I think my three favorite teams are (in no order) the Kings, the Grizzlies and the Bucks. I’m a sucker for a dominant center, regardless of era.
I boo this post.
Likewise, Wallace and Gobert are modern defensive titans. I get that both players aren't on the level of those guys, but these are players who had top 10-15 impact on their teams at their very best.
Let’s use Wallace, since he actually played against great centers.
H2H, Shaq put up 25 / 10 / 3 on 59% shooting.
Wallace averaged 6 / 9 / 1 on 51% shooting.
In any matchup, you’re losing the center battle big time. On a regular team, Wallace’s teammates could pick up the slack. Shaq’s Lakers teams were two or three deep with great players.
In a historic draft, the opponents go at least 10 deep. Losing one matchup in the starting lineup by 20+ points is a huge deficit.
That doesn’t just apply to centers, but they’re the most visible. A big man shooting 55% inside is still going to be the most consistent and efficient way to score points.
I don't worry about one position being at a major deficit in terms of point production because they are not taking an equal number of shots / possessions. That difference in shots / possessions is going to go talented teammates who can make up the difference. So I don't put much emphasis on that issue.
What I worry about with Ben Wallace is his lack of team offense. Say versus Marc Gasol who is a low scoring center (13-15ppg most of his career) but has significant value in team offense due to his passing ability and shooting ability. He is a threat. He has to be defended. He creates space for teammates. He passes the ball well and gets teammates the ball in more advantageous spots. He vacates the paint and lets players attack the paint. He has enough of a one-on-one post game to punish smaller players so you can't hide bad defenders on him.
Ben Wallace doesn't do those things. That is the part that bothers me. Not his point production but lack of team offense contribution. He is not a threat outside of the paint. He has to stay in the paint to be a threat in which case he clogs the paint. And he doesn't have a one-on-one game to punish lesser defenders.
What I worry about is his lack of team offense effective Karl Malone's ability to post up effectively. I worry about spacing for Tiny's driving game. I worry that opponents will be allowed to put their defensive centers on K.Malone and hide their PFs on Ben Wallace. There are so many teams that have PFs that cannot possibly defend Karl Malone but can get away with it because they can switch their matchups because Ben Wallace is such a non-threat.
I also worry that when Ben Wallace is on a high post big and not allowed freedom to stay in the paint and roam around the paint to challenge and dissuade shots that his defensive value is decreased. That he will not have the defensive impact in this Historical League that he had in 2004 when he faced more two big man lineups many of which contained low skilled bigs that allowed him more defensive freedom to wreak havoc.
So low individual production + low team offense + vulnerable to decreased defensive value.
I think that is a fair point, however the Jazz started Greg Ostertag next to Malone for much of the 90's (including the two Finals runs). And before Ostertag, Felton Spencer was the starting center. Ostertag was a terrible offensive player and even worse as a passer than Wallace (and Spencer may have been worse than Ostertag). I understand it was a different era, but those unathletic terrible offensive lumbering big men, didn't negatively affect what Malone could do offensively in the slightest. I feel much better having the much more athletic Wallace next to Malone. That was actually one of the reasons I was ok selecting Wallace, because I knew what had worked so well with Malone in the past. Once I got Malone and my Stockton i.e. Tiny, I almost went about modernizing what the Jazz were so that I could in fact get the most out of Malone. I took Peja, Walker, Cooper, and Kiki to sort of mimic (though obviously with much greater skill) the roles that Russell, Hornacek, and Anderson filled. I grabbed Wallace and Mikan to help take the burden off of Malone defensively (the Ostertag, Carr roles). And obviously grabbed Haywood to be the Malone replacement when he was on the bench and the modern small ball center at the times it made sense to go small. Buse was an excellent defender, passer, and shooter, so I think he would replicate what Tiny could do at least fairly well.
So what you see as a negative, I think actually worked quite well for the Jazz. I understand real life teams aren't as good as the ones here, but when something works for the real life teams, if you can replicate it, but better, then I think that is actually the best evidence that it would work here. And again, I want a center that is going to rebound and defend. I know everyone claims that can't work, yet the Lakers just won the title with Dwight Howard and JaVale McGee at center. They played the Heat with Bam Adebayo at center. The Warriors were winning titles with McGee and Kevon Looney at center (and Bogut before that) and they were playing the Cavs with Thompson at center (who also won a title with Thompson). This idea that you need a center to stretch the floor, just isn't born out in reality, even in modern ball. Frankly, the only time (and I mean basically in the entire history of the league) we've ever seen a champion with a stretch center was the Raptors (and they don't even win it if Durant doesn't get hurt).