RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#81 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Aug 17, 2017 7:06 am

dhsilv2 wrote:I think Howard is going to go up after he retires. I mean to me I think he's neck and neck with Ewing, who we already have in. It feels like a lot of centers rise on these lists. Hakeem (I didn't have him top 10 when he retired), Ewing, even Shaq I think gets a better look today than after he retired (all that team hopping). I'm not sure it's right but eventually people will look back at Howard who took a team to the finals, beat a top 3 player in Lebron in the plaoyffs, and was the best defender peak wise maybe ever.

People forget about the small stuff with time and that seems to always favor the big men. Not sure why.


Howard has only ever been successful on one team, in no small part because everything about his professionalism was crap. Once the explosiveness of youth was gone, he became crap.

But it's worse than that because everywhere he's been, he's turned toxic. Even the one situation he succeeded in, he pushed them to make desperate trades that made them worse, he played politics with his coach - a proven NBA coach, he held the franchise hostage for an extended period of time in part because he couldn't make up his own damn mind and was unable to foresee the obvious consequences of his indecision.

So no, I don't think a guy who was washed up by age 26 is going to have a wave of nostalgia boosting him back up.

His peak was great, but he's got a TON working against him that is simply irrelevant to guys like Ewing who were actually someone a franchise could count on.

Now of course, Shaq was similarly immature. But Shaq was much better, Shaq actually led teams to titles, and Shaq was hugely valuable for multiple teams.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#82 » by dhsilv2 » Thu Aug 17, 2017 7:42 am

Winsome Gerbil wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Wanted to address this specifically because there's truth in it and it's important.

Dwight Howard went down from the 2011 list and the 2014 list, and frankly I hope he goes down further this time around. Is this due to projection? Well, depends on how you define projection, but it's certainly part of the same concern:

There's an absurdity to moving down the list as you play more, and we should fine it pretty abhorrent.

In Howard's case, for me what's happened is that his subsequent behavior changed how I saw what he'd accomplished before, and not for the better. And that's something that Curry at this point is potentially vulnerable too.

So it's possible that in 2020 I'll rate Curry worse than I do now, and that will make me look pretty silly...but I'll just have to own that. I can't rate Curry lower than I see him now simply because I recognize that there's still some uncertainty about how best to see what he's accomplishing. Right now I'm really freaking impressed, and so I rank him as I do.

To the other point, is Curry's a partial career compared to Durant and Paul Well consider raw +/- over careers:

Steph Curry +4049
Chris Paul +3996
Kevin Durant +3082

Now, don't let me appear to overrate this here. I voted Paul ahead of Curry, but just the literal statement here that Curry has already more net advantage over opponents in his career when he's on the floor than Paul or Durant to me is quite telling.

Obviously this is happening because the past few years in GS have been such an outlier...but does that make it less impressive, or more impressive?


I think Howard is going to go up after he retires. I mean to me I think he's neck and neck with Ewing, who we already have in. It feels like a lot of centers rise on these lists. Hakeem (I didn't have him top 10 when he retired), Ewing, even Shaq I think gets a better look today than after he retired (all that team hopping). I'm not sure it's right but eventually people will look back at Howard who took a team to the finals, beat a top 3 player in Lebron in the plaoyffs, and was the best defender peak wise maybe ever.

People forget about the small stuff with time and that seems to always favor the big men. Not sure why.



By the time Howard is done he's going to be a 15-12 career guy with a short peak/prime when he looks like a borderline franchise player. He's not going to go up, nor should he (well, depending of course on how far down he is currently). He was not at the level of any of the 90s giants except maybe Mourning (he was better than Deke, which I should not have to say, but will anyway because of Deke's mysterious rise into deityhood in some threads). Great defender, but then again so were all of them (except Shaq, who was in another league), and they were all elite offensive centerpieces the other way too. Dwight could just never get the offense going. Just lacked the talent for it, no matter how many Hakeem lessons he took. If anything, by the time it's done Dwight's legacy is going to resemble something like Nate Thrumond's.


nate thrumond? He's already passed in 1000x over. He has imo a clear higher peak than Ewing. His longevity is a real issue. His offensive abilities get grossly under valued because of the bias for big men to be post up iso scorers and the ability to play off ball gets devalued. He has 8 years of 25+ per 100 scoring seasons.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#83 » by dhsilv2 » Thu Aug 17, 2017 7:47 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:I think Howard is going to go up after he retires. I mean to me I think he's neck and neck with Ewing, who we already have in. It feels like a lot of centers rise on these lists. Hakeem (I didn't have him top 10 when he retired), Ewing, even Shaq I think gets a better look today than after he retired (all that team hopping). I'm not sure it's right but eventually people will look back at Howard who took a team to the finals, beat a top 3 player in Lebron in the plaoyffs, and was the best defender peak wise maybe ever.

People forget about the small stuff with time and that seems to always favor the big men. Not sure why.


Howard has only ever been successful on one team, in no small part because everything about his professionalism was crap. Once the explosiveness of youth was gone, he became crap.

But it's worse than that because everywhere he's been, he's turned toxic. Even the one situation he succeeded in, he pushed them to make desperate trades that made them worse, he played politics with his coach - a proven NBA coach, he held the franchise hostage for an extended period of time in part because he couldn't make up his own damn mind and was unable to foresee the obvious consequences of his indecision.

So no, I don't think a guy who was washed up by age 26 is going to have a wave of nostalgia boosting him back up.

His peak was great, but he's got a TON working against him that is simply irrelevant to guys like Ewing who were actually someone a franchise could count on.

Now of course, Shaq was similarly immature. But Shaq was much better, Shaq actually led teams to titles, and Shaq was hugely valuable for multiple teams.


As time passes the stats live on much more so than the stories of personality. Since we aren't talking about making him a top 20 guy, a lot of his immaturity will be glossed over. He played 8 years for the magic so it isn't like he just left them. He went to the most screwed up team without players going to jail in the lakers, and honestly I thought he was pretty good as a rocket but his health just wasn't where he needed it to be.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#84 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Aug 17, 2017 8:07 am

dhsilv2 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:I think Howard is going to go up after he retires. I mean to me I think he's neck and neck with Ewing, who we already have in. It feels like a lot of centers rise on these lists. Hakeem (I didn't have him top 10 when he retired), Ewing, even Shaq I think gets a better look today than after he retired (all that team hopping). I'm not sure it's right but eventually people will look back at Howard who took a team to the finals, beat a top 3 player in Lebron in the plaoyffs, and was the best defender peak wise maybe ever.

People forget about the small stuff with time and that seems to always favor the big men. Not sure why.


Howard has only ever been successful on one team, in no small part because everything about his professionalism was crap. Once the explosiveness of youth was gone, he became crap.

But it's worse than that because everywhere he's been, he's turned toxic. Even the one situation he succeeded in, he pushed them to make desperate trades that made them worse, he played politics with his coach - a proven NBA coach, he held the franchise hostage for an extended period of time in part because he couldn't make up his own damn mind and was unable to foresee the obvious consequences of his indecision.

So no, I don't think a guy who was washed up by age 26 is going to have a wave of nostalgia boosting him back up.

His peak was great, but he's got a TON working against him that is simply irrelevant to guys like Ewing who were actually someone a franchise could count on.

Now of course, Shaq was similarly immature. But Shaq was much better, Shaq actually led teams to titles, and Shaq was hugely valuable for multiple teams.


As time passes the stats live on much more so than the stories of personality. Since we aren't talking about making him a top 20 guy, a lot of his immaturity will be glossed over. He played 8 years for the magic so it isn't like he just left them. He went to the most screwed up team without players going to jail in the lakers, and honestly I thought he was pretty good as a rocket but his health just wasn't where he needed it to be.


So, people will become more ignorant over time and this may result in people giving Howard more respect than he deserves? True, but why is it that right now you think he deserves to be up there with guys who had no such problems and thus were legit franchise players.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#85 » by dhsilv2 » Thu Aug 17, 2017 8:12 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Howard has only ever been successful on one team, in no small part because everything about his professionalism was crap. Once the explosiveness of youth was gone, he became crap.

But it's worse than that because everywhere he's been, he's turned toxic. Even the one situation he succeeded in, he pushed them to make desperate trades that made them worse, he played politics with his coach - a proven NBA coach, he held the franchise hostage for an extended period of time in part because he couldn't make up his own damn mind and was unable to foresee the obvious consequences of his indecision.

So no, I don't think a guy who was washed up by age 26 is going to have a wave of nostalgia boosting him back up.

His peak was great, but he's got a TON working against him that is simply irrelevant to guys like Ewing who were actually someone a franchise could count on.

Now of course, Shaq was similarly immature. But Shaq was much better, Shaq actually led teams to titles, and Shaq was hugely valuable for multiple teams.


As time passes the stats live on much more so than the stories of personality. Since we aren't talking about making him a top 20 guy, a lot of his immaturity will be glossed over. He played 8 years for the magic so it isn't like he just left them. He went to the most screwed up team without players going to jail in the lakers, and honestly I thought he was pretty good as a rocket but his health just wasn't where he needed it to be.


So, people will become more ignorant over time and this may result in people giving Howard more respect than he deserves? True, but why is it that right now you think he deserves to be up there with guys who had no such problems and thus were legit franchise players.


At his peak, he was a better basketball player.

And I wouldn't call it ignorance, it's more about what they focus on. A lot of guys have their issues over their careers, most people in the present focus far too much on the negatives. Over time people look back at more of the positives.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#86 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Aug 17, 2017 8:39 am

dhsilv2 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:
As time passes the stats live on much more so than the stories of personality. Since we aren't talking about making him a top 20 guy, a lot of his immaturity will be glossed over. He played 8 years for the magic so it isn't like he just left them. He went to the most screwed up team without players going to jail in the lakers, and honestly I thought he was pretty good as a rocket but his health just wasn't where he needed it to be.


So, people will become more ignorant over time and this may result in people giving Howard more respect than he deserves? True, but why is it that right now you think he deserves to be up there with guys who had no such problems and thus were legit franchise players.


At his peak, he was a better basketball player.

And I wouldn't call it ignorance, it's more about what they focus on. A lot of guys have their issues over their careers, most people in the present focus far too much on the negatives. Over time people look back at more of the positives.


It will be ignorance if and when people argue about Howard's time in Orlando as if he wasn't the one who destroyed it, simple as that, and it will be ignorance if people try to justify that without understanding that Howard's problematic mindset is the reason why he struggled so much as he played toxic journeyman from there on out.

I agree with you though in the sense that we do get trapped in the moment and can overstate the importance of certain things that lead to emotional assessment, and I'll go further that in something like basketball analysis, we get to see new data and information after the fact that can leave us wiser than contemporaries were. As an example of that:

'10-11 was a strange season where really no one had an MVP level year, but I still had a list, and Howard was my choice. I noted at the time though how awkward it was because the team had gotten WORSE specifically because of trades that had been made to placate Howard, and in the process this had actually made Howard more valuable from an on/off perspective because they traded Gortat for players who could actually play with Howard. Even at the time, this made me uncomfortable, but I wasn't willing to judge Howard too harshly for it at the time.

But time marched on, we saw how the situation played out, and so we can now definitely state that the moves made before '10-11 were part of a slow moving car crash wherein Howard step-by-step destroyed what was basically his perfect situation, which would then be followed by him destroying other situations that were also quite promising.

So then, if you were looking to draft Howard, knowing what you know now, how would you see him? Would you see him as a guy a franchise could expect to cleanly build around? I'd say that would be foolish. At this point we know he was extremely immature and that even building the team to a point it could make deep runs into the playoff wouldn't be enough to necessarily keep him happy. Even worse, because he was so indecisive and had so little understanding of how team building worked you couldn't even rely on him to tell you when we wanted out. And all this before we circle back to remember that this was a guy with zero work ethic who clearly was built to peak at a young age since he didn't have it in him to actually master old man game.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#87 » by dhsilv2 » Thu Aug 17, 2017 8:57 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
So, people will become more ignorant over time and this may result in people giving Howard more respect than he deserves? True, but why is it that right now you think he deserves to be up there with guys who had no such problems and thus were legit franchise players.


At his peak, he was a better basketball player.

And I wouldn't call it ignorance, it's more about what they focus on. A lot of guys have their issues over their careers, most people in the present focus far too much on the negatives. Over time people look back at more of the positives.


It will be ignorance if and when people argue about Howard's time in Orlando as if he wasn't the one who destroyed it, simple as that, and it will be ignorance if people try to justify that without understanding that Howard's problematic mindset is the reason why he struggled so much as he played toxic journeyman from there on out.

I agree with you though in the sense that we do get trapped in the moment and can overstate the importance of certain things that lead to emotional assessment, and I'll go further that in something like basketball analysis, we get to see new data and information after the fact that can leave us wiser than contemporaries were. As an example of that:

'10-11 was a strange season where really no one had an MVP level year, but I still had a list, and Howard was my choice. I noted at the time though how awkward it was because the team had gotten WORSE specifically because of trades that had been made to placate Howard, and in the process this had actually made Howard more valuable from an on/off perspective because they traded Gortat for players who could actually play with Howard. Even at the time, this made me uncomfortable, but I wasn't willing to judge Howard too harshly for it at the time.

But time marched on, we saw how the situation played out, and so we can now definitely state that the moves made before '10-11 were part of a slow moving car crash wherein Howard step-by-step destroyed what was basically his perfect situation, which would then be followed by him destroying other situations that were also quite promising.

So then, if you were looking to draft Howard, knowing what you know now, how would you see him? Would you see him as a guy a franchise could expect to cleanly build around? I'd say that would be foolish. At this point we know he was extremely immature and that even building the team to a point it could make deep runs into the playoff wouldn't be enough to necessarily keep him happy. Even worse, because he was so indecisive and had so little understanding of how team building worked you couldn't even rely on him to tell you when we wanted out. And all this before we circle back to remember that this was a guy with zero work ethic who clearly was built to peak at a young age since he didn't have it in him to actually master old man game.


The work ethic stuff is going too far for me. He had some major back injuries and imo shouldn't have played in 2013 at all. I think the lakers decision/howards decision to let him play that year was wrong and ruined him. Back injuries are serious stuff. I'm not sure one ever recoveries fully from that kind of thing. Perhaps I'm giving him too much credit for that, but when big players have back issues they never seem to go away.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#88 » by Doctor MJ » Thu Aug 17, 2017 9:21 am

dhsilv2 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:
At his peak, he was a better basketball player.

And I wouldn't call it ignorance, it's more about what they focus on. A lot of guys have their issues over their careers, most people in the present focus far too much on the negatives. Over time people look back at more of the positives.


It will be ignorance if and when people argue about Howard's time in Orlando as if he wasn't the one who destroyed it, simple as that, and it will be ignorance if people try to justify that without understanding that Howard's problematic mindset is the reason why he struggled so much as he played toxic journeyman from there on out.

I agree with you though in the sense that we do get trapped in the moment and can overstate the importance of certain things that lead to emotional assessment, and I'll go further that in something like basketball analysis, we get to see new data and information after the fact that can leave us wiser than contemporaries were. As an example of that:

'10-11 was a strange season where really no one had an MVP level year, but I still had a list, and Howard was my choice. I noted at the time though how awkward it was because the team had gotten WORSE specifically because of trades that had been made to placate Howard, and in the process this had actually made Howard more valuable from an on/off perspective because they traded Gortat for players who could actually play with Howard. Even at the time, this made me uncomfortable, but I wasn't willing to judge Howard too harshly for it at the time.

But time marched on, we saw how the situation played out, and so we can now definitely state that the moves made before '10-11 were part of a slow moving car crash wherein Howard step-by-step destroyed what was basically his perfect situation, which would then be followed by him destroying other situations that were also quite promising.

So then, if you were looking to draft Howard, knowing what you know now, how would you see him? Would you see him as a guy a franchise could expect to cleanly build around? I'd say that would be foolish. At this point we know he was extremely immature and that even building the team to a point it could make deep runs into the playoff wouldn't be enough to necessarily keep him happy. Even worse, because he was so indecisive and had so little understanding of how team building worked you couldn't even rely on him to tell you when we wanted out. And all this before we circle back to remember that this was a guy with zero work ethic who clearly was built to peak at a young age since he didn't have it in him to actually master old man game.


The work ethic stuff is going too far for me. He had some major back injuries and imo shouldn't have played in 2013 at all. I think the lakers decision/howards decision to let him play that year was wrong and ruined him. Back injuries are serious stuff. I'm not sure one ever recoveries fully from that kind of thing. Perhaps I'm giving him too much credit for that, but when big players have back issues they never seem to go away.


I'll put it this way:

It's actually pretty common for young guys to have terrible work ethics. Guys like Howard and Derrick Rose were said to basically live off of candy. They had no real discipline. They played instinctively, and because they were so explosive they got away with it.

Now, could they have developed better work ethics over time? Well yes, they did, but they remained problematic.

In Howard's case the most salient thing was him insisting on getting many opportunities to score using a back-to-the-basket post game. He had chosen to focus his practice on that seemingly in response to Shaq chiding him for his inability to score that way. But that had never been Howard's strength, and it's never been less valuable than it is now. So even when Howard chose to work on something, he wasn't really listening to proper mentors, and of course this has everything to do with why team after team has given up on him.

Perhaps a better term for Howard is that he's just not very teachable. He's like the opposite of Kawhi. And teachability is a real thing, that I think you should be factoring in when evaluating players.

Last note:

I come at all this in a way I tend to call franchise-oriented. That's a philosophical perspective, and philosophy is a matter of personal opinion. It is fine if you don't come at it the same way. But however you approach things, you need to try to understand how much of a player's success came as a result of context, because otherwise you risk over or underrating his actual contribution.

Back when Howard leading the Magic to title contention, it was commonly argued that he was doing it "by himself". That he was the only serious talent on the team, and that he by himself was essentially creating an elite defense. This wasn't accurate.

On offense, the team thrived because of ahead-of-its-time use of spacing wherein considerably more shooting was happening from the perimeter than the interior. While Howard was the lead scorer, the offense was not built with him as an alpha option in the volume scoring sense. He wasn't asked to work in the post Hakeem-style, which was good because he couldn't do it. He got a lot of his points off of assists and he got a lot of his points off of offensive rebounds. For these reasons it's definitely wrong to look at him as if he was a top tier offensive anchors - and it's also why it made sense to think he'd be less valuable over time unless he grew in other areas immensely.

Defense though is the bigger issue. I actually don't even have a problem with his DPOYs, but one defensive player can only do so much. While his teammates were not defensive stars, they played good team defense masterminded by a very smart coach (who of course Howard treated terribly because that's what Howard does).

Howard deserves a lot of credit for the good that happened in Orlando of course, but when we're talking about him vs a guy like Ewing, it's important to think about what SVG could have done with Ewing in that situation. The fact that Ewing never had an argument for seriously being the MVP while Howard did is not enough to be able to argue that Howard had the better peak.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #29 

Post#89 » by dhsilv2 » Thu Aug 17, 2017 9:35 am

I think you make fine points here. I disagree clearly on how good Ewing was perhaps more so than our view of Howard. Ewing to me is a mid 40's guy as is Howard. I would rank Ewing due to peak just ahead of Howard, but the more these two have been discussed the more I'm starting to increase my view of Howard and the less of Ewing I think.

But the one point I did want to respond to is Howard's focus on post play. EVERYONE was talking about how he needed to develop a post game. You couldn't turn on a Magic game and not hear someone saying how "if he just had a post game" or "I don't get why this guy doesn't have a post game". The reality is a more reliable jumper to create spacing was what he needed/needs but that just wasn't the thinking at the time, and very few players are innovators to the extent he would have needed to be to realize that. I can't imagine his coach was against him working on his post game.

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