tsherkin wrote:G35 wrote:
- On one hand, "Kobe is selfish! Kobe shoots too much! Kobe doesn't pass enough! Kobe makes the game too hard!"
- On the other hand, "Pau is a top 50 player. The Lakers had the best front court in the game. Phil Jackson and the triangle made it work."
I think there's a relevant side group here. Stepping away from Pau and whether or not he has a place in the top 50, there is a lot of discussion attempting to denigrate Pau in order to prop up Kobe, which is where there's a bunch of resistance. For me, I can certainly see why someone wouldn't put Pau Top 50. That doesn't mean he wasn't a very good player, of course, and he obviously played a lot better as #2 to Kobe and within the triangle than he was able to as a #1 in Memphis. It worked out for everyone. And it doesn't undercut Kobe to have appropriate talent for a period of dominance. You don't accidentally make 3 trips to the Finals in a row, you do it on a good team. But that was still Kobe's team, and he was clearly the best player on that squad and all that.So I know the argument will be, "Well two things can be true at the same time, Kobe is selfish and shoots too much and Pau was great."
You're right two things can be true at the same time, Pau was great for the Lakers and he was not a top 50 or 75 player at the same time.
Yeah, I'm with you on that. Didn't get to you earlier reply to me, but we largely agree with the basic premise that Pau fit very well into this context and was a very good #2 to Kobe.In the 2007-08 season, the Lakers started with Bynum and Odom in the front court and they were playing very well. At one point were the #1 team in the WC. It took Bynum's injury for the Lakers to pull the trigger on trading for Pau.
The Lakers unquestionably won at a notably higher rate with Pau even in 08 than without him. He immediately improved the team. Remember, they were 22-5 with him (67-win pace), and 35-20 without him (52-win pace). In Bynum's 35 games, they were 24-11 (56-win pace), so again, they were doing notably better with Pau.OTOH, Pau was not necessarily the optimal or only fit for the Lakers, I think many other players could have duplicated Gasol's impact in that time period:
Bosh
Garnett
Duncan
Al Jefferson
Elton Brand
ZBo
Rasheed
Boozer
Al Horford
Aldridge
Doubt it with Bosh, Jefferson, Brand, Z Bo, Sheed, Boozer or Aldridge. Garnett and Duncan were superstars, so that seems evident. They likely would have been a lot better, even with KG and Tim a little older at that point. Al Jefferson was an inefficient post scorer who wasn't a great passer and wasn't a good defender, he would definitely not have been as good as Pau in that system. Z Bo was a good rebounder but nothing like Pau on D or as a passer, and was worse on offense. Sheed wasn't the rebounder or scoring threat. Boozer was a horrific defender, though offensively he might have fit in. Horford was and remains quite good. Aldridge was not good enough on the glass and was a notably less effective scoring threat. Most of those dudes wouldn't have got it done in LA.
Yes, Pau fits beautifully along Kobe and inside of the triangle. He is intelligent, willing passer, understood the concept the triangle was trying to implement.
So there is no argument that Pau was phenomenal.
Now here is the pushback, prepare yourself, its not personal.
You point out that the Lakers had a higher winning percentage with Pau (without Bynum), than with Bynum (without Pau). That is also a fact. Lets put out some more facts:
22-5 with Pau is a 67 win pace, that is ATG right there...so lets dive into that.
Did Kobe and Shaq ever win 67 games? Yes, one time in 2000. But in 2001, they won 56 games. In 2002 the last championship they won 58 games. Does that mean that Pau and Kobe, was better than Kobe and Shaq in those years? Obviously, foolish question. But by the numbers, 2008 Kobe and Pau, were a more effective tandem than Kobe and Shaq in every year except 2000.
Let's do a different comparison. The 2016 Warriors won 73 games with the core of Curry, Klay, Draymond, Bogut. The 2017 Warriors won 67 games with Curry, Klay, Draymond, and Durant...which core was better? I think we know.
So the point is that back in 2008, the Lakers that season were making a jump, it was similar to the 2015 Warriors or 2005 Suns. They were coming into their own. Unfortunately, Bynum got hurt. Pau stepped into a great situation, he was there to keep it rolling. But if Bynum does not get hurt Pau is unnecessary, it is a very similar argument to if the Warriors needed Durant to win a title...some people feel yes, some people say no. The bottom line is the Lakers were good without Pau.
So now onto the most crucial point. I choose my words carefully and I see that some have missed my point. I said that many other players could duplicate the IMPACT of Pau. I did not say they would be a replica of Pau. This goes back to which pair is better, Kobe and Shaq or Kobe and Pau. Shaq could not do what Pau can do, but neither can Pau do what Shaq can do.
So when I mentioned Brand, Aldridge, Horford, Boozer, I am not saying they would be a duplicate of Pau. I am saying they would have similar impact but in different areas:
- Brand would provide better post offense/defense and shotblocking, but his passing would be poorer...against the Celtics I would rather have Brand
- Aldridge I think is a better scorer, similar rebounding, I give Pau a big edge in passing this is a push
- Horford I would rather have Pau also
- Boozer stronger post game, stronger post defense, better rebounder, more consistent offense, Pau is once again a better passer/facilitator
I don't think you are looking at the Lakers in a holistic manner. Its not Pau vs Boozer/Aldridge/Horford/Brand
It's Pau/Odom/Bynum
vs Brand/Odom/Bynum and so on
One of the things you are glossing over that I have repeatedly mentioned is toughness. Almost all of the players I have chosen are tangibly tougher and more resilient than Pau. This is where I think so many of the "pretty basketball" arguments come in to play. Pau is a finesse player, its great when you are passing and moving the ball and everybody gets touches. That's a regular season argument.
In the playoffs against teams like those Boston Celtics or the 2004 Pistons where physicality is a factor, Pau is not optimal. I saw Pau get punked by 6'6 Chuck Hayes. I don't know if you remember Chuck Hayes but he was similar to PJ Tucker but more in the post. Pau couldn't do anything against Chuck Hayes, he was flopping, throwing up BS shots because it was too physical and this would happen when Kobe went to the bench and the Lakers needed Pau to be the #1 option. Pau is not built for that.
Pau prefers to facilitate and defer. Pau does not take over and assert his will on the game in the same way a STAR would do. Pau is a super-powered role player. He is an ideal role player who does what is asked. But if you ask him to carry the team for stretches at a time, he cannot do that and that is why I look for other players who could fit that role.....










