Posted by m4284850 on 7/13/2012 3:44:00 PM (view original):
Posted by tianyi7886 on 7/13/2012 2:47:00 PM (view original):
Why are we talking about how clutch stockton is when he was the 3rd option on the Jazz offense for most of his career? It's like saying Scottie Pippen was terrible because he wasn't clutch; well of course when Jordan took all the final shots. Or saying Jason Kidd sucked because he never scored much in his career. Stockton was never the focal point of the Jazz offense.
Stockton was the best player on his team!?!?! Karl Malone would argue differently, considering how he was averaging 25-30ppg.
If you want to talk about offensive efficiency, it's not even close. Stockton was a career 52% shooter from the field. Isiah Thomas is like Allen Iverson with less volume, but AI went to the line like a competitive eater at the buffet.
1. Not really, Stockton was just a bad playoff player for the most part (it's not clutch when you get worse when it matters) Isiah got better when it mattered (EXAMPLE: '90 finals- Averaged a 28-5-7, and shot 11-16 for 3! Now Isiah's all time playoff averages- 20-9-5 (111 Games) Stockton's playoff averages- 13-10-4 (182 games). The Blazers eliminated the Jazz in '91 and '92, Stockton shot 6 for 25, getting outplayed by TERRY PORTER (averaged 26-8 for the series)! There's plenty more examples, but I'd rather not do the research (please don't make me do the research ;)!
2. Never said Stockton was the best player on the team, he wasn't. I said if he was, the team probaly wouldn't be very good. What I'm saying is if you replaced Isiah with Stock on those championship piston teams, they wouldn't have been champions. Isiah was a much more valuable player in his prime than stockton was.
3.If you remove the 3 pointers (b/c when he was in his prime basically everybody was missing 3 pointers so you can still blame him, but he kind of has an excuse, Example: league average in 1983 is 24%. 3's didn't start to look somewhat effecient until 1987 (league average about 30%) so Isiah was in the horrible 3 pt shooting era for 6 years, as his FG % got butchered. He was actually a career 47% shooter from 2.
OK a-in-the-b. I have more examples, ( I had to do the :( research) First the stockton performances: His playoff #'s are blown up by the 97 and 98 years when he was guarded by scrubs as I previously mentioned, and the 1988 season when he had a huge playoffs (shot 57% averaged 20 and 15) before losing to the Lakers. But besides that 1 impressive postseason he's been really nothing as a postseason player.
From '92 to '96 Stockton shot just 44% and 30% from 3. In 89 the 2 seed Jazz got swept by the 7 seed warriors (their PG was Winston Garland). In '90 Kevin Johnson and the suns beat Utah in a deciding game 5. Already mentioned Stockton choking away the '91 and '92 playoffs. The '93 Jazz blew a 2-1 series lead and lost to Seattle in the 1st round, as Stockton shot 4 for 14 in a series clinching game 4 at home. In '94 the Jazz lost in the Western Finals to Houston, and Stockton made 27 of 65 shots (41%) and averaged just 9.4 assists for the series (averaged 13 that year during the regular season). The '95 Jazz lost a deciding game 5 at home to Houston, Stockton had 5 assists and 12 points on 4 of 14 shooting. And then the Jazz lost game 7 of the Western finals to Seattle. In this series
John Stockton gets absolutely DOMINATED by Gary Payton. Payton averages 21-6 on 56% shooting, Stockton Averages 10-8 on 39% shooting!
By this time Stockton is 34 and he should be starting a downward slope into retirement. But he gets lucky as Magic and Isiah were gone, Mark Price and Kevin Johnson were fading. Penny Hardaway was about to blow-out his knee, Tim Hardaway tore his ACL and was now much easier to defend, and Kidd and Marbury were too young. That left Gary Payton and John Stockton as the only great PG's left (most of the other ones sucked).
OK I hope this has started to convince you!