Post#25 » by LA Bird » Sat Oct 5, 2019 12:03 am
1. 2015 Chris Paul
Paul's offensive style has changed over time but I think the bigger difference comes on the defensive end. Even though he had higher steal numbers early on, +/- metrics suggest Paul's defense peaked during his later Clippers years. 2015 is the only season of him around that time frame not missing a lot of RS minutes (though he did two miss playoff games). The advanced stats don't really stand out compared to his other seasons but the team performance of the 2015 Clippers was incredible. They had a +12.5 offense with Paul on-court, which is on par with the Warriors' +12.6 offense with 2016 Curry during his insane regular season. I think (correct me if I am wrong) Paul's +19.5 offensive on/off is still the highest yet recorded and he is the only player left besides 2016 Draymond to have a +20 or above overall on/off. On top of the elite offense, Paul was also one of the top defensive point guards in the league. He had a pretty good playoffs performance though his missed games probably cost them the series (then again, they most likely would have advanced if the Rockets hadn't magically pulled out a 40 point 4th quarter comeback without Harden out of nowhere).
2. 2005 Steve Nash
2007 has a case as Nash's best season since he had career highs in assists per game, TS%, box ORtg and OBPM and had the best postseason in ElGee's playmaking metric. However, I think arguments for Nash should be more based on his impact on team offenses than individual statistics in which case 2005 is pretty tough to beat. In the regular season, 05 Nash had an on-court rORtg of +14.2, highest ever just ahead of 18 Curry. In the playoffs is where the Suns offense really exploded. By series, the 2005 Suns offense was +21.9 vs Grizzlies, +14.8 vs Mavs, +15.2 vs Spurs for an overall +17 in the postseason. It is the single most dominant playoff run on either ends of the floor in ElGee's spreadsheets, topping even Bill Russell (-14.1 defense in 1964). Magic's best postseason offense (1987) was a +10.7 for comparison. In 2007, the Suns postseason offense was only +6.7 vs Lakers and +7.9 vs Spurs for an overall +7.6. The 07 Suns did have a better defense than in 05 and were comparable overall in both the regular season and playoffs SRS but with Nash being a heavily offense-only player, I give him less credit for the better team defense in 07 than the better team offense in 05. All else being equal, I also value extreme one-end dominance more than comparable two-way play which gives 05 Nash the edge here over his 07 version (might expand upon this idea more in a later post).
3. 2009 Chris Paul
Could be persuaded to change this into 08 Paul but this is currently the highest season left in my seasonal ratings. The playoffs performance was indeed awful but it's only 1 series. Curry in the 2016 Finals wasn't much better and he was voted in a long time ago based on his regular season performance. Personally, I don't penalize guys like 94 Robinson, 07 Dirk or 09 Paul too much for 1 round of poor playoffs performance after they put up incredible regular season performances for ~80 games. Before 2016 Curry came along, 09 Paul's advanced stats and on/off were basically the gold standard for point guards. Some of his stats have since been overshadowed by Curry and Westbrook but this was still an incredible regular season. Defense was better than in 08, which gives it a slight edge even after penalizing for the playoffs.
I wouldn't mind seeing 49 Mikan voted here either, even though I personally don't rank seasons that early.