permaximum wrote:Duke4life831 wrote:permaximum wrote:
1. You have to consider durability. I know you won't even understand what I'm saying but Iverson's per game stats has to be adjsted by the pace of the game and they should be used for comparison. That's what I meant. Because they don't play the same amount of possessions per game. With that adjustment AI and Isaiah's per game stats would even be more apart.
2. Yes I think exactly like that. Coaches are not stupid. They know basketball better than you. Player efficiency suffers when they continue to play lots of minutes and maintain their usage.
3. Wrong. In his prime Iverson's TS% was slightly better than league average. But that's not the point. The point is Iverson increases the whole team's TS% by 6-11% when he is on the floor (which is by far the best in his era) because of the double teams he got outside the 3pt line and triple - quadraple teams he got when he's inside the 3pt line. Thanks to his skills, he took insane amount of attention from defenses in a handcheck era. You just had to watch games or listen to players talk about him.
Finally if you asked Isaiah himself he would say he's not even close to AI and drop the comparison immediately.
1) Yes and that is why I just showed you the per 100 Possession stats and they still favor IT.
2) So wait are you agreeing with me that players are not less durable but the coaches play deeper rotations now a days? Because that is what Im saying and that is why AI wouldnt be playing 40+ minutes a game if he played today.
3) Im just going to leave this link when it comes to his TS%. This is from his MVP season, this is the list of guards that played at least 60 games and averaged at least 30 minutes a game. He ranked 30th out of 44 guards who fit this criteria when it comes to TS%. So if we are comparing him to his peers at the time (guards that played a lot), he was below average.
http://stats.nba.com/players/advanced/#!?sort=TS_PCT&dir=-1&Season=2000-01&SeasonType=Regular%20Season&CF=GP*GE*60:MIN*GE*30&PlayerPosition=G
1. Alright you don't know what I'm talking about just like I predicted.
2. You didn't even understand what I was saying. Iverson maintained his effiency although he played more and continue taking shots unlike other players. That's why he played a lot and that's why he would still play a lot.
3. Putting a criteria? Lol
I think you are completely missing his points, not vice versa.
If you want to try to extrapolate how much more efficient Iverson would be in today's game, comparing AI to his direct peers while he was playing is exactly what you should be doing. If he was below average in efficiency compared to his peers back then, we don't have a lot of reasons to believe it would be any different today objectively speaking.
Using per possession numbers is also another thing you should exactly be doing.














