2. Vertical bigs
3. Horizontal bigs
4. Vertical + horizontal wings
5. Horizontal wings
6. PG
So, for example: Russell > Duncan > KG > Lebron > Jordan > CP3
I’ll touch more on both of these concepts later, but this is just a preliminary discussion. Here’s a ranking of some top players by anti-gravity:
1. Bill Russell
2. David Robinson
3. Hakeem Olajuwon
4. Bill Walton
5. Tim Duncan
Theoretically, you could refine the formulas to this level:
(1/3 MG + 2/3 EG) + C = 1
where MG = mass of gravity and EG = efficacy of gravity and C = creation
(1/2 MA + 1/2 EA) + D = 1
where MA = mass of anti-gravity and EA = efficacy of anti-gravity and D = disruption
Note that for either, a 0 would be average, and a -1 would be the worst possible defender/offensive player
The Walton-Parish scale is for the later rankings (~50 or so). The ALWAYS CONTEXT RULE is all that’s left – that’s simple. It’s just that every stat, every observation (including something like PPG) has to be analyzed in context. That’s it.
Spoiler:
Alright part 2. Here goes:
HOW TO ASSESS GREATNESS
As with any sort of analysis, I feel when analyzing a player, it’s vital to go from macroscopic levels to microscopic levels. Therefore I feel this is important ordering:
ERA > TEAM > PLAYER > MISCELLANEOUS
So, I’ll start with era. There are 2 primary components of era that I think are important when assessing greatness – era context and era translation.
Era context – this is simply analyzing the strengths/weaknesses of the era in which a player played, as well as defining influences/rules involved. Examples of these are race issues in the 60s, hand checking in the 00’s, illegal defense in the 90’s. Another example is Kareem Abdul-Jabber – he played in what was one of the weakest eras of basketball due to expansion and two leagues, yet the opposing big men he faced were a gauntlet of hall of famers – both of those factors must be considered. I hope that all are familiar with this portion of context, so I will not go into detail on this, except to make note of significant things or to bring something up towards someone else.
Era translation – this is the act of “transporting” a player’s skillset into a variety of eras and seeing how well they translate – a form of “best player in a vacuum” type test. Believe me, I’m not typically a fan of assumptions, but I think analyzing their skillsets proves to be an effective way to do this. I know some people exclusively look in era, but if we *only* look in era, it becomes another form of “best career,” so I think both are important.
Next is team. There are two factors, team makeup and team contribution.
Team makeup is the act of determining how the team is made up, and how that affected the player’s role/impact. For example, playing on a garbage team and not winning should not be negatively viewed (unless they are the cause); however, playing on a good team and not winning (11 Lebron, 95 Jordan) cannot be excused. If they forced players out of their team, or enabled a solid team to be built around them, those are factors to consider as well.
Team contribution is simply how much they contributed to the team that surrounded them. Did they maximize 1) their impact and 2) the team’s potential?
Next is player level. As I’ve said before, the goal of analyzing players is to try to determine their level of impact in team/era context as much as possible, and determine how that impact contributed to winning. I’ve already touched on intangibles and portability/scalability so I won’t mention them too much here.
One distinction I make when analyzing offensive/defensive skills is by making distinct categories. I don’t do it for the purpose of arbitrarily drawing lines, but rather making sure no part of someone’s game is missed. Here are those categories:
Offensive:
Shooting
Creating (2 sub-categories – playmaking and scoring)
Off-ball (including shooters a la Reggie Miller, and things like screen setters a la KG)
Offensive rebounding
Gravity
Defensive:
Defensive rebounding
Vertical (rim protection/shot contesting/etc.)
Horizontal (perimeter D/lateral movement/etc.)
Help defense
Anti-gravity
The biggest unknown of that list is the gravity/anti-gravity combo. Hopefully, I can expound on it here a little bit, and continue discussing later in the project – especially around the 8-15 spots. I know many have mentioned gravity before me – according to my definition, it is the ability of a player to warp a defense around them, thus providing potential for more offensive efficacy (NOTE: I distinguish between the amount/efficacy of gravity, as well as distinguishing the fact of gravity from the efficacy of gravity – more on this later). Gravity can be combined with creation in a formula with creation:
Gravity + Creation = 1
That 1 is theoretically equal to the perfect offensive player – one who has the most gravity/most effective gravity, and who takes advantage of it most effectively.
Now, some semantics… First, I would like to distinguish between amount and efficacy of gravity. Case in point: a recent thread about Shaq vs. Curry in terms of gravity. Many argued for Shaq having “greater” gravity, whereas I argued he merely had “more,” because for me, the efficacy of the gravity is even more important. Shaq commanded double and triple teams even without the ball, so there’s no question who had the most gravity (he and Kareem probably had more than any in history). However, his gravity is not the most useful gravity for a team (which also falls into the perimeter O > big man O category I had in a prior post). His gravity is not more useful than Steph’s for a team’s offense. Shaq operated exclusively in the paint, so the defense was sucked into the lane. This certainly opened passing lanes to the outside, but it meant that any shots at rim (besides his) were likely to be more contested.
Compare that with Steph. He could not command as much gravity, but his was more useful, because it better spaces the floor, and allows for more effective creation, whether through cuts to the goal, shots on the perimeter, etc. However, the player I feel has/had the most effective gravity of all is Dirk Nowitzki. The reason is that he draws the defense out to the midrange, or even the three point line a la Steph (though to a lesser level) and the defense that he draws out is big men, thus meaning clear lanes to the goal, open 3’s, less rim protection, etc. Theoretically, a stretch big with low post ability and great playmaking could have the most gravity of all.
Next it’s important to distinguish between actually *having* gravity, and *doing* something with that gravity. That means any arguments about Shaq being a guaranteed 2 points fall into the latter category.
Here are my top few players by gravity:
1. Dirk Nowitzki
2. Stephen Curry
3. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
4. Shaquille O’Neal
5. Michael Jordan
Now to anti-gravity. Anti-gravity is the capacity of a defender to warp an offense, simply due to their presence. A perfect example of this is Bill Russell – there were players literally afraid to come into the paint, and he struck fear into them. Offenses clearly shifted as a result of him. Anti-gravity can be described in a formula as well:
Anti-gravity + Disruption = 1
1 = perfect defender. Again, there is a difference in the *warping* effect of a defender, and the *actual* disruptions (rim protection, blocked shots, tipped passes, etc.). There is not as much of a difference between the amount and efficacy of gravity on defense, except that warping in the paint is more valuable than elsewhere. Something I’d like to do at a later time is an RAPM study of value, so I can compare bigs/wings/etc. (the same way I did with just offense vs defense). The list would currently rank like this:
1. Vertical + Horizontal bigs
2. Vertical bigs
3. Horizontal bigs
4. Vertical + horizontal wings
5. Horizontal wings
6. PG
So, for example: Russell > Duncan > KG > Lebron > Jordan > CP3
I’ll touch more on both of these concepts later, but this is just a preliminary discussion. Here’s a ranking of some top players by anti-gravity:
1. Bill Russell
2. David Robinson
3. Hakeem Olajuwon
4. Bill Walton
5. Tim Duncan
Theoretically, you could refine the formulas to this level:
(1/3 MG + 2/3 EG) + C = 1
where MG = mass of gravity and EG = efficacy of gravity and C = creation
(1/2 MA + 1/2 EA) + D = 1
where MA = mass of anti-gravity and EA = efficacy of anti-gravity and D = disruption
Note that for either, a 0 would be average, and a -1 would be the worst possible defender/offensive player
The Walton-Parish scale is for the later rankings (~50 or so). The ALWAYS CONTEXT RULE is all that’s left – that’s simple. It’s just that every stat, every observation (including something like PPG) has to be analyzed in context. That’s it.
All-Time Fantasy Draft Team (90 FGA)
PG: Maurice Cheeks / Giannis
SG: Reggie Miller / Jordan
SF: Michael Jordan / Bruce Bowen
PF: Giannis / Marvin Williams
C: Artis Gilmore / Chris Anderson
PG: Maurice Cheeks / Giannis
SG: Reggie Miller / Jordan
SF: Michael Jordan / Bruce Bowen
PF: Giannis / Marvin Williams
C: Artis Gilmore / Chris Anderson
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
- THKNKG
- Pro Prospect
- Posts: 994
- And1: 368
- Joined: Sep 11, 2016
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
And part 3, my actual vote.
ALRIGHT, NOW IT’S FINALLY TIME FOR ME TO TALK ABOUT THE PLAYERS
I’ll just go straight down the list and compare the main 4 candidates I’ve previously mentioned (with cursory glances at Lebron/Wilt/KG/Shaq/Magic if applicable).
1. Era context
Russell – played in an era with much fewer teams, but much more parity; era had much racism/prejudice; due to the nature of dribbling + no 3 point line + his iq, he had the capacity to be the most effective defender ever
Kareem – played in the diluted era much of his career, however, he faced the biggest gauntlet of premier players at his position; dealt with some forms of prejudice
Jordan – hand checking; illegal defenses (though honestly these two cancel one another out); played in an incredibly tough league part of his career and a weak league part of his career
Duncan – one of the toughest eras; hand-checking + illegal defenses for a portion of his prime
If anyone were to *gain* anything from their era, it’d be one of the bigs.
2. Era translation
Russell – an incredibly smart rim-protector who deflected shots to his teammates, top 3 defensive rebounder ever, high post hub on offense, with extremely quick horizontal movement and ability, potentially the greatest BBIQ ever
Skillset translation
70s – at least similar impact (+0)
80s – at least similar impact (+0)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
10s – probably slightly less impact (-1)
Kareem – the most unstoppable scorer ever, in his prime an excellent defender, range out to midrange, good passer, really freaking tall
Skillset translation
50s – significantly more impact (+2)
60s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – at least similar impact (+0)
10s – at least similar impact (+0)
Jordan – superlative scorer, excellent playmaker, really solid defender, excellent from midrange, freak athlete
Skillset translation
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
10s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
Duncan – pretty good midrange, good passer, good low post scorer, excellent rim protector
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - significantly more impact (+2)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
80s - at least similar impact (+0)
90s – at least similar impact (+0)
Results:
Duncan – 5
KAJ – 4
Russell – 1 (though he is negatively affected in this due to how much impact he actually had)
MJ – 0
This sides with what I believe – that big men’s games would translate better.
3. Team makeup/contribution
Overall, their team strengths could be rated as follows (over their whole career):
Russell
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
MJ and KAJ played with poor supporting casts part of the time, and part of the time with juggernauts. Russell consistently led a juggernaut (and I would hold that he had the best supporting cast of the era, but he was what made them a juggernaut). Duncan had some really good teams, but his supporting cast never approached the level of these others. Since this is an argument for #1, there are few places where players did not maximize their team (though MJ and KAJ have the most instances of this).
4. Impact
In terms of pure, in era impact, there is a clear #1 (Russell). Jordan could also be firmly considered #2 at his peak, but it’s pretty close after him for both Duncan/KAJ. I would consider all non-Russell candidates pretty close in terms of overall, on court impact. KAJ and Duncan were able to pretty often lead top 10 O/D at the same time.
5. Offense/Defensive skill
Shooting:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Creating:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Offensive rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Off-ball:
MJ
Duncan
KAJ
Russell
Gravity:
KAJ
MJ
Duncan
Russell
Vertical:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Horizontal:
Russell
MJ
KAJ/Duncan
Defensive Rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Help D:
Russell
Duncan
Jordan
KAJ
Anti-gravity:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
Jordan
Russell – 17
Duncan - 15
MJ – 13
KAJ – 12
Of course, there’s a bias towards bigs on defense in this ranking, but I’ve already established why I value them so much relative to wings.
6. Portability/Scalability
The two players with the most portability/scalability IMO are Duncan and Russell. This is because defense is basically always additive, and because these two players were a case study in scalability. They dealt with rotating teams (particularly Russell) and rotating roles (particularly Duncan) and they always maximized their teams in all those varieties of ways.
7. Intangibles
Clearly Duncan and Russell are outliers in this regard – the two greatest teammates ever. I don’t dock MJ or KAJ for their personalities much, if at all.
Alright, with all that being said, it can be clear that I value the bigs more than I do the wings. Therefore, MJ is 4th out of all of those players. He had astronomical impact, but he can’t match their longevity (KAJ/Duncan) or their impact (Russell), so he’s a (very worthy) 4th place for me.
Russell takes 3rd for me, because at the top (besides Russell) many players have impacts that are similar. KG, Duncan, DRob for example are not *that* much lower than MJ, Shaq, Lebron at peak level, and the longevity Duncan and Kareem have takes them to the top 2 spots.
Now, it’s down to two: Kareem and Duncan. I know the underlying assumption of most basketball fans is Kareem > Duncan. Now I’m going to outline my case for Duncan as #1.
1. At his peak, Duncan had a (clear) top 10 peak.
One argument I’ve heard is that Duncan just wasn’t as great as some others at their peak. That’s true for a select few, but he’s still at the top. My peak list goes:
Wilt
Shaq
Lebron
Jordan
KG
Duncan
Kareem
Russell
Hakeem
DRob
Or somewhere in that general area. Point is, he’s clearly at the top level. He’s also one of the few players who peaked offensively and defensively at the same time.
2. Duncan is one of the 5 best defenders ever.
The only ones that have an argument over him are Russell, Hakeem, Walton, and DRob. However, he did it more consistently (Hakeem), and much longer (Walton/DRob). Thus, as a career defender, he could be considered #2.
3. Duncan was really good offensively.
He’s not on the level of Kareem or Jordan as a scorer, but they’re not on his level defensively, either. He was the primary scorer and focal point of championship winning teams, so he has proven his capability in both regards.
4. Duncan’s longevity was more valuable than Kareem’s, or anyone’s ever.
Prime for prime, they are comparable (probably with a slight edge to Kareem). However, Duncan was more valuable post prime. His defensive anchoring and rebounding is much more valuable to a contending team than big man scoring is. Plus, this past season, the Spurs played excellently without him. That’s not because they were in a system, but because Duncan established that system and every single time allowed for smooth transition from superstar to superstar. Thus, this past season could be considered an epilogue to Duncan’s career, because it absolutely happened because of him.
5. Duncan was the best teammate ever, and produced an absolute dynasty, the winningest 19 year span in NBA history.
I will probably add more throughout the thread, and welcome responses, but I’ll conclude this post with an old post of mine on Duncan.
Duncan’s argument goes far beyond box score, and he makes the argument for himself rather convincingly. He, as a player, built and sustained a dynasty on his greatness, and due to his greatness is sustaining it even after he left.
Vote: Tim Duncan
2nd: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
ALRIGHT, NOW IT’S FINALLY TIME FOR ME TO TALK ABOUT THE PLAYERS
I’ll just go straight down the list and compare the main 4 candidates I’ve previously mentioned (with cursory glances at Lebron/Wilt/KG/Shaq/Magic if applicable).
1. Era context
Russell – played in an era with much fewer teams, but much more parity; era had much racism/prejudice; due to the nature of dribbling + no 3 point line + his iq, he had the capacity to be the most effective defender ever
Kareem – played in the diluted era much of his career, however, he faced the biggest gauntlet of premier players at his position; dealt with some forms of prejudice
Jordan – hand checking; illegal defenses (though honestly these two cancel one another out); played in an incredibly tough league part of his career and a weak league part of his career
Duncan – one of the toughest eras; hand-checking + illegal defenses for a portion of his prime
If anyone were to *gain* anything from their era, it’d be one of the bigs.
2. Era translation
Russell – an incredibly smart rim-protector who deflected shots to his teammates, top 3 defensive rebounder ever, high post hub on offense, with extremely quick horizontal movement and ability, potentially the greatest BBIQ ever
Skillset translation
70s – at least similar impact (+0)
80s – at least similar impact (+0)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
10s – probably slightly less impact (-1)
Kareem – the most unstoppable scorer ever, in his prime an excellent defender, range out to midrange, good passer, really freaking tall
Skillset translation
50s – significantly more impact (+2)
60s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – at least similar impact (+0)
10s – at least similar impact (+0)
Jordan – superlative scorer, excellent playmaker, really solid defender, excellent from midrange, freak athlete
Skillset translation
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
10s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
Duncan – pretty good midrange, good passer, good low post scorer, excellent rim protector
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - significantly more impact (+2)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
80s - at least similar impact (+0)
90s – at least similar impact (+0)
Results:
Duncan – 5
KAJ – 4
Russell – 1 (though he is negatively affected in this due to how much impact he actually had)
MJ – 0
This sides with what I believe – that big men’s games would translate better.
3. Team makeup/contribution
Overall, their team strengths could be rated as follows (over their whole career):
Russell
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
MJ and KAJ played with poor supporting casts part of the time, and part of the time with juggernauts. Russell consistently led a juggernaut (and I would hold that he had the best supporting cast of the era, but he was what made them a juggernaut). Duncan had some really good teams, but his supporting cast never approached the level of these others. Since this is an argument for #1, there are few places where players did not maximize their team (though MJ and KAJ have the most instances of this).
4. Impact
In terms of pure, in era impact, there is a clear #1 (Russell). Jordan could also be firmly considered #2 at his peak, but it’s pretty close after him for both Duncan/KAJ. I would consider all non-Russell candidates pretty close in terms of overall, on court impact. KAJ and Duncan were able to pretty often lead top 10 O/D at the same time.
5. Offense/Defensive skill
Shooting:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Creating:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Offensive rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Off-ball:
MJ
Duncan
KAJ
Russell
Gravity:
KAJ
MJ
Duncan
Russell
Vertical:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Horizontal:
Russell
MJ
KAJ/Duncan
Defensive Rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Help D:
Russell
Duncan
Jordan
KAJ
Anti-gravity:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
Jordan
Russell – 17
Duncan - 15
MJ – 13
KAJ – 12
Of course, there’s a bias towards bigs on defense in this ranking, but I’ve already established why I value them so much relative to wings.
6. Portability/Scalability
The two players with the most portability/scalability IMO are Duncan and Russell. This is because defense is basically always additive, and because these two players were a case study in scalability. They dealt with rotating teams (particularly Russell) and rotating roles (particularly Duncan) and they always maximized their teams in all those varieties of ways.
7. Intangibles
Clearly Duncan and Russell are outliers in this regard – the two greatest teammates ever. I don’t dock MJ or KAJ for their personalities much, if at all.
Alright, with all that being said, it can be clear that I value the bigs more than I do the wings. Therefore, MJ is 4th out of all of those players. He had astronomical impact, but he can’t match their longevity (KAJ/Duncan) or their impact (Russell), so he’s a (very worthy) 4th place for me.
Russell takes 3rd for me, because at the top (besides Russell) many players have impacts that are similar. KG, Duncan, DRob for example are not *that* much lower than MJ, Shaq, Lebron at peak level, and the longevity Duncan and Kareem have takes them to the top 2 spots.
Now, it’s down to two: Kareem and Duncan. I know the underlying assumption of most basketball fans is Kareem > Duncan. Now I’m going to outline my case for Duncan as #1.
1. At his peak, Duncan had a (clear) top 10 peak.
One argument I’ve heard is that Duncan just wasn’t as great as some others at their peak. That’s true for a select few, but he’s still at the top. My peak list goes:
Wilt
Shaq
Lebron
Jordan
KG
Duncan
Kareem
Russell
Hakeem
DRob
Or somewhere in that general area. Point is, he’s clearly at the top level. He’s also one of the few players who peaked offensively and defensively at the same time.
2. Duncan is one of the 5 best defenders ever.
The only ones that have an argument over him are Russell, Hakeem, Walton, and DRob. However, he did it more consistently (Hakeem), and much longer (Walton/DRob). Thus, as a career defender, he could be considered #2.
3. Duncan was really good offensively.
He’s not on the level of Kareem or Jordan as a scorer, but they’re not on his level defensively, either. He was the primary scorer and focal point of championship winning teams, so he has proven his capability in both regards.
4. Duncan’s longevity was more valuable than Kareem’s, or anyone’s ever.
Prime for prime, they are comparable (probably with a slight edge to Kareem). However, Duncan was more valuable post prime. His defensive anchoring and rebounding is much more valuable to a contending team than big man scoring is. Plus, this past season, the Spurs played excellently without him. That’s not because they were in a system, but because Duncan established that system and every single time allowed for smooth transition from superstar to superstar. Thus, this past season could be considered an epilogue to Duncan’s career, because it absolutely happened because of him.
5. Duncan was the best teammate ever, and produced an absolute dynasty, the winningest 19 year span in NBA history.
I will probably add more throughout the thread, and welcome responses, but I’ll conclude this post with an old post of mine on Duncan.
Spoiler:
Duncan’s argument goes far beyond box score, and he makes the argument for himself rather convincingly. He, as a player, built and sustained a dynasty on his greatness, and due to his greatness is sustaining it even after he left.
Vote: Tim Duncan
2nd: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
All-Time Fantasy Draft Team (90 FGA)
PG: Maurice Cheeks / Giannis
SG: Reggie Miller / Jordan
SF: Michael Jordan / Bruce Bowen
PF: Giannis / Marvin Williams
C: Artis Gilmore / Chris Anderson
PG: Maurice Cheeks / Giannis
SG: Reggie Miller / Jordan
SF: Michael Jordan / Bruce Bowen
PF: Giannis / Marvin Williams
C: Artis Gilmore / Chris Anderson
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
micahclay wrote:And part 3, my actual vote.
ALRIGHT, NOW IT’S FINALLY TIME FOR ME TO TALK ABOUT THE PLAYERS
I’ll just go straight down the list and compare the main 4 candidates I’ve previously mentioned (with cursory glances at Lebron/Wilt/KG/Shaq/Magic if applicable).
1. Era context
Russell – played in an era with much fewer teams, but much more parity; era had much racism/prejudice; due to the nature of dribbling + no 3 point line + his iq, he had the capacity to be the most effective defender ever
Kareem – played in the diluted era much of his career, however, he faced the biggest gauntlet of premier players at his position; dealt with some forms of prejudice
Jordan – hand checking; illegal defenses (though honestly these two cancel one another out); played in an incredibly tough league part of his career and a weak league part of his career
Duncan – one of the toughest eras; hand-checking + illegal defenses for a portion of his prime
If anyone were to *gain* anything from their era, it’d be one of the bigs.
2. Era translation
Russell – an incredibly smart rim-protector who deflected shots to his teammates, top 3 defensive rebounder ever, high post hub on offense, with extremely quick horizontal movement and ability, potentially the greatest BBIQ ever
Skillset translation
70s – at least similar impact (+0)
80s – at least similar impact (+0)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
10s – probably slightly less impact (-1)
Kareem – the most unstoppable scorer ever, in his prime an excellent defender, range out to midrange, good passer, really freaking tall
Skillset translation
50s – significantly more impact (+2)
60s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – at least similar impact (+0)
10s – at least similar impact (+0)
Jordan – superlative scorer, excellent playmaker, really solid defender, excellent from midrange, freak athlete
Skillset translation
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
10s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
Duncan – pretty good midrange, good passer, good low post scorer, excellent rim protector
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - significantly more impact (+2)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
80s - at least similar impact (+0)
90s – at least similar impact (+0)
Results:
Duncan – 5
KAJ – 4
Russell – 1 (though he is negatively affected in this due to how much impact he actually had)
MJ – 0
This sides with what I believe – that big men’s games would translate better.
3. Team makeup/contribution
Overall, their team strengths could be rated as follows (over their whole career):
Russell
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
MJ and KAJ played with poor supporting casts part of the time, and part of the time with juggernauts. Russell consistently led a juggernaut (and I would hold that he had the best supporting cast of the era, but he was what made them a juggernaut). Duncan had some really good teams, but his supporting cast never approached the level of these others. Since this is an argument for #1, there are few places where players did not maximize their team (though MJ and KAJ have the most instances of this).
4. Impact
In terms of pure, in era impact, there is a clear #1 (Russell). Jordan could also be firmly considered #2 at his peak, but it’s pretty close after him for both Duncan/KAJ. I would consider all non-Russell candidates pretty close in terms of overall, on court impact. KAJ and Duncan were able to pretty often lead top 10 O/D at the same time.
5. Offense/Defensive skill
Shooting:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Creating:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Offensive rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Off-ball:
MJ
Duncan
KAJ
Russell
Gravity:
KAJ
MJ
Duncan
Russell
Vertical:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Horizontal:
Russell
MJ
KAJ/Duncan
Defensive Rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Help D:
Russell
Duncan
Jordan
KAJ
Anti-gravity:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
Jordan
Russell – 17
Duncan - 15
MJ – 13
KAJ – 12
Of course, there’s a bias towards bigs on defense in this ranking, but I’ve already established why I value them so much relative to wings.
6. Portability/Scalability
The two players with the most portability/scalability IMO are Duncan and Russell. This is because defense is basically always additive, and because these two players were a case study in scalability. They dealt with rotating teams (particularly Russell) and rotating roles (particularly Duncan) and they always maximized their teams in all those varieties of ways.
7. Intangibles
Clearly Duncan and Russell are outliers in this regard – the two greatest teammates ever. I don’t dock MJ or KAJ for their personalities much, if at all.
Alright, with all that being said, it can be clear that I value the bigs more than I do the wings. Therefore, MJ is 4th out of all of those players. He had astronomical impact, but he can’t match their longevity (KAJ/Duncan) or their impact (Russell), so he’s a (very worthy) 4th place for me.
Russell takes 3rd for me, because at the top (besides Russell) many players have impacts that are similar. KG, Duncan, DRob for example are not *that* much lower than MJ, Shaq, Lebron at peak level, and the longevity Duncan and Kareem have takes them to the top 2 spots.
Now, it’s down to two: Kareem and Duncan. I know the underlying assumption of most basketball fans is Kareem > Duncan. Now I’m going to outline my case for Duncan as #1.
1. At his peak, Duncan had a (clear) top 10 peak.
One argument I’ve heard is that Duncan just wasn’t as great as some others at their peak. That’s true for a select few, but he’s still at the top. My peak list goes:
Wilt
Shaq
Lebron
Jordan
KG
Duncan
Kareem
Russell
Hakeem
DRob
Or somewhere in that general area. Point is, he’s clearly at the top level. He’s also one of the few players who peaked offensively and defensively at the same time.
2. Duncan is one of the 5 best defenders ever.
The only ones that have an argument over him are Russell, Hakeem, Walton, and DRob. However, he did it more consistently (Hakeem), and much longer (Walton/DRob). Thus, as a career defender, he could be considered #2.
3. Duncan was really good offensively.
He’s not on the level of Kareem or Jordan as a scorer, but they’re not on his level defensively, either. He was the primary scorer and focal point of championship winning teams, so he has proven his capability in both regards.
4. Duncan’s longevity was more valuable than Kareem’s, or anyone’s ever.
Prime for prime, they are comparable (probably with a slight edge to Kareem). However, Duncan was more valuable post prime. His defensive anchoring and rebounding is much more valuable to a contending team than big man scoring is. Plus, this past season, the Spurs played excellently without him. That’s not because they were in a system, but because Duncan established that system and every single time allowed for smooth transition from superstar to superstar. Thus, this past season could be considered an epilogue to Duncan’s career, because it absolutely happened because of him.
5. Duncan was the best teammate ever, and produced an absolute dynasty, the winningest 19 year span in NBA history.
I will probably add more throughout the thread, and welcome responses, but I’ll conclude this post with an old post of mine on Duncan.Spoiler:
Duncan’s argument goes far beyond box score, and he makes the argument for himself rather convincingly. He, as a player, built and sustained a dynasty on his greatness, and due to his greatness is sustaining it even after he left.
Vote: Tim Duncan
2nd: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
I really dislike the era argument. I mean, that's as much subjective as it gets, and it's really an easy way out since you can't prove it's right and I can't prove it's wrong.
I can also say Hakeem in the 60s would be a +5 since he had tremendous rim protection but was a far better player than Russell on offense.
Also a player has to develop to his own era. Why should a guy develop skills for eras that never existed or past eras where the game was different?
“These guys have been criticized the last few years for not getting to where we’re going, but I’ve always said that the most important thing in sports is to keep trying. Let this be an example of what it means to say it’s never over.” - Jerry Sloan
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
- Wavy Q
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
Will Edit this post when i get home from work, sorry for the late timing
Re: RE: Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RE: Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
micahclay wrote:And part 3, my actual vote.
ALRIGHT, NOW IT’S FINALLY TIME FOR ME TO TALK ABOUT THE PLAYERS
I’ll just go straight down the list and compare the main 4 candidates I’ve previously mentioned (with cursory glances at Lebron/Wilt/KG/Shaq/Magic if applicable).
1. Era context
Russell – played in an era with much fewer teams, but much more parity; era had much racism/prejudice; due to the nature of dribbling + no 3 point line + his iq, he had the capacity to be the most effective defender ever
Kareem – played in the diluted era much of his career, however, he faced the biggest gauntlet of premier players at his position; dealt with some forms of prejudice
Jordan – hand checking; illegal defenses (though honestly these two cancel one another out); played in an incredibly tough league part of his career and a weak league part of his career
Duncan – one of the toughest eras; hand-checking + illegal defenses for a portion of his prime
If anyone were to *gain* anything from their era, it’d be one of the bigs.
2. Era translation
Russell – an incredibly smart rim-protector who deflected shots to his teammates, top 3 defensive rebounder ever, high post hub on offense, with extremely quick horizontal movement and ability, potentially the greatest BBIQ ever
Skillset translation
70s – at least similar impact (+0)
80s – at least similar impact (+0)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
10s – probably slightly less impact (-1)
Kareem – the most unstoppable scorer ever, in his prime an excellent defender, range out to midrange, good passer, really freaking tall
Skillset translation
50s – significantly more impact (+2)
60s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – at least similar impact (+0)
10s – at least similar impact (+0)
Jordan – superlative scorer, excellent playmaker, really solid defender, excellent from midrange, freak athlete
Skillset translation
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
10s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
Duncan – pretty good midrange, good passer, good low post scorer, excellent rim protector
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - significantly more impact (+2)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
80s - at least similar impact (+0)
90s – at least similar impact (+0)
Results:
Duncan – 5
KAJ – 4
Russell – 1 (though he is negatively affected in this due to how much impact he actually had)
MJ – 0
This sides with what I believe – that big men’s games would translate better.
3. Team makeup/contribution
Overall, their team strengths could be rated as follows (over their whole career):
Russell
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
MJ and KAJ played with poor supporting casts part of the time, and part of the time with juggernauts. Russell consistently led a juggernaut (and I would hold that he had the best supporting cast of the era, but he was what made them a juggernaut). Duncan had some really good teams, but his supporting cast never approached the level of these others. Since this is an argument for #1, there are few places where players did not maximize their team (though MJ and KAJ have the most instances of this).
4. Impact
In terms of pure, in era impact, there is a clear #1 (Russell). Jordan could also be firmly considered #2 at his peak, but it’s pretty close after him for both Duncan/KAJ. I would consider all non-Russell candidates pretty close in terms of overall, on court impact. KAJ and Duncan were able to pretty often lead top 10 O/D at the same time.
5. Offense/Defensive skill
Shooting:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Creating:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Offensive rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Off-ball:
MJ
Duncan
KAJ
Russell
Gravity:
KAJ
MJ
Duncan
Russell
Vertical:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Horizontal:
Russell
MJ
KAJ/Duncan
Defensive Rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Help D:
Russell
Duncan
Jordan
KAJ
Anti-gravity:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
Jordan
Russell – 17
Duncan - 15
MJ – 13
KAJ – 12
Of course, there’s a bias towards bigs on defense in this ranking, but I’ve already established why I value them so much relative to wings.
6. Portability/Scalability
The two players with the most portability/scalability IMO are Duncan and Russell. This is because defense is basically always additive, and because these two players were a case study in scalability. They dealt with rotating teams (particularly Russell) and rotating roles (particularly Duncan) and they always maximized their teams in all those varieties of ways.
7. Intangibles
Clearly Duncan and Russell are outliers in this regard – the two greatest teammates ever. I don’t dock MJ or KAJ for their personalities much, if at all.
Alright, with all that being said, it can be clear that I value the bigs more than I do the wings. Therefore, MJ is 4th out of all of those players. He had astronomical impact, but he can’t match their longevity (KAJ/Duncan) or their impact (Russell), so he’s a (very worthy) 4th place for me.
Russell takes 3rd for me, because at the top (besides Russell) many players have impacts that are similar. KG, Duncan, DRob for example are not *that* much lower than MJ, Shaq, Lebron at peak level, and the longevity Duncan and Kareem have takes them to the top 2 spots.
Now, it’s down to two: Kareem and Duncan. I know the underlying assumption of most basketball fans is Kareem > Duncan. Now I’m going to outline my case for Duncan as #1.
1. At his peak, Duncan had a (clear) top 10 peak.
One argument I’ve heard is that Duncan just wasn’t as great as some others at their peak. That’s true for a select few, but he’s still at the top. My peak list goes:
Wilt
Shaq
Lebron
Jordan
KG
Duncan
Kareem
Russell
Hakeem
DRob
Or somewhere in that general area. Point is, he’s clearly at the top level. He’s also one of the few players who peaked offensively and defensively at the same time.
2. Duncan is one of the 5 best defenders ever.
The only ones that have an argument over him are Russell, Hakeem, Walton, and DRob. However, he did it more consistently (Hakeem), and much longer (Walton/DRob). Thus, as a career defender, he could be considered #2.
3. Duncan was really good offensively.
He’s not on the level of Kareem or Jordan as a scorer, but they’re not on his level defensively, either. He was the primary scorer and focal point of championship winning teams, so he has proven his capability in both regards.
4. Duncan’s longevity was more valuable than Kareem’s, or anyone’s ever.
Prime for prime, they are comparable (probably with a slight edge to Kareem). However, Duncan was more valuable post prime. His defensive anchoring and rebounding is much more valuable to a contending team than big man scoring is. Plus, this past season, the Spurs played excellently without him. That’s not because they were in a system, but because Duncan established that system and every single time allowed for smooth transition from superstar to superstar. Thus, this past season could be considered an epilogue to Duncan’s career, because it absolutely happened because of him.
5. Duncan was the best teammate ever, and produced an absolute dynasty, the winningest 19 year span in NBA history.
I will probably add more throughout the thread, and welcome responses, but I’ll conclude this post with an old post of mine on Duncan.Spoiler:
Duncan’s argument goes far beyond box score, and he makes the argument for himself rather convincingly. He, as a player, built and sustained a dynasty on his greatness, and due to his greatness is sustaining it even after he left.
Vote: Tim Duncan
2nd: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
What makes you think MJ would've been worse in the 60's?
Lähetetty minun LG-H440n laitteesta Tapatalkilla
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
cpower said:
But MJ didn't have Sharman or Cousy level of offensive player to start with, so it would have been unfair to compare their early days. On the contrary, Duncan's early days have been more impressive than both players
Didn't he? In his rookie year he had Orlando Woolridge who was Sharman in 57 level and Quinton Dailey, another scorer, plus Corzine/Steve Johnson two interior scorers at center. His PGs sucked (Wes Mathews and Enis Whatley) but he had scorers; just no one who was interested in defense and (with the exception of Corzine who set good picks) no one interested in team play. It wasn't the talent level of the Celtics by any stretch, but it wasn't about the lack of scoring, just the selfish individual play. One reason why MJ may have been selfish in his early years was that's all he saw around him.
2nd year he was injured
3rd year he had Gene "Tinkerbell" Banks, another somewhat selfish scorer, John Paxson, Charles Oakley, plus Sedale Threatt off the bench, again good scorers (more efficient, less able to create for themselves), and again with Corzine platooning at center, this time with Earl Cureton (great physical specimen who never really figured out how to play the game).
I'd say Banks is rough equivalent to Heinsohn, Paxson to Sharman, Oakley clearly superior to Lotscutoff, Ramsey clearly superior to Threatt, no equivalent playmaker to Cousy again but then Cousy is a negative shooting in the playoffs again (he shot .326, up from .324 in 1957 , , , you can see why I am not impressed with Cousy's 20ppg scoring when it comes to winning titles!). Chicago's problem in Jordan's early years wasn't scoring, it was team play.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RE: Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RE: Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
janmagn wrote:...
What makes you think MJ would've been worse in the 60's?
Lähetetty minun LG-H440n laitteesta Tapatalkilla
The argument that MJ would be worse in the 60s comes from several things. (1) He would have to dribble on top of the ball rather than carry it like modern players do. That's why most of the great dunkers of the 60s (Baylor, Hawkins, Gus Johnson) dunked out of the high/mid post with only a couple of steps rather than driving in from the perimeter. (2) The interior lanes were more crowded with people and there were more good shotblockers/post protectors playing center (because of the rule differences mainly; starting centers even averaged a hair taller if you add 1.5 inches for measuring in socks rather than shoes). (3)To add to that, it was considered normal (if not legal) to undercut dunkers showing up your team, unlike in the post merger era. Thus Baylor/Hawkins/Johnson also shared another trait in common, knee injuries very early in their NBA careers. Add the unpadded floors and canvas shoes and it was much harder physically to be a high flyer.
Would Jordan have been great . . . of course . . . if. He had incredible athletic ability, great basketball IQ, and a great midrange game. The only other if is his gambling. The 60s were completely paranoid about gambling (with good reason after the point shaving scandals of the 50s). Great players like Connie Hawkins, Roger Brown, and Doug Moe were banned from the league for "associating with gamblers" with very little evidence of actual misconduct. Could Jordan have controlled his gambling habit? Maybe, but it's another danger area.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
Joao Saraiva wrote:micahclay wrote:And part 3, my actual vote.
ALRIGHT, NOW IT’S FINALLY TIME FOR ME TO TALK ABOUT THE PLAYERS
I’ll just go straight down the list and compare the main 4 candidates I’ve previously mentioned (with cursory glances at Lebron/Wilt/KG/Shaq/Magic if applicable).
1. Era context
Russell – played in an era with much fewer teams, but much more parity; era had much racism/prejudice; due to the nature of dribbling + no 3 point line + his iq, he had the capacity to be the most effective defender ever
Kareem – played in the diluted era much of his career, however, he faced the biggest gauntlet of premier players at his position; dealt with some forms of prejudice
Jordan – hand checking; illegal defenses (though honestly these two cancel one another out); played in an incredibly tough league part of his career and a weak league part of his career
Duncan – one of the toughest eras; hand-checking + illegal defenses for a portion of his prime
If anyone were to *gain* anything from their era, it’d be one of the bigs.
2. Era translation
Russell – an incredibly smart rim-protector who deflected shots to his teammates, top 3 defensive rebounder ever, high post hub on offense, with extremely quick horizontal movement and ability, potentially the greatest BBIQ ever
Skillset translation
70s – at least similar impact (+0)
80s – at least similar impact (+0)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
10s – probably slightly less impact (-1)
Kareem – the most unstoppable scorer ever, in his prime an excellent defender, range out to midrange, good passer, really freaking tall
Skillset translation
50s – significantly more impact (+2)
60s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
90s – probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s – at least similar impact (+0)
10s – at least similar impact (+0)
Jordan – superlative scorer, excellent playmaker, really solid defender, excellent from midrange, freak athlete
Skillset translation
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
00s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
10s - probably slightly less impact (-1)
Duncan – pretty good midrange, good passer, good low post scorer, excellent rim protector
50s - significantly more impact (+2)
60s - significantly more impact (+2)
70s - probably slightly more impact (+1)
80s - at least similar impact (+0)
90s – at least similar impact (+0)
Results:
Duncan – 5
KAJ – 4
Russell – 1 (though he is negatively affected in this due to how much impact he actually had)
MJ – 0
This sides with what I believe – that big men’s games would translate better.
3. Team makeup/contribution
Overall, their team strengths could be rated as follows (over their whole career):
Russell
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
MJ and KAJ played with poor supporting casts part of the time, and part of the time with juggernauts. Russell consistently led a juggernaut (and I would hold that he had the best supporting cast of the era, but he was what made them a juggernaut). Duncan had some really good teams, but his supporting cast never approached the level of these others. Since this is an argument for #1, there are few places where players did not maximize their team (though MJ and KAJ have the most instances of this).
4. Impact
In terms of pure, in era impact, there is a clear #1 (Russell). Jordan could also be firmly considered #2 at his peak, but it’s pretty close after him for both Duncan/KAJ. I would consider all non-Russell candidates pretty close in terms of overall, on court impact. KAJ and Duncan were able to pretty often lead top 10 O/D at the same time.
5. Offense/Defensive skill
Shooting:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Creating:
MJ
KAJ
Duncan
Russell
Offensive rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Off-ball:
MJ
Duncan
KAJ
Russell
Gravity:
KAJ
MJ
Duncan
Russell
Vertical:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Horizontal:
Russell
MJ
KAJ/Duncan
Defensive Rebounding:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
MJ
Help D:
Russell
Duncan
Jordan
KAJ
Anti-gravity:
Russell
Duncan
KAJ
Jordan
Russell – 17
Duncan - 15
MJ – 13
KAJ – 12
Of course, there’s a bias towards bigs on defense in this ranking, but I’ve already established why I value them so much relative to wings.
6. Portability/Scalability
The two players with the most portability/scalability IMO are Duncan and Russell. This is because defense is basically always additive, and because these two players were a case study in scalability. They dealt with rotating teams (particularly Russell) and rotating roles (particularly Duncan) and they always maximized their teams in all those varieties of ways.
7. Intangibles
Clearly Duncan and Russell are outliers in this regard – the two greatest teammates ever. I don’t dock MJ or KAJ for their personalities much, if at all.
Alright, with all that being said, it can be clear that I value the bigs more than I do the wings. Therefore, MJ is 4th out of all of those players. He had astronomical impact, but he can’t match their longevity (KAJ/Duncan) or their impact (Russell), so he’s a (very worthy) 4th place for me.
Russell takes 3rd for me, because at the top (besides Russell) many players have impacts that are similar. KG, Duncan, DRob for example are not *that* much lower than MJ, Shaq, Lebron at peak level, and the longevity Duncan and Kareem have takes them to the top 2 spots.
Now, it’s down to two: Kareem and Duncan. I know the underlying assumption of most basketball fans is Kareem > Duncan. Now I’m going to outline my case for Duncan as #1.
1. At his peak, Duncan had a (clear) top 10 peak.
One argument I’ve heard is that Duncan just wasn’t as great as some others at their peak. That’s true for a select few, but he’s still at the top. My peak list goes:
Wilt
Shaq
Lebron
Jordan
KG
Duncan
Kareem
Russell
Hakeem
DRob
Or somewhere in that general area. Point is, he’s clearly at the top level. He’s also one of the few players who peaked offensively and defensively at the same time.
2. Duncan is one of the 5 best defenders ever.
The only ones that have an argument over him are Russell, Hakeem, Walton, and DRob. However, he did it more consistently (Hakeem), and much longer (Walton/DRob). Thus, as a career defender, he could be considered #2.
3. Duncan was really good offensively.
He’s not on the level of Kareem or Jordan as a scorer, but they’re not on his level defensively, either. He was the primary scorer and focal point of championship winning teams, so he has proven his capability in both regards.
4. Duncan’s longevity was more valuable than Kareem’s, or anyone’s ever.
Prime for prime, they are comparable (probably with a slight edge to Kareem). However, Duncan was more valuable post prime. His defensive anchoring and rebounding is much more valuable to a contending team than big man scoring is. Plus, this past season, the Spurs played excellently without him. That’s not because they were in a system, but because Duncan established that system and every single time allowed for smooth transition from superstar to superstar. Thus, this past season could be considered an epilogue to Duncan’s career, because it absolutely happened because of him.
5. Duncan was the best teammate ever, and produced an absolute dynasty, the winningest 19 year span in NBA history.
I will probably add more throughout the thread, and welcome responses, but I’ll conclude this post with an old post of mine on Duncan.Spoiler:
Duncan’s argument goes far beyond box score, and he makes the argument for himself rather convincingly. He, as a player, built and sustained a dynasty on his greatness, and due to his greatness is sustaining it even after he left.
Vote: Tim Duncan
2nd: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
I really dislike the era argument. I mean, that's as much subjective as it gets, and it's really an easy way out since you can't prove it's right and I can't prove it's wrong.
I can also say Hakeem in the 60s would be a +5 since he had tremendous rim protection but was a far better player than Russell on offense.
Also a player has to develop to his own era. Why should a guy develop skills for eras that never existed or past eras where the game was different?
I don't disagree with anything you said. It doesn't have any consequential value - just a good thought project that allows me to refine my thinking.
All-Time Fantasy Draft Team (90 FGA)
PG: Maurice Cheeks / Giannis
SG: Reggie Miller / Jordan
SF: Michael Jordan / Bruce Bowen
PF: Giannis / Marvin Williams
C: Artis Gilmore / Chris Anderson
PG: Maurice Cheeks / Giannis
SG: Reggie Miller / Jordan
SF: Michael Jordan / Bruce Bowen
PF: Giannis / Marvin Williams
C: Artis Gilmore / Chris Anderson
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
micahclay wrote:Anti-gravity + Disruption = 1
1 = perfect defender. Again, there is a difference in the *warping* effect of a defender, and the *actual* disruptions (rim protection, blocked shots, tipped passes, etc.). There is not as much of a difference between the amount and efficacy of gravity on defense, except that warping in the paint is more valuable than elsewhere. Something I’d like to do at a later time is an RAPM study of value, so I can compare bigs/wings/etc. (the same way I did with just offense vs defense). The list would currently rank like this:
1. Vertical + Horizontal bigs
2. Vertical bigs
3. Horizontal bigs
4. Vertical + horizontal wings
5. Horizontal wings
6. PG
At the beginning it is labeled Anti-gravity + Disruption . . . from observation, I would say that the great point defenders have traditionally had clearly more disruption effect than wing defenders. Now, a wing like Scottie Pippen may be defending the opposing PG, but guys like Frazier or Payton had effect beyond shutting down their man plus steals. They also forced the ball out of the preferred offensive set. Magic said that Payton was the only defender he had ever faced that made him turn around and back the ball in; that's a major difference to Magic's ability to impact a defense. Frazier scared opposing coaches enough that they would sometimes have their off guards bring the ball up rather than their lead guard to avoid potential steals. That's disruption.
I agree that great big man have a disparate impact on opposing offenses, but I question whether it is a general rule that wings have more impact than PGs. (and I further question whether when you add scoring to playmaking, wings (especially before 2000) actually had more impact offensively). I'd be very interested to hear your support.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
eminence wrote:I'm sure we've gotten into this more than once before, but points/rebounds/assists don't even begin to adequately account for production on the basketball court in my book. When you reference someone like 38 year old Malone as an example of productive longevity and then go on to say that Duncan was only a support player later in his career I can't help but laugh at how ridiculously far off our two perceptions are. That gap isn't being bridged anytime soon.
Haven't had much time this week so far to contribute, but my question is..if someone as polarizing as KG is on this forum...whom I view as a player that isn't a "Batman" level player but more of a supercharged 6-11 version of Pippen..and some here say Duncan is really a better (but not all time great) scorer in the low post..but similar level players except one has had the good fortune of playing for Pop...can Duncan really be discussed as a GOAT level player where its clear his minutes were managed at a very early stage when he turned 30/31? Certainly a very portable player no doubt and the consumate professional, but I don't seriously consider him a GOAT candidate as I look as him as a poor man's Hakeem Olajuwon... but with better intangibles.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List #1
andrewww wrote:eminence wrote:I'm sure we've gotten into this more than once before, but points/rebounds/assists don't even begin to adequately account for production on the basketball court in my book. When you reference someone like 38 year old Malone as an example of productive longevity and then go on to say that Duncan was only a support player later in his career I can't help but laugh at how ridiculously far off our two perceptions are. That gap isn't being bridged anytime soon.
Haven't had much time this week so far to contribute, but my question is..if someone as polarizing as KG is on this forum...whom I view as a player that isn't a "Batman" level player but more of a supercharged 6-11 version of Pippen..and some here say Duncan is really a better (but not all time great) scorer in the low post..but similar level players except one has had the good fortune of playing for Pop...can Duncan really be discussed as a GOAT level player where its clear his minutes were managed at a very early stage when he turned 30/31? Certainly a very portable player no doubt and the consumate professional, but I don't seriously consider him a GOAT candidate as I look as him as a poor man's Hakeem Olajuwon... but with better intangibles.
Umm, I missed the question I think?
But that's up to you on KG I guess, he's without a doubt in my top 10 (possibly top 5). So a slightly better (I don't think Duncan was actually better, but more fortunate) KG would have a pretty dang strong case for GOAT imo (obviously, I voted for him).
I bought a boat.