dhsilv2 wrote:HomoSapien wrote:Reggie is such a hard player to evaluate because his overall stats are kind of meh, but his impact in key games was just staggering. In the last 5 minutes of a close game, you just feared Reggie Miller. Not a lot of players elicit fear.
20st all time in VORP
15th in WS
His stats are insanely good...
Those are both longevity stats. He was never that level player in any one season, but because he had old man athleticism at 22 he was able to keep on putting up good but not overwhelming numbers for a long time. His game didn't fall off because there was no place for his athleticism to go down. He created most of his offense in his mind, not with quickness, strength, or any other physical trait.
His calling cards will always be shooting efficiency and clutch shooting in the playoffs. But it was pretty close to the ONLY thing he did out there at above replacement level. He was a classic glass cannon. Actually the modern player he might have resembled most would have been Kevin Martin, who even tried to duplicate his constant motion off the ball game, except Martin was a better athlete and worse in the clutch. There was some brilliance, or at least steady vision to the way the Pacers' front office stayed steady in building squads throughout the 90s that recognized that fact. Small market, they had very few complete players or resources to get them. Everybody was a specialist of one sort or the other. Mark Jackson passed, and that was it. Reggie shot, and that was it. The Davis Bros defended and banged, and that was it. Smits was the other Reggie for them, the all offense big man, and nothing else. Only McKey threatened versatility, and he largely couldn't be inspired to do more than defend either.
Trying to blow Reggie up into an all time figure has always annoyed me. He could only do one thing, and he wasn't hugely prolific at that one thing. But unlike Klay, he proved that he was so good and steady and sophisticated in that one thing, that you could, with a lot of teamwork and a perfect build of supporting players, feature him in that one role and he would not shrink. He wasn't falsely propped up as a shooter or benefitting from attention being eaten up by teammates. He just needed his teammates to excel at all those things he didn't do at all.




















