This isn't completely true. Moving from say "15" -> "16" (and so on) may matter more. Would you rather have 1 all star season or 10 seasons of barely above replacement level production sort of deal. When the goal is to win championships, it's completely reasonable to support a 10x20 > 15x15.Mike G wrote:A 15 X 15 square is bigger than a 10 X 20 rectangle, and it doesn't require any 'distortion' to believe that. You may like the shape of the rectangle, or it may fit your preference better, but that's just you.
Vote players into our alltime top 160, etc.
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Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
http://pointsperpossession.com/
@PPPBasketball
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Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
Well, if the 15 and the 20 are PER, then we are comparing a player with 10 years at marginal all-star level, vs a player with 15 years at average player level. Both players will be assumed to go through a 'trajectory'; and the 15-yr guy may get one allstar nod as a replacement (like Divac) vs the 'better' player who got 1 or 2 all-NBA's and 6-8 allstar games.
In that case, it seems like no contest: It's a perennial allstar (but with a relatively short career) vs a constant (and long-term) contributor. But the lesser player has 1.5 times the career length -- 15 vs 10 chances of contributing to a title run. He may be a 4th or 5th or 8th or 10th man, but every champion has these guys.
It'll be a while -- if ever -- before we are debating replacement types vs one-season wonders. But with 30 teams, a player of any caliber who plays 15 years has a 50/50 shot at a title. Better players should have a better chance.
In hindsight, we see why or how some guys got there and others did not. A superstar may hog the ball or the salary, so his team never attracts the supporting players he needs. A journeyman may hook up with one or several champs, just by being a self-sacrificing 'team player'.
Are Horry and Fisher itinerant title-delivering specialists? Or just amazingly lucky? Or were their teams lucky to have them?
In that case, it seems like no contest: It's a perennial allstar (but with a relatively short career) vs a constant (and long-term) contributor. But the lesser player has 1.5 times the career length -- 15 vs 10 chances of contributing to a title run. He may be a 4th or 5th or 8th or 10th man, but every champion has these guys.
It'll be a while -- if ever -- before we are debating replacement types vs one-season wonders. But with 30 teams, a player of any caliber who plays 15 years has a 50/50 shot at a title. Better players should have a better chance.
In hindsight, we see why or how some guys got there and others did not. A superstar may hog the ball or the salary, so his team never attracts the supporting players he needs. A journeyman may hook up with one or several champs, just by being a self-sacrificing 'team player'.
Are Horry and Fisher itinerant title-delivering specialists? Or just amazingly lucky? Or were their teams lucky to have them?
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
With less than a day left to vote or change your vote, we have 24 players with 3 or more votes. These would be advanced to top 75 consideration and replaced with 24 other names.
It's rather a disappointment that only 5 people have voted. Round 1 had 15 voters, round 2 had 7. Only one person has voted after the first day in this round.
To me, the discussions are more interesting than the vote totals -- especially when those totals are meager. I can't tell if people are intimidated by the discussion process, the voting process, or if they're just uninterested in such an experiment. The thread is exposed to (I think) the best analytical basketball minds in the world.
It's still better than a situation where lots of knuckleheads are calling people names, insisting their opinions are without fault while others are idiots, and the like. Everyone's been pretty level headed for the most part. There just aren't enough "everyones".
The upshot is that this "first iteration" is a highly preliminary phase. We're just establishing a "consensus" top 25, top 50, etc. Then we can, sooner or later, restart the process.
It may be that the most expedient final process would be for individuals to submit an actual ranking, from 1 to 100, 1 to 200, or whatever. Averaging these submissions could then be the tiebreaking procedure.
It's rather a disappointment that only 5 people have voted. Round 1 had 15 voters, round 2 had 7. Only one person has voted after the first day in this round.
To me, the discussions are more interesting than the vote totals -- especially when those totals are meager. I can't tell if people are intimidated by the discussion process, the voting process, or if they're just uninterested in such an experiment. The thread is exposed to (I think) the best analytical basketball minds in the world.
It's still better than a situation where lots of knuckleheads are calling people names, insisting their opinions are without fault while others are idiots, and the like. Everyone's been pretty level headed for the most part. There just aren't enough "everyones".
The upshot is that this "first iteration" is a highly preliminary phase. We're just establishing a "consensus" top 25, top 50, etc. Then we can, sooner or later, restart the process.
It may be that the most expedient final process would be for individuals to submit an actual ranking, from 1 to 100, 1 to 200, or whatever. Averaging these submissions could then be the tiebreaking procedure.
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
The difficulty of lasting the same career duration in the older era; defense; basketball iq (see his coaching career) which might manifest itself in say low turnovers, leadership etc; physical fitness (running oppenents ragged to the benefit of his substitutes Sam Jones and Frank Ramsey). Does your system put much weight on %s (that might be another area of difference)?Mike G wrote:Well, Bill Sharman ranks way out there at 190 in my list, so unless he's a write-in, he won't be on the ballot for a while.
In Win Shares, regular season, he's 46th among guards, 123rd among all players. In playoffs, 85th.
He ranks 81 in Offensive WS (RS) and 36th in WS/48.
In my version of 'equivalent points', season + playoff, he's #108; amongst Theus, DJ, Jeff Malone, and Byron Scott.
In eAssists, he's 248th -- behind Dantley, Paul Silas, Bill Bradley. There are 75 players with more of both.
His stats indeed suggest that he was the best SG of his era; but that he'd be lucky to crack the top 10 today.
Unless there's something the stats aren't conveying, of course.
Given the goal of winning championships and given the gap between him and the next best 50s SG (especially if you discount Ramsey as a tweener), and the convention to play two guards Sharman gave a substantial edge to increasing your team's probability of winning titles. He's 124th in career Win Shares, a metric that skews favourably to bigs (and again the longevity that early 50s players couldn't have) and 179 (circa 2009) in a PER derived value added measure that skewed against older era players. On their own that wouldn't say top 75 material but again substantially better than say Carl Braun or Gene Shue and as such giving you a substantial edge towards winning titles. As a guard (and dead-eye shooter) in the pre-three era that he was consistently top 10 in ts% is pretty impressive.
Anyway I've added my first voting contribution. Decided not to write in especially when I don't have a solid set of rankings yet. Guys I'd look to vote for next time not presently on the board include:
Arizin
Howell
S Jones
Sharman
Moncrief
Dave Cowens
plus maybe ...
Chet Walker
Hornacek
Eddie Jones
Terry Porter
Detlef Schrempf
Mikkelsen
Gallatin
Bobby Jones
possibly maybe ...
Terrell Brandon
Dave Bing
Earl Monroe
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
Just voted for 20 players, I have 5 write-ins:
Bill Sharman
Bobby Jones
Bill Walton
Dennis Johnson
Dave DeBusschere
I might sub Dantley and Webber out for Mel Daniels and Sidney Moncrief before the deadline, not sure though.
Bill Sharman
Bobby Jones
Bill Walton
Dennis Johnson
Dave DeBusschere
I might sub Dantley and Webber out for Mel Daniels and Sidney Moncrief before the deadline, not sure though.
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
Cowens got 6 of 7 votes in the 2nd round, i.e., preliminary top 50.Guys I'd look to vote for next time not presently on the board include:
...
Dave Cowens...
Sharman played when a season was 66 to 79 games. I've multiplied his yearly 'equivalent totals' by 82/66, etc. I've also weighed playoffs more heavily, and given credit for titles. But I don't give him credit for having a better shooting % than his contemporaries.
If he shot better than others, then he got more points, which are also a higher % of total points in the games he was in. So his teams outscored their opponents, they got into more playoff games, and they won more titles. He gets credit in all these ways. Yet I still don't rank him as highly as his offensive Win Shares would say.
He had 4 years above 34 mpg; just 2 years above 36. Richie Guerin went as high as 43 mpg and scored 29.5 ppg. Why isn't he in the discussion?
Bobby Wanzer was an earlier superguard. Check out his playoff rates:
http://bkref.com/tiny/ENUFa
There are literally dozens of similarly accomplished players in NBA and ABA history -- of guards, forwards, and centers -- they can't all be in the top 100.
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
What quantitatively (or qualitatively) separates these players in assessments of their careers?
http://bkref.com/tiny/6L5JV
(Cunningham, Kemp, Jerry Lucas, McAdoo, McGinnis, Webber)
http://bkref.com/tiny/6L5JV
(Cunningham, Kemp, Jerry Lucas, McAdoo, McGinnis, Webber)
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
Sorry must have missed Cowens.Mike G wrote:Cowens got 6 of 7 votes in the 2nd round, i.e., preliminary top 50.Guys I'd look to vote for next time not presently on the board include:
...
Dave Cowens...
Sharman played when a season was 66 to 79 games. I've multiplied his yearly 'equivalent totals' by 82/66, etc. I've also weighed playoffs more heavily, and given credit for titles. But I don't give him credit for having a better shooting % than his contemporaries.
If he shot better than others, then his points are a higher % of total points in the games he was in. So his teams outscored their opponents, they got into more playoff games, and they won more titles. He gets credit in all these ways. Yet I still don't rank him as highly as his offensive Win Shares would say.
He had 4 years above 34 mpg; just 2 years above 36. Richie Guerin went as high as 43 mpg and scored 29.5 ppg. Why isn't he in the discussion?
Bobby Wanzer was an earlier superguard. Check out his playoff rates:
http://bkref.com/tiny/ENUFa
There are literally dozens of similarly accomplished players in NBA and ABA history -- guards, forwards, centers -- they can't all be in the top 100.
Personally I'd say there's far too much not caused by Sharman for playoffs to give Sharman sufficient weight for his superiority. Sharman's minutes were limited in later years by having Sam Jones and Frank Ramsey playing his position, so techinically that harmed his total productivity but it seems harsh to say that diminished his career.
Guerin isn't in the discussion yet because (a) his 29.5ppg season was a fluke, both in his performance and that performance coinciding with a high pace, high percentage (for era) and thus high scoring year. He also isn't in because because whether you consider him a pg or an sg (the distinction wasn't so strong at the time) he was probably only third best at his position (behind West and Sam Jones, I'd have to look at Greer too at SG, Robertson and probably Wilkens at PG).
Wanzer, Zaslofsky, Davies, Feerick, Fulks and Risen could all warrant serious consideration. But players like this are disadvantaged here because:
a) We're on a metrics board and we've got less metrics for 40s players
b) They likely missed chunks of their career to armed service (WW2), and the late beginning of basketball that we now consider major league. As a result they'll fair poorly on counting/accumulative stats (and also won't be on the board until late).
c) The mostly white and pre-shot clock era is difficult to compare fairly with "modern" era players, even for those who want to do so fairly. Most (not on here but elsewhere) will just mock the games pioneers for their whiteness and playing to the rules at that time.
So basically I'm tempted to consider this a list/ranking of players who played a significant chunk of their career post-shot clock (and George Mikan), and act in accordance with that.
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
Well voting hasMike G wrote:What quantitatively (or qualitatively) separates these players in assessments of their careers?
http://bkref.com/tiny/6L5JV
(Cunningham, Kemp, Jerry Lucas, McAdoo, McGinnis, Webber)
6: Lucas, McAdoo
5: Cunningham
3: McGinnis, Webber
2: Kemp
Lucas and McAdoo (the two that I voted for) might be considered better because:
McAdoo- took an NBA MVP over Jabbar, has an excellent peak (the sort that makes you think the team could/should be a contender)
Lucas: Likely the best player at the position of the decade (you could argue Howell by the metrics, DeBusschere on D, Hawkins by what he could have done and his demolition of the ABA or Heinsohn for contributions to winner, but Lucas seems to have the best combination of stats and acclaim - at the time and after), which can't be said for the others. Has a high percieved historical standing (made the NBA 50 in 1996, the only player of this group to do so). Combines high percentages and rebounding with floor spacing which is fairly rare and valuable.
Kemp is damaged by PR (Dream Team II, so may children, getting fat, substance abuse), but would probably be in the top 75 if he'd stayed in shape/productive for a couple more years. As it is his low career minutes (he never played more than three quarters of the game, typically a little less) during his productive years caused by his horrendous foul trouble, combined with his rapid decline meant he didn't have the impact that he could/should(?) have had. He's better than how I think people percieve him though.
Cunningham and McGinnis are probably just approaching what I think would be (of the top of my head) their ballpark (very roughly 75-100, though McGinnis could slide further, and I'm okay with Cunningham making the top 75). They just didn't have very long careers, didn't shoot that accuarately and weren't a good "best player" in terms of giving you a good chance at an NBA title (no great NBA peak). Cunningham is coming off higher (I suspect) because of better D, better work ethic (as percieved, fairly or otherwise), better teammate (sublimating his stats), better BB-IQ and caring more (Cunningham became a Coach/Owner, McGinnis has a poor reputation in Philly, or at least with Pat Williams). Actually most of this applies to Webber too good, but not the best at his position, too low a fg%, not a good "best player" for making a team championship probability rather than just possibility.
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
Final tallies for round 3, players ranked in the top 75:
7 - Bob Lanier, Ray Allen
6 - Dominique Wilkins, Manu Ginobili, Reggie Miller, Bob McAdoo, George Gervin, Alonzo Mourning, Jerry Lucas, Wes Unseld, Adrian Dantley, Nate Thurmond
5 - Pau Gasol, Tony Parker, Billy Cunningham, Dikembe Mutombo
4 - Dan Issel, Vince Carter, James Worthy, Kevin Durant, Kevin Johnson, Ben Wallace
There are again 22 players who've received more than 50% of (7) votes.
3 - Chris Webber, George McGinnis, Chauncey Billups, Jack Sikma, Terry Cummings, Alex English, Shawn Marion, Neil Johnston, Walt Bellamy, Tom Heinsohn
2 - Shawn Kemp, Rasheed Wallace, Larry Nance, Cliff Hagan, Horace Grant, Grant Hill, Gus Williams, Bill Walton
1 - Carlos Boozer, Carmelo Anthony, Elton Brand, Maurice Lucas, Dennis Johnson, Dave DeBusschere, Bobby Jones, Bill Sharman, Dennis Rodman
0 - Divac, Adams, Odom, Amar'e, Baron, Cassell, Dandridge
Part of me wants to promote and replace those who got 3 votes; in the previous round, all who received 3 of 7 votes got 4 or more this time. So it may be "inevitable" that players who are "average" in round A will be the cream of the crop in round (A+1).
However, 2 players -- Durant and Ben Wallace -- received 3 votes previously and barely made the cut with 4 this time. (Ray Allen, meanwhile, went from 1 vote to unanimous 7 this time.)
Due to the relatively low participation, and even with much time to debate the candidates, there's not that great a correlation between votes in subsequent rounds. The write-in feature is causing fewer than half of players to get as many as half the votes.
Also, shooting for ~25 to advance, our options are 22 (with 4+ votes) vs 32 (with 3+ votes).
I'll now re-write the poll to include 22 more player candidates.
7 - Bob Lanier, Ray Allen
6 - Dominique Wilkins, Manu Ginobili, Reggie Miller, Bob McAdoo, George Gervin, Alonzo Mourning, Jerry Lucas, Wes Unseld, Adrian Dantley, Nate Thurmond
5 - Pau Gasol, Tony Parker, Billy Cunningham, Dikembe Mutombo
4 - Dan Issel, Vince Carter, James Worthy, Kevin Durant, Kevin Johnson, Ben Wallace
There are again 22 players who've received more than 50% of (7) votes.
3 - Chris Webber, George McGinnis, Chauncey Billups, Jack Sikma, Terry Cummings, Alex English, Shawn Marion, Neil Johnston, Walt Bellamy, Tom Heinsohn
2 - Shawn Kemp, Rasheed Wallace, Larry Nance, Cliff Hagan, Horace Grant, Grant Hill, Gus Williams, Bill Walton
1 - Carlos Boozer, Carmelo Anthony, Elton Brand, Maurice Lucas, Dennis Johnson, Dave DeBusschere, Bobby Jones, Bill Sharman, Dennis Rodman
0 - Divac, Adams, Odom, Amar'e, Baron, Cassell, Dandridge
Part of me wants to promote and replace those who got 3 votes; in the previous round, all who received 3 of 7 votes got 4 or more this time. So it may be "inevitable" that players who are "average" in round A will be the cream of the crop in round (A+1).
However, 2 players -- Durant and Ben Wallace -- received 3 votes previously and barely made the cut with 4 this time. (Ray Allen, meanwhile, went from 1 vote to unanimous 7 this time.)
Due to the relatively low participation, and even with much time to debate the candidates, there's not that great a correlation between votes in subsequent rounds. The write-in feature is causing fewer than half of players to get as many as half the votes.
Also, shooting for ~25 to advance, our options are 22 (with 4+ votes) vs 32 (with 3+ votes).
I'll now re-write the poll to include 22 more player candidates.
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
Kemp is also known as the only player ever to arguably outplay Jordan in the Finals, in 1996 -- or possibly in any playoff series. In Jordan's other 5 Finals, nobody else was at all close.Kemp is damaged by PR (Dream Team II, so may children, getting fat, substance abuse), but would probably be in the top 75 if he'd stayed in shape/productive for a couple more years. As it is his low career minutes (he never played more than three quarters of the game, typically a little less) during his productive years caused by his horrendous foul trouble, combined with his rapid decline meant he didn't have the impact that he could/should(?) have had.
He wasn't 'the best at his position' because of Karl Malone, who was the best ever at the position. Also that Barkley guy.
Kemp was perfectly capable of playing extended minutes. From '92 thru '98, he averaged 28 to 34 mpg in the season and 35 to 41 in playoffs. Seattle had a rather deep team in that time. Kemp's playoff numbers tended to be stronger than his regular seasons AND over more minutes.
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Re: Vote players into our alltime top 100, etc.
I'm going to write-in Andrei Kirilenko as one of my votes.
http://pointsperpossession.com/
@PPPBasketball
@PPPBasketball
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 100, etc.
Kirilenko has one. Bobbo, you should have one more vote yet.
Of this group of (now) 51, AK has scored more points than Rodman or Walton.
He's 37th of 51 in rebounds, 38th in assists, 28th in steals, and 5th in blocks.
In the sum of all these things, he's ahead of only Walton, and he's 45th in minutes.
In 45 playoff games his PO/RS ratio is dead last, and by a good bit -- .76 -- next lowest is .82 (Cassell), and the median is .96
His playoff PER is 14.9, vs season PER of 19.0 -- ratio is .78
PO/RS WS/48 = .093/.155 = .60
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... lan01.html
This isn't a fluke result of his having most playoff minutes outside his prime years. 68% of his playoff minutes are from '07 and '08, age 25-26. He just has never brought his A game to the postseason.
Of this group of (now) 51, AK has scored more points than Rodman or Walton.
He's 37th of 51 in rebounds, 38th in assists, 28th in steals, and 5th in blocks.
In the sum of all these things, he's ahead of only Walton, and he's 45th in minutes.
In 45 playoff games his PO/RS ratio is dead last, and by a good bit -- .76 -- next lowest is .82 (Cassell), and the median is .96
His playoff PER is 14.9, vs season PER of 19.0 -- ratio is .78
PO/RS WS/48 = .093/.155 = .60
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... lan01.html
This isn't a fluke result of his having most playoff minutes outside his prime years. 68% of his playoff minutes are from '07 and '08, age 25-26. He just has never brought his A game to the postseason.
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 100, etc.
Bill Walton's career (equivalent) totals look like these guys' --Ralph made it to the Hall of Fame with a similar storyline.
In per 36 minutes, relative to 100 pts and 44 reb per team per game:None of these are really close. Nate is close as a shotblocker, maybe. There's Sampson again. Next 5: Gilmore, Roundfield, Russell, Stokes, Bogut
Walt BellamyScorer-rebounders not known for their defense. I could be way off on Bells' Blk rate, as this is based on the very end of his career. Next 5: Thorpe, Zach, Cummings, C Boozer, Gooden.A couple of the same names. Next 5: Willis, Buck, Kemp, Sheed, Marion
Jack SikmaSame-sized careers resemble one another here. Next: Kemp, Webber, Cummings, Buck, Rasheed.
Rebounders who score and pass.Next 5 - Laettner, Gus Johnson, Brad Miller, DeBusschere, Wicks
Larry FoustNext: Sabonis, Gallatin, Roundfield, Risen, Vin Baker
next - Mychal Thompson, Cartwright, Lovellette, Perkins, Paultz
Zelmo Beatynext - McDyess, Nance, Dwight, Kerr, McAdoo
next - Risen, Johnny Green, Howell, Carroll, Okur
Alvan AdamsA C with the numbers of a SF. Next up - C Hawkins, A Walker, Odom, Webber, Divac
next - M Lucas, Cowens, Ron Harper, McGinnis, J Howard
Code: Select all
diff career equiv. ePts eReb eAst PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Bill Walton 6527 5303 1678 1444 418 1490 1134
.35 Dave Corzine 7472 5726 1460 2084 398 1435 909
.39 Mel Hutchins 6959 5300 1999 1780 651 992 610
.43 Ralph Sampson 7085 4420 1055 1755 431 1513 818
.51 Sweetwater Clifton 6479 4892 1820 2267 604 957 575
.51 Bo Outlaw 5669 4802 1577 2245 886 1118 1241
In per 36 minutes, relative to 100 pts and 44 reb per team per game:
Code: Select all
diff career per36 Sco Reb Ast PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Bill Walton 15.7 12.8 4.0 3.5 1.0 3.6 2.7
.30 Jerry Lucas 15.5 11.9 3.1 2.8 1.4 2.6 1.8
.41 Ralph Sampson 16.9 10.5 2.5 4.2 1.0 3.6 1.9
.47 Vlade Divac 14.3 9.9 3.6 3.8 1.3 2.6 1.7
.47 Nate Thurmond 13.4 11.9 2.7 2.8 .6 2.4 2.6
.48 Josh Smith 16.9 9.3 3.2 3.1 1.4 2.7 2.3
Walt Bellamy
Code: Select all
diff career per36 Sco Reb Ast PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Walt Bellamy 18.4 11.0 2.3 3.4 .8 2.5 .7
.10 David Lee 17.3 11.5 2.4 3.2 1.0 2.2 .4
.10 Cliff Robinson 18.2 9.9 2.2 3.5 1.2 2.9 .8
.11 Luis Scola 18.4 10.0 2.2 3.9 .9 2.2 .4
.12 Mehmet Okur 17.6 9.7 2.0 3.5 .7 1.9 .9
.14 Truck Robinson 16.0 10.3 1.9 3.3 .8 3.0 .7
Code: Select all
diff career equiv. ePts eReb eAst PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Walt Bellamy 20,467 12083 2521 3733 835 2762 770
.35 Otis Thorpe 18,833 11293 2820 4378 881 2916 518
.50 Terry Cummings 20,324 9763 2277 4180 1374 2415 729
.52 Dolph Schayes 21,823 11189 3422 3986 1210 2606 1401
.53 Jack Sikma 17,901 11880 3546 4310 1260 2819 1131
.59 Bob Lanier 19,702 9882 3124 3276 1103 2853 1596
Jack Sikma
Code: Select all
diff career equiv. ePts eReb eAst PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Jack Sikma 17,901 11880 3546 4310 1260 2819 1131
.44 Otis Thorpe 18,833 11293 2820 4378 881 2916 518
.51 Bob Lanier 19,702 9882 3124 3276 1103 2853 1596
.53 Walt Bellamy 20,467 12083 2521 3733 835 2762 770
.55 Dolph Schayes 21,823 11189 3422 3986 1210 2606 1401
.56 Vlade Divac 15,189 10471 3830 4043 1407 2742 1803
Rebounders who score and pass.
Code: Select all
diff career per36 Sco Reb Ast PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Jack Sikma 16.1 10.7 3.2 3.9 1.1 2.5 1.0
.06 Dave Cowens 16.1 11.9 3.5 3.8 1.1 2.2 .9
.06 Maurice Lucas 15.8 10.7 2.8 4.1 1.0 3.0 .8
.10 Neal Walk 15.9 9.6 2.8 4.4 .9 2.4 .7
.10 Lamar Odom 15.2 9.6 3.9 3.3 .9 2.5 1.0
.11 Arvydas Sabonis 18.3 10.8 3.0 3.9 1.1 2.4 1.4
Larry Foust
Code: Select all
diff career per36 Sco Reb Ast PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Larry Foust 18.5 9.8 2.2 4.3 1.1 2.6 1.5
.05 Willis Reed 18.4 10.8 1.9 3.9 1.0 2.6 1.7
.07 Vern Mikkelsen 18.2 8.5 2.4 4.6 1.2 2.5 1.3
.10 Bailey Howell 19.1 8.2 2.0 4.2 1.0 2.4 1.3
.10 Zelmo Beaty 17.2 9.3 1.6 4.0 .9 2.3 1.4
.10 Paul Millsap 17.6 10.0 2.2 4.3 1.4 2.0 1.2
Code: Select all
diff career equiv. ePts eReb eAst PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Larry Foust 15,105 8422 1866 3672 723 1742 1038
.27 Zelmo Beaty 16,249 8636 1502 3736 808 2143 1343
.37 Antonio McDyess 13,205 8689 1381 3343 818 1709 1164
.43 Jermaine O'Neal 14,862 8096 1473 3056 496 1995 1945
.45 Spencer Haywood 16,028 7954 1517 2517 591 2419 1065
.45 Johnny Kerr 13,112 9359 2284 2834 975 1928 1279
Zelmo Beaty
Code: Select all
diff career equiv. ePts eReb eAst PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Zelmo Beaty 16,249 8636 1502 3736 808 2143 1343
.27 Larry Foust 15,105 8422 1866 3672 723 1742 1038
.39 Bailey Howell 18,452 7894 1937 4038 947 2264 1170
.42 Jermaine O'Neal 14,862 8096 1473 3056 496 1995 1945
.43 Sam Perkins 17,310 9058 2165 3618 1236 1822 1077
.43 Spencer Haywood 16,028 7954 1517 2517 591 2419 1065
Code: Select all
diff career per36 Sco Reb Ast PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Zelmo Beaty 17.2 9.3 1.6 4.0 .9 2.3 1.4
.07 Willie Naulls 16.9 8.0 1.8 3.8 .9 2.2 1.2
.08 Antonio McDyess 15.6 10.3 1.6 4.0 1.0 2.0 1.4
.08 Vin Baker 16.8 9.0 2.2 3.6 .8 2.5 1.1
.10 Larry Foust 18.5 9.8 2.2 4.3 1.1 2.6 1.5
.11 Willis Reed 18.4 10.8 1.9 3.9 1.0 2.6 1.7
Alvan Adams
Code: Select all
diff career per36 Sco Reb Ast PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Alvan Adams 16.6 8.9 4.8 4.1 1.6 3.4 1.0
.12 Mickey Johnson 16.6 8.9 3.5 4.3 1.4 3.7 .9
.21 Billy Cunningham 19.9 9.0 4.2 3.9 1.6 3.9 1.4
.23 Sidney Wicks 16.7 8.7 3.3 3.6 1.1 3.0 .8
.26 Christian Laettner 16.2 8.6 3.1 3.8 1.3 2.7 .9
.26 Scottie Pippen 17.9 7.3 5.5 3.0 2.0 2.9 .9
Code: Select all
diff career equiv. ePts eReb eAst PF Stl TO Blk
.00 Alvan Adams 14,115 7599 4085 3464 1380 2888 887
.32 Billy Cunningham 15,015 6937 3247 3064 1283 3036 1086
.44 Antoine Walker 16,088 7715 3484 2751 1182 2708 499
.49 Lamar Odom 15,073 9557 3839 3315 929 2506 1000
.58 Dave DeBusschere 13,173 8919 2688 3151 1209 2199 1385
.60 Bob Dandridge 16,763 5840 3067 3322 1182 2717 552
Re: Vote players into our alltime top 75, etc.
I like Kemp, but he was playing less than he would have because of foul trouble. Seattle went deep with perimeter/wing talent but not on bigs (Benjamin, Perkins, Ervin Johnson, Mcilvaine and then some Schrempf or McKey at the 4). On the outside they had (at various times: Payton, McMillan, Threatt, Barros, Snow, Pierce, Gill, Hawkins, Askew, Wingate, Ehlo, Schrempf, McKey, Eddie Johnson). Seattle were deeper and more talented on the outside than the inside and I suspect they’d rather have 36-38 minutes from him than the 32-34 they usually got. He has three seasons above 22.5 PER and .200 WS/48 (a not insignificant achievement), but looking at all such seasons his are very much at the bottom end of the minutes spectrum (one could look by mpg rather than total minutes and then their lockout season won't be unfairly punished, but I think the other two seasons come off even worse)Mike G wrote:Kemp is also known as the only player ever to arguably outplay Jordan in the Finals, in 1996 -- or possibly in any playoff series. In Jordan's other 5 Finals, nobody else was at all close.Kemp is damaged by PR (Dream Team II, so may children, getting fat, substance abuse), but would probably be in the top 75 if he'd stayed in shape/productive for a couple more years. As it is his low career minutes (he never played more than three quarters of the game, typically a little less) during his productive years caused by his horrendous foul trouble, combined with his rapid decline meant he didn't have the impact that he could/should(?) have had.
He wasn't 'the best at his position' because of Karl Malone, who was the best ever at the position. Also that Barkley guy.
Kemp was perfectly capable of playing extended minutes. From '92 thru '98, he averaged 28 to 34 mpg in the season and 35 to 41 in playoffs. Seattle had a rather deep team in that time. Kemp's playoff numbers tended to be stronger than his regular seasons AND over more minutes.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... rder_by=mp
Sort by fouls per minute amongst that group and you see foul trouble very much was what limited his minutes
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... =pf_per_mp
This foul trouble is what allows people to make the poor and crude argument that he isn’t a historically significant type of player because he “only once scored 20ppg” (which I have seen online alongside the false claim that he never got 10rpg and whilst ignoring the slow era pace and the efficiency of his scoring). Had he played those extra minutes (either in his 30’s as an non-fatty, or in his prime with less fouls, or perhaps coaches willing to risk playing him whilst in foul trouble) he would have been a fair bit better and be perceived as quite a lot better.
Are those years Kirilenko’s peak? Injuries, and then maybe Sloan mishandling him (or at least their relationship not working) and his confidence seemingly going meant at an age when you might expect him to be peaking he had what by PER and WS/48 is his worst year (’07) and an average or worse year (‘08). By contrast he played just 5 playoff games in the three years that PER and WS/48 concur was his peak (03-05).Mike G wrote:Kirilenko has one. Bobbo, you should have one more vote yet.
Of this group of (now) 51, AK has scored more points than Rodman or Walton.
He's 37th of 51 in rebounds, 38th in assists, 28th in steals, and 5th in blocks.
In the sum of all these things, he's ahead of only Walton, and he's 45th in minutes.
In 45 playoff games his PO/RS ratio is dead last, and by a good bit -- .76 -- next lowest is .82 (Cassell), and the median is .96
His playoff PER is 14.9, vs season PER of 19.0 -- ratio is .78
PO/RS WS/48 = .093/.155 = .60
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... lan01.html
This isn't a fluke result of his having most playoff minutes outside his prime years. 68% of his playoff minutes are from '07 and '08, age 25-26. He just has never brought his A game to the postseason.
The sum of the boxscore numbers is harsh on Kirilenko because:
(a) the things Kirilenko is good at (especially blocks but also steals) occur less than the things that he is less good at (volume scoring).
(b) he’s still active
(c) he’s a high percentage shooter (very strong ts%) and low turnover player
(d) he’s a very good defender
I seem to recall (though my knowledge of this is limited) +/- type stats tend to like him. He also has metrics peak few left on the board have. 24.4 PER (albeit in somewhat limited total minutes due to injury) is very impressive especially for a relative non-scorer (on a metric I believe favours scorers), based on a quick search I only spotted Brand, Ming, Bellamy, Hill, Arizin, Kevin Love, John Drew, Terrell Brandon, Bernard King, Bosh, Walton, Carmelo Anthony, Arvydas Sabonis, Brook Lopez , Chris Webber and Penny Hardaway who are still unlisted and have a PER peak above his.
Of those only Walton has defensive reputation that could be compared with Kirilenko. Most had either short/injury ravaged/ substance issue affected careers, were bad defenders or still haven’t played a lot of their careers, or a combination of the above. Some will be voted in very soon.
I won’t be voting for him just yet but I understand him getting consideration.