#21 - GOAT peaks project (2019)

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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#41 » by cecilthesheep » Tue Sep 3, 2019 9:54 pm

E-Balla wrote:
cecilthesheep wrote:Part of this is my skepticism about advanced individual-year defensive metrics. There's just way too much random variance for me to take them as anything but secondary inputs to actual game footage, and I watched a *lot* of Spurs games that year. Kawhi was worse in 2017 than he was in 2016, sure, but saying Jonathan Simmons was a better defender just tells me that, at best, you haven't looked at Jonathan Simmons very carefully. That guy did not know what he was doing half the time, and despite his athleticism he couldn't stay in front of anyone. Had some good moments in man defense against Harden in the playoffs, I'll give him that. Dedmon was good with nice size and instincts but flawed - very foul-prone, jumped at every fake, couldn't be on the floor in important moments because of it. Green and LMA you could make better cases for, but i'm still skeptical.

In the case of Dedmon and Simmons their defensive value was mostly as bench players and you're right that they couldn't be relied on in bigger roles, but the fact they were above average defenders means they were better than Kawhi.

It's funny you're mentioning watching the games when the whole reason I started saying his defense fell off at first was because of the eye test (because I was saying it early season before the numbers were even reliable enough to read). He wasn't locking people down at all and that's where his primary defensive value comes from, then off ball they were taking him out of plays completely by putting his man in the corner.

Really that whole year the only time Kawhi was in the play was when he was doing a way worse than usual job at guarding ball handlers. Both eye test and numbers showed that.

Kawhi that year was used quite a bit as a plug to prop up lineups with old guys like Pau Gasol, Tony Parker, etc.

If true Kawhi would have a better DRTG than those guys. He doesn't. He was the worst on the team by far.

He played a lot of help defense and was used less as a shutdown corner type than in previous years (not least because the opposing team's response was often to simply remove that player from the play entirely). This all hurts surface-level assessments of him and +/- based metrics. And on top of that he didn't get over screens quite as well and got blown by a little more. None of this made him a "terrible" defender.

We saw the same thing this year. The gap in analysis here is what effect did it have on the team?

Kawhi without shutting people down loses his value on ball above the average decent defender. Kawhi without being in the play while he's off ball loses his value off ball and basically becomes neutral overall (above average or average defensively IMO). Kawhi trying to get in the play and leaving his man is giving the offense an open shot which made him a negative whenever he did that. Overall their defense with Kawhi on the floor was still good but not great like it was without him, mainly because without him being shutdown and with offenses gameplanning to force him to stick to shooters in the corner they knew he wasn't going to stick to, they were able to get easy buckets compared to what they got without Kawhi. The Spurs were an ATG defense, and offenses schemed Kawhi into being their weakness by relying on the fact he wasn't going to just sit in the corner and watch plays. Along with his bad lockdown defense due to a lack of caring and giving energy to that end it made him a hole in an otherwise untouchable defense.


meh, I think we're seeing roughly the same thing watching the games and taking way different stuff away from it. I think he's doing things that advanced numbers don't pick up on as accurately, you think he's doing things that don't make as much of a difference. If Parker can't get over a screen so Gasol has to switch onto a guard who then blows by to the rim, and Kawhi helps out of the corner to prevent the guaranteed layup, but the guard makes the right pass and Parker who's now switched onto the big is slow rotating to the corner so Kawhi has to sprint back out but can't get there in time - Kawhi takes the fall for that play, but in reality he's the only guy doing his job and he stopped a layup.

Or maybe because all the other offensive anchors on the team were retired or aging and the bench was full of a bunch of newer guys who didn't know the system like the previous iteration of the team did. The Spurs system from around 2013-15 wasn't special because nobody ever iso'd - there were always Duncan post-ups, ball-pounding possessions from Parker, etc. What the offense really depended on to be something more than that was how the team had a bunch of players who had been together forever, knew all of each other's tendencies and what to do in any given moment, could communicate instantly and at a high level. When you change personnel, you lose that.

They only lost Duncan between 2016 and 2017. Everyone aging wasn't why they did worse. Everybody aging isn't why now with Demar and Jakob replacing Kawhi and Danny their offense is better than it was in 2017. No way in hell should Kawhi with that supporting cast look that bad defensively.

Yeah, I completely disagree on the bolded. I think it was absolutely why they did worse and I think you're way underrating the Duncan communication effect on both ends. Kawhi didn't suddenly become a more iso-focused ball hog between '16 and '17 - if anything he became a more advanced passer who knew how to make more reads. The reason you saw the system break down was because Duncan had been the ace communicator on both ends for as long as Kawhi had been playing basketball. When you lose a guy like that, the system is not going to run as smoothly.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#42 » by liamliam1234 » Tue Sep 3, 2019 9:58 pm

E-balla wrote:On the other side of this, is there any doubts 2016 Kawhi could score at a high level like 2017 and 2019 Kawhi? And if there is is it only because of his PPG?


Your Kawhi takes are extremely baffling for someone who generally seems to value playoffs a lot. Why is the focus on how much Kawhi “hurt” his team’s offence during the 2017 and 2019 regular seasons... while ignoring how hard he carried them in the postseason? Speaking for the Raptors specifically, as a dedicated fan, they were absolutely useless without him before the Warriors series, and his on/off numbers indicate as much (especially on offence). When did 2016 Kawhi ever evidence any ability to take over on offence in the playoffs? How can you look at his 2016 self and sincerely go, “Yeah, this guy is basically the same scorer as he was in two of the most efficient scoring playoff runs ever?” I will tell you upfront, I would dismiss his 2019 regular season almost entirely; were it not for Lebron 2017 at least making it close, it would be by an unparalleled magnitude the single most blatant instance of regular season apathy I have ever seen.

Anyway, I think I mostly know how my vote will go, but I am still deciding between 2017 and 2019 Kawhi. Really tough to tell which was better given all the injuries.

Also, separately from the Kawhi thing, what exactly is the argument for Ewing over Gilmore?
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#43 » by E-Balla » Tue Sep 3, 2019 10:06 pm

cecilthesheep wrote:When you take an offense that lost 0.7 points of ORtg,

*fails to mention league changing rules so all ORTGs across the board were up and that actually what happened was that relative to league average they went from being +5.2 to being +2.7 meaning they were about half as good as the year before.

went from 2nd in the league to 5th,

*uses league wide rankings to ignore the major gap between the 5th and 2nd best offenses most years as if there's only a small gap between the Rockets/Warriors and the Raptors offense with Kawhi.

and didn't sputter out in the playoffs for the first time in like ever,

Like I said he raised their floor. Is that at all relevant to my main point that there's a clear ceiling that's not that high when you have 2017 and 2019 Kawhi running the offense?

and describe that as "falling off a cliff", I just cannot take it seriously. I don't get how that's anything but a manufactured point against Kawhi.

If anything was manufactured it's you picking numbers in an attempt to make Kawhi look good. Why mention raw ORTG as if that's not affected by leaguewide rule changes and we didn't have a major one this offseason? Why use where an offense ranks league wide as if that tells us anything about the actual quality of the offense year to year and not just the quality of the offense compared to other offenses in that same year?

I absolutely do not believe '16 Kawhi was anything close to the scorer he was in later years. This has nothing to do with his point totals, although those are evidence of it. Between '16 and '17 he learned to draw fouls at a high level, learned to operate out of the pick-and-roll properly whereas he had previously been getting more of his offense through the post, added about a million dribble moves, tightened up his midrange shooting, and on and on. He went from a guy who could produce in the right context to someone who could support an offense by himself.

He did learn how to draw fouls better and I'll give him that but as far as everything else goes those are only benefits if they help. Is Kawhi better in the PNR as a ball handler? Yes. Is Kawhi good enough as a PNR ball handler to justify actually using possessions that way regularly when there's other options? Hell no. Are Kawhi's new dribble moves great? Yes. Are they great enough to justify using tons of extra possessions for him to pound the air out of the ball? Nope. So at that point I start to ask my self was it that he couldn't do it before, or that Pop didn't let him because it was better for the team if Kawhi focused on other things (like his defense for example).

I mean being the primary ball handler takes a lot of energy and we all know (at least I hope we do) you get diminishing returns the more you give the ball to a player at a certain point. Are those extra scoring possessions from Kawhi worth their opportunity cost? To me looking at the offenses of the 2017 Spurs and 2019 Raptors go from things of beauty the prior seasons to ugly iso ball after running through Kawhi answers the question.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#44 » by 2klegend » Tue Sep 3, 2019 10:14 pm

Didn't have the time to participate early but at #21.

1. Barkley '93 - MVP season with a strong playoff.
2. Durant '17 - Final MVP and could easily put up better regular-season number if not for the Warriors being too stack. But 27PER + 27PER that season shows Durant didn't really drop off that much despite not fully maximizing his stat production.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#45 » by E-Balla » Tue Sep 3, 2019 10:23 pm

liamliam1234 wrote:
E-balla wrote:On the other side of this, is there any doubts 2016 Kawhi could score at a high level like 2017 and 2019 Kawhi? And if there is is it only because of his PPG?


Your Kawhi takes are extremely baffling for someone who generally seems to value playoffs a lot. Why is the focus on much Kawhi “hurt” his team’s offence during the 2017 and 2019 regular seasons... while ignoring how hard he carried them in the postseason?

Because I'm still comparing Kawhi to Kawhi here. Maybe you forgot what started this but it was me saying 2016 is his best year and I don't see why people are defaulting to 2017 and 2019 then saying he was worse than other guys those years for various reasons that don't apply to 2016. It seems like people are looking at the PPG and picking 2017 and 2019 because he wasn't averaging a whole lot in 2016.

Speaking for the Raptors specifically, as a dedicated fan, they were absolutely useless without him before the Warriors series, and his on/off numbers indicate as much (especially on offence).

How much of that was self inflicted though? Yeah they couldn't score without him on the floor, what's more relevant to me is that with him on the floor their scoring still wasn't that good. Definitely not what you'd expect with that talent around him.

When did 2016 Kawhi ever evidence any ability to take over on offence in the playoffs? How can you look at his 2016 self and sincerely go, “Yeah, this guy is basically the same scorer as he was in two of the most efficient scoring playoff runs ever?” I will tell you upfront, I would dismiss his 2019 regular season almost entirely; were it not for Lebron 2017 at least making it close, it would be by an unparalleled magnitude the single most blatant instance of regular season apathy I have ever seen.

Anyway, I think I mostly know how my vote will go, but I am still deciding between 2017 and 2019 Kawhi. Really tough to tell which was better given all the injuries.

Wrong question, the question that should be asked is whether or not Kawhi needed to take over on offense either of those years while surrounded with the good but not great offensive talent he had around him. The 2016 Spurs in the postseason was better than the 2017 Spurs and the 2019 Raptors without him taking over. Why? Because like I've been saying at a certain point he's stifling the offense and not helping it. Toronto and San Antonio both have good offensive systems in place. If Kawhi isn't allowing them to get into their sets while he's on the floor it's hard to catch that rhythm in the 6 minutes a game he's not out there.

Also, separately from the Kawhi thing, what exactly is the argument for Ewing over Gilmore?

I think he's worse on both sides of the ball and benefited from a lack of good competition at the C spot in the ABA. We saw Ewing up against Robinson, Shaq, Zo, and Hakeem but outside of Mel Daniels and Swen Nater I can't think of many Cs worth mentioning that he was up against. Once he hit the league and was playing other great Cs he paled in comparison, while Ewing for at least that one year can say he was better than 2 people already on this list.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#46 » by trex_8063 » Tue Sep 3, 2019 10:41 pm

HBK_Kliq_33 wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:
HBK_Kliq_33 wrote:
I was comparing 2017 Kawhi to 2014 Durant, the reg season gap wasn't really as massive as the playoff gap.


My bad. Still, it's a 29.8 PER, .295 WS/48, +8.8 BPM and +19 net rating in 38.5 mpg vs 27.6 PER, .264 WS/48, +7.9 BPM, and +19 net rating in 33.4 mpg (plus a mere handful more missed games).


What makes you think that's close to the playoff gap? Playoffs Leonard has a 10% better TS, 9 point better PER, 12% better freethrow rate, 4% better assist percentage, .3 and .1 more win shares and VORP despite playing 7 less games! 7 higher in BPM

https://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.fcgi?request=1&sum=0&player_id1_hint=Kawhi+Leonard&player_id1_select=Kawhi+Leonard&player_id1=leonaka01&idx=players&y1=2017&player_id2_hint=Kevin+Durant&player_id2_select=Kevin+Durant&player_id2=duranke01&idx=players&y2=2014

Do you really think the gaps on regular season and playoffs are the same? The only way Durant could have overcame that type of playoff gap in stats is if he won the championship or at least get to the finals.


Might consider [as I did above] that these things we're citing are rate metrics. The gap we see in the rs figures are despite Durant playing +5.1 mpg [or at any rate, it's that much more value added relative to Kawhi].
The gap in the playoff numbers are with Kawhi playing -7.1 mpg. Fatigue and wear/tear are likely larger issues for one more so than the other.


And as others have mentioned, Kawhi tends to be a bit more of a ball-stopper, which I don't think lends itself to great team offense as well as an off-ball scorer (unless you're also a fine playmaker; Kawhi is not).
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#47 » by liamliam1234 » Tue Sep 3, 2019 10:43 pm

Fair point against Gilmore.

For Kawhi, no, that really comes across as a classic blogboi take. I would love for you to find me a single Raptors fan who thought the Raptors playoff offence could function at its Kawhi level if he were off the team. That is akin to looking at the Utah Jazz and assuming they should be this strong playoff offence because they know how to get to the perfect statistical spot in the regular season. We did not have scorers on that team. Siakam is a decent second option, and everyone else is a role player scorer at best. And that is true of the Spurs, albeit to a lesser extent. Time and time again we see the need to rely on guys who can just get a bucket in the playoffs; I thought that was part of why you were down on Curry? The Spurs did not lose that 2016 series against the Thunder because it was simply not the “plan” to have Kawhi score an efficient thirty points per game; that is nonsense. If Kawhi could have taken over, that would have been welcomed. But he could not, so he did not, and they lost comfortably, and he was generally only the third best guy on the floor. A year later, that was no longer the case, and he has basically performed like the best guy on the floor every series since (with 2019 Curry being his only real competition).

Also, during these past playoffs, Kawhi really was not a ballstopper. Everyone was pretty useless against the Magic and especially the 76ers, even when Kawhi tried to get them involved, and then late in the Bucks and Warriors series Kawhi’s step back in scoring coincided with some increased passing. Which I suppose may as well settle as the tiebreaker for me between his two potential peak years.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#48 » by euroleague » Tue Sep 3, 2019 10:49 pm

I’d take KD by a lot over Kawhi because of the playmaking and teamplay difference. In 2014 KD carried playmaking duties at an elite level, and he has become an elite rim protector. Kawhi doesn’t pass, and his terrible help defense causes his team to not benefit as much as it should from his elite man defense. Duncan covered a lot of those flaws.

My vote:

1. 81 Moses Malone - great playoff run, dominant anchor for his team offensively where he demanded unreal amounts of attention despite playing against elite centers.

2. 98 Karl Malone - his elite midrange game and passing out of the high post is a skill set he honed to perfection, despite it not being his natural strength, and one that shows his ability to become absolutely elite in PF facets of the game to help his team. His unselfish play, scoring, and playmaking aren’t that flashy and appealing to the eye... but, it’s incredibly effective and consistent. Probably the 2nd most dominant offensive PF behind Barkley, but far better defensively.

3. 82 Moses Malone - a dominant regular season and decent postseason, this is a great year in scoring which actually gets underrated, when you consider how much of his own misses he recovered through ORB and converted. I’ll put this over 83, as he was on a far less talented team and arguably more dominant
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#49 » by HBK_Kliq_33 » Tue Sep 3, 2019 11:36 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
HBK_Kliq_33 wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:
My bad. Still, it's a 29.8 PER, .295 WS/48, +8.8 BPM and +19 net rating in 38.5 mpg vs 27.6 PER, .264 WS/48, +7.9 BPM, and +19 net rating in 33.4 mpg (plus a mere handful more missed games).


What makes you think that's close to the playoff gap? Playoffs Leonard has a 10% better TS, 9 point better PER, 12% better freethrow rate, 4% better assist percentage, .3 and .1 more win shares and VORP despite playing 7 less games! 7 higher in BPM

https://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.fcgi?request=1&sum=0&player_id1_hint=Kawhi+Leonard&player_id1_select=Kawhi+Leonard&player_id1=leonaka01&idx=players&y1=2017&player_id2_hint=Kevin+Durant&player_id2_select=Kevin+Durant&player_id2=duranke01&idx=players&y2=2014

Do you really think the gaps on regular season and playoffs are the same? The only way Durant could have overcame that type of playoff gap in stats is if he won the championship or at least get to the finals.


Might consider [as I did above] that these things we're citing are rate metrics. The gap we see in the rs figures are despite Durant playing +5.1 mpg [or at any rate, it's that much more value added relative to Kawhi].
The gap in the playoff numbers are with Kawhi playing -7.1 mpg. Fatigue and wear/tear are likely larger issues for one more so than the other.


[b]And as others have mentioned, Kawhi tends to be a bit more of a ball-stopper, which I don't think lends itself to great team offense as well as an off-ball scorer (unless you're also a fine playmaker; Kawhi is not)[/b].


I don't buy into this at all, since Kawhi has taken over as the number one scoring option in 2017 his team has never lost a playoff series. Ball stoppers is a negative term for such a winner like Kawhi. I also think Kawhi's off ball play is very underrated as he's a great spot up shooter (rookie season he was a spot up shooter mostly and has brought that with him even as a superstar) when being set up or he can slash hard without the ball and get set up by big man like he did with Gasol. Spurs just never had a good playmaker in 2017 to set up Leonard but he did get set up plenty by Lowry. He's no where close to the ball stopper of a Harden or even a Durant. Leonard also has never played along another offensive superstar, so he has to have a high usage and control the pace a lot more than usual.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#50 » by HBK_Kliq_33 » Tue Sep 3, 2019 11:38 pm

euroleague wrote:I’d take KD by a lot over Kawhi because of the playmaking and teamplay difference. In 2014 KD carried playmaking duties at an elite level, and he has become an elite rim protector. Kawhi doesn’t pass, and his terrible help defense causes his team to not benefit as much as it should from his elite man defense. Duncan covered a lot of those flaws.

My vote:

1. 81 Moses Malone - great playoff run, dominant anchor for his team offensively where he demanded unreal amounts of attention despite playing against elite centers.

2. 98 Karl Malone - his elite midrange game and passing out of the high post is a skill set he honed to perfection, despite it not being his natural strength, and one that shows his ability to become absolutely elite in PF facets of the game to help his team. His unselfish play, scoring, and playmaking aren’t that flashy and appealing to the eye... but, it’s incredibly effective and consistent. Probably the 2nd most dominant offensive PF behind Barkley, but far better defensively.

3. 82 Moses Malone - a dominant regular season and decent postseason, this is a great year in scoring which actually gets underrated, when you consider how much of his own misses he recovered through ORB and converted. I’ll put this over 83, as he was on a far less talented team and arguably more dominant


But when it came to the playoffs, Leonard was the better playmaker and even averaged 6 assists during the Rockets series. Go check their assist percentage numbers.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#51 » by E-Balla » Tue Sep 3, 2019 11:44 pm

liamliam1234 wrote:For Kawhi, no, that really comes across as a classic blogboi take. I would love for you to find me a single Raptors fan who thought the Raptors playoff offence could function at its Kawhi level if he were off the team.

Wrong question. Again we're comparing Kawhi to himself in 2016. The question to ask Rap fans isn't whether or not the offense would be better without him but whether or not the offense would be better if he played within it and didn't isolate or run the PNR from behind the arc nearly as much.

Then of course we can all agree 2016 Kawhi would vastly improve the defense.

I think a big gap here is people thinking 2016 Kawhi couldn't do things offensively just because he played within the system and didn't do it as much because Pop reigned him in. Kawhi was in the 97th percentile as a PNR ball handler in the 2016 playoffs in 4 possessions a night. He was in the 95th percentile on 2.5 possessions a night in the regular season. Now he's in the 91st percentile with 6 possessions a night and in the playoffs he was in the 87th percentile in 7.5 possessions a night. In 2017 he was in the 93rd percentile in 5.5 possessions a night and in the playoffs he was in the 93rd percentile in 7 possessions a night. Is he improved to any meaningful degree, or has he just started doing it more? It's not like his efficiency in the PNR or isolation is up, just his volume is, and with it his team offenses are down.

And that is true of the Spurs, albeit to a lesser extent.

Lamarcus Aldridge isn't a scorer? Hell I mean last year Lamarcus led an offense just as good as the one Kawhi led, and Kawhi had more talent around him than LMA did by a mile.

Time and time again we see the need to rely on guys who can just get a bucket in the playoffs; I thought that was part of why you were down on Curry?

I wasn't down on Curry at all for his scoring. If I was I'd be crazy, because even in 2016 when he was probably a net negative he was scoring well. 23 ppg on 58 TS% is good scoring production. His 26 ppg on 59 TS% in the 2015 Finals was great scoring production. His 31 ppg on 60 TS% in the 2019 Finals is tremendous. I criticized his decision making, playmaking, and passing, which happen to be the same things I'm criticizing Kawhi for.

The Spurs did not lose that 2016 series against the Thunder because it was simply not the “plan” to have Kawhi score an efficient thirty points per game; that is nonsense. If Kawhi could have taken over, that would have been welcomed.

If he could've taken over but it would mean the offense is worse for it, it wouldn't be welcomed at all.

You act like this is such a novel premise, did Phil not get Jordan and Kobe the ball less? Did he not find the perfect balance between their primacy and the health of the overall offense? What about Kerr and Curry? Hannum and Wilt? Why is it so absurd to think Pop didn't do it with Kawhi? Is it them not winning it all? Do you think Toronto would've beat the 2016 Thunder?

But he could not, so he did not, and they lost comfortably, and he was generally only the third best guy on the floor. A year later, that was no longer the case, and he has basically performed like the best guy on the floor every series since (with 2019 Curry being his only real competition).

If we're talking offensively only he was worse than both Curry and Klay in these last Finals. Either way has Kawhi even been in series against/with guys as accomplished as Westbrook, LMA, and KD since 2016 outside of Curry and Klay? Of course he's been the arguable best player in each series since then, he's never been against 2 MVPs since then. KD in his half game back was lighting Kawhi up again actually.

Also, during these past playoffs, Kawhi really was not a ballstopper. Everyone was pretty useless against the Magic and especially the 76ers, even when Kawhi tried to get them involved, and then late in the Bucks and Warriors series Kawhi’s step back in scoring coincided with some increased passing. Which I suppose may as well settle as the tiebreaker for me between his two potential peak years.

He was definitely a ball stopper and practically everyone was discussing it just a few months ago.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#52 » by HBK_Kliq_33 » Tue Sep 3, 2019 11:46 pm

liamliam1234 wrote:Fair point against Gilmore.

For Kawhi, no, that really comes across as a classic blogboi take. I would love for you to find me a single Raptors fan who thought the Raptors playoff offence could function at its Kawhi level if he were off the team. That is akin to looking at the Utah Jazz and assuming they should be this strong playoff offence because they know how to get to the perfect statistical spot in the regular season. We did not have scorers on that team. Siakam is a decent second option, and everyone else is a role player scorer at best. And that is true of the Spurs, albeit to a lesser extent. Time and time again we see the need to rely on guys who can just get a bucket in the playoffs; I thought that was part of why you were down on Curry? The Spurs did not lose that 2016 series against the Thunder because it was simply not the “plan” to have Kawhi score an efficient thirty points per game; that is nonsense. If Kawhi could have taken over, that would have been welcomed. But he could not, so he did not, and they lost comfortably, and he was generally only the third best guy on the floor. A year later, that was no longer the case, and he has basically performed like the best guy on the floor every series since (with 2019 Curry being his only real competition).

Also, during these past playoffs, Kawhi really was not a ballstopper. Everyone was pretty useless against the Magic and especially the 76ers, even when Kawhi tried to get them involved, and then late in the Bucks and Warriors series Kawhi’s step back in scoring coincided with some increased passing. Which I suppose may as well settle as the tiebreaker for me between his two potential peak years.


2016 gets blown out of proportion by KD fans. That was pre offensive peak years for Kawhi and Durant was in his peak. Their numbers that series:

Kawhi Leonard: 23 points on 48/28/75 shooting splits.
Kevin Durant: 28 points on 50/29/89 shooting splits.

All Durant did was basically shoot better freethrows. Compare that to Leonard vs Embiid or Leonard vs Giannis 2019 and it's a big difference.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#53 » by E-Balla » Tue Sep 3, 2019 11:53 pm

euroleague wrote:I’d take KD by a lot over Kawhi because of the playmaking and teamplay difference. In 2014 KD carried playmaking duties at an elite level, and he has become an elite rim protector. Kawhi doesn’t pass, and his terrible help defense causes his team to not benefit as much as it should from his elite man defense. Duncan covered a lot of those flaws.

My vote:

1. 81 Moses Malone - great playoff run, dominant anchor for his team offensively where he demanded unreal amounts of attention despite playing against elite centers.

2. 98 Karl Malone - his elite midrange game and passing out of the high post is a skill set he honed to perfection, despite it not being his natural strength, and one that shows his ability to become absolutely elite in PF facets of the game to help his team. His unselfish play, scoring, and playmaking aren’t that flashy and appealing to the eye... but, it’s incredibly effective and consistent. Probably the 2nd most dominant offensive PF behind Barkley, but far better defensively.

3. 82 Moses Malone - a dominant regular season and decent postseason, this is a great year in scoring which actually gets underrated, when you consider how much of his own misses he recovered through ORB and converted. I’ll put this over 83, as he was on a far less talented team and arguably more dominant

Karl Malone????? I'm completely shocked, I didn't expect him to get votes until the late 30s, maybe 40s.

Why 98 Malone over Alonzo either that same year or 99? Is the fight and suspension the deal breaker?
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#54 » by HBK_Kliq_33 » Wed Sep 4, 2019 12:10 am

E-Balla wrote:
liamliam1234 wrote:For Kawhi, no, that really comes across as a classic blogboi take. I would love for you to find me a single Raptors fan who thought the Raptors playoff offence could function at its Kawhi level if he were off the team.

Wrong question. Again we're comparing Kawhi to himself in 2016. The question to ask Rap fans isn't whether or not the offense would be better without him but whether or not the offense would be better if he played within it and didn't isolate or run the PNR from behind the arc nearly as much.

Then of course we can all agree 2016 Kawhi would vastly improve the defense.

I think a big gap here is people thinking 2016 Kawhi couldn't do things offensively just because he played within the system and didn't do it as much because Pop reigned him in. Kawhi was in the 97th percentile as a PNR ball handler in the 2016 playoffs in 4 possessions a night. He was in the 95th percentile on 2.5 possessions a night in the regular season. Now he's in the 91st percentile with 6 possessions a night and in the playoffs he was in the 87th percentile in 7.5 possessions a night. In 2017 he was in the 93rd percentile in 5.5 possessions a night and in the playoffs he was in the 93rd percentile in 7 possessions a night. Is he improved to any meaningful degree, or has he just started doing it more? It's not like his efficiency in the PNR or isolation is up, just his volume is, and with it his team offenses are down.

And that is true of the Spurs, albeit to a lesser extent.

Lamarcus Aldridge isn't a scorer? Hell I mean last year Lamarcus led an offense just as good as the one Kawhi led, and Kawhi had more talent around him than LMA did by a mile.

Time and time again we see the need to rely on guys who can just get a bucket in the playoffs; I thought that was part of why you were down on Curry?

I wasn't down on Curry at all for his scoring. If I was I'd be crazy, because even in 2016 when he was probably a net negative he was scoring well. 23 ppg on 58 TS% is good scoring production. His 26 ppg on 59 TS% in the 2015 Finals was great scoring production. His 31 ppg on 60 TS% in the 2019 Finals is tremendous. I criticized his decision making, playmaking, and passing, which happen to be the same things I'm criticizing Kawhi for.

The Spurs did not lose that 2016 series against the Thunder because it was simply not the “plan” to have Kawhi score an efficient thirty points per game; that is nonsense. If Kawhi could have taken over, that would have been welcomed.

If he could've taken over but it would mean the offense is worse for it, it wouldn't be welcomed at all.

You act like this is such a novel premise, did Phil not get Jordan and Kobe the ball less? Did he not find the perfect balance between their primacy and the health of the overall offense? What about Kerr and Curry? Hannum and Wilt? Why is it so absurd to think Pop didn't do it with Kawhi? Is it them not winning it all? Do you think Toronto would've beat the 2016 Thunder?

But he could not, so he did not, and they lost comfortably, and he was generally only the third best guy on the floor. A year later, that was no longer the case, and he has basically performed like the best guy on the floor every series since (with 2019 Curry being his only real competition).

If we're talking offensively only he was worse than both Curry and Klay in these last Finals. Either way has Kawhi even been in series against/with guys as accomplished as Westbrook, LMA, and KD since 2016 outside of Curry and Klay? Of course he's been the arguable best player in each series since then, he's never been against 2 MVPs since then. KD in his half game back was lighting Kawhi up again actually.

Also, during these past playoffs, Kawhi really was not a ballstopper. Everyone was pretty useless against the Magic and especially the 76ers, even when Kawhi tried to get them involved, and then late in the Bucks and Warriors series Kawhi’s step back in scoring coincided with some increased passing. Which I suppose may as well settle as the tiebreaker for me between his two potential peak years.

He was definitely a ball stopper and practically everyone was discussing it just a few months ago.


Curry never outplayed Kawhi in the finals, you're stretching again here and showing your bias against Kawhi.

Kawhi in finals: 28 points on 60% TS 122 offensive rating
Curry in finals: 30 points on 59% TS 119 offensive rating
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#55 » by euroleague » Wed Sep 4, 2019 12:22 am

E-Balla wrote:
euroleague wrote:I’d take KD by a lot over Kawhi because of the playmaking and teamplay difference. In 2014 KD carried playmaking duties at an elite level, and he has become an elite rim protector. Kawhi doesn’t pass, and his terrible help defense causes his team to not benefit as much as it should from his elite man defense. Duncan covered a lot of those flaws.

My vote:

1. 81 Moses Malone - great playoff run, dominant anchor for his team offensively where he demanded unreal amounts of attention despite playing against elite centers.

2. 98 Karl Malone - his elite midrange game and passing out of the high post is a skill set he honed to perfection, despite it not being his natural strength, and one that shows his ability to become absolutely elite in PF facets of the game to help his team. His unselfish play, scoring, and playmaking aren’t that flashy and appealing to the eye... but, it’s incredibly effective and consistent. Probably the 2nd most dominant offensive PF behind Barkley, but far better defensively.

3. 82 Moses Malone - a dominant regular season and decent postseason, this is a great year in scoring which actually gets underrated, when you consider how much of his own misses he recovered through ORB and converted. I’ll put this over 83, as he was on a far less talented team and arguably more dominant

Karl Malone????? I'm completely shocked, I didn't expect him to get votes until the late 30s, maybe 40s.

Why 98 Malone over Alonzo either that same year or 99? Is the fight and suspension the deal breaker?

Alonzo Mourning is very limited offensively, and as a defensive anchor he’s great but his impact has limitations a great offensive team player doesn’t have.

Malone torched Duncan in 98, swept Shaq, and should’ve beaten the Bulls except for a no-call on an offensive foul by MJ on the last shot. Rodman couldn’t phase him.

Malone is often criticized as a system player - but that’s because he built his skills to fit the system. Mourning never developed the elite post game his team needed. Karl Malone was worse than Mourning in 99, but definitely not in 98
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#56 » by E-Balla » Wed Sep 4, 2019 1:27 am

euroleague wrote:
E-Balla wrote:
euroleague wrote:I’d take KD by a lot over Kawhi because of the playmaking and teamplay difference. In 2014 KD carried playmaking duties at an elite level, and he has become an elite rim protector. Kawhi doesn’t pass, and his terrible help defense causes his team to not benefit as much as it should from his elite man defense. Duncan covered a lot of those flaws.

My vote:

1. 81 Moses Malone - great playoff run, dominant anchor for his team offensively where he demanded unreal amounts of attention despite playing against elite centers.

2. 98 Karl Malone - his elite midrange game and passing out of the high post is a skill set he honed to perfection, despite it not being his natural strength, and one that shows his ability to become absolutely elite in PF facets of the game to help his team. His unselfish play, scoring, and playmaking aren’t that flashy and appealing to the eye... but, it’s incredibly effective and consistent. Probably the 2nd most dominant offensive PF behind Barkley, but far better defensively.

3. 82 Moses Malone - a dominant regular season and decent postseason, this is a great year in scoring which actually gets underrated, when you consider how much of his own misses he recovered through ORB and converted. I’ll put this over 83, as he was on a far less talented team and arguably more dominant

Karl Malone????? I'm completely shocked, I didn't expect him to get votes until the late 30s, maybe 40s.

Why 98 Malone over Alonzo either that same year or 99? Is the fight and suspension the deal breaker?

Alonzo Mourning is very limited offensively, and as a defensive anchor he’s great but his impact has limitations a great offensive team player doesn’t have.

As limited as Zo was it's not like Malone wasn't also limited. There's a reason his postseason production wasn't all that. Outside of the Lakers series he wasn't producing at Zo's level at all in the 98 postseason.

Malone torched Duncan in 98,

What? His team won against rookie Duncan but individually Malone got crushed. Karl averaged 24.6 ppg on 46.3 TS%. They won because his team was better.

swept Shaq, and should’ve beaten the Bulls except for a no-call on an offensive foul by MJ on the last shot. Rodman couldn’t phase him.

He won, but he didn't play good enough to be this high.

Malone is often criticized as a system player - but that’s because he built his skills to fit the system. Mourning never developed the elite post game his team needed. Karl Malone was worse than Mourning in 99, but definitely not in 98

Karl is a better offensive player. No one will argue against that. Zo is miles better on defense though, and Karl's offense isn't the greatest either. He played his whole career with Stockton and couldn't be a consistent postseason performer. Imagine him without a top 10 passer ever.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#57 » by Sublime187 » Wed Sep 4, 2019 3:58 am

Agree with E in that Malone should not be close yet. I mean he struggled mightily on the playoffs. For a guy like D Rob he had the defense but for Malone he is not all time there either.

I think guys like Moses and Ewing be before him IMO.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#58 » by JordansBulls » Wed Sep 4, 2019 4:21 am

Malone beat prime Shaq, Hakeem, Robinson/Duncan in the same playoffs. All of which were on title teams.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#59 » by euroleague » Wed Sep 4, 2019 4:26 am

E-Balla wrote:
euroleague wrote:
E-Balla wrote:Karl Malone????? I'm completely shocked, I didn't expect him to get votes until the late 30s, maybe 40s.

Why 98 Malone over Alonzo either that same year or 99? Is the fight and suspension the deal breaker?

Alonzo Mourning is very limited offensively, and as a defensive anchor he’s great but his impact has limitations a great offensive team player doesn’t have.

As limited as Zo was it's not like Malone wasn't also limited. There's a reason his postseason production wasn't all that. Outside of the Lakers series he wasn't producing at Zo's level at all in the 98 postseason.

Malone torched Duncan in 98,

What? His team won against rookie Duncan but individually Malone got crushed. Karl averaged 24.6 ppg on 46.3 TS%. They won because his team was better.

swept Shaq, and should’ve beaten the Bulls except for a no-call on an offensive foul by MJ on the last shot. Rodman couldn’t phase him.

He won, but he didn't play good enough to be this high.

Malone is often criticized as a system player - but that’s because he built his skills to fit the system. Mourning never developed the elite post game his team needed. Karl Malone was worse than Mourning in 99, but definitely not in 98

Karl is a better offensive player. No one will argue against that. Zo is miles better on defense though, and Karl's offense isn't the greatest either. He played his whole career with Stockton and couldn't be a consistent postseason performer. Imagine him without a top 10 passer ever.


Malone in his prime destroyed David Robinson head to head. The TS% of the 90s wasn’t great, and he averaged that 25/10/4 drawing Duncan and DRob out of the paint.. facilitating Stockton’s pick and roll.

Malone was the first PF who specialized in drawing defenses out of the paint and hitting cutters. His playmaking was of similar impact to his scoring.

Lastly, Duncan’s team was definitely better than Karl Malone’s. 98 David Robinson beats 98 Stockton by quite a bit. Avery Johnson and Will Purdue were not far off of old Hornacek and Byron Russell. Vinny Del Negro was better than Ostertag by quite a lot.

Rookie Duncan was arguably in his early prime already at 22 years old.
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Re: #21 - GOAT peaks project (2019) 

Post#60 » by liamliam1234 » Wed Sep 4, 2019 5:58 am

E-Balla wrote:Again we're comparing Kawhi to himself in 2016. The question to ask Rap fans isn't whether or not the offense would be better without him but whether or not the offense would be better if he played within it and didn't isolate or run the PNR from behind the arc nearly as much.

Then of course we can all agree 2016 Kawhi would vastly improve the defense.

I think a big gap here is people thinking 2016 Kawhi couldn't do things offensively just because he played within the system and didn't do it as much because Pop reigned him in. Kawhi was in the 97th percentile as a PNR ball handler in the 2016 playoffs in 4 possessions a night. He was in the 95th percentile on 2.5 possessions a night in the regular season. Now he's in the 91st percentile with 6 possessions a night and in the playoffs he was in the 87th percentile in 7.5 possessions a night. In 2017 he was in the 93rd percentile in 5.5 possessions a night and in the playoffs he was in the 93rd percentile in 7 possessions a night. Is he improved to any meaningful degree, or has he just started doing it more? It's not like his efficiency in the PNR or isolation is up, just his volume is, and with it his team offenses are down.

...

If he could've taken over but it would mean the offense is worse for it, it wouldn't be welcomed at all.

You act like this is such a novel premise, did Phil not get Jordan and Kobe the ball less? Did he not find the perfect balance between their primacy and the health of the overall offense? What about Kerr and Curry? Hannum and Wilt? Why is it so absurd to think Pop didn't do it with Kawhi? Is it them not winning it all? Do you think Toronto would've beat the 2016 Thunder?


Then your premise is that Kawhi, in the span of an offseason, became a selfish stat-padder and Popovich was too scared to reign him in. Again, you throw all these regular season numbers out as if any Spurs fan would tell you, “Yeah, Kawhi was better when he was scoring 22.5 playoff points per game on 60% true shooting than he was when scoring 28 points per game on 67% true shooting.” That is not Jordan or Kobe level suppression. That is increasing volume by twenty-five percent while increasing efficiency. And to prove it was not a total fluke, his next playoff run increased the volume even further while still maintaining efficiency above his 2016 self (against several of the league’s top defences, no less). You complain about his playmaking when he was demonstrably a better and more willing passer in both superstar playoff runs than in 2016.

Again, find me a Spurs fan who thinks he was better in 2016. Or a beat reporter. Any reputable analyst. This is a hot take just for the sake of hot takes (for the sake of curiosity, even a disreputable analyst offering this take would be interesting, because then we might see people respond to it). It would be one thing if you wanted to argue his defensive slip is worse than his offensive improvement; I would disagree, but that at least would be an honest case to be made. But no, you talk about disrupting motion offences as if the Spurs were better for having willing passer Demar over him, or as if the Raptors have ever shown signs of any individual/team scoring translating well to the playoffs. It is profoundly ahistorical. Kawhi had two of the single most efficient high-volume scoring postseasons in NBA history, and you complain about him having more of a black hole effect than Moses Malone? Come off it.

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