DavidStern wrote:To all who voted for Payton - why he over Stockton?
And ElGee, based on what you think that Reggie's longevity was so long and Stockton only until '95?
nominate: CP
Well, it was based on what you suggested, actually. Either 1996 Stockton is healthy and was just epically owned by Gary Payton, or he really was banged up so much in the PS to be that bad. So that's kind of a useless year then...
In 1997, he still is 35 mpg player...so I should amend that to add another year.
But by 1998, he's a sub 30 mpg guy. He averages 11-8 in the 98 playoffs...hard to watch the 98 PS and consider Stockton still an AS-level player. Good, no doubt, but I'm not interested in someone who might be the 30th best player in the league and an excellent role player. Really, in the last 13 PS games in 98, Stockton, he of the assist, has 3 double-figure ast games and 4 double-figure scoring games.
People may look at 99 then and say "he made all-nba!" That's a bit absurd to me. The top guards in MVP voting were: Iverson, Kidd, Payton, Armstrong, Penny, M. Jackson, S. Smith.
Kidd and Iverson were 1st team
Payton and Tim Hardaway were 2nd team
Stock was voted 3rd team with Kobe
Which means he beat out Armstrong, Penny, M. Jackson, S. Smith and Miller.
Penny was probably slotted as a forward. Armstrong was totally new to the party (and had a good year). Carter was a rookie and maybe treated as a 3. S. Smith played 72% of the year, which probably soured his vote...but Smitty took Atlanta from -1.4 to +4.6. Dude was a star, almost in the mold of Reggie, and pretty clear to me he's way better than Stock.
And Miller, well, see the last post I had on him. His classic off-ball spacing, hyper-efficient offensive role (coupled with some nice decision-making from Jackson) helped Indiana to a +5.2 offense in the RS and a +8.3 PS offense. Reggie's still giving you 18 ppg on high efficiency - no doubt he's way better than Stockton.
So, that 1999 all-nba nod has always been a joke/reputation nod to me. (It's possible voters selected "true PG's.") No way was Stockton a top-15 player. That's basically Stock for the next few years...people who look to WS/48 might tend to overrate him because he's playing a hyper-efficient game himself, but that, in many ways, was always Stockton's weakness.
Just compare them 10 years into the prime -- 98 Stock vs. 00 Miller. One is a low-minute, low-production cog/decision-maker, the other is the driving offensive star of a championship-level team. Miller averaged 24 ppg on 60% TS in the PS for goodness sakes, including back-to-back 40 pointers in the PS, 34 to close the Knicks, and after his G1 Finals disaster, 27.8 ppg on 65.5% TS for that series. Dude's playing at like peak levels at 34.
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As for Stockton vs. Payton, I feel like I've discussed that ad nausea in the last few threads. Payton has a better peak and a comparable number of good years. He fits well on a lot of teams. Hard for me to accept Stockton ahead of him.