RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6

Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ

ThaRegul8r
Head Coach
Posts: 6,448
And1: 3,037
Joined: Jan 12, 2006
   

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#81 » by ThaRegul8r » Thu Jun 29, 2017 11:40 pm

Outside wrote:vs Hakeem -- Both had the misfortune of playing at the same time as all-time dynasties (a combo of Lakers/Celts, Pistons, and Bulls for Hakeem)


Once again, for the umpteenth time, the Bulls had absolutely no impact on Hakeem. Jordan's Bulls and Hakeem's Rockets met a grand total of zero times in the postseason. This is some myth that needs to die because it's 100% false. "Oh, Hakeem had the misfortune of playing at the same time as Jordan's Bulls even though they never once obstructed him from winning a championship, because they never met."
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters


Retirement isn’t the end of the road, but just a turn in the road. – Unknown
User avatar
Outside
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 10,112
And1: 16,827
Joined: May 01, 2017
 

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#82 » by Outside » Thu Jun 29, 2017 11:52 pm

ThaRegul8r wrote:
Outside wrote:vs Hakeem -- Both had the misfortune of playing at the same time as all-time dynasties (a combo of Lakers/Celts, Pistons, and Bulls for Hakeem)


Once again, for the umpteenth time, the Bulls had absolutely no impact on Hakeem. Jordan's Bulls and Hakeem's Rockets met a grand total of zero times in the postseason. This is some myth that needs to die because it's 100% false. "Oh, Hakeem had the misfortune of playing at the same time as Jordan's Bulls even though they never once obstructed him from winning a championship, because they never met."

Okay, sorry, you're right about that. Is that the only takeaway you had from my post or even my "vs Hakeem" paragraph?
If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention.
drza
Analyst
Posts: 3,518
And1: 1,861
Joined: May 22, 2001

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#83 » by drza » Thu Jun 29, 2017 11:58 pm

KG vs Wilt

I could be mistaken, but I really don't remember doing this particular comp before. Which is interesting, because it's one with a lot of obvious parallels. Wilt and Garnett are both among the (if not THE) most "five tool" players in NBA history. Each could do almost everything that could be done on a basketball court, to at least some degree of facility. Both are known, on at least some level, as boxscore phenoms that weren't winners in the way that their most common era rival was considered, and suffer from that comparison. Wilt was the first NBA player to put together a four-year streak of averaging 20 points/10 rebounds/5 assists, before Larry Bird did it for 5 years in a row in the 80s and then eventually KG did it for 6 years in the 2ks. Both went on to win championships on dominant teams, while playing a style of play that was different from what they were best known for in their primes. Heck, Garnett once played Wilt in a movie. So, for the next little while I'll meander through a comp of the two of them and see what shakes out.

The style makes the fight

As alluded to above, both Wilt and KG were overflowing with things that they could do on the court, and throughout their careers they played in different ways. Wilt'Wilt was the giant of his generation, most often physically compared to Shaq because of the physical dominance they displayed over their peers. Unlike Shaq, though, Wilt didn't depend as much on his power and explosiveness to score (some, in fact, decry that and believe he'd have been more effective if he did). But, Wilt developed more of a finesse game than Shaq, utilizing finger rolls instead of dunks, and wanting to show that he could operate from out-top as well instead of just living in the paint. Wilt seemed as though, for the most part, he could pick an area of the game and decide to pile up statistics at unheard of rates. He spent much of his early career scoring at a volume that was absurd, and doing so with great field goal percentage. He pulled down rebounds, consistently, at a level that only one player in his generation could come close to matching. He played more minutes in a season than anyone, ever, in a record that will never be approached. In one season it's said that he decided to lead the league in assists, and he did. He decided at some point to start maximizing his field goal percentage, and he set records there, as well.

Wilt was bigger than life, and his individual statistical accomplishments reflected that as well as he could seemingly choose what record to break and break it. But, a criticism of his is that he often seemed to evaluate the quality of his play based upon those individual statistical (or other) accomplishments, as opposed to how much he could help his team to win games. That twice in his career, Wilt had a coach that was able to sell him on the concepts of focusing more on defense and taking far fewer shots on offense, and in both instances his ability to help his team win went through the roof. But, despite those results, the lessons didn't take and he continued to focus on individual marks to the detriment of team success.

It should be noted, of course, that many don't agree with parts/all of that criticism. They tend to believe that Wilt was always dominant, and that the reason he didn't win more was because his teammates weren't good enough. Based on my current understanding, I tend to agree more with the critics. But, just like 70sFan did with his analysis of Wilt's playoff team defenses, if someone can make convincing arguments that Wilt's play did lend itself to consistent max impact, I'll certainly listen.

Garnett was a different player, in a different era. It was a much bigger league, with a much larger pool of global talent, more sophisticated schemes on offense and defense, and many different rules/implementations. Garnett's versatility, compared to Wilt's, was more on the level of skillset than feature of the game. For example, though Wilt wasn't a good shooter, he was still able to dominate the scoring aspect of the game like no one ever had. Garnett, on the other hand, could score at a high level in just about any way that someone can score. He's known for having an excellent mid-range-to-deep jump shot, unheard of and unparalleled for a 7-footer outside of Dirk Nowitzki. But what isn't as obvious is that Garnett actually had the skillset to be a dominant back-to-the-basket scorer from the post. He was absurdly long, he had a variety of moves and countermoves, with facility to spin over either shoulder and finish. In one of the last RealGM projects, someone pointed out that in the first four years of Synergy (2005 - 2008), Garnett scored more points per possession from post-ups than Duncan did. Garnett could handle the ball and had court vision much more commensurate with a guard than a big man, and he is in the argument for best passing big man in history. Garnett can (and has) played almost every position on offense for extended stretches, and he can (and has) guarded almost every position on defense for extended stretches.

Garnett could, then, do more things on the basketball court than most, and at a higher level than many. However, one of his criticisms was that he was TOO versatile...that he did everything well, but that he wasn't dominant as a scorer the way many felt he should (and could) be. Though he did lead the NBA in points scored one season, in which he tied for second in points/game, many thought that he could and should focus on scoring (and specifically scoring in the post) as opposed to passing so much and "settling" for jumpers. The phrase "unselfish to a fault" has been used often to describe Garnett, from people all throughout the basketball world. Some say that this lack of scoring is why the Timberwolves didn't have a lot of playoff success, and many use this as reasoning for why Garnett should be further down the rankings list, behind some of the more dominant scorers in history.

It should be noted, of course, that many don't agree with parts/all of that criticism. They tend to believe that Garnett was always dominant, and the reason he didn't win more was because his teammates weren't good enough. Based on my current understanding, I don't agree with the critics. I tend to believe that Garnett's style of play, while unorthodox, allowed him to be a pioneer in new ways to maximize impact that weren't the norm before him. And of course, I've been debating this particular topic for years, and as yet no one has convinced me that the evidence supporting his dominance isn't valid...but I still love to engage, and at the end of a debate hopefully we've both learned something.

How do their results compare?
At his peak, Garnett was at the top of fantasy drafts every year because of his box score stat dominance. However, if fantasy basketball would have existed in Wilt's day, he'd have been comp in points-based leagues. Just, no one could compare to his ridiculous volume. If boxscore volume stats are your thing, Wilt is the clear winner here (as he would be versus pretty much everyone).

However, if Wilt is the boxscore King, Garnett has shown himself to be the posterchild for +/- stats. In the 20+ years of the stats, the Garnett's only peer in those measures is LeBron, with Shaq and Duncan just behind. They represent a different way to evaluate the game than the boxscores, one that is based more on impact. But, the boxscore stats have the advantage of accuracy (for the feature being measured) over the impact stats, which can be noisy and harder to get significantly large datasets out of. However, over his 21 year career, Garnett demonstrated dominant impact, as measured by various +/- approaches, repeatedly, in wildly different situation, for an extremely long time. Thus, the signal of his outstanding impact has proven to be much larger than any noise that might be inherent in the different +/- approaches. His measured, dominant impact is legit.

But, while KG's boxscore footprint is still incredible (even if not quite up to the video game Wilt stats), Wilt did not share a similar outstanding footprint in the available impact approaches for his era. Obviously, WOWY isn't perfect and is more limited than databall-era +/- stats (Blackmill has posted on this); and evaluating players based on how much his former team declined and/or his new team improves, is also not optimal (for many reasons, not the least of which is other player movement). However, those are some of the best impact tools that we have available for that era, and...Wilt doesn't do great, there. His first team improved a lot when he arrived, and his last team declined significantly when he left...both to his credit as an impact player. But, when Wilt went from the Warriors to the 76ers (mid-season), neither team's regular season SRS changed all that much. When he went from the 76ers to the Lakers, the 76ers only fell off a bit and the Lakers didn't change all that much. When he missed a good chunk of a season with the Lakers, again, the team's SRS didn't change that much. Now, I know that there is context to be considered and pushback about why some of these results looked the way they did. And I'm perfectly willing to listen to those reasons, and give credence where they make sense (such as 70Fan's post on playoffs and Wilt's defense, which makes sense and improves his standing in my mind). But, if his impact dominance truly matched his super-sized boxscore dominance, then I believe we would see much more difference in his comings and goings, despite the other context.

What their changes in style through the years say about them

I could make the argument that Wilt and Garnett are two of the players who should most NOT be judged based upon their boxscore stats. But for opposite reasons. The boxscore stats were meant to provide good estimates for how good a player was playing, how much he was impacting the game. But, the boxscores have holes...they do an awful job tracking defense, and have large gaps as far as different ways to contribute on offense as well. The assumption is, and for the most part it's not a terrible one, that players that do well in the boxscore are generally making a great impact on games.

However, in Wilt's case, his mechanisms of outstanding impact seemed to be tied to his defense and unselfish offensive play. His most impressive boxscore stats, though, came from him (seemingly) conscientiously over-emphasizing certain boxscore stats (again, based on my current level of understanding). And it may be reasonable to conclude that focusing on the stat, for the stat's sake, can work against the impact it's assumed to yield. That a great scorer will, as an effect of being a great scorer, have a lot of points in the boxscore at a good efficiency. But the counter is not necessarily true, and may be false...because having a lot of points in the boxscore at good effiency doesn't necessarily make you a great scorer (where "great scorer" is defined as someone whose scoring ability leads to positive team results). Similarly, a great team offense initiator will likely accumulate assists as an effect of setting up teammates in a good position to score. Again, though, the opposite isn't necessarily true...accumulating a lot of assists does not necessarily make a treat team offense initiator. So, if it's true that he was consciously choosing to maximize various boxscore stats for reasons outside of his team winning (which has been contended, and at least somewhat reasonable supported), then that would support another contention that I've heard against Wilt...that he was essentially tone-deaf when it came to how to use his awesome gifts to maximize impact, and it took outstanding (and tough) coaches like Alex Hannum to recognize what he should do and then coax him to do it for short periods.

In Garnett's case, his approach to the game almost always had a maximal impact on his teams, regardless of how he chose to play. In his early days, Garnett was playing (nominally) small forward often, putting up solid-to-good boxscore stats but in a bunch of categories, but not drawing the casual eye based on those stats...but his team was improving in leaps and bounds, his teammates were having their best seasons, and the available impact stats peg Garnett's value as around top-5 in the league (I went into a lot of detail here, to look into what he was doing and how to help explain how/why he may have been making that level of impact http://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=56862875#p56862875 ). As he approached his peak, his offensive responsibilities steadily increased, until in his peak years he was measuring out as a top 1-3 offensive player in the NBA (I go into excruciating detail, here, about everything about those Wolves offenses and KG's contributions to explain his impact stats http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/150868850871/mechanisms-of-greatness-scouting-kevin-garnetts ) and top 3 - 7 defensive player at the same time, on teams in which he was by-far the leading scorer, one of (if not THE) primary distributor, and the primary gravity producer. And the available impact stats pegged his value as the best in the league. And then, when he went to Boston, Garnett went the other way, lessening his offensive responsibilities while maximizing his defensive energy...he measured out as by-far the best defensive player in the league, and overall as the highest impact player in the league before age/injury slid him back to "just" a top 5-ish player by impact per minute over the remainder of his Boston tenure. (again, I go into massive detail, here, about Garnett's defense at every phase of his career, and why it was so dominant that it resulted in the type of defensive impact stats he had: http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/150844038866/mechanisms-of-greatness-scouting-kevin-garnetts His impact, then, wasn't dependent upon a coach utilizing him properly, but instead seemed to be an inherent part of his understanding of the way to "play the right way".

Bottom line: All told, I'm impressed by Wilt's amazing achievements. But I think that ultimately, Garnett's approach to the game and his own brand of dominating by maximizing just about every team that he was ever on made him the better player. But as always...I'd love for this post to lead to a debate, instead of radio silence. Where one stands on Wilt vs Garnett says a lot about how one evaluates the game, and a good push-back conversation could lead to some interesting outcomes, if anyone wants to engage.
Creator of the Hoops Lab: tinyurl.com/mpo2brj
Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
Contributor to TYTSports: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTbFEVCpx9shKEsZl7FcRHzpGO1dPoimk
Follow on Twitter: @ProfessorDrz
User avatar
An Unbiased Fan
RealGM
Posts: 11,736
And1: 5,708
Joined: Jan 16, 2009
       

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#84 » by An Unbiased Fan » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:00 am

Outside wrote:vs Magic -- Wilt was so dominating offensively, but it's essentially a tossup at that end because Magic was also so impactful offensively. Defense is a clear win for Wilt. I give Magic an edge in leadership/winning/intangibles, though I don't view that all as Magic=good, Wilt=bad as some people appear to. Overall, they're close but I give the edge to Wilt, which is why my vote is what it is.

I've defended Wilt in this project, but don't see how it's a tossup on the offensive side with him and Magic. Wilt didn't lead great offenses, even in what I consider a subpar era. It's not until 1967 that his team's overall offense is elite. He later joins LA that was already elite offensively. Yes, he put up massive box scores, but his efficiency in particular was subpar for most of his career. When you adjust his number to pace...they're not as gaudy either.

I actually feel Wilt is underrated defensively, but don't feel his overall impact was greater than Magic who consistently led great offenses, and translated that impact into playoff success.

The biggest issue is that I see arguments against Wilt that aren't applied equally. MJ scored at a higher rate adjusted for pace, but he's the GOAT while Wilt's scoring is somehow an argument against him, that he was selfish and a stat padder. Wilt wasn't a winner because he always lost to Russell's Celtics, but LeBron losing five of eight finals is brushed aside and even an argument in his favor, leading overmatched teammates valiantly against vastly superior opponents. Wilt's era was garbage so nothing that happened then counts, but Kareem is ranked number 2 despite playing in the watered down expansion 70s and Russell is ranked number 4 despite playing in largely the same era as Wilt.

Agreed. There are arguments for and against Wilt like everyone else, but the criteria seems to shift based on the players being compared.
7-time RealGM MVPoster 2009-2016
Inducted into RealGM HOF 1st ballot in 2017
Cyrusman122000
Analyst
Posts: 3,599
And1: 2,919
Joined: Jun 21, 2013
   

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#85 » by Cyrusman122000 » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:15 am

Vote; Shaq
averages for his career; 23.7, 10.9, 2.3 blocks on 58.6 TS%, 58.2 eFG%.
His first 12 seasons in the league 1992-2004: 27, 12, 2.6 blocks on very good efficiency

peak: 29.7, 13.6, 3 blocks, .283 WS/48 and 30.6 PER. To me his peak of 2000 may be the best peak ever.

Led the league in PER 5 straight seasons

His playoff success is amazing

Won 3 straight championships + Final MVPs, overall 4 championships.
I mean just look at his numbers in the finals from 2000-2002
38, 17, 2.7 blocks on 61% from the field
33, 16, 3.4 blocks on 57% from the field- against the defensive player of the year
36, 12, 2.8 blocks on 60% from the field
IMO he is the greatest finals performer.

He also always had a winners mentality. For being goofball off the court the second Shaq took the floor he became an absolute assassin. He would dominate who ever was in front of him.

Second vote; Wilt Chamberlain
trex_8063
Forum Mod
Forum Mod
Posts: 12,648
And1: 8,294
Joined: Feb 24, 2013
     

Re: RE: Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#86 » by trex_8063 » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:20 am

ardee wrote:
wojoaderge wrote:
An Unbiased Fan wrote:I would be intersted in hearing arguments/evidence for Dirk over Magic/Bird, because I don't quite see any. As for KG, what's his case over Shaq, Kobe, Hakeem, or even DRob?

There aren't any/there isn't one

Exactly. Not even a modicum. I skip over the posts discussing it because I wouldn't even entertain the thought, and there's no point in refuting them because the people making them are so set on it already.


Oh, the irony......
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
kayess
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,807
And1: 1,000
Joined: Sep 29, 2013

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#87 » by kayess » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:21 am

Are there simply less people posting, or is even the volume of posts/person declining? We don't even reach 10 pages per thread, while the first 10 spots were heavily debated in 2014...
ThaRegul8r
Head Coach
Posts: 6,448
And1: 3,037
Joined: Jan 12, 2006
   

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#88 » by ThaRegul8r » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:22 am

Outside wrote:
ThaRegul8r wrote:
Outside wrote:vs Hakeem -- Both had the misfortune of playing at the same time as all-time dynasties (a combo of Lakers/Celts, Pistons, and Bulls for Hakeem)


Once again, for the umpteenth time, the Bulls had absolutely no impact on Hakeem. Jordan's Bulls and Hakeem's Rockets met a grand total of zero times in the postseason. This is some myth that needs to die because it's 100% false. "Oh, Hakeem had the misfortune of playing at the same time as Jordan's Bulls even though they never once obstructed him from winning a championship, because they never met."

Okay, sorry, you're right about that. Is that the only takeaway you had from my post or even my "vs Hakeem" paragraph?


I address statements that are false when and wherever I come across them. I wasn't singling you out, I do that any time I happen to see something posted that's false. Speaking of which, I also don't know how the Pistons figure into anything either, unless you're counting his last year with Toronto—which is the only possible explanation, which is rather disingenuous. In fact, the whole trying to force a parallel with Wilt continually going up against the greatest dynasty in the history of North American professional team sports, led by the greatest winner in the history of North American professional team sports is disingenuous.

But as far as who you vote for, your reasons are your reasons. I'm not on the voting panel, so my opinion is irrelevant. I don't tell people who to vote for anyway—that's for the actual voters to discuss among yourselves.
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters


Retirement isn’t the end of the road, but just a turn in the road. – Unknown
User avatar
Outside
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 10,112
And1: 16,827
Joined: May 01, 2017
 

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#89 » by Outside » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:28 am

An Unbiased Fan wrote:
Outside wrote:vs Magic -- Wilt was so dominating offensively, but it's essentially a tossup at that end because Magic was also so impactful offensively. Defense is a clear win for Wilt. I give Magic an edge in leadership/winning/intangibles, though I don't view that all as Magic=good, Wilt=bad as some people appear to. Overall, they're close but I give the edge to Wilt, which is why my vote is what it is.

I've defended Wilt in this project, but don't see how it's a tossup on the offensive side with him and Magic. Wilt didn't lead great offenses, even in what I consider a subpar era. It's not until 1967 that his team's overall offense is elite. He later joins LA that was already elite offensively. Yes, he put up massive box scores, but his efficiency in particular was subpar for most of his career. When you adjust his number to pace...they're not as gaudy either.

I actually feel Wilt is underrated defensively, but don't feel his overall impact was greater than Magic who consistently led great offenses, and translated that impact into playoff success.

Here's why I said Wilt and Magic are a tossup offensively:

-- Others disagree, but from my point of view, Wilt is as dominating a scorer as the game has seen. He had the rare combination of elite volume and efficiency, he could power right over the opponent or score with skill, and he could score effectively against any defender. He was so overwhelming as a scorer that the league implemented numerous rule changes in an attempt to mitigate his scoring dominance -- offensive goaltending, widening the lane, even inbounding the ball over the backboard and dunking free throws -- but the rule changes did little to slow him. Many people don't appreciate the level of domination Wilt had.

-- Magic was GOAT-level as a distributor and driver, but he had limited shooting range. He worked to get better as his career progressed, but he started out as a poor outside shooter and developed into a decent one. His ability to drive and finish and to distribute to the great scorers on his team masked that deficiency, but for a guard, that's a notable limitation.

Push come to shove, I'd probably give Magic the edge, but it's close enough for me that I said it was a tossup.
If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention.
User avatar
Senior
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,821
And1: 3,673
Joined: Jan 29, 2013

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#90 » by Senior » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:29 am

Found that ElGee post I mentioned earlier. Man, some of the mathematical work posters have done on this board is just fantastic. Amazes me every time. Fatal9 and bastillon from the older days have also made tremendous posts on Hakeem.

ElGee wrote:Note that this has NOTHING to do with 1995 or one playoff series. Put Olajuwon on a defensively oriented team, say, draft him to the 1998 Spurs, and what kind of devastation would he cause? How would his dazzling array of offensive skills look with an elite shooter? A primary creator?

In 86, the Rockets were about 3 SRS points worse in 18g without sophomore Hakeem
In 87, Hakeem and Sampson played 37g and posted a -4.5 DRtg. In the 6 games Hakeem missed and Sampson played, Houston had a +3 DRtg and a -15 SRS.
In 88, after Sampson's injury, the Rockets played 60g of +1 SRS, -2 DRtg with Hakeem.
In 89, the Rockets were a top-5 defense and then 1st in the league in 90 at -4.3.
In 91, the Rockets were again -4 defensively (and a 4 SRS team in 56 games with him).
In 12g without him in 92, the Rockets were a +10 defense, -12 SRS team.

In 1992, Hakeem played 25g with Rudy T (Thorpe, B. Johnson Jet and Max) with a 2 SRS and 0 DRtg. The 93 team was a -3 DRtg +4 SRS team. In 12 PS games, the Rockets were a -5 DRtg +5.5 SRS team.

In 1994 the Rockets were a -5 DRtg, +4 SRS team. In 23 PS games, they were a a -3.5 DRtg, =7.5 SRS team (+5 ORtg). The 95 Rockets were actually a bit of a mess, executing the Drexler trade which didn't immediately materialize (1.7 SRS with Hakeem and Drexler in RS). Again, in 22 PS games, Houston posted a +8.8 SRS and -1.1 DRtg (+8.2 ORtg) -- they shot 39% from 3, 2% higher than in the previous two years, accounting for about 1.5 extra points of efficiency.

So there are clear indicators on both sides of the debate with Hakeem leading to strong questions: are the postseason numbers more indicative of his "value" of his ridiculous-looking two-way skill? Such numbers with those teammates, IMO, are clearly GOAT-level. As in, from 1993-1995, while clearly acting as the centerpiece of the offense and defense, Olajuwon's teams played 57 PS games at 7.6 SRS, -2.9 D and +5.5 O. The flip side of the coin is that he never had a great RS team, a "dominant" PS team, he might have needed ISO too much creating diminishing returns on his Global offensive value, and that blocked shots are overrated/you need the right coach to flex his lateral PnR defense.

Re: the lack of dominance - that was brought up a little bit with Duncan, but as far as I'm concerned I wouldn't expect those teams to be dominant given the parity of the league from 93-95. He didn't really have the top-end talent surrounding him like the current Warriors, Shaqobe Lakers, or 80s LA/BOS teams had, and I actually think teams like the Sonics or 95 Orlando were more talented.

I'm also interested in Blackmill's question about how significant are the impact stats, because we have the more in-depth stats for some players and not others. KG is the poster boy for this, but Duncan, Lebron, and now Shaq are being considered with data on their side. Is it fair to use that data to compare against Wilt, Hakeem, Magic, or Bird? If so, how much should it matter?
ThaRegul8r
Head Coach
Posts: 6,448
And1: 3,037
Joined: Jan 12, 2006
   

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#91 » by ThaRegul8r » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:30 am

kayess wrote:Are there simply less people posting, or is even the volume of posts/person declining? We don't even reach 10 pages per thread, while the first 10 spots were heavily debated in 2014...


Someone else commented on this as well, and it's odd, because people were wondering when voting for the next Top 100 project was going to be, and there were posters showing up who hadn't been seen in a while, and people were gung ho about the project beginning ASAP—and those wishes were acquiesced to, but the threads have much less pages. Which is concerning, since projects inevitably peter out, but if it starts this small...
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters


Retirement isn’t the end of the road, but just a turn in the road. – Unknown
User avatar
Outside
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 10,112
And1: 16,827
Joined: May 01, 2017
 

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#92 » by Outside » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:33 am

ThaRegul8r wrote:I address statements that are false when and wherever I come across them. I wasn't singling you out, I do that any time I happen to see something posted that's false. Speaking of which, I also don't know how the Pistons figure into anything either, unless you're counting his last year with Toronto—which is the only possible explanation, which is rather disingenuous. In fact, the whole trying to force a parallel with Wilt continually going up against the greatest dynasty in the history of North American professional team sports, led by the greatest winner in the history of North American professional team sports is disingenuous.

But as far as who you vote for, your reasons are your reasons. I'm not on the voting panel, so my opinion is irrelevant. I don't tell people who to vote for anyway—that's for the actual voters to discuss among yourselves.

Fair enough. Thanks for the explanation.
If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention.
User avatar
Senior
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,821
And1: 3,673
Joined: Jan 29, 2013

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#93 » by Senior » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:58 am

Here's a great defensive game by Hakeem - closeout Game 5, 1994 WCF vs Utah (again, credit to Fatal9 for posting this)

Box score: http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/199405310HOU.html

HOU 94 UTA 83, Hakeem 7 blocks/4 steals



UTA shot 33% from the field.

Some of these defensive plays are just mind-blowing. I know this is a highlight video, but watch the defensive sequences. He does a great job fronting and challenging entry passes/swiping at the ball (forces a few TOs from Spencer) because he knows he's quick enough to take the gamble and reset if he doesn't get the steal, forces plenty of adjustments from the Jazz at the rim without fouling, does a great job retaining possession when he blocks the shot (or at least not swatting it into the bleachers), incredibly quick hands. There were two plays I saw where Thorpe was trying to front Malone and nearly got the lob from his guards, but Hakeem would come out of nowhere and just blow it up.

This is kind where Hakeem passes Shaq for me. Hakeem affects the game in more ways than Shaq does, even if Shaq's offense is superior. Hakeem had 22 points in this game but he was dominant. If you held Shaq to 22 you'd consider that a below-average game for Shaq almost every time.
User avatar
rebirthoftheM
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,787
And1: 1,858
Joined: Feb 27, 2017
 

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#94 » by rebirthoftheM » Fri Jun 30, 2017 12:59 am

Re KG v Hakeem..

How do we properly account for the fact that Hakeems teams were never in the negatives defensively/below average like KG's squads in 01-03, 05 & 07 (so even if there are missed game issues with KG that deflated his teams defensive ratings, we can see a general trend) and were in the top 5, 6 times between 88-97, to KG's 1 (04) between 99-07? Does this prove Hakeem>KG on D? Or does it give weight to the fact that individual defenders, particularly defenders who are not ATG rim protectors, can only do so much on defense, and can't control it like offensive players control their teams offense?

The 04-07 Wolves are really interesting. in 04, they skyrocketed to a 6th ranking (highest ranking for KG pre-boston). Then went to the negatives in 05 despite KG playing all 82 games, then popped up to positives (finished in top 10) in 06, and then tanked again in 07. Was KG the reason for these fluctuations? Did he up his D in 06? Or was it that he got more support, which moved the needle, indicating his lack of control over his teams defensive fortunes?
User avatar
An Unbiased Fan
RealGM
Posts: 11,736
And1: 5,708
Joined: Jan 16, 2009
       

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#95 » by An Unbiased Fan » Fri Jun 30, 2017 1:16 am

rebirthoftheM wrote:Re KG v Hakeem..

How do we properly account for the fact that Hakeems teams were never in the negatives defensively/below average like KG's squads in 01-03, 05 & 07 (so even if there are missed game issues with KG that deflated his teams defensive ratings, we can see a general trend) and were in the top 5, 6 times between 88-97, to KG's 1 (04) between 99-07? Does this prove Hakeem>KG on D? Or does it give weight to the fact that individual defenders, particularly defenders who are not ATG rim protectors, can only do so much on defense, and can't control it like offensive players control their teams offense?

The 04-07 Wolves are really interesting. in 04, they skyrocketed to a 6th ranking (highest ranking for KG pre-boston). Then went to the negatives in 05 despite KG playing all 82 games, then popped up to positives (finished in top 10) in 06, and then tanked again in 07. Was KG the reason for these fluctuations? Did he up his D in 06? Or was it that he got more support, which moved the needle, indicating his lack of control over his teams defensive fortunes?

Sam Cassell's health seemed to cause the fluctuation in the mid 00's. To be frank, KG's early support while not elite, wasn't all that bad either. He has Starbury early on, and decent talent in the early 00's after. His cast in 06 & 07 was crap, but comparably so was Kobe's and Lebron's, yet both players took their teams to the playoffs during that same time period.
7-time RealGM MVPoster 2009-2016
Inducted into RealGM HOF 1st ballot in 2017
Colbinii
RealGM
Posts: 34,243
And1: 21,858
Joined: Feb 13, 2013

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#96 » by Colbinii » Fri Jun 30, 2017 1:20 am

I just spent over 2 hours on a post only for me to somehow get "logged out" when I went to submit. I guess doing everything in word first is a good idea :banghead:
Colbinii
RealGM
Posts: 34,243
And1: 21,858
Joined: Feb 13, 2013

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#97 » by Colbinii » Fri Jun 30, 2017 1:22 am

rebirthoftheM wrote:Re KG v Hakeem..

How do we properly account for the fact that Hakeems teams were never in the negatives defensively/below average like KG's squads in 01-03, 05 & 07 (so even if there are missed game issues with KG that deflated his teams defensive ratings, we can see a general trend) and were in the top 5, 6 times between 88-97, to KG's 1 (04) between 99-07? Does this prove Hakeem>KG on D? Or does it give weight to the fact that individual defenders, particularly defenders who are not ATG rim protectors, can only do so much on defense, and can't control it like offensive players control their teams offense?

The 04-07 Wolves are really interesting. in 04, they skyrocketed to a 6th ranking (highest ranking for KG pre-boston). Then went to the negatives in 05 despite KG playing all 82 games, then popped up to positives (finished in top 10) in 06, and then tanked again in 07. Was KG the reason for these fluctuations? Did he up his D in 06? Or was it that he got more support, which moved the needle, indicating his lack of control over his teams defensive fortunes?


Garnett had 3 casts between 01-07 rank dead last in defensive rating when Garnett was on the bench. He had 2 seasons where the team was ranked 12th and 15th without Garnett, and then the other seasons they ranked 20th and 27th without Garnett.

Do we know if the Rockets were the worst for any 3 years without Hakeem?
User avatar
MisterHibachi
RealGM
Posts: 18,657
And1: 19,075
Joined: Oct 06, 2013
Location: Toronto
 

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#98 » by MisterHibachi » Fri Jun 30, 2017 3:19 am

kayess wrote:Are there simply less people posting, or is even the volume of posts/person declining? We don't even reach 10 pages per thread, while the first 10 spots were heavily debated in 2014...


I think part of it is that there isn't a nomination process this time. I remember in the last project there were people posting stuff like "Malone doesn't deserve this spot, but we should start thinking about him soon" since like thread 5 or something super early. Now there's just the players who actually would garner votes at this particular spot being talked about.
"He looked like Batman coming out of nowhere"
User avatar
Winsome Gerbil
RealGM
Posts: 15,021
And1: 13,095
Joined: Feb 07, 2010

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#99 » by Winsome Gerbil » Fri Jun 30, 2017 3:28 am

Well, the Wilt people aren't going to give up, but the Duncan thing is a moderate to severe case of recency bias that will probably just be a ??? in a few iterations. I mean, you know you're in trouble when you're getting "he sure was a great guy" arguments for his greatness.

In any case, I arrived here knowing certain things were going to happen, so one of them did, now it's time to get back to work:

6) Wilt
7) Magic

For reasons already stated, but I'll go ahead and post some numbers that people should already know. I don't want to continue to reference the Duncan thing going forward, but it might be useful in a couple of spots, because if Tim Duncan is your #5, how on Earth can a guy who did what Wilt did comparatively not be #6, at least?

Okay, so a simple series of all time top lists. Wilt was IMPORTANT. Hugely significant. His name is all over the record books for a reason.

NBA All Time Points Per Game
1) Chamberlain 30.1
2) Jordan 30.1
3) Baylor 27.4
4) Durant 27.2
5) James 27.1
6) West 27.0
7) Iverson 26.7
8) Petit 26.4
9) Gervin 26.2
10) Robertson 25.7

#11 and #12 are Kobe and Mailman, tied at 25.0. Duncan...is not in the top 60.

NBA All Time Points, Total
1) Kareem 38387
2) Mailman 36928
3) Bryant 33643
4) Jordan 32292
5) Chamberlain 31419
6) Nowitzki 30260
7) James 28787
8) O'Neal 28596
9) Moses 27409
10) Hayes 27313

next 7 are Hakeem, Oscar, Nique, Duncan, Pierce, Havlicek, Garnet all in the 26,000+ range

NBA All Time Rebounds Per Game
1) Chamberlain 22.9
2) Russell 22.5
3) Stokes 17.3
4) Petit 16.2
5) Lucas 15.6
6) Thurmond 15.0
7) Unseld 14.0
8) Bellamy 13.7
9) Cowens 13.6
10) Baylor 13.5

Rodman is 12th at 13.1, top 2 current players are 14) Drummond 12.8 and 15) Howard 12.7. Duncan is at 10.8 tied for 33/34/35 with Boogie and Sven Nater.

NBA All Time Rebounds, Total
1) Chamberlain 23924
2) Russell 21620
3) Abdul-Jabbar 17440
4) Hayes 16279
5) Moses 16212
6) Duncan 15091
7) Mailman 14968
8) Parish 14715
9) Garnett 14662
10) Thurmond 14464

Bellamy, Unseld, Hakeem, Shaq and Buck WiIliams round out the next 5.

NBA All Time Assists, Centers
1) Abdul-Jabbar 5660
2) Chamberlain 4643
3) Russell 4100
4) Adams 4012
5) Unseld 3822

So we have a 4x MVP, 2x NBA Champion (on 2 all time great teams too), who also just so happens to be the NBA's all time leading per game scorer and rebounder, with only a single peer in each category (2 guys named Jordan and Russell, who have already been taken). He's also 2nd on the all time assist list amongst centers

Come on now. No more flying in the face of the league's history. Don't make Wilt angry, or suffer the consequences:
User avatar
rebirthoftheM
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,787
And1: 1,858
Joined: Feb 27, 2017
 

Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #6 

Post#100 » by rebirthoftheM » Fri Jun 30, 2017 3:45 am

Colbinii wrote:
rebirthoftheM wrote:Re KG v Hakeem..

How do we properly account for the fact that Hakeems teams were never in the negatives defensively/below average like KG's squads in 01-03, 05 & 07 (so even if there are missed game issues with KG that deflated his teams defensive ratings, we can see a general trend) and were in the top 5, 6 times between 88-97, to KG's 1 (04) between 99-07? Does this prove Hakeem>KG on D? Or does it give weight to the fact that individual defenders, particularly defenders who are not ATG rim protectors, can only do so much on defense, and can't control it like offensive players control their teams offense?

The 04-07 Wolves are really interesting. in 04, they skyrocketed to a 6th ranking (highest ranking for KG pre-boston). Then went to the negatives in 05 despite KG playing all 82 games, then popped up to positives (finished in top 10) in 06, and then tanked again in 07. Was KG the reason for these fluctuations? Did he up his D in 06? Or was it that he got more support, which moved the needle, indicating his lack of control over his teams defensive fortunes?


Garnett had 3 casts between 01-07 rank dead last in defensive rating when Garnett was on the bench. He had 2 seasons where the team was ranked 12th and 15th without Garnett, and then the other seasons they ranked 20th and 27th without Garnett.

Do we know if the Rockets were the worst for any 3 years without Hakeem?


I have no idea, and I'm thinking out-loud/asking questions. I must admit I am operating from the position that elite defensive players in general have far less control on their teams defenses than elite offensive players have on their offenses (although the information I've read about Russell has made think about this again), and I therefore wouldn't punish KG mightily for those below average teammates in a comparison with Hakeem for example.

But since you are more in tune with KG's career than I, I did have some questions re his defense. If you can/have the time, or any one else, please feel free to chime in.

How would you rank KG's pre 03 defense and defensive impact (say 99-02) ? and how would your rate it from 05-07? Why are his defensive indicators not so pretty in 05? Why weren't the wolves suffering w/o his defensive presence in 06 like they were in other years? Why did his defensive indicators spike again in 07? Was his defensive spike in 03 and 04 a reflection of him playing at a higher level of D than he ever had previously/since on the wolves, and if so, how significant was it?

Since there's been accusations in other threads about hidden agendas, I must repeat that this is a genuine inquiry. The answers to these questions obviously require some reference to game-tape/memories of games/reference to the line-ups the Wolves put out, and I have little knowledge of this.

Return to Player Comparisons