Curry: RS On/Off +11.3, PS On/Off +12.0
LeBron: RS On/Off +10.8, PS On/Off +10.3[/quote]
True. You know who also looks monstrous with unadjusted on/off?
Draymond: RS On/Off: +9.6, PS On/Off: +12.6
Gee. I wonder what would happen if we adjusted for lineups...

Huh? Lebron is #1 and Steph isn't close? Well okay, maybe that's a fluke. Different creators use different means of regression, blah, blah blah...
(Yeah it's not going to get better)First, I want everyone to appreciate
just how far ahead Lebron is,
per possession. In the first set, if I count Embid, the gap between Lebron and #2 is about as big as the gap between #2 Embid and #5 Steph Curry. If I apply a 100000 possession filter, the gap between Lebron and #2 Garnett is bigger than the gap between #2 Garnett and
#6 Tim Duncan.
Second, let's check the possession count. Keeping in mind, that averages tend to go down the longer you play, Lebron has maintained this large advantage having played
70,000 more minutes than #2(or 3) Garnett and nearly
twice as much as #6(or 7) Steph Curry.
Again, with the second-set, Lebron is dominant
per-possession, posting the best, 2nd best, and 4th best 5-year marks. But what happens when we also look at the # of possessions...

See that circle? It's the Lebron system. It has 3 planets. one of them is named
"2013-2017 Lebron". "2013-2017 Lebron"'s climate has 3 unique seasons, 2015 Lebron, 2016 Lebron, and 2017 Lebron. If we switch to Elgee's data(where Lebron also "cooks")...

All 3 are at the tippity top, right there with the second best season on record
(
disclaimer:
getting the best, the second best, or the third best season isn't significant inofitself. At a certain treshold, adjusted stuff starts misattributing value, if you want to distingush between single-season, you need to get into the weeds. What's note-worthy is how frequently a player scores near or at the top, and how you look over extended samples. RAPM is great for establishing a baseline of value, not deciding if 2004 kg is more valuable than 2016 draymond)
Regardless, 2015-2017 consistently grades out as a top-tier 3-year stretch with the adjusted stuff. And yet...
ShotCreator wrote:15 - Curry(easily)
16 - LeBron(very close)
17 - Curry(very close)
18 - LeBron(very close)
19 - Curry
20 - LeBron(extra super duper easy)
21 - Curry(Very close)
22 - Curry
23- Curry
LeBron has this thing of having fringe MVP RS, .
kayess wrote:It's surprising how close LeBron is here. I think he was better but I'd take Curry's career obviously (rings aside)
'15 Curry was clearly better
'16 LeBron had the higher series/single game peak; Curry had one of the ATG seasons, so it's kinda close
'17-'18 Curry's basically as good as '16, slightly better, but doesn't show cause of Durant; LeBron has asome all-time playoff performances
'19 duh
'20 duh
'21-'22 Curry clearly but it's mega injury marred
'23 uninjured LeBron somehow better than Curry and injured LeBron outplays him in critical moments in the playoffs...
Yeah it's tough. I think LeBron's the better player and can express that "betterness" maybe 20% of the time vs. Curry who can sustain ~95% of that level longer.
Curry probably overall (by a hair)
LeBron better player
TheLand13 wrote:The Master wrote:This is insane you can exclude 11 seasons of LeBron (4x MVP, 2x Finals MVP) in the best days athletically of him and it's still very arguable that he was better than borderline top10 player ever (Curry) impact-wise.
Just longevity stats some people say...
Curry better RS performer, LeBron better PS performer is a comfortable assessment to make here.
Not only that, you’re also excluding all of his all defense selection seasons, two of which he was second in DPOY voting.
I think some people forget just how good LeBron was.
hmm...
Regular SeasonLet's start with 2015. To set the table, the lebron-less cavs with
kyrie and love are a bad defense and average offense if you go by net-rating(-1.73 overall, 30ish wins). This is also true in 2016(-1.7), 2017(-2.81) which adds up to
-1.99 for all 3-seasons. Without any of the 3, the cavs are
-14.62.
With Lebron
and no kyrie or love, the Cavs are
+6.79. With all 3 they're
[b]+10.76[/b](
PBPstats). with both and without both Lebron looks historically valuable.
But maybe this is just a matter of wonky lineups/rotations? Well, we can then look at WOWY, only including games where the Cavaliers
knew they'd be playing without Lebron. In 2015 they were
3-10 without Lebron. Extending our sample the Cavs out to 2017 and the Cavs were
4-23. In games without Lebron and
with Kyrie and Love, the cavs were
4-11, a
21-win pace.
With Lebron, the 2015 Cavs went
50-19(59-win). Without they went 3-10 going at a
19-win pace. With all three of Love, Kyrie, and Lebron, the Cavs were
42-5(73-win) improving from 4-11 with just kyrie and love
21-win(note that's a 3-year sample, not just 2015).
What if we forget w-l and look at the o-rating and d-rating splits:




(
it's probably not a matter of rotationsIn summary, adjusted, lineup-splits, and wowy all seem to agree 2015 Lebron, back problems and all, was all-time valuable. It also seems that the Cavs improved dramatically
on offense when he was on the floor while also significantly bolstering cleveland defensively. But how? Well, I think we can get a clue when we look at how Lebron's teammates shot with and without:


Lebron's teammates shoot dramatically more efficiently with Lebron on the floor. Incidentally, Lebron has an ast% of 36 to go with a tov% of 3:1. Lebron also isn't scoring inefficiently as he would in the playoffs(more on that later) scoring 25 points on +4.1 rTS. Finally their is the mental side of the game, and here we get back to Lebron having one of the highest bbal iq's ever:
Heej wrote:Which is what makes LeBron so incredible because he's been the control tower on offense and defense for damn near his entire career. We've had coaches and teammates describe him as a coach on the floor. There was an article during the 2018 Finals I remember where JR Smith said LeBron's communication on the floor legitimately makes everyone one step faster on defense. And this is something he doesn't get nearly enough credit for. But this is a big deal to people who are actually in the game and around the game, because one of the major talking points about the Lakers acquiring Rondo for LeBron was about how helpful it would be for LeBron to have someone else think the game for him and organize sets and get guys to their spots.
All considered, if you combine strong scoring, great-playmaking, the ability to handle the ball and control pace alot more than anyone else(without commiting too many turnovers) and being a "control tower" like draymond is for the Warriors, it's not hard to see why Lebron can still look all-time-valuable even if he isn't at his physical peak. Combine that with
still historically good non-big d, and you get an extremely yaluable regular season player,
even in down year, and then we get to the...
PlayoffsFor 2015-2017, the Cavs without lebron and with kyrie and love go from
-1.99 to
-5.05. the Cavs with none of the three go from
-14.62 to
-11.62. Frankly i'm not inclined to rely on these samples(a combined 280 minutes is covered here), and would recommend using the larger regular season stuff as an "off", regardless, whatever happens with the lebron-less teams, the lineups with lebron
improve, The
+6.79 no kyrie/love lineups from the regular season improve to
+8.47(648 minutes) and the lebron and kyrie and love lineups improve from
10.76 to
+14.50.
As importantly, this lineup-level improvement manifests in team-wide elevation:
Playoff Offensive Rating: +4.2 (63rd), Playoff Defensive Rating: -5.4 (44th)
Playoff SRS: +9.98 (65th), Total SRS Increase through Playoffs: +3.72 (26th)
Average Playoff Opponent Offense: +2.85 (32nd), Average Playoff Opponent Defense: -2.37 (41st)
(2015)While Lebron's net-rating without kyrie and love drops to +4.83(doesn't adjust for opponent quality), the Cavs post an inciredible
+10 PSRS with the two co-stars basically missing half of the postseason. Moreover, with kyrie barely playing, they sweep a 50ish win srs(60-win record) Hawks team and go 2-1 up on the
67-win Warriors forcing a switch to the 73-win inducing death-lineup. Again, you may ask, how? Didn't Lebron shoot bad?
His TS does plummet by
8 points, but he also goes from scoring 25ppg to 30ppg. And whatever you think of that scoring trade-off, lebron's
creation improves:


Take a peep at Kyrie Irving. While he's basically unaffected by Lebron in the regular season, his playoff shooting spikes by
9 points when Lebron is on the floor.
As it so happens, Lebron puts up goat-level playmaking-box stuff(and the best of his playoff prime(, putting up an ast% of 45 to a tov% of only 11%. In the finals, against
the best playoff defense of the era, Lebron puts up an ast% of 52 on a tov% of 8 in for, at least per box, one of the best playmaking series ever.
The Cavs also improve defensively, with Lebron anchoring a
-5.4 playoff defense. Check who that defense performs best against:
Boston Celtics: +7.1 / -3.0
Chicago Bulls: +8.0 / -1.6
Atlanta Hawks: +10.9 / -9.1
Golden State Warriors: -1.7 / -4.3
Detroit Pistons: +14.9 / +4.4
Atlanta Hawks: +21.5 / +4.0
Toronto Raptors: +13.3 / -8.8
Golden State Warriors: +5.3 / -6.0
Overall, the 15/16 Cavs were elite playoff defenses, elevating significantly from "ok" in the regular season(bad without Lebron), and then turning
all-time great against top 5 offenses(including the small-ball warriors). While they regress a bit in 2016 in the playoffs(kevin love and kyrie irving lineups consistently look worse defensively than lineups without the two), they remain elite overall and hit another gear in the last two rounds.