Post#3 » by trex_8063 » Fri Nov 24, 2017 12:09 am
1st vote: Tracy McGrady
I'm very very big on meaningful longevity, and McGrady suffers in comparison to many other candidates on the basis of his longevity/durability--->more the durability than the longevity. He did play 15+ seasons (though only seven of them prime-level, 2 others were relatively "near-prime", and he was at least marginally useful in all the others)......that's OK in terms of longevity; he did miss large chunks of multiple seasons, though (so durability is certainly an issue).
If not for this, I'd have supported him earlier. With the exception of Bill Walton, Tracy McGrady is [imo] the best peak [and best average level during prime] left on the table (and obviously his longevity/durability soundly trounces Walton's).
While WS/48 doesn't rate him overly generous, the other rate metrics do. In a decent length career (938 rs games, >30,000 rs minutes), TMac has the 31st highest career PER of all-time (in NBA/ABA combined); he has the 12th-best career playoff PER of all-time. He has the 26th-best rs BPM of all-time (or since 1973, I should say), 15th-best playoff BPM.
He's also 49th all-time in MVP award shares, fwiw.
Impact data doesn't exactly love him (but it doesn't rate him poorly either). Spreadsheet I have which compiled data for many notable players from the following sources:
*colts18's rs-only APM for '94-'96
**ascreamingcomesacrossthecourt RAPM for '97-'00 (NPI for '97, PI otherwise)
***shutupandjam RAPM for '01-'07 (NPI for '01, PI otherwise)
****GotBuckets? PI RAPM for '08-'14
*****JE's google sheets PI RAPM for '15-'17
......from those, TMac's best 7 years combined is extremely similar to that of the following players who are off the table: Gary Payton (#35), Dwight Howard (#44), Ray Allen (#47), Reggie Miller (#42), and Russell Westbrook (#51).
Come on people! I don't think anyone values longevity more than I, and yet I'd still suggest #65 is probably past time for TMac. I'm pretty dead-set on him as my top pick anyway.
Also just noted McGrady went #48 in the last project. There are only 2-3 current players who have surpassed him since; so I'd suggest either we [somewhat drastically] overrated him in that project, or we're on the verge of significantly underrating him in this one (or possibly a little bit of both).
2nd vote: Nate Thurmond
Yes, too many shots on poor shooting efficiency, but I do allow he's unlikely to take so many "poor" shots in any later era (when coaches and basketball minds in general had smartened up a bit). I'd also speculate (as Outside did in prior threads) that his willingness (and modest ability) to shoot from 12-16 feet forces the opposing PF/C out of the paint (I actually did see an example of this in game from '64).
He was decent in his low-post game (nice little jump-hook anyway), and arguably an underrated passer.
Anyway, that's about as far as I can argue his offense. Suffice to say I feel he's perhaps maligned slightly more here than is justified, but nonetheless obviously offense is not where the lion's share of his value and impact come from.
Defensively, reputation (statements from the likes of Wilt and Kareem) and my own H2H studies have led me to conclude he's the greatest low-post man defender of all-time.
He appears to be a very relevant rim-protecting presence, too: I'm basing this on a little eye-test, reputation (statements made by himself, as well as various teammates, Wilt, etc), and the fact that he avg 3.4 blocks/100 possessions from '74-'77 (all on the wrong side of age 32, mostly post-prime years).
And from the games I've watched, I like what I see (especially relative to era-norms) in terms of pnr defense (even as late as 1975).
The little we have in terms of impact indicators is compelling:
With/without records
'63 Warriors (before Thurmond): 31-49
‘64: 46-30 (.605) with, 2-2 (.500) without (48-32 overall: +17 wins from prior year, with majority roster overlap; addition of Thurmond and new [better] coach in Alex Hannum were the primary changes; ALL of that improvement happened on the defensive end, btw)
‘65: 17-60 (.221) with, 0-3 (.000) without
‘66: 33-40 (.452) with, 2-5 (.286) without
‘67: 38-27 (.585) with, 6-10 (.375) without
‘68: 32-19 (.627) with, 11-20 (.355) without
‘69: 38-33 (.535) with, 3-8 (.273) without
‘70: 21-22 (.488) with, 9-30 (.231) without
‘71: 41-41 (.500) with, 0-0 without
‘72: 49-29 (.628) with, 2-2 (.500) without
‘73: 46-33 (.582) with, 1-2 (.333) without
‘74: 35-27 (.565) with, 9-11 (.450) without
‘75: 45-35 (.563) with, 2-0 (1.000) without
‘76: 46-32 (.590) with, 0-2 (.000) without
‘77: 27-22 (.551) with, 16-17 (.485) without
Rates out very well in Elgee's WOWY studies, too (though I've previously questioned methodology there).
HM for me is Kevin Johnson.
"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