Joao Saraiva wrote:1st vote Chauncey Billups
Tremendous pace controller. Great scorer when needed. Gave the ball to his teammates when needed, made it happen by himself when needed.
As a PG he was definitely not a liability on D.
I know I stopped voting at some point but it can get frustrating when you vote too much for a guy and he doesn't even have consideration. Do people really think Isiah was a better player than Billups? If yes, why so?
2nd vote Adrian Dantley
fwiw, you don't HAVE to vote for the very next guy on your own list; you can defer temporarily and go to the
next guy who has some small/reasonable amount of traction.
re: Billups vs Isiah....
JoeMalburg did make some very nice arguments in favor of Isiah somewhere around the 30's, fwiw.
Also Billups I think is hurt a little bit by impact metrics that seem to lag behind his box-based advanced metrics (RAPM doesn't exactly love him, for instance, nor on/off). Defensively in particular, there's definitely some indication that his reputation may be marginally overstated.
Dantley too, for that matter, has every appearance of offensive impact decidedly
behind his box-based metrics.
Isiah, otoh,
appears [based on the admittedly limited info] to have had impact that goes well beyond his box-based advanced metrics, when we start looking at with/without records, SRS, and so forth:
Isiah WOWY (as much of his prime as I have compiled presently)
‘82: 36-36 (.500) with, 3-7 (.300) without
-0.25 SRS with, -3.40 SRS without
‘83: 37-44 (.457) with, 0-1 without
-0.13 SRS with, -3.80 SRS without
‘84: 49-33 (.598) with
‘85: 46-35 (.568) with, 0-1 without
+2.81 SRS with, -3.83 SRS without
‘86: 45-32 (.584) with, 1-4 (.200) without
+1.90 SRS with, -5.63 SRS without
108.83 ORtg with, 111.68 ORtg without
107.13 DRtg with, 119.72 DRtg without
‘87: 52-29 (.642) with, 0-1 without
+3.65 SRS with, -6.96 SRS without
109.2 ORtg with, 106.5 ORtg without
105.6 DRtg with, 120 DRtg without
***In first six seasons: 265-209 (.559) +1.96 SRS with, 4-14 (.222) -4.26 SRS without
‘88: 53-28 (.654) with, 1-0 without
+5.22 SRS with, *+25.02 SRS without (*played at home against a basement-level team who also happened to be missing TWO of their starters.....Pistons won by 35)
110.5 ORtg with, 108.1 ORtg without
105.7 DRtg with, 73.7 DRtg without
‘89: 61-19 (.763) with, 2-0 without
+6.06 SRS with, +13.56 SRS without
110.4 ORtg with, 127.2 ORtg without
104.6 DRtg with, 108.7 DRtg without
‘90: 59-22 (.728) with, 0-1 without
+5.62 SRS with, -11.55 SRS without
110.1 ORtg with, 96.0 ORtg without
103.4 DRtg with, 108.5 DRtg without
‘91: 31-17 (.646) with, 19-15 (.559) without
OVERALL THRU '91: 469-295 (.614) with, 26-30 (.464) without
OVERALL THRU '90: 438-278 (.612) and +3.20 SRS with Isiah, 7-15 (.318) and -1.64 SRS without
Speaking for myself, it also raised my attention when drza lent Isiah his support in the late 30's. drza's a poster whom I consider very knowledgeable, discerning, and relatively unmoved by status quo narratives. His criteria/method on rating players also tends to lean heavy on both impact and scouting report, the latter being the lens thru which he teases apart all the nuance and context to discover how that impact is occurring. So when he says he feels Isiah belongs there, that suggests [to me] there's more there than what his advanced metrics show (if that's what you're basing your opinion of Isiah on), and suggests that maybe the above "WOWY effect" I've outlined above isn't just smoke and mirrors.
Anyway, if you're frustrated by a lack of support for a specific candidate, mount some larger arguments to shift opinion (shouldn't have long to wait on Billups now; mid-30's was hard, because it wasn't just Isiah......we still had PG/wings like Payton, Barry, Frazier, Miller, Gervin, etc on the table; to say nothing of Gilmore, Howard, Schayes, McHale and so forth at that time).
"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