f4p wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Just in a nutshell: It's unrealistic to have positive +/-, and thus I believe high RAPM, when you're a big minute guy on the losing team in the series. As such, I believe there's likely a kind of "winning vs losing bias" thing wherein players lead teams with first & second round exits are going to see their RAPM hurt on average even if they don't actually underperform relative to perception.
Alright so heading over to Cheema's study from
1997-2021 career Postseason RAPM, the top guys from #1 to Shaq:
1. LeBron James +5.875 (don't assume this scale is the same as nbarapm study)
2. Draymond Green +5.483
3. Manu Ginobili +5.169
4. Kevin Garnett +4.767
5. Tim Duncan +4.289
6. Steph Curry +4.117
7. James Harden +4.106
8. Shaquille O'Neal +3.932
Shouldn't stuff like this force people to be higher on #19 peak harden? He's basically tied with Steph and duncan while being the only non-KG guy who wasn't on a dynasty, which you say above tends to make it tough to look good in these measures, like we see with Manu and green.
Well, I can only speak for myself, and for myself I'm not coming in with any assumption of where Harden should be.
But I would also note that you just singled out the measure I posted where Harden looks best - so there are other perspectives that look worse - and we are talking about a career measure here rather than a peak/prime measure. We should remember Harden's best Playoff RAPM span almost certainly has a significant OKC component, and while I'm not looking to knock his time in OKC at all - I thought he was severely underrated - this likely means that around the time of his MVP he probably wouldn't rank quite as high as this study suggests.
On this note, I'm going to take data from a source I'm really cautious about using because a) playoff RAPM is fraught with issues, b) single post-season RAPM data all the more so, and c) I don't know anything about who the source actually is, but it's what we have and it's relevant here:
Single-season RS & PS RAPM studies on GithubSo for Harden, in the playoffs, this is where this source rates Harden, fwiw:
OKC
'09-10: +0.3665 (50th & below Durant, Westbrook)
'10-11: +1.9783 (6th & above them)
'11-12: +2.7003 (3rd & above them)
Houston
'12-13: -.5004 (negative)
'13-14: -.0815 (negative)
'14-15: +0.2547 (67th)
'15-16: -1.4063 (negative)
'16-17: +0.6537 (37th)
'17-18: +1.6445 (8th)
'18-19: +1.1475 (26th)
That's as far as their studies go, and we should note that the Cheema study goes two more years which could have helped some. In neither case is it factoring in the last 4 years.
So yeah, we at least have a study that seems to indicate that Harden's playoff RAPM peaked in OKC, and while that study may be wrong - we should not trust it blindly - it's not a surprise given what Harden's On-Off looked like toward the end of his time on the Thunder.
Now, should Harden get "knocked" because he was awesome in OKC? Not from any kind of career perspective obviously, but if we're trying to get a sense of what a player's Playoff RAPM was around his MVP candidate years, it does indicate that his arc of post-season impact might not be what we'd tend to expect based on typical player careers.
f4p wrote:I think Curry & Green being next to each other is fortuitous. As I always say, I welcome people seeking to argue Green > Curry, I just tend to push back against people who want to use Green to tear down Curry. Did Green help Curry get the chips? Absolutely. Could that mean their On & On-Off are each inflated? Yes. Does inflation explain why Curry an all-timer on ORAPM while Green is an all-timer by DRAPM? No, it really doesn't. Both of these guys are worth discussion among the all-timers.
It's not necessarily about tearing Steph down as seeing him being the most kids gloves treated superstar ever (see below). The same people who will say we really need to focus on RAPM will then say we can't look at green as being Steph's equal, essentially because it just doesn't make sense. But of course the whole point of RAPM is supposed to be that it sees beyond what makes sense and tells us the truth. If it only does that when it makes sense, then it's tough to use. I mean KD, who supposedly doesnt impact much of anything (even in non warriors contexts), beats Steph in playoff RAPM in the engelmann data and Draymond beats Steph fairly regularly and people will acknowledge this (well, not the KD part), but then just go back to it was all Steph. Or jump on the one year with crazy outlier impact in 2017 as if it is essentially the validating data for what everyone sees in the regular season numbers for Steph through his prime and not the outlier.
Or we have people describing steph as like an outlier among outliers in offensive impact and then he's not even 1st in playoff ORAPM or even second behind LeBron.
I mean i wouldnt put green over curry but if I was mostly sticking to RAPM then it would seem like a serious convo.
So, I'd say what bugs you is a perception of goalpost moving by people who claim to be rational but continue to side with the same guys no matter what. I get that and I'm not asserting that I have any kind of immunity to that. I try to be rational, but I'm also sure that I have emotions warping my reasoning just like everyone else, and so part of trying to be rational for me is trying to identify the existing knots of inconsistency in what I think I know.
So I'm game to discuss this stuff because I want to get better, but it's also only going to be fruitful if I'm talking to someone who really is talking to me rather than a larger group that I'm taken to be part of.
And one of the things I really need to emphasize is that there are concerns about using RAPM in the playoffs as if that data will give you something apples-to-apples with what we think of it as meaning in the regular season. Playing a small number of games against a far smaller number of opponents just means there's going to be a huge amount of noise. I'm happy to discuss PS RAPM, but from a perspective of "You value RAPM so much in the RS but ignore the PS, what's up with that?", well, noise is what's up.
To give another example on this that I've said for a long-time: I really like using regression-based models for the modern NBA, but that doesn't mean I'm itching to get that data for the deep past because I don't actually think it would give us meaningful information for guys like Wilt & Russell who played basically all meaningful minutes, and thus their Off sample would perpetually be noisy even after years and years of sample.
So I'll probably always talk more about RS RAPM data than PS RAPM data even as I acknowledge that legacy is determined primarily from the post-season. And this definitely leaves room for the possibility of a player being much less or much more effective in the playoffs relative to rivals than RS RAPM would indicate, and once again drives us back to the final step of analysis not being following stats but explaining how we come to differ in assessment from them.
f4p wrote:Considering all of that plus the fact that we've seen Curry leader quality seasons without Green playing major minutes, but when the reverse situation happened the team fell off a cliff (maybe due to apathy, but a missed opportunity for proof),
I mean the team lost its top 3 offensive weapons. It would effectively be like if Steph had to play for a year as the best defender on the team (and not just relative to position, like actual best) and also that team didn't really have good offensive players either. And the team tanked. And the team also sucked even when Draymond played (like it did when steph played). And Steph only played like 60% of the season.
Sure, but there's levels to this. No one was expecting Draymond to lead them to a chip sans Splash Bros, but that doesn't they had to be as bad as they were, and it certainly doesn't mean we should treat it as proof of Draymond being able to do something we didn't see him do.
Also, the fact that you're alluding to fit is something I very much approve of. Being able to say that Green specifically needs to be playing with scorers to do his offensive thing while Curry needs other things to round out his play is helpful.
Here's where I'll also say that I'm quite cautious about trying to normalize for fit when doing player evaluation. I want to note the degree of synergy between the teammates, and I do recognize that some of that is out of the player's hands, but I also want to credit players for actively seeking to learn to fit around the teammates they have, and doing that historically well as has happened with Curry & Green is something I see as a major positive.
f4p wrote:Next I want to point out to Curry's RS being in '15-16 but PS in '16-17. This is something I've alluded to already on this thread as a think that's being used as a cudgel against Curry, but I think we should be very careful about this.
I understand saying "they're different seasons", but do I think it's a coincidence that Curry's marks in the respective RS & PS came only a year apart? No, can't say I do.
To me Steph's 2015 to 2018 regular seasons look more like each other than his 2017 playoffs do to any of the other playoffs.
Okay. Do you understand what I was pointing to when I said what I said? Can you theorize as to where in our respective processes we diverge?
f4p wrote: Fine to knock a season in this context for health, but from a perspective of trying to dismiss the '16-17 PS run as something unearned because of Durant's presence, I think we know we wouldn't be so prone to do this if Curry had simply been able to be enough better to have the team end up 4-3 in the finals rather than 3-4, and while the bragging rights are huge there in the context of putting LeBron over Steph... why exactly should we put Step below other guys for losing to LeBron, when we expect everyone would lose to LeBron?
This is what I mean by kids gloves. Yes, LeBron is amazing and maybe had his best series ever, or maybe anybody's best series ever. But the warriors lost because steph was real bad. Full stop. The scoring champion averaged 22 ppg and had more turnovers than assists for the series and went 6/19 in a nail biter game 7 against a team with no elite perimeter defenders that regularly had 35 year old richard jefferson and kevin love playing forward minutes.
It doesn't get talked about like 2011 LeBron, but it's arguably even more of a thrown away title. Like the Heat needed to win 2 more games, the warriors just needed to score more than 0 points in the final 5 minutes of the series.
So, let me acknowledge that the mere fact that it was LeBron's team that Steph's team lost to doesn't mean Steph should be above criticism in non-LeBron debates.
But let me also point out that you're zeroing in on what you perceive as Steph's greatest failure to evaluate him as a player, and this is something that I try to avoid, just as I try to avoid getting overly infatuated with runs that seem "perfect" as if the player's lack of perfection in any other years is about that player getting a tier worse.
So in the '15-16 Finals, Steph has worse numbers than in the '14-15 Finals. Does that mean he generally got worse at basketball from one year to the next? I think all would say "No", and would also note that Curry clearly improved from '14-15 to '15-16 looking at the entirety of the season. So what does it mean that Curry was worse in the '15-16 series?
From a pure only-looking-at-this-season perspective, easy enough to just aggregate over the year with a heavy weight toward the playoffs and come to a conclusion, and the reasons for why a guy was inconsistent are just ignored.
But if all of this can get explained from a perspective of Curry being banged up over the course of a season where they killed themselves to get to 73-9, then why are indexing so hard on that particular moment?
Not saying we should ignore the moment either, but when we see a close to unprecedented level of RS & PS success from a team over a half-decade run, why would we want to try to evaluate the peaks of the players by looking at their nadir?
Now, I do understand having less confidence in Curry's peak because of inconsistencies and I'm not really looking to imply he "has to be at least" any particular rank, but I would just urge caution when seeking to approach this project by finding nits to pick on particular guys because
a) I believe that tends to lead to fixation on narrative and notions of perfection/imperfection rather than basketball.
b) I think people tend to apply this lens inconsistently. Some players end up getting anchored to positive moments while others get anchored to negative moments, and while this doesn't necessarily start out through any personal emotional bias, it tends to go in that direction when we get into intense debates on the subject over time.