Doctor MJ wrote:DQuinn1575 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
So as I'm saying, my statement wasn't really about "If you're DeRozan bad then I don't care about you."
That said, I literally think Danny Green has had a more worthwhile career than either DeRozan or Maravich.
Not saying Green should get Top 100 consideration though because he's nowhere close, only that if we made the project long enough, I'd vote in Green before I voted in the other two.
So Green really benefits because we probably see best case for him - maybe 4th best player on a championship team. Maravich was never in that situation, so dont really know how he would do if teamed with 3 players better than him.
And on the reverse, Maravich took a 2nd year awful expansion team to a near 500 record in 1975 - No way Danny Green takes that team anywhere near that. I don't really know how to look at seasons like that.
We've certainly seen Maravich with 3 or more teammates better at basketball than him. Dude went to the best offense in the league as a rookie and disrupted everything.
But that's really not the big point now that I think about it. The big point is that I don't rank player overall simply based on their ability to play alpha. It matters a good deal to me if you can play a valuable role on a championship team, and most of those roles are not alphas.
I think Maravich is as overrated, or at least has been, as the next guy. That said "went to the best offense" and "disrupted
everything" is an interesting framing.
1) Other changing pieces: Caldwell out to ABA (I think an off-ball energy wing, i.e. not a Maravich shaped hole, coming off somewhat of an outlier peak year in PER, offensive win shares and TS% - 2nd on the team in all the above), other edge of rotation changes
2) Best offense: Yes but ... Caldwell gone, narrowly so, overall a thin spread league, 5th the year prior with Beaty so maybe a touch lucky ...
3)
He did it: Did he pull down their FT%? His was circa 12% better than Caldwell's broadly similar number of attempts. Three of the top 5ft% guys are gone from last year (all fringe rotation), one similar % guy added, Bellamy functionally arrives (for full season) and shoots circa 60%; Hudson, Hazzard, Bridges, Davis (3-6 in attempts, Maravich being 2, Bellamy 1) all drop in % significantly (I think I've looked at this before but can't find it). The fg% drop is worse than a 2nd rank to 3rd rank would have you believe but not catastrophic. What I'm saying is you'd want to look closer at the parts, which isn't always possible but at least try. What is plausible that his poor fit (functionally replacing Pogo Joe, but wanting to be a lead/high primacy playmaker guard on a team that already has a point, and shunts Hudson up to forward) meant less offensive boards (and less transition points off steals) and that he was turnover prone.
4) Consistency: Are we saying he improved their D?
Rookie Maravich was a poor fit, likely a sloppy, harmful (like most rookies) player and had a lot of baggage (high paid, high endorsed, "great white hope", "next West") that didn't help him integrate. Saying he did the damage the leagues best offense seems a bit much/harsh/one-sided though (undersells Caldwell; shooting esp ft%; fit; morale factors outside his control).
Sorry for the tangent. And insofar as this was an opportunity to "fit in" I think it is probably fair to say he failed (albeit (a) rookie (b) fitting into a non-Maravich shaped hole ... though maybe there aren't many such holes and that's the point and he arguably walked away from the chance to fill one not wanting to come off the bench for a full year and so retiring in Boston, iirc).