How good is Giannis offensively?

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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#21 » by AussieBuck » Fri May 27, 2022 8:17 am

70sFan wrote:
AussieBuck wrote:Gets docked for taking his team beyond where they should get to. Hakeem is about it for bigs succeeding with similar **** perimeter play. He's somehow expected to play both ends of the pick and roll at once on offense. Also elbows too pointy.

I don't think Giannis played with worse perimeter talent than 1999-04 Duncan. I don't think it's even close to be honest. Same applies to 1960-64 Wilt or 1975-79 Kareem.

Yeah I sometimes forget early timneh, the other dudes sure I know that's you're thing but if that's the first point of contention you hit here I don't know what to say.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#22 » by GSP » Fri May 27, 2022 8:18 am

AussieBuck wrote:
GSP wrote:
AussieBuck wrote:Gets docked for taking his team beyond where they should get to. Hakeem is about it for bigs succeeding with similar **** perimeter play. He's somehow expected to play both ends of the pick and roll at once on offense. Also elbows too pointy.


Past prime Drexler is the only real perimeter talent Hakeem got in his prime. And his stock was so low Portland traded their decade long star for Otis Thorpe and Tracy Murray.........

As mid as Bledsoe was he wouldve been Hakeems best guard pre Drexler. For his holes on offense he was still an elite defensive guard, great slasher and underrated playmaker. He just couldnt hit spot up 3s with which Giannis one dimensional playmaking game made much less talented guards like George Hill a better fit next to him

And Giannis still got to play with Brogdon, Jrue and Khris - Khris a better halfcourt player than even Drexler............Its not all that close ITO perimeter talent played with. No ones buying a washed up Sleepy Floyd, erratic chucking Mad Max or Kenny the Jet Smith as good as those guys :lol: :lol:

I mean I concede Hakeem and you bought him anyway. In any case Bledsoe was a playoffs basketcase on offense to the point washed George hill was massively better, Brogdon wasn't healthy in the playoffs at any point and Khris isn't a guard at all. Your posts on Giannis are consistently absurd. I would have thought getting a win might have moderated you but here we are. Also not mentioning Cassell shows you up.


You tried to paint Giannis perimeter talent as "similar" to Hakeem when it wasn't at all.

You mentioned "perimeter play". Khris is a perimeter player.... You didn't specify guard play in the originally quoted post

As for not mentioning Sam I specified Hakeems **** perimeter play pre Drexler. Sam was only a factor after Clyde got there and during their historic 95 run Sam was still just a 2nd year spark plug game manager off the bench. He wasn't any better than 19 George Hill were not talking peak 04 Sam who formed a legit duo with Kg
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#23 » by SickMother » Fri May 27, 2022 8:20 am

GSP wrote:Mitchell is a horrendous defender but hes a great great offensive talent


Mitchell has a career TS+ of 98 and a season high of 101. He hasn't translated his offensive talent to efficient scoring.

Giannis has a career TS+ of 109 & a season high of 115, that's just a whole other level if efficiency. He's also a leaps & bounds better as a rebounder and has a higher AST% for both career & peak season. He scored fifty in the finals to secure a Championship.

The only thing Mitchell is better at is missing shots.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#24 » by AussieBuck » Fri May 27, 2022 8:37 am

GSP wrote:
AussieBuck wrote:
GSP wrote:
Past prime Drexler is the only real perimeter talent Hakeem got in his prime. And his stock was so low Portland traded their decade long star for Otis Thorpe and Tracy Murray.........

As mid as Bledsoe was he wouldve been Hakeems best guard pre Drexler. For his holes on offense he was still an elite defensive guard, great slasher and underrated playmaker. He just couldnt hit spot up 3s with which Giannis one dimensional playmaking game made much less talented guards like George Hill a better fit next to him

And Giannis still got to play with Brogdon, Jrue and Khris - Khris a better halfcourt player than even Drexler............Its not all that close ITO perimeter talent played with. No ones buying a washed up Sleepy Floyd, erratic chucking Mad Max or Kenny the Jet Smith as good as those guys :lol: :lol:

I mean I concede Hakeem and you bought him anyway. In any case Bledsoe was a playoffs basketcase on offense to the point washed George hill was massively better, Brogdon wasn't healthy in the playoffs at any point and Khris isn't a guard at all. Your posts on Giannis are consistently absurd. I would have thought getting a win might have moderated you but here we are. Also not mentioning Cassell shows you up.


You tried to paint Giannis perimeter talent as "similar" to Hakeem when it wasn't at all.

You mentioned "perimeter play". Khris is a perimeter player.... You didn't specify guard play in the originally quoted post

As for not mentioning Sam I specified Hakeems **** perimeter play pre Drexler. Sam was only a factor after Clyde got there and during their historic 95 run Sam was still just a 2nd year spark plug game manager off the bench. He wasn't any better than 19 George Hill were not talking peak 04 Sam who formed a legit duo with Kg

Khris is an iso post player. We run a Giannis handoff into a short pick and roll specifically because Khris has the handle of a drunk Jaylen Brown and we use the defender sagging of Giannis to take away Khris having to dribble the ball against a defender while facing the rim. If you wanna use Khris hitting threes as a reason to call him a perimeter player go ahead but I don't see it as adding the the coherence of your argument.
Then again you're saying Sam wasn't better than 2019 Hill so we're deep in cork on a fork territory here so I reckon we're done. Good luck on your is Giannis a top 10 offense guy journey. I'm sure you'll find some support but it's the not company I'd converse with.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#25 » by LAL1947 » Fri May 27, 2022 8:50 am

70sFan wrote:Hakeem had a better motor than Duncan, I'll give you that. He had GOAT-level motor, which allowed him to be extremely active on defense while being the main offensive player as well.

On the other hand, we have seen Duncan playing center role and scoring almost 30 ppg against Shaq and Kobe in 2002 without Robinson and he was the main Shaq defender in that series as well. So Duncan, motor was just fine. Duncan's scoring went down mostly because Manu and Parker became better and he moved the ball more.

About offense itself - well, Duncan was far better passer and playmaker than Hakeem and he was better offensive rebounder. You can pick only two versions of Hakeem - younger one who was poor man's Moses on offense (excellent rebounder, poor passer) or older one (better passing - though still not great - and shooting, but no rebounding anymore). At no point of his career, Hakeem was better rebounder and passer than Duncan (well, he was never a better passer than Duncan period).

Duncan also wins the battle in the little things - screening, off-ball movement, ball-handling, outlet passing. Another quite big thing is foul drawing ability - Duncan could put your frontcourt in serious troubles because of that, Hakeem never had such effect on that end.

Hakeem has the edge as an iso scorer. He was absurdly efficient low post scorer given his shot profile and you couldn't do anything to prevent him from taking these shots. Of course it hurt his overall efficiency, but made him more resilient in playoffs. Another slight advantage that Hakeem has is shooting. Olajuwon wasn't amazing shooter, but he was more natural shooter than Duncan and he could knock down short midranges at elite level.

You can pick Hakeem over Duncan for reasons mentioned above, but there is no reason to pretend that he's much better. Because he wasn't, unless you simply mean that he was more "creative" or more fun to watch.

Hakeem was better than Duncan on offense. I'm not saying "much better"... but you're making it sound like there is an option to pick Duncan over Hakeem, which I can't agree with.

Let's talk about the ability to score first. If you look at the Top 10 highest playoff PPG among the two, Hakeem has 7 to Duncan's 3... with his highest series being 10.0 PPG more than Duncan's.

1) Hakeem 1987-88........ 37.5 PPG
2) Hakeem 1994-95........ 33.0 PPG
3) Hakeem 1986-87........ 29.2 PPG
4) Hakeem 1993-94........ 28.9 PPG
5) Duncan 2001-02......... 27.6 PPG
6) Hakeem 1985-86........ 26.9 PPG
7) Duncan 2005-06......... 25.8 PPG
8) Hakeem 1992-93........ 25.7 PPG
9) Hakeem 1988-89........ 25.3 PPG
10) Duncan 2002-03....... 24.7 PPG

If you look at their PPG between ages 22-34 (what I consider the prime years for a Center):

Hakeem, regular season: 24.2 PPG
Duncan, regular season: 20.5 PPG

Hakeem, playoffs: 27.3 PPG
Duncan, playoffs: 22.8 PPG

So Hakeem was clearly the better scorer.

As you have mentioned too... Hakeem was more creative, with better footwork, a more natural shooter... all of which is important in moments of pressure or against the best defenses. For these same reasons (plus BBIQ), I would similarly say that Duncan is better on offense than Giannis even if Giannis scores more PPG in today's game.

You also say that Duncan was a better passer/playmaker and offensive rebounder, yet they had almost the exact same numbers between ages 22-34.

Hakeem:
Assists in regular season: 2.7
Assists in playoffs: 3.4
ORB in regular season: 3.6
ORB in playoffs: 3.4

Duncan:
Assists in regular season: 3.2
Assists in playoffs: 3.5
ORB in regular season: 3.0
ORB in playoffs: 3.5
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#26 » by GSP » Fri May 27, 2022 8:54 am

AussieBuck wrote:
GSP wrote:
AussieBuck wrote:I mean I concede Hakeem and you bought him anyway. In any case Bledsoe was a playoffs basketcase on offense to the point washed George hill was massively better, Brogdon wasn't healthy in the playoffs at any point and Khris isn't a guard at all. Your posts on Giannis are consistently absurd. I would have thought getting a win might have moderated you but here we are. Also not mentioning Cassell shows you up.


You tried to paint Giannis perimeter talent as "similar" to Hakeem when it wasn't at all.

You mentioned "perimeter play". Khris is a perimeter player.... You didn't specify guard play in the originally quoted post

As for not mentioning Sam I specified Hakeems **** perimeter play pre Drexler. Sam was only a factor after Clyde got there and during their historic 95 run Sam was still just a 2nd year spark plug game manager off the bench. He wasn't any better than 19 George Hill were not talking peak 04 Sam who formed a legit duo with Kg

Khris is an iso post player. We run a Giannis handoff into a short pick and roll specifically because Khris has the handle of a drunk Jaylen Brown and we use the defender sagging of Giannis to take away Khris having to dribble the ball against a defender while facing the rim. If you wanna use Khris hitting threes as a reason to call him a perimeter player go ahead but I don't see it as adding the the coherence of your argument.
Then again you're saying Sam wasn't better than 2019 Hill so we're deep in cork on a fork territory here so I reckon we're done. Good luck on your is Giannis a top 10 offense guy journey. I'm sure you'll find some support but it's the not company I'd converse with.


You know Hakeem didn't play with prime Sam Cassell right........He was drafted by Houston and averaged 10/4/2 there as a bench player. I mean we can use historical revisionism and pretend Rockets Sam was on the same level as Bucks/Wolves/Clips Sam. It wouldn't be based in reality tho. Rockets Sam and Bucks (19/20 not 22) George Hill are very similar quality players specially considering George's defensive advantage
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#27 » by AussieBuck » Fri May 27, 2022 8:58 am

GSP wrote:
AussieBuck wrote:
GSP wrote:
You tried to paint Giannis perimeter talent as "similar" to Hakeem when it wasn't at all.

You mentioned "perimeter play". Khris is a perimeter player.... You didn't specify guard play in the originally quoted post

As for not mentioning Sam I specified Hakeems **** perimeter play pre Drexler. Sam was only a factor after Clyde got there and during their historic 95 run Sam was still just a 2nd year spark plug game manager off the bench. He wasn't any better than 19 George Hill were not talking peak 04 Sam who formed a legit duo with Kg

Khris is an iso post player. We run a Giannis handoff into a short pick and roll specifically because Khris has the handle of a drunk Jaylen Brown and we use the defender sagging of Giannis to take away Khris having to dribble the ball against a defender while facing the rim. If you wanna use Khris hitting threes as a reason to call him a perimeter player go ahead but I don't see it as adding the the coherence of your argument.
Then again you're saying Sam wasn't better than 2019 Hill so we're deep in cork on a fork territory here so I reckon we're done. Good luck on your is Giannis a top 10 offense guy journey. I'm sure you'll find some support but it's the not company I'd converse with.


You know Hakeem didn't play with prime Sam Cassell right........He was drafted by Houston and averaged 10/4/3 there as a bench player. I mean we can use historical revisionism and pretend Rockets Sam was on the same level as Bucks/Wolves/Clips Sam. It wouldn't be based in reality tho. Rockets Sam and Bucks (19/20 not 22) George Hill are very similar quality players specially considering George's defensive advantage

Your argument keeps shrinking away and now involves entirely irrelevant defense. Sam was a genius from the start. Cork on a fork. Have fun dude.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#28 » by jalengreen » Fri May 27, 2022 8:59 am

GSP wrote:
jalengreen wrote:
GSP wrote:
Is he top 10 on offense?

Jokic
Steph
Luka
Bron
Kd
Kawhi
Jimmy
Trae
Dame
Ja
Mitchell

id take all of them..........are we sure Giannis is a better offensive player than Kat? I dunno about that........Even Embiid for his own flaws isnt clearly worse IMO


Can you expand on the case for Mitchell over Giannis offensively? Not sure I see it


One of the best shooters and off dribble scorers in the league. Can get tunnel vision but his driving and bullet passes is a massive part of Utahs offense too. He had a mid series against Dallas but we shouldnt forget how incredible he was in the last 2 playoffs. Numbers speak for themselves. He was outplaying Kawhi and Pg last year and the year before was the best offensive player in a series with Jokic. Mitchell is a horrendous defender but hes a great great offensive talent


earlier you mentioned the shooters around giannis earlier helping his numbers.. does this not to some extent apply to utah? conley, ingles, royce, niang.. all fantastic shooters

yes mitchell has had some great playoff performances. as has giannis, no doubt. earlier you mentioned that he performs well against slow footed bigs while struggling against the right teams... but mitchell's premier playoff performance was against the nuggets in the bubble, were they really an optimal team to defend donovan mitchell? i'm not so sure...

also giannis' playmaking is no doubt a massive part of the bucks' offense. he has improved a ton at his ability to hit shooters in the right spots off of drives, i think it's fair to mention his value in that regard

and another key part of offense is getting to the free throw line. giannis excels in that category to an extent that mitchell certainly can't touch

i also don't think the "numbers speak for themselves" argument is very strong either when the earlier rgument seemed to be "well for giannis the numbers *don't* speak for themselves. they're inflated because of context." it feels like giannis is being held to a higher standard here and the same scrutiny isn't being applied to mitchell. mitchell's tunnel vision is a massive problem and certainly makes his scoring numbers look better
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#29 » by jalengreen » Fri May 27, 2022 9:11 am

70sFan wrote:
GSP wrote:
70sFan wrote:I didn't realize that Dame is there, I also don't think I'd take him over Giannis at this point.


Fair to question Dame going forward but last we saw him healthy in 21 im def taking that Dame over Giannis on offense

It's fair to question Dame because his offense was completely unsustainable in the playoffs. I know that last year he had a great series in the first round, but it was only one round against very faborable matchup. Lillard isn't a young guy establishing his position, he has a long history of underperformances in postseason.

I know that Lillard is like more on-ball version of Steph in theory, but he's not even close to that in reality. His shooting is streaky and he can't finish inside the paint. He always struggle against good defenses because of that. No, I won't pick him over Giannis.


dame certainly has a history of underperforming in the postseason. with that said, i'm fairly confident that dame took a big step in his offensive game after 2020. his shooting improved on higher volume and importantly, his passing/playmaking was so much better IMO. the scoring in the DEN series is what stands out but 2018 dame was definitely not capable of the level of playmaking he showed in those six games (and in 2020 and 2021 in general)

unfortunately we werent able to get a significant playoff sample size from him in that span outside of two playoff series so i think reluctance is understandable. but i can't help but mention my perception of his offensive (he's probably regressed defensively) improvement when talking about his past playoff performances
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#30 » by GSP » Fri May 27, 2022 9:15 am

jalengreen wrote:
GSP wrote:
jalengreen wrote:
Can you expand on the case for Mitchell over Giannis offensively? Not sure I see it


One of the best shooters and off dribble scorers in the league. Can get tunnel vision but his driving and bullet passes is a massive part of Utahs offense too. He had a mid series against Dallas but we shouldnt forget how incredible he was in the last 2 playoffs. Numbers speak for themselves. He was outplaying Kawhi and Pg last year and the year before was the best offensive player in a series with Jokic. Mitchell is a horrendous defender but hes a great great offensive talent


earlier you mentioned the shooters around giannis earlier helping his numbers.. does this not to some extent apply to utah? conley, ingles, royce, niang.. all fantastic shooters

yes mitchell has had some great playoff performances. as has giannis, no doubt. earlier you mentioned that he performs well against slow footed bigs while struggling against the right teams... but mitchell's premier playoff performance was against the nuggets in the bubble, were they really an optimal team to defend donovan mitchell? i'm not so sure...

also giannis' playmaking is no doubt a massive part of the bucks' offense. he has improved a ton at his ability to hit shooters in the right spots off of drives, i think it's fair to mention his value in that regard

and another key part of offense is getting to the free throw line. giannis excels in that category to an extent that mitchell certainly can't touch

i also don't think the "numbers speak for themselves" argument is very strong either when the earlier rgument seemed to be "well for giannis the numbers *don't* speak for themselves. they're inflated because of context." it feels like giannis is being held to a higher standard here and the same scrutiny isn't being applied to mitchell. mitchell's tunnel vision is a massive problem and certainly makes his scoring numbers look better


Mitchell is a way better ballhandler tho and can run efficient pick and roll. He hit Rudy for a game winning alley oop in a playoff game. He doesn't need shooters everywhere like Giannis who has sus handles and needs a lot more space to operate

Denver was not equipped to defend Mitchell that's true and at the time I questioned its flukeyness too but the next year he absolutely torched 2 great perimeter defenses b2b with Memphis and then Lac

Giannis is def better getting to the line. I see a lot of his "effective offense" as rim pressure/foul drawing, rolling, offensive boards. He can make plays and hit the odd post jumper but I dont think he really moves the needle much at all as a ballhandler or playmaker
anywhere close to compared to those offensive players. IIRC Milwaukee was posting as good or better offensive results this with Jrue or Jrue/Khris on the floor even when Giannis was out

We saw how Jrue, Khris and Brook (who is most negatively affected on offense by Giannis due to playing a much more limited game) looked in the Ecf going 2-0 after Giannis went out

Image

Image

I dont think Giannis really makes his teammates much better on offense besides his rim pressure and roll gravity taking attention away. I don't buy his playmaking or creation onball as really effective offense TBH besides to some spotup shooter maybe. There's a reason perimeter players have more value on offense than bigs besides unicorns like Jokic who have a lot of the same offensive qualities handling, shooting, spacing, running offense than Giannis just doesnt
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#31 » by LukaTheGOAT » Fri May 27, 2022 9:21 am

jalengreen wrote:
GSP wrote:
jalengreen wrote:
Can you expand on the case for Mitchell over Giannis offensively? Not sure I see it


One of the best shooters and off dribble scorers in the league. Can get tunnel vision but his driving and bullet passes is a massive part of Utahs offense too. He had a mid series against Dallas but we shouldnt forget how incredible he was in the last 2 playoffs. Numbers speak for themselves. He was outplaying Kawhi and Pg last year and the year before was the best offensive player in a series with Jokic. Mitchell is a horrendous defender but hes a great great offensive talent


earlier you mentioned the shooters around giannis earlier helping his numbers.. does this not to some extent apply to utah? conley, ingles, royce, niang.. all fantastic shooters

yes mitchell has had some great playoff performances. as has giannis, no doubt. earlier you mentioned that he performs well against slow footed bigs while struggling against the right teams... but mitchell's premier playoff performance was against the nuggets in the bubble, were they really an optimal team to defend donovan mitchell? i'm not so sure...

also giannis' playmaking is no doubt a massive part of the bucks' offense. he has improved a ton at his ability to hit shooters in the right spots off of drives, i think it's fair to mention his value in that regard

and another key part of offense is getting to the free throw line. giannis excels in that category to an extent that mitchell certainly can't touch

i also don't think the "numbers speak for themselves" argument is very strong either when the earlier rgument seemed to be "well for giannis the numbers *don't* speak for themselves. they're inflated because of context." it feels like giannis is being held to a higher standard here and the same scrutiny isn't being applied to mitchell. mitchell's tunnel vision is a massive problem and certainly makes his scoring numbers look better


Mitchell has a lower offensive floor than Giannis when he isn't hitting his 3s, however,

against the Grizzlies last year. He averaged 28.5 pts per game in 29.9 MPG on 60.9 TS%. Absurd scoring. His clippers series gets even better. Mitchell averaged 34.8 ppg in 37.7 MPG on 59.8 TS%. In 2020 he was #1 in PS O-RAPTOR and PS Offensive EPM. In 2021, he was #1 in PS O-RAPTOR and #2 in PS O-EPM. If you believe enough in the 17 game sample size of the 2 PS, then there you have it.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#32 » by 70sFan » Fri May 27, 2022 9:26 am

LAL1947 wrote:I'm not saying that Hakeem was "much better", just that I think he was better than Duncan.

Let's talk about the ability to score first... if you look a the Top 10 highest playoff PPG among the two, Hakeem has 7 to Duncan's 3... with his highest series being 10 PPG more than Duncan's.

1) Hakeem 1987-88........ 37.5 PPG
2) Hakeem 1994-95........ 33.0 PPG
3) Hakeem 1986-87........ 29.2 PPG
4) Hakeem 1993-94........ 28.9 PPG
5) Duncan 2001-02......... 27.6 PPG
6) Hakeem 1985-86........ 26.9 PPG
7) Duncan 2005-06......... 25.8 PPG
8) Hakeem 1992-93........ 25.7 PPG
9) Hakeem 1988-89........ 25.3 PPG
10) Duncan 2002-03....... 24.7 PPG

If you look at their PPG between ages 22-34 (what I consider the prime years for a Center):

Hakeem, regular season: 24.2 PPG
Duncan, regular season: 20.5 PPG

Hakeem, playoffs: 27.3 PPG
Duncan, playoffs: 22.8 PPG

So Hakeem was clearly the better scorer.

1. You don't take into account pace, because Hakeem played in a faster era. If we look at their 10 years primes adjusted for pace:

1986-97 Hakeem in RS: 23.9 points per75
1998-09 Duncan in RS: 23.4 points per75

1986-97 Hakeem in playoffs: 26.0 points per75
1998-09 Duncan in playoffs: 23.9 points per75

Hakeem has basically no edge in RS and he increases his volume in postseason. As I said, Hakeem was better isolation scorer but the gap isn't giant.

2. You include postseason runs like 1988 or 1989, when Hakeem played 4 games and you compare it to Duncan's 3-4 series runs.

As you have mentioned too... he was more creative, with better footwork, a more natural shooter, and had a better motor and athleticism... all of which is important in moments of pressure or against the best defenses.


Hakeem and Duncan had comparable success against the best defenses. Here are culminative stats against -4.0 rDRtg defenses or better:

1986-96 Hakeem: 42.0 mpg, 10.2 rpg, 3.1 apg, 3.4 tov, 24.1 ppg on 48.9% FG, 75.2% FT and 53.9% TS (+0.30% rTS)
1998-08 Duncan: 41.7 mpg, 13.7 rpg, 3.2 apg, 3.0 tov, 23.6 ppg on 47.8% FG, 68.0% FT and 52.7% TS (+0.50% rTS)


You also say that Duncan was a better passer/playmaker and offensive rebounder, yet they had almost the exact same numbers between ages 22-34.

Hakeem:
Assists in regular season: 2.7
Assists in playoffs: 3.4
ORB in regular season: 3.6
ORB in playoffs: 3.4

Duncan:
Assists in regular season: 3.2
Assists in playoffs: 3.5
ORB in regular season: 3.0
ORB in playoffs: 3.5

1. Again, no adjustment for minutes played or pace difference:

1986-97 Hakeem in RS: 2.8 apg, 3.3 tov, 2.8 assists per75, 3.2 tov per75, 13.0 AST% and 12.9 TOV%
1986-97 Hakeem in PS: 3.5 apg, 3.1 tov, 3.3 assists per75, 2.9 tov per75, 16.5 AST% and 11.5 TOV%

1998-09 Duncan in RS: 3.2 apg, 2.8 tov, 3.5 assists per75, 3.0 tov per75, 16.6 AST% and 12.5 TOV%
1998-09 Duncan in PS: 3.5 apg, 3.0 tov, 3.6 assists per75, 3.1 tov per75, 18.1 AST% and 12.6 TOV%

1986-97 Hakeem in RS: 10.2 ORB%
1986-97 Hakeem in PS: 9.4 ORB%

1998-09 Duncan in RS: 10.1 ORB%
1998-09 Duncan in PS: 10.4 ORB%

As you can see, Duncan was comfortably more efficient playmaker than Hakeem based on stats. Rebounding looks comparable, but see my 2nd point.

2. As I said, to pick the best of Hakeem you can either go with younger Hakeem who was a great offensive rebounder but horrible passer, or improved passer who couldn't rebound at high rate anymore:

1986-91 Hakeem: 12.0 ORB%, 10.1 AST%, 13.2 TOV%
1992-97 Hakeem: 8.6 ORB%, 15.7 AST%, 12.6 TOV%

Duncan doesn't have such a clear difference between his prime seasons:

1998-03 Duncan: 10.0 ORB%, 16.0 AST%, 13.3 TOV%
2004-09 Duncan: 10.2 ORB%, 17.3 AST%, 11.6 TOV%

You can't pick the best passing and rebounding version of Hakeem, while Duncan was basically on the same level in both aspects after 2001.

3. Judging passing ability by assist numbers is incredibly crude. Hakeem had a lot of assists for a center in 1993-95 period because he played in an offensive system that was built to create as many easy passing opportunities as possible for Hakeem through spacing and exploiting illegal defense. Hakeem didn't magically become a great passer in his 30s, he simply got far more favorable circumstances. Even then, Hakeem missed a lot of open teammates when he had the ball in his hands. He couldn't punish defense in any other way than easy double reads. Olajuwon-anchored offense had a clear ceilling because he couldn't break down defenses with his passing like top players could and did.

If you think that's bullsh*t, think about this way - Giannis averages more assists than Larry Bird and he's not even close to Bird as a passer. Duncan wasn't Bird of course, but after 2001 he reached the level than Hakeem couldn't reach in terms of passing.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#33 » by 70sFan » Fri May 27, 2022 9:29 am

jalengreen wrote:
70sFan wrote:
GSP wrote:
Fair to question Dame going forward but last we saw him healthy in 21 im def taking that Dame over Giannis on offense

It's fair to question Dame because his offense was completely unsustainable in the playoffs. I know that last year he had a great series in the first round, but it was only one round against very faborable matchup. Lillard isn't a young guy establishing his position, he has a long history of underperformances in postseason.

I know that Lillard is like more on-ball version of Steph in theory, but he's not even close to that in reality. His shooting is streaky and he can't finish inside the paint. He always struggle against good defenses because of that. No, I won't pick him over Giannis.


dame certainly has a history of underperforming in the postseason. with that said, i'm fairly confident that dame took a big step in his offensive game after 2020. his shooting improved on higher volume and importantly, his passing/playmaking was so much better IMO. the scoring in the DEN series is what stands out but 2018 dame was definitely not capable of the level of playmaking he showed in those six games (and in 2020 and 2021 in general)

unfortunately we werent able to get a significant playoff sample size from him in that span outside of two playoff series so i think reluctance is understandable. but i can't help but mention my perception of his offensive (he's probably regressed defensively) improvement when talking about his past playoff performances

That could be the case and I guess we'll never know. At the same time, he didn't improve his finishing at the rim notably, so I think he'd always live and die with three point shot.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#34 » by GSP » Fri May 27, 2022 9:40 am

To further expound on what I think Giannis not really making his teammates much better on offense bit....... Besides spot up shooters anyways........ Does anyone not find it WEIRD how poor Jrue has been on offense with Giannis in playoffs?

18/8/6 on .474ts

Jrue had by far his best offensive form in playoffs along Ad.....

24/6/6 on .581ts

There is sample size difference..... But has Jrue been great offensively in ANY series for Milwaukee????

Blazers were a bad playoff defense but Jrues numbers against Warriors were even better than what we've seen in Milwaukee in playoffs - 20/7/6 on .54ts

Brooklyn was a bad defense too and Jrue was horrific offensively that series - 15/6/5 on .43ts. The only time Jrue looked like Pelicans Jrue on offense in playoffs in Milwaukee..... Was when Giannis got hurt. To me that screams about deficiencies in Giannis offensive game.

Ads much better offball ability and as a play finisher and shooter spacer just made it far easier for his guards and perimeter talent it seems. I see Jrue forced so often to take and settle for inefficient iso pull up jumpers when he's on floor with Giannis
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#35 » by AussieBuck » Fri May 27, 2022 9:52 am

You know you've made it when you get the totally unhinged kind of anti fans that Jordan, Lebron etc have.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#36 » by 70sFan » Fri May 27, 2022 11:13 am

GSP wrote:To further expound on what I think Giannis not really making his teammates much better on offense bit....... Besides spot up shooters anyways........ Does anyone not find it WEIRD how poor Jrue has been on offense with Giannis in playoffs?

18/8/6 on .474ts

Jrue had by far his best offensive form in playoffs along Ad.....

24/6/6 on .581ts

There is sample size difference..... But has Jrue been great offensively in ANY series for Milwaukee????

Blazers were a bad playoff defense but Jrues numbers against Warriors were even better than what we've seen in Milwaukee in playoffs - 20/7/6 on .54ts

Brooklyn was a bad defense too and Jrue was horrific offensively that series - 15/6/5 on .43ts. The only time Jrue looked like Pelicans Jrue on offense in playoffs in Milwaukee..... Was when Giannis got hurt. To me that screams about deficiencies in Giannis offensive game.

Ads much better offball ability and as a play finisher and shooter spacer just made it far easier for his guards and perimeter talent it seems. I see Jrue forced so often to take and settle for inefficient iso pull up jumpers when he's on floor with Giannis

I think it's a fair topic, although I think more questions about Jrue offense than Giannis limiting his ceilling. I mean, he played very iso heavy basketball against Celtics and although he was often forced to do that, it has nothing to do with Giannis.

I think there is a real concern regarding Giannis portability, but Jrue isn't good enough to adjust Giannis for his production.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#37 » by 70sFan » Fri May 27, 2022 11:14 am

AussieBuck wrote:You know you've made it when you get the totally unhinged kind of anti fans that Jordan, Lebron etc have.

Who is anti-fan in this thread? I only see reasonable questions and rational criticism of Giannis limitations.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#38 » by No-more-rings » Fri May 27, 2022 12:32 pm

For raw scoring, I'm not sure he's even better than peak/prime Amare. People may laugh at that, but Amare while didn't have Giannis' handles was super explosive and wasn't bothered by strong defenders like Giannis and had a more reliable mid range jumper. He's a lot better passer than that of course, overall offense he's maybe like Karl Malone level or a bit above that. Not historically elite really. Worse than someone like Barkley or Dirk for sure when comparing to bigs, definitely considerably below Jokic or Kareem.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#39 » by Colbinii » Fri May 27, 2022 12:46 pm

I have had criticisms of Giannis offense for a few years now. I don't see him considerably better than he was in say 2018 compared to what he is now. My biggest flaws with him are the following:

1) Low Portability
2) Low Scalability

These are because he generates most of his points through the fast break and on drives. He is similar to a larger, worse passing/playmaing Westbrook in that regard [though Westbrook was a significantly better shooter--which isn't a good sign].

How good is he offensively? Around Kevin Garnett level.
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Re: How good is Giannis offensively? 

Post#40 » by Ron Swanson » Fri May 27, 2022 1:51 pm

People still throwing out the KG, Westbrook, Amare/Shawn Kemp comparisons on offense is just laughable. Just admit at this point that your pre-conceived notions of his limitations ("he has no 3PT shot") will never change and will always influence your view of his offensive impact irregardless of how much he's actually improved there (post-scoring arsenal, mid-range shooting, play-making) and even if it doesn't jive with reality.

Could post his mid-range shooting splits that show he was actually a more reliable/efficient mid-range guy than Luka. Could post his ISO efficiency numbers that show he's a better/more efficient isolation scorer than Devin Booker, Jayson Tatum, Paul George, Bradley Beal, and Joel Embiid. But probably easier to just post that the Bucks offense absolutely cratered (-17.9 points-per-100 worse) whenever he left the floor, yet he still almost carried that roster to a series win vs. the #2 ranked defense. But sure, I guess "He mainly gets points from transition and slashing to the rim for dunks/layups" is this weird hill that so many people are still willing to die on.

Would have really thought most of the lazy criticisms of his offense would have dissipated after the last two postseason runs where he's demonstrated the full arsenal (jump-hooks, running floaters, baseline fadeaways, pull-up FT line jumpers). He's no worse than a Top-5 offensive player in the league with the only player I see having a clear and unimpeachable case over him being Jokic (obviously).

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