penbeast0 wrote:SkyHookFTW wrote:It comes down to Thurmond vs. Ewing for me. As a man/post defender Thurmond has the edge, and I will go by my eye test and what his contemporaries said about his play. Thurmond was also a very good shot blocker for a good portion of his career, getting 12 blocks in a game that became the first time a player recorded an official NBA quad-double (Bill and Wilt probably did it but we have no official block numbers from their playing days). I consider Ewing to be the better team/help defender.
I turned to rebounding for an additional insight. Frog said something about Thurmond and Ewing's rebounding numbers to be about the same while citing the incompleteness of data for Thurmond, so I took it in a different direction.
Going by regular season numbers, Thurmond played 35881 minutes while gathering 14464 boards in those minutes. That comes out to about 0.405 of a rebound for every minute played. Ewing played 40594 minutes while gathering 11607 boards, which comes out to 0.285 of a rebound for every minute played. Rebounding splits appear to be about equal between offensive and defensive rebounds, so I would conclude that Thurmond simply gathered more rebounds, and thus more defensive rebounds over a similar time on the court than Ewing did.
I think it's close, but my vote goes to Nate Thurmond.
Did you adjust for rebound availability? Nate played in a faster paced era with lower efficiency percentages, there were appreciably more rebounds available. Not sure whether that's enough to erase Nate's edge, but looking at Rodman v. Wilt/Russell, that plus adjusting for Wilt/Russell playing bigger minutes was enough to erase a 7 or 8 rebound per game edge to the 60s stars and make the all-time rebound rate leaders (that I have checked) Rodman, then Russell, then Wilt and bring some other guys within reach of Wilt and Russell in a way that raw rebounds or rebounds per game don't come close to (there's also questions about team rebounds which were counted differently, etc.). There was a nice article pinned on the statistical analysis board by TrueLAFan looking at this question.
I did some quick numbers using Thurmond's last prime years (71-73, which we have data on). It's a rough adjustment based on Ewing's and late prime Thurmond's rebound%. FWIW Thurmond's late prime rb% is the same as prime Ewing's, and he was rebounding more when younger.
Rebounds per 75 poss Ewing 87-95 / Thurmond 65-73 adjusted (Thurmond unadjusted)
9.2 12.4 (13.2)
8.9 12.3 (13.1)
10.4 13.2 (14.1)
11.0 13.7 (14.7)
11.3 12.6 (13.4)
12.5 11.5 (12.3)
11.6 10.0 (10.7)
11.7 11.1 (11.9)
13.2 12.7 (13.6)

























