Magic Is Magic wrote:Jordan Syndrome wrote:Magic Is Magic wrote:Reggie Miller is a confusing one for me because he literally hasn't done anything in his career and people still want to rank him over people like Scottie Pippen. I just can't understand that. Reggie Miller has the following:
0x MVPs
0x FMVPs
0x 1st all NBA
0x 1st All Defense
0x 2nd all NBA
0x 2nd All Defense
0x Top 3 MVP voting
0x Top 5 MVP voting
0x Rings
Yikes.
His "weapon" was scoring but he never even scored 25 ppg once in his career. He did achieve a 50-40-90 season which is pretty bad ass to me, but that's nearly his only achievement. I've been reviewing players in this ranking for the project and with my formula and compiling the numbers for him was interesting. Among the 50 players I tested, Reggie Miller was literally the lowest scoring player of the entire bunch.
Understanding statistics and participating in film analysis goes a long way in player evaluation. Reading basketball-references accolades page only gets you so far.
Sure, but not being biased also helps a bit? What about Allen Iverson? Someone who is close in tiers to Reggie IMHO, but Iverson has a better career, no? Just as a small example, Allen Iverson has:
1x MVP
3x All NBA 1st
3x All NBA 2nd
1x > 25.0 PER run in the RS
3x top 5 MVP finishes
Miller literally has zero of all those categories but no one is talking about Iverson.
You are using completely arbitrary numbers.
Iverson ('98-'08): 91.3 WS, 3.9 OBPM
Miller ('90-'00): 120.9 WS, 4.5 OBPM
Post-Season Iverson ('98-'08): 7.3 WS, 4.8 OBPM
Post-Season Miller ('90-'00) : 15.7 WS, 5.9 OBPM
To me, picking Allen Iverson over Reggie Miller shows a complete misunderstanding of the object of Winning Basketball.
Here is the thing about Allen Iverson: You will never win with him being your best offensive player. You can never win with your system built around Allen Iverson. I'll give people the benefit of the doubt and say "You can't build an offense around Reggie Miller as the primary playmaker"--but you can build offenses around Reggie Miller as a player.
Now, who makes for the better second option? The play who routinely worked off-ball to G.O.A.T level efficiency? The player who routinely performed at the highest levels in the post-season against all-time great defenses?
Here is the list of Ranks of the offenses from 1990-2000 where Reggie Miller was the Star and Focal Point.
Here is Allen Iverson team ranks from 1998-2008.
Nuggets go from 11th Offense in 2008 to 7th in 2009 (Iverson played half season) and then up to 3rd in 2010.
Philly goes from 23rd in 2006 to 26th in 2007 with Half season of Iverson to 18th in 2008.
You need to ask yourself how you rank players and what you value. Do you value how much a player contributed to winning? Do you value accolades? Do you value arbitrary Per/48 Win Share numbers over tiny sample sizes?