No-more-rings wrote:Big deal.
Amare put up 37 ppg on high efficiency against Duncan
Seriously? Even ignoring Duncan’s injury, there is a clear difference between Amar’e doing that with Steve Nash overseeing the offence and
providing negative defensive value. Willis Reed was a superb defender, and I would say the indications are he was more defensively impactful than what Davis has exhibited. What a dishonest comparison.
I don’t know how much more value I should put in it just because it was done against a team with an all time defender on it. It could be due to some random variance, or the type of attention they got or what ever.
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Players are allowed to have a bad series or an outstanding one and it could just be variance like i said.
Which is why it is relevant that the very next year he won a championship.
Do you seriously not understand why it is more impressive to put up offensive numbers against top-tier defences than against mediocre or mildly positive ones?

What exactly is Davis’s playoff sample anyway?
Yes, players are “allowed” to have a bad series — Kobe was bad against the Celtics in 2008, Dirk was bad against the Heat in 2011, Garnett was not great against the Lakers in 2004, Robertson was not great against the Celtics in 1964 — but when it makes up such a large proportion of their sample, as it does with Davis, yeah, that is going to matter to me.
If that bothers you less, fine, by all means, but I have been very, very, very consistent in saying how I judge peak performance predominantly off how the player translated their performance to the playoffs.
You can’t seriously compare Davis series against the Warriors similar to Giannis vs the Bucks.
Presuming you mean Raptors, that takes us back to quality of defensive opposition. And again, defensive gap between Giannis and Davis.
KD got voted in pretty high, and he had 2 mediocre series against the Grizzlies and Spurs. If we applied strictly playoff performance there’s no way he’d go that high, but that’s just not how it works.
Oh, were we assigned a recipe? My mistake.
Vote for yourself, not off the rest of the project. A bunch of the Durant backers are gone. And I never voted for him. Because of those playoffs, I would not have voted for that year at all. I would have probably gone with 2013, but even then, nowhere near that early. I was stuck voting for Nash for ten rounds. What does that tell you about how I felt about the project’s selections during that chunk? Giannis was just admitted, without me voting for him, and I said I would have taken Giannis ahead of Durant. For me, Durant is Harden and KMalone and Davis tier, and you want to say I should vote for them because other people voted him in way too early? How does that make sense?
Look, man, I understand it is frustrating to have been stuck voting for Harden for so long. I know. Cecil knows. It sucks. But there are better routes to go about arguing for him or whoever you support with your third vote. You are better off arguing why Harden generally deserves a vote over Davis or KMalone or Howard than whatever your strategy is in arguing over
my (at this point securely established) standards. I agree it looks ridiculous for KMalone to be so far behind Barkley, and Harden to be so far behind Durant, but that is the issue with multiple voters splitting their values. I do not know why you expect me to compromise my own to simply make the list look like we all agreed more than we did.
I think you are somewhat biased against older players, and I can appreciate that, but I would hope you could appreciate the reverse. So stick to what you know and compare him with guys belonging to, or at least closer to, his era.
