Author | Thread |
AUTOADVERT |
CrushAlot
Posts: 59764 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 7/25/2003 Member: #452 USA |
![]() Four of those guys played with either Bryant or Jordan ( 3 w/mj). I think if I am the Wizards I would build my franchise around John Wall. I also really think it depends on individual talent. All of those guys had at least one hall of famer on their team except possibly Billups. I don't think you can discount the position. I still wonder what would have happened if the Knicks had kept MJax with Ewing.
I'm tired,I'm tired, I'm so tired right now......Kristaps Porzingis 1/3/18
|
scoshin
Posts: 20584 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/23/2004 Member: #568 |
![]() Yeah the stats are skewed cause over the past two decades, nearly 80% of the 'ships have been won by one of Jordan, Kobe, or Duncan. The only current players on that level are LeBron and Durant. We just whiffed on one of those, and the other isn't a FA for another 5 years. Plus, 11 of those 'ships were in the triangle offense, where the PG's role is significantly diminished. As for the Spurs, Tony Parker may not be the best player on his team, but he's still an all-star PG and a Finals MVP...and Manu ran point off the bench quite a bit as well.
For every other team, getting a quality point guard is probably the most important position to fill. The ESPN article also neglects to mention all the teams lead by PG's that made it to repeated conference finals or finals like Stockton, Kidd, and Nash. |
Knixkik
Posts: 35464 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 7/24/2001 Member: #11 USA |
![]() scoshin wrote:Yeah the stats are skewed cause over the past two decades, nearly 80% of the 'ships have been won by one of Jordan, Kobe, or Duncan. The only current players on that level are LeBron and Durant. We just whiffed on one of those, and the other isn't a FA for another 5 years. Plus, 11 of those 'ships were in the triangle offense, where the PG's role is significantly diminished. As for the Spurs, Tony Parker may not be the best player on his team, but he's still an all-star PG and a Finals MVP...and Manu ran point off the bench quite a bit as well. I agree with these points, and i think we can see that having a star PG makes you a strong playoff team, but having a star wing player or big man makes you a championship team. I think having a dominant big man is the most important thing. Even Kobe can't do it without one. Only Jordan really could. But most teams have won without a star PG. We have a star big so it is a great start. |
nixluva
Posts: 56258 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 10/5/2004 Member: #758 USA |
![]() Like I said the likely targets have been talked about to death. CP3 or Melo! I think we'll get a resolution to that question at some point this season or off season. It's not a long time to wait. In the meantime we try to develop another good player or two until a deal can be worked out.
|
Panos
Posts: 30089 Alba Posts: 3 Joined: 1/6/2004 Member: #520 |
![]() scoshin wrote:Yeah the stats are skewed cause over the past two decades, nearly 80% of the 'ships have been won by one of Jordan, Kobe, or Duncan. The only current players on that level are LeBron and Durant. We just whiffed on one of those, and the other isn't a FA for another 5 years. Plus, 11 of those 'ships were in the triangle offense, where the PG's role is significantly diminished. As for the Spurs, Tony Parker may not be the best player on his team, but he's still an all-star PG and a Finals MVP...and Manu ran point off the bench quite a bit as well.
|
knickstorrents
Posts: 21121 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/23/2010 Member: #3050 Hong Kong |
![]() Knixkik wrote:scoshin wrote:Yeah the stats are skewed cause over the past two decades, nearly 80% of the 'ships have been won by one of Jordan, Kobe, or Duncan. The only current players on that level are LeBron and Durant. We just whiffed on one of those, and the other isn't a FA for another 5 years. Plus, 11 of those 'ships were in the triangle offense, where the PG's role is significantly diminished. As for the Spurs, Tony Parker may not be the best player on his team, but he's still an all-star PG and a Finals MVP...and Manu ran point off the bench quite a bit as well. Jordan had a very underrated big man named Horace Grant. Horace's WP48 was .347 during his best year. I think you need a good big man to win, and Jordan was no exception to this rule. Whether the facilitator is played by a PG or a SG or a SF is irrelevant really. You could make the argument that over time players are just getting bigger and stronger... Even now PGs who are 6'4" are not out of the question (actually, it's ideal). I think over time (decades) players will just keep getting taller and stronger, so who fits the 'classic' pg mold will become murky. In summary I don't agree with the article's conclusions, I think it's just a matter of recent history skewing perceptions. Strong Point Guard play can make massive differences in a teams win column. See Detroit without Billups, the 76ers without Andre Miller, the Nets without Jason Kidd, Utah after Stockton (and before Deron). Rose is not the answer.
|
knickstorrents
Posts: 21121 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/23/2010 Member: #3050 Hong Kong |
![]() scoshin wrote:Yeah the stats are skewed cause over the past two decades, nearly 80% of the 'ships have been won by one of Jordan, Kobe, or Duncan. The only current players on that level are LeBron and Durant. We just whiffed on one of those, and the other isn't a FA for another 5 years. Plus, 11 of those 'ships were in the triangle offense, where the PG's role is significantly diminished. As for the Spurs, Tony Parker may not be the best player on his team, but he's still an all-star PG and a Finals MVP...and Manu ran point off the bench quite a bit as well. +1 - Totally agree here. The article's conclusions are just plain wrong. Rose is not the answer.
|
Knixkik
Posts: 35464 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 7/24/2001 Member: #11 USA |
![]() knickstorrents wrote:Knixkik wrote:scoshin wrote:Yeah the stats are skewed cause over the past two decades, nearly 80% of the 'ships have been won by one of Jordan, Kobe, or Duncan. The only current players on that level are LeBron and Durant. We just whiffed on one of those, and the other isn't a FA for another 5 years. Plus, 11 of those 'ships were in the triangle offense, where the PG's role is significantly diminished. As for the Spurs, Tony Parker may not be the best player on his team, but he's still an all-star PG and a Finals MVP...and Manu ran point off the bench quite a bit as well. It's definitely true that the PG position is one of the most important positions. Good PGs make teams into playoff teams. In today's league most of the teams with top tier PGs are playoff teams. But i think the conclusion of this is that teams with top big men are championship contenders. Look at all of the top big men in the league right now. Dwight Howard leads a contending team for the last couple years and immediate future. Pau Gasol is what turned a playoff team into a championship team in LA. Dirk has made Dallas a contending team throughout his prime. Bosh is now on a contending team. Garnett led his team to the title. Stoudemire's team overachieved last season to compete with the Lakers in the WCF. Duncan obviously goes without saying. These are your top bigs in the league, and all of which allow teams to either compete like they are supposed to, or overachieve. Hopefully that is the case with Stoudemire this season. Since we are looking at the top big men, looking at the top PGs Paul, Williams, Rondo, Rose, Nash, all of which are on playoff teams, but none, with the exception of Rondo, are likely to compete for a title now or anytime soon, they are just capable of leading solid playoff teams. |
Panos
Posts: 30089 Alba Posts: 3 Joined: 1/6/2004 Member: #520 |
![]() Knixkik wrote:It's definitely true that the PG position is one of the most important positions. Good PGs make teams into playoff teams. In today's league most of the teams with top tier PGs are playoff teams. But i think the conclusion of this is that teams with top big men are championship contenders. Look at all of the top big men in the league right now. Dwight Howard leads a contending team for the last couple years and immediate future. Pau Gasol is what turned a playoff team into a championship team in LA. Dirk has made Dallas a contending team throughout his prime. Bosh is now on a contending team. Garnett led his team to the title. Stoudemire's team overachieved last season to compete with the Lakers in the WCF. Duncan obviously goes without saying. These are your top bigs in the league, and all of which allow teams to either compete like they are supposed to, or overachieve. Hopefully that is the case with Stoudemire this season. Since we are looking at the top big men, looking at the top PGs Paul, Williams, Rondo, Rose, Nash, all of which are on playoff teams, but none, with the exception of Rondo, are likely to compete for a title now or anytime soon, they are just capable of leading solid playoff teams. Pau Gasol? Bosh? Garnett? These are the guys you chose to make your point? |
tj23
Posts: 21851 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 4/20/2010 Member: #3119 |
![]() If you dont believe in building around a pg then one could say you dont believe in Dantoni's offense. I do believe you need a big time scorer on the perimeter. Not just a jason kidd type pg. Nash could post bigger scoring numbers then he did at times. He's a great scorer but he's also unselfish. But look at the best players in the nba right now. How many are PG's? With Mike's offense maybe the PG doesn't have to even be your best or 2nd best player but he has to be pretty good considering mike likes to have his point run the pick and roll over and over. One thing you could wonder about carmelo is that he uses a number of screens to work his mid range game and whether mike would use him to his best abilities.
|
Knixkik
Posts: 35464 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 7/24/2001 Member: #11 USA |
![]() Panos wrote:Knixkik wrote:It's definitely true that the PG position is one of the most important positions. Good PGs make teams into playoff teams. In today's league most of the teams with top tier PGs are playoff teams. But i think the conclusion of this is that teams with top big men are championship contenders. Look at all of the top big men in the league right now. Dwight Howard leads a contending team for the last couple years and immediate future. Pau Gasol is what turned a playoff team into a championship team in LA. Dirk has made Dallas a contending team throughout his prime. Bosh is now on a contending team. Garnett led his team to the title. Stoudemire's team overachieved last season to compete with the Lakers in the WCF. Duncan obviously goes without saying. These are your top bigs in the league, and all of which allow teams to either compete like they are supposed to, or overachieve. Hopefully that is the case with Stoudemire this season. Since we are looking at the top big men, looking at the top PGs Paul, Williams, Rondo, Rose, Nash, all of which are on playoff teams, but none, with the exception of Rondo, are likely to compete for a title now or anytime soon, they are just capable of leading solid playoff teams. Just because you're a good big man doesn't mean you will have a good team if there isn't anything else around them. The point is all good teams have all-star big men. Not all good teams have all-star PGs. |
GodSaveTheKnicks
Posts: 23952 Alba Posts: 21 Joined: 11/21/2006 Member: #1207 USA |
![]() nixluva wrote:What wins in the NBA is that All World PF/C like Duncan, Shaq, Hakeem, Ewing, Howard or having a SG/SF unstoppable scorer type like MJ, Kobe, Wade, Lebron, Durant. We at least have a PF that could be part of a title contending tandem, but we don't have that other guy on the outside that is unstoppable on offense. This is why people really want Melo. He's the only guy left on that level that we could get. CP3 is in that Isiah group so that's why he would make a good title contending PG. That's pretty much it. We get one of those 2 and you have the basic ingredients to the title formula. We just have to see what happens. Don't forget there are a bunch of young guys coming off their rookie contracts in the future. I am NOT saying we should make all moves to set ourselves up for that at all..just that all is not lost if you whiff on Melo and CP3. Tyreke Evans, Stephen Curry, Darren Collison, Jennings etc. all did pretty well as rooks and may develop. Let's try to elevate the level of discourse in this byeetch. Please
|
knickstorrents
Posts: 21121 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/23/2010 Member: #3050 Hong Kong |
![]() Knixkik wrote:Just because you're a good big man doesn't mean you will have a good team if there isn't anything else around them. The point is all good teams have all-star big men. Not all good teams have all-star PGs. I think a better way to put it is - all good teams have good rebounders/shot blockers (who are usually big). All good teams also have good ball handlers/distributors (who can be big or small). Basketball is a big mans game, and the league is trying to equalize it somewhat with the new hand check rules to favor speedy players... but overall basketball favors bigger players. They tend to get the bigger and longer contracts, even if their production is questionable. Rose is not the answer.
|
Knixkik
Posts: 35464 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 7/24/2001 Member: #11 USA |
![]() knickstorrents wrote:Knixkik wrote:Just because you're a good big man doesn't mean you will have a good team if there isn't anything else around them. The point is all good teams have all-star big men. Not all good teams have all-star PGs. Your point is well taken but these aren't just good rebounders and shot blockers, we are taking about great offensive big men who are all scoring 20 or more points a game and are either first or second option on their teams. The only excption was Ben Wallace but. That pistons team was the exception to a lot of rules. These teams all have a dominant wing who control the game and great 2-way big men. The pg position have been made up of solid role players who fit the team and compliment the stars well. |