You are literally ignoring the context of Nash's career in these posts. You are engaging in what you criticize.
"That didn't accomplish anything", what is an accomplishment in the NBA to you? Tell me this. What does a team need to do to accomplish in your eyes. Win a championship? Something that one team every year does? Emphasis on team.
in the context of retroactively placing one player over another that was universally considered better in real time based on little more than analytics and "team success"... yes, I'm going to need those team accomplishments to be AT LEAST close to winning a championship...if I'm gonna consider the merits of an argument based around "well of course you take that guy because he's more impactful in winning" I'm gonna need examples of said impact more substantial than winning a couple of 2nd round playoff series
You not caring about offensive rating in a discussion about best offensive players (important to single this out, as neither of the discussed players are good defensively)
Naw stop that bullshyt, what's important is that you don't invent imaginary discussions that no one was having mid argument...this wasn't a discussion about who the best offensive player was...and if it were, team offensive rating is not close to the sole measure of individual offensive talent
Nice try though
is the issue. I gave you an example of Nash, away from MDA, playing with a 38 year old Hill and 34 y/o Vince and Robin Lopez, zero all star teammates, leading a unit to an offense that would rank best in the league, when he himself was 36 years old, and you don't care. Even though it completely blew up this statement from you -
But yeah, the reason why I don't give a fukk about offensive rating... particularly in this specific case in regards to a bunch of teams whose collective ceiling, again, is a couple of 2nd round series wins...is because that metric doesn't exist in a vacuum... strategy, style of play and roster/lineup decisions to that end determine that rating...and there's a give and take between offense/defense, speed/size, fast breaking/rebounding etc etc that is involved... So when we see teams who go all-in on one way of those extremes, but
CONSISTENTLY fail in the playoffs.. then yeah I don't care what the offensive rating was... The object of basketball at the highest is to win championships, there are no "highest regular season offensive rating" trophies...(though with all these non hooping ass nerds in the media, maybe it's coming).....Nash's most successful years came playing a certain style of ball that was absolutely perfect and tailormade for him to maximize his individual game, but consistently proved to only lead to middling playoff success...and not due to any lack of talented teammates or lack of opportunity either..Nash in non gimmick all offense, more well balanced teams wasn't gonna make him look special....which is cool, there's no shame in being an Allstar level player whose crowning achievement was winning 2nd round series...teams like the DeRozan raptors or the Paul George Pacers or the Sheed Wallace Blazers or the Iso Joe Hawks are all cool lil teams that have their place in history....but them shyts ain't placing you above players that were clearly better than you....
Also gave context to why the Mavericks got better after Nash left, and why they moved on from him, which blew up this statement from you
With zero response from you on those points, because you KNOW you were wrong.
That whole post is adding context to statements you made with no effort to explain them. You thinking those teams were empty calories is another example for why you struggle to get his value. You don't know how to evaluate player influence because you are only looking at the end result. You keep talking about how Nash never made a finals while ignoring injuries to players in three seperate Western Conference Finals, not including the Amare/Diaw controversial suspensions, as if they had no influence on the end result.
All of this, more juelz'ing ... Providing "context" for each of the instances through out the entirety of his what 17 year career with a rotating cast of Allstar and all NBA teammates, that the great Steve Nash oh gosh just got unlucky with to be burdened with ... like every player that's ever played the game hasn't had to deal with random shyt happening

..... You provided "context" to explain how the Mavs got better after they let Nash walk and decided to go in a more balanced defensive direction and ended up in the finals within a year....none of this is seeming like a reoccurring theme to you yet
Nowhere did I say no credit. Just not as much as his accolades as an All-NBA player and his numbers on face value would suggest. Not as much credit as you gave him when you said that the Suns should've been a 70 win team based on their talent around him, including Shawn Marion. THAT terrible comment is what spawned this entire argument, one that you still seem to actually believe because you overrate how "stacked" that team truly was.
So you're saying Shawn Marion had his status as a player arbitrarily inflated because he played in a gimmick system that inflated everyone's stats and gave him certain accolades that you don't believe he otherwise would be deserving of...and because of this, the team didn't accomplish what one would expect from a team with players that were REALLY on that level











It's like, that line of logic sounds soooooo familiar...if only it could be applied to a certain middling sometimesy Allstar point guard that played in the same exact gimmick system and quickly saw him blossom at the age of 30 into the only multiple MVP winner in the history of basketball to never play a second in the NBA finals
If Nash was who y'all pretend he is and the sun's are who y'all pretend them to be...yes, they'd be the dynasty warriors....that's the level of accomplishment that would be required for me to buy this retroactive rewriting of history of Nash's legacy....they're not though....so get that bullshyt outta here