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  1. #31
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    Default Re: Dennis Rodman's rebounding statistics vs other great rebounders from all eras

    Quote Originally Posted by kuniva_dAMiGhTy
    Willis is like Dwight Howard with a midrange game. Only difference between them far as impact goes, is that Willis played during the GOAT era for big men (as you said).

    And yeah, Daugherty is another underrated beast.
    Willis strung together like what 4 All-Star caliber seasons in a row? What did he do in the playoffs. Go ahead and post a few of his best runs. Dwight had a waaaay better 5 year run has been much better in the playoffs than Willis ever was. Dwight was on another level defensively too.

    18/13 with .5 blocks on 49% for Willis in the RS during that 4 year span. Dwight put up 20/13 with 2.4 blocks on 59%. Dwight had more playoff success as well.

    Willis faced way tougher competition no doubt, Dwight's also played his entire career in an NBA that desperately has tried to move away from big men and focus on perimeter players. Teams don't go to the post like they use too, Willis wouldn't be feasting today. Dwight's usually been the best player on his team as well, up until Houston. Dwight put up like 18/12 with Houston '14 during the regular season and exploded for 26/14 & 3 blocks vs Portland in the playoffs when he needed too.

    Kevin Willis was literally putting up 13/9 in a prime year on a 43 win team. 5th leading scorer on that team.

  2. #32
    Yarp. Mike Armstrong's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dennis Rodman's rebounding statistics vs other great rebounders from all eras

    Quote Originally Posted by sdot_thadon
    He was a beast on the glass.
    Yarp.

  3. #33
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    Default Re: Dennis Rodman's rebounding statistics vs other great rebounders from all eras

    Quote Originally Posted by 97 bulls
    Russells scoring is on par with Rodman based on context.
    No it's not. Rodman makes Russell look like a scoring champ.

  4. #34
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    Default Re: Dennis Rodman's rebounding statistics vs other great rebounders from all eras

    Quote Originally Posted by SHAQisGOAT
    Very close estimates of Russell and Wilt's TRB%...

    Wilt

    60 - 20.3

    61 - 20.7

    62 - 20.0

    63 - 20.8

    64 - 19.8

    65 - 20.3

    66 - 20.4

    67 - 21.3

    68 - 20.1

    69 - 20.4

    70 - 20.7

    71 - 18.4

    72 - 20.1

    73 - 19.6

    Career TRB%: 20.16

    Bill

    57 - 21.9

    58 - 21.3

    59 - 19.0

    60 - 19.0

    61 - 18.6

    62 - 19.1

    63 - 19.9

    64 - 20.9

    65 - 20.5

    66 - 20.6

    67 - 20.7

    68 - 19.8

    69 - 18.6

    Career TRB%: 19.94


    Looking at Dennis...

    1988 - 18.6

    1989 - 19.8

    1990 - 19.0

    1991 - 21.3

    1992 - 26.2

    1993 - 26.0

    1994 - 25.7

    1995 - 29.7

    1996 - 26.6

    1997 - 25.6

    1998 - 24.1

    1999 - 22.9

    2000 - 23.6

    Career TRB%: 23.4

    Moses...

    1977 - 23.4

    1978 - 22.3

    1979 - 23.2

    1980 - 20.9

    1981 - 20.3

    1982 - 19.3

    1983 - 21.6

    1984 - 20.6

    1985 - 19.7

    1986 - 18.0

    1987 - 17.6

    1988 - 18.3

    1989 - 18.1

    1990 - 17.1

    1991 - 19.1

    1992 - 16.9

    1993 - 25.6

    1994 - 20.1

    1995 - 17.5

    Career TRB%: 19.8

    Those are the 4 GOAT rebounders ^, in my book.

    (only mentioned regular-season numbers in this post)
    Did you took into account the team rebounds. Denis Rodman was the rebounding phenomen of his era and he really is a GOAT level rebounder. But he is not far ahead of Wilt and Bill as this data sugests.

    I copied that post from http://skepticalsports.com/the-case-...cient-history/ :

    First off, in your Rodman vs. Ancient History the model is completely wrong because TEAM REBOUNDS were kept into league averages until the 1968-69 season, thus inflating the number of rebounds available per game in comparison to the 1980s/90s in which Dennis Rodman played.
    For instance: I will find the sum rebounds for the players in 1963 (Wilt’s best RPG year after team rebounds are taken out of the equation – I don’t think it is the best one for REB% because his MPG were also high for that year.)
    1963 Warriors Rebounds (with team rebounds): 5359
    1963 Warriors Rebounds (without team rebounds): 4670
    Wow that is a big difference! Remember, during Rodman’s time (he played after 1967-68) the league didn’t count these team rebounds into their averages. I actually found data for EVERY YEAR (both regular season and playoffs) Wilt and Rodman played in the team rebounds category and put them all to the base year of 1996 (thus comparing them on equal footing) and this is how it pans out.

    Wilt Regular season:
    1959-60 17.4
    1960-61 17.4
    1961-62 17.2
    1962-63 17.5
    1963-64 15.8
    1964-65 16.0
    1965-66 16.9
    1966-67 16.8
    1967-68 17.0
    1968-69 15.3
    1969-70 14.4
    1970-71 14.2
    1971-72 15.5
    1972-73 15.2

    AVG: 16.29

    PER36: 12.81

    Rodman Regular Season:
    1986-87 4.0
    1987-88 8.3
    1988-89 8.8
    1989-90 9.3
    1990-91 11.9
    1991-92 17.7
    1992-93 17.5
    1993-94 16.6
    1994-95 16.7
    1995-96 14.9
    1996-97 16.2
    1997-98 14.9
    1998-99 11.1
    1999-00 13.8

    AVG: 12.71

    PER36: 14.43

    Rodman is still clearly ahead, of course there are reasons for that. Blatant stat-padding such as ripping rebounds out of teammates hands, not boxing out his man and going to the side he felt the ball would go to, missing layups and tip ins on purpose, aborting the offense, not coming on help defense and grabbing every end of quarter heave and free throw miss that he could. I’m not saying its never been done before, but it gives a good idea why he is such an outlier in the regular season and why he is only second in REB% in the playoffs.

    Here are some quotes to back up this stat padding mentality that he had:
    “I let Dennis Rodman get his rebounds and get out of his way . . . allow him to pad his rebound stats,” Pippen said. “I think, as a basketball team, we just have to get more hungry. Dennis is going to get his rebounds. I just have to be more aggressive and get mine as well. We need to go out to win and not go out for the stats.”

    http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1...-dennis-rodman

    “Dennis is going to get that basketball at the cost of pulling it away from his teammate sometimes” – Phil Jackson

    “It’s a passion for him, but sometimes a distraction,” Jackson says. “It borders on an obsession that can create an obstruction to a team. We always have to temper him as still being a part of the offense, even though you’re still doing your job–which is going to get rebounds. There are times when I’ve seen Dennis step from one side of the basket where his man is because the shot is there and he can get the high-percentage rebound. But the ball bounces right to his man for a layup. His instinct is to go to the high-percentage side to get that rebound.”

    http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1...is-rodman-grab

    “I mean, there are times when we’re fighting against him to get rebounds. Sometimes we’ll lose it out of bounds because we’re fighting him.” – Michael Jordan

    From “In the Year of the Bull” by Rick Telander p212

    (This is an article on how stat keeping is superstar-biased, not sure how accurate it is, but have a look at it)

    Alex says, “is if a shot goes up and someone tips it and someone else recovers it, you can give it to either one. Rodman would get those all the time. Most callers will give it to the guy who actually gets possession. But that doesn’t mean a caller can’t give it to someone in a scrum who tipped it. What if Byron Scott retrieves it? Byron Scott doesn’t need the rebound.”

    http://deadspin.com/5345287/the-conf...ba-scorekeeper

    I could find more, but you get the point. Much (but not all) of this was removed in the playoffs. How does Rodman stack up now?

    Wilt playoffs:
    1959-60 16.8
    1960-61 14.9
    1961-62 17.7
    1963-64 18.1
    1964-65 19.0
    1965-66 21.7
    1966-67 19.4
    1967-68 18.1
    1968-69 18.1
    1969-70 17.2
    1970-71 16.2
    1971-72 17.1
    1972-73 18.8

    AVG: 17.97

    PER36: 13.71

    Rodman playoffs:
    1986-87 4.6
    1987-88 5.8
    1988-89 9.6
    1989-90 8.4
    1990-91 12.0
    1991-92 10.4
    1993-94 15.8
    1994-95 15.2
    1995-96 14.4
    1996-97 8.6
    1997-98 12.4

    AVG: 10.06

    PER36: 12.80

    WOW! Wilt Per36 minutes was actually a better rebounder than Dennis Rodman for his playoffs career! Rodman still might be a better rebounder some years than Wilt and still this isn’t quite as accurate as REB% but its still puts EVERYTHING in perspective. Especially since Wilt eclipses Rodman in nearly every facet of the game itself. Wilt even played 4 playoffs (where many of his games were played) after a career threatening injury.

  5. #35
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    Default Re: Dennis Rodman's rebounding statistics vs other great rebounders from all eras

    [QUOTE=julizaver]

    Rodman is still clearly ahead, of course there are reasons for that. Blatant stat-padding such as ripping rebounds out of teammates hands, not boxing out his man and going to the side he felt the ball would go to, missing layups and tip ins on purpose, aborting the offense, not coming on help defense and grabbing every end of quarter heave and free throw miss that he could. I

  6. #36
    NBA Legend LAZERUSS's Avatar
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    Default Re: Dennis Rodman's rebounding statistics vs other great rebounders from all eras

    [QUOTE=julizaver]Did you took into account the team rebounds. Denis Rodman was the rebounding phenomen of his era and he really is a GOAT level rebounder. But he is not far ahead of Wilt and Bill as this data sugests.

    I copied that post from http://skepticalsports.com/the-case-...cient-history/ :

    First off, in your Rodman vs. Ancient History the model is completely wrong because TEAM REBOUNDS were kept into league averages until the 1968-69 season, thus inflating the number of rebounds available per game in comparison to the 1980s/90s in which Dennis Rodman played.
    For instance: I will find the sum rebounds for the players in 1963 (Wilt

  7. #37
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    Default Re: Dennis Rodman's rebounding statistics vs other great rebounders from all eras

    Quote Originally Posted by kshutts1
    Take those same rebounding qualities, turn them in to scoring qualities, and that player is now... Michael Jordan.
    Jordan was known to score when there were players open, under the basket, for a layup.
    Jordan aborts the offense regularly.
    Jordan keeps the ball in fast-break situations.
    Coaches have to BEG Jordan to pass the ball to his teammates. It's a legit, documented battle to make him pass.

    All of those qualities make Jordan a "killer" and "alpha" and "da goat". The same qualities translated to rebounds make Rodman a stat-padder whose successes should be overlooked.

    Please. Be. Consistent.
    Consistent ?

    Why do you mess MJ here ? Off course he was selfish as all scorers are - otherwise he can not have 30 ppg career average over 1000 games.
    Rodman was the rebounding phenomen of the 90s and I just copy pasted interesting article about him and other all-time great rebounders. Everything below the link is not my own words, it is from the link.

    Anyway to add to the thread: For me the best undersized rebounder of all-time is Charles Barkley.
    His rebounding average in the postseason per 36 min is 11.7, while Rodman is 12.6. Which is not far cry distance, considering the fact that Barkley do a lot more on the field.
    Last edited by julizaver; 08-28-2015 at 09:55 AM.

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