I'm throwing out Greg Oden (who had a fantastic rookie season overshadowed by getting too many "rookie" calls), Derrick Rose (whose hype train never took off fully until the Bulls had made a trade that took them from a once again lottery team to a 50-win caliber team overnight, which was explained by...Rose of course) and Blake Griffin because they haven't been in the league long enough. Oden and Rose were both in it for one season, and Griffin hasn't even signed his rookie contract yet.
Then there's the question of longetivity achievement vs. per season achievement, Duncan wins the first by default, LeBron probably wins the second.
10. Michael Olowokandi (LAC, 1998)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
500 | 13130 | 11.3 | 9.4 | 0.9 | .457 | 14.9 | 4.2 | 0.9 | 3.8 | 16.6 | 18.8 | 88 | 104 | 10.7 | 2.4 |
John Hollinger once called Olowokandi the "biggest fraud in the league" and he was nearly right. It's easy to forget, but back in 2002 a lot of people were saying "you have to give him a max contract" simply because he was the only other "true" center outside of Shaq. Even the $16 million over three years the Wolves gave him was probably too much.
What's the biggest problem? Well, look at that TS%. He has a career TS% of 46%. His
career high is 48%. Antoine Walkers' career average is 48.5% and cracked 48% five times. (And was a few made baskets shy twice more.) Even Walker managed to crack 50% twice. Olowokandi only topped the 46% mark twice. It's not like he did anything else on offense either, out of the 29 centers who played 10,000+ minutes since Olowokandi was drafted, Kandi ranks
24th in offensive rebounding,
23rd in assist percentage, and
17th in turnover percentage. (And that TS%?
Dead last, by a mile.) Add it all up, and Kandi is not just
last by a parsec for centers in ORtg, but is arguably
the worst offensive player to play 10,000+ minutes since the 1999 season.
His shot blocking percentage of almost 4% was solid, and he was a defensive factor in Minnesota when he actually played. But we're not talking Tim Duncan or anything, maybe if the all-defense team had ten teams he'd make it as a center on one of the latter half.
Playoffs? TS% of 38%, Tov% of 30%, ORtg of 70 and PER of 2.0. I don't think you need to know anything else.
9. Andrea Bargnani (TOR, 2006)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
221 | 5943 | 16.6 | 5.8 | 1.4 | .536 | 9.5 | 6.4 | 0.8 | 2.5 | 11.4 | 22.6 | 101 | 109 | 12.9 | 7.2 |
Let's get the Olowokandi mocking out of the way. Last season Bargnani had 3.9 win shares for a 33-49 team. Olowokandi has 2.4
career win shares.
Bargnani's second season looks like a fluke. He's shot 54-56% in the other two years, and he was below 50% in 2007-08 and fell to 40% in the playoffs. He's not quite there as a great player, or anywhere near "number one" pick, but that's mostly because of his seive like defense outside of some pretty good shot blocking considering where he plays. Offensively, he's moving along Rashard Lewis' path in terms of his development as a scorer. I wouldn't discount 20 point scoring seasons down the line. He loses out to Kwame Brown because Kwame's peak was higher than Bargnani is so far, and because Kwame somehow keeps suckering teams into big contracts so he's stuck around the league. Do this a year or two from now, I'd expect Bargnani to move up easily.
8. Kwame Brown (WAS, 2001)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
462 | 10560 | 11.1 | 8.8 | 1.6 | .523 | 14.1 | 7.3 | 1.3 | 2.2 | 17.0 | 16.1 | 102 | 105 | 12.8 | 16.9 |
Like I said above, Kwame's here because he's been around longer. He has good years in 2003-04 and his first two with the Lakers. He also wasn't bad in Detroit last season. Everyone has accepted he's never going to be a star and so both Detroit and the Lakers have used him as a hole-in-the-dike big man who hits the boards and takes easy shots. He's also big enough to guard most centers around the league. If he could slice his turnovers down to his rookie levels (odd, yes) he'd be a servicable starter for desperate teams. His 2005-06 playoffs are an example of this. Why people keep giving him multi-million dollar multi-year contracts I'll never understand though.
7. Andrew Bogut (MIL, 2005)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
262 | 8450 | 13.3 | 9.8 | 2.8 | .553 | 16.0 | 12.8 | 1.1 | 2.6 | 15.9 | 17.9 | 108 | 108 | 16.1 | 17.0 |
You can see from the stats alone we've made another leap in quality. Bogut's racked up just as many win shares as Kwame in half the time. He's also had four consistent seasons instead of the wild fluctuations in quality we saw in the three guys below him. Compared to those guys and especially Olowokandi, Bogut looks like a superstar, but overall in the context of the league and these number one picks, he's more like average. Like most bigs his problem is turnovers, and he's not the best defensive player (nor on the best team defensively which doesn't help his numbers) but it's easy to forget he's still only 25 when next season starts.
6. Kenyon Martin (NJN, 2000)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
548 | 17806 | 15.7 | 7.9 | 2.3 | .517 | 12.5 | 11.2 | 2.0 | 2.8 | 12.7 | 21.6 | 101 | 100 | 15.7 | 39.4 |
There's this perception about Martin that he's fallen apart without Kidd, when in reality it was really the lack of go-to scoring options in New Jersey and later injuries. As I showed in another thread a year or so ago, Martin's first (and injury free) season in Denver is more or less exactly the same as his last two in New Jersey. All three of those years Martin was using 23-25% of possessions. Which for a guy who was shooting only 51-52% and had ORtgs around 100, was not really a good thing. Now he's down to 17-18% usage and 52-55% while shaving a few more turnovers off to give up ORtg's closer to 105. He's kept up his defense and his rebounding is where it's generally been (much lower than you'd expect from something with his athletic skills) but it's more his injuries and aging than anything Kidd did.
He probably peaked in the 2004 playoffs. 19/11 with 58% shooting. In the end, like Bogut, he's really just average and thus good enough to start, which isn't bad, but isn't great either.
5. Dwight Howard (ORL, 2004)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
407 | 14623 | 17.3 | 12.6 | 1.4 | .597 | 20.5 | 6.9 | 1.3 | 4.2 | 16.9 | 22.3 | 111 | 100 | 21.2 | 52.3 |
As we make another leap, this was the toughest to decide, especially since he's played the same number of minutes as Yao in two fewer seasons. I eventually knocked him below Yao because next year and probably for the rest of history he'll be higher. What is there to say about Howard? He's a beast who's dominating despite, as he been said ad nasuem, only having two offensive moves. He's gotten better each year and become the dominant defensive player in the league. He's lead the league in rebounding three times, and the last two times he's been to the playoffs, he's matched or exceeded his regular season performance. This year he averaged 20/15 on 63% shooting (and an insane 35% DReb%) while dominating defensively as he lead Orlando into the Finals.
4. Yao Ming (HOU, 2002)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
481 | 15727 | 21.1 | 10.2 | 1.8 | .596 | 16.5 | 9.6 | 0.6 | 4.4 | 14.5 | 26.8 | 112 | 99 | 23.0 | 64.2 |
I kept Yao here despite the injuries mostly as a notation that Howard will storm up this list over the next two years and Yao needs to be recognized in the meantime. He's spent the last five years combining 26+% usage rates with 60+% TS%'s. He is an offensive juggernaut who is often overlooked defensively. Since his second season, when he manages to play 2000+ minutes the Rockets have yet to fall below 5th defensively despite an ever shifting, ever injured, calvalcade of teammates.
Yao and the Rockets are knocked for playoff failures, but Yao isn't really the one to be blaming for these. In 2005 he scored 21ppg despite playing only 31 minutes because he shot 69% while swatting 7% of the Mavericks shots in a seven game series. In 2007 he obviously played worse than during the season, but still dropped 25/10 on 56% shooting over seven games. This year he put up 17/11 on 63% shooting before getting injured after breaking the first round curse.
Yao's going to slip down after next season because of the injuries, and because Dwight is powered by God, but not because of his play.
3. Elton Brand (CHI, 1999)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
643 | 24421 | 18.9 | 9.6 | 2.5 | .555 | 15.6 | 13.3 | 1.3 | 4.0 | 12.2 | 24.7 | 111 | 104 | 22.4 | 82.2 |
Elton Brand is probably the most underrated and underappreciated superstar of the last decade. He was only once voted onto an All-Star team (injury replacement the other year) despite usually being the third best power forward in the league after Duncan and Garnett. Players who took his spot over the years include Anthony Mason, Wally Sczerbiak, Pedja Stojakovic (who was great that year, but nowhere near Brand), and Mehmet Okur.
Brand was a force on both ends that didn't just toil on terrible teams, but dominated on them. In his rookie year he infamously dropped a 20/10 while not just doubling, but
tripling up the win shares of the next closest player. Upon arriving on the Clippers
he nearly dragged them to the playoffs with a near 18/12 and 59% shooting despite the best efforts of Olowokandi (2569 minutes), Jeff McInnis (3030) and Darius Miles (2228). After the team imploded (despite two more All-Star quality but reduced due to injury seasons from Brand) and gave up following the Andre Miller addition, the team jettesoned Olowokandi and others. Brand immediately went back to work playing 3000+ minutes in each of the next seasons. (81, 79 and 80 games.) With the addition of Sam Cassell, he and the Clippers had
their best season ever as Brand terrorized the league (doubling up Cassell's win shares) behind 25/10 on 58% shooting with just 9% turnovers. He did the same in the playoffs 25.4/10.3 on 59% and just 10% for 122 ORtg as they nearly got to the Western Conference Finals. Brand was so dominant the team only needed four players to play more than 1525 minutes.
Injuries have destroyed his career the last two seasons, and with him hitting 30, Dwight is going to overtake him on this list. If Brand had landed almost anywhere but the TerriBulls and the Clippers, he might have a few rings. (Or if say, the Bulls didn't trade away that front line of Brad Miller, Ron Artest and Brand, all of whom would go onto All-Star seasons. Just none in Chicago.)
2. LeBron James (CLE, 2003)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
472 | 19142 | 24.4 | 6.2 | 5.9 | .555 | 10.0 | 32.9 | 2.3 | 1.6 | 11.6 | 31.6 | 113 | 103 | 26.2 | 83.4 |
At this point, anything less than the greatest player of all time will be a dissapointment. Not only did he just put on a season that matches if not tops anything by anyone else, he also put on
the greatest ten plus game individual playoff performance in history. 35/9/7 on 62% shooting with only 9% turnovers? LeBron's not great, he's just unfair. Infact, it's in the leagues best interest that LeBron never gets on a team like the 1991, 1992 or 1996 Bulls. LeBron's never played with two all-star caliber players alongside him like Jordan did. If he gets a team with/like those, and plays like this. Everything we know about team dominance will be re-written.
Like I said, he's unfair.
1. Tim Duncan (SAS, 1997)G | MIN | P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | REB% | AST% | STL% | BLK% | TOV% | USG% | ORtg | DRtg | PER | WS |
899 | 33138 | 20.9 | 11.5 | 3.1 | .553 | 18.4 | 16.6 | 1.1 | 4.6 | 12.5 | 28.2 | 110 | 94 | 25.0 | 148.5 |
LeBron will surpass Duncan and Dwight probably will. But for now, and since he was drafted, he's the very definition of "the best number one pick." His offense is consistently underlooked because only once has he averaged 25+ ppg, and his fg%'s don't blow people away. However his ORtg's are consistently good, sometimes great such as his first MVP year, his TS% is always in the mid to upper 50's, and his turnovers are low for a big man. During his MVP seasons he was 1st and 7th in offensive win shares.
But offense isn't Duncan's advantage over everyone. He'd be a great player with a championship or two based on his offense alone. However, Duncan is also the best defensive player post-merger. Others have blocked more shots, Rodman was the more fercious and versitile defender, and Duncan has no DPOY. But he's
simply the best. The defensive ranks of the Spurs since Duncan's drafting? 2nd, 1st, 2nd, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 1st, 1st, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th. The 2004 Spurs are possibly the greatest defensive team in NBA history, and certainly the best since the merger. The string of defensive dominance from 2004-2006 for the Spurs is unmatched by anyone who isn't the 1960's Celtics. The Knicks of the 90's only dominated at near that level for two years, the Spurs did it for three. Every player Duncan has played with since 2002 has seen their defensive numbers increase with the Spurs and dimenish after they left. Rasho Nesterovic went from a really good defensive player to one of the best at his position. The Spurs were without Manu Ginobili for most of the year last season and played often-undersized sieves like Matt Bonner and Roger Mason big minutes. They still finished fifth.
Duncan's a unique player. In the playoffs, he plays better. Look at that link above about LeBron's playoff performance. You'll notice Duncan is 12th. If we make it 9+ games, Duncan would appear in the top ten again. In losing years he's dominant, in winning years he's dominant. In 2002 he averaged 24.5/14.5/4 on 55% shooting while swatting more shots than anyone and having the highest PER of the playoffs. (One that matched LeBron's this season.) In 2006, it was 26/10.5/3 on 63% shooting and once again the highest. When he wins, he also dominates. 25/15.5/5 on 58% shooting in 2003, including his infamous Game Six of the Finals. In 2005 (the third best Spurs team) it was 23.5/12.5/3 on only 53%. (Only!) In 2007 (the best) it was 22/11.5/3 on 56%. (Only 38 and 37 mpg on those two teams compared to 42 and 43 in 2002 and 2003.)
But really I could have just posted "'Nuff Said" for Duncan couldn't I.