migya wrote:Dutchball97 wrote:migya wrote:
What you just showed was for playoff career.
For ten year primes and 3 year peak, as I did before:
10 Year Prime-
Karl Malone- 1989-98, 117gms
109OR, 103DR, 23.2PER, 53.3TS%, 9.0PWS, 8.0DWS, 17.0WS, .167WS/48, 5.4BPM, 9.1VORP
Shaquille O'Neal- 1994-2003, 136gms
114OR, 104DR, 28.7PER, 56.8TS%, 17.4OWS, 6.6SWS, 24.0WS, .211WS/48, 7.0BPM, 12.4VORP
3 Year Peak-
Karl Malone- 1996-98, 58gms
105OR, 99DR, 23.3PER, 51.1TS%, 3.2OWS, 4.6DWS, 7.8WS, .160WS/48, 5.7BPM, 4.5VORP
Shaquille O'Neal- 2000-02, 58gms
113PR, 100DR, 29.3PER, 56.2TS%, 8.4PWS, 3.7DWS, 12.1WS, .238WS/48, 7.5BPM, 5.9VORP
For playoffs it's definitely Shaq but I think having more scoring burden on him is why Malone had less numbers than in the RS. Give him a good two way big like Horace, who would open things up, would've allowed Malone to perform better.
Besides his lower efficiency Malone has great numbers across the board and they are comparable to many alltime greats.
Of course I talked about their careers, no use looking at arbitrary stretches that tell you the same thing, which is Shaq was on a completely different level. Actual all-time greats also aren't reliant on having someone like Horace Grant on the team in order not to crumble in the play-offs.
Malone being unable to string together 2 years in the play-offs has nothing to do with a lack of a 2-way big next to him. He just wasn't build for the post-season. Especially considering he played nearly his entire career next to Stockton. Malone benefitted from getting fed by the all-time assist leader in the regular season but then he couldn't step up in the play-offs when getting a bucket required some more effort on his part. Look at Stockton in the play-offs as well. His production also dropped somewhat but less so than Malone and he was much, much more consistent year to year. This isn't a situation of Malone not living up to the top 10 guys because he had bad teammates, it's because of his level of teammates that he was even able to rack up enough stats for you to entertain this comparison.
Besides all that, if you already knew Shaq had a massive edge in the post-season and the regular season numbers are similar at best, what made you think Malone had any kind of case over Shaq?
Malone does have a case because playoffs isn't more than RS. The numbers are very similar and Malone was great for longer than Shaq. Shaq is a top 10 player but Malone isn't far behind.
So you're arguing to only place the same emphasis on a play-off game than on a regular season game? They're not remotely the same in terms of pressure and effort though. I can understand not valuing the play-offs more than the regular season or even like a 60/40 in favor of the regular season due to the sample size being so much bigger but you're here acting like play-off performance doesn't matter at all.
Karl Malone being great for longer than Shaq doesn't rhyme with me either. "Great" is such a vague term that eliminates any differentation. If you only need to be "great" then what is even your argument for Malone over Stockton? What then makes Malone better than Robert Parish? This is why I dislike people who simply count the amount of seasons someone played at a general level and then call it a day without looking at it any deeper. Shaq is definitely a top 10 player but Malone isn't anywhere near that conversation.