cecilthesheep wrote:Soulcatcher33 wrote:cecilthesheep wrote:Scottie Pippen
I suspect Kawhi may end up at the top of this list before his career is over, but for now Scottie's longevity at almost the same level of defense takes the cake for me.
Like most players the more energy expended on offense the less that was expended on defense. Kawhi wasn't close to the defensive player he had been before in 2017 (still very good though) and hasn't come close to even 2017 this season. It's hard to see him ever surpassing Pippen.
Pippen didn't stay the same defensive player for 10 years either though. He was really really good for a really really long time, but I think through 8 years Kawhi has peaked higher and been just a bit better on the whole - in my opinion, there's a reason Kawhi won two DPOYs and Scottie didn't. Especially given that it was probably easier for perimeter guys to win them when Scottie was breaking out than when Kawhi was. I think if Kawhi can keep playing at an All-Defense level, not necessarily a DPOY level, he will pass Scottie by the time he retires and be the greatest perimeter defender ever.
I hate Kawhi so much. I didn't like typing that.
Not really. Pippen in 94 and especially 95 is the highest any perimeter player has ever peaked defensively. He had a team who lost Jordan and Grant (the other 2/3 best defensive players of the first threepeat) as the second best defensive team in 95. Kawhi was never as good as he was those two seasons. That's disregarding the fact that Scottie regularly became even more dominant defensively in the playoffs througout his career.
















