FrogBros4Life wrote:trex_8063 wrote:As I mentioned in last thread, was re-watching G5 of the 1994 Knicks/Pacers series, and Ewing looks fantastic to me. I'll scout just a few plays in the early going to illustrate what I mean....
Great post, Trex. The vid you posted is a nice example of how defensive activity doesn't always show up in a box score, and Ewing was always extremely active on the defensive side of the ball. Wallace was an active defender as well, but I just don't think his defensive influence was as prominent all over the court in the same way that Ewing's was. I think Wallace simply "stood out" more on the court to those who were watching him play. With his hair, headband, and muscle man arm bands...he was almost like a WWF/WWE character. This doesn't take away from his impact (the same thing applies to someone like Rodman -- who actually had a wrestling career fwiw), but it does tend to shape our perceptions of a player in a way that goes
beyond impact. We all remember Wallace as this great shot blocker, swatting everything that was put up at the rim, but every shot blocking metric we have rates Ewing ahead in that department. Where Wallace is really undervalued as a defender is as a ball thief. He was terrific at jumping the lanes, and even better at poking the ball away from behind after his man received the ball on a post up.
Wallace was a great reactionary defender, stopping plays while they were in motion. Ewing was a more mindful defender (great spatial awareness), better at preventing a play from ever gaining traction within the offense. Wallace's defense was like the other team hitting a roadblock. Ewing's defense would gum up the other team's engine. His impact was there, bubbling under the surface in ways that didn't automatically catch your eye like Wallace's.
Ewing was one of the best defensive players of all time at the college level, and some people are acting as if he somehow forgot how to play defense at the pro level, or at least became appreciably worse. I don't see that as being the case. Wallace's NBA defense actually reminds me a lot of how Ewing played defense at Georgetown, stylistically speaking. But NBA Ewing became a much smarter defender, even if he wasn't as explosive.
Vote: Ewing (Wallace gets my vote next round).
Well put. This very nicely expresses what I see watching them too.
Ewing appears very aware of what's transpiring on the court, and uses his spatial awareness and intelligent positioning to "gum up" (to use your words) the works of opposing teams, essentially busting up a play before it ever has a chance [to use your words again] to "gain traction". This kind of defense is probably a bit less apparent to a casual viewer (occasionally even to a more studious fan).
Wallace appears a little less aware to me, and more reacts to situations as they're occurring, relying to some degree on his athleticism to throw up a road-block at the last possible second.
I can't say for certain if one style is more effective than the other, and perhaps I simply have a bias toward more "cerebral" defenders. But these observations are part of what makes me favor Ewing slightly (that and the longevity edge), as I can observe a more consistent play-to-play impact, even if Wallace does come up with more highlight reel plays.
My impression (at the time) was that Wallace was swatting away everything that came close to him during his prime. But I just looked, and his avg per 100 possessions from '01-'07 is 3.9 blk (same as '88-'97 Ewing), and his BLK% in that period is 5.4% ('88-'97 Ewing was 5.1%). So it's basically identical to Ewing's (which is notably behind guys like Robinson, Hakeem, and Dikembe).
You're right about him generating a fair number of turnovers. In the game I scouted, I noted he'd regularly take a poke at the ball from behind when his man received it in the post. The other thing he did a few times when being posted up is set up behind his man, wait until the entry pass is in the air, and then try to quickly slip around his man's shoulder to tip away the entry pass. Didn't always work, but often did.
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