RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 (Kawhi Leonard)

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RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 (Kawhi Leonard) 

Post#1 » by trex_8063 » Fri Mar 2, 2018 2:41 pm

1. Michael Jordan
2. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
3. Lebron James
4. Bill Russell
5. Tim Duncan
6. Wilt Chamberlain
7. Magic Johnson
8. Shaquille O'Neal
9. Hakeem Olajuwon
10. Larry Bird
11. Kobe Bryant
12. Kevin Garnett
13. Oscar Robertson
14. Karl Malone
15. Jerry West
16. Julius Erving
17. Dirk Nowitzki
18. David Robinson
19. Charles Barkley
20. Moses Malone
21. John Stockton
22. Dwyane Wade
23. Chris Paul
24. Bob Pettit
25. George Mikan
26. Steve Nash
27. Patrick Ewing
28. Kevin Durant
29. Stephen Curry
30. Scottie Pippen
31. John Havlicek
32. Elgin Baylor
33. Clyde Drexler
34. Rick Barry
35. Gary Payton
36. Artis Gilmore
37. Jason Kidd
38. Walt Frazier
39. Isiah Thomas
40. Kevin McHale
41. George Gervin
42. Reggie Miller
43. Paul Pierce
44. Dwight Howard
45. Dolph Schayes
46. Bob Cousy
47. Ray Allen
48. Pau Gasol
49. Wes Unseld
50. Robert Parish
51. Russell Westbrook
52. Alonzo Mourning
53. Dikembe Mutombo
54. Manu Ginobili
55. Chauncey Billups
56. Willis Reed
57. Bob Lanier
58. Allen Iverson
59. Adrian Dantley
60. Dave Cowens
61. Elvin Hayes
62. Dominique Wilkins
63. Vince Carter
64. Alex English
65. Tracy McGrady
66. James Harden
67. Nate Thurmond
68. Sam Jones
69. Kevin Johnson
70. Bob McAdoo
71. Sidney Moncrief
72. Paul Arizin
73. Grant Hill
74. Bobby Jones
75. Chris Bosh
76. Tony Parker
77. Shawn Marion
78. Hal Greer
79. Ben Wallace
80. Dan Issel
81. Larry Nance
82. James Worthy
83. Chris Webber
84. Rasheed Wallace
85. Dennis Rodman
86. Horace Grant
87. Elton Brand
88. Terry Porter
89. Maurice Cheeks
90. Carmelo Anthony
91. Tim Hardaway
92. Jack Sikma
93. Billy Cunningham
94. Mookie Blaylock
95. Chet Walker
96. ???

Only five spots left. Who do you want to take them? Now's the time to lobby hard and present some convincing arguments for your picks. I'm sort of loosey goosey for at least 3-4 of these last five spots.

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#2 » by penbeast0 » Fri Mar 2, 2018 4:10 pm

Vote: Mel Daniels
Alternate: Jerry Lucas (Sharman, Howell, Hawkins, Beaty, Marques Johnson, Dumars, or Kawhi Leonard)


Why Mel Daniels? It may be winner's bias, but when I see a team win multiple championships, I tend to look more closely at the makeup of the teams to see WHY they are winning. I don't automatically value big minute contributors to championships, I have been down on Bob Cousy's role on those Celtic titles for example. However, I do value the championships a lot and how a team got there. Indiana was the Boston Celtics of the ABA. They didn't have nearly the big name stars of Kentucky (Gilmore, Issel, Dampier), New York (Erving, Kenon), or even San Antonio (Gervin, Silas, Paultz) but they won the most and the most consistently. Breaking those teams down, Slick Leonard was a competent coach but had little success elsewhere and wasn't that highly regarded for either his game management or his player development. Their guards were pretty weak. Freddie Lewis a below average PG, not much of a distributor and only an average shooter and defender, while their 2 guards changed regularly and were unimpressive. Roger Brown at SF was a nice scorer with good range, great handles, and enough variety that his nickname was "the man of a thousand moves." He was definitely a key factor but he didn't play much defense or add much rebounding or playmaking. The PF were Bob Netolicky (the self proclaimed Joe Namath of the ABA) who was another excellent scorer and decent rebounder with no interest in defense then they replaced him with George McGinnis, another volume scorer (less efficient) and a great rebounder who generated a lot of assists, and turnovers. But for me, looking at this franchise's success, it was all built around Mel Daniels in the middle. A good scorer (consistently close to 20 a game on above average efficiency), great rebounder (usually among top in league), and powerful defender (better positionally than in help defense) who set the tone of the team and acted as their enforcer. His career was short and corresponds almost exactly with the rise and fall of the Pacers as a force in the ABA (his rookie year, he apparently shot a lot of long jump shots and had poor efficiency for Minnesota, which Leonard immediately banned when he came to Indiana).


Mel Daniels is certainly the only multiple MVP winner left. Nobody else changed or dominanted on both ends to the same degree for more than 1-1.5 years (Walton, Hawkins). Daniels was the best player on two championship teams plus a willing support role on a third championship though in a weak league (probably better than the pre-Russell 50s though). I tend to value defense, particularly for big men, and Mel was basically the original Alonzo Mourning with more rebounding but less shotblocking or, to use dhsilv2's comp, Moses Malone (without the longevity of course). He was a 1st round NBA pick (the first to sign with the ABA) and in the NBA would probably have been one of the best centers as well, not in the Jabbar league, but contending with Unseld/Cowens for the rebounding leaderboard and 2nd team All-Defense with good scoring (but poor playmaking). The two MVPs show he was valued above his box scores.

It is reasonable to compare Daniels to Kawhi Leonard as they have similar length of career by now. Kawhi brings excellent wing defense early on, but Daniels was probably more impactful defensively as intimidating defensive centers tend to be (especially in the 20th century). Kawhi's defense is still good and his scoring has blown up, a clearly better option than Daniels; also clearly a better passer. Daniels brings rebounding and toughness at a level equal to guys like Wes Unseld or Dave Cowens who are already in from his era (other league). I think the impact Daniels brought was appreciably higher in his league than that Kawhi has in the current league, enough to overcome the much weaker league he played in. Connie Hawkins would be another early ABA guy, higher peak than Daniels, shorter career though he did have a 1st team All-NBA between his first and second major knee injury. More of a career than Walton, less than Daniels. With careers this short, the difference is magnified. Of the bunch, I rate Daniels the highest.

Lucas, early Kevin Love type that played a long career. Announcers used to call 20-25 footers, "Lucas Layups," as the Royals would station him outside to let Oscar bully people in the paint. Great rebounder, super smart, comes across as a bit of a "rain man" type with his memorizing phone books and needing to know his exact stats. Played well as a role player on the Knicks post prime.

Getting mentioned by position:
PG DJ, Archibald
SG Sharman, Dumars, Lou Hudson, Richmond, Hornacek
SF Kawhi, Marques Johnson, Bernard King, Wilkes, Dandridge, Mullin, Hagan
PF Amare, Connie Hawkins, Bailey Howell, Paul Silas, Kemp, McGinnis, Jerry Lucas, Buck Williams, DeBusshcere
C Mel Daniels, Mark Gasol, Bellamy, Yao. Divac, Zelmo, Johnston
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#3 » by penbeast0 » Fri Mar 2, 2018 4:27 pm

Mel Daniels v. Nate Archibald

Peak -- Nate was an MVP candidate with incredible stats in a weak league; Mel was a 2 time MVP (not just a candidate) in an even weaker league. Nate's was the more impressive individual accomplishment but despite the Kings having a top rate offense, I think Mel's 2-way impact was stronger in terms of pushing his team to wins. Admittedly it's a lot easier for a center to have a strong impact in the earlier days of the league but those were the rules of the day.

Prime -- Nate had basically a 4 year prime, 2 superstar seasons where he was a legit MVP candidate, 2 where he was still a powerful offensive weapon (20/10+ guy). He did get a couple of further All-Star nominations but those seasons just weren't that impressive and I think they were more just reputation votes. Mel had a 5 year prime where he was a consistent 1st or 2nd team All-ABA center and 2 time MVP, his prime is actually longer than Tiny's.

Pre/Post prime seasons -- Mel had one pre-prime season where he was a powerful but raw rebounding rookie with poor shooting on a bad team. He then had a consistent 5 year prime as an MVP candidate, followed by one year as a good center but with a lesser role and one year as a part time player soon traded to Memphis. HE did try an abortive comeback but it failed. Nate also had a decent rookie season pre prime but has a stronger post prime career as a solid roleplayer/starter on the Celtics for 3 or 4 years. He also had some injury riddled seasons with the Kings.

Impact -- Nate's offensive impact is stronger. In his prime, he led his team to a top offensive; even as a role player, he was always a drive and dish threat. Mel's offensive game was pretty basic, he had limited range and not great passing skills; he would get the ball inside and power through guys looking for a basket or a score rather than doing anything fancy. But it worked pretty well; he was a regular 20/10 threat in his prime. His defensive impact was mainly based on his rebounding and enforcer role for the Pacers; he was a decent but not spectacular help defender. But, in the ABA, which was a league of slashers, post up scorers, and thugs more than the NBA, his defensive skills were perfectly suited to the environment. His impact led Indiana to 3 titles, two as the clear best player (2nd best scorer, Roger Brown was the go to guy when they needed a bucket).

Strength of league -- Both were expansion diluted and with a lot of guys playing to get stats hoping to jump leagues for a big payday. The early ABA was weaker but guys like Rick Barry didn't dominate to a much greater degree; if you look at the guys who jumped leagues and check out their per minute stats (many NBA guys got a chance to play greater minutes), you will find the difference is clear but not close to the difference between todays NBA and Euroleague for example.

Even accounting for this difference, I find a 2 time MVP and 2-way dominant center in the weaker league more valuable than a 2-time All-NBA player and 1-way ball dominant small point guard in the stronger league.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#4 » by Clyde Frazier » Fri Mar 2, 2018 5:19 pm

penbeast0 wrote:Even accounting for this difference, I find a 2 time MVP and 2-way dominant center in the weaker league more valuable than a 2-time All-NBA player and 1-way ball dominant small point guard in the stronger league.


Correction: Tiny made 5 all NBA teams.

I’m still going with Tiny, but definitely considering Daniels at this point for my alternate.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#5 » by HeartBreakKid » Fri Mar 2, 2018 7:45 pm

I've always been a proponent of high peak players. I also like to take into account non-NBA work if I think the player had NBA level superstar impact else where.

This makes Bill Walton an easy selection for me. I mean even with longevity taken into account, I would rather have 3 years or so of Bill Walton playing 60ish games than Carmelo Anthony.

Dominant two way centers just give your team such a crazy mismatch advantage. His passing, defense, scoring - I'm not sure if another player could have fit the championship blazers like Walton did - maybe Sabonis.


I vote for Bill Walton
My second vote is for Kawhi Leonard
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#6 » by penbeast0 » Fri Mar 2, 2018 8:30 pm

Clyde Frazier wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:Even accounting for this difference, I find a 2 time MVP and 2-way dominant center in the weaker league more valuable than a 2-time All-NBA player and 1-way ball dominant small point guard in the stronger league.


Correction: Tiny made 5 all NBA teams.

I’m still going with Tiny, but definitely considering Daniels at this point for my alternate.


Thanks; though question: do you really think he deserved 5? I only see 4 legit All-Star seasons, much less all-NBA. I wasn't that impressed with him in Boston.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#7 » by Outside » Fri Mar 2, 2018 10:01 pm

Vote: Bill Walton
Alternate: Mel Daniels


Walton's glorious peak, brief as it was, earns him a spot on a top 100 list. He was a tremendously skilled and gifted player who made an impact on every aspect of the game. It helps that he was good with the Clippers and very good in his role with the Celtics. Athleticism, skill, intelligence, competitiveness, joy for the game, and belief to the core in playing to maximize the sum of the parts rather than any individual player.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#8 » by dhsilv2 » Fri Mar 2, 2018 10:40 pm

penbeast0 wrote:
Clyde Frazier wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:Even accounting for this difference, I find a 2 time MVP and 2-way dominant center in the weaker league more valuable than a 2-time All-NBA player and 1-way ball dominant small point guard in the stronger league.


Correction: Tiny made 5 all NBA teams.

I’m still going with Tiny, but definitely considering Daniels at this point for my alternate.


Thanks; though question: do you really think he deserved 5? I only see 4 legit All-Star seasons, much less all-NBA. I wasn't that impressed with him in Boston.


He was top 10 in MVP voting each year he made all nba. But I have a hard time believing people weren't seeing something in 81 on that boston team for him to get all nba, MVP votes, and be an allstar. Would be interesting if anyone had a bit more first hand knowledge of that year and why voters were so high on him.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#9 » by trex_8063 » Fri Mar 2, 2018 11:35 pm

1st vote: Kawhi Leonard
I’ll be honest, I’m sort of surprised Kawhi is still on the table at this point. He’s probably the last player I feel somewhat strongly belongs on the list, and that’s in spite of me being somewhat of an outlier in how important meaningful longevity is to me. Consequently I just really didn’t think he’d still be eligible at this point.

I’m not sure if public opinion has drifted away from him due to his injury here in the present ‘18 season??? It certainly felt like it was more in his corner a year ago, so not sure if the present season is influencing people here.
penbeast mentioned (though later rescinded) a comment about the Spurs not skipping a beat without him, and I wonder if that's a [mistaken] view that's hurting him here. But the Spurs are hurting this year relative to last season. As I mentioned previously, Gasol, Parker, and Ginobili are all a year further into decline, and they got rid of Dedmon and Jonathan Simmons. But otoh, some of their young talents have made great strides this season (notably Kyle Anderson, Dejonte Murray, and Bryn Forbes), and they obtained Rudy Gay (though he's missed some games) and Joffrey Lauvergne to fill the void left by those changes (simply upping Patty Mills' minutes has largely replaced Parker's decline, too).
So the dip we're seeing by the Spurs this year is [imho] largely a result of Kawhi basically missing the whole season thus far.

And perhaps it's because the Spurs are still 4th in the West that people don't realize how far they've fallen; but they have come down quite a ways: last year they won 61 games and had a +7.13 SRS; this year they're on pace for barely 48 wins and are a +2.60 SRS. A -4.53 drop in SRS is nothing to sneeze at, especially when we consider that's ceiling raising, not floor-raising.


And it really shouldn't be surprising looking at the quality of player Kawhi's been in each of the last two seasons: collectively in '16-'17 he was a 26.8 PER, .270 WS/48, +8.1 BPM, +22 efficiency differential in 33.2 mpg. Was 4th in the league in PI RAPM last year (behind only Lebron, Curry, and -0.01 behind Draymond), and 6th in the league [in both PI and NPI] in '16 (behind Lebron, Curry, Draymond, CP3, and Durant). By all measures available, he was one of the very best players in the game (during a very top-heavy era, I might add).

Aside from Bill Walton, he's the highest peak left on the table. And while his longevity is lacking, it’s not non-existent: he was a solid role player right out of the gate in his rookie year. He was just about a borderline All-Star by his 2nd season, and only got better from there. By his third year he was a legitimately an All-Star caliber player (and won FMVP). By his 4th season he was legitimate All-NBA caliber. And then the last two seasons [as noted above] were legit MVP candidate stuff.

In fact, aside from Walton, Kawhi's arguable got TWO seasons that are better than any one peak year from anyone else left on the table, imo.

He's been scoring elite level volume on elite level efficiency, and ultra-elite level turnover economy (in light of combined scoring and playmaking). Add to that decent rebounding from the SF position and his defensive presence (2-time DPOY) and some big-time playoff performances.........well, his six seasons seem like plenty to award him a spot on the list.



2nd vote: ???? (EDIT: tentatively going with Walt Bellamy)
Here I’m less sure on who I want to go with. Some possibilities……

Walt Bellamy - Leaves something to be desired defensively, but a heckuva offensive man in the middle and entirely decent rebounder. And he provided that for a good long stretch, as he was more or less an ironman: missed just five games TOTAL in his first ELEVEN seasons, despite playing >35 mpg in 9 of those 11 seasons (>40 mpg in 5 of them); including one season in which (due to a mid-season trade) managed to play 88 rs games (a record I’ll wager will never be broken unless they change the length of the rs). Even in his 12th season he was still playing 37.9 mpg (missed an acceptable 8 games that year), and was still playing 31.7 mpg in his 13th season (was still a 15.2 PER, .107 WS/48, +0.3 BPM player in that 13th season, too).

Pen has in the past remarked that Bellamy “ate his way to mediocrity”, or something to that effect. I’ve never been clear on whether that was his choice of words, or quoting someone. But when a guy is still----statistically, per minute----an above average player in nearly 32 mpg in his 13th season (at age 34), and had a near All-Star caliber 11th season at age 32, and basically never missed games in his whole career…….idk, it’s collectively not very supportive of this “lazy” or “didn’t take care of himself” narrative.
Bells, in over 1,000 career rs games, averaged 37.3 mpg while averaging an estimated 22.2 pts/100 possessions @ +5.91% rTS, 15.1 reb and 2.7 ast per 100 possessions.
fwiw, wrt impact: his prime regressed WOWY is +2.9 (+2.7 for career), which is very respectable.

It’s hard to not give him serious consideration at this point.


Dave DeBusschere
Statistically, DeBusschere’s fairly underwhelming. He was a pinch too willing to pop up those mid-range jumpers for my taste, though that was to no small degree a by-product of era. He’s got range, for sure (have seen him fire away out to ~20 feet or so, even a quick release curling off a screen at the top of the key), and given he was usually playing the PF, that does provide a positive spacing effect; likely would fit better in a 3pt era. I’d be more comfortable with him (likely would have supported him earlier), if he were just a bit more accurate/efficient as a scorer (his FT% could be better, too).
But with DeBusschere, obviously his defense [and rebounding] is where the lion’s share of his value comes from. Widely credited with being one of the very best defensive forwards of his generation, he appears to exhibit versatility, physical play, and decent rebounding for a PF/combo forward.
Closest modern comparison is Draymond Green (but without the playmaking). Dave did his thing for 10 fairly consistent seasons, too (plus one irrelevant injury-hit season), and oddly seemed to hang up his sneakers at the height of game (his final season is one of his very best). Not sure if there was an off-season injury that went into that decision or what.

WOWY data (looking only at W/L column) is a bit inconsistent, though the huge jump the Knicks make in trading Bellamy and Komives for him is certainly in his favour:
WOWY
‘63: 34-46 (.425) with
‘64: 4-11 (.267) with, 19-46 (.292) without
‘65: 31-48 (.392) with, 0-1 without
‘66: 22-57 (.278) with, 0-1 without
‘67: 30-48 (.385) with, 0-3 without
‘68: 38-42 (.475) with, 2-0 without
‘69: Pistons were 11-18 (.379) [DeBusschere played in all 29] prior to trading him for Bellamy and Komives, 21-32 (.396) after the trade. Knicks were 18-17 (.514) before the trade, 36-11 (.766) after obtaining DeBusschere (he played in all 47).
‘70: 57-22 (.722) with, 3-0 without
‘71: 52-29 (.642) with, 0-1 without
‘72: 47-33 (.588) with, 1-1 (.500) without
‘73: 52-25 (.675) with, 5-0 without
‘74: 41-30 (.577) with, 8-3 (.727) with

Elgee’s regressed WOWY (looking at pt differential) rates him as an elite +5.9 for his prime (+5.5 for career).


I think I’m maybe trying to decide between these^^^ two very different players. But also on the table being considered are Joe Dumars (good all-around guard with solid longevity and a decent playoff resume), Shawn Kemp (amazing handful of years who allowed laziness and personal problems to erode his prime awesomeness, though a touch sympathetic story as to why he allowed things to slide), Marques Johnson (very very good----though perhaps never quite “great”----player with a career cut short by injury), Vlade Divac (another dark horse candidate?? Solid and long career of usefulness), and Mel Daniels (another short-career candidate, built around defense, rebounding, leadership, and accomplishments in an early ABA of questionable competitiveness).
George McGinnis, Jeff Hornacek, Cliff Hagan, and Jerry Lucas not far off either.

I’ll edit in my 2ndary pick later.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#10 » by Clyde Frazier » Sat Mar 3, 2018 12:00 am

penbeast0 wrote:
Clyde Frazier wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:Even accounting for this difference, I find a 2 time MVP and 2-way dominant center in the weaker league more valuable than a 2-time All-NBA player and 1-way ball dominant small point guard in the stronger league.


Correction: Tiny made 5 all NBA teams.

I’m still going with Tiny, but definitely considering Daniels at this point for my alternate.


Thanks; though question: do you really think he deserved 5? I only see 4 legit All-Star seasons, much less all-NBA. I wasn't that impressed with him in Boston.


I'd have to delve further into each all NBA season to give you a thorough answer, but why weren't you really impressed with him in boston? As I said in my vote last thread, "He was an important piece for the celtics for a few seasons, and played a big role in their 81 title run. His transition into that role post prime / injury is impressive to me."
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#11 » by dhsilv2 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 12:01 am

Trex do you have WOWY on Divac and/or Tiny (maybe you've posted?) Those are right now my leanings, same as last round, but would be interested if there's data to push them off. I did see RAPM from 99 which was VERY decent for Vlade and confirmed my view he should make one of these last few spots.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#12 » by trex_8063 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 12:41 am

dhsilv2 wrote:Trex do you have WOWY on Divac and/or Tiny (maybe you've posted?) Those are right now my leanings, same as last round, but would be interested if there's data to push them off. I did see RAPM from 99 which was VERY decent for Vlade and confirmed my view he should make one of these last few spots.


I've not compiled my own W/L wowy for those two. Elgee's WOWYR has Divac as a +5.8 for prime (+5.4 for career). Tiny's is +0.4 (though there's a notation indicating it's incomplete data).

There's RAPM from '97, btw. Also rs APM for '94-'96.

Divac's '94 APM: +1.34 (*49th in league)
'95 APM: +3.68 (*8th in league)
'96 APM: +1.05 (*58th in league)
*does not include those players who switched teams within the season (for example, the '95 data does not include Clyde Drexler)
'97 (NPI): +4.45 (13th in league)
'98 (PI): +5.25 (9th in league)
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#13 » by dhsilv2 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 12:45 am

trex_8063 wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:Trex do you have WOWY on Divac and/or Tiny (maybe you've posted?) Those are right now my leanings, same as last round, but would be interested if there's data to push them off. I did see RAPM from 99 which was VERY decent for Vlade and confirmed my view he should make one of these last few spots.


I've not compiled my own W/L wowy for those two. Elgee's WOWYR has Divac as a +5.8 for prime (+5.4 for career). Tiny's is +0.4 (though there's a notation indicating it's incomplete data).

There's RAPM from '97, btw. Also rs APM for '94-'96.

Divac's '94 APM: +1.34 (*49th in league)
'95 APM: +3.68 (*8th in league)
'96 APM: +1.05 (*58th in league)
*does not include those players who switched teams within the season (for example, the '95 data does not include Clyde Drexler)
'97 (NPI): +4.45 (13th in league)
'98 (PI): +5.25 (9th in league)


Thanks. Seems if the Tiny is incomplete it might not be of much value as his last few seasons were pretty poor imo.

Does look good for Vlade though. Shows him as an all nba level impact guy vs the non allstar he often was.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#14 » by dhsilv2 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 1:02 am

Clyde Frazier wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
Clyde Frazier wrote:
Correction: Tiny made 5 all NBA teams.

I’m still going with Tiny, but definitely considering Daniels at this point for my alternate.


Thanks; though question: do you really think he deserved 5? I only see 4 legit All-Star seasons, much less all-NBA. I wasn't that impressed with him in Boston.


I'd have to delve further into each all NBA season to give you a thorough answer, but why weren't you really impressed with him in boston? As I said in my vote last thread, "He was an important piece for the celtics for a few seasons, and played a big role in their 81 title run. His transition into that role post prime / injury is impressive to me."


I more or less asked the same question. While to me there's a HUGE edge for Tiny vs Walton in their Boston days, but the allstar/all nba selections seem really off. That said I struggle to think he got THAT much credit so he must have at least had a story worthy of discussion here. But that said, again Tiny has 2-3x the value of walton in his boston days.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#15 » by pandrade83 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 1:22 am

Traveling without computer so this has to be quick,

Primary: Walton
Alt: Kawhi

The peak values of these guys is quite clearly ahead of everyone else.

Both have demonstrated the ability to lead elite level teams, both are finals mvps. The longevity isn’t great but at this late stage, I’m looking for guys who really moved the needle - even if for a short period. Both of these players did that in spades.

As outlined In prior posts, Walton offered value in other years besides just 77 and his longevity - while bad - is not AS bad as you might think.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#16 » by penbeast0 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 1:28 am

Clyde Frazier wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
Clyde Frazier wrote:
Correction: Tiny made 5 all NBA teams.

I’m still going with Tiny, but definitely considering Daniels at this point for my alternate.


Thanks; though question: do you really think he deserved 5? I only see 4 legit All-Star seasons, much less all-NBA. I wasn't that impressed with him in Boston.


I'd have to delve further into each all NBA season to give you a thorough answer, but why weren't you really impressed with him in boston? As I said in my vote last thread, "He was an important piece for the celtics for a few seasons, and played a big role in their 81 title run. His transition into that role post prime / injury is impressive to me."


When we (the Bullets) played the Celtics, I thought of him as the weakness in that Boston lineup, not a strength. Their front line of Bird, Maxwell, and Parish was the threat, Chris Ford played nice defense, Tiny gave them a secondary playmaker and drive and dish threat. When Bird was in the game and Tiny was playmaking, it was frankly a relief and less of a threat. But he wasn't Kyrie to Bird's LeBron on that team, was was Bird's JR Smith . . . a guy who could occasionally go off but didn't scare you. I had no idea at the time why people were voting him that high except that he was a wonderful person and loved around the NBA; I still don't.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#17 » by trex_8063 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 2:04 am

Transferring this from the last thread.....

pandrade83 wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:
I think Walton's entire tenure in a Clippers uniform + his rookie season (a mere 35 games) equal in total value what Kawhi provided in his first two seasons. The specified Walton seasons comprise 5,712 rs minutes as an average 18.6 PER, .101 WS/48, +3.3 BPM player with ZERO playoff minutes to speak of. "Luck" applies here, though is arguably counter-balanced by the "damage" dhsilv2 is referring to (before we even talk about salary).
Kawhi's first two seasons comprise 3,344 rs minutes as a 16.5 PER, .168 WS/48, +4.1 BPM player; plus 1,154 playoff minutes.



....the only thing I disagree with is the healthy clipper years vs. Kawhi's 1st two years - partially because the fact Kawhi made the playoffs in those years by function of being on the Spurs isn't that value add to me - but also:

Per 36:
Walton: 16-12-4, 3.7 blk + steals, 57% TS
Kawhi: 13-7-2, 2.6 blk + steals, 58% TS

Now, Kawhi does have a meaningful advantage in TO's (4 to 1.1) - but some of that is a function of team responsibilities - Kawhi isn't asked to do much with the ball in general. Walton's per minute production seems more comparable to Manu's career per 36:

19-5-5, 58% TS, 2.8 TOV, 2.3 blk + steals

When I couple that with Walton's with/without impact - I actually do give the edge to Walton during those healthy Clipper years.


Couple things I'd mention......

1) One thing was already elaborated on by Owly in the last thread---->noting the poor quality of Walton's replacement, as well as the "relative ease" of improving upon garbage teams (and how these factors may inflate his impact as measured by WOWY).

2) I think you gloss over the turnovers a bit. You commented that his low turnover rate is largely due to low responsibilities; however, we've seen in recent years that he continues to have an ultra-low turnover rate despite shouldering huge usage......and somewhat contrary to a common belief that he's just a system scorer who's having all his shots created for him, he's called upon to score a lot in isolation (only 38.4% of his 2pt FG's were assisted in '17, 47.6% of his total FG's.....which is more than most volume scorers, but it still means he's creating the majority for himself).

3) Per 36 numbers perhaps inflate the difference slightly (faster pace in early 80's than in early 2010's). You also somewhat liberally rounded Walton's TS% up (while rounding Kawhi's down), and further didn't take note of the difference in league avg TS%
(which would look even more in Kawhi's favor if we used rTS%).....

Per 100 possessions, "healthy" Clipper ('84-'85) Walton averaged 20.4 pts, 16.4 reb, 5.2 ast, 4.9 stl+blk, 5.3 tov @ +2.11% rTS in 3,123 minutes.
'12-'13 Kawhi per 100 possessions: 18.3 pts, 10.3 reb, 2.5 ast, 3.7 stl+blk, 1.6 tov @ +5.30% rTS in 3,344 minutes.

And Kawhi's for a much better team (where he faces potential redundancy----which can hinder his volume production----and/or more limited playing time because the team has other talents in can turn to.......issues not present for Walton on those Clipper teams).
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#18 » by dhsilv2 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 2:05 am

penbeast0 wrote:
Clyde Frazier wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
Thanks; though question: do you really think he deserved 5? I only see 4 legit All-Star seasons, much less all-NBA. I wasn't that impressed with him in Boston.


I'd have to delve further into each all NBA season to give you a thorough answer, but why weren't you really impressed with him in boston? As I said in my vote last thread, "He was an important piece for the celtics for a few seasons, and played a big role in their 81 title run. His transition into that role post prime / injury is impressive to me."


When we (the Bullets) played the Celtics, I thought of him as the weakness in that Boston lineup, not a strength. Their front line of Bird, Maxwell, and Parish was the threat, Chris Ford played nice defense, Tiny gave them a secondary playmaker and drive and dish threat. When Bird was in the game and Tiny was playmaking, it was frankly a relief and less of a threat. But he wasn't Kyrie to Bird's LeBron on that team, was was Bird's JR Smith . . . a guy who could occasionally go off but didn't scare you. I had no idea at the time why people were voting him that high except that he was a wonderful person and loved around the NBA; I still don't.


Given we have Walton and Tiny getting a lot of discussion. walton is kinda at best a neutral intangibles guy (shy guy not a leader which is pretty vanilla, but when you add in missing games likely a slight to reasonable negative). If your view is tiny was a meaningful high value locker room type, that's a pretty important advantage in their discussion.

I'm still open to an argument that Walton wasn't a slight negative in intangibles based on his narrative of himself and a reasonable assumption that it's best for star players to not miss games. Throw in the huge concerns raised about his salary demands which I kinda tend to not look at myself as I think it's off limits (gotta get your value).
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#19 » by Owly » Sat Mar 3, 2018 10:18 am

penbeast0 wrote:Mel Daniels v. Nate Archibald

...
Strength of league -- Both were expansion diluted and with a lot of guys playing to get stats hoping to jump leagues for a big payday. The early ABA was weaker but guys like Rick Barry didn't dominate to a much greater degree; if you look at the guys who jumped leagues and check out their per minute stats (many NBA guys got a chance to play greater minutes), you will find the difference is clear but not close to the difference between todays NBA and Euroleague for example.

Hmm Barry's a tricky case: in his first year his advanced stats rise substantially and to a level they wouldn't reach again, but then it's a small sample, but then the improvement comes despite a year out of competitive basketball, but then he's at an age where he'd be expected to be improving. Then for the rest of the time his numbers are more in line with his NBA stuff, although it's hard to say what (if anything) injuries in those first two ABA years did to him.

Perhaps more pertinently though, bigs leaping from the ABA to NBA saw dropoffs in productivity
Hawkins: 29.1 PER, .280 WS/48 in the two ABA years - 19.7, .147 first year in the NBA
Haywood : 28 PER, .216 WS/48 in ABA year - 19.2, .121 partial NBA year plus first full NBA year

there aren't really a load of bigs going the other way but for Zelmo Beaty
Beaty: 19.1 PER, .156 WS/48 last NBA year - 25.2, .264 first ABA year
one might also mention
Austin "Red" Robbins: NBA - drafted ... didn't make 76ers roster - 25.7, .208 first ABA year

Thus, particularly at the big positions, my perception has been that there is a gulf in quality between the early ABA and the NBA at that time. For me this only makes Daniels' relatively pedestrian metrics more damning. There is, admittedly, the possibility he's getting shorted by the absence of defensive boxscore metrics in his prime.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 #96 

Post#20 » by penbeast0 » Sat Mar 3, 2018 1:39 pm

Owly wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:Mel Daniels v. Nate Archibald

...
Strength of league -- Both were expansion diluted and with a lot of guys playing to get stats hoping to jump leagues for a big payday. The early ABA was weaker but guys like Rick Barry didn't dominate to a much greater degree; if you look at the guys who jumped leagues and check out their per minute stats (many NBA guys got a chance to play greater minutes), you will find the difference is clear but not close to the difference between todays NBA and Euroleague for example.

Hmm Barry's a tricky case: in his first year his advanced stats rise substantially and to a level they wouldn't reach again, but then it's a small sample, but then the improvement comes despite a year out of competitive basketball, but then he's at an age where he'd be expected to be improving. Then for the rest of the time his numbers are more in line with his NBA stuff, although it's hard to say what (if anything) injuries in those first two ABA years did to him.

Perhaps more pertinently though, bigs leaping from the ABA to NBA saw dropoffs in productivity
Hawkins: 29.1 PER, .280 WS/48 in the two ABA years - 19.7, .147 first year in the NBA
Haywood : 28 PER, .216 WS/48 in ABA year - 19.2, .121 partial NBA year plus first full NBA year

there aren't really a load of bigs going the other way but for Zelmo Beaty
Beaty: 19.1 PER, .156 WS/48 last NBA year - 25.2, .264 first ABA year
one might also mention
Austin "Red" Robbins: NBA - drafted ... didn't make 76ers roster - 25.7, .208 first ABA year

Thus, particularly at the big positions, my perception has been that there is a gulf in quality between the early ABA and the NBA at that time. For me this only makes Daniels' relatively pedestrian metrics more damning. There is, admittedly, the possibility he's getting shorted by the absence of defensive boxscore metrics in his prime.


Truth be told, I don't know what happened to Spencer Haywood; I expected more. But Hawkins was coming off a career threatening knee injury and actually changed both his game (moved out of the post, shot more jumpers) and his position (PF/C to SF/PF) coming into the NBA. I agree that the NBA is clearly better but, other than Kareem who is in a league of his own during the early 70s, the biggest difference was actually at guard, not center. It's surprising how weak the ABA guards were since you would think that would be the greatest talent pool and the least differential.
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