E-Balla wrote:Because the impact of a PG, especially a playmaking PG, goes beyond their scoring. He still averaged 8.3 apg, 2.5 topg, and had a 108 ORTG despite his terrible scoring (also let's not pretend a 108 ORTG on high volume is bad, or that him having such high playmaking volume and skills didn't help his teammates be more efficient). The game is beyond the numbers, if Zeke was scoring near his regular efficiency (53 TS%) his ORTG would've been around a 120 because of his great playmaking.
I get it... Isiah was the primary playmaker on that Pistons squad and deserves to get credited for that... What i'm asking is why are the rest of the supporting cast offensive contributions being ignored after that like they're not relevant to the overall discussion? Is this what we are doing now? Identifying a team that had an elite rORTG PS run and then assigning the bulk of the credit to their primary playmaker just because he was making the most decisions on the team?
In that case, we can start putting Sam Cassell up there with the GOAT PG conversations... The '01 Bucks finished the regular season with a +5.8 rORTG (and upped that to +6.3 rORTG in the PS...) Cassell was their primary playmaker, his impact goes beyond the numbers... How many PG's led their teams to such an elite offensive rating throughout a course of the season and Playoffs?
Cool we're comparing 1997 which is Stockton's 2nd best postseason over a 10 year prime to Isiah's 2nd worst postseason over a 8 year prime. See the gap in their abilities here?
No, i don't see the 'gap in their abilities here', because your claim is easily explained by the fact that Stockton had horrid offensive casts up until 1995 when Hornacek played his first full season with Utah... Prior to that it Stockton only had 1 elite offensive player in Malone (who had much more problems translating his offensive impact in the PS than Stockton did at the time) and the rest of the Jazz roster consisted of below average to absolutely horrific offensive players...
1997 was actually the first time Stockon had comparable offensive support to what Isiah Thomas basically had his whole career...
What you are doing is comparing two PG's on offense with vastly different levels of help around them and then pointing towards team results as the ultimate telltale of who the better player was, while completely ignoring every other metric...
''WELL, THIS GUY WAS THE PRIMARY PLAYMAKER FOR HIS TEAM, AND HIS TEAM REGULARLY PREFORMED BETTER IN THE PLAYOFFS; ERGO, HE MUST BE THE BETTER PLAYER''
Or his teammates simply offered more value on offense and contributed more themselves than the other guy's teammates? That could also be a possibility, mind you... it's not like most of the metrics aren't saying to us exactly that...
Also, it's funny how you keep emphasizing that Isiah's '89 PS contributions are underrated because his 'playmaking went beyond the numbers'... You do realize that Stockton had a bigger playmaking 'footprint' for the Jazz in '97, right?
Isiah was averaging 12 apg (36.7 AST%) with 3.7 TO per 100
Stockton was averaging 14.3 apg (47.5 AST%) with 4.7 per 100
Isiah had a better passing cast and received notably more help in playmaking from his backcourt mate Dumars who averaged 5.5 apg with 1.8 TO in that PS...