Not Cherry picking. Suns were in the playoffs the day Amare went down for the season with the eye injury in 2009. Also, I didnt' say Nash was perfect, only that Nash has done as much sans-D'Antoni as he did with (twice, when counting Dallas in 02-03), so the argument that D'Antoni made Nash is laughable.
Not sure what you're getting at with Felton/Duhon to Nash comment. I'm saying Nash is equal or better than Kidd, so why would I elevate those to to Nash's level?
Point was D'Antoni's system creates shots, which scores points, but his system isn't the sum of its parts unless Nash is involved. Players may average 20 ppg, but most times they lose 40+ games. Nash made D'Antoni, not the other way around.
I specifically mentioned the 05-06 Suns. Not sure why I didn't mention Marion there, because I did in subsequent posts. I mentioned those Suns players specifically because the argument was made that Kidd did more with lesser talent than Nash, and that Nash always had elite offensive talent. The player named were either castoffs (Bell), recent waivees (T.Thomas/House) or previous season benchwarmers/scrubs (Diaw, Jones, Barbosa), yet all formed the rotation around Nash and Marion (couldn't create offense, merely benefit from it) to win 50+ games and advance to the Conference Finals in a season without Amare (injury) and K.Thomas (injury).Stoudemire was good before and after Nash.
So is Marion (which, despite being the leading scorer, was mysteriously left off in your reference to the 06 team).
Joe Johnson posted better stats after Nash.
You pulled up all the talent around Kidd, and totally ignored Nash.
I didn't mention Johnson and Richardson because they were the previous season. I strategically picked the Nets best Finals team (actually won two games vs. previous season's sweep) vs. the Suns lesser WCF team to compare rosters, records and statistics.
Also Marion completely fell off after Nash. Not only in PPG, but efficiency. Also, his best years in offensive efficiency came alongside Nash, so while impactful without, he was most effective with.
But it was said. Maybe not by you, but it was said that Kidd did more with less than did Nash, which is a fallacy at best, farce at worst. The 05-06 season a perfect example. The relative production and efficiency of those players surrounding Nash they were not able to duplicate elsewhere.
Good players will get their points, no matter the situation, but it's players like Collins, Mutombo, George McCloud, and the such that defined Kidd. I am not saying Nash couldn't do it, in fact, Nash did it as well as Kidd, which would make them equals.
However, Kidd was better in rebounding and defense. Nash was better as a shooter. At the end of the day, I will take rebounding and defense over shooting from a passing PG.
As far as players like Amare and Johnson scoring better post Nash, sure, but both players saw their percentages dramatically increase alongside with Nash's addition, then decrease once they left (Amare 48% before, 56% with, 50% after; Johnson 43-30% before, 46-48% with, 45-36 after). Nash means a lot. Marion also saw his percentage drop like 5%.
See above, but Amare was less efficient when a PG couldn't shoot off the pic-n-roll. Was before Nash and after. Also, go back re-read playoff articles discussing those Nets teams. Most discuss their struggles in the half-court. I watched those Nets teams to see Kidd, so I know how successful and how unsuccessful pic-n-roll offense of Kidd's was. It was average, at best, and often mediocre.Amare averaged about the same with a 90 year old Billups and Raymond Felton as his PG. Yes, he does have an expanded repetoire now, but it's not far-fetch to say he would average the same with Kidd.
Besides, Kidd ran the pick and roll with Kenyon Martin with a lot of success. I don't see why he wouldn't do the same with Stoudemire.
I wasn't ignoring, and have mentioned this previously. Kidd and Nash are two different types of PGs. Some of the different is tempo, as the Suns averaged many more possessions per game than those Nets teams did. More possessions equals more pro-rated probability for turnovers. Nash also dictates much more of the offense vs. Kidd in his prime. Kidd was ball-dominant, but Nash was a whole nother level.I also like how you would quote 3.5-3.8 TO for Kidd in his prime, yet totally just ignored Nash's 3.3-3.8 TO in his prime.
Better compe ion, mostly. Never said Nash was perfect. I've even argued against Nash as the 04-05 MVP. My response was to show that neither was Kidd. Like I said, I am not saying Kidd isn't the pick, but Nash is all-time great at leading offenses, and Kidd just isn't in this same league.Then comparing the Kidd's Nets finals to Nash's WCF appearance is an obvious attempt at cherry-picking stats. Nash averaged 4.7 TO in the 05 playoffs, and 4.4 TOs in 07. He was still a great shooter then, so why was he committing all these TOs?
I've seen this used elsewhere and I like it, as it shows how prone an offense was to committing a turnover, and since Kidd led the team in the category, and was the team leader/facilitator, I have referenced it to discuss overall offensive efficiency. Despite a 12-15% slower pace, the 02-03 Nets had more total turnovers than the 05-06 Suns.I also do not get why you are using team ast/to ratios when you are comparing individuals, doesn't this speak more to the overall personnel and systems rather than individuals? Why would Mutombo committing a TO count against Kidd?
I never know what to put into these equations. However, as far as offensive efficiency, I think analyzing statistics of a player and the players team is meaningful, so equations that analyze such interest me. Not sure what it's worth, and to most probably nothing, but they are a wrinkle to use/dismiss.ELO is a community based ranking system, basically similar to all-star voting. I am not going to quote anything ELO has as a backup, especially considering the following curiosities:
Larry Bird as the #2 of all time over Jabbar (who is ranked #14), Chamberlain (ranked #13)
Garnett over Duncan, Shaq (ranked 20?, Jabbar, Chamberlain.
John Stockton over the above mentioned + Isiah Thomas (#23).
Pippen over Shaq, Thomas, McHale, Drexler
Dirk Nowitzki ranked #51 behind Chris Paul, WIlkins, Maravich, Pierce, Pippen, Ewing.
Wade at #58 behind Archibald, Miller, Sam Jones, Adrian Dantley, Alex English, Chris Paul.
Just an overall crappy list.
For me, Nash's prime is a bit more elite, while Kidd is the better player/career. I think Nash's impact (9-straight times his teams were tops in production efficiency) on offense and relative team success (4 WCFs) within decade where his Conference dominated the le landscape means a bit more to me than Kidd's middle-pack offenses and two Finals appearances in the Leastern Conference, especially when his overall Western Conference struggles are factored in to his prime.
I can't argue with Kidd as the better overall player for his career, but I think at their absolute zeniths, Nash had more significant impact in the tougher Conference to have it in with no better players and amidst heavy roster turnover and decimating injuries.
Anyways, this was a fun pot-stir. I think the tone of the initial post was a ulative laugh at reason after reason, most of which were mere opinions not backed up by anything.
Maybe my attempts to back things up weren't enough, but I tried to provide some justification, even if ultimately perceived as wrong/flawed.

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is this a joke?
go ahead...
