JordansBulls wrote: Seems like really 2 more guys are in contention with Durant and Curry in 2014 and 2015.
Assuming we go for top 50, 2015 Harden will probably make it, too.
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JordansBulls wrote: Seems like really 2 more guys are in contention with Durant and Curry in 2014 and 2015.
Mutnt wrote:Rating some of the elder guys might prove more abstract than what we want for healthy discussions. Take someone like Russell for example. How can we accurately compare Russell's peak when we have almost zero information + his case is made on the defensive end which is even harder to gauge.
JordansBulls wrote:The Warriors are basically a good college team until they meet a team with bigs in the NBA.
Quotatious wrote:JordansBulls wrote: Seems like really 2 more guys are in contention with Durant and Curry in 2014 and 2015.
Assuming we go for top 50, 2015 Harden will probably make it, too.
70sFan wrote:I have important question. Do we count every season from every league (BAA, NBA, ABA)? If so, George Mikan for example is the most dominant player ever (more than Shaq and others) based on peak. But he played in worse league with different rules. Also guys like Gilmore, Hawkins and even Dr J had peaks in ABA, where rules also were different (3 point line) than in NBA. Do this years counts in project?
70sFan wrote:I have important question. Do we count every season from every league (BAA, NBA, ABA)? If so, George Mikan for example is the most dominant player ever (more than Shaq and others) based on peak. But he played in worse league with different rules. Also guys like Gilmore, Hawkins and even Dr J had peaks in ABA, where rules also were different (3 point line) than in NBA. Do this years counts in project?
acrossthecourt wrote:trex_8063 wrote:acrossthecourt wrote:I don't think rebounds per possession are useful from that era. There were so many more misses it's kinda pointless to compare. You can do TRB% estimates.
By the same token pts or ast per 100 poss are "not very useful" (as more missed shots means fewer of both per possession). I still think per 100 poss estimates are helpful to put some of those old era players stats into perspective; one just has to be conscious of the fact that reb (even per 100 poss) were higher then, and pts and ast were lower.
Not that your method isn't helpful, too.acrossthecourt wrote:Rule e) helps guys with multiple peaks a lot.
I don't think it "helps" guys with multiple peaks, but rather just is not penalizing them for having broad or multiple peaks.acrossthecourt wrote: We may need to vote on seasons first. Like, say, we agree on 12 nominees for the opening round and then we have a thread for voting on specific seasons for those players. Then every round we nominate a player and vote for a season. The player with the most nominations gets in the voting pool, and the season chosen most often is the designated one. But when you vote a player in, we already have a season chosen beforehand.
For example, in the first round someone could vote for Shaq (2000) and nominate Dirk (2011) while someone else nominates Dirk (2007).
(That still helps players with multiple peaks, but you still have to be voted in so it's not a glaring issue.)
Again, I see this different (I get the feeling at least Quotatious agrees with me). For instance, if for Dirk we by consensus (beforehand) decide his peak is '07 and tell people you MUST consider '07 Dirk only......we might have a handful of people thinking "well, I'd normally give this spot to Dirk IF I could use '11 version, but since I can't, I'm going to vote for someone else". So thus the method you propose still penalizes guys for having multiple or broad peaks......just not quite as much.
This is problematic because (imo) the WHO is much more important than the WHEN.
For instance when we're discussing and comparing players posters will often make statements such as "I think so and so is a top 10 peak of a all-time" or similar, with no mention of what year they're referring to......because ultimately within the context of the MOST of these discussions regarding career value and legacy it is how high a player peaked that is relevant, not what year said peak occurred.
If the majority agrees that Lebron is a top 5 (or perhaps top 3-4) peak all-time, I don't think he should be relegated to #6 or 7 because no one can agree whether it's '09 or '13 or '12 (ditto for guys like Dirk or Kobe or Wade or Wilt). To me, that sort of misses the point of what a peaks project should be about.
I kind of like that idea we've already hashed out (determining year AFTER the player earns his spot), unless a bunch of people voice disagreement.
I'm sorry but that's silly. Simply rearranging words and bolding things doesn't make something true.
It's all about voting for how good a player's particular peak was. If someone doesn't value a particular season highly, then that's useful information and a real opinion. But mixing that up and allowing people to vote for multiple seasons, essentially, means you wash away that signal and a multiple peak guy gets a real advantage. And in most cases it'll be like this: a person prefers 2007 Dirk but because 2011 Dirk is on the board the vote will probably just go to 2011 Dirk anyway.
It is in no way penalizing players with multiple peaks. That doesn't make sense. It's not like votes are being split. You can still vote for the player.
Peja Stojakovic wrote:Jimmy butler, with no regard for human life
sp6r=underrated wrote:acrossthecourt wrote:trex_8063 wrote:
By the same token pts or ast per 100 poss are "not very useful" (as more missed shots means fewer of both per possession). I still think per 100 poss estimates are helpful to put some of those old era players stats into perspective; one just has to be conscious of the fact that reb (even per 100 poss) were higher then, and pts and ast were lower.
Not that your method isn't helpful, too.
I don't think it "helps" guys with multiple peaks, but rather just is not penalizing them for having broad or multiple peaks.
Again, I see this different (I get the feeling at least Quotatious agrees with me). For instance, if for Dirk we by consensus (beforehand) decide his peak is '07 and tell people you MUST consider '07 Dirk only......we might have a handful of people thinking "well, I'd normally give this spot to Dirk IF I could use '11 version, but since I can't, I'm going to vote for someone else". So thus the method you propose still penalizes guys for having multiple or broad peaks......just not quite as much.
This is problematic because (imo) the WHO is much more important than the WHEN.
For instance when we're discussing and comparing players posters will often make statements such as "I think so and so is a top 10 peak of a all-time" or similar, with no mention of what year they're referring to......because ultimately within the context of the MOST of these discussions regarding career value and legacy it is how high a player peaked that is relevant, not what year said peak occurred.
If the majority agrees that Lebron is a top 5 (or perhaps top 3-4) peak all-time, I don't think he should be relegated to #6 or 7 because no one can agree whether it's '09 or '13 or '12 (ditto for guys like Dirk or Kobe or Wade or Wilt). To me, that sort of misses the point of what a peaks project should be about.
I kind of like that idea we've already hashed out (determining year AFTER the player earns his spot), unless a bunch of people voice disagreement.
I'm sorry but that's silly. Simply rearranging words and bolding things doesn't make something true.
It's all about voting for how good a player's particular peak was. If someone doesn't value a particular season highly, then that's useful information and a real opinion. But mixing that up and allowing people to vote for multiple seasons, essentially, means you wash away that signal and a multiple peak guy gets a real advantage. And in most cases it'll be like this: a person prefers 2007 Dirk but because 2011 Dirk is on the board the vote will probably just go to 2011 Dirk anyway.
It is in no way penalizing players with multiple peaks. That doesn't make sense. It's not like votes are being split. You can still vote for the player.
I am not going to participate but I want to state that I strongly agree with ascreamaccrosthecourt. The purpose of an all-peak thread is to evaluate individual seasons. Allowing votes for different seasons to be combined is completely inconsistent with the goal of the project.
sp6r=underrated wrote:I am not going to participate but I want to state that I strongly agree with ascreamaccrosthecourt. The purpose of an all-peak thread is to evaluate individual seasons. Allowing votes for different seasons to be combined is completely inconsistent with the goal of the project.
Dr Positivity wrote:70sFan wrote:I have important question. Do we count every season from every league (BAA, NBA, ABA)? If so, George Mikan for example is the most dominant player ever (more than Shaq and others) based on peak. But he played in worse league with different rules. Also guys like Gilmore, Hawkins and even Dr J had peaks in ABA, where rules also were different (3 point line) than in NBA. Do this years counts in project?
Rating players like Mikan, Cousy, Pettit has historically been divisive and up to the voter. Sometimes we have only included post shot clock players as eligible. My personal take is to rate them based on how good they would be now but if giving the training to adapt to the modern game. I won't be voting for Mikan, Cousy or Pettit in my top 50 even if they could all be starters in modern day.
acrossthecourt wrote:
It's all about voting for how good a player's particular peak was.
acrossthecourt wrote: If someone doesn't value a particular season highly, then that's useful information and a real opinion. But mixing that up and allowing people to vote for multiple seasons, essentially, means you wash away that signal and a multiple peak guy gets a real advantage. And in most cases it'll be like this: a person prefers 2007 Dirk but because 2011 Dirk is on the board the vote will probably just go to 2011 Dirk anyway.
70sFan wrote:I have important question. Do we count every season from every league (BAA, NBA, ABA)? If so, George Mikan for example is the most dominant player ever (more than Shaq and others) based on peak. But he played in worse league with different rules. Also guys like Gilmore, Hawkins and even Dr J had peaks in ABA, where rules also were different (3 point line) than in NBA. Do this years counts in project?