prophet_of_rage wrote:It's a comparison of the West and East. The West was tough for Phoenix not because of talent issues but because there was an inherent flaw in their system the best Western teams could exploit at any time.
prophet_of_rage wrote:The Raptors were a tough team and so were the Bucks and AI vanquished both doing all the scoring. Those teams were as tough as any in the West.
This reads like someone who will pretty much say anything on a whim to prop their guy up. What makes you think the Raptors and Bucks even come close to the bloodbath 00s West?
So Iverson's competition is:
47 win Raptors, 1.69 SRS (14th), 14th defense
52 win Bucks, 3.13 SRS (8th), 20th defense
and that's "tough." A bottom 10 defense in the league is "tough."
Meanwhile Nash goes against:
50 win '03 Blazers, 2.97 SRS (6th), 13th defense (a first round opponent that's already arguably better than both the '01 Raps and Bucks, and the Jailblazers were actually "tough")
59 win '03 Kings, 6.68 SRS (2nd), 2nd defense
60 win '03 Spurs, 5.65 SRS (3rd), 3rd defense (lost in 6)
58 win '05 Mavs, 5.86 SRS (3rd), 9th defense
59 win '05 Spurs, 7.84 SRS (1st), 1st defense (lost in 5)
60 win '06 Mavs, 5.96 SRS (3rd), 11th defense (lost in 6)
58 win '07 Spurs, 8.35 SRS (1st), 2nd defense (lost in 5)
50 win '10 Spurs, 5.07 SRS (4th), 8th defense
57 win '10 Lakers, 4.78 SRS (5th), 4th defense (lost in 6)
Pretty much every year he made it to the WCF, he was facing two teams that were better than anything Iverson EVER faced in the East. It might take the '03 Blazers 6-7 games to beat the Bucks/Raptors, but every other team here is sweeping, 5 games max.
prophet_of_rage wrote:How do we get around this that Nash had less success with a far more talented team?
Are you allergic to context or purposefully being dense? You get around it by not judging players entirely on the basis of a binary outcome that they can influence only so much. You are essentially saying "The
team Iverson played on in 2001, and the ONLY playoff run of his career worth mentioning, won a whole 3 more games through the conference + NBA Finals than the 2006 and 2010 Suns that Nash was on, and for that reason, the
individual player Iverson is better than the
individual player Nash." That logic just doesn't make sense to me. Do you consider the 2018 Cavs as the second best team in the league that year just for making the finals?
Btw Iverson doesn't even have more success lol. It's 1MVP + 1 Finals appearance (which like I said taken into context isn't THAT impressive) vs 2 MVPs + 3 WCF as the #1 and 1 WCF as the #2 (in a historically stacked conference go against perennial contenders every year). Nash is higher on the all-time assists list than Iverson is on the all-time scorers list. The SSOL Suns inspired the offenses of today. Iverson was a revolutionary cultural guy, but on the court he fizzled in the playoffs every other year, including his Denver years.
As an (somewhat related) aside, I saw in another thread you rank Ewing > Reed on an all time centers list. How does that make sense if you value winning and rings above all? Ewing should be in the same tier as Nash/CP3 and Reed in the same as Iverson/Thomas for you. Why don't Reed's rings count in that comparison?