Owly wrote:70sFan wrote:ceiling raiser wrote:Nash was a guy who was probably exposed by iso ball, but you can build a better team defense around a high effort PG defender than you can a medium effort SG/SF defender with decent tools. You can still target the weak link in a scheme surely, but I believe Nash would thrive in a high effort scheme.
We have seen that it doesn't work in reality though. Celtics defense suffered a lot by having Kemba/Thomas guards a few years ago and they had to get rid off them to succeed. Nash wasn't good defensively even when he tried.
Strongly disagree with equating him to Thomas (especially at productivity peak) on D.
On the underlined, technically I would agree ... but I think I'd disagree with the impression that I got beyond the specific words (hopefully reading the context, but maybe faulty intution). Not good, but arguably not bad either. I'd guess this DRAPM was circa average for a starting pg https://sites.google.com/site/rapmstats/97-14-rapm-2 and surely not substantially worse than that. Phoenix despite the impression of their pace, were more below average than outright bad defensively (arguably circa average in their apex 05-07 or 08 run) and though the Suns are in raw terms worse defensively with him on (https://www.cleaningtheglass.com/stats/player/2660/onoff#tab-team_efficiency) it tends more in the below average range than genuinely bad.
As far as I can tell, whilst it's true to say Nash wasn't a good defender, [I'm presently inclined to think] he was only a small negative, and not substantially impactful either way on that end. I'm open to better evidence showing this view to be wrong.
I didn't equate Nash to IT on defense, it was just an extreme example of my broader point.
About data - you just posted RAPM studies showing that Nash finished 1138th out of 1648 players included in 1997-2014 studies. That puts him into 30th percentile and these are not only starting players, but also plenty of roleplayers coming from the bench.
I am well aware of how overrated Kobe is defensively, but he finishes the studies 780th or 53th percentile. As you may see, Kobe is ranked above average even including his non-prime seasons and he was considerably better defender in his prime years (excluding 2005-07 period).
To me, that's not a small edge. Nash wasn't all-time bad defender for all players that played during that period, but for a high minutes players that's not a good look at all.