OhayoKD wrote:HeartBreakKid wrote:great Bird war will come soon enough.
And so it didColbinii wrote:
It is much simpler than you are making it out to be.
From 2000-2011, Kobe played in 35K Minutes and 903 Games in the RS and 7.4K Minutes and 180 Games in the PS.
From 1980-1988, Bird played in 27K Minutes and 711 Games in the RS and 6.1K Minutes and 145 Games in the PS.
Kobe gets incremental value from 2012 and 2013 [off-prime, still all-star level].
Bird gets incremental value for 1990 and 1991 [off-prime, still all-star level]
Kobe also has 1998 and 1999 where he is a positive impact player [Missing a total of 4 games in these two seasons].
It is taken into account. The thing is the effect is
nowhere near as pronounced when you filter for higher quality players:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=107884176#p107884176And you know, this is something Ben(whose
opinion, not actual tracking or tracking-derived metrics is now being treated as evidence), actually went and accounted for(there's also probably an argument to be made that isn't how era-relativity actually works...)
Actually there's alot of favorable assumptions and claims Ben makes for Bird(we will get to "stat bias" later) for example...
70sFan wrote:That's very interesting. To me putting rookie Bird on MVP level is a level too much. Although he certainly showed a lot of impact, let's not forget that he was still relatively inefficient scorer, low volume creator who regressed in the playoffs and I don't think he was in his defensive prime yet either.
Here's the thing. Ben agrees. As of 2018 he had Bird with as a strong mvp in 1980. And then he
stayed as a strong MVP all the way to 1988 despite only once posting a better srs than 1980 with significantly improved casts.
Ben also pretty much agrees with all of these(not really defensible) claims:
Colbinii wrote:Larry Bird
Not much to see here, the purest basketball-savant we likely have ever seen. Developed into a lethal shooter and scorer during his 1984-1986 stretch, incredible feel and instincts as a catalyst unlike anything we have ever seen [Until Jokic]. He truly was able to vitalize an offense as well as anyone, ever. The greatest impetus who ever graced the court [along with Nash].
In fact, he went so far to put Bird
ahead, for his prime, over this guy:

Keep in mind
-> impact consistently favors magic over bird(In fact it actually seems to like Johnson over everyone from the time period)
-> Magic's is
#1 in regular season winning %
-> Magic is
#1 in playoff winning %(Bird is not close)
-> Magic has led better regular-season offenses as well as better playoff offenses(as well as a bunch of other post-merger greats in this not exhaustive list):
Curry:
2015 +4 (RS) +4.1(PS)
2016 +7.9(RS)+5.7(PS)
2017 +6.8(RS)+11.6 (PS)
2018 + 5.0(RS)+6.5(PS)
2019 + 5.5(RS)+5.4 (PS)
average: 5.85 (RS) 6.6(PS)
combined average: +6.2
Lebron
2013 +6.4 (RS) +7.2 (PS)
2014 +4.2 (RS) +10.6 (PS)
2015 +5.5(RS) +5.5 (PS)
2016 +4.5(RS) +12.5 (PS)
2017 +4.8 (RS) +13.7 (PS)
Average +5.1(RS) +9.9 (PS)
combined average: +7.5
jordan* (i had to use his first 5 championship seasons)
1991 +6.7(RS) +11.7 (PS)
1992 +7.3(RS) +6.5 (PS)
1993 +4.9 (RS) +9.8 (PS)
1996 +7.6 (RS) +8.6 (PS)
1997 +7.7(RS) +6.5(PS)
average +6.85 (RS) +8.6(PS)
combined average:+7.7
nash
2005 suns. +8.4(RS) +17 (PS)
2006 suns +5.3(RS) +9.5 (PS)
2007 suns +7.4(RS)+7.6 (PS)
2008 suns. +5.8(RS) + 3.1 (PS)
2010 suns +7.7(RS) +13.4 (PS)
Average +6.9(RS) + 10.1 (PS)
combined average: +8.5
shaq
1998 +6.9(RS), +10.1(PS)
1999 +5.4(RS), +4.7(PS)
2000 +3.2(RS), +9.3(PS)
2001 +5.4 (RS) +13.6(PS)
2002 +4.9(RS), +6.4 (PS)
Average +5.2(RS) +8.8(PS)
combined average: +7
bird
1984 +3.3 (RS) +6.4 (PS)
1985 +4.9 (RS) +3.9 (PS)
1986 +4.6 (RS) + 8.3 (PS)
1987 +5.2 (RS) + 8.7 (PS)
1988 +7.4 (RS) +4.2 (PS)
average +5.1(RS) +6.3(PS)
combined average: +5.7
magic
1986 +6.1(RS) +6.7
1987 +7.6 (RS) +10.7
1988 +5.1(RS) +8.3
1989 +6 (RS) +9.3
1990 +5.9(RS) +8.4
Average +6.1(RS), + 8.7 (PS)
combined average: +7.4
Despite Ben's insistence Bird is a different calibre of player, Kobe has actually led comparable offenes
without shaq and with Shaq his increase in production was the driving force for a
+11 psrs improvement from what the Lakers managed in 2000 as they played far better in the playoffs than the Celtics ever have. You might recall Kobe outscored and outassisted Shaq for 2 of 3 rounds while averaging more minutes all playoffs. If 1980 Larry was a {b]strong MVP[/b] losing to a non finalist(and thus define the arc of every prime bird year), what does that make 2001 Kobe?
But I digress, because ultimately, you can ignore
all of this as Ben, with all these assumptions and beliefs inputted his season to season evaluations into an objective championship formila for both players and came out with...
Kobe Bryant coming out ahead.
Kobe Bryant, in a better league, playing with different co-stars in a scheme asking him to take the most ineffecient shots...
Was more valuable over his careerNow. You might be surprised. After all we have these CAREER WOWY numbers clearly saying that Larry was the more valuable player! Here's the thing. Ben, with whatever bias he carries when he insists those 2-3 weakly defended 3's a game in an era with illegal defense were defense-warping, is not a robot. He wants to evaluate all the seasons properly, including ones where Bird
didn't miss time.And a couple issues arise when trying to claim Bird was actually such an outlier Kobe's longetvity doesn't matter.
For one, we have seen the Celtics without Bird, they were...fine:
-> in 1992 bird was replaced with an all-star and...the Celtics nearly made the conference finals
-> 89 with a weaker version of that replacement they played at a 45 or 44-win pace(40-games at full-strength)
-> 86-88 they played at a 45-win pace, 87-88, 43-win(7 gms/szn)
For another, it's very difficult to find theoretical weaknesses with Bird's support. All of the celtics could pass. All of them could handle the ball. They had two strong isolation scorers, an excellent defensive cast with a goat-defensive guard and two bigs who were both switchable
and decent to good rim-protectors
and strong ball-handlers, scorers, decent floor-spacers, and capable passers...
Actually, pause. I want readers to really think about that last part.
Larry Bird, a guy with very limited ball-handling, a poor slashing game , vulnerable man defense, and weak(for a pf) rim-protection got to play with bigs who were good at
at all of that...in the 80's.
While Ben presents Bird being able to play with a pf as a
strength, really it is a luxury. Because if Bird was playing on a typical roster, he would not get to play power forward offensively, while being hidden as a small-forward on defense.
Bird not only had a talented team. He also had
unique and hard to replicate roster construction. Fair to say then that Bird, impact extraordinaire should be expected to do alot of winning?
Well, this gets us to issue #3
WOWY is mostly looking at the regular season. And if SRS decided championships, Bird would have 5. And yeah, with 5 wins it would be alot harder to argue. The problem is he only has
3. Kobe, by srs, would only have
1 title. Instead, he has
5. You can bring up the srs and the wowyr, but that is a
6 ring delta in Kobe's favor. You also can't really put that all on Shaq, because the second Bryant got his own Kevin Mchale, he went
-> finals
-> championship
-> repeat championship
Bird has never won at that frequency, and frankly I think some of that is
Bird's own doing(on both ends):
Nope. But they are better from 3 or at the rim or are a better relative to position. Shaq can foul out frontlines, Reggie can chuck 3's at higher volume on crazy effeciency and Dirk was a center who could shoot from everywhere.
And here again, Bird runs into a problem. He doesn't protect the rim or even have the size/strength to be played at center or PF without strong rim-help. But he also doesn't have the ball-handling or slashing of a small-forward. So you need unique teammates who can handle the ball and help him a bunch defensively. And this could prove very problematic in his time with the right opponent. The Pistons guards were just torching him over and over. And he couldn't get vertical seperation from their undersized rim-deterrents. And he couldn't exploit illegal d by driving and forcing them to pick between a double or single coverage. So the end result is, with a team thats pretty good without him(45-win 86-88, 45-win 89), the Celtics are outscored by a team with half their SRS in 87 and are decisvely thumped by a team with lesser srs in 88 as their offense plummets by 13 points.
WestGOAT wrote:I have shared some of the proto-tracking but I guess I may as well provide what was done with game 1 from the same series. Was vetted by different people though(and a love of Caps Lock

)...
The original methodology:
90sAllDecade wrote:Also if you value Colt's opinon, he also lists Birds many playoff failures.
By available creation metrics(Including those that give Bird credit for high era-relative 3-point volume), it's Kobe who creates more, and Kobe who has the more reselient(and versatile) scoring arsenal. There are box cases for either, but Bird is helped greatly by a high volume of defensive rebounds and a block a game...
playing next to two bigger and better defenders.
Of course there are those who would argue the box-score is actually
biased against Larry...
draymondgold wrote:It’s immensely valuable to be the first player to break down the defense, which leads to the best shot for the team, even when breaking down the defense does not instantly generate a fully open teammate. It’s valuable to be a good screen setter and offensive rebounder. It's valuable to be creating throughout the possession
...on aspects of the game that
favor Kobe. Kobe Bryant is a strong ball-handler. So he is more frequently
breaking down a defense first and
creating throughout a possession. He will also get turnovers which hurt his box, but are a worthy trade-off for all this non-box creation he's offering. Moreover, that ball-handling actually makes it
easier to generate more valuable passes:
tsherkin wrote:Start with that.
Timing, accuracy. His touch passing, when he only has the ball for a fraction of a second and one-hands it to someone. No-lookers, the whole range of things which might impress someone with his positional awareness and technical passing acumen. Watch more Bird and pay specific attention to his passing. I don't want to be rude, your question is fair, especially for someone who never saw him live. But there are plenty of highlights which illustrate why the fanfare exists.
In this highlight reel,
none of his first four passes create wide open looks. There are still defenders the recipients have to deal with up until pass #5. You have to wait till pass #8 to see another uncontested look. Pass #10 for the 3rd.
For comparison...
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Magic's first
7 passes here create
wide open looks.
9 of his first
12. You might also notice that alot of these passes come with Magic
handling the ball in traffic, allowing Johnson to filter out defenders,
before he makes the pass. In some of these Magic is also leveraging
rim-pressure as defenders take themselves out of the play in anticipation of what he's going to at the basket.
[url]
;start=25[/url]
Kobe creates
5 wide-open looks in his first 10 possessions(for clarity, i am
not[b] counting something like the Walton pass). As you might expect he is not anticipating or making reads as early as the other two are but he is able to leverage both his pressure at the rim and penetration to compensate for his disadvantage in raw-skill. Bryant is also, like Magic, taking defenders out of the play pre-pass