The dribbled between the legs actually hit the back of his left leg, then the side of his right leg, but he still managed to maintain control and hit White lol. Nesmith's unnecessary help there gave Jaylen an out.Watching it I. Real time he had a moment where he had to cross to his left and stumbled a bit and this has been his Achilles heel but recovered quickly to his right and at that point it was game over thank you and good night
I think I mentioned this upthread but JB said previously that there's a lot of things he worked on last summer that he doesn't get a chance to show because this year's team is so good.At the very least, I think Jaylen Brown will improve more, in multiple facets, before his career has done. He's entering his physical prime while still adding lots of things.
And not to derail the thread, maybe DW will make ESPN's top-50 list.When the playoffs are finished, Tatum should be cemented as a top 5 player and JB as a top 20 player.....comfortably ahead of Domantas Sabonis
Not sure what you mean by "past 2 years" but even according to DARKO, 2022-23 was his best season and this year everyone on the Cs watched their numbers go down because everyone was so good.I think he actually stagnated for the past 2 years and maybe even slightly regressed, but this season in particular the defense and decision-making with the ball has notably improved. What’s been great about his playoff run thus far is he’s done it without KP on the court. He seems to play better pissed off, so here’s to Jaylen continuing to evolve into this franchise’s Rodney Harrison.
Yeah if you look at the dots on the graph and not just the line, you'll see the 50ish games where he dropped a lot and then a return to his normal presence. It happens. And it matches the eye test from the beginning of this year.Not sure what you mean by "past 2 years" but even according to DARKO, 2022-23 was his best season and this year everyone on the Cs watched their numbers go down because everyone was so good.
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Digging in a little, it looks like one reason why DARKO is down on JB is because of his defense - it has him as a minus in D-DPM this year which probably reflects his box score stats but doesn't really reflect how he's played on defense.
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I wish I could give a better answer, but to me the more standard stats and eye test had Jaylen, before this season, peaking in 2021 or so, and then really leveling off with worse 3p shooting and turnover rates the next couple seasons. It's not like he regressed noticeably, it just didn't appear he was improving as he had been up to age 24 or so. I also think Jaylen has had by far his best year defensively this season, and obviously DARKO disagrees, so again I can't really provide a counter other than to say it's based off of admittedly more standardized stats and observation. I think this has been his overall best season.Not sure what you mean by "past 2 years" but even according to DARKO, 2022-23 was his best season and this year everyone on the Cs watched their numbers go down because everyone was so good.
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Digging in a little, it looks like one reason why DARKO is down on JB is because of his defense - it has him as a minus in D-DPM this year which probably reflects his box score stats but doesn't really reflect how he's played on defense.
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Yeah, it's worth emphasizing that DARKO tries to measure impact, not talent, so it's not like a given player's progression curve is context independent.This is one of those cases where if DARKO says that Jaylen was worse this year, DARKO is wrong.
It's not just an eyetest thing: he drastically improved the team's ability to function in non-Tatum lineups. People don't talk enough about how big a deal it is to have Jaylen-on/Tatum-off lineups be as good as they were.
Is that partly a function of replacing Smart with Jrue, and White improving further? Yes, but being able to accentuate that talent as the lead guy is a premium, premium NBA skill.
Good and fair point, and especially relevant in the context of a team trying to win a title: you want maximum talent, even to the point where it's overkill.Yeah, it's worth emphasizing that DARKO tries to measure impact, not talent, so it's not like a given player's progression curve is context independent.
That’s why Tatum finishing tied for second with Giannis was funny.As WBCD noted, DARKO likely struggled with this year's Celtics because they were so good at the top end it made it hard for each individual to share as much of the 'credit'
I fully agree with the subjective input that Jaylen grew a bunch this year, and we saw some of that on display in the ECF
To borrow an example I remember it's creator giving to illustrate, take a guess as when Al started and stopped playing alongside Joel Embiid:"Have Tatum space and give the ball to Jaylen with a closeout game on the line" is not something that was happening prior to this season. That's his growth in a nutshell: he used to be an athletic play finisher, and now he's inching closer to being an NBA star.
Good and fair point, and especially relevant in the context of a team trying to win a title: you want maximum talent, even to the point where it's overkill.
The "regression for teammates" is a problem with every stat, but I think that "DARKO says that Jaylen was worse this year" is not what I'm taking from what DARKO says. When I look at the chart, I see a stretch when Jaylen performed poorly at the very end of last year carrying through the first couple of months of this season. Then everything seems to have clicked for him, and he returned to being Jaylen.This is one of those cases where if DARKO says that Jaylen was worse this year, DARKO is wrong.
It's not just an eyetest thing: he drastically improved the team's ability to function in non-Tatum lineups. People don't talk enough about how big a deal it is to have Jaylen-on/Tatum-off lineups be as good as they were.
Is that partly a function of replacing Smart with Jrue, and White improving further? Yes, but being able to accentuate that talent as the lead guy is a premium, premium NBA skill.
For clarification, you hate Isaiah Thomas as in IT3 of recent Celtics lore or Isiah Thomas, the point guard from the Pistons?I don’t like Isaiah Thomas at all. But for the purposes of this theead and what’s actually happening, Stephen A is such a fucking jackass it’s unreal. He’s made his career out of being an unbearable loud mouth who “embraces debate”. He’s a shit stain on all of media.
His handle seems to have gotten dramatically better which is what I see is his major improvement. I don’t remember one bad instance of him dribbling off his foot or driving and losing it where the last couple years it seemed fairly common.This is one of those cases where if DARKO says that Jaylen was worse this year, DARKO is wrong.
It's not just an eyetest thing: he drastically improved the team's ability to function in non-Tatum lineups. People don't talk enough about how big a deal it is to have Jaylen-on/Tatum-off lineups be as good as they were.
Is that partly a function of replacing Smart with Jrue, and White improving further? Yes, but being able to accentuate that talent as the lead guy is a premium, premium NBA skill.
....and then decided to unsublimate it, and it's been awesome....and Jrue seems to have sublimated his game for the good of the team.
Yes, I found myself not worrying about it at end of game situations.His handle seems to have gotten dramatically better which is what I see is his major improvement. I don’t remember one bad instance of him dribbling off his foot or driving and losing it where the last couple years it seemed fairly common.
Yeah. It's awesome that he in particular just takes what is given. Want to load up on the Jays, fine, I'll burn you. When he was taking Siakam into the post and getting an and-1, I'm like "who the fuck does that?" He did it twice in final minutes in this series, just putting his head down and getting a basket, nevermind the huge defensive plays.....and then decided to unsublimate it, and it's been awesome
I don't think that he did. He let the others pass him and saved some gas in the tank for when it was needed, like this series.Yes, I found myself not worrying about it at end of game situations.
Interesting that JH steadily declined. I wonder if that shoulder stinger he had mid-season is only now resolved.
Thomas, the guard from the Pistons. He's had some sexual harassment issues from his time in the Knicks front office. Seems like he's kind of a sleazebagFor clarification, you hate Isaiah Thomas as in IT3 of recent Celtics lore or Isiah Thomas, the point guard from the Pistons?
As far as Stephen A. Smith, that guy used to be a great print journalist in the day, but now he is just another talking (yelling) head. So annoying.
One other thing is that it seems to me that impact on the ball defense is hard to measure. I doubt DARKO is taking into account FG% against but other than that there's really no stat to measure JB's i,pact when he is (for example) chasing Steph around the court.Yeah, it's worth emphasizing that DARKO tries to measure impact, not talent, so it's not like a given player's progression curve is context independent.
I am recollecting that during the latter half of the regular season JH had a fair share of brain-fartish miscues near the rim, and his 3pt shooting declined.Yeah. It's awesome that he in particular just takes what is given. Want to load up on the Jays, fine, I'll burn you. When he was taking Siakam into the post and getting an and-1, I'm like "who the fuck does that?" He did it twice in final minutes in this series, just putting his head down and getting a basket, nevermind the huge defensive plays.
I don't think that he did. He let the others pass him and saved some gas in the tank for when it was needed, like this series.
I've obviously been a Jaylen stan since he put on the green jersey for the first time, but I don't buy that he's improved as dramatically as others say he has. I think the results have simply been better because he's not playing with Marcus Smart anymore.The dribbled between the legs actually hit the back of his left leg, then the side of his right leg, but he still managed to maintain control and hit White lol. Nesmith's unnecessary help there gave Jaylen an out.
Actually, that help from Nesmith is exactly the kind of issue Jaylen himself has had in the past that he's cleaned up this season. Nesmith actually turned off his area to guard Jaylen from shooting at, I guess, the Indy bench?
This seems like a bit of a slippery slope, as essentially the entire point of advanced stats is to prevent an over-reliance on traditional stats and our own personal eye test. It should be a pretty high threshold to decide all advanced stats don't like player X as much as they should and the advanced stats must be wrong.Advanced stats just don’t love Jaylen, so I take them with a grain of salt when it comes to him.
This is where I'm at generally as well.This is the JB we've had for a long time, IMO, and for me, Marcus Smart (who I loved and he brought it on defense) was the absolute worst possible mix with a guy like JB and JT and when you added TL to that mix, you basically had 3 offensive players that defenses had to worry about and all of the focus went to the Jays. If the C's had Holiday over the last 5-6 years instead of Smart, I truly believe we're looking for banner #20 right now instead of #18.
My issue here is the assumption that "advanced stats" are good enough to prevent this over-reliance. I get that the circularity of having to fall back on other modes of analysis in order to validate "advanced" stats sucks, but it's pretty unavoidable, given the alternative.This seems like a bit of a slippery slope, as essentially the entire point of advanced stats is to prevent an over-reliance on traditional stats and our own personal eye test. It should be a pretty high threshold to decide all advanced stats don't like player X as much as they should and the advanced stats must be wrong.
...
Well, now we know for sure DARKO sucks, because everyone on my twitter feed has been yelling at me that Ant is better than Tatum.DARKO puts Jaylen at 3.1 DPM this season, right around James Harden and De’Aaron Fox. If you go +/- 0.5 DPM you have a band of guys including Brunson, Curry, Towns, Edwards, Porzingis, and Van Vleet.
I don’t know, that sounds actually right to me.
Most anti-advanced stat arguments are going to heavily rely on someone's own personal eye test.My issue here is the assumption that "advanced stats" are good enough to prevent this over-reliance. I get that the circularity of having to fall back on other modes of analysis in order to validate "advanced" stats sucks, but it's pretty unavoidable, given the alternative.
All of my "begging the question" warning lights get triggered when something is called "advanced", and then used as a yardstick in and of itself.
Agree in the sense that this Jaylen isn't materially different than "just got voted all-NBA" Jaylen from last year. However, there was a dip from the Miami series last year through the beginning of this year a bit. I don't think that he's that much better than the guy who finished last year's regular season and started the playoffs. He might be the exact same guy every day since, who was struggling to perform due to changing conditions around him.This seems like a bit of a slippery slope, as essentially the entire point of advanced stats is to prevent an over-reliance on traditional stats and our own personal eye test. It should be a pretty high threshold to decide all advanced stats don't like player X as much as they should and the advanced stats must be wrong.
Certainly they are not perfect, and there are a bunch of team factors that can affect things. But there are probably some warts in Jaylens overall really good game that I think these stats are picking up on.
As far as players declining because a team is really good and there is only so much goodness to go around.... Murray, KCP, Porter Jr, and Gordon are all improving on DARKO and it seems like Jokic improvement/dominance is only helping them.
From a sanity check POV, that scans.DARKO puts Jaylen at 3.1 DPM this season, right around James Harden and De’Aaron Fox. If you go +/- 0.5 DPM you have a band of guys including Brunson, Curry, Towns, Edwards, Porzingis, and Van Vleet.
I don’t know, that sounds actually right to me.
FWIW, I think that the newer metrics (avoiding the A word), never tell a complete picture either, which is where some folks are coming from. It's another tool, part of a collection of data points. As long as we're not using tragically bad ones like PER, they're useful and informative tools, but they should never be considered as gospel either. Folks who disregard them altogether as junk are missing a ton of the picture though. Feels like just yesterday when we had to explain FIP (before that BABIP) for folks who just refused to accept it and chose to project guys by stats that were being collected when we had 38 states.Most anti-advanced stat arguments are going to heavily rely on someone's own personal eye test.
I'd be cautious blinding believing ones own assessment is the gold standard of accuracy, regardless how much it "feels" true.
Any scoring of "Talent" or "Value" suffers from Heisenberg-esque uncertainty: you can look at it from every angle, but by the time you have enough of a bead on it, by whatever means you might choose, it has already shifted. It's always a moving target, and in fact it can never be known except within a margin of error that is sometimes too broad to be satisfying.My issue here is the assumption that "advanced stats" are good enough to prevent this over-reliance. I get that the circularity of having to fall back on other modes of analysis in order to validate "advanced" stats sucks, but it's pretty unavoidable, given the alternative.
All of my "begging the question" warning lights get triggered when something is called "advanced", and then used as a yardstick in and of itself.
2-man pairings last season, Smart/Brown had the worst Net Rtg (+3.6) amongst the TOP15 in minutes played (1502 mins)I've obviously been a Jaylen stan since he put on the green jersey for the first time, but I don't buy that he's improved as dramatically as others say he has. I think the results have simply been better because he's not playing with Marcus Smart anymore.
If instead of White standing out there in the corner, it was Smart, one of two things were likely to happen. JB wouldn't have passed it and either got stripped or tried to make a ridiculous shot or he would have passed to Marcus who probably would have bricked it. The result is the same, a loss and only the narrative changes, JB can't dribble/his handle sucks or Oh well, Marcus missed or the C's simply can't win close games and are chokers.
Last year in game 7 against Miami, where JB played arguably his worst game with the 8 turnovers, he was forced into a role he should never be in because of the ankle roll by Tatum. But we also need to remember in that game, besides JB's struggles, White was 2-9 from deep, Smart was 1-6 and Tatum, although playing 41+ minutes, was basically a decoy on offense, only taking 13 shots. Jaylen was forcing everything, trying to beat traps with a dribble and when he did get the ball out, guys just bricked everything. But because that happened, it's easy to forget that JB went for 24.6ppg in the first two series on 54% from the floor and 47% from deep over 13 games and was a +76 in his time on the floor.
This is the JB we've had for a long time, IMO, and for me, Marcus Smart (who I loved and he brought it on defense) was the absolute worst possible mix with a guy like JB and JT and when you added TL to that mix, you basically had 3 offensive players that defenses had to worry about and all of the focus went to the Jays. If the C's had Holiday over the last 5-6 years instead of Smart, I truly believe we're looking for banner #20 right now instead of #18.
2022-23 (ranked by minutes):2-man pairings last season, Smart/Brown had the worst Net Rtg (+3.6) amongst the TOP15 in minutes played (1502 mins)
In the 554 minutes they played together in the playoffs they were a bit better +3.9
https://www.nba.com/stats/team/1610612738/lineups-advanced?GroupQuantity=2&Season=2022-23&SeasonType=Regular Season&dir=D&sort=MIN
FWIW Brown/Brogdon in 883 minutes were a +1.5 and Malcolm was lights out from 3
Yes, Jaylen was better this season IMHO2022-23 (ranked by minutes):
Brown/Tatum: +6.3 (1629 minutes)
Brown/Horford: +6.0 (1534)
Brown/Smart: +3.6 (1502)
Brown/White: +11.0 (1415 minutes)
Brown/Grant: +3.7 (down to 1050 minutes)
Brown/Brogdon: +3.9
2023-24:
Brown/White: +10.3 (2nd most on team with 1847 minutes)
Brown/Tatum: +8.0 (1577)
Brown/Holiday: +6.5 (1478)
Brown/KP: +11.0 (1355)
Brown/Horford: +8.4 (1061)
Brown/Hauser: +7.2 (682) [Was +7.7 over 382 minutes last season]
I realize that the other 3 guys on the floor influence this stat as well. But I don't think the argument that Brown has improved this season is necessarily incorrect.
Yes, but you see, those are not official Advanced Stats with an acronym named after an NBA player, so they are not authoritative. You even have to use some judgement in determining what they mean, as opposed to just having an unbiased all-in-one number to compare against other numbers. Extremely dangerous to have laymen interpreting the scriptures in this way.2022-23 (ranked by minutes):
Brown/Tatum: +6.3 (1629 minutes)
Brown/Horford: +6.0 (1534)
Brown/Smart: +3.6 (1502)
Brown/White: +11.0 (1415 minutes)
Brown/Grant: +3.7 (down to 1050 minutes)
Brown/Brogdon: +3.9
2023-24:
Brown/White: +10.3 (2nd most on team with 1847 minutes)
Brown/Tatum: +8.0 (1577)
Brown/Holiday: +6.5 (1478)
Brown/KP: +11.0 (1355)
Brown/Horford: +8.4 (1061)
Brown/Hauser: +7.2 (682) [Was +7.7 over 382 minutes last season]
I realize that the other 3 guys on the floor influence this stat as well. But I don't think the argument that Brown has improved this season is necessarily incorrect.
I thought there was a definite step up in playmaking and seeing the game from JB this year.Yes, Jaylen was better this season IMHO
His left-hand handle + lefty finish were an actual weapon.
Much better off-ball defense along with excellent on-ball D.
Fewer brain freezes (except for the weird FT yips)
I just posted the Brown+Smart #s since DotB was speculating that Marcus along with TL were contributors to JB getting more defensive attention. Teams did sag off Smart + TimeLord was never a threat to shoot outside the paint.
Lol. I do think DARKO, like any other analytic tool, can be both informative and useful. But assessing the actual impact of a particular player in the NBA is always going to be an imprecise task given the context-dependent nature of the data that underlies these so-called advanced metrics.Yes, but you see, those are not official Advanced Stats with an acronym named after an NBA player, so they are not authoritative. You even have to use some judgement in determining what they mean, as opposed to just having an unbiased all-in-one number to compare against other numbers. Extremely dangerous to have laymen interpreting the scriptures in this way.
Solid work.Yes, but you see, those are not official Advanced Stats with an acronym named after an NBA player, so they are not authoritative. You even have to use some judgement in determining what they mean, as opposed to just having an unbiased all-in-one number to compare against other numbers. Extremely dangerous to have laymen interpreting the scriptures in this way.
I also think he took a step forward. I don't remember his finishing being this good the last few years. He's been using his body a lot more and just muscling guys to the rim. I maybe didn't watch as many Celtics games the past few years, but I feel like he was playing at a faster, more out of control pace before. This year he's seemed to have slowed it down a bit and just methodically brought people to the rim and scored on them. He still has the explosive dunks and layups too, but a lot more of his game is like White or Holiday where they are in total control going to the rim.I thought there was a definite step up in playmaking and seeing the game from JB this year.
Biggest callouts from this: Voters aren't aligned with but aren't completely different from DARKO, Wemby is a joke omission by the voters, Paul George isn't popular. Also Haliburton got some "bag helium", and Sabonis is the token "counting stats" guy.Lol. I do think DARKO, like any other analytic tool, can be both informative and useful. But assessing the actual impact of a particular player in the NBA is always going to be an imprecise task given the context-dependent nature of the data that underlies these so-called advanced metrics.
Jaylen Brown had a huge upgrade in teammates in 2 critical roles, and it's certainly possible that DARKO perhaps underweights that impact, especially when looking at a single season, which can yet be small enough to be noisy. The Nuggets were brought up as a counter example to the teammate impact, but Denver did not add two players anywhere near as impactful as KP and Jrue Holiday to their starting rotation.
Still, I don't have any real problem with where Jaylen Brown is ranked using DPM (#24). In any given season, there are usually 10 eligible players that are obvious All-NBA winners. And there are about 10-20 additional players that could make an argument for the final 5 spots. DARKO puts Jaylen Brown right in the mix of those 10-20, which seems about right.
I also have no problem with ignoring any metric that doesn't have Jaylen Brown in the top 40 this past season.
Just for kicks, looking at this season's All-NBA teams and their respective DARKO rankings:
Jokic (#1)
Tatum (2)
Giannis (3)
Luka (8)
SGA (11)
---
Kawhi (5)
Durant (9)
Anthony Davis (15)
Brunson (17)
Anthony Edwards (20)
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LeBron (12)
Booker (14)
Curry (18)
Haliburton (33)
Sabonis (93)
Top 20 DARKO players missing from the All-NBA list include:
Embiid (4) - Ineligible
Donovan Mitchell (6) - Ineligible
Wemby (7) - Rookie, but that will obviously change real soon
Paul George (10) - See below
Kyrie (13) - Ineligible
Butler (16) - Ineligible
KAT (19)- Ineligible
Paul George was probably overlooked by voters despite having a really good season. Kawhi being on the team hurts his chances considerably, IMO, as does his injury history in recent seasons.
FWIW, he has also been going through guys, not just around them. In control mostly (although he gets an outsized share of offensive fouls). But he gets half a step past a guy now, and instead of accelerating to top speed to lose the guy, he keeps him there and finishes through him at the hoop. Both he and Tatum have pulled a little Giannis into their offensive game (the good part of Giannis).I also think he took a step forward. I don't remember his finishing being this good the last few years. He's been using his body a lot more and just muscling guys to the rim. I maybe didn't watch as many Celtics games the past few years, but I feel like he was playing at a faster, more out of control pace before. This year he's seemed to have slowed it down a bit and just methodically brought people to the rim and scored on them. He still has the explosive dunks and layups too, but a lot more of his game is like White or Holiday where they are in total control going to the rim.
Yeah.. that's what I mean by muscling guys to the rim... he's getting defenders on their back foot and keeping them back peddling by using his strength... but not in an out of control way so that it isn't a foul, most of the time.FWIW, he has also been going through guys, not just around them. In control mostly (although he gets an outsized share of offensive fouls). But he gets half a step past a guy now, and instead of accelerating to top speed to lose the guy, he keeps him there and finishes through him at the hoop. Both he and Tatum have pulled a little Giannis into their offensive game (the good part of Giannis).
I don't consider the Wemby omission a joke. He averaged less than 30 minutes per game as Pop and the Spurs managed his minutes carefully. And the Spurs finished with the same 22-60 record as they did the prior season. Just like the MVP in MLB shouldn't necessarily go to the player who put up the biggest bWAR or fWAR, I don't think voters necessarily need to follow DARKO rankings either.Biggest callouts from this: Voters aren't aligned with but aren't completely different from DARKO, Wemby is a joke omission by the voters, Paul George isn't popular. Also Haliburton got some "bag helium", and Sabonis is the token "counting stats" guy.
I also think he took a step forward. I don't remember his finishing being this good the last few years. He's been using his body a lot more and just muscling guys to the rim. I maybe didn't watch as many Celtics games the past few years, but I feel like he was playing at a faster, more out of control pace before. This year he's seemed to have slowed it down a bit and just methodically brought people to the rim and scored on them. He still has the explosive dunks and layups too, but a lot more of his game is like White or Holiday where they are in total control going to the rim.
If we are just talking eye test here, the offensive improvements that stand out to me are:FWIW, he has also been going through guys, not just around them. In control mostly (although he gets an outsized share of offensive fouls). But he gets half a step past a guy now, and instead of accelerating to top speed to lose the guy, he keeps him there and finishes through him at the hoop. Both he and Tatum have pulled a little Giannis into their offensive game (the good part of Giannis).
Fair, though as a metric which uses plus-minus both quality of bench and rotation approach mean it can be true that some players in good teams are harmed “artificially” while others are not. Celtics bench was better than Denver’s this year—so this will impact Celtics with lower ratio of bench-player minutes I’d imagineAs far as players declining because a team is really good and there is only so much goodness to go around.... Murray, KCP, Porter Jr, and Gordon are all improving on DARKO and it seems like Jokic improvement/dominance is only helping them.
A good portion of his step "up" during the season was having a 7'3" guy who can shoot and roll to the basket playing next to him.I thought there was a definite step up in playmaking and seeing the game from JB this year.
I don't think that voters should follow anything in particular, DARKO rating, or whether Lebron made All-NBA in his rookie year. Wemby finished 82nd in minutes. It's not MVP, it's all NBA. Guy deserved to be on there somewhere.I don't consider the Wemby omission a joke. He averaged less than 30 minutes per game as Pop and the Spurs managed his minutes carefully. And the Spurs finished with the same 22-60 record as they did the prior season. Just like the MVP in MLB shouldn't necessarily go to the player who put up the biggest bWAR or fWAR, I don't think voters necessarily need to follow DARKO rankings either.
Also, very few rookies have made All-NBA team their first season since 1980: Larry Bird (first), Michael Jordan (2nd), David Robinson (made 3rd team first season of 3rd team voting), and Tim Duncan (1st). Neither Shaq nor LeBron made All-NBA their rookie seasons.
Agreed. I wasn't a fan of Brown initiating the offense from the top at the beginning of the season, but I was very wrong.I thought there was a definite step up in playmaking and seeing the game from JB this year.