I'd take Brand, he's a better passer, slightly better mid-range shooter, at least percentage wise, and they're about equal in rebounding and shot blocking. Another thing is that Brand is a worker, and for a star kinda guy he does many things you'll see from hustle player like Mark Madsen or Brian Cardinal.
After Tim Duncan, Brand is the only other player in the league to rival him in post skill, he has unlimited moves down low, and knows how to score when he get's the ball deep. He doesn't have a go to move, but he has so many moves its hard to stop him down there.
Brand's mid-range FG% is 38.9%, Duncan's is 38.4%, and Jermaine O'neal's is 37.8%, he also takes a lot more mid-range jumpers (JO that is), 73% of his attempts, as opposed to 58% and 56% by Brand and Duncan. JO wan'ts to be KG, but can't make the shots like him

.
Even inside, I already said how Brand's interior skills are very very good, he shoots 60.9% in the paint as opposed to 46.0% by Jermaine O'neal.
Some other misc numbers, Brand get's blocked way less than JO, he creates his own shot more often and better, he get's assisted on 58% of his makes as opposed to JO who get's assisted on 71% of his makes, and he still shoots a better percentage.
Now for the "better winner" argument, is Kenyon Martin better than Brand because he's won more?
If you actually payed attention to why Brand's teams have lost (I will only explain if needed), injuries being a big part, this argument wouldn't even surface. Now another misc stat, the Clippers were
18-20 this season when their starting lineup was healthy and playing, hmm, interesting.
Amphatoast wrote:well tracy mcgrady> kobe statistically too. It's a team game, its easier to get good stats on a bad team since your one of the few if not the only option they have.
Brand takes 14.2 shots a game, and JO takes 17.9 shots a game, guess that theory just got smashed.
Riot wrote:It's not like Brand has no talent either remember when he had Andre Miller, Lamar Odom, Michael Olowokandi, Corey Maggette, Quentin Richardson. Jermaine O'Neal's pacer team wasn't that talented.

remember how the starters missed a combined 117 games, Kandi played 36, Odom 49, Brand 62, and Maggette 64, the lone survivor was Andre Miller playing 80 games.
Even the bench was injured, Q-Rich played 59 games, Piatakowski 62, Jaric 66, Ely 52, and Wilcox 46 games only.
The team had Tremaine Fowlkes back again, and starting 10 games too, and Cherokee Parks and Sean Rooks starting, I wonder why they weren't succesful.
Jae. wrote:As it's been mentioned, good players on a shit team are more likely to post high numbers. T-Mac in Orlando, LeBron in Cleveland (yes) and Kobe in LA this season (hmm). Elton Brand has only ever played for Chicago and the LA Clippers, is there seriously two worse teams in the NBA than that? If he and Jermaine switched places it's safe to say Jermaine's statistics would be boosted significantly.
Wait, shouldn't a better team make your FG% go higher? Jermaine already takes more shots and scores less, yet him going to a worse team and taking less shots should make his numbers go higher?
Playing on a bad team also helps blocks and rebounds right?
Lidstrom#5 wrote:defenitely jo,he has much more talent,is only 26 and has already played 8 seasons i´m sure he´ll raise his game the next few seasons
If he's 26 and has played 8 seasons, shouldn't that mean he should be about reaching his peak as opposed to raising his game even further?