No-more-rings wrote:sansterre wrote:3) People loooove when a single player uses a ton of possessions to lift a team to the title. Wade did it in '06. Neither Drexler or Pippen did it.
And this is supposed to be a bad thing? I would've thought a player being able to win a title carrying a big load was a good thing. Lebron's done it in every single one of his titles.
sansterre wrote:1) People love scoring. Wade was a better scorer than Drexler and Pippen. At his peak, his volume was incredible.
1) Things that aren't scoring. Wade was a strong passer, but he was a weaker rebounder than Pippen and Drexler (despite being quite good himself).
I lumped these two together to make an overall point.
Even if you wanted to argue that scoring is the only major category Wade was better at, that doesn't mean his overall impact was worse. You can argue scoring is the only thing that Jordan does better than KG, yet he's universally seen as better even despite clearly worse longevity. Scoring is arguably the only thing Kareem does better than KG, and he's universally regarded as the better player.
sansterre wrote:And he looks like a weaker defender than them (which may have been a byproduct of his offensive usage, but that still counts).
I don't think there's much of a difference between Drexler and Wade defensively, they seem around the same.
sansterre wrote: And he spaced the floor worse.
Not really actually. Pippen's jumper is far from reliable in the postseason, that's a big reason why his scoring was never super hot.
Check this out, Wade's 3 point shooting his only major weakness he's not really worse than Pippen and Drexler in the playoffs.
Wade from 06-2012: 83 games- 33% on 2.6 3PA
Drexler from 87-95: 98 games- 27.1% on 3.2 3PA
Pippen from 91-98: 136 games- 28.8% on 3.2 3PA
These guys certainly do not add more spacing than Wade, unless you think Wade is just left alone off ball, which he wasn't obviously.
sansterre wrote:2) Sustained Value. Wade has three really strong seasons ('05-07) and then another five really strong seasons ('09-13). His career besides those years is fairly negligible. Compare that with Drexler who played at a high level from '87 to '97.
That's fair, but it seems a little lazy to me to just lump all those seasons together, put them side by side and call Drexler better because he played more. If it were that simple, Karl Malone should've been easily in the top 10. We're getting to the point, where i think longevity should honestly be less of an issue because Wade is one of the few left who has true 1st option championship ability. Drexler doesn't quite have that, and Pippen certainly doesn't. Curry has it, Nash to a lesser degree i think does, Stockton i don't think so.
sansterre wrote:Riddle me this Batman: if the '06 Heat lose to the Mavericks, do we still have this discussion? I feel like a particular selling-point for Wade is that he "lifted his team to the championship" even though the '06 Heat were probably the weakest title-winner in the last two decades.
I mean why wouldn't we? Even if he loses that one championship as the 1st option, you have multiple guys already voted in who never won one anyway, Cp3, Karl and Barkley.
They were a weak title winner because Wade's cast was nothing special, not because Wade wasn't all time great he clearly was by all metrics.
Do you knock Hakeem for the 94 Rockets being weak title winners?
sansterre wrote:Wade was obviously the best floor-raiser of the three. But I think the other two have arguments that they added value in ways that Wade did not. And in order to push Wade here you've got to believe that his floor-raising during his peak was so good that it overcomes the defense/scalability over more years for the other two.
This nonsense about Wade's scalability has been debunked countless times. I don't mean to come off as aggressive, but i don't know how many times it has to be repeated before people stop falsely claiming it.
Wade's scalability worked just fine when he co led a finals team as 1a/1b, and then was a good 2nd option on two championship teams.
What's more scalable about Drexler and Pippen? They had better health, that's pretty much it.
sansterre wrote:My rankings are built on a BPM->CORP converter for career value that uses half regular season BPM and half postseason BPM. I'm not saying that the rankings are proven or anything. But Wade fits the profile of a player that would be very easy to overrate.
That's an ironic thing to say about Wade, when the guy you pushed for(Cp3), is already in. For all his great impact metrics, it translated to the least playoff success of anyone else already voted it. I'm not saying he's undeserving necessarily, but i raised a lot of concerns earlier about his very shaky postseason health and no one seemed to have a good rebuttal for it as far as I'm concerned.
Wade's prime when healthy(05-12), was a clear level or two above Drexler or Pippen's, and like Trex said he has the best peak left aside from possibly Curry or Walton, so i think his amount of longevity along with high level superstar seasons is more than enough to get him somewhere in the 25-28 range. I mean if we're going to misuse longevity this much where does it end? We may as well start voting for Miller and Ray Allen over him too.
I appreciate your take on this, though you i think you seem to underestimate the force that Wade was in the league at his healthy best(06-11).