Who ranks higher all-time?
— Ball (@BallMuse23) July 10, 2023
— Kyrie or Dame
— KG or Dirk
— Nash or CP3
— Hakeem or Kobe
— Kawhi or Jokić
— Oscar or West
— Bill or Wilt
— Jordan or LeBron
— Magic or Duncan
— Curry or Bird
Reply with your answers to all 10 ⬇️⬇️⬇️ pic.twitter.com/MkbdCN1fbP
Because it's the off season and this topic circulates around this time every year, I wanted to put my
Thesis: Kevin Garnett, under any lens or through any criteria, was never better than Dirk Nowitzki.
A brief preamble before I get started:
- Most nephews on the bird app or Reddit only remember the last decade of Dirk's career and assume that's who he always was. They forget the mobile terror he used to be during the early aughts; pushing the ball up court for the Mavs offense like a galloping gazelle.
- KG has 2 fan bases that will stan for him (Wolves and Celts) so in terms of 'zealots' defending their guy, KG has that advantage. (I'll gladly admit to my own bias as a staunch acolyte in the Church of Swish.)
- I am not saying KG isn't a top 25 player or even one of the best 2 way players of his era. I am saying as someone who watched both players, whose careers overlapped almost entirely, that KG was never better than Dirk.
So let's get into it.
Point 1: Head to Head.
I would argue that KG's MVP season was one of the best individual 2 way seasons of all time. BUT…
Dirk owned KG. Specifically, when the Mavs SWEPT the Wolves in 2002 in a series that Dirk DOMINATED (Dirk averaged 33-16-3 on 53/73/89 splits that series. That's god tier ****.)
I'll see Wolves/KG stans counter with; "Dirk had more help!" To that I say; both teams had the same # of All Stars (2) and in Rd 1 of 2002 playoffs:
- Dirks teammates averaged 79.4 pts/game on 54% TS
- KG's teammates averaged 78 pts/game on 53.5% TS
Statistically, the Wolves supporting cast and Mavs supporting cast were almost identical that series…and Minnesota got SWEPT. Garnett also had more than double the turnovers than Dirk, which prolly had something to do with it.
Point 2: Team Success
Dirk CONSISTENTLY had better regular season success. 11 straight years of 50 wins with a grand total of 3 all stars around him [Finley, Nash, Josh Howard] for his career (4 if you count 36 yr old Jason Kidd being selected as an injury replacement in 2010) plus 15x playoff berths.In the HISTORY of the NBA, only 3x has a franchise stacked 50+ wins in consecutive seasons for more than a decade:
1- Spurs (00-17)
2- Showtime Lakers (80-91)
3- Mavs (01-11)
That's it.
Compare the insane list of HALL OF FAME level talent in their primes that contributed to those runs for LA and SA vs what Dirk and the Mavs had.
The point is; if you had Dirk on your team, you were lethal on offense and guaranteed a playoff berth in the West, no matter who else was on the roster. Dirk was arguably the single best floor raiser the NBA has ever seen.
Despite the embarrassing 1st Rd loss to the Warriors in '07, the fact that the Mavs won 67 games with the below starting lineup is one of the most incredible NBA feats (only 13 teams EVER have won 67 or more):
- Eric Dampier
- Devin Harris
- Josh Howard
- Dirk
- Jason Terry
KG was great on offense too, but not in a way that buoyed wins. Of the 12 years KG spent in Minnesota, his team only won 50 games 4 times and went three straight years of missing the playoffs during his prime. All time greats don't do that. (It's why I was so hard on Luka this past season.)
In terms of playoff success, they both won 1 championship. KG won his by fleeing the west to form a super team with 2 other all time greats in their prime. Dirk won his with a collection of very good role players, but no all stars, in the West and against arguably the best Super Team ever [pre warriors].
Dirk was the best player on a championship team and KG was simply not. KG joined a super team. Dirk went through a super team.
Point 3: Offense vs Defense
Offense is more important than defense.
Every time this debate comes up, the argument is typically framed as an All Time NBA Defender vs an All Time NBA Scorer. But that framing is disingenuous b/c it implies that defense is as valuable or scarce as elite scoring. Historically, it's infinitely harder to find an offensive player in Dirk's stratosphere than to find someone with KGs level of defense. KG was an elite defender, but he could not stop players like Dirk or Duncan for the life of him and often wouldn't be able to match up with them for fear of foul trouble.
KG was also no slouch on offense, but Dirk was pantheon level great who's efficiency, gravity, and effect on the other team's defense is rivaled only by the likes of MJ, Lebron, Kobe, Kareem, KD, Steph, Jokic, Harden (and hopefully 1 day, Luka).
If your offense stagnated and the clock was close to 0, having a 7ft assassin that could nail an efficient shot at literally any point on the court is the single biggest asset any team can have. Dirk's average defense paired with the Ferrari engine of his offense was simply more valuable to team success. [If Wemby develops a reliable jumper, it's why the spurs will contend every year for a decade plus]
Point 4: Revolutionize the Game
Maybe this shouldn't count, but I see it used all the time when talking about MJ's GOAT status, so I think it's fair game here.
Dirk wasn't the first big man to shoot from range, but he is the living embodiment of the "Stretch 4" archetype. The idea of 7ft-ers operating outside of the post or hoisting 3 point shots was a novelty and hardly taken seriously (shoutout Manute Bol) before Dirk. Dirk didn't invent the mold, but perfected it and weaponized it. He catapulted the 80/90s era, lumbering, brute force big man, into the modern era of space and pace. And in doing so, he created a wholly unique and unstoppable shot that is trademarked specifically to him; the one legged fade. His impact on the game will be felt forever.
All of this is to ignore the contributions he had as a non American. Whether it's Hakeem, Yao, Ginobli, Parker or Giannis....Dirk belongs in the pantheon of players who helped push the NBA borders beyond North America.
In more ways than one, you simply cannot tell the story of the NBA without mentioning Dirk Nowitzki.
Conclusion:
In the era that Dirk and KG were at their most productive, iso scoring was as valuable as it ever was. Dirk and Kobe were the "A tier" ISO scorers of their era, and as such, Dirks skillset correlated stronger to winning. Inversely, KG's skill set was somewhat cannibalized.
The primary argument for Dirk is that as a number 1 option, Dirk's teams had significantly more success than KG's. The rebuttal is usually that Dirk had better teammates, but this ignores that in an era when teams were regularly scoring under 90 points, it's Dirk's all time offensive ability that allowed for his teammates elevated play. To say "KG didn't have help" is to insinuate that Dirk did. That's simply not true. No player has had less all-star help than Dirk while attaining the same amount of team success, and it's really not even close. Dirk allowed the Mavs to run a modern offense ten years ahead of the curve.
If you wanna take the argument to quantifiable factors, when it comes to accolades, it's a wash. All NBA appearances are a tie and both have an MVP. KG has his defensive accolades, but Dirk has a final's MVP and much more team success. Statistically, KG has slightly better counting stats, but the key quantifiable difference for Dirk comes with the playoffs.
Upon Dirk's retirement, of the top 100 in NBA Scoring history, only 1 player has a larger bump across the 4 box score categories, collectively, than Dirk (Hakeem). And NO player in NBA history has a larger bump in PPG and RPG from Reg Season to Playoffs than Dirk.
Which player in nba history has the most clutch points in a single playoff run? Dirk.
When the games mattered most, Dirk was at his best.
Most KG arguments devolve into hypotheticals or use arbitrary bookends for what is considered a player's 'Peak'. I cant help but think that when people argue for KG, what they are saying is that right now they would rather have KG than Dirk. Or that it would be easier to start a team from scratch with KG. Regardless, when you look at what actually happened on court when it actually mattered, Dirk was the better player.