Ambrose wrote:AEnigma wrote:Ambrose wrote:When you reduce it down to that, sure, I guess.
Except Luka's massive volume is greater than theirs. He has 3 seasons of higher scoring volume than Lillard has ever had, and 2 (plus a tie) over Trae. That is with comparable efficiency.
Balancing efficiency with volume, I would say he and Trae have been similarly effective scorers, but here you are definitely underselling Lillard’s efficiency.
I notice you used ORAPM, and not something like ORAPTOR or OLEBRON where the results vary quite a bit.
Because those balance raw impact with box score components and my argument was not particularly tied to which of them have better box scores.
while downplaying the fact that Luka scales up in the postseason. If you want to compare their postseason runs, be my guest.
Conference Finals Run
Dame 33.1 pts/100 56.6% TS 4.9 OBPM
Trae 37.9 pts/100 55.1% TS 6.8 OBPM
Luka 44.6 pts/100 57.7% TS 6.8 OBPM
Even if you want to say they have comparable regular seasons it's pretty clear who the superior postseason scorer is, and Dame/Trae certainly aren't closing that gap with defense. It seems pretty easy to argue he did it with the inferior cast as well. Don't see an argument for either of them to be honest.
His postseason elevation is the entire reason he was voted in and the entire reason he has been receiving votes since the mid-30s. To my recollection, neither Lillard nor Trae have received a single ballot (maaaaaybe Lillard received one random one from an uncommitted voter).
Regardless, it seems you have not really considered the key reason I used those two as comparison: while they are all offensive giants, their overall ranks in most of these metrics (even the ones mixing in box scores) take a huge hit because of how much of a drain they are defensively. Luka is not providing
clear top five value on offence in the regular season, and to cover for his defence that is what he should be doing.
If the argument for Penny is a remarkably impressive 28 game sample based mostly on team results, (bref doesn't even have +/- for that year, no concrete RAPM either) while his individual numbers never came close to reaching that level again, I'm going to lean with the guy that has proven he can hold his level of play for the last three seasons.
I encourage you to read back through the Penny thread (and maybe a couple of its predecessors). 28 games was far from the sole reason given, and he very much had a strong three-year run of his own.
Again, I do not think it is anything wild to prefer Luka, especially if we use a hyper-modern lens, but here you pretty much are asking for us to use a 25-31 game sample for Luka, because his
regular season sample really does not stand out relative to many others in terms of raw value provided to a team.
Not really sure what you're arguing here. You're making arguments for players you yourself admit have no support for the conversation,
No, I am comparing Luka with players who seemingly have no especially strong case yet have arguably outperformed Luka during the regular season.
with metrics you can't use to support the actual comparison being made.
Luka’s total RAPM is so bad that even diminished Penny tops him, and the on/off data we have for Penny’s true peak tilts far further to his advantage.
Generalizing "offensive giants and a defensive drain" tells us nothing useful if it ignores the levels of each.
Well you seemed to have no interest in the holistic assessment. If we look at Luka as a whole, he is probably not one of the twenty most valuable players to his team during the regular season — and that is being nice and giving him extra credit for his box score production.
You say Penny had a strong 3-year run, and he did, yet one of these appears to be a little bit of an outlier at least in terms of advanced numbers. T-Mac dropped from 21 in 2019 to 34 this year for having a year deemed an outlier (admittedly a much bigger one). Penny jumped from unranked in 2019 to 39 now despite more seasons being included.
And multiple players ahead of Penny in 2019 dropped, because the pool of voters is different and some standards have changed over the past three years. By your own framing, do you feel there should have been a 20 spot gap between McGrady and Penny in 2019? To me this five spot gap is far more reasonable.
Who said anything about a 25-31 game sample? I'd argue Luka had the more impressive 3-year run.
Again, not if we want to look at relative regular season impact.
Now, I would agree Luka maintains better in the postseason, so the question is then whether at that point even with his defensive weaknesses he becomes more valuable than Penny, and/or whether the current era is so much better than Penny’s that even if Luka is not more valuable relative to his own era, he would be more valuable transplanting Penny into the modern era. Both arguments have their merits, and I have often used the latter when I felt profiles were otherwise close, but I certainly do not think those are incontestable for Luka.