RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42 (Reggie Miller)
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
VOTE: Bob Cousy
ALT: Dolph Schayes
Adding a bit on Schayes while repeating "VOTE: Bob Cousy ..." from (dozens? of) other previous threads:
Cousy was selected 1st-Team ALL-NBA TEN times (one of only 10 players ever so honored in the 80 combined years of the: NBL, ABA, NBA); plus two additional 2nd-Team ALL-NBA selections. Sure most of his Great Years were during the 1950's, a decade definitely weaker than all subsequent decades - but he DOMINATED his position for a decade - one can hardly do more or ask for more than that. He revolutionized his position too. (Btw, I'm no Celtics' or Cousy fan)
I have Cousy as my GOAT #15, and GOAT PG #3 (behind: Magic and then "O"; ahead of: Stockton, CP3 & then J.Kidd)
Schayes was selected ALL-League TWELVE times (6 X 1st-Team, 6 X 2nd-Team) (by far the highest number of selections for any player we have not yet voted-in not-named Cousy). Way more dominant of his position than any other remaining PF.
Cousy (and Schayes) had WAY MORE Great Years (as defined here as being selected ALL-League 1st-Team or 2nd-Team) than many of the players we've already voted in to our GOAT list; and WAY MORE Great Years than ALL of the players currently getting more traction than they are. In fact, after Cousy's & Schayes 12 ALL-League 1st+2nd Teams each; double (or more) all remaining players except the following 6 guys, who each had "only" 7 combined:
Greer (1963-1969 seasons),
Davies (1947-53),
Sharman (1953-60)
McDermott (1942-48),
Edwards (1938-46) &
Shipp (1938-44)
--------------------------------------------------
The significance of being selected to ALL-League teams can not be over-stated. The 100++ people who are the selectors are PAID to report on the sport - who could possibly be in a better position to report on which players dominated each year. Further, the large number of them is super-effective in canceling out any individual biases (much like, but much better than: Olympic Diving voting (where the top and bottom votes are eliminated, and the diver's score is based on the remaining votes)).
The ALL-League selection process is so good, that since I've been paying attention to it (the 59-1960 season); I've never had any MAJOR problems with it. Imo, it TRUMPS by a huge margin any and all reliance on any other factor / stat or combination of them. Again, THEY were there, it was THEIR JOB to observe closely and report accurately. They did get it right.
----------------------------------
In what follows: in each descending set of 5 GOAT spots, there's one player per position. GOAT POSITIONAL rankings are determined primarily by "Points" which are determined by the number of ALL-League selections (pro-rated upwards for each succeeding decade; in other words, particularly players who played before 1960 are significantly "penalized" for their "Great Years" during weak eras). So players such as Cousy & Schayes have significant deductions on their "Points" totals; still they have the most "Points" of all remaining players:
my GOAT #15, PG #03:1st-Teams:10, 2nd-Teams: 2: (40.5 "Points") Bob Cousy
ALT VOTE:
my GOAT #33, PF #07: 1st-Teams: 6, 2nd-Teams: 6: (28.2 "Points") Dolph Schayes
Honorable Mention:
my GOAT #30, SG #06: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (18.0 "Points") Sidney Moncrief
my GOAT #35, SG #07: 1st-Teams: 0, 2nd-Teams: 7: (17.5 "Points") Hal Greer
Upcoming (in my GOAT Top 50)
my GOAT #36,, C #08: 1st-Teams: 5, 2nd-Teams: 1: (31.4 "Points") Dwight Howard
my GOAT #37, PG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 3: (25.6 "Points") Allen Iverson
my GOAT #38, SF #08: 1st-Teams: 2, 2nd-Teams: 3: (22.1 "Points") Tracy McGrady
my GOAT #39, PF #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (17.5 "Points") Jerry Lucas
my GOAT #40, SG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 1: (17.5 "Points") Paul Westphal
my GOAT #43, SF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (19.3 "Points") Dominique Wilkins
my GOAT #44, PF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Amar'e Stoudemire
my GOAT #45, SG #09: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 0: (16.8 "Points") James Harden
my GOAT #48, SF #10: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Grant Hill
my GOAT #50, PF #10: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (15.8 "Points") George McGinnis
ALT: Dolph Schayes
Adding a bit on Schayes while repeating "VOTE: Bob Cousy ..." from (dozens? of) other previous threads:
Cousy was selected 1st-Team ALL-NBA TEN times (one of only 10 players ever so honored in the 80 combined years of the: NBL, ABA, NBA); plus two additional 2nd-Team ALL-NBA selections. Sure most of his Great Years were during the 1950's, a decade definitely weaker than all subsequent decades - but he DOMINATED his position for a decade - one can hardly do more or ask for more than that. He revolutionized his position too. (Btw, I'm no Celtics' or Cousy fan)
I have Cousy as my GOAT #15, and GOAT PG #3 (behind: Magic and then "O"; ahead of: Stockton, CP3 & then J.Kidd)
Schayes was selected ALL-League TWELVE times (6 X 1st-Team, 6 X 2nd-Team) (by far the highest number of selections for any player we have not yet voted-in not-named Cousy). Way more dominant of his position than any other remaining PF.
Cousy (and Schayes) had WAY MORE Great Years (as defined here as being selected ALL-League 1st-Team or 2nd-Team) than many of the players we've already voted in to our GOAT list; and WAY MORE Great Years than ALL of the players currently getting more traction than they are. In fact, after Cousy's & Schayes 12 ALL-League 1st+2nd Teams each; double (or more) all remaining players except the following 6 guys, who each had "only" 7 combined:
Greer (1963-1969 seasons),
Davies (1947-53),
Sharman (1953-60)
McDermott (1942-48),
Edwards (1938-46) &
Shipp (1938-44)
--------------------------------------------------
The significance of being selected to ALL-League teams can not be over-stated. The 100++ people who are the selectors are PAID to report on the sport - who could possibly be in a better position to report on which players dominated each year. Further, the large number of them is super-effective in canceling out any individual biases (much like, but much better than: Olympic Diving voting (where the top and bottom votes are eliminated, and the diver's score is based on the remaining votes)).
The ALL-League selection process is so good, that since I've been paying attention to it (the 59-1960 season); I've never had any MAJOR problems with it. Imo, it TRUMPS by a huge margin any and all reliance on any other factor / stat or combination of them. Again, THEY were there, it was THEIR JOB to observe closely and report accurately. They did get it right.
----------------------------------
In what follows: in each descending set of 5 GOAT spots, there's one player per position. GOAT POSITIONAL rankings are determined primarily by "Points" which are determined by the number of ALL-League selections (pro-rated upwards for each succeeding decade; in other words, particularly players who played before 1960 are significantly "penalized" for their "Great Years" during weak eras). So players such as Cousy & Schayes have significant deductions on their "Points" totals; still they have the most "Points" of all remaining players:
my GOAT #15, PG #03:1st-Teams:10, 2nd-Teams: 2: (40.5 "Points") Bob Cousy
ALT VOTE:
my GOAT #33, PF #07: 1st-Teams: 6, 2nd-Teams: 6: (28.2 "Points") Dolph Schayes
Honorable Mention:
my GOAT #30, SG #06: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (18.0 "Points") Sidney Moncrief
my GOAT #35, SG #07: 1st-Teams: 0, 2nd-Teams: 7: (17.5 "Points") Hal Greer
Upcoming (in my GOAT Top 50)
my GOAT #36,, C #08: 1st-Teams: 5, 2nd-Teams: 1: (31.4 "Points") Dwight Howard
my GOAT #37, PG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 3: (25.6 "Points") Allen Iverson
my GOAT #38, SF #08: 1st-Teams: 2, 2nd-Teams: 3: (22.1 "Points") Tracy McGrady
my GOAT #39, PF #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (17.5 "Points") Jerry Lucas
my GOAT #40, SG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 1: (17.5 "Points") Paul Westphal
my GOAT #43, SF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (19.3 "Points") Dominique Wilkins
my GOAT #44, PF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Amar'e Stoudemire
my GOAT #45, SG #09: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 0: (16.8 "Points") James Harden
my GOAT #48, SF #10: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Grant Hill
my GOAT #50, PF #10: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (15.8 "Points") George McGinnis
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Dr Positivity wrote:pandrade83 wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:
I've had him as my alt for 2 rounds now. I think the negative personality stuff is completely fair though I feel a few people are blowing it up. We have a lot of personality issues and possible drug issue types at this level. Kidd and Iverson both are if we believe the news stories (I don't follow closely so correct me if we know better now) pretty awful people and treated their wives pretty horribly. I can't imagine some of that didn't impact the locker rooms. Guys on drugs might make a locker room more "fun" but sure as heck doesn't make a team win. I tend to try and stay out of these things on this list in part because I feel team success should go down with it. For me I don't think howard needs a lot of negative credit here given his success has been fairly poor outside of his finals run in orlando.
I also give him a 100% pass for the LA year for anyone wondering, full disclosure on that one! (I give pretty much full passes for anyone not winning in LA or NYC as I think both cities are just bad for players).
I noticed you were ahead of me in pushing Dwight - that's why I was careful to write "one of" the leaders instead of the first.
In 80-85% of cases, I don't really care about the intangibles - I feel like they should/do manifest themselves in the results enough of the time that it takes care of itself. I know others on the board care about them a lot - you saw it in the group that was pushing for Isiah, and though I wasn't voting then, I saw it on the Russell debate; it's the only way he's as high as he is and Wilt is as low as he is.
Dwight's been punished enough on the intangibles and here's one way to illustrate this:
Let's say an AI had all the information that we know about basketball dumped into it's core. It only knew the data - all of it that we have & the team results. It doesn't know about locker room stuff, it doesn't know about off the court stuff. The AI is told that it can have any player left put into a time machine, given nutritional benefits to compensate for the era and that's it to build a franchise around. The AI is told that it has to give the player a gigantic $400 M contract - but it can figure out how to pay the player that $400 M any way it wants over the next 20 years, and it's locked into it's production.
The AI's goal is to maximize likelihood of success and told that over a 20 year window, building around this player if it doesn't achieve 30 points based on the below scale, it will be destroyed.
Playoff Series Win = 1 Point
Division Title = 1 Point
Playoff Appearance = 1 Point
Finals Appearance = 4 points
Title = 10 Points
I feel pretty confident that the AI would be picking Howard in this spot - and that the AI would select Howard over a fair number of players we've already voted in if given the choice. That last part - that's how I know that Howard has been punished enough. It's time to start the process of getting him in there.
Ftr here is the list I made of total WS rank and MVP share rank averaged, players are in bold are voted in already.Spoiler:
So on a list that correlates very well with our voting with 37 of the top 41 matching (and one of the others being ABA driven in Issel, and on the other end Mikan couldn't make the above list) Howard rates highest, although the real most impressive is Schayes considering he would have rated higher if there was MVP voting in his first 6 seasons
Where to put Bob Lanier is interesting, he never got that relevant champion team, but he has a 3rd and 4th place in MVP voting, finishes top 5 in WS 3 times (3rd once), is a fantastic BPM player including a 1st place and a 2nd place in VORP. Compared to other players with non-limited longevity that looks like a good resume
Nice work.
Lanier is another "name only" to me, but I expected to see him when we got to around 60 (our base 10 math driving our thinking). I'll be interested to arguments for him when they come.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
dhsilv2 wrote:trex_8063 wrote:Dr Positivity wrote:Since Miller is going to be one of the frontrunners this thread, how confident are we that Miller > Allen?
They do feel very very close; until very recently I basically had them adjacent on my ATL. And fwiw, I do kinda feel like Allen could have filled Miller's role in Indiana better than Miller could have filled Allen's role in Milwaukee/Seattle. Allen's got better on-ball/iso skills, is a marginally better passer/play-maker [imo], and he is a slightly better rebounder, while basically being an equal shooter.
Reggie was distinctly better at one thing, which was drawing fouls: he averaged 7.6 FTA/100 with a .402 FTr (vs 5.6 and .260 for Allen). If memory serves, he did a lot of that via kicking the one leg out on his shot, which the defender would periodically bump into (and Reggie would fall down for show), and the ref would blow the whistle. That distinctly higher FTr is the reason Reggie was more efficient overall. And the fact that he operated somewhat more off-ball enabled him to produce similar volume with a marginally lower turnover rate, as well. Gun to my head, I'd say Miller was the marginally better defender, too.
As has been mentioned previously, Miller appears to win the battle of impact slightly, has the more consistently awesome playoff resume, and appears to have a marginal longevity/durability edge: very similar career arc, but Miller managed to maintain at a slightly higher level during those final two seasons, and also tended to be injured less often.
^^^^These are the things that push Miller a little ahead for me recently.
Peak vs Peak thoughts? Love this post btw. Especially on miller's shall we call it "90's style flopping" which I wanted to hint at before, but just didn't trust my memory enough to go there.
Peak vs peak, I'd say Ray Allen ('01 Ray Ray was pretty special, imo).
And you are not mis-remembering the "90's style flopping", although I don't think it's exactly limited to the 90's.
"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
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Doctor MJ wrote:oldschooled wrote:Still not sold on Allen, Pierce, Reggie at this point. Yes they contributed highly on winning (WS), longevity and are high impact guys but there's still guys left with MVP's and championships. I just can't put them above those guys.
Vote: Willis Reed
Alt: Wes Unseld
Should these guys have been seen as MVP caliber players though? To me both Reed & Unseld's MVP years were pretty fluky.
I'll add that Reed also has major longevity issues.
Sent from my iPhone using RealGM mobile app
Compared to those guys? Yes.
Code: Select all
Rank Player MVP Shares
40. Willis Reed* 1.048
58. Wes Unseld* 0.655
143. Paul Pierce 0.040
147. Ray Allen 0.038
And yes I'm aware of Reed's longevity issues, 4, 5 year prime max. But factoring all, i'd still take those two over Pierce, Reggie and the Allen's of the world.
Frank Dux wrote:LeChosen One wrote:Doc is right. The Warriors shouldn't get any respect unless they repeat to be honest.
According to your logic, Tim Duncan doesn't deserve any respect.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
trex_8063 wrote:dhsilv2 wrote:trex_8063 wrote:
They do feel very very close; until very recently I basically had them adjacent on my ATL. And fwiw, I do kinda feel like Allen could have filled Miller's role in Indiana better than Miller could have filled Allen's role in Milwaukee/Seattle. Allen's got better on-ball/iso skills, is a marginally better passer/play-maker [imo], and he is a slightly better rebounder, while basically being an equal shooter.
Reggie was distinctly better at one thing, which was drawing fouls: he averaged 7.6 FTA/100 with a .402 FTr (vs 5.6 and .260 for Allen). If memory serves, he did a lot of that via kicking the one leg out on his shot, which the defender would periodically bump into (and Reggie would fall down for show), and the ref would blow the whistle. That distinctly higher FTr is the reason Reggie was more efficient overall. And the fact that he operated somewhat more off-ball enabled him to produce similar volume with a marginally lower turnover rate, as well. Gun to my head, I'd say Miller was the marginally better defender, too.
As has been mentioned previously, Miller appears to win the battle of impact slightly, has the more consistently awesome playoff resume, and appears to have a marginal longevity/durability edge: very similar career arc, but Miller managed to maintain at a slightly higher level during those final two seasons, and also tended to be injured less often.
^^^^These are the things that push Miller a little ahead for me recently.
Peak vs Peak thoughts? Love this post btw. Especially on miller's shall we call it "90's style flopping" which I wanted to hint at before, but just didn't trust my memory enough to go there.
Peak vs peak, I'd say Ray Allen ('01 Ray Ray was pretty special, imo).
And you are not mis-remembering the "90's style flopping", although I don't think it's exactly limited to the 90's.
Long drunk response....great post! We disagree on value but agree on these two. I love it! I value peaks you don't, and these two are so close that well both views are fine.
cheers!
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Guys like Manu, and to a lesser extent Reggie, are hard to assess because they never faced much adversity. They always had strong teammates, good coaches. They were on winning teams from the moment they entered the league. It's almost a separate class of guys. I'm very open to the idea that Manu was more talented than many guys. I flat think he WAS more talented than Reggie. If you wanted to argue he was more talented than Richmond or Allen I wouldn't think you were crazy. Its an unproven hypothesis, but the eye test always suggested such a thing. But the thing is he never had that pressure on him to perform while other teams keyed on him. To carry sad sack teammates. To overcome shoddy coaching. As he's aged he's been able to drift back into a low minutes role player. At this point he's played in 992 games, and averaged only 25.8min and 13.6pts. My eye test and numerous metrics suggest he was much better than those numbers -- indeed on numbers alone he probably does not even belong in this Top 100 project. But I can't put a guy like that way up the charts over guys who were perennial All NBA types and MVP candidates and as their team's #1.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Winsome Gerbil wrote:Guys like Manu, and to a lesser extent Reggie, are hard to assess because they never faced much adversity. They always had strong teammates, good coaches. They were on winning teams from the moment they entered the league.

I can't say this doesn't seem like some spin-doctoring (if not flat false).
Reggie arrived to a team that had been losing for years, had just managed a 41-41 record (and the first playoff appearance in six years--->1st round exit) the year before he arrived. Does that sound anything at all like the environment Manu arrived to?
The best player on the Pacers the year Reggie arrived was Vern Fleming; the 2nd-best player was probably Steve Stipanovich.......the best player when Manu arrived was Tim Duncan, 2nd-best was twilight David Robinson. Does this sound similar?
In Reggie's 2nd season he had four (four) head coaches, ultimately landing on Dick Versace (who had a career of three seasons as head coach with a losing record overall); when Versace was done, he had Bob Hill for a few years before finally landing Larry Brown.
Manu had Pop throughout.......I'm not sure who could think this sounds similar.
And though Reggie's supporting casts improved for much of the 90's (at least by the mid-90's), I don't think Detlef, Smits, Dale Davis, Vern Fleming et al truly compares well to Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, Bruce Bowen, Brent Barry and co.
"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
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Thru post #47:
Willis Reed - 3 (dhsilv, Clyde Frazier, oldschooled)
Reggie Miller - 2 (JordansBulls, LABird)
Paul Pierce - 1 (trex_8063)
Wes Unseld - 1 (pandrade83)
Bob Cousy - 1 (Pablo Novi)
Nate Thurmond -1 (Outside)
This thread has about 18-20 hour more [early tomorrow evening, in in North America] before we hit a runoff.
Willis Reed - 3 (dhsilv, Clyde Frazier, oldschooled)
Reggie Miller - 2 (JordansBulls, LABird)
Paul Pierce - 1 (trex_8063)
Wes Unseld - 1 (pandrade83)
Bob Cousy - 1 (Pablo Novi)
Nate Thurmond -1 (Outside)
This thread has about 18-20 hour more [early tomorrow evening, in in North America] before we hit a runoff.
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"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
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Pick: Cousy
Alt: Harden
HM: Westbrook
Pick: Cousy - Cousey's passing influenced the way the game was played hugely, and he did so in an unconventional way that didn't gain any unfair advantage a la goaltending. He won an MVP as his prime was ending, and his offensive style lives on far past his retirement and beyond his success leading the Celtics pre-Russell (questionable how Russell's passing would've developed without Cousey).
When Cousy joined the league, the Celtics were a 20 win team, and he immediately brought them to 40 his rookie year. He changed a bottom dwelling team to an immediate contender, and went on to contend with an elite offense in the eastern conference before Russell ever joined. He won MVP, and led the league in assists many times on his way to 10 all-nba first teams.
Alt: Harden - Harden has redefined flopping, and will probably get a rule change. However, it can't be argued that he is a very effective scorer and passer, who led his team to the WCF and is capable of leading teams with no secondary star better than Eric Gordon to 55+ wins. Multiple MVP level seasons.
HM: Westbrook - Westbrook was 1b to Durant's 1a, and Durant was in a long time ago. He averaged a 3x double, which is significant simply because for the entire history of the nba only Oscar had done it (although it's a little meaningless). He had a huge impact on the game, and showed that he can elevate a team as a solo first option. This year, playing more normal minute totals with a back-up in PG, I expect he will do much better in terms of wins.
Quite divided on who to rank higher still, WB or Harden. But for now, going this order.
Alt: Harden
HM: Westbrook
Pick: Cousy - Cousey's passing influenced the way the game was played hugely, and he did so in an unconventional way that didn't gain any unfair advantage a la goaltending. He won an MVP as his prime was ending, and his offensive style lives on far past his retirement and beyond his success leading the Celtics pre-Russell (questionable how Russell's passing would've developed without Cousey).
When Cousy joined the league, the Celtics were a 20 win team, and he immediately brought them to 40 his rookie year. He changed a bottom dwelling team to an immediate contender, and went on to contend with an elite offense in the eastern conference before Russell ever joined. He won MVP, and led the league in assists many times on his way to 10 all-nba first teams.
Alt: Harden - Harden has redefined flopping, and will probably get a rule change. However, it can't be argued that he is a very effective scorer and passer, who led his team to the WCF and is capable of leading teams with no secondary star better than Eric Gordon to 55+ wins. Multiple MVP level seasons.
HM: Westbrook - Westbrook was 1b to Durant's 1a, and Durant was in a long time ago. He averaged a 3x double, which is significant simply because for the entire history of the nba only Oscar had done it (although it's a little meaningless). He had a huge impact on the game, and showed that he can elevate a team as a solo first option. This year, playing more normal minute totals with a back-up in PG, I expect he will do much better in terms of wins.
Quite divided on who to rank higher still, WB or Harden. But for now, going this order.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
trex_8063 wrote:Winsome Gerbil wrote:Guys like Manu, and to a lesser extent Reggie, are hard to assess because they never faced much adversity. They always had strong teammates, good coaches. They were on winning teams from the moment they entered the league.
![]()
I can't say this doesn't seem like some spin-doctoring (if not flat false).
Reggie arrived to a team that had been losing for years, had just managed a 41-41 record (and the first playoff appearance in six years--->1st round exit) the year before he arrived. Does that sound anything at all like the environment Manu arrived to?
The best player on the Pacers the year Reggie arrived was Vern Fleming; the 2nd-best player was probably Steve Stipanovich.......the best player when Manu arrived was Tim Duncan, 2nd-best was twilight David Robinson. Does this sound similar?
In Reggie's 2nd season he had four (four) head coaches, ultimately landing on Dick Versace (who had a career of three seasons as head coach with a losing record overall); when Versace was done, he had Bob Hill for a few years before finally landing Larry Brown.
Manu had Pop throughout.......I'm not sure who could think this sounds similar.
And though Reggie's supporting casts improved for much of the 90's (at least by the mid-90's), I don't think Detlef, Smits, Dale Davis, Vern Fleming et al truly compares well to Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, Bruce Bowen, Brent Barry and co.
There's a reason I said "to a lesser extent".
Reggie had a ton of quality teammates over his career. And not just offensive guys. But quality guys doing the things Reggie was not good at. Lot of good talent. Good post scorers, good defenders, good passers, as well as really skilled perimeter offensive guys like Rifleman, Shrempf, Rose etc.
Manu obviously was born into the NBA with a silver spoon in his mouth. He was surrounded by HOF talent, not merely "good" talent.
And the results of the different levels of privilege are obvious in the win totals. For all of this Reggie as great winner myth, it took him EIGHT years before his first team won 50+ games, and then after 2 52 win seasons, they were back under .500 again for his 10th campaign. Manu OTOH arrived to a 58 win team and amazingly has never had to suffer a single sub-50 win season.
My real and eternal point with the overrating of privileged players is can anybody say with a straight face that if Reggie or Mitch Richmond had showed up in San Antonio as rookies instead of Manu that the Spurs wouldn't have gone on to win just as much? Or nearly so? Because that's the problem when overcrediting guys who were not their team's #1 guys. We don't know, and they might have been considerably more replaceable than most people admit. The tendency to overcredit guys on winning teams isn't higher level analysis. Its exactly the opposite. Its lack of imagination. I saw this guy win, therefore he's a winner. I didn't see this guy win therefore he's not. But the circumstances leading to that winning or losing are far bigger than the individual player.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Now as we get to tertiary guys like Ray Allen, again I have to wonder what does hanging around on good teams have to do with "greatness"? Because it looks to me very much like sloppy bleedover -- wow that team was great! Ray's great too!
And the thing is, like the Pierce situation, we actually got to see what Ray Allen could do alone as a standalone star, and what he could do, even with Rashard Lewis along, was go 37-45, 52-30, 35-47 and 31-51.
And again, I'm not the guy to necessarily hold guys to task for failing to individually elevate bad situations. HOWEVER, when those players are being compared across the board to far more decorated players, who put up bigger numbers, led their one star teams further, were annually considered All NBA/Top 10 players etc.. Then yes it matters.
By the time Ray Allen went to Boston he was putting up Rip Hamilton numbers. By the time he left it was more like Byron Scott numbers. He was just the saavy old bench talent in Miami. Those are all positive years for him on the greatness totem pole, but in no way should it be magically launching him up above guys who were clearly more productive and esteemed in their days. Ray was a #3 in Boston, maybe even a #4 by the end. He was a bencher in Miami. How many titles does he win without KG and LeBron? Zero.
I have said this repeatedly about these second and third tier guys, that it's these following guys who are the legends, the guys who will be remembered for their own greatness, not the greatness of their teammates:
Allen Iverson 7x All NBA, 1.567 MVP Shares
Russell Westbrook 6x All NBA, 1.531 MVP Shares
Dominique Wilkins , 7x All NBA, .844 MVP Shares
Dwight Howard 8x All NBA, 1.250 MVP Shares (perhaps inflated as the last/only big of his era)
guys like Reggie, Pierce, Allen, or Manu are on a different, lesser tier:
Reggie Miller 3x All NBA, .003 MVP Shares
Paul Pierce 4x All NBA, .040 MVP Shares
Ray Allen 2x All NBA, .038 MVP Shares
Manu Ginobili 2x All NBA, .026 MVP Shares
There's an obvious obvious gap there.
42) Iverson
43) Westbrook
P.S. this is also why I mentioned that Curry was going too high. If you want Curry in the Top 30, then Westbrook has the numbers and accolades to be hot on his heels. Positing a 20 player gap between fellow MVPs from the same era with similar stats is very hard to justify.
And the thing is, like the Pierce situation, we actually got to see what Ray Allen could do alone as a standalone star, and what he could do, even with Rashard Lewis along, was go 37-45, 52-30, 35-47 and 31-51.
And again, I'm not the guy to necessarily hold guys to task for failing to individually elevate bad situations. HOWEVER, when those players are being compared across the board to far more decorated players, who put up bigger numbers, led their one star teams further, were annually considered All NBA/Top 10 players etc.. Then yes it matters.
By the time Ray Allen went to Boston he was putting up Rip Hamilton numbers. By the time he left it was more like Byron Scott numbers. He was just the saavy old bench talent in Miami. Those are all positive years for him on the greatness totem pole, but in no way should it be magically launching him up above guys who were clearly more productive and esteemed in their days. Ray was a #3 in Boston, maybe even a #4 by the end. He was a bencher in Miami. How many titles does he win without KG and LeBron? Zero.
I have said this repeatedly about these second and third tier guys, that it's these following guys who are the legends, the guys who will be remembered for their own greatness, not the greatness of their teammates:
Allen Iverson 7x All NBA, 1.567 MVP Shares
Russell Westbrook 6x All NBA, 1.531 MVP Shares
Dominique Wilkins , 7x All NBA, .844 MVP Shares
Dwight Howard 8x All NBA, 1.250 MVP Shares (perhaps inflated as the last/only big of his era)
guys like Reggie, Pierce, Allen, or Manu are on a different, lesser tier:
Reggie Miller 3x All NBA, .003 MVP Shares
Paul Pierce 4x All NBA, .040 MVP Shares
Ray Allen 2x All NBA, .038 MVP Shares
Manu Ginobili 2x All NBA, .026 MVP Shares
There's an obvious obvious gap there.
42) Iverson
43) Westbrook
P.S. this is also why I mentioned that Curry was going too high. If you want Curry in the Top 30, then Westbrook has the numbers and accolades to be hot on his heels. Positing a 20 player gap between fellow MVPs from the same era with similar stats is very hard to justify.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
oldschooled wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:oldschooled wrote:Still not sold on Allen, Pierce, Reggie at this point. Yes they contributed highly on winning (WS), longevity and are high impact guys but there's still guys left with MVP's and championships. I just can't put them above those guys.
Vote: Willis Reed
Alt: Wes Unseld
Should these guys have been seen as MVP caliber players though? To me both Reed & Unseld's MVP years were pretty fluky.
I'll add that Reed also has major longevity issues.
Sent from my iPhone using RealGM mobile app
Compared to those guys? Yes.Code: Select all
Rank Player MVP Shares
40. Willis Reed* 1.048
58. Wes Unseld* 0.655
143. Paul Pierce 0.040
147. Ray Allen 0.038
And yes I'm aware of Reed's longevity issues, 4, 5 year prime max. But factoring all, i'd still take those two over Pierce, Reggie and the Allen's of the world.
I don't know what you're doing quoting MVP shares with me. I know the history just fine. They got treated as far stronger MVP candidates than Pierce and Allen, that much is clear. The question is really whether they were actually on entirely different tiers as players in actuality.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Winsome Gerbil wrote:Now as we get to tertiary guys like Ray Allen, again I have to wonder what does hanging around on good teams have to do with "greatness"? Because it looks to me very much like sloppy bleedover -- wow that team was great! Ray's great too!
And the thing is, like the Pierce situation, we actually got to see what Ray Allen could do alone as a standalone star, and what he could do, even with Rashard Lewis along, was go 37-45, 52-30, 35-47 and 31-51.
And again, I'm not the guy to necessarily hold guys to task for failing to individually elevate bad situations. HOWEVER, when those players are being compared across the board to far more decorated players, who put up bigger numbers, led their one star teams further, were annually considered All NBA/Top 10 players etc.. Then yes it matters.
By the time Ray Allen went to Boston he was putting up Rip Hamilton numbers. By the time he left it was more like Byron Scott numbers. He was just the saavy old bench talent in Miami. Those are all positive years for him on the greatness totem pole, but in no way should it be magically launching him up above guys who were clearly more productive and esteemed in their days. Ray was a #3 in Boston, maybe even a #4 by the end. He was a bencher in Miami. How many titles does he win without KG and LeBron? Zero.
I have said this repeatedly about these second and third tier guys, that it's these following guys who are the legends, the guys who will be remembered for their own greatness, not the greatness of their teammates:
Allen Iverson 11x All Star, 7x All NBA, 1.567 MVP Shares
Russell Westbrook 6x All Star, 6x All NBA, 1.531 MVP Shares
Dominique Wilkins 9x All Star, 7x All NBA, .844 MVP Shares
and while he only had half a career of dominance and I think there was a little inflation as the last/only big man of his era:
Dwight Howard 8x All Star, 8x All NBA, 1.531 MVP Shares
42) Iverson
43) Westbrook
P.S. this is also why i mentioned that Curry was going too high. If you want Curry in the Top 30, then Westbrook has the numbers and accolades to be hot on his heels. Positing a 20 player gap between fellow MVPs from the same era with similar stats is very hard to justify.
What Ray Allen did in Boston was better than anything Iverson ever did.
Is that a crazy statement? Well, if your goal is to win a title, what Allen did in Boston is very valuable. What Iverson did anywhere basically precluded the possibility. I know they got their way to the finals once, but only because they briefly were able to pull off a marvelous defense in the weak East. Letting Iverson score like that is not a wise way to try to win a title and that's before you even get into his actual issues.
Re: Iverson remembered for his greatness. By those who really don't know much, that is all they'll probably know. Well that and his cornrows. The cornrows are his real legacy. Those were some killer cornrows.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Vote: Reggie Miller
Alt: Paul Pierce
Been voting for these guys for a while. I'm used to that. I expect it at certain times in these projects.
I like to think I don't get frustrated, but that's not really true. I don't get frustrated because people disagree, just some of the reasons people give for disagreeing. In the end I really feel like what we do by default is base our opinions on what we thought the game was when we were younger. Typically that means traditional stats, prestigious accolades, and rings. Even when readily speak to the nuance that makes a player so clearly more than these things, we tend to merely slide the original assessment over a bit rather than starting over from whole cloth.
So with Miller what we get is a lot of people essentially saying "I see why you're saying Miller would be underrated because of his lack of volume stats, but c'mon, he can't be THAT underrated." There's an utter disbelief to the objection that to me has no rational basis because people know full well these award voters are far from perfect and none of us has done any kind of rigorous analysis confirming a maximum possible error they could have. It's an incidence where one can find a poster trash an authority and then appeal to that same authority in argument in the span of a few paragraphs.
Reggie was playing a role that nowadays we basically recognize as a must-have for a championship team. It's a role that allows the player to constantly have small but significant amounts of positive effect all throughout the possession, and among players who truly play that role, Reggie has had the best career in history. The idea that someone like that wouldn't be a lock for Top 50 is frankly strange to me.
Alt: Paul Pierce
Been voting for these guys for a while. I'm used to that. I expect it at certain times in these projects.
I like to think I don't get frustrated, but that's not really true. I don't get frustrated because people disagree, just some of the reasons people give for disagreeing. In the end I really feel like what we do by default is base our opinions on what we thought the game was when we were younger. Typically that means traditional stats, prestigious accolades, and rings. Even when readily speak to the nuance that makes a player so clearly more than these things, we tend to merely slide the original assessment over a bit rather than starting over from whole cloth.
So with Miller what we get is a lot of people essentially saying "I see why you're saying Miller would be underrated because of his lack of volume stats, but c'mon, he can't be THAT underrated." There's an utter disbelief to the objection that to me has no rational basis because people know full well these award voters are far from perfect and none of us has done any kind of rigorous analysis confirming a maximum possible error they could have. It's an incidence where one can find a poster trash an authority and then appeal to that same authority in argument in the span of a few paragraphs.
Reggie was playing a role that nowadays we basically recognize as a must-have for a championship team. It's a role that allows the player to constantly have small but significant amounts of positive effect all throughout the possession, and among players who truly play that role, Reggie has had the best career in history. The idea that someone like that wouldn't be a lock for Top 50 is frankly strange to me.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
I'll present multiple posts in favor of Nate Thurmond. First up is a reworked version of my first post promoting his candidacy.
Nate Thurmond. Nate the Great. My favorite player ever, so I can't claim to be impartial, but I can be his advocate for this project.
Thurmond was a great, great defender and rebounder. Even though he was better at defense than Wilt and Kareem and better at offense than Russell, his profile never rose above those three, and he's overlooked because of it.
Defensively, he was second only to Russell. When the league began recognizing All-Defensive Team honors in 1968-69, his sixth season, he was 1st team twice and 2nd team three times.
He was an exceptional shotblocker, one of the best the game has ever seen, but blocks weren't recorded until 1973-74, his 11th season in the league. Even though the game had taken a toll on his knees by that point, he was still top 10 in blocks the next two seasons (8th and 3rd).
Once blocks and steals became official stats, another stat became possible -- the quadruple-double. Thurmond was the first player to record one, with 22 points, 14 rebounds, 13 assists, and 12 blocks. There have been only three other quadruple-doubles since.
But to provide some context, Thurmond said this:
Any good basketball fan knows that there were plenty of quadruple-doubles back in the 1960s... Let me put it this way: I had 12 blocks in my quadruple-double game, and it was my 12th year in the league. That’s with two bad knees and more than 30,000 minutes pounding NBA floors, night after night. You bet I had plenty of quadruple-doubles before 1974. I’m not trying to brag, but there were games where it was ridiculous the number of shots I blocked. When I was young, there were nights when guys couldn’t come close to getting shots off on me. Only Russell could have blocked more in his career.
Said Walt Hazzard: "As for blocking shots, I've seen guys get offensive rebounds and then go back 15 feet to make sure they can get a shot off. They know Nate is there."
Kareem said Thurmond was his toughest opponent. "He plays me better than anybody ever has, He's tall, has real long arms, and most of all he's agile and strong. When I score on Nate, I know I've done something."
Wilt Chamberlain: "Nate Thurmond was an incredible defensive basketball player. He played me as well as Bill Russell."
As a rebounder, Thurmond was one of the best ever:
-- NBA record for rebounds in a quarter - 18
-- One of only four players with 40 rebounds in a game (Russell, Chamberlain, Lucas)
-- One of only five players to average 20 rebounds for a season (Russell, Chamberlain, Pettit, Lucas);
-- One of only five players to average 15 rebounds for a career (Russell, Chamberlain, Pettit, Lucas)
-- 10th all time in career rebounds
Offensively, Thurmond had an inside and outside game. He averaged 15 PPG for his career and had five straight 20-point seasons. His outside shot was inconsistent, but he was one of the earliest centers with floor spacing ability, benefitting his team by drawing the opposing center outside. Often overlooked are the other aspects of his offensive game -- he was an excellent passer for a big man and one of the best at setting screens.
Thurmond had six seasons with MVP shares, including 1966-67, when he came in second to Wilt and well ahead of Russell and Oscar.
Nate Thurmond. Nate the Great. My favorite player ever, so I can't claim to be impartial, but I can be his advocate for this project.
Thurmond was a great, great defender and rebounder. Even though he was better at defense than Wilt and Kareem and better at offense than Russell, his profile never rose above those three, and he's overlooked because of it.
Defensively, he was second only to Russell. When the league began recognizing All-Defensive Team honors in 1968-69, his sixth season, he was 1st team twice and 2nd team three times.
He was an exceptional shotblocker, one of the best the game has ever seen, but blocks weren't recorded until 1973-74, his 11th season in the league. Even though the game had taken a toll on his knees by that point, he was still top 10 in blocks the next two seasons (8th and 3rd).
Once blocks and steals became official stats, another stat became possible -- the quadruple-double. Thurmond was the first player to record one, with 22 points, 14 rebounds, 13 assists, and 12 blocks. There have been only three other quadruple-doubles since.
But to provide some context, Thurmond said this:
Any good basketball fan knows that there were plenty of quadruple-doubles back in the 1960s... Let me put it this way: I had 12 blocks in my quadruple-double game, and it was my 12th year in the league. That’s with two bad knees and more than 30,000 minutes pounding NBA floors, night after night. You bet I had plenty of quadruple-doubles before 1974. I’m not trying to brag, but there were games where it was ridiculous the number of shots I blocked. When I was young, there were nights when guys couldn’t come close to getting shots off on me. Only Russell could have blocked more in his career.
Said Walt Hazzard: "As for blocking shots, I've seen guys get offensive rebounds and then go back 15 feet to make sure they can get a shot off. They know Nate is there."
Kareem said Thurmond was his toughest opponent. "He plays me better than anybody ever has, He's tall, has real long arms, and most of all he's agile and strong. When I score on Nate, I know I've done something."
Wilt Chamberlain: "Nate Thurmond was an incredible defensive basketball player. He played me as well as Bill Russell."
As a rebounder, Thurmond was one of the best ever:
-- NBA record for rebounds in a quarter - 18
-- One of only four players with 40 rebounds in a game (Russell, Chamberlain, Lucas)
-- One of only five players to average 20 rebounds for a season (Russell, Chamberlain, Pettit, Lucas);
-- One of only five players to average 15 rebounds for a career (Russell, Chamberlain, Pettit, Lucas)
-- 10th all time in career rebounds
Offensively, Thurmond had an inside and outside game. He averaged 15 PPG for his career and had five straight 20-point seasons. His outside shot was inconsistent, but he was one of the earliest centers with floor spacing ability, benefitting his team by drawing the opposing center outside. Often overlooked are the other aspects of his offensive game -- he was an excellent passer for a big man and one of the best at setting screens.
Thurmond had six seasons with MVP shares, including 1966-67, when he came in second to Wilt and well ahead of Russell and Oscar.
If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Thoughts on Cousy, Billups, Miller, Tmac, Mourning, Dwight, Schayes, Iverson, Unseld, Pierce, Westbrook, Hayes from last thread:
+ Willis Reed - Case for: High level peak. A player who at different points win MVP and leads league in WS. Outside of the boxscore which is great on its own, has non box value as a 1st team all-defense C who is a great floor spacer for his position. Rated the best player on a team with Frazier. Good intangibles. Quality playoff performer with two Finals MVP. Case against: Short longevity with about 5 prime years and some other decent ones. Not a great passer or dominant offensive player overall, plays weakest offensive position in center. Support as best Knicks player over Frazier may be because white people preferred the quieter black man.
+ Nate Thurmond - Case for: Rated a high level defender in his time at a key defensive position in C, both man to man where he is supposed GOAT level in an era where it matters a lot, and late career block numbers are promising. With high baseline of value on defense does not need much more on offense to be great. Volume scorer, floor spacer and above average playmaker. A quality decade's worth of longevity. Peaks at 2nd in MVP. Case against: Poor TS while taking a lot of shots for his role. Due to inefficiency weak WS numbers for a player this high.
Vote Paul Pierce
Pierce has a high value offensive role as a ball handler, passer, creator and floor spacer with solid defense. His longevity is tremendous still going strong 15 years into his career and has good moments in the playoffs.
2nd: Reggie Miller
Spoiler:
+ Willis Reed - Case for: High level peak. A player who at different points win MVP and leads league in WS. Outside of the boxscore which is great on its own, has non box value as a 1st team all-defense C who is a great floor spacer for his position. Rated the best player on a team with Frazier. Good intangibles. Quality playoff performer with two Finals MVP. Case against: Short longevity with about 5 prime years and some other decent ones. Not a great passer or dominant offensive player overall, plays weakest offensive position in center. Support as best Knicks player over Frazier may be because white people preferred the quieter black man.
+ Nate Thurmond - Case for: Rated a high level defender in his time at a key defensive position in C, both man to man where he is supposed GOAT level in an era where it matters a lot, and late career block numbers are promising. With high baseline of value on defense does not need much more on offense to be great. Volume scorer, floor spacer and above average playmaker. A quality decade's worth of longevity. Peaks at 2nd in MVP. Case against: Poor TS while taking a lot of shots for his role. Due to inefficiency weak WS numbers for a player this high.
Vote Paul Pierce
Pierce has a high value offensive role as a ball handler, passer, creator and floor spacer with solid defense. His longevity is tremendous still going strong 15 years into his career and has good moments in the playoffs.
2nd: Reggie Miller
Liberate The Zoomers
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Doctor MJ wrote:Vote: Reggie Miller
Alt: Paul Pierce
Been voting for these guys for a while. I'm used to that. I expect it at certain times in these projects.
I like to think I don't get frustrated, but that's not really true. I don't get frustrated because people disagree, just some of the reasons people give for disagreeing. In the end I really feel like what we do by default is base our opinions on what we thought the game was when we were younger. Typically that means traditional stats, prestigious accolades, and rings. Even when readily speak to the nuance that makes a player so clearly more than these things, we tend to merely slide the original assessment over a bit rather than starting over from whole cloth.
So with Miller what we get is a lot of people essentially saying "I see why you're saying Miller would be underrated because of his lack of volume stats, but c'mon, he can't be THAT underrated." There's an utter disbelief to the objection that to me has no rational basis because people know full well these award voters are far from perfect and none of us has done any kind of rigorous analysis confirming a maximum possible error they could have. It's an incidence where one can find a poster trash an authority and then appeal to that same authority in argument in the span of a few paragraphs.
Reggie was playing a role that nowadays we basically recognize as a must-have for a championship team. It's a role that allows the player to constantly have small but significant amounts of positive effect all throughout the possession, and among players who truly play that role, Reggie has had the best career in history. The idea that someone like that wouldn't be a lock for Top 50 is frankly strange to me.
Actually, unless you are just referring to 3pt shooting and flopping, I would say the role Reggie played is practically obsolete now. His weakness with the ball is the complete opposite with the way the vast majority of perimeter play has trended. Nobody has the patience to wait for an off the ball guy to run around in circles for 15 seconds trying to get open anymore. Why should they when it's perfectly acceptable now for any guard to pull up at any time and chuck his own shot off the dribble? Reggie was the purest of "off" guards, but those have largely gone the way of the pure points. Now everybody wants to be a tweener, and the one great SG plays the game like a chucking PG and in fact was called a PG all last season.
BTW, volume stats ARE stats, and for a reason. While the number varies a bit through the ages, generally speaking there are about 95-100 possessions per team per game. It gets increasingly hard to say if you are Reggie, that hey, I know you guys had 80 other possessions, but it was my 13 shots and 3 assists a game that made you guys winners! He contributed to his team's success on a much smaller percentage of their possessions than let's say a Russell Westbrook did last season.
Career Per 100 Possessions:
Iverson 33.7pts 4.7reb 7.8ast
Wilkins 34.7pts 9.3reb 3.5ast
Westbrook 33.8pts 9.2reb 11.8ast
Miller 27.5pts 4.5reb 4.5ast
Without even taking into account minutes, where Iverson in particular was famous for ironmanning 40+ min a night, Reggie's lack of "volume stats" is precisely leaving a whole hell of a lot more for his teammates to do to earn a victory.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
Doctor MJ wrote:Vote: Reggie Miller
Alt: Paul Pierce
Been voting for these guys for a while. I'm used to that. I expect it at certain times in these projects.
I like to think I don't get frustrated, but that's not really true. I don't get frustrated because people disagree, just some of the reasons people give for disagreeing. In the end I really feel like what we do by default is base our opinions on what we thought the game was when we were younger. Typically that means traditional stats, prestigious accolades, and rings. Even when readily speak to the nuance that makes a player so clearly more than these things, we tend to merely slide the original assessment over a bit rather than starting over from whole cloth.
So with Miller what we get is a lot of people essentially saying "I see why you're saying Miller would be underrated because of his lack of volume stats, but c'mon, he can't be THAT underrated." There's an utter disbelief to the objection that to me has no rational basis because people know full well these award voters are far from perfect and none of us has done any kind of rigorous analysis confirming a maximum possible error they could have. It's an incidence where one can find a poster trash an authority and then appeal to that same authority in argument in the span of a few paragraphs.
Reggie was playing a role that nowadays we basically recognize as a must-have for a championship team. It's a role that allows the player to constantly have small but significant amounts of positive effect all throughout the possession, and among players who truly play that role, Reggie has had the best career in history. The idea that someone like that wouldn't be a lock for Top 50 is frankly strange to me.
Me and pavlo voted cousy something like 20 straight threads. Literally all my Alts and HMs have been voted in 3x over.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
euroleague wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Vote: Reggie Miller
Alt: Paul Pierce
Been voting for these guys for a while. I'm used to that. I expect it at certain times in these projects.
I like to think I don't get frustrated, but that's not really true. I don't get frustrated because people disagree, just some of the reasons people give for disagreeing. In the end I really feel like what we do by default is base our opinions on what we thought the game was when we were younger. Typically that means traditional stats, prestigious accolades, and rings. Even when readily speak to the nuance that makes a player so clearly more than these things, we tend to merely slide the original assessment over a bit rather than starting over from whole cloth.
So with Miller what we get is a lot of people essentially saying "I see why you're saying Miller would be underrated because of his lack of volume stats, but c'mon, he can't be THAT underrated." There's an utter disbelief to the objection that to me has no rational basis because people know full well these award voters are far from perfect and none of us has done any kind of rigorous analysis confirming a maximum possible error they could have. It's an incidence where one can find a poster trash an authority and then appeal to that same authority in argument in the span of a few paragraphs.
Reggie was playing a role that nowadays we basically recognize as a must-have for a championship team. It's a role that allows the player to constantly have small but significant amounts of positive effect all throughout the possession, and among players who truly play that role, Reggie has had the best career in history. The idea that someone like that wouldn't be a lock for Top 50 is frankly strange to me.
Me and pavlo voted cousy something like 20 straight threads. Literally all my Alts and HMs have been voted in 3x over.
I would switch my alt vote back to him to get him in the runoff, but that feels despicably tactical, which is just what the mods running this show are trying to avoid.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #42
When I argued for Thurmond in prior threads, he was criticized for his offense, particularly his shooting percentages. In this post, I'll offer some rebuttals regarding Thurmond's offense.
Thurmond's FG% is not good, but he shot free throws well, so his TS% compares much more favorably. For example, Bill Russell had a better FG% (44.0 to 42.1), but their TS% is almost identical (47.1 to 47.0).
Centers like Dikembe Mutombo and Wes Unseld had better efficiency, but they were never primary scorers on their teams. Thurmond, on the other hand, was a primary scorer for much of his career:
66-67 - 2nd leading scorer (18.7) behind Rick Barry (35.6)
67-68 - 2nd leading scorer (20.5) behind Rudy LaRusso (21.8)
68-69 - 2nd leading scorer (21.5) behind Jeff Mullins (22.8)
69-70 - 2nd leading scorer (21.9) behind Mullins (22.1)
70-71 - 2nd leading scorer (20.0) behind Mullins (20.8)
71-72 - 2nd leading scorer (21.4) behind Mullins (21.5)
72-73 - 3rd leading scorer (17.1) behind Barry (22.3) and Mullins (17.8)
That's a responsibility that Wes Unseld and Dikembe Mutombo never had.
Unseld was his team's 5th leading scorer in his ROY and MVP season and the 9th leading scorer the year Washington won the title. Unseld averaged at least 15 PPG only once (16.4), while Thurmond did it nine times, including five seasons of over 20 PPG.
In his rookie season, Mutombo was his team's 2nd leading scorer (16.6 PPG), but his efficiency was low for him (49.3 FG%, 54.0 TS%). His efficiency would go up a few points in subsequent seasons, but his scoring went down, fluctuating between 10-13 PPG as his team's 4th or 5th leading scorer.
In addition to scoring, Thurmond brought value to other aspects of the offensive game, including passing, setting screens, and floor spacing.
All this merely makes Thurmond credible offensively. When you add that to his all-time greatness as a defender and rebounder, he becomes an excellent choice compared to other players being considered.
Thurmond's FG% is not good, but he shot free throws well, so his TS% compares much more favorably. For example, Bill Russell had a better FG% (44.0 to 42.1), but their TS% is almost identical (47.1 to 47.0).
Centers like Dikembe Mutombo and Wes Unseld had better efficiency, but they were never primary scorers on their teams. Thurmond, on the other hand, was a primary scorer for much of his career:
66-67 - 2nd leading scorer (18.7) behind Rick Barry (35.6)
67-68 - 2nd leading scorer (20.5) behind Rudy LaRusso (21.8)
68-69 - 2nd leading scorer (21.5) behind Jeff Mullins (22.8)
69-70 - 2nd leading scorer (21.9) behind Mullins (22.1)
70-71 - 2nd leading scorer (20.0) behind Mullins (20.8)
71-72 - 2nd leading scorer (21.4) behind Mullins (21.5)
72-73 - 3rd leading scorer (17.1) behind Barry (22.3) and Mullins (17.8)
That's a responsibility that Wes Unseld and Dikembe Mutombo never had.
Unseld was his team's 5th leading scorer in his ROY and MVP season and the 9th leading scorer the year Washington won the title. Unseld averaged at least 15 PPG only once (16.4), while Thurmond did it nine times, including five seasons of over 20 PPG.
In his rookie season, Mutombo was his team's 2nd leading scorer (16.6 PPG), but his efficiency was low for him (49.3 FG%, 54.0 TS%). His efficiency would go up a few points in subsequent seasons, but his scoring went down, fluctuating between 10-13 PPG as his team's 4th or 5th leading scorer.
In addition to scoring, Thurmond brought value to other aspects of the offensive game, including passing, setting screens, and floor spacing.
All this merely makes Thurmond credible offensively. When you add that to his all-time greatness as a defender and rebounder, he becomes an excellent choice compared to other players being considered.
If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention.