2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
Also I can't get there with T-Mac. Tremendous talent, sure, but complete failure in the playoffs, and totally punked out in the last year of his Rockets contract, faking injury to avoid getting traded, while banking $21M for his troubles.
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
The tremendous talent part is what stands out to me. Before the injuries, he was a great player. I never liked him or his demeanor but I'll give him the talented part.Odogg wrote:Also I can't get there with T-Mac. Tremendous talent, sure, but complete failure in the playoffs, and totally punked out in the last year of his Rockets contract, faking injury to avoid getting traded, while banking $21M for his troubles.
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
I just think it's gotten derailed a while back and its getting worse. But it's interesting to watch from outside.Odogg wrote:They both vote for George Mikan.elmouse03 wrote:I'm gonna wait to see who grizz and abe vote for
By the way, Billups nominated before Wallace is still completely ridiculous.
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
You say that, which I'm not saying that you're wrong, but I don't fully understand what is so ridiculous. Talk to me, grizz.vcsgrizzfan wrote:I just think it's gotten derailed a while back and its getting worse. But it's interesting to watch from outside.Odogg wrote:They both vote for George Mikan.elmouse03 wrote:I'm gonna wait to see who grizz and abe vote for
By the way, Billups nominated before Wallace is still completely ridiculous.
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
Ben anchored that defense that was why they won. He was not replaceable. At his peak, he was an athletic freak who dominated the paint at the defensive end. He could jump, land and jump again with the same speed as a guard. He had tremendously quick hands for deflections and steals in the paint as well.y2ktors wrote:You say that, which I'm not saying that you're wrong, but I don't fully understand what is so ridiculous. Talk to me, grizz.vcsgrizzfan wrote:I just think it's gotten derailed a while back and its getting worse. But it's interesting to watch from outside.Odogg wrote:
They both vote for George Mikan.
By the way, Billups nominated before Wallace is still completely ridiculous.
In any case, he was the defensive anchor and they won primarily because of his ability to guard the bucket and rebound the ball.
I think there was a number of guys who could have replaced Billups. You weren't replacing what Ben brought.
His peak was short because he was so reliant on his freakish athleticism.
It's easy to go back and try to rewrite history. The truth is though, that Ben was the MVP of those best Pistons teams.
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
And he wasn't the offensive liability people make him out to be. Sure he wasn't a great scorer, but he was an excellent screen setter and great offensive rebounder, he did all the little things without ever overstepping his role.vcsgrizzfan wrote:Ben anchored that defense that was why they won. He was not replaceable. At his peak, he was an athletic freak who dominated the paint at the defensive end. He could jump, land and jump again with the same speed as a guard. He had tremendously quick hands for deflections and steals in the paint as well.y2ktors wrote:You say that, which I'm not saying that you're wrong, but I don't fully understand what is so ridiculous. Talk to me, grizz.vcsgrizzfan wrote:
I just think it's gotten derailed a while back and its getting worse. But it's interesting to watch from outside.
By the way, Billups nominated before Wallace is still completely ridiculous.
In any case, he was the defensive anchor and they won primarily because of his ability to guard the bucket and rebound the ball.
I think there was a number of guys who could have replaced Billups. You weren't replacing what Ben brought.
His peak was short because he was so reliant on his freakish athleticism.
It's easy to go back and try to rewrite history. The truth is though, that Ben was the MVP of those best Pistons teams.
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
Yes, I'm inclined to agree with Grizz's post above.
I think the main reason someone would confuse CB against Wallace is because they underestimate the degree to which Wallace contributed to the offense of the Pistons, because he did it in a very unusual way. He wasn't as important as CB, but he was absolutely not a non-contributor offensively.
Defense is obviously a mile-high crush for Big Ben, and the 2004 Pistons primarily won through defense.
On net, Wallace counted a step or two more to the bottom line.
I think the main reason someone would confuse CB against Wallace is because they underestimate the degree to which Wallace contributed to the offense of the Pistons, because he did it in a very unusual way. He wasn't as important as CB, but he was absolutely not a non-contributor offensively.
Defense is obviously a mile-high crush for Big Ben, and the 2004 Pistons primarily won through defense.
On net, Wallace counted a step or two more to the bottom line.
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
Those Pistons having a 2nd year role player with gangly arms render LA's 2nd option practically useless also helped them to a title, but yeah Ben Wallace meant more to those teams than Billups or Rip IMO. Just like KG anchoring Boston in '08 - they don't sniff the Finals if he's not there.
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
And see, I can get with this UNTIL after he left the Pistons. Recall, his last season in Detroit is arguably his peak.vcsgrizzfan wrote:Ben anchored that defense that was why they won. He was not replaceable. At his peak, he was an athletic freak who dominated the paint at the defensive end. He could jump, land and jump again with the same speed as a guard. He had tremendously quick hands for deflections and steals in the paint as well.y2ktors wrote:You say that, which I'm not saying that you're wrong, but I don't fully understand what is so ridiculous. Talk to me, grizz.vcsgrizzfan wrote:
I just think it's gotten derailed a while back and its getting worse. But it's interesting to watch from outside.
By the way, Billups nominated before Wallace is still completely ridiculous.
In any case, he was the defensive anchor and they won primarily because of his ability to guard the bucket and rebound the ball.
I think there was a number of guys who could have replaced Billups. You weren't replacing what Ben brought.
His peak was short because he was so reliant on his freakish athleticism.
It's easy to go back and try to rewrite history. The truth is though, that Ben was the MVP of those best Pistons teams.
The next season, Detroit's defensive dropped from 5th to 7th. By 2008, they were better than in Ben's last season.
Nazr and C-Webb cannot possibly have been equal replacements but statistically, the Pistons were not worse without Ben. Detroit's dropoff didn't happen until they blew the team up, trading Billups to Denver, etc.
Ben Wallace leaves Detroit and his career Quickly fades. His on/off was -5.1 in his best season in Chicago, the season following his peak season.
I'm not saying that Ben shouldn't be in the conversation. What I am saying is that he was valuable during that run in Detroit. I don't agree that he was the most important cog in the system because they weren't impacted by his departure.
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
He couldn't score, shoot, pass or be any threat outside of the basket. That makes him a liability. Screen setting and rebounding gave him some resemblance of value but he still was a liability.wailuaFC wrote:And he wasn't the offensive liability people make him out to be. Sure he wasn't a great scorer, but he was an excellent screen setter and great offensive rebounder, he did all the little things without ever overstepping his role.vcsgrizzfan wrote:Ben anchored that defense that was why they won. He was not replaceable. At his peak, he was an athletic freak who dominated the paint at the defensive end. He could jump, land and jump again with the same speed as a guard. He had tremendously quick hands for deflections and steals in the paint as well.y2ktors wrote: You say that, which I'm not saying that you're wrong, but I don't fully understand what is so ridiculous. Talk to me, grizz.
In any case, he was the defensive anchor and they won primarily because of his ability to guard the bucket and rebound the ball.
I think there was a number of guys who could have replaced Billups. You weren't replacing what Ben brought.
His peak was short because he was so reliant on his freakish athleticism.
It's easy to go back and try to rewrite history. The truth is though, that Ben was the MVP of those best Pistons teams.
I'm a baaaddd motherfucker!!
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
I completely disagree, his rebounding allowed him to clean up easy baskets and allowed his team many extra possessions, and with detroits grind it out style those extra offensive possessions were more valuable then you'd think. The man was always near the top of his team for ortg with a career ortg of 108, higher then rip Hamilton who was the offensive go to.y2ktors wrote:He couldn't score, shoot, pass or be any threat outside of the basket. That makes him a liability. Screen setting and rebounding gave him some resemblance of value but he still was a liability.wailuaFC wrote:And he wasn't the offensive liability people make him out to be. Sure he wasn't a great scorer, but he was an excellent screen setter and great offensive rebounder, he did all the little things without ever overstepping his role.vcsgrizzfan wrote:
Ben anchored that defense that was why they won. He was not replaceable. At his peak, he was an athletic freak who dominated the paint at the defensive end. He could jump, land and jump again with the same speed as a guard. He had tremendously quick hands for deflections and steals in the paint as well.
In any case, he was the defensive anchor and they won primarily because of his ability to guard the bucket and rebound the ball.
I think there was a number of guys who could have replaced Billups. You weren't replacing what Ben brought.
His peak was short because he was so reliant on his freakish athleticism.
It's easy to go back and try to rewrite history. The truth is though, that Ben was the MVP of those best Pistons teams.
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
If Ben wasn't a liability, then no player can be one, and I don't agree with that. Every player brings something of positive value to an offense But all levels of value are not equal.wailuaFC wrote:I completely disagree, his rebounding allowed him to clean up easy baskets and allowed his team many extra possessions, and with detroits grind it out style those extra offensive possessions were more valuable then you'd think. The man was always near the top of his team for ortg with a career ortg of 108, higher then rip Hamilton who was the offensive go to.y2ktors wrote:He couldn't score, shoot, pass or be any threat outside of the basket. That makes him a liability. Screen setting and rebounding gave him some resemblance of value but he still was a liability.wailuaFC wrote: And he wasn't the offensive liability people make him out to be. Sure he wasn't a great scorer, but he was an excellent screen setter and great offensive rebounder, he did all the little things without ever overstepping his role.
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
I nominate Ben Wallace
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
It's probably a better idea to think of "value" or "overall contribution" rather than ideas like being a "liability" or "limitation".
Reason being, you can be a liability in some ways, but compensate for those liabilities (or more) in producing positive value on net for your team. On the other hand, you can have a relative lack of "liabilities", but also not have any significant positives and therefore not produce great value on net.
Like I've said before, a player who couldn't shoot/score, pass, rebound, screen, etc...worth a lick would still be the greatest player in history if he blocked 30 shots a game
Reason being, you can be a liability in some ways, but compensate for those liabilities (or more) in producing positive value on net for your team. On the other hand, you can have a relative lack of "liabilities", but also not have any significant positives and therefore not produce great value on net.
Like I've said before, a player who couldn't shoot/score, pass, rebound, screen, etc...worth a lick would still be the greatest player in history if he blocked 30 shots a game
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
I don't know how you could call him a liability though, he did a lot of things very well on the offensive end and way more importantly he didn't try to do anything he couldn't. He's not a rondo or Kobe who would hurt the offense by stopping the ball or over shooting his team out of games, and he was a darn good finisher that played close to the hoop so defenses couldn't leave/ignore him or he'd make them pay. There's a reason he was usually in the top 3 for ortg for those Pistons teamsy2ktors wrote:If Ben wasn't a liability, then no player can be one, and I don't agree with that. Every player brings something of positive value to an offense But all levels of value are not equal.wailuaFC wrote:I completely disagree, his rebounding allowed him to clean up easy baskets and allowed his team many extra possessions, and with detroits grind it out style those extra offensive possessions were more valuable then you'd think. The man was always near the top of his team for ortg with a career ortg of 108, higher then rip Hamilton who was the offensive go to.y2ktors wrote: He couldn't score, shoot, pass or be any threat outside of the basket. That makes him a liability. Screen setting and rebounding gave him some resemblance of value but he still was a liability.
Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
There is a difference between having certain individual liabilities on offense and being a liability to the offense *on net*.
The first is definitely true for Ben Wallace. The second is IMO, not true or at least is fairly exaggerated by most fans.
The first is definitely true for Ben Wallace. The second is IMO, not true or at least is fairly exaggerated by most fans.
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
well stated.Bush4Ever wrote:There is a difference between having certain individual liabilities on offense and being a liability to the offense *on net*.
The first is definitely true for Ben Wallace. The second is IMO, not true or at least is fairly exaggerated by most fans.
The latter is true in some seasons...but not all or even a majority.
Like Wailua said, he played within his limitations and that I do applaud. Btw, Rondo is a selfish shithead who can definitely be a liability offensively.
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
King Deez wrote:I nominate Ben Wallace
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Re: 2015 Anger General Greatest post-merger Players of All Time #43
Disclaimer: Haven't examined nearly all the data intimately and didn't watch the Pistons tons in that time period (college).y2ktors wrote:
The latter is true in some seasons...but not all or even a majority.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/pla ... abe01.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
According to his offensive +/- he cost the Pistons approximately 1.5 to 2 points per 100 possessions during his Pistons years.
That strikes me as being somewhat close the average (albeit on the bad side), and not overwhelmingly bad.
In basically all the years the Pistons were a serious contender, he also led the Pistons in *overall* +/- as well.
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