Instead of re-posting the whole article (I wrote it in the fan posts section of the blog), I'll just link to it and hit the highlights:
http://www.celticsblog.com/2011/2/28/2018520/pierce-and-ray-vs-other-elite-wings-by-the-numbers*The article compares Paul Pierce and Ray Allen with 25 other good wing players in the NBA according to 5 advanced stats: PER, win shares, wins produced, adjusted +/-, and Roland Rating (82games.com).
*I show the top-15 wings for each of the advanced stats, along with their "value" in that stat.
*At the end, I summarize by looking at all 27 players as a group. I average their rank order in all 5 of the stats, and use that as a rough-and-ready ranking tool.
*Based on that last composite table, I group players into tiers. Among NBA wings...
Tier 1 is essentially LeBron James. He was first in all 5 stats. The only person even close is Dwyane Wade, who finished 2nd or 3rd in every stat to also edge onto tier 1.
Tier 2 is Kevin Durant, Manu Ginbobili, Paul Pierce and Kobe Bryant. While Kobe and Durant are super-duper stars and Ginobili has gotten some quiet acclaim as a dark horse MVP candidate, it's interesting that the Captain measures right with them this year without nearly the fan fair.
Tier 3 is a group of 8 guys, highlighted by Ray Allen (who landed just behind Kobe according to the numbers). This tier is an interesting mix of big names and guys that may be having a bigger impact than their names would suggest. New Knick Carmelo Anthony is on this tier with Ray, along with several young scorers (Gay, Gordon, Martin) and a couple of versatile/glue/defensive type players (Iguodala, Deng and Fields).
I'm not going to spend much time with the rest, though it is interesting that guys like Joe Johnson and Monta Ellis are maybe further down the list than you might expect. The take-away for me is that while Miami (obviously) is built around 2 super-wings, the Celtics (and I guess, now, the Knicks) are the only other teams with two wings from among the top 3 tiers. This continues what I would suspect will be a common theme for the Celtics in these statistical measurements...quality and quantity combining to form a potent whole.
Pierce and Allen may not be quite as good as the Miami boys, but they're right there with Durant, Kobe, Manu, Melo and the other wings with an argument for top 5 in the league. Sounds about right to me.
Any thoughts?
(I made this thread on the message board because it seems like often the folks that discuss on the boards are a different group from those that discuss on the fan posts page. There is some overlap, but often it's an entirely separate discussion. But if you have a comment or suggestion, feel free to comment at either place.)