Wed Jun 10, 2015 6:12 pm
P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | Ortg | Drtg | PER | Ws/48 |
17.0 | 12.6 | 4.1 | .562 | 116 | 102 | 22.2 | .200 |
P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | Ortg | Drtg | PER | Ws/48 |
19.7 | 9.1 | 2.1 | .571 | 113 | 107 | 21.3 | .158 |
P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | Ortg | Drtg | PER | Ws/48 |
26.1 | 6.1 | 3.3 | .625 | 119 | 109 | 23.3 | .200 |
P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | Ortg | Drtg | PER | Ws/48 |
16.8 | 2.3 | 4.7 | .554 | 113 | 110 | 15.3 | .118 |
P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | Ortg | Drtg | PER | Ws/48 |
20.7 | 9.6 | 4.1 | .510 | 103 | 100 | 21.4 | .136 |
P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | Ortg | Drtg | PER | Ws/48 |
19.6 | 12.3 | 3.1 | .488 | Nr | Nr | 22.0 | .136 |
P/36 | R/36 | A/36 | TS% | Ortg | Drtg | PER | Ws/48 |
19.5 | 5.9 | 4.3 | .593 | 120 | 104 | 19.8 | .205 |
Wed Jun 10, 2015 6:37 pm
Wed Jun 10, 2015 6:50 pm
Wed Jun 10, 2015 7:14 pm
Wed Jun 10, 2015 10:59 pm
Wed Jun 10, 2015 11:24 pm
Thu Jun 11, 2015 12:21 am
Menopauss wrote:Are you crazy. Is he not a top 3 scorer in the 3pt era? Can't you read and acknowledge stats? Other than your whole post being consisted of really no important factor to the discussion, you question if Dantley was great offensively?
This reply tells me that all you know about Adrian Dantley is his PPG and TS%.
Adrian Dantley was a low-post scoring small forward. Very strong for his size, he had a knack for using his body to create contact and with contact, create space to get off a shot and/or draw a foul. He was quite exceptional at that, but this can be concluded from his TS% already.
The Utah teams in his prime were absolutely miserable. They struggled mightily to break 30 wins (let alone make the playoffs), which is already strange with a seemingly all-time great like Dantley on board. What's more strange is that the team didn't miss a beat (and actually got a tiny bit better) when Dantley got injured for most of the season in '83 and got better after getting rid of him in '86.
Then he went to Detroit, where the team had some success with him. Then they traded AD for Mark Aguirre and went from contenders to back-to-back champions. All that while Dallas (Dantley's new team) went from WCF to lottery to first-round sweep.
Point is, his impact was neutral to slightly negative in his Utah years and a big negative in his later years. He was a defensive sieve and his offense was a miniscule positive at best.
You're probably thinking "this makes no sense. 30+ PPG on 60+TS% - how can that not be helping a team?". The answer to that is simple, but it would require you to get out of basketball-reference and actually watch a basketball game.
It's all in his playstyle. He was a notorious ball-stopper and black hole on offense. He would get the ball posted up about 15 feet from the basket, back down, back down, back down, pump fake, pump fake, pump fake... if he got a shot off, he often drew a foul as well. Efficient offense. When he didn't, though? He would still burn the entire shot clock, then pass out to one of his teammates for an awful, contested shot at the end of the shot clock. Keeps his USG down, keeps his TS% high, tanks the team's offensive efficiency and record. Dantley completely killed any ball movement and turned his teammates into spectators on every possession. He functioned solely as a #1 option and you had two choices when he's on your team:
a) you give him the ball and play 1v5 - and he will take the entire shot clock to set up his moves to score (or pass out at the last second)
b) you don't give him the ball and play 4v5 - Dantley didn't move without the ball very well
For all the crap a guy like Melo gets for hogging the ball and not passing, let me tell you he's a LOT more willing to move the ball than Dantley was.
And it wasn't a case of doing what the team asked, either. His playstyle was upsetting members of the team and caused multiple clashes. First with coach Frank Layden in Utah, then with Isiah in Detroit. The Pistons wanted Dantley to move out to the mid-range area to space the floor better and avoid clogging the paint for their other interior scorers. He was unhappy about it and wouldn't. When Utah asked him to move the ball more, he wouldn't. Reportedly, he even kind of clashed with Abdul-Jabbar and Wilkes in LA, before the Utah years. Both of them not really known for being selfish or whatever.
The truth is, good teams that had Dantley didn't want him. Buffalo drafted Dantley, he averaged 20 PPG as a rookie... they traded him to LA. Lakers had Dantley right before drafting Magic and... they traded him. Utah was miserable with him for half a decade while he put up historically great scoring stats. When they got a good coach (Layden) and started improving... they traded him. Detroit wouldn't get him to fit, he clashed with Isiah... they traded him. He could definitely play the game, but only HIS way. Nobody wanted him for very long.
So, unfortunately for the TS% worshippers, Adrian Dantley is the ultimate "empty stats" player. He put up huge numbers on huge efficiency that weren't having an effect on his teams. He played no defense and his offense was ball-stopping on the level of Rondo and then some.
To answer your question: the problem isn't my stat reading capability. The problem is that not all of basketball can be expressed in a box score.
Thu Jun 11, 2015 12:25 am
Thu Jun 11, 2015 3:09 am
Thu Jun 11, 2015 1:34 pm
Keeps his USG down, keeps his TS% high
Thu Jun 11, 2015 2:01 pm
Fri Jun 12, 2015 7:31 am
Menopauss wrote:Eye tests are subjective and incorrect. Only way to go is to check out stats which go way beyond TS% you're so desperately clinging on to. Please do your reasearch and read what people post towards you. They actually thing you'll try to read and comprehend it not just ignore it and call for the "watch the game" meaningless argument.
benji wrote:The offense was scraping the bottom of the barrel in his last two seasons even with Dantley and Stockton propping it up. And then Malone replacing Dantley. It would take the Jazz eight years to surpass the (9th!) offense of the 1984 season Dantley borderline created on his own. And it was only in 1990 that the team wasn't in shambles on that end. Utah won in that era with its defense, the dominating offense came in the late 1990s. Dantley's early period in Utah was reflective of Nissalke's desire to slow the pace (something he did everywhere else he coached), and since the team had no one else, why not give it to Dantley.
benji wrote:When Layden opened things up and turned the Jazz into one of the fastest paced teams in the league year after year, Dantley maintained his % role and improved his offensive performance.
benji wrote:Dantley's situation in Detroit and eventual trade had more to do with his relationship with Isiah Thomas than his play. Dantley had bought into the time-share with Rodman (because he was also the fourth guard) that Aguirre also would do when he caved in completely because of his secret lovechild with Isiah. The other Pistons, including Rodman, have all been much more friendly towards Dantley than Thomas post-careers.
benji wrote:Moving him out on the Pistons wouldn't have unclogged the paint as he was the Pistons primary interior scorer, next was James Edwards. Putting him into the mid-range would have put him right in the way of Isiah, Dumars, Laimbeer and Johnson.