RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#161 » by kayess » Sun Jun 25, 2017 3:26 am

Texas Chuck wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
You're entitled to think along these lines but do you understand why others don't believe in driving a tier-sized wedge between players on the basis of "X may have done it, but Y actually did it"?

I'm trying to remove luck from the conversation and in team sports, there's always luck as a factor for the team results of individuals.


By the same token you can understand why others want to remove projection and supposition from the conversation as well. And basketball is a game with relatively little luck compared to say poker which also has those who subscribe to GTO and unexploitable play. Tho just like in basketball, its those with the most talent who win when you get into sample sizes large enough to remove the luck, not the guys who follow the math most closely. Elite players can "beat" the math because players make mistakes.

I tend to agree with Tesla that more credit should be given to those teams and players who achieved the highest of heights and am cautious about making assumptions about what others might could have done based on some real world data from a totally different situation.

That doesn't mean player X with greater team success than player Y should always be rated higher, but I can't get to where I feel confident giving player Y credit for what player X (and his team) actually did achieve.

Both perspectives should be given merit.

edit: Also I'm reading a book currently on counterfactuals and its interesting how much of this type of discussion ties into counterfactuals and how it leads us down false trails--sometimes to our good, but mostly to our detriment.


Any excerpts from this book particularly relevant to this current discussion? Would love to dig deeper here!
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#162 » by Joao Saraiva » Sun Jun 25, 2017 3:44 am

I love it that people now try to blame LeBron on how the team plays when he's not there.

Then they say:
- he built the roster!;
- he's the one who fired Blatt;
- since he made the roster they can only work arround him, so by failing when he's not there he has to be blamed.

Fine, I can accept all that but then:
- LeBron built the roster - yeah, but the teams LeBron built went to 3 finals in a row and beat the legendary 73 win team. Does he get extra credit for building the team too?;
- he fired coach Blatt... and then won the NBA championship with Lue as a coach (the yes man for LeBron). If he's just a yes man for LBJ then does LBJ get more credit for being a player-coach? Or do we use that just when it's bad for him?;
- Since that type of roster only works arround LeBron and they had an all time season on offense, should we credit LeBron a lot more for them? Remember, the only reason you guys say they can produce is because they're good arround LBJ. Therefore, it has to be said he's the solo catalyst of such cast;
- People say Cavs haven't got great defenders. But there was enough defense vs GSW in 16... and in 15 they kept the series tied even with Kyire and Love out. Now, do we give credit only to LeBron on providing the needed defense?

You can't have it both ways.

I'd like to give credit to Kyrie for being able to score, and being a great iso-player.
I'd like to give credit to Delly in 15 for the defense he played on Curry.
I'd like to give credit to Thristan Thompson for being a rebounding force and a good defender most of the time - even if this year he seemed a lot less impactful than in the last two.
I'd like to give credit to Love for being a very versatile scorer and a very good rebounder.
I'd like to give credit to Lue for trying to adjust and reacting as a coach. I think people actually sell his importance short at times.

But if people want to go as far as criticizing LeBron for every damn little thing the Cavs havent got 100% right and even criticize the teams' bad play when he goes to the bench on him, then they have to give him basically all the credit for everything that goes right.

You just can't have it both ways.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#163 » by kayess » Sun Jun 25, 2017 3:55 am

Joao Saraiva wrote:- he fired coach Blatt... and then won the NBA championship with Lue as a coach (the yes man for LeBron). If he's just a yes man for LBJ then does LBJ get more credit for being a player-coach? Or do we use that just when it's bad for him?;


Won't comment on the rest of the post, but Blatt was fired for being a yes-man, I think (which his teammates got sick of), while Lue is said to be the opposite. So idk if we should then harp on LeBron for betting Blatt fired (coach killer! selfish!) or credit him for firing a yes-man and then putting in someone who would stand up to him and make him accountable (lol).

Or yeah, maybe it wasn't just him/wasn't him at all/etc. etc.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#164 » by THKNKG » Sun Jun 25, 2017 4:35 am

Some basic arguments:

Duncan - already stated
Russell - highest observable impact we've seen thus far, and that's with a player in the same league who was capable of 50 ppg
Lebron - in the russell rank of impact, but he needs more superstar longevity to officially pass him
KG - around the same placing as Lebron - Lebron will surpass him in a few years, just can't put him above yet
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#165 » by Narigo » Sun Jun 25, 2017 4:51 am

Vote: LeBron James
Second Vote: Wilt Chamberlain


This is between LeBron and Wilt for me. Both of these guys are among the best dominant players ever.

Lets start at LeBron. He is arguably the best player in the league since 2006. This can be backed up statistically. LeBron 05-08 is underrated because he did not have a good supporting cast. From 06-08, LeBron made the Cavs overachieved in the playoffs. In 06, he took the 64 win Pistons team to seven games. He was the leading scorer, rebounding and playmaker on the Cavs against the Pistons.

In 07, he eventually beat the Pistons who were favored to make it the Finals that year. In 08, he took the Celtics to seven games. Even though it look like LeBron played terrible in the 08 Playoffs, He was +24.8. The Cavs fell apart when he went to the bench.


He is arguably the most durable player(so far) in NBA History. LeBron has never been seriously injured in his prime. He has a longer prime than either Jordan and probably Kareem. Slightly underrated longevity, LeBron is second in total minutes played in the playoffs and the all-time leader in points.


Wilt proably has the best stamina out of anyone in NBA History. Wilt usually play almost the entire game with almost little rest. He is usually called on to be best offense and defensive player for almost 48 minutes a night and for at least 72 or more games a season. That incredible. Not to mention, he was very impactful all the way to to his final season.

If Wilt played today, his prime would have lasted a bit longer. From 60-68 Wilt played a total of 33,044 minutes. From 00-10, Kobe Bryant played a total of 32,311. From 04-14 LeBron played a total of 33,276. I think you get my point. Wilt with reasonable mintues would have at least 10-12 prime seasons today.

I going with LeBron now, but I might flip my vote to Wilt.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#166 » by Narigo » Sun Jun 25, 2017 4:54 am

micahclay wrote:
Lebron - in the russell rank of impact, but he needs more superstar longevity to officially pass him



LeBron has longer prime than Russell and has played more minutes than Russell for his career
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#167 » by THKNKG » Sun Jun 25, 2017 5:09 am

Narigo wrote:
micahclay wrote:
Lebron - in the russell rank of impact, but he needs more superstar longevity to officially pass him



LeBron has longer prime than Russell and has played more minutes than Russell for his career

I know, but even though he's at the Russell level of impact, Russell's impact was still higher, so Lebron needs more. Plus he really only has ~10 year mega impact at this point (07-17), and 05/06 were possibly borderline.


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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#168 » by Tesla » Sun Jun 25, 2017 5:12 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
Tesla wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
You're entitled to think along these lines but do you understand why others don't believe in driving a tier-sized wedge between players on the basis of "X may have done it, but Y actually did it"?

I'm trying to remove luck from the conversation and in team sports, there's always luck as a factor for the team results of individuals.



I understand the argument, it just isnt a good one for ranking "all time great". It is a peaks ranking type arguement. There is a lot more luck in KG actually matching what Duncan did than the actual luck Duncan had.

Also, there is luck in not getting injured (oftentimes), yet we can not give credit to that player that unluckily got injured for something he has not done but "probably would have" had he not been so unlucky. Unfortunatley, luck is real and it plays a role how shapes everything and ultimately how we perceive it.


So far as I know, trex can correct me, in the end we use our own definition of "greatness". You're essentially arguing for a more qualitative approach than I am so to me allowing your freedom to do this when it can't be known to align with others is precisely why leeway is needed.

Re: luck is real. Sure, and I think very carefully about how I deal with the luck factor without ever claiming to argue I have it solved.

I'll put it this way:

One of the core things I ask is "Who would I draft first?" It's not the only thing I ask but it helps keep me from making arguments like "Well X won more championships so I'll rank him ahead of Y" which is both a relief and a necessity.

If forced to draft between KG and Duncan it'd basically be a coin flip for me.



Yes, I agree we should all use our own definition of greatness, which is what this discussion/ranking is all about. I am just challenging others definition and illustrating my own.

I get the thought process behind drafting, who you would pick first. You see very little difference between the two in actual play impact, and I am not nessesarily disagreeing with it. What I am disagreeng with is there at some point have to be differences in order to rank, and these accomplishments cannot be ignored. It is not a small difference (as in perhaps a small lead KG may have in some impact stats) its a big difference in terms of accomplishments.

Also, rather than looking at it in sense of an all time league that has been done here several times, Id leave you with: If San Antonio had a do over would there be any chance they would choose KG over Duncan? The chance of that is as close to zero as possible, because there isnt much more imaginable that could be improved from Duncans tenure. The same cannot be said for Minnesotta, they very well may still draft KG over Duncan, but the choice would not be so crystal clear.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#169 » by andrewww » Sun Jun 25, 2017 9:11 am

Vote: Hakeem Olajuwon
2nd: Lebron James


Dream had a peak that coincided both offensively and defensively with about as great of a 3 year run (93-95) as you could find (MVP, 2FMVP, 2DPOY, 2 championships). He was able to volume score, had a signature unstoppable go to move, was one of the greatest defensive players in the history of the game. 12 all-NBA selections at a position where only 3 get named each year, including 6 1st team selections. Conquered all his contemporaries in perhaps the greatest big man era the league has seen. He was a supercharged version of Duncan when he put it all together, and his peak/prime hold up against any other player in league history.

Both Dream and Lebron were incredibly impactful offensively at their peak, but Dream was on a different level defensively compared to even the difference between Lebron and Dream on the offensive side of the ball where you give Lebron the advantage as a creator.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#170 » by Clyde Frazier » Sun Jun 25, 2017 10:09 am

Vote 1 - Tim Duncan
Vote 2 - Bill Russell

I really struggled with this one. Went back and forth on a few guys after skimming the discussion, and I landed on Duncan looking back at my Kareem pick for #2. Duncan's longevity and ability to adapt to a different role later in his career, but still maintain a high impact was very impressive. The marked consistency over the years from a dominant force on both ends (his 03 title run was incredible) to a reliable offensive player and solid defensive player is hard to match.

The culture the spurs developed over his time in san an was as much a benefit to him as he was a benefit to his teammates. Right out of the gate he fit in seamlessly next to robinson, who was still a star player even though he was nearing the end of his prime. I don't know how many other guys would be able to do that (see: magic, for example -- it's rare).

He then went on to form a bond with parker and ginobili, staying together long enough to become the winningest trio in league history. While parker developed into an impressive PG over the years and ginobili is clearly a special player, Duncan was the constant that kept everyone together, as they've both reflected on since he retired.

Later in his career as he started to take a back seat to kawhi's development, he was still a very effective player. I found it especially impressive that he was able to adapt to the faster pace and space style popovich emphasized in 2013 and 2014. The way the spurs bounced back specifically in 2014 to pull off that title run really beat the odds.

Regarding russell, i'm having trouble discerning his impact vs. the teammates he played with. A quick survey of guys he played with:

Cousy, Sharman, Heinsohn, Frank Ramsey, Sam Jones, Havlicek, KC Jones

That's a lot of talent (mainly offensive) to play with over the course of your career. Of course, russell was the constant in all this, the defensive anchor and team leader. I just didn't feel comfortable voting for him over duncan who i view similarly, but had a better handle on his place on those spurs teams.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#171 » by drza » Sun Jun 25, 2017 10:20 am

I was busy today, and find that I missed my chance to contribute to the LeBron conversation in any meaningful way. The votes have been cast, and it appears that LeBron will likely win. Thus, I'll have no opportunity to dig into this in threads moving forward, so I should go ahead and put my thoughts here.

To me, it seems like the discussion about LeBron's impact is more...accusatory and narrative-driven (in both directions) than it needs to be. LeBron has generated the largest impacts that we've got measurements for in this generation. LeBron, also, has not shown the ability to maximize his own impact in certain teammate environments...and it is true, that his more talented teammates often have to adjust/subsume/modify parts of their games in order to fit best next to him. Yet another truth is that LeBron has had strong supporting casts with high front-end talent for the past seven seasons since the decision...and that he has led all seven of them to the NBA Finals, with three of them ending as champions. LeBron is not the GM of his teams. He is the best player on them.

To me, the above statements can all be true without there being a cause for blame or anger in any direction. There's nothing in those statements, to me, that requires a need for either attack of or defense against an enemy point of view. Even when trex's question is about whether LeBron holds any blame for his team's struggles without him is thrown into the mix, I don't see that as a call to arms...it seems more, to me, like a good excuse to dig into the mechanisms by which LeBron makes his impact, and to try to characterize it as best we can. To that end, I think that comparisons to players like Duncan and Garnett can be illustrative. So, without further ado...

LeBron James, Kevin Garnett and Tim Duncan: mechanisms of impact

Let me start by pointing out that I was recently, just before this project, involved in a few discussions about Duncan and LeBron, and here's one of the posts that kind of summarizes my stance: http://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=55454030#p55454030

There's been discussion in this project about the notion of individual offense being more important than individual defense. I weighed in on it in the first thread, I believe. A thumbnail summary of my viewpoint is that individual offense allows for an individual to exert a larger raw impact than individual defense (supported, for example, by the +/- studies of the last two decades). However, the counterpoint is that individual defense can have an impact almost as large as the best offense, it can be added to a given team without causing any diminishing returns http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162035208506/individual-offense-is-not-more-important-than , and there are fewer individuals capable of producing elite defensive impact than elite offensive impact which makes it a scarcer resource http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162019505846/individual-offense-is-not-more-important-than .

LeBron, Garnett & Duncan are 1st, 2nd and 4th on Doc MJ's spreadsheet of scaled PI RAPM scores, ranked according to the five-best single season marks for all players (Shaq is 3rd). They've all measured out as mega impact players, across now a long career in different circumstances. LeBron is first on the list, so if your criteria is raw impact alone, this would support LeBron over the two bigs. But part the questions LeBron has faced in this thread are about whether LeBron's impact is as robust as the big men's, and what it might mean to a given team.

Impact across time, role
Duncan is the most uniform of this group, over time. Early in his career he was playing next to a still strong David Robinson, and Robinson was the one that had the larger measured defensive impact while Duncan had the larger offensive impact. By like 2000, Duncan had caught Robinson on defense, and as he entered his peak in 2002 Duncan led the NBA in RAPM. If you broke it down according to defense and offense, Duncan was 2nd in the NBA in DRAPM and 26th in ORAPM in 2002. He was almost the exact same in 2003, where Duncan was 2nd in DRAPM and 35th in ORAPM. The only year of Duncan's prime that didn't fit this general template was 2007, where Duncan finished 5th in ORAPM and 20th in DRAPM. This was a big outlier result for him, though, suggesting that either there were adjustments in team role that only occurred in 2007, or perhaps that this was a fluke in the measurements. Either way, it seems to be a true statement that in Duncan's prime, his mechanisms of impact were to be a dominant defensive player and a very good offensive player. That fits exactly with expectation, as well.

LeBron was also pretty uniform in his mechanisms of impact. In 2009 he finished 1st in ORAPM and 14th in DRAPM. In 2010 he finished 1st in ORAPM and 15th in DRAPM. In 2013 he finished 2nd in ORAPM and 47th in DRAPM. In 2016 he was 1st in ORAPM and 5th in DRAPM, by far his best defensive finish. Again, like Duncan, the mechanisms were similar, just opposite. LeBron has always been a dominant offensive player and a very good defensive player.

Garnett is the one that has been the most dynamic in his mechanisms of impact. In 2000 Garnett was 15th in ORAPM and 11th in DRAPM. In 2003, Garnett was 2nd in the NBA in ORAPM and 7th in DRAPM. In 2004, he was 1st in ORAPM and 3rd in DRAPM. In 2008, on the other hand, he was 1st in DRAPM and 19th in ORAPM. Garnett's consistently been strong on defensive impact, but it scaled from strong to elite based upon his role, while his offense scaled from good up through elite based on his role.

Portability/scaleability
Above, we looked at Duncan, LeBron and Garnett's impacts in a vacuum. But, what happens if you look at their impacts in conjunction with their teammates? Duncan first.

In 2000, David Robinson finished 4th in RAPM, Duncan 15th.
In 2002, Duncan finished 1st, Robinson 10th.
In 2005, Duncan finished 2nd, behind teammate Manu GInobili's 1st.
In 2007, Duncan finished 1st with teammate Ginobili at 3rd.
In 2016, even end Duncan finished 12th with teammate Kawhi Leonard in 6th.

In 2000, Garnett finished 2nd in RAPM, Terrell Brandon 40th (w/ his best mark we have on record, only partial career available)
In 2003, Garnett finished 1st, Nesterovic finished 63rd
In 2004, Garnett finished 1st, Sam Cassell finished 13th (w/ best mark of his career)
In 2008, Garnett finished 1st, Paul Pierce finished 8th (w/ best mark of his career)
In 2009, Garnett finished 2nd, Pierce finished 18th, Ray 19th (w/ best mark of his career to date, topped in 2010)

In 2007, LeBron finished 2nd in RAPM, Ilgauskas 28th
In 2009, LeBron finished 1st, Ilgauskas 31st (Wade finished 4th, Bosh 13th)
In 2010, LeBron finished 1st, Anthony Parker 51st (Wade 2nd, Bosh 9th)
In 2011, LeBron finished 4th, Wade 9th, Bosh 14th
In 2012, LeBron finished 3rd, Wade 12th, Bosh 24th
In 2016, LeBron finished 2nd, Love 22nd, Tristan 25th, Kyrie 154th

I listed rankings here, instead of scores, which hopefully helps show the pattern (but actually under-emphasizes how much drop-off LeBron and Wade did from 09, 10 to 11, 12). But the general idea is that when Duncan was making his best impacts, his teammates were also making their best impacts. When Garnett was making his best impacts, his teammates were also making their best impacts. But with LeBron, he made his HOLY CRAP impacts on teams where his teammates were role players. When he played with the Heat, even though he was still right in his peak window, LeBron's impact as well as his best teammates' impacts both attenuated. This supports that the bigs have more portability/scaleability than LeBron when playing with talent, and opens the door to them possibly being better ceiling raisers than LeBron.

Is LeBron "to blame" for the current Cavs "falling off a cliff" without him?

This is a more nuanced question, and one that doesn't lend itself to quick quantified answers. Let's start with an interesting quote in this thread, that to me makes a good jumping off point:

Outside wrote:I have my theory that the Cavs are specifically built to operate with LeBron on the court, that the other Cavs have their roles customized to complement LeBron, that they spend the vast majority of their time playing that way, and that they're far less efficient when LeBron's no longer there, both because of the absence of their best player and that it's not so easy to switch from the complementary roles they are trained to play.


This puts me in mind of some of the Wilt discussions we had years ago. The general concept was that, especially in his early years, everything went through Wilt to such a degree that he could put up megasaurus numbers with good efficiency, but that because the offense was built around funnelling things to WIlt, none of the other teammates were optimized and thus the team itself was weakened. DocMJ wrote something about this on his blog, and called his variation of the discussion The Chamberlain Theory: https://asubstituteforwar.wordpress.com/2011/01/20/chamberlain-theory-the-real-price-of-anarchy-in-basketball/ with the suggestion that Wilt was't playing the game correctly, and thus that it negatively influenced his team and countered some of his own individual greatness.

But it's different, with LeBron. I don't think anyone would dare suggest that he's playing the game the wrong way. And the way that he plays is MASSIVE impact, which is the opposite of those Wilt years, so LeBron's monster numbers are leading to positive team results as well.

However, where there could be some overlap, is with the concept that the team has to play to LEBRON'S strengths, instead of their own. As several posters (kayess?) have pointed out, it makes basketball sense for the team to be built around LeBron, because he's clearly the best player, and it leads to great team results...as long as LeBron is there. Bosh moved away from his on-ball offensive style in Toronto, and instead picked up defensive skills and a more consistent spot-up 3-point shot. These skills served him in good stead to maximize his play with LeBron. But if you take LeBron OUT Of the equation, Bosh's Toronto game would likely be more conducive to positive team results than his Miami game.

Same thing, with Kevin Love in Cleveland. A lot of the current Cavs teammate discussion revolves around Kyrie Irving, because he's the spectacular scorer. But really, Love is the more established impact guy than Kyrie (to be fair, a lot of this is due to Love having a longer career pre-Cavs). And in Minnesota, Love was a lot more of an iso offensive threat and team engine. If you go through his basketball-reference page, it's fairly clear. Love averaged 6 assists per 100 possessions in his last year in Minnesota, but about half that in Cleveland. Love was assisted on fewer shots in Cleveland, and took a larger proportion of his shots inside the 3-point line. He isn't nearly as good of an offensive option as LeBron, and clearly the Cavs are best served running things through LeBron. BUT. Again, when LeBron ISN'T on the floor, Minnesota Love would make a better team centerpiece than Cleveland Love, but it seems that (be it scheme, repitition, mindset, whatever) Minnesota Love is nowhere to be seen when LeBron is off the court.

A LeBron-less Cavaliers squad featuring Kyrie as a primary scorer/ball-handler and part-time team offense initiator, with Minneota Love as the other primary scorer/team offense initiator from the high post, surrounded by shooters and a hustle-big like Thompson would, I would expect, play dramatically better than the Cavs currently do when LeBron sits. But, is that LeBron's fault?

I think "fault" is too strong of a word. It makes sense to build the team around LeBron's strengths, after all. And if the coach doesn't set up the units such that "Minnesota Love" and Kyrie get consistent 5 - 7 minutes each half when LeBron is on the bench, that's a coaching decision and not a LeBron one. So, no, I don't see it as a "blame LeBron" kind of thing.

BUT. I do believe, as I alluded to and tried to quantify above, that by definition offense isn't additive. And that if your team is built around an offensive nova like LeBron, then other offensive players that can create will fall into diminishing returns. The result can be lower impacts by both LeBron and Wade...or it can be a necessity for guys like Bosh or Love to change the way that they play offense to best play off LeBron. Either way, though, there IS a diminishing return that you get with LeBron that you don't get with Duncan or Garnett. Not because LeBron deserves blame, or because he is playing selfishly...it's just inherent in being a player that primarily makes impact with offense/volume scoring/on-ball decision-making. It's just part of what, as I led with, I don't see individual offense as more important overall than individual defense. Yes, you can have a larger impact in a vacuum with individual offense. But when you look at the overall team impact and dynamics, I think defense can have the larger net impact.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#172 » by ardee » Sun Jun 25, 2017 10:29 am

Nothing changes for me. Voting Russell here.

Here's the thing about Russ now. There's this notion that people have that a guy can't be as impactful on defense as guys like Jordan/Magic/Bird are on offense. This notion is wrong. The AVERAGE player's defense is not on par with the average player's offense, but in RUSSELL'S case, his defense is even MORE impactful than the GOAT offensive player (Jordan/Magic/Bird to me). The case for Russ built around his defense, really, is that his gap over the second best defender is SO MUCH BIGGER than the GOAT offensive player's gap over the second best offensive player (it's actually so close I can't even decide an order between those two).

If I had to rank it SRS wise for their primes I'd go:

Defense

Russell: 10
Hakeem: 5
Robinson: 5
Duncan: 4-4.5

Offense

Jordan/Magic/Bird: 9-9.5
LeBron: 8.5 or so
Kobe/Barkley/Oscar: 7.5-8
Shaq/Dirk/Kareem: 7

It's a real cluster*** on offense, with defense it's SO clear that Russ is the GOAT it's not even funny.

And honestly I don't see why Russell's impact would not translate. Not to the 60s level of course but at least 85% of it would be there, other than the 3 point line. He moved horizontally like KG, covered ground as well as someone regarded the GOAT modern defensive mover, and blocked shots better than anyone. It's the complete package, perfect storm. Someone who competed in Olypmic level athletics definitely has the hops to dominate today.

And people who knock on Russell's offense: well, it doesn't matter! The thing about Russ was that he was SO DOMINANT on defense, that offense didn't even matter. The numbers don't lie. The Cs were last on offense most years of Russ's prime, but they were SO GOOD on defense that the results spoke for themselves. The gap between the Cs on defense and the no. 2 defense was greater than no. 2 and no. 10! In retrospect, you HAVE to have such crazy outlier results to win 11 titles.


Vote: Bill Russell

2nd: LeBron James
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#173 » by drza » Sun Jun 25, 2017 10:34 am

Vote: same as last thread, going with Bill Russell for my main vote. He's still, as far as I can tell, the biggest in-era impact player of all-time. He was an innovator in his approach, and he utilized defense and psychological warfare as massively effective weapons in ways that had never been done before. And, as opposed to a player like Mikan, I do believe that Russell has the tools to be a max impact player in any given era.

My unofficial impression is that LeBron is about to take this round, so I'll have more room to hopefully get into more interesting Russell discussion next thread.

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#174 » by eminence » Sun Jun 25, 2017 1:08 pm

Suppose I should get my votes in. Same 1st ballot for the third time in a row, but get to make a second choice, woohoo! So will actually be touching more on my second pick.

1st Ballot: Tim Duncan
-Excellent excellent defender (career-wise I'd put him 2nd behind Russell)
-Almost untouched impactful longevity (I'd say KAJ/KG/Malone/Stockton come closest)
-Stayed in his lane offensively, served as a reasonable 1a/1b anchor type during his prime, and didn't have any problems transitioning roles as he aged to a more supportive position.
-I try not to get too much into off court stuff, but it's pretty clear he was a great in those areas as well. Lead by example type.

Like I said up thread you could probably just copy micahclay's thoughts for me (creepy similar), so the guys I have in top consideration for my 2nd spot are LeBron/KG/Russell/Wilt (Shaq/Hakeem very close).

KG - The most versatile superstar ever.

Wilt - Untouched volume monster.

LeBron - Came in with next MJ hype and has surpassed it, unbelievable.

Russell - Winning and consistency, never lost that focus and drive.

When I try to look for hole's in resumes of this caliber they're awful hard to find. LeBron had some troubles with passivity and his immense talents might not be the most stackable, Wilt had some trouble finding the right role, KG spent time on some real terrible teams and his scoring did suffer a bit in the playoffs, Russell gets a bit of a one-way player label.

And I see at least some truth to all of these but one: Russell as a one-way player. Or at the very least, I don't see it as much of a criticism, it's true he was only dominating on the one side, but that's a mode of impact, not a measure of his effectiveness. And I think we've seen enough solid arguments in this thread and others to support the idea that Russell was equaling anybody's impact through his defense alone.

2nd Ballot: Bill Russell
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#175 » by THKNKG » Sun Jun 25, 2017 2:13 pm

eminence wrote:Suppose I should get my votes in. Same 1st ballot for the third time in a row, but get to make a second choice, woohoo! So will actually be touching more on my second pick.

1st Ballot: Tim Duncan
-Excellent excellent defender (career-wise I'd put him 2nd behind Russell)
-Almost untouched impactful longevity (I'd say KAJ/KG/Malone/Stockton come closest)
-Stayed in his lane offensively, served as a reasonable 1a/1b anchor type during his prime, and didn't have any problems transitioning roles as he aged to a more supportive position.
-I try not to get too much into off court stuff, but it's pretty clear he was a great in those areas as well. Lead by example type.

Like I said up thread you could probably just copy micahclay's thoughts for me (creepy similar), so the guys I have in top consideration for my 2nd spot are LeBron/KG/Russell/Wilt (Shaq/Hakeem very close).

KG - The most versatile superstar ever.

Wilt - Untouched volume monster.

LeBron - Came in with next MJ hype and has surpassed it, unbelievable.

Russell - Winning and consistency, never lost that focus and drive.

When I try to look for hole's in resumes of this caliber they're awful hard to find. LeBron had some troubles with passivity and his immense talents might not be the most stackable, Wilt had some trouble finding the right role, KG spent time on some real terrible teams and his scoring did suffer a bit in the playoffs, Russell gets a bit of a one-way player label.

And I see at least some truth to all of these but one: Russell as a one-way player. Or at the very least, I don't see it as much of a criticism, it's true he was only dominating on the one side, but that's a mode of impact, not a measure of his effectiveness. And I think we've seen enough solid arguments in this thread and others to support the idea that Russell was equaling anybody's impact through his defense alone.

2nd Ballot: Bill Russell


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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#176 » by eminence » Sun Jun 25, 2017 2:15 pm

micahclay wrote:Maybe we're the same person :o


We're going to have to disagree one of these ballots so they don't catch us double voting ;)
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#177 » by mischievous » Sun Jun 25, 2017 2:18 pm

Vote: Lebron James. 2nd all time in career PER, slightly behind Mj. 3rd in career playoff PER.

7 straight finals trips, winning 3 with dominant playoff performances. Arguably goat playoff run in 09 for runs that resulted in a loss.

Defensive and offensive anchor for those heat teams, catalyst for a 27 game win streak.

Excellent superstar longevity already, 06-17 is 12 seasons, perhaps 13 if we generously include 05.

2nd vote: Wilt.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#178 » by trex_8063 » Sun Jun 25, 2017 2:26 pm

Interesting stuff; still a handful of posts I want to read, and there was some comments I wanted to post but never got around to (maybe I will later, or potentially even in a later thread, even though some has to do with Lebron). But I think I'll call this one, and we'll move on.
Thru post #174 we have 32 votes, so a player needs 17 to achieve majority:

Lebron James - 15 (2klegend, Bad Gatorade, Dr Positivity, Jaivl, janmagn, Joao Saraiva, LABird, MisterHibachi, Narigo, PockyCandy, RCM88x, Tesla, trex_8063, Winsome Gerbil, wojoaderge)
Bill Russell - 10 (TrueLAfan, Texas Chuck, scabbarista, penbeast0, Outside, JordansBulls, drza, Doctor MJ, BasketballFan7, ardee)
Tim Duncan - 6 (Clyde Frazier, Cyrusman122000, eminence, Hornet Mania, kayess, micahclay)
Hakeem Olajuwon - 1 (andrewww)


No majority, so Hakeem is eliminated from contention; andrewww stipulated Lebron as his 2nd choice, so that his added to Lebron's total, making it:

Lebron - 16
Russell - 10
Duncan - 6


Still not quite a majority, so Duncan is eliminated and 2ndary votes are transferred: one was for Shaq (becomes a "ghost vote"), three for Russell, two for Lebron.....

Lebron - 18
Russell - 13


Calling it for Lebron. Will have the #4 thread up shortly.

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#179 » by rebirthoftheM » Sun Jun 25, 2017 2:59 pm

Not a voter here and I know it has already been decided, but the problems with LBJs offensive system has been something i have been mulling over recently and I see many have been mulling over it for eons.

My own tenative conclusion is that Lebron in general, either deliberately or inadvertently creates team situations which accentuate his own individual production but leaves his team open to severe exploitation. He creates conditions necessitating he rescue his squads, and thereby creates a win win for himself as a result: if his team wins, it's because he carried them, and if the team loses, it aint his fault because he balled out and his team are all bums. In fact LBJs citation of his triple doubles and his strange references to his stats in the past, alongside his itch to remind the world how great he is (im the best player in the world...im a two way player etc) to me raises a suspicion that LBJs poorly constructed teams are not random, but all apart of his attempt to build his legacy. A hero legacy is hard to beat...

Something that got me thinking was the shift in the Cavs approach to basketball from late 08/08 playoffs to the 09 season/playoffs. LBJ in particular had an underwhelming offense performance v the Celtics in 08 (he was excellent defensively) but the series was a seesaw grind out event, with PP having to go wild in game 7 to salvage the series for the Celtics. Ben Wallaces addition turned the Cavs D around, and despite LBJs inability to generate high quality offense, in large part because of the awful spacing, the team competed against the NBAs best (and no the celtics struggles v the hawks do not undermine what happened v the cavs: clearly the cavs matched up amazingly while with the Hawks, the celtics had road jitters).

But then in 09 playoffs, Ben Wallace, the only guy on the cavs who could play effective post d and p and r D saw his playoff minutes cut in half, while the Cavs got demolished by Shaq Howard (he was attracting triples because of how ineffective the cavs bigs were) and on p&r, whilst lebron put up amazing individual numbers next to excellent spacing. Something makes me think the Cavs sacrified great playoff D for better offense, although this didnt necessiarly translate into wins. Lebron got his 38/8/8 and to this date many hail it his peak even though his team was one of the most dominant RS teams in recent times..

Lebron has not yet demonstrated he can anchor a historically great team and IMO it is because his approach to the game of basketball precludes this. No historically great team needs a rescue culture like LBJ creates everywhere he goes and I dont think this predicament is random. And I think this matters when you are comparing players in a team sport like basketball.

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#180 » by colts18 » Sun Jun 25, 2017 3:48 pm

rebirthoftheM wrote:Not a voter here and I know it has already been decided, but the problems with LBJs offensive system has been something i have been mulling over recently and I see many have been mulling over it for eons.

My own tenative conclusion is that Lebron in general, either deliberately or inadvertently creates team situations which accentuate his own individual production but leaves his team open to severe exploitation. He creates conditions necessitating he rescue his squads, and thereby creates a win win for himself as a result: if his team wins, it's because he carried them, and if the team loses, it aint his fault because he balled out and his team are all bums. In fact LBJs citation of his triple doubles and his strange references to his stats in the past, alongside his itch to remind the world how great he is (im the best player in the world...im a two way player etc) to me raises a suspicion that LBJs poorly constructed teams are not random, but all apart of his attempt to build his legacy. A hero legacy is hard to beat...

Something that got me thinking was the shift in the Cavs approach to basketball from late 08/08 playoffs to the 09 season/playoffs. LBJ in particular had an underwhelming offense performance v the Celtics in 08 (he was excellent defensively) but the series was a seesaw grind out event, with PP having to go wild in game 7 to salvage the series for the Celtics. Ben Wallaces addition turned the Cavs D around, and despite LBJs inability to generate high quality offense, in large part because of the awful spacing, the team competed against the NBAs best (and no the celtics struggles v the hawks do not undermine what happened v the cavs: clearly the cavs matched up amazingly while with the Hawks, the celtics had road jitters).

But then in 09 playoffs, Ben Wallace, the only guy on the cavs who could play effective post d and p and r D saw his playoff minutes cut in half, while the Cavs got demolished by Shaq Howard (he was attracting triples because of how ineffective the cavs bigs were) and on p&r, whilst lebron put up amazing individual numbers next to excellent spacing. Something makes me think the Cavs sacrified great playoff D for better offense, although this didnt necessiarly translate into wins. Lebron got his 38/8/8 and to this date many hail it his peak even though his team was one of the most dominant RS teams in recent times..

Lebron has not yet demonstrated he can anchor a historically great team and IMO it is because his approach to the game of basketball precludes this. No historically great team needs a rescue culture like LBJ creates everywhere he goes and I dont think this predicament is random. And I think this matters when you are comparing players in a team sport like basketball.

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A few things.

1) In 09, the Cavs did have an amazing defense. The only problem is that they faced the only team which was a huge matchup problem. The Cavs big were good defensive bigs but Howard was the only one strong and athletic enough to exploit them. Varejao/Wallace/Z could effectively guard 90% of the bigs in the league. Howard wasn't one of them. Not to mention that the Magic perimeter players were bigger than the Cavs guys and were great shooters. They were basically a 2017 team transported to 2009.

2) LeBron has anchored has great teams. The 2016 and 2017 Cavs were amazing in the playoffs. 12+ SRS in the playoffs both years. He beat a 73 win team that no one else has beat in the last 3 years.

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