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tpols
07-11-2020, 12:31 PM
57th pick in the NBA draft.

That's nuts.

How did that happen?

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 01:09 PM
That's crazy and I feel you can make a good argument he was spurs best player without question in 2005 playoffs. I would even take it as far as saying Manu was spurs best and most important player from 2005-2007. The advanced stats from Manu/Duncan were very similar during those three years and Manu was always way more efficient, better playmaker and just the motor of the team. 2005-2007 if Manu doesn't foul Dirk in game 7 2nd round the spurs probably 3peat during those years. So when you're the best and most important player for that caliber of 3 year stretch, it just shows how great of a player you are.

Tony Parker on the other hand was a poor 3 point shooter, poor defender, and had a habit of disappearing in big games. They easily would of been better off replacing Parker with somebody like Jason Terry.

Uncle Drew
07-11-2020, 01:14 PM
Manu cost the team two championships.

Akeem34TheDream
07-11-2020, 01:20 PM
He would have been a top 10 pick if he was drafted in 2002, the year he entered NBA. He was very successful in Europe but that was after he was drafted.

tpols
07-11-2020, 01:21 PM
i didn't even know this but Larry Bird was taken after

Mychal Thompson
Phil Ford
Rick Robey
Michael Ray Richardson (gangster name)
and Purvis Short


:roll:

What were these GM's smoking?

That's not a low pick but damn...

1987_Lakers
07-11-2020, 01:28 PM
i didn't even know this but Larry Bird was taken after

Mychal Thompson
Phil Ford
Rick Robey
Michael Ray Richardson (gangster name)
and Purvis Short


:roll:

What were these GM's smoking?

That's not a low pick but damn...

Pretty sure Bird deciding to stay another year in college after being drafted is a reason why he was taken #6. He would have been the #1 pick if he decided to play in the NBA right after being drafted.

I thought this was common knowledge.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 01:35 PM
Manu cost the team two championships.


2006 spurs vs mavs

Manu put up 21PPG on 64% TS with a 16.1 GmSc

Tony Parker put up 20PPG on 48% TS with a 10.3 GmSc

At least we know whos fault it was losing that series! And that's despite Jason Terry's 1 game suspension wow props to Dirk but big L for Tony Parker. Did parker ever have a good playoff run besides 2007?

SouBeachTalents
07-11-2020, 02:01 PM
That's crazy and I feel you can make a good argument he was spurs best player without question in 2005 playoffs. I would even take it as far as saying Manu was spurs best and most important player from 2005-2007. The advanced stats from Manu/Duncan were very similar during those three years and Manu was always way more efficient, better playmaker and just the motor of the team. 2005-2007 if Manu doesn't foul Dirk in game 7 2nd round the spurs probably 3peat during those years. So when you're the best and most important player for that caliber of 3 year stretch, it just shows how great of a player you are.

Tony Parker on the other hand was a poor 3 point shooter, poor defender, and had a habit of disappearing in big games. They easily would of been better off replacing Parker with somebody like Jason Terry.
You could definitely make an argument he was, but without question? FOH :oldlol:

imdaman99
07-11-2020, 02:08 PM
It's a cheat code to have someone with his ability come off the bench for most of their career for your team. Pop you sonuvabitch

tpols
07-11-2020, 02:13 PM
Manu was an absolutely brilliant basketball player.

I know a lot of this forum is in love with durable stat guys like iverson and westbrook... but manu was on an entirely different intellectual and skill plane.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 02:14 PM
You could definitely make an argument he was, but without question? FOH :oldlol:

Make an argument = entire duration of 05-07 stretch

Pretty clearly = 2005 playoffs

Manu had the clutch gene and dominated in pretty much every important closeout game from 2005-2007. Duncan 2005-2007 isn't the same player as 01-03 Duncan, while Manu was hitting his peak. In 2005 I would take Manu over Steve Nash as well.

Carbine
07-11-2020, 02:17 PM
Nobody thought Manu was the Spurs best player in the 2005 playoffs. This was never a topic of discussion, everyone knew better.

If you give it enough time, people will revisionist history a lot of things that make no sense.

Carbine
07-11-2020, 02:22 PM
Typically when someone leads their team in playoff PPG by a decent margin, leads in rebounding by a wide margin, leads in defensive impact by a vast margin and is just 1.5 assists per game from leading the team in that category too....... Their status doesn't get questioned. It didn't in the process while it was happening.

Whoah10115
07-11-2020, 02:23 PM
Nobody thought Manu was the Spurs best player in the 2005 playoffs. This was never a topic of discussion, everyone knew better.

If you give it enough time, people will revisionist history a lot of things that make no sense.

As usual, the revisionist talking about revisionist history.

Duncan was Spurs' best player. But in the playoffs, and especially in the Finals, there was plenty talk from plenty that Manu was giving the best performance.

But tell me more about revisionism. How's the Jordan/Bulls evaluation going?

Proper no-nothing.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 02:24 PM
Manu was an absolutely brilliant basketball player.

I know a lot of this forum is in love with durable stat guys like iverson and westbrook... but manu was on an entirely different intellectual and skill plane.


https://youtu.be/KhjAfxlKQ3g

Yeah and Manu had the clutch gene. Even when he was older, skip to 1:50 the 3 pointer he made in 2014 WCF to keep the series from going to 7.

In 2005 finals game 7 he also made a huge 3 in the final minutes.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 02:29 PM
Nobody thought Manu was the Spurs best player in the 2005 playoffs. This was never a topic of discussion, everyone knew better.

If you give it enough time, people will revisionist history a lot of things that make no sense.

On realgm board I remember there was. Even well respected moderator poster who was a pistons fan "How come Duncan throws up bricks all series and wins finals MVP, that was Manu's MVP"

tpols
07-11-2020, 02:32 PM
Nobody thought Manu was the Spurs best player in the 2005 playoffs. This was never a topic of discussion, everyone knew better.

If you give it enough time, people will revisionist history a lot of things that make no sense.

manu beat duncan in the olympics H2H.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtopNCH5-qY

With less help.

Tell me more about the NBA.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 02:35 PM
Typically when someone leads their team in playoff PPG by a decent margin, leads in rebounding by a wide margin, leads in defensive impact by a vast margin and is just 1.5 assists per game from leading the team in that category too....... Their status doesn't get questioned. It didn't in the process while it was happening.

3PPG margain is insufficient evidence if the efficiency is massively worse. Manu is also making the same exact amount of freethrows as Duncan despite taking less shots and playing less minutes. Advanced stats also give the edge to Manu by a landslide in 2005, even if you stretch it from 2005-2007 Manu is holding his own with Duncan's advanced stats.

Carbine
07-11-2020, 02:36 PM
I'm not talking about the 2005 finals. Manu was the best Sour on offense, clearly.

But to say he was the clear cut best player of the entire 2005 playoffs? Even arguably..... Nobody argued it at the time. Duncan was the best player.

Bulls run - it's going well man. Thanks for asking. Maybe you should rewatch the Spurs 2005 and 2007 runs too, educate yourself a little bit.

tpols
07-11-2020, 02:38 PM
Holy shit @ 2:45. I dont remember luis scola throwing down that type of exclamation.

That was a dagger dunk. A **** you.

Carbine
07-11-2020, 02:42 PM
3PPG margain is insufficient evidence if the efficiency is massively worse. Manu is also making the same exact amount of freethrows as Duncan despite taking less shots and playing less minutes. Advanced stats also give the edge to Manu by a landslide in 2005, even if you stretch it from 2005-2007 Manu is holding his own with Duncan's advanced stats.

It's not just the scoring. I don't even care if you say Manu was th best offensive player for the 2005.. whatever. That isn't outlandish.

This was Duncan in his defensive prime though. The impact he provided on that side of the floor is hard to value but anyone who watched them play with a watchful eye for the details of the game knows it was worth a hell of a lot more than 3 less ppg on better efficiency.

Turbo Slayer
07-11-2020, 02:43 PM
Probably. Manu was a great player.

Horatio33
07-11-2020, 02:51 PM
2006 spurs vs mavs

Manu put up 21PPG on 64% TS with a 16.1 GmSc

Tony Parker put up 20PPG on 48% TS with a 10.3 GmSc

At least we know whos fault it was losing that series! And that's despite Jason Terry's 1 game suspension wow props to Dirk but big L for Tony Parker. Did parker ever have a good playoff run besides 2007?

I'd probably say it was when the Spurs were up three with under 20 seconds left and Ginobili fouled Nowitzki when Dirk was making a layup that cost the Spurs more than Tony Parker's total shooting percentage. But then again I watched the game and didn't look at basketball reference so what do I know?

Horatio33
07-11-2020, 02:54 PM
In 2005 finals game 7 he also made a huge 3 in the final minutes.

Remind me again who was double teamed, read the double team perfectly, and threw the pass to Ginobili to make that shot? Its slipped my mind.

L.Kizzle
07-11-2020, 03:01 PM
There have been other great players picked in the second round like Willis Reed, Alex English and Tiny Archibald, but not picked so low. With the number of teams today, they would have been drafted in the late 1st round with Willis Reed being a lottery pick. Willis Reed was the first pick of the 2nd Round in the 1964 Draft. But he was actually 8th overall (but there was 9 teams in 64?!?!)

Uncle Drew
07-11-2020, 03:13 PM
2006 spurs vs mavs

Manu put up 21PPG on 64% TS with a 16.1 GmSc

Tony Parker put up 20PPG on 48% TS with a 10.3 GmSc

At least we know whos fault it was losing that series! And that's despite Jason Terry's 1 game suspension wow props to Dirk but big L for Tony Parker. Did parker ever have a good playoff run besides 2007?

Manu fouled Dirk. Manu choked on the line. Cost the team two championships.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 03:17 PM
I'm not talking about the 2005 finals. Manu was the best Sour on offense, clearly.

But to say he was the clear cut best player of the entire 2005 playoffs? Even arguably..... Nobody argued it at the time. Duncan was the best player.

Bulls run - it's going well man. Thanks for asking. Maybe you should rewatch the Spurs 2005 and 2007 runs too, educate yourself a little bit.

Manu advanced stats for the entire 2005 playoffs blow Duncan's away. Manu was also the clear cut best offensive player in every series besides Suns.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 03:24 PM
It's not just the scoring. I don't even care if you say Manu was th best offensive player for the 2005.. whatever. That isn't outlandish.

This was Duncan in his defensive prime though. The impact he provided on that side of the floor is hard to value but anyone who watched them play with a watchful eye for the details of the game knows it was worth a hell of a lot more than 3 less ppg on better efficiency.

Manu is a very underrated defensive player in his own right though. He had a 2.8 DBPM during the 2005 and 2007 titles.

Also in the 2005 playoffs, spurs net rating was always massively better with Manu on the floor then off the floor and Duncan played a decent amount of minutes when Manu rested. Spurs were +15 per 100 possessions with Manu on court and -4.4 per 100 in the 300+ minutes he was off court. Many of those minutes with Manu off had Duncan on.

Are those stats incorrect? or what does that tell you? Basically Duncan's only argument seems to be minutes played or maybe the 5% usage. Overall, I still see Manu as the MVP of the playoffs in 2005 for spurs or any team.

Horatio33
07-11-2020, 03:26 PM
Manu advanced stats for the entire 2005 playoffs blow Duncan's away. Manu was also the clear cut best offensive player in every series besides Suns.

You don't watch basketball. You hide behind spreadsheets and numbers. You don't understand how the offense in those years ran through Duncan or what a great defender Duncan was. You just want to prop up your bias with numbers. I would put good money on you never having watched one entire game of basketball in your life. You spend your life on basketball reference.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 03:27 PM
I'd probably say it was when the Spurs were up three with under 20 seconds left and Ginobili fouled Nowitzki when Dirk was making a layup that cost the Spurs more than Tony Parker's total shooting percentage. But then again I watched the game and didn't look at basketball reference so what do I know?

It would of never went to game 7 in the 1st place if Tony Parker didn't play that terrible, that's the point. Why are Duncan/Manu losing to a 1 man team in Dirk's Mavs? Because Tony Parker is dragging them down. Also, Dirk did what Jerry West could never do and overcome the odds, so no discredit to him. Its still tony parker's fault why that series wasn't closed in 5 or 6

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 03:33 PM
Remind me again who was double teamed, read the double team perfectly, and threw the pass to Ginobili to make that shot? Its slipped my mind.

He needed Horry and Manu to make the big shots for him that series. Duncan had a 44% usage in game 7 and didn't do anything with it at 42% TS and -1.2 BPM.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 03:35 PM
You don't watch basketball. You hide behind spreadsheets and numbers. You don't understand how the offense in those years ran through Duncan or what a great defender Duncan was. You just want to prop up your bias with numbers. I would put good money on you never having watched one entire game of basketball in your life. You spend your life on basketball reference.

Manu was the motor, heart and soul, lead playmaker of that team. Anybody who watched will tell you that. The advanced stats just back up the proof that all those traits made him spurs most impactful player. I said things for Manu such as clutch gene that has nothing to do with stats.

Uncle Drew
07-11-2020, 03:42 PM
You don't watch basketball. You hide behind spreadsheets and numbers. You don't understand how the offense in those years ran through Duncan or what a great defender Duncan was. You just want to prop up your bias with numbers. I would put good money on you never having watched one entire game of basketball in your life. You spend your life on basketball reference.

This is the worst kept secret in this place, yes.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 03:42 PM
Manu fouled Dirk. Manu choked on the line. Cost the team two championships.

Cherry picking a play doesn't define a title. Parker played awful the entire mavs series in 06.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 04:12 PM
This is the worst kept secret in this place, yes.

I've watched all of spurs playoff runs during the Duncan/Manu era.

The way I see it, in 2005 Manu was the Jordan and Duncan was the Pippen.

Manu/Jordan dominate closeout games, are generally more efficient and have better advanced stats.

Duncan/Pippen are the defensive anchors who vanish offensively in big games and generally have poor efficiency.

Carbine
07-11-2020, 04:17 PM
That's quite a bad take.

Whoah10115
07-11-2020, 04:38 PM
I'm not talking about the 2005 finals. Manu was the best Sour on offense, clearly.

But to say he was the clear cut best player of the entire 2005 playoffs? Even arguably..... Nobody argued it at the time. Duncan was the best player.

Bulls run - it's going well man. Thanks for asking. Maybe you should rewatch the Spurs 2005 and 2007 runs too, educate yourself a little bit.

Why? I did that twice and you responded with stats.

Roundball_Rock
07-11-2020, 05:13 PM
Duncan/Pippen are the defensive anchors who vanish offensively in big games and generally have poor efficiency.

Let's compare Pippen's PPG relative to the other #2 options in the finals and ECF (so big series--and limit it strictly to scoring, not counting playmaking as part of "offense" for our purposes here). Let's also ignore that Chicago couldn't be a top 10 offense without Pippen* (even in 98'--the #1 juggernaut in 97' slipped to 13th sans Pippen)--but were without Jordan, with Pippen. Even the playoff angle doesn't hold up--the 94' Bulls were 5th of the 16 teams in PO offense and 2nd of the 8 teams that won a series (in contrast, the Bulls' offenses in the PO sans Pippen were subpar every single year, despite 20+ PPG second options each time; with Pippen a rookie the Bulls were dead last).

We can't assess efficiency in a vacuum--we have to compare respective volume. Numbers are PPG and TS %. In the 97' ECF Pippen played only 7 minutes in Game 5 before injury so let's compare his averages in full games with Mourning's there to have an apples to apples comp. Pippen also got injured in the 98' finals and was a decoy for Game 6 so let's look at games 1-5.

Pippen Scoring Compared to Opposing Sidekicks in Finals, ECFs

1991 ECF: Pippen 22 on 56% TS 28% usage, Dumars 13 on 45% TS 18% usage
1991 Finals: Pippen 21 on 53% 26% usage, Worthy 19 on 50% 25% usage
1992 ECF: Pippen 20 on 54% 26% usage, Daughtery 18 on 55% 20% usage (a center)
1992 Finals: Pippen 21 on 56% 25% usage, Porter 16 on 57% 17% usage
1993 Finals: Pippen 21 on 46% 28% usage, Johnson 17 on 49% 23% usage
1996 ECF: Pippen 19 on 51% 23% usage, Penny 26 on 55% 29% usage
1996 Finals: Pippen 16 on 43% 22% usage, Kemp 23 on 63% 27% usage (a PF)
1997 ECF: Pippen 21 on 52% 27% usage, Mourning 16 on 56% 25% usage (a center)
1997 Finals: Pippen 20 on 54% 26% usage, Stockton 15 on 61% 21% usage
1998 ECF: Pippen 17 on 46% 26% usage, Smits 16 on 63% 23% usage (a center)
1998 Finals: Pippen 17 on 50%** 23% usage, Stockton 10 54% 19% usage
Averages: Pippen 20 on 52%, 26% usage; Opposing #2 17 on 55%, 22% usage
Averages: Pippen 20 on 52%, 26% usage; Perimeter #2's 16 on 53%, 22% usage


Other than 96', when Pippen had foot, neck, and back injuries, what seems to be the problem? His efficiency stacks up well despite much higher volume and scoring. The opposing perimeter #2 has 1% more efficiency--but that comes on 25% less scoring and 18% less usage. I am sure the Bulls would trade the 1% for 20 PPG instead of 16 PPG. Wouldn't you?

The efficiency stuff is misleading because his efficiency would be higher if he had the low volume of second options on those other teams. 5 of these 12 opposing sidekicks were at 21% or less usage. That is 3rd or 4th option type volume...Pippen's usage went up in big series (a sign of trust from Jackson)--but it looks like that it didn't happen on the other side. Would Pippen somehow be better if he was scoring 16 PPG on 55% instead of 20 PPG on 52% for ISH, even if it hurt the team and cost them rings (how many chips would Ewing have if he got this production instead of what Starks, and McDaniel gave, for instance?)? :confusedshrug:

*If you want to throw MJ a bone, the Bulls were 9th of 23 when Pip was a rookie. That's analogous to being 12th in today's 30 team league, FWIW.
**20 PPG on 57% TS in fully healthy games (Games 1-4).

Kblaze8855
07-11-2020, 05:13 PM
i didn't even know this but Larry Bird was taken after

Mychal Thompson
Phil Ford
Rick Robey
Michael Ray Richardson (gangster name)
and Purvis Short


:roll:

What were these GM's smoking?

That's not a low pick but damn...


Red drafted him a year early after he already said he was going back. He got an obvious steal then the mba changed the rules so you couldn’t.

rmt
07-11-2020, 05:25 PM
I've watched all of spurs playoff runs during the Duncan/Manu era.

The way I see it, in 2005 Manu was the Jordan and Duncan was the Pippen.

Manu/Jordan dominate closeout games, are generally more efficient and have better advanced stats.

Duncan/Pippen are the defensive anchors who vanish offensively in big games and generally have poor efficiency.

2005 playoffs
Duncan 23.6 pts 12.4 rebs 2.7 asst 0.3 stl 2.3 blks
Manu 20.8 pts 5.8 rebs 4.2 asst 1.2 stl 0.3 blks

I don't know if averaging almost 24 points over 23 games could be considered in any way vanishing offensively.

SouBeachTalents
07-11-2020, 05:28 PM
2005 playoffs
Duncan 23.6 pts 12.4 rebs 2.7 asst 0.3 stl 2.3 blks
Manu 20.8 pts 5.8 rebs 4.2 asst 1.2 stl 0.3 blks

I don't know if averaging almost 24 points over 23 games could be considered in any way vanishing offensively.
You want to see someone vanish offensively, see Manu in the games at Detroit

Bronbron23
07-11-2020, 07:20 PM
57th pick in the NBA draft.

That's nuts.

How did that happen?

Definitely up there. I honestly feel like you could put him in hardens place in his prime and hed put up similar numbers. He played in the ultimate team system his whole career. Put him in a situation where he dominates the ball and play makes and he could have very good stats. Maybe not 36 pts a game but Definitely 30/8/6 in this era.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 07:43 PM
Let's compare Pippen's PPG relative to the other #2 options in the finals and ECF (so big series--and limit it strictly to scoring, not counting playmaking as part of "offense" for our purposes here). Let's also ignore that Chicago couldn't be a top 10 offense without Pippen* (even in 98'--the #1 juggernaut in 97' slipped to 13th sans Pippen)--but were without Jordan, with Pippen. Even the playoff angle doesn't hold up--the 94' Bulls were 5th of the 16 teams in PO offense and 2nd of the 8 teams that won a series (in contrast, the Bulls' offenses in the PO sans Pippen were subpar every single year, despite 20+ PPG second options each time; with Pippen a rookie the Bulls were dead last).

We can't assess efficiency in a vacuum--we have to compare respective volume. Numbers are PPG and TS %. In the 97' ECF Pippen played only 7 minutes in Game 5 before injury so let's compare his averages in full games with Mourning's there to have an apples to apples comp. Pippen also got injured in the 98' finals and was a decoy for Game 6 so let's look at games 1-5.

Pippen Scoring Compared to Opposing Sidekicks in Finals, ECFs

1991 ECF: Pippen 22 on 56% TS 28% usage, Dumars 13 on 45% TS 18% usage
1991 Finals: Pippen 21 on 53% 26% usage, Worthy 19 on 50% 25% usage
1992 ECF: Pippen 20 on 54% 26% usage, Daughtery 18 on 55% 20% usage (a center)
1992 Finals: Pippen 21 on 56% 25% usage, Porter 16 on 57% 17% usage
1993 Finals: Pippen 21 on 46% 28% usage, Johnson 17 on 49% 23% usage
1996 ECF: Pippen 19 on 51% 23% usage, Penny 26 on 55% 29% usage
1996 Finals: Pippen 16 on 43% 22% usage, Kemp 23 on 63% 27% usage (a PF)
1997 ECF: Pippen 21 on 52% 27% usage, Mourning 16 on 56% 25% usage (a center)
1997 Finals: Pippen 20 on 54% 26% usage, Stockton 15 on 61% 21% usage
1998 ECF: Pippen 17 on 46% 26% usage, Smits 16 on 63% 23% usage (a center)
1998 Finals: Pippen 17 on 50%** 23% usage, Stockton 10 54% 19% usage
Averages: Pippen 20 on 52%, 26% usage; Opposing #2 17 on 55%, 22% usage
Averages: Pippen 20 on 52%, 26% usage; Perimeter #2's 16 on 53%, 22% usage


Other than 96', when Pippen had foot, neck, and back injuries, what seems to be the problem? His efficiency stacks up well despite much higher volume and scoring. The opposing perimeter #2 has 1% more efficiency--but that comes on 25% less scoring and 18% less usage. I am sure the Bulls would trade the 1% for 20 PPG instead of 16 PPG. Wouldn't you?

The efficiency stuff is misleading because his efficiency would be higher if he had the low volume of second options on those other teams. 5 of these 12 opposing sidekicks were at 21% or less usage. That is 3rd or 4th option type volume...Pippen's usage went up in big series (a sign of trust from Jackson)--but it looks like that it didn't happen on the other side. Would Pippen somehow be better if he was scoring 16 PPG on 55% instead of 20 PPG on 52% for ISH, even if it hurt the team and cost them rings (how many chips would Ewing have if he got this production instead of what Starks, and McDaniel gave, for instance?)? :confusedshrug:

*If you want to throw MJ a bone, the Bulls were 9th of 23 when Pip was a rookie. That's analogous to being 12th in today's 30 team league, FWIW.
**20 PPG on 57% TS in fully healthy games (Games 1-4).

His efficiency was usually worse then Jordan, just like Duncan's efficiency was usually worse then Manu. That was my point.

HBK_Kliq_2
07-11-2020, 08:01 PM
2005 playoffs
Duncan 23.6 pts 12.4 rebs 2.7 asst 0.3 stl 2.3 blks
Manu 20.8 pts 5.8 rebs 4.2 asst 1.2 stl 0.3 blks

I don't know if averaging almost 24 points over 23 games could be considered in any way vanishing offensively.


You want to see someone vanish offensively, see Manu in the games at Detroit

Finals:

Game 2 Duncan only takes 10 shots on 22% usage. Didn't have to do much of anything

Game 3 Duncan has 14 points on 15 shots and and 33% FG

Game 4 Duncan had 16 points on 17 shots and 29% FG

Game 5 Duncan has a better scoring volume game but still manages just 45% TS

Game 7 Duncan has 25 points on 27 shots and 37% FG

That's 5 games when he shot like a horse's ass. What's with all these games taking more total field goal attempts then total points? Rasheed and pistons defense turned him into Westbrook pretty much.

Sounds like Duncan was having knee problems or just letting Rasheed own him. He got away with winning a finals and not really doing shit. Lets put it this way, Duncan in 2005 finals had the same GmSc as Kawhi in 2014 finals when people always give Kawhi shit for being a 'role player'.

Roundball_Rock
07-11-2020, 08:12 PM
His efficiency was usually worse then Jordan, just like Duncan's efficiency was usually worse then Manu. That was my point.

Got it. The way your post was written implied shrinking in big series/games but we talked about this in the other thread in response to 3ball. His PO efficiency was consistent with his RS efficiency when he was healthy and here the data shows his usage was at its highest in the biggest series (finals and ECF). Jordan was more efficient than Pippen (MJ was the most efficient perimeter superstar of the era of course--more efficient than any perimeter superstar by far) so both could remain pretty consistent with MJ remaining ahead.

Not sure what the data says about Duncan/Manu--have not looked into that as deeply.

rmt
07-11-2020, 09:10 PM
You want to see someone vanish offensively, see Manu in the games at Detroit

According to HBQ - only 3 of the 4 Spurs wins count where Manu is concerned.

Round Mound
07-11-2020, 10:27 PM
He is underrated in the way McHale is, Just because he played plenty of his career as a 6thman. After Kobe and Wade i think Manu was the 3rd best SG of his era.

tpols
07-11-2020, 10:31 PM
He is underrated in the way McHale is, Just because he played plenty of his career as a 6thman. After Kobe and Wade i think Manu was the 3rd best SG of his era.

Vince Carter and Ray Allen are close.

But i agree manu's absurd creativity may put him a small notch above.

tpols
07-11-2020, 10:37 PM
"I didn't even know i was drafted to tell you the truth. Nobody told me that i had a chance of being drafted so i didn't even consider it. And i remember waking up the next day saying i was the 57th pick.

I wanted to show the whole world i belong here."


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UySuufDRF20

Unreal.

Doranku
07-11-2020, 11:25 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UySuufDRF20

Unreal.

Such a unique player. Never seen some of those moves/passes and never realized how many nasty dunks he's had. Made Kobe at his defensive best look silly a few times too. Dude was incredibly entertaining to watch.