Has ANY GM, Player, or Owner in NBA History Manipulated the Media as Adeptly as D. Morey?

FTBS

Superstar
Joined
May 29, 2012
Messages
21,403
Reputation
3,939
Daps
59,233
Reppin
NULL
What y'all have to understand is that in the wake of Morey completely crapping the bed this offseason, and heading into his 8th season as a genius GM with exactly 3 playoff appearances and just 1 series win on his record, when he's most vulnerable to justified criticism and people questioning what the hell he has ever won for his supposedly brilliant wheeling and dealing and utilization of advanced statistics and unique methods of measuring player value...

Grantland just published this:

http://grantland.com/the-triangle/the-best-way-to-understand-daryl-morey/

An apologia that anticipates the justified criticism and tries to undercut it by acknowledging it, on some Eminem in 8 Mile shyt. The conclusion the author reaches? It's crucial to understand that no matter how things work out, no matter how little the Rockets ever have to show for all his "genius" maneuvering, Daryl Morey is... Chris Paul. And you wish he was your GM because he's awesome!

Fam! The shamelessness! The manipulation. His personal publicist couldn't have written a more transparent and slanted fellating. The most obvious aspect of Morey's undeserved reputation is this: he grants access to the media, and in turn they spin and protect his narrative. His own talking points have become their own. Specifically Bill Simmons, who Morey is directly in bed with. This is probably the most absurd profile of Morey every penned. And that's saying a lot.

:wow:
That reminds me of this article about Steve Nash from a few years ago.

New stats, new picks
Improved metrics reveal voting oddities in recent MVP awards
Comment Email Print
By Eric Neel
ESPN.com
Archive
When our man John Hollinger introduced his Value Added and Estimated Wins Added metrics recently, he not only provided a sharp look at the 2008-09 MVP race (LeBron James should win the award, Dwyane Wade is a closer second than you'd think, and both Chris Paul and Dwight Howard come before Kobe Bryant), he also gave us a way to look back on recent MVP votes with a more discerning eye.

nba_g_nash_200.jpg

Lisa Blumenfeld/Getty ImagesDid Steve Nash deserve his two MVP trophies? The numbers say no.
EWA is a measure of the number of victories a player contributes to a team's overall record, relative to the number of games that team would be expected to win if the player were replaced by a league-average performer. In other words, it tells us, in a nice round number, precisely how grateful Mike Brown and Dan Gilbert should be for the gift of LeBron (30.8 Estimated Wins Added). And it also provides a better understanding of just how good a job the voters did in selecting the last five MVPs.


2003-2004 MVP

(Players are listed in voting order, followed by their EWA.)
Kevin Garnett 28.90
Tim Duncan 20.79
Jermaine O'Neal 14.70
Peja Stojakovic 18.28
Kobe Bryant 16.03
EWA doesn't take defense into account, so KG's MVP year was actually even more impressive than these numbers suggest. It's hard to remember now, bathed as he is in the generous glow of the Celtics' championship, but Garnett-love was somewhat hard to come by back when he was with the Timberwolves in 2003-04, since he still hadn't advanced past the first round of the playoffs. His EWA is evidence of how ridiculous the skeptics were when they questioned whether he had what it took to win. This was a righteous MVP for a dominant player at the height of his powers and it offers an implicit critique of the sometimes simpleminded way we let wins and losses (as if they're something an individual can wish or will into being) color our analysis. The Kevin Garnett who wears a ring (and had an EWA of 16.12 while playing alongside Paul Pierce and Ray Allen in 2007-08) is a hero, while the Kevin Garnett who was head and shoulders above everyone else in the league was somehow flawed, somehow not quite good enough to win our whole-hearted approval.


2004-05

Steve Nash 14.13
Shaquille O'Neal 20.37
Dirk Nowitzki 22.00
Tim Duncan 18.11
Allen Iverson 19.38
2005-06

Steve Nash 17.10
LeBron James 29.55
Dirk Nowitzki 25.67
Kobe Bryant 28.71
Chauncey Billups 18.10
The Nash years are fascinating. EWA suggests the votes both season were way off base, and that Nash didn't even belong in the same conversation with Dirk, Shaq, LeBron and Kobe. Leadership of the savvy point guard is a romantic ideal -- an irresistible story that seems to reinforce all the notions we hold dear about basketball played "the right way" -- and Nash was the flesh-and-blood avatar of those beliefs. There was, too, almost certainly a kind of corrective, throwback appeal in the Nash votes. He seemed like the antidote to a game some folks thought had become too individualized, too ego-driven; a vote for Nash was a vote for something once thought lost.

Driven this way by story more than data, Nash's MVPs seem unjust just a few years after the fact. Surely Shaq is more deserving of two MVP awards than Nash is. Clearly we should be talking about LeBron's second or Kobe's third MVP this season. But still, it's hard to dismiss Nash solely on the basis of EWA. There is little doubt that something interesting happened when Nash joined the Phoenix Suns beginning in the 2004-05 season. There was some kind of catalytic magic in the combination of Nash, Shawn Marion, and Amar'e Stoudemire (and Mike D'Antoni, too) in those first two seasons.

Marion's PER went from 19.9 in 2003-04 to 21.7 in 2004-05 to 23.6 in 2005-06. Stoudemire's PER went from 19.8 to 26.6 before getting hurt in 2005-06. Nash's went from 20.5 in his last season in Dallas to 22.0 in 2004-05 and 23.3 in 2005-06. The Suns went from winning only 29 games in 2003-2004 to 62 in 2004-2005 and 54 the year after that (basically without Stoudamire). On the one hand, Nash's MVP awards reveal our frustrating attachment to old-school ideas, an attachment that sometimes blinds us to the greatness in our midst. On the other hand, don't the awards also indicate a moment in which the MVP was awarded as kind of imprecise, but nevertheless legitimate, marker of a rare and compelling instance of a team in collaboration, flowing and functioning at a ridiculously high level? And isn't Nash, at the helm of that hot band, a pretty reasonable recipient of our attention and praise?

Dude shat on the whole purpose of his column to :cape: for Nash. :mjlol:
 

XII

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2014
Messages
14,031
Reputation
5,530
Daps
64,253
Dude shat on the whole purpose of his column to :cape: for Nash. :mjlol:
Here is the new statistic I support. :ehh:
Here is everything wrong with the new statistic I support. :snoop:
 
Last edited:
Top