bchaikin wrote:
you say this about shawn bradley based on what?...
shawn bradley was a very good to excellent defender most of his career...
aside from having watched him, here's just one 3rd party claim to bradley's excellent defense - here's what jordan cohn had to say about him in his books:
94-95 - with bradley in the lineup, sixers opponents shot 46% scored 97 pts/g, went 20-29, without him opp FG% jumped to 51%, pts/g against 111, team went 5-28... he rates bradley's defense as AA...
95-96 - when bradley played 30+ min/g, sixers opponents shot 43%, philly went 17-26, in less than 30 min/g, opponents shot 51%, sixers went 7-33... he rates bradley's defense AAA...
96-97 - he doesn't list any on/off numbers, but rates his defense AAA, the highest he can rate a player in his system (D suspect, C mediocre, B middle of the pack, A first rate, AA big time, AAA top of the line)...
so that's 3 straight years he's got shawn bradley rated as a big time to top of the line defender, and this is early in bradley's career (ages 22-24). if that's not excellent defense i don't know what is...
so my question for you is just what is your statement that bradley was not an excellent overall defender based on?...
But to claim Nance as an elite defender simply off of BPG seems a bit incomplete.
and just who has made this claim? perhaps you should re-read this thread - blocked shots is just part of it, along with watching a player and reading everything about a player you can...
greatest all-time lists are fun to debate - but to "claim" one player is better than another without taking in to full consideration a player's contribution on the defensive side of the floor (aside from ratings that apportion equal defensive contribution towards team defensive rank based solely on minutes played) will skew your list towards offensive minded players...
For one, it seems you don't understand the conceptual difference between Defensive Rating and DBPM.
Defensive Rating differs from plus/minus in that it's predicated on individual "defensive stops" per 100 possessions, or in Oliver's defensive rating "only the buckets scored as a result of [a players] defensive mistakes are counted against him" - BleecherReport
I think you're confusing Oliver's defensive rating w/ DBPM.
Shawn Bradley's Drtg = 100.92 (54th all-time)
That's not bad, but in my defensive ratings I also include "awards" to help serve as a sort of expert 'eye test'. Bradley has no defensive honors in his career.
Obviously, Bradley was an elite shot-blocker, but in my list I consider elite all-time defenders >110, that means:
In that order. I've only ranked about 150 players, so some prominent defensive specialist are not included, such as Bowen, Battier maybe. Nance is definitely not in this category.Bill Russell
Wilt Chamberlain
Hakeem Olajuwon
Tim Duncan
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
Ben Wallace
David Robinson
Dwight Howard
Kevin Garnett
Dikembe Mutumbo
LeBron James
Artis Gilmore
John Havlicek
Dennis Rodman
Michael Jordan
Patrick Ewing
Dave DeBusschere
Bobby Jones
Scottie Pippen
Nate Thurmond
Another important detail in my list that I forgot to mention as far as defensive ratings, is that once the initial ratings are determined, they are then adjusted by position. In other words, guards/SF are then rated against other guards/SF, big men against other big men.
Shawn Bradley's career defensive rating = 97, 1 point lower than Nance, 1 point higher than Chris Webber.
But back to that "position relative" thing in the second step, comparing big men to big men, perimeter players to perimeter players.
Bradley and Alvin Roberston have virtually the same initial defensive rating in my system, but after the "position relative" step is applied:
Alvin Roberston = 104
Shawn Bradley = 97