RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 (Bob McAdoo)

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RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 (Bob McAdoo) 

Post#1 » by trex_8063 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 1:28 am

2020 List
1. LeBron James
2. Michael Jordan
3. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
4. Bill Russell
5. Tim Duncan
6. Wilt Chamberlain
7. Magic Johnson
8. Shaquille O'Neal
9. Hakeem Olajuwon
10. Larry Bird
11. Kevin Garnett
12. Kobe Bryant
13. Jerry West
14. Oscar Robertson
15. Dirk Nowitzki
16. Karl Malone
17. David Robinson
18. Julius Erving
19. George Mikan
20. Moses Malone
21. Charles Barkley
22. Kevin Durant
23. Chris Paul
24. Stephen Curry
25. Bob Pettit
26. John Stockton
27. Steve Nash
28. Dwyane Wade
29. Patrick Ewing
30. Walt Frazier
31. James Harden
32. Scottie Pippen
33. Elgin Baylor
34. John Havlicek
35. Rick Barry
36. Jason Kidd
37. George Gervin
38. Clyde Drexler
39. Reggie Miller
40. Artis Gilmore
41. Dolph Schayes
42. Kawhi Leonard
43. Isiah Thomas
44. Russell Westbrook
45. Willis Reed
46. Chauncey Billups
47. Paul Pierce
48. Gary Payton
49. Pau Gasol
50. Ray Allen
51. Dwight Howard
52. Kevin McHale
53. Manu Ginobili
54. Dave Cowens
55. Adrian Dantley
56. Sam Jones
57. Bob Lanier
58. Dikembe Mutombo
59. Elvin Hayes
60. Paul Arizin
61. Anthony Davis
62. Robert Parish
63. Bob Cousy
64. Alonzo Mourning
65. Nate Thurmond
66. Allen Iverson
67. Tracy McGrady
68. Alex English
69. Vince Carter
70. Wes Unseld
71. Tony Parker
72. Rasheed Wallace
73. Dominique Wilkins
74. Giannis Antetokounmpo
75. Kevin Johnson
76. Bobby Jones
77. ???

Target stop-time around 9pm EST on Tuesday.
Please provide ordered lists of ALL tractioned candidates, if you haven't already done so (and keep tabs in case new candidates emerge).

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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#2 » by Odinn21 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 1:29 am

77. Bob McAdoo
Very very good 5-6 seasons of prime with a great peak. Then he was a valuable member of the Lakers in the '80s, very much like Bill Walton in '86 but for longer and also better. The difference between KJ and McAdoo, KJ's prime being longer in playtime.

78. Ben Wallace
I considered players with 5-6 seasons of prime such as Sidney Moncrief, Grant Hill. But I think in terms of best 5-6 consecutive seasons, Wallace was straight up better player and he had better prime duration.

79. Hal Greer
I respect his prime very much. Also quite high on his prime duration, especially considering the '60s standards. Scoring, passing, playmaking, defending, he had it all. Mainly, his prime duration almost doubling Moncrief's and Hill's while being a '60s player is the reason why I'm going with Greer over those 2. Their peaks are not good enough to reward like I did with Wallace.

For the other players with traction;
S. Marion > L. Nance > N. Jokic > D. Rodman > B. Walton
The issue with per75 numbers;
36pts on 27 fga/9 fta in 36 mins, does this mean he'd keep up the efficiency to get 48pts on 36fga/12fta in 48 mins?
The answer; NO. He's human, not a linearly working machine.
Per75 is efficiency rate, not actual production.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#3 » by trex_8063 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 1:31 am

1st vote: Shawn Marion
Yeah, I swapped him ahead of Bosh. I found I was having difficulty justifying him behind Bosh while being consistent with my criteria.
Marion came into the league an above average player, and remained so for at least the first decade of his career; had at least 2-3 years after that as clearly above average.
Like Bosh, he peaked at roughly "All-NBA 2nd Team level", and had 7-8 seasons as a [more or less] All-Star caliber player.

He showed a lot of versatiliy in his career: sliding easily into a PF role when Stoudemire got injured [in fact had what is, imo, his peak season playing PF in '06], and taking on a utilitarian and defensive stopper role for a title team in Dallas [even though past his prime by that point].

Marion managed to be pretty decent scorer and offensive player through finishing pretty well [in transition, as an instinctively good cutter/lane-filler, or sporadically on the offensive glass], spacing the floor [despite his weird shot] by shooting 34.7% on 3.4 3PA/game in the seven-year stretch of '02-'08.
He made his FT's well, and though couldn't play-make, he at least didn't turn it over very much. Sporadically he could create off the dribble [lots of shot pull-ups or little runners from 8-14'].

He was 6'7", but that's with a kinda [to my eye] short neck and small head, as well as high-set shoulders [like McHale]; combined with his long arms, I'd wager his standing reach was closer to that of a typical 6'9" or 6'10" player.
Combining that length with his instincts and with his quick jump (especially quick on the 2nd jump), he managed to be in the GOAT-tier of rebounding SF's [really only Baylor +/- maybe Bird are competition for him in this].

And then defensively.....
I said it previously: it's a near-crime that he never received All-D honours. His length and athleticism allowed him to effectively guard 1-4, while he also averaged a whopping 4.4 stl+blk/100 during the 8-year span of '01-'08 (and again: also being a fantastic defensive rebounding forward).

Put all that together and it's a fairly formidable and important player. Good longevity too.


2nd vote: Chris Bosh
Things I really like when looking at his career....
1) Fairly nice peak and average prime year: he was basically like clockwork good for ~23/10 year after year in Toronto. Much of that was for mediocre to poor teams, though he also did it for a couple of weak supporting casts that he semi-carried to positive SRS's, 41-47 wins, and playoff berths.
2) Adaptability: he altered his game in Miami to integrate with Lebron on a contender [semi-dynasty]. He developed a 3pt shot, and didn't complain [to my knowledge] about his reduced role. In the meantime he also became [imo] one of the league's best pnr defenders.
3) Consistent high level/longevity of quality. If you just look at total games played [893] or seasons played [13], his longevity doesn't look that great. But a couple things to consider: a) he packed nearly 32k minutes into the 893 games [CAREER avg of 35.8 mpg]; and b) he was good basically his ENTIRE career--->he was already at least an average player as a rookie, improved to clearly above avg in his 2nd year, was a clear All-Star talent by his 3rd season.....and basically never again declined below at least borderline All-Star for the rest of his career [peaking near All-NBA 2nd Team level].

It's a decent amount of career value, imo.


3rd vote: Larry Nance
Another "good at many things, perhaps great at nothing" type of forwards, who had solid effective longevity [because he doesn't have any meaningless seasons], and was an ideal teammate.
Compared to Marion, he may have been a marginally better scorer, and was a better rim-protector and passer. But a worse rebounder, less defensively versatile and generally lesser man defender, and lesser longevity.


Among those who have received votes of any kind, I'm tentatively going with this order:
Marion > Bosh > Nance > Grant > Wallace > McAdoo > Melo > Rodman > Greer > Hornacek > D.Johnson > Walton/Jokic (I need to think more about where I'd have Jokic in relation to Walton; both are outside my top 100 as of 2020, though, so unlikely to be ahead of many players who may come up in Condorcet for me. I'll decide between them if I'm forced to [very close]; not sure who I'd go with. Might be leaning toward Jokic presently).
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#4 » by penbeast0 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 2:14 am

1. Shawn Marion I know he complained about his role in Phoenix but it never seemed to affect his play on the floor. Terrific player even before Steve Nash, with Nash he ascended to amazing levels; always thought of him as the co-MPV on those SSOL teams (with Amare as overrated).

2. Dennis Rodman -- Yes, one of the great headcases in NBA history (but for that matter so was Jordan, just in a different way). But also a legit GOAT rebounder candidate and a brutal defender when focused on that. Watching him, he just affects the game in so many ways (mainly good but some bad as well). If he had Bo Outlaw's personality, he'd be top 50 for me.

3. Larry Nance -- Two long, very good career guys are the next two on my list. Neither graduated to "great" in my book but made very consistent contribution both as very good (not great) defenders and good offensive players. I have Larry Nance over Horace Grant because he more successfully approaching having a great impact with his shotblocking; he was the greatest shotblocking non-center to ever play in the league (counting guys like Duncan as centers because they played there a lot). He was also a higher percentage shooter and one of the great finishers with outstanding hops and quickness for a guy his size. He won the first NBA (not ABA) Slam Dunk competition over Julius Erving but despite this, managed to stay under the radar of the casual fan and sportswriters. Grant's advantage comes from his role in some very successful teams and his superior passing and turnover economy; he was also stronger in terms of post defense where "the Thin Man" could be pushed by the wide bodies of the NBA.

I am looking at H. Grant, Greer, Jeff Hornacek, Moncrief, McAdoo, Hill, Worthy, Hawkins, DJ, Ben Wallace in roughly that order. I don't have Walton on my top 100 despite his iconic status (and not sure about Hawkins or even Moncrief either). I don't see Jokic as top 100 without including this year and he would be behind Dan Issel and Bill Walton.

Looking at the list from 2017, the following names have not been voted in yet:

70 Bob McAdoo
71 Sidney Moncrief
(72 Paul Arizin)
73 Grant Hill
74 Bobby Jones
75 Chris Bosh
(76 Tony Parker)
77. Shawn Marion
78. Hal Greer
79. Ben Wallace
80. Dan Issel
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#5 » by Cavsfansince84 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 2:16 am

77. Hal Greer
-7x all nba 2nd team. 9-10 year prime where he is between 20-23ppg on very good efficiency(ts+ between 103 and 106) while being a + defender. Many high scoring playoff runs including the 67 title Sixers that he led in playoff scoring(27.7ppg).

78. Bob McAdoo

-Has a great 5 yr run from 74-78 where he finishes top 2 in mvp voting 3 straight years(on teams that were winning 42-49 games) and is putting up 30+ppg on ts+ of 108-118.
-Comes back as a role player for the Lakers in the 80's and helps them win a couple of titles
-One of the best combos of scoring and rebounding in league history

79. Jerry Lucas
-9 year prime where he averages 18.8/17.6/3.2 on ts+ of 112 with 4 seasons of ts add over 200
-5x all nba(3x 1st, 2x 2nd), 2x top 10 in mvp voting(high of 5th)
-one of the great outside shooting bigs of all time
-key contributor on the 73 champion Knicks

80. DeBusschere
81. Johnston
82. Cunningham
83. Wallace
84. Worthy
85. Cheeks
86. Rodman
87. Lillard
88. Hill
89. Mullin
90. Marion
91. DJohnson
92. Nance
93. Porter
94. Issel
95. Butler
96. Melo
97. Moncrief
98. Jokic
99. Dumars
100. Griffin


others considering: Richmond, Webber, Price, King, Grant
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#6 » by HeartBreakKid » Mon Mar 29, 2021 3:51 am

Criteria

Spoiler:
I'm a pretty big peak guy, I'm not that interested in value of total seasons. The value of multiple seasons to me is to give me a greater sample size to understanding how good they were on the court, not necessarily the totality of their impact through out the years.

I also value impact over all else, and I define impact as the ability to help a team win games. Boxscore stats, team accolades and individual accolades (unless I agree with them personally) have very little baring on my voting so some names will look a bit wonky. The reason why I ignore accolades and winningness is because basketball is a team game and the players are largely not in control of the quality of their teammates or the health f their team (or their own personal health in key moments), thus I don't see the value of rating players based on xx has this many MVPs versus this guy has this many rings. In addition, I simply find this type of analysis boring because it's quite easy to simply look at who has a bigger laundry list of accomplishments.



1) Bill Walton. He is the best player by far here. He was probably a top 3 player in the world during his last couple years in college as well, though I believe this is NBA only. I am quite certain that Bill Walton is a top 20 peak ever. He is a top ten defensive anchor which alone adds more value than anyone left, and his offensive passing can generate very efficient offenses without him needing to score.

2)) Nikola Jokic. #2 vote I'll give to the only guy who is large and passes better than Walton. I'm not a longevity guy but Jokic has actually been a star caliber player for longer than people think. He was greatly underplayed in his 2nd season and Malone was criticized for that even back then. He has 4 seasons of all-star impact and two seasons where I had him as the 2nd best player in the league. I do think his offense is so special from his position that it causes an imbalance that makes him more valuable than two way bigs. His scoring ability might be the best among all the bigs left, and what's great about him is that he doesn't need to score a lot to have impact. Walton's defense is so intense that I can't imagine taking Jokic over that, but everyone else left is a tier or 2 down from either Walton's offense or his defense.


3) Sidney Moncrief - Sidney does everything well. He is lacking longevity, with maybe 5 great seasons - but outside of that he gave a team everything they'd need. Incredible defensive ability, great passing, good scoring (modest volume but outlier efficiency), good rebounder and he plays well with other stars. The Bucks were a pretty consistent threat in the 80s and Sidney may have been the largest individual reason why. Once his prime really started to hit he was a consistent playoff performer as well. Not only does he seem more well rounded than some of the new contenders (Bosh, B Jones, McAdoo, Marion, Wallace) but he is an outlier in two categories, scoring efficiency and defense (and for his position his passing is kind of an outlier). Seems like a superstar almost.













B Wallace > Rodman> McAdoo > Nance > Marion > Greer> Hornacek > Bosh > Lucas > C Anthony
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#7 » by HeartBreakKid » Mon Mar 29, 2021 3:53 am

How was Jerry Lucas defensively?
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#8 » by HeartBreakKid » Mon Mar 29, 2021 7:32 am

For example, prior to THIS CURRENT season [which doesn't count for this project], I don't think Jokic has had any rs that touches what Giannis did in '19 or '20.
Then I have to ask, why? I know people for some reason keep bringing up Jokic's current season, but it's not like he came out of nowhere. He was very much an MVP caliber player last year and the year before. What level do you think Jokic was exactly?

I also don't think their respective FIRST "high-level" reg seasons are on equal footing: sure, if you look at their advanced metrics they look REALLY similar........until you note Giannis's was on 35.6 mpg while Jokic's was in 27.9 mpg. imo, that equates to Giannis bringing significantly more value per game than Jokic did that year.
Well, Jokic is not the coach - he was almost certainly underplayed in his second season. His stamina issues are not so bad that a player of his production should be under 30 minutes per game.

I don't think Malone knew how good Jokic really was.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#9 » by Dutchball97 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 10:32 am

1. Nikola Jokic - I might be voting for Jokic for a while but I think he deserves to make the list at least. Jokic' case is very similar to Giannis in my opinion. Both have 4 high level years along with 1 other positively contributing year. While both have 4 great regular seasons it is clear Giannis has the edge up till 2020, which is why I have him ahead. The difference in longevity is just Giannis' first two years when he was barely a replacement level player so if you're fine with Giannis being voted in this range, how can you justify not having Jokic not in your top 100 at all? Their play-off resumes are comparable at this point as well. Giannis has 5.8 WS and 3.4 VORP in the post-season so far compared to 5.5 WS and 3.5 VORP for Jokic. Giannis has reached the play-offs more often (5 times) than Jokic (2 times) but both have 3 play-off series wins at this point. While Giannis has played 10 more games than Jokic, the reason why the numbers are still close is that both of Jokic' runs were arguably better than any of Giannis' play-off outings. It's a shame some of the voters don't consider him for the top 100 project at all but at this point of the list we're all simply going to have to accept players will receive votes that others don't have among their next 25 picks at all.

2. Ben Wallace - Boxscore stats generally don't do defensive specialists justice but even so Ben Wallace still comes out looking very well in stats like WS and BPM. Despite a relatively short 6 year prime Ben still has pretty solid longevity at this point in the list as well. The main factor why I'm voting for him here is his excellent post-season play. 3 consecutive post-season runs with 3+ WS and 1+ VORP is very impressive. That alone would be a strong play-off pedigree at this point but he has multiple other very solid performances in the post-season as well. His pivotal role for the Pistons in some very deep runs and even a championship shouldn't be understated.

3. Gus Williams - While another voter already has Dennis Johnson on his ballot, I'm surprised nobody has mentioned his teammate on the 79 champion Supersonics yet tbh. Gus Williams was only a 2 time All-Star so I understand he might fly under the radar for some people but this massively undervalues him. His prime quality and duration really isn't much different than Ben Wallace. It maybe shouldn't be a surprise I'm this high on Gus WIlliams because I've consistently put a big emphasis on play-off performance and Gus was a post-season savant who consistently stepped his game up when it counted most. After being the best player for the 78 Sonics that lost game 7 of the finals, he went on to post a 23.8 PER, .210 WS/48 and 6.7 BPM alongside a league leading 2.7 WS and 1.3 VORP on the way to a championship the next year. That isn't the end of Gus Williams being amazing in the play-offs though. In the 1980, 82, 83 and 84 post-seasons he had 20+ PER, .150+ WS/48 and 6+ BPM in every single one of those campaigns.

Sidney Moncrief > Terry Porter > Anfernee Hardaway > Draymond Green > Jimmy Butler > Grant Hill > Horace Grant > James Worthy > Paul George > Damian Lillard > Jeff Hornacek > Shawn Marion > Larry Nance > Kyle Lowry > Jerry Lucas > Walt Bellamy > Carmelo Anthony > Bob McAdoo > Maurice Cheeks > Hal Greer > Andre Kirilenko > Eddie Jones > Chris Bosh > Dennis Rodman > Bill Walton > Dennis Johnson
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#10 » by trex_8063 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 1:07 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:How was Jerry Lucas defensively?


I've heard mixed reviews, ranging from "decent" [have never heard anything implying really good] to "poor(ish)". Consensus maybe mediocre. I've got a limited eye-test and he appeared [to me].....nothing special anyway.

He's not terribly consistent about boxing out on the defensive glass, fwiw. Per his own admission, he would migrate to where he thought the rebound would come off [even if that meant leaving his man without a body on him].
Similar to Rodman, this methodology doesn't lead to quite as good of team DREB% as one might guess based on individual rebounding numbers. And I suspect (cannot confirm) that similar to late-career Rodman or early-career Kevin Love he may have sacrificed perimeter defense in favour of being in rebounding position.


As for a modern analogy, btw, Kevin Love seems the closest comparison:
*same size, same position played
**roughly same career length
***Both outstanding individual rebounders
****Both good (but not great) passing bigs [imo probably marginal edge to Love, on account of he looks like arguably the best outlet passing big of his generation (until Jokic came along anyway)]
*****Both great outside shooters
******Both with questionable defensive reputations (Love's probably a little worse)
*******Both filled up the stat-sheet for some more mediocre(ish) teams before having a reduced [but important] role on a title team

Lucas has a bit better durability, though.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#11 » by Hal14 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 1:24 pm

Hal14 wrote:1. Dennis Rodman
2. Dennis Johnson
3. Tiny Archibald

Rodman was:

-Top 5 rebounder of all time - arguably the best
-Top 5 defender of all time - arguably the best
-In terms of running through a wall to make a play, going all out to help his team, hustle, diving on the floor for loose balls - he's also top 5 of all time in that, arguably the best
-Won 5 titles. Was a top 3 player on his team for 3 of those titles (96-98) and probably a top 3 player on the other 2 (89, 90)..many people even think he should have won finals MVP in 96.

To me, that's good enough to be a top 70 player of all time. Sure, you can say that he couldn't score and that he was a head case who at times caused team turmoil - but that's why he's here and not 20 spots higher.

Love him or hate him, you've got to respect that he was one of the greatest players of all time:



Johnson was Finals MVP in 79. The dude was an animal. Flying around the court like a bat outta hell, some of the best defense a guard has ever played. Going all out, hustling, taking it strong to the rim.

Next, let's look at 84. 83-84 was his first year on the Celtics. The year before that in 83 the Celtics got swept in the 2nd round by the Bucks. Yes, KC Jones taking over as coach was a factor as well, but the Celtics adding Johnson was a HUGE reason why they went from being swept in the 2nd round in 83 to NBA world champs beating the Lakers in the finals the very next year in 84 (with Magic and Kareem in their prime).

In both 84 and 86 Johnson was one of the team's top 4 players, came through in the clutch time and time again and Bird is on record saying that Johnson was the best teammate he ever played with (meaning Bird thinks Johnson was better than Parish and Mchale).

Johnson was one of the best defensive guards of all time, easily one of the top 10 defensive guards ever. The guy had very good size and strength at the PG position which made him a tough matchup, early in his career had great explosiveness and athleticism, he could score inside, drive to the basket and as his career went on developed a deadly outside shot - especially in the mid range area, not as much from 3 because at the time 3's weren't being taken very much across the league (early in his career there was no 3 point line), plus he could rebound well, unselfishly looked to get the ball to his teammates but would make you pay dearly if you ignored him too much on offense, plus of course his outstanding defense.

Solid longevity, played 14 seasons (13 of which he played 27+ mins a game and all of them he played in 70+ games) which was solid for that era, especially considering he played in a ton (180 to be exact) of playoff games.

How about durability? The guy always played, he was always in the lineup. Out of his 14 seasons:
-he played 72+ games in 14/14 (100%)
-he played in 77+ games in 12/14 seasons (86%)
-he played in 80+ games in 7/14 seasons (50%)

How about Rasheed's durability?
-he played 72+ games in 14/16 (63%)
-he played in 77+ games in 8/16 seasons (50%)
-he played in 80+ games in 10/16 seasons (13%)
1/11/24 The birth of a new Hal. From now on being less combative, avoiding confrontation - like Switzerland :)
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#12 » by trex_8063 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 1:32 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:
For example, prior to THIS CURRENT season [which doesn't count for this project], I don't think Jokic has had any rs that touches what Giannis did in '19 or '20.
Then I have to ask, why? I know people for some reason keep bringing up Jokic's current season, but it's not like he came out of nowhere. He was very much an MVP caliber player last year and the year before. What level do you think Jokic was exactly?


Again: rs was stipulated. Going by the numbers, here are what Jokic's reg seasons look like:

'17: 26.3 PER, .228 WS/48, +7.3 BPM, +17 net rating, +4.53 RAPM in 27.9 mpg
'18: 24.4 PER, .211 WS/48, +6.9 BPM, +14 net rating, +2.99 RAPM in 32.6 mpg
'19: 26.3 PER, .226 WS/48, +9.1 BPM, +14 net rating, +2.14 RAPM in 31.3 mpg
'20: 24.9 PER, .202 WS/48, +7.4 BPM, +11 net rating in 32.0 mpg


By the same numbers, here are Giannis's '19 and '20 reg seasons:

'19: 30.9 PER, .292 WS/48, +10.4 BPM, +22 net rating, +4.31 RAPM in 32.8 mpg
'20: 31.9 PER, .279 WS/48, +11.5 BPM, +19 net rating in 30.4 mpg.


I just don't see one of those years for Jokic that truly compare.


HeartBreakKid wrote:
I also don't think their respective FIRST "high-level" reg seasons are on equal footing: sure, if you look at their advanced metrics they look REALLY similar........until you note Giannis's was on 35.6 mpg while Jokic's was in 27.9 mpg. imo, that equates to Giannis bringing significantly more value per game than Jokic did that year.
Well, Jokic is not the coach - he was almost certainly underplayed in his second season. His stamina issues are not so bad that a player of his production should be under 30 minutes per game.

I don't think Malone knew how good Jokic really was.


Point being from an absolute standpoint [regardless of whose fault it was] he did not provide as much value per game.

And it's likely that he wouldn't have even if Malone HAD played him more: his advanced metrics [which were roughly equal(ish) to GA's] would very likely have gone DOWN had he been forced to play an additional 6-8 mpg. Fatigue [and he DID look gassed frequently in those early years, even as recently as '19, imo] and foul trouble come into play more frequently with those star-level minutes.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#13 » by Owly » Mon Mar 29, 2021 3:55 pm

trex_8063 wrote:
HeartBreakKid wrote:How was Jerry Lucas defensively?


I've heard mixed reviews, ranging from "decent" [have never heard anything implying really good] to "poor(ish)". Consensus maybe mediocre. I've got a limited eye-test and he appeared [to me].....nothing special anyway.

He's not terribly consistent about boxing out on the defensive glass, fwiw. Per his own admission, he would migrate to where he thought the rebound would come off [even if that meant leaving his man without a body on him].
Similar to Rodman, this methodology doesn't lead to quite as good of team DREB% as one might guess based on individual rebounding numbers. And I suspect (cannot confirm) that similar to late-career Rodman or early-career Kevin Love he may have sacrificed perimeter defense in favour of being in rebounding position.


As for a modern analogy, btw, Kevin Love seems the closest comparison:
*same size, same position played
**roughly same career length
***Both outstanding individual rebounders
****Both good (but not great) passing bigs [imo probably marginal edge to Love, on account of he looks like arguably the best outlet passing big of his generation (until Jokic came along anyway)]
*****Both great outside shooters
******Both with questionable defensive reputations (Love's probably a little worse)
*******Both filled up the stat-sheet for some more mediocre(ish) teams before having a reduced [but important] role on a title team

Lucas has a bit better durability, though.

This framing, to my eye, seems a touch generous to Lucas.

Love has proven impact on both the good and the bad teams. Lucas, in the limited info we have, looks awful for anyone in consideration for the top 100. Love's "mediocre" team's could be as good as +5.6 per 100 possessions with him on ('14 T'Wolves) whilst the Royals in the very limited data we have, looked slightly better with Lucas out (both '65 and '69, this then got worse in '70 for the Warriors, before a positive WoWY for '72 and '73).

In terms of productivity Love broke 24 PER thrice (peaking 26.90), Lucas never quite reached 21, ws/48 looks the same to a slightly lesser degree (three above .210, never above .190 despite a lesser role on a deeper more RS dominant good team).

Both have significant career box composite playoff drops (caveat emptor: uneven competition, uneven minute distribution ... Love missing the playoffs in his 3 best box regular seasons, fwiw Lucas misses some late 20s seasons though box composite numbers are only around career average ..., smaller samples etc) but Lucas's hurts more being from a lower baseline.

The comp maybe works a lot of ways stylistically - to my mind, less so in terms of how good and impactful they were.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#14 » by trex_8063 » Mon Mar 29, 2021 8:33 pm

Thru post #13:

Shawn Marion - 2 (penbeast0, trex_8063)
Bob McAdoo - 1 (Odinn21)
Dennis Rodman - 1 (Hal14)
Nikola Jokic - 1 (Dutchball97)
Hal Greer - 1 (Cavsfansince84)
Bill Walton - 1 (HeartBreakKid)


About 28 or so hours left for this one.
Please remember to provide ordered listing of all players with votes [plus extras if you wish]; Nance is likely to receive a vote, too, btw.

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[quote=”sansterre”].[/quote]
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#15 » by trex_8063 » Tue Mar 30, 2021 12:52 pm

Hal14 wrote:.


Seriously going to need an ordered listing of all 6 six players who have a vote itt, plus Larry Nance.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#16 » by sansterre » Tue Mar 30, 2021 1:06 pm

1. Larry Nance - I know that nobody else has mentioned him (except for TRex bringing his name up to me). But I'm telling you, Larry Nance was considerably better than you think. You know that Bill James observation that people like players who do one thing historically well more than players who are quite good at everything (Lou Brock vs. Ron Santo is a good example - Santo was miles better, but Brock was more historically notable)? Anyhow. This applies to Nance particularly. He was an athletic 6'10" power forward who played strong defense. He consistently posted strong defensive stats (Block% above 3.5 and Steal% above 1 for much of his career) and pretty much every metric we have (which are, in fairness, mostly box score driven) really likes his defense. But he was no Hakeem or Ewing. He was merely an unusually good defending 4. He also rebounded well, averaging 13+% TRB for most of his career, but he was never great. Just quite good. Passing/ball control? His turnover were low for a big, and his assists were in the "not a liability, but definitely not strong" for a big. His scoring? His usage rate was rarely higher than 22%, and his PP75 were never much above 21-22. But his efficiency was exceptional, posting seven different seasons with an rTS% above +5, and four above +6. You know who his statistical (not play style, just statistical) comp is? Kevin McHale.

McHale: 30.1k minutes, 22.4% usage, +6.7 rTS, 13.2% Reb, 8.1% Ast, 11.7% TO, 0.6% Stl, 3.2% Blk, +2.4 / +0.1 / +2.5
Nance: 30.7k minutes, 20.6% usage, +4.9 rTS, 13.6% Reb, 11.8% Ast, 11.3% TO, 1.4% Stl, 3.8% Blk, +2.3 / +1.4 / +3.6

They're comparable as rebounders. As passers Nance has a small edge. McHale is clearly the better scorer but Nance (according to box score metrics) was the notably better defender. Now, I'll be the first to admit that McHale's defense is underestimated by DBPM. I'm not trying to suggest that Nance was the better defender necessarily. But if I said "Picture McHale, slightly worse scorer, comparable defender and slightly better passer" . . . that's a pretty good player, right? And I'll stipulate that McHale's scoring took a jump in the postseason where Nance's didn't, but still. McHale got in a while ago. And it's worth mentioning that McHale's WOWYR numbers are fairly humdrum (+3.6 prime) compared to Nance's +5.1 prime.

So if Nance was so good, why is nobody talking about him? Because his teams never won. He was dominant on a series of decent Phoenix teams, and then they traded Nance and immediately took off. That may sound like a bad look for Nance but Phoenix got a haul for him. They basically got West and Corbin (their quality defensive bigs for the next five years) and Dan Majerle while replacing Nance with free agent Tom Chambers. Both teams got what they needed. And in Nance's twilight years (where he was still very good) his Cavs were quite good, breaking 50+ wins several times. But he was never on a team that made the Finals. And frankly my dear, I don't give a damn. Nance was an excellent all-around player that both impact metrics (WOWYR) and box score metrics think very well of.

2. Shawn Marion - Pretty much every box-score stat *loves* Marion. He's at least a standard deviation above the mean of this group in BackPicks, PIPM, WS and VORP (in this group he is 3rd, 3rd, 2nd and 2nd respectively in those metrics). He's a really, really weird player. Given his success in box score metrics you might guess he was a scorer but he really wasn't. His usage in his prime was above average (but usually in the 22-23% range) and his efficiency was in the +0% to +2% range for much of it. His only strong shooting seasons were from '06 to '08 with Steve Nash, for which Nash perhaps deserves some credit. But Marion, whether he played a big SF or small PF was a ferocious rebounder for his position/height. If I ask StatHead for players 6'7" or under with seasons at 13% TRB or better, I get Charles Barkley having 14, and then next is Shawn Marion tied with Wes Unseld with 11. I'm not trying to sell you on Marion being a Rodman, he wasn't, he was just a really, really great rebounder for his size. He was never a good passer, but he mitigated the cost there by turning the ball over very rarely (consistent AST:TO > 1). And he was really, really good on defense. Not Bill Russell or anything, but he was a really strong defensive wing. With the understanding that these are just steals and blocks, if I ask StatHead for players that averaged 2.5% steals or better, and 2% blocks or better, I get 6 of Marion and Hakeem, 5 or Erving, 4 of Wade and Kirilenko and then others at 3. Blocks and steals are not great stats, but those are all extremely athletic players. After his prime, Marion reinvented himself as something of a rebounding/defensive specialist, and was a critical piece of the 2011 Mavericks. He played a long career (40k minutes) and also had a strong (if not flashy) prime. His AuRPMs are good but not as good as you'd think (slightly below average for this group) and his -> playoff numbers weren't great. But given his blend of strong prime *and* strong longevity, Marion is hard to pick against here. Unless you like flashy scorers. Then don't vote Marion.

3. Jeff Hornacek - "Jeff Hornacek!?" you say. "Jeff Hornacek" I say. There are simply not metrics that he looks bad in. His BackPicks BPM, Win Shares CORP and VORP CORP are all well above average for this group. His PIPM is a little underwhelming, though still above average. And his peak WOWYR of +5.2 is one of the best in this group. Surprising, right? And yet, he's weirdly excellent.

Let's imagine that we looked for strong (but not dominant) shooting guard seasons. We're looking for a 2nd/3rd option, so sub 22% usage. He needs to break an OBPM of +2, TS above 57% and post PPX above 22. But we want him to be a solid passer who doesn't make mistakes, so AST% > 22% and TO% below 12.5%. That's a pretty specific player I just asked for. But Hornacek had six of those seasons; nobody else had more than 1. What if I loosened the terms? If I allowed usage rates higher than 22% I'd get Jordan and Kyrie tying with him. If I dropped the shooting efficiency requirement Fat Lever had four of those seasons. If I remove the assist requirement Hornacek had 8 seasons, with Reggie Miller and J.J. Reddick having 5 each. My point is, I'll stipulate that Hornacek was only an average usage player. But within those constraints he 1) scored efficiently, 2) passed well (or at least for volume), 3) turned the ball over very little (Assist:TO of 2.5 for much of his career) and 4) overall contributed to offenses at a solid level. And he did it for a long freaking time. He never really had a "Peak" because his seasons were metronomically excellent. He put up four straight 3+ VORP seasons in Phoenix, then another five in Utah. So if you're trying to remember Hornacek's time when he dominated the league . . . you won't find it. He was merely really good for a very long time.

And he kept showing up on strong teams. His age 25 season (1989) was when the Suns took a big step forward. Was he the one driving it? No, KJ was. But Johnson surely benefited from the spacing that Hornacek provided. And by VORP, Hornacek was the 2nd best player on both the '89 and '90 Suns (two teams that made my Top 100 list). In '92 The Suns posted a +5.68 RSRS with Hornacek as their best player (according to VORP). From 1992 to 1993 the Suns replaced Hornacek with Danny Ainge, and replaced Tim Perry and Andrew Lang with Charles Barkley and Cedric Ceballos. And the team's RSRS improved by . . . +0.59. Perry + Lang -> Barkely + Ceballos is clearly a monster upgrade. And Danny Ainge was no pushover. Was losing Hornacek a bigger blow than we thought? I don't want to overplay it; KJ missed almost half the year and that was clearly a driving force. And I'm not trying to sell you on the idea that Hornacek was a Barkley-level player. He wasn't. But even with KJ missing some time, you'd think the jump from '92 to '93 would be bigger than it was. Unless Hornacek was actually better than anyone realized.

And then Utah. Here are their seasons starting at '93:

1993: 47-35, +1.74 RSRS
1994: 53-29, +4.10 RSRS
1995: 60-22, +7.76 RSRS
1996: 55-27, +6.25 RSRS
1997: 64-18, +7.97 RSRS

They acquired Hornacek in the middle of one of those seasons; any guesses which?

Look. This is all slightly circumstantial. There are other factors that explain why the Jazz went from being decent to being the best team in the conference besides Jeff Hornacek. But Hornacek was clearly a big part of it.

Naysayers would argue that Hornacek was a bad first option. This is totally true. He had no business running your offense as the primary ball handler. But as long as he wasn't asked to take more than 20% of the team's shots he'd space the floor, can shots at a well-above average rate, pass well, not screw anything up and generate a fair number of steals. And the combination of these things had a consistent and genuine impact, even if no one of them is particularly remarkable.

We don't have AuRPM for his whole career, but here are his numbers with the Jazz starting at Age 31:

+3.4, +2.8, +5.9, +5.2, +4.5, +3.1

Two +5 seasons toward the tail-end of his career? That's damned impressive.

Nance > Shawn Marion > Hornacek > Terry Porter > Horace Grant > D.Green? > Kyle Lowry > B.Wallace > Eddie Jones > Bosh > Bellamy > Jokic > A.Kirilenko > Hill > M.Cheeks > B.Walton > P.George > Webber > LaMarcus Aldridge > D.Issel > A.Iguodala > Schrempf > H.Greer > Moncrief > G.Williams > J.Worthy > C.Anthony > A.Hardaway > J.Butler > M. Johnson > D.Lillard > D.Johnson > D.Rodman > M.Price > C.Mullin > B.McAdoo > K.Irving > K.Thompson
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#17 » by sansterre » Tue Mar 30, 2021 1:07 pm

Price, Marques Johnson, Carmelo, Schrempf and Gus Williams are all added to my listing.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#18 » by Hal14 » Tue Mar 30, 2021 3:41 pm

Ranking of players who have received votes:

1. Dennis Rodman
2. Bob Mcadoo
3. Hal Greer
4. Bill Walton
5. Shawn Marion
6. Larry Nance
7. Nikola Jokic
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#19 » by penbeast0 » Tue Mar 30, 2021 6:43 pm

Sidney Moncrief v. Grant Hill v. James Worthy (Using per 100 stats to lessen era/minute differentials)

Moncrief 5 year prime: ~36.5 mpg, 27 p, 7.5 r, 6.1 a, ~.590 ts%, 4 1st team All-Defense, 1 2nd team, 2xDPOY, 1 1st All-NBA, 4 2nd All-NBA. 2 years pre-prime, 3 hobbled years post prime (ignoring years with less than 50 games played other than 1999). Surprisingly his rebounding per 100 is actually equal to Worthy's.

Hill 6 year prime: ~29 mpg, 30 p, 11 r, 8.5 a, .540ts%, 1 1st team All-NBA, 4 2nd All-NBA, 6 solid post prime seasons. Hill was the focus of the Detroit offense; both of the others played on deep teams that spread the ball around. He was also the primary distributor while the others were more secondary distributors or finishers.

Worthy 7 year prime (85-91): ~35.5 mpg, 27 p, 7.5r, 4.5 a, ~.570ts%, 2 x All-NBA 3rd, 1FMVP, I have his 1st 2 years as pre-prime as his scoring load was significantly less and his last 3 years as post-prime as his efficiency dropped significantly. The healthiest of the bunch, probably the lowest RS peaks. His scoring volume may have been hurt a bit by all the talent on the Lakers, on the other hand, playing with Magic (as compared to say Brian Winters or Lindsey Hunter at PG) probably helped his efficiency.

I have these three as:

1. Moncrief -- his prime was shorter but a lot stronger. He was one of the NBA's all time great defenders, the others were both solid but not outstanding, plus offensively he's at least arguably the strongest of the 3 with the highest shooting efficiency at equivalent scoring volume. The monster defense for 5 years is worth more to me than 1 or 2 years of extra years of equivalent offense and decent defense and the extra role player years don't move the needle that much in comparison.

2. Hill's case is based on his rebounding and playmaking from the 3, though his scoring efficiency was less, plus his long post-prime career where he reinvented himself as a 3 and D guy. The rebounding and playmaking is certainly an argument in his favor, he rebounds significantly better as a 3/2 guy than the 3/4 Worthy and gets more assists than the 2/1 Moncrief (though a lot of that is role). His career outside his prime is better than Worthy's and significantly better than Moncrief's, enough to make it close but not enough for me to put him higher.

3. Worthy is the lowest of the 3, an efficient scorer but despite playing a lot of PF, a weak rebounder. He was blessed to play with the most talent around him and thus had a stronger playoff resume, his case is based on that, particularly his FMVP season. His career was actually shorter than Hill's in number of games despite his better health. 926 games to 1026 for Hill (and 767 for Moncrief).

Let's look at those playoff numbers in their primes again using per 100 possessions:

Worthy ~39mpg 28p, 7r, 4.5a, .580 ts%
Hill ~38mpg, 32.7p, 11r, 9a, .520ts% (only 13 games to avoid using 00 when he was injured)
Moncrief ~40mpg, 25p, 7r, 5.5a, .575ts%

I don't think this makes Worthy's case appreciably stronger although he certainly played a lot more playoff games than the other two due to his situation in LA.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #77 

Post#20 » by Odinn21 » Tue Mar 30, 2021 7:12 pm

penbeast0 wrote:Worthy 7 year prime (85-91): His scoring volume may have been hurt a bit by all the talent on the Lakers, on the other hand, playing with Magic (as compared to say Brian Winters or Lindsey Hunter at PG) probably helped his efficiency.

Curious how Worthy's career would turn out on a different team. He was in a 1a/1b position with Magic for majority of his prime. And aside from 1991, I've always felt like he had more scoring volume in himself than 22-24 ppg, though playing without Magic and his team's sole scoring power would cost him efficiency surely.

Top postseason scorers on the Lakers in that span;

1985
Kareem 21.9 ppg (30.3)
Worthy 21.5 ppg (29.0)
Magic 17.5 ppg (21.5)

1986
Kareem 25.9 ppg (35.6)
Magic 21.6 ppg (26.8)
Worthy 19.6 ppg (24.4)

1987
Worthy 23.6 ppg (29.8)
Magic 21.8 ppg (28.1)
Kareem 19.2 ppg (29.5)

1988
Worthy 21.1 ppg (29.3)
Magic 19.9 ppg (25.6)
Scott 19.6 ppg (27.2)

1989
Worthy 24.8 ppg (31.2)
Magic 20.0 ppg* (24.8)
Scott 21.7 ppg* (27.8)

1990
Magic 25.2 ppg (30.8)
Worthy 24.2 ppg (30.4)
Scott 13.4 ppg (19.0)

1991
Worthy 22.2 ppg* (27.6)
Magic 21.8 ppg (26.3)
Perkins 17.7 ppg (23.3)

* indicates injury impacted games are disregarded.

Worthy comes off as the 1a scorer of the Lakers from '87 to '91 and '86 looks like an outlier for Worthy considering '85 is in line with '87-'91 span. Pretty consistent scorer around 21-24 ppg with 29-30 pp 100.
And when the team didn't have another 18-21 ppg scorer as their 3rd scoring option, both of Magic and Worthy upped their scoring outputs in '90. One of the major reasons why I believe Worthy had more in himself.
The issue with per75 numbers;
36pts on 27 fga/9 fta in 36 mins, does this mean he'd keep up the efficiency to get 48pts on 36fga/12fta in 48 mins?
The answer; NO. He's human, not a linearly working machine.
Per75 is efficiency rate, not actual production.

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