OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs

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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#41 » by 70sFan » Sat Jun 20, 2020 9:37 pm

Joey Wheeler wrote:Some players can do it all for a team's offense, be the lead ball handler, playmaker and scorer. That's what we refer to as a carry-job. Lebron James for instance is a guy capable of doing everything for a team's offense.

No player is capable of doimg everything on offense. LeBron doesn't spread the floor, he doesn't set screens, he doesn't roll and finish lobs.

If you need other players to take key roles in the offense, you're not carrying anything by yourself.

If that's your definition then nobody ever carried anything. LeBron needs shooters, without it his drive and kick game isn't as effective. He can't score one on five.

Let's look at what Kareem was up to when he didn't have an elite all-time guard next to him and his supposed offense-carrying ability was truly required:

Before breaking down your choices, it's funny how you never mentioned Kareem's rookie season when Bucks won 56 games, had +3.1 rORtg and lost in ECF to future champions. What all-time guard did he have then?

You also didn't mention his 1974 season, because he had Oscar in his last year that lost ability to score, was dealing with injuries all season long, missed 12 games and got shut down in playoffs. Yet Bucks still won 59 games and had +3.4 rORtg.

How about 1972? Oscar missed significant time in RS and Bucks were at 62 wins pace without him while Kareem averaged ridiculous numbers.

1975 - missed the playoffs with a 38-44 record

I've already told you that Bucks were at ridiculous 14 wins pace without him. Kareem missed playoffs because he missed games, nothing else.

1976 - missed the playoffs with a 40-42 record

Only because of playoffs format that existed back then. Besides, Lakers offense was above league average, let's not act like they struggled on that end.
1977 - swept in the CF, 53-29 record

He had excellent record with weak supporting cast and then he lost his starting PG in playoffs. Lakera guarda were beyond terrible in that series. It's not his fault that he lost to champions with injured team.
1978 - barely make the playoffs, out in the 1st round, 45-37 record

Barely made playoffs because Kareem missed significant time. With Kareem they were at 53 wins pace.
They had +2.5 rORtg against Seattle, it's not like their offense got shut down.
1979 - backdoor swept in the second round, 47-35 record

Again, they didn't lost because of offense.

These teams had some talent btw, Dantley was on them in 1978 and 1979 for instance.

Only 1978 and 1979 (1975-77 were garbage). Besides, these teams were good offensively. I don't see your point.

If you remove Kareem from that team and add a prime James Harden or Westbrook instead, that team is going to be average ~50 wins for that span just due to their ability to actually carry an offense.

Based on what? Westbrook didn't reach 50 wins even once in 2017-19 period and he played with better teams than Kareem in 1975 and 1976. Harden never played with as bad as these teams. Don't be ridiculous...

If you add a Lebron James or Larry Bird instead, you'll be competitive in the playoffs and contend.

That's funny - let's look at it:

2005 Cavs: 42 wins, missed playoffs
2007 Cavs: -1.0 rORtg in RS, sweep in the finals
2008 Cavs: -1.5 rORtg in RS, loss in ECF
2010 Cavs: loss in second round

Why didn't James contend in these years? Did he magically lost his ability to carry the offense? You blame Kareem's inability to carry the offense for lossess but Jabbar never played in below average offense in his career.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#42 » by carlquincy » Mon Jun 22, 2020 10:31 am

How good/accurate is OBPM when used to compare across eras?

Is it normalised to that seasons league average, or normalised to an universal value?
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#43 » by VDT » Tue Jun 23, 2020 12:07 pm

Joey Wheeler wrote:
Odinn21 wrote:Are you going to agree that Reggie Miller or Russell Westbrook was a better offensive player than Karl Malone or Hakeem Olajuwon?


Yes, of course. Not only are they better offensively, they are so by a bigger margin than suggested by this stat.



That's a joke post.

Hakeem carried his team to two titles, Westbrook has done nothing and is seen more as a problem than a solution.

For the people complaining that the OP cares only about the difference and not the magnitude, i think he is correct.

Correct me if i am wrong, but the BPM stat takes into account the overall team performance and the position, meaning that he weighs the box score stats differently for different positions https://www.basketball-reference.com/about/bpm2.html . As such comparing the same player in the postseason and the regular season or comparing the same player in different years, assuming that the team and his role havent changed much, is the way the stat is supposed to be used. When you start comparing across different teams and roles or even different eras you are not using the stat correctly imo.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#44 » by Doctor MJ » Tue Jun 23, 2020 4:12 pm

VDT wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:
Odinn21 wrote:Are you going to agree that Reggie Miller or Russell Westbrook was a better offensive player than Karl Malone or Hakeem Olajuwon?


Yes, of course. Not only are they better offensively, they are so by a bigger margin than suggested by this stat.



That's a joke post.

Hakeem carried his team to two titles, Westbrook has done nothing and is seen more as a problem than a solution.
.


Not my argument but I can’t help but notice that they were talking about offense and you responded by calling it a joke based on the overall accomplishment of a DPOY.

Do not forget that Hakeem’s success has much to do with defense. Don’t put his offense in a higher tier simply because of team accomplishments that were about more than his offense.


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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#45 » by VDT » Tue Jun 23, 2020 6:51 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
VDT wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:
Yes, of course. Not only are they better offensively, they are so by a bigger margin than suggested by this stat.



That's a joke post.

Hakeem carried his team to two titles, Westbrook has done nothing and is seen more as a problem than a solution.
.


Not my argument but I can’t help but notice that they were talking about offense and you responded by calling it a joke based on the overall accomplishment of a DPOY.

Do not forget that Hakeem’s success has much to do with defense. Don’t put his offense in a higher tier simply because of team accomplishments that were about more than his offense.


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That's true, but is also true that Hakeem was the one that carried the offense on these teams to the point that he won a title with just roleplayer. And Hakeem for his volume, lack of help and type of game (basically strictly half court offense) was absolutely elite imo.

Meanwhile Westbrook has accomplished nothing while having better supporting casts and due to his poor decision making and shooting he is seen more like problem when trying to build a good team.

So when someone says that Westbrook is a much better offensive player than Hakeem i am not sure how to take that seriously.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#46 » by G35 » Tue Jun 23, 2020 8:40 pm

Joey Wheeler wrote:
Odinn21 wrote:
Cavsfansince84 wrote:Only change I'd make off hand is changing LeBron's prime years to go back to 06 or 07. I think he was definitely in his prime at that point.

I'm quite impressed by the persistence on lack of knowledge BTW.

Kareem missed the playoffs because the league had a dumb playoff format. Teams with worse records made the playoffs ahead of the Bucks in '75 and the Lakers in '76. In 1974-75 season, Kareem was injured at the start of the season and the team started the season with 1-13 in Kareem's absence.
It's so easy to talk actual knowledge like the circumstances didn't change. Like ever.

Kareem carried Oscar Robertson's sorry a.. to the NBA Finals in '74. Robertson had 6 points in game 7 of the NBA Finals with 2 for 13 shooting from the field.
Saying Kareem couldn't do anything without an atg PG is ignorant and arrogant as hell...


He missed it due to the dumb playoff format? I guess going 38-44 and 40-42 had nothing to do with it then? In 1975, he went 35-30 in the games he played, is this supposed to be impressive?

How did you manage to turn "can't carry an offense on his own" into "couldn't do anything"? And what do you mean arrogant - so having a different opinion than you about a basketball player means I'm full of myself? You either have some problems commanding the English language or are just plainly arguing in bad faith, hope it's the former...



You're cherry picking. A lot has to do with the composition of the team.

It's like some kid in 2040 saying what happened to Lebron in 2018-19 season? He missed the playoffs...he can't anchor an offense.

Look at what Kareem did as a rookie in 1970 without having Oscar. Milwaukee won 56 games after only winning 27 the previous season. Had a #2 ORTG and went to the conference finals.

Also, are the numbers not available prior to 1974? Kareem had some great years before that.....
I'm so tired of the typical......
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#47 » by Doctor MJ » Tue Jun 23, 2020 10:18 pm

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
VDT wrote:

That's a joke post.

Hakeem carried his team to two titles, Westbrook has done nothing and is seen more as a problem than a solution.
.


Not my argument but I can’t help but notice that they were talking about offense and you responded by calling it a joke based on the overall accomplishment of a DPOY.

Do not forget that Hakeem’s success has much to do with defense. Don’t put his offense in a higher tier simply because of team accomplishments that were about more than his offense.


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That's true, but is also true that Hakeem was the one that carried the offense on these teams to the point that he won a title with just roleplayer. And Hakeem for his volume, lack of help and type of game (basically strictly half court offense) was absolutely elite imo.

Meanwhile Westbrook has accomplished nothing while having better supporting casts and due to his poor decision making and shooting he is seen more like problem when trying to build a good team.

So when someone says that Westbrook is a much better offensive player than Hakeem i am not sure how to take that seriously.


Right but, for example, that team you mention, the '93-94 Rockets, ranked 15th out of 27 in ORtg but 2nd out of 27 in DRtg. It certainly isn't the case that prime Westbrook wasn't capable of leading his team to an above average offense.

I'll add that while I'm certainly not looking to put a ceiling on Hakeem's team offense and I'm not a big fan of Westbrook, Reggie Miller was also part of the conversation. And Miller was a guy who in back-to-back years had the single highest on-court ORtg of any big minute player in the league while playing a style that was exceptionally scalable to working with other great players and making the offense even better.

All this is to say that anyone who simply has Hakeem in a completely different offensive category than these other guys because his team won the championship with him as their alpha needs to step back and ask "But how elite was that team offense compared to the other guys' team offenses?" The question of who the overall basketball player was is one thing, but that doesn't means we should assume he was better in every facet of the game.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#48 » by Joey Wheeler » Wed Jun 24, 2020 1:21 am

70sFan wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:Some players can do it all for a team's offense, be the lead ball handler, playmaker and scorer. That's what we refer to as a carry-job. Lebron James for instance is a guy capable of doing everything for a team's offense.

No player is capable of doimg everything on offense. LeBron doesn't spread the floor, he doesn't set screens, he doesn't roll and finish lobs.

If you need other players to take key roles in the offense, you're not carrying anything by yourself.

If that's your definition then nobody ever carried anything. LeBron needs shooters, without it his drive and kick game isn't as effective. He can't score one on five.

Let's look at what Kareem was up to when he didn't have an elite all-time guard next to him and his supposed offense-carrying ability was truly required:

Before breaking down your choices, it's funny how you never mentioned Kareem's rookie season when Bucks won 56 games, had +3.1 rORtg and lost in ECF to future champions. What all-time guard did he have then?

You also didn't mention his 1974 season, because he had Oscar in his last year that lost ability to score, was dealing with injuries all season long, missed 12 games and got shut down in playoffs. Yet Bucks still won 59 games and had +3.4 rORtg.

How about 1972? Oscar missed significant time in RS and Bucks were at 62 wins pace without him while Kareem averaged ridiculous numbers.

1975 - missed the playoffs with a 38-44 record

I've already told you that Bucks were at ridiculous 14 wins pace without him. Kareem missed playoffs because he missed games, nothing else.

1976 - missed the playoffs with a 40-42 record

Only because of playoffs format that existed back then. Besides, Lakers offense was above league average, let's not act like they struggled on that end.
1977 - swept in the CF, 53-29 record

He had excellent record with weak supporting cast and then he lost his starting PG in playoffs. Lakera guarda were beyond terrible in that series. It's not his fault that he lost to champions with injured team.
1978 - barely make the playoffs, out in the 1st round, 45-37 record

Barely made playoffs because Kareem missed significant time. With Kareem they were at 53 wins pace.
They had +2.5 rORtg against Seattle, it's not like their offense got shut down.
1979 - backdoor swept in the second round, 47-35 record

Again, they didn't lost because of offense.

These teams had some talent btw, Dantley was on them in 1978 and 1979 for instance.

Only 1978 and 1979 (1975-77 were garbage). Besides, these teams were good offensively. I don't see your point.

If you remove Kareem from that team and add a prime James Harden or Westbrook instead, that team is going to be average ~50 wins for that span just due to their ability to actually carry an offense.

Based on what? Westbrook didn't reach 50 wins even once in 2017-19 period and he played with better teams than Kareem in 1975 and 1976. Harden never played with as bad as these teams. Don't be ridiculous...

If you add a Lebron James or Larry Bird instead, you'll be competitive in the playoffs and contend.

That's funny - let's look at it:

2005 Cavs: 42 wins, missed playoffs
2007 Cavs: -1.0 rORtg in RS, sweep in the finals
2008 Cavs: -1.5 rORtg in RS, loss in ECF
2010 Cavs: loss in second round

Why didn't James contend in these years? Did he magically lost his ability to carry the offense? You blame Kareem's inability to carry the offense for lossess but Jabbar never played in below average offense in his career.


The three main roles on offense are ball handling, playmaking and scoring, Lebron can do all 3 at an elite level. Setting screens and spacing the floors are things that can be and are done by players who don't have star level primacy.

Why do you keep mentioning relative ORTG? Offense in Kareem's prime was mostly extremely primitive compared to today, ORTG accross the entire league was even sometimes below 100. Simply put, offenses were garbage, mostly because teams insisted on running them through their big men in the post. The fact that Kareem was slightly above a terrible league average doesn't really mean much.

Yes, offense run through Kareem was somewhat effective relative to other offenses in his time, but we now know far more about basketball strategy and know there are more effective ways to attack, which is why ORTG is up by huge margins across the league. If we focus on relative numbers, obviously Kareem will look good compared to Lebron since the league in his time was far less efficient offensively.

VDT wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:
Odinn21 wrote:Are you going to agree that Reggie Miller or Russell Westbrook was a better offensive player than Karl Malone or Hakeem Olajuwon?


Yes, of course. Not only are they better offensively, they are so by a bigger margin than suggested by this stat.



That's a joke post.

Hakeem carried his team to two titles, Westbrook has done nothing and is seen more as a problem than a solution.

For the people complaining that the OP cares only about the difference and not the magnitude, i think he is correct.

Correct me if i am wrong, but the BPM stat takes into account the overall team performance and the position, meaning that he weighs the box score stats differently for different positions https://www.basketball-reference.com/about/bpm2.html . As such comparing the same player in the postseason and the regular season or comparing the same player in different years, assuming that the team and his role havent changed much, is the way the stat is supposed to be used. When you start comparing across different teams and roles or even different eras you are not using the stat correctly imo.


So what? Westbrook is still far superior offensively anyway. Hakeem just wasn't anything special offensively; not really a playmaker, somewhat efficient high volume scorer. He didn't carry the Rockets offense to any extent, although he was of course their leading scorer. Even in the paint alone Westbrook is the better offensive player with his ability to break down the defense with his drives and generate looks for his teammates with his passing ability.

Hakeem's greatness is based on his defense, which was historic for sure. Offensively he's not special at all and certainly not comparable to Westbrook or Miller.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#49 » by 70sFan » Wed Jun 24, 2020 7:46 am

Joey Wheeler wrote:The three main roles on offense are ball handling, playmaking and scoring, Lebron can do all 3 at an elite level. Setting screens and spacing the floors are things that can be and are done by players who don't have star level primacy.

Why do you keep mentioning relative ORTG? Offense in Kareem's prime was mostly extremely primitive compared to today, ORTG accross the entire league was even sometimes below 100. Simply put, offenses were garbage, mostly because teams insisted on running them through their big men in the post. The fact that Kareem was slightly above a terrible league average doesn't really mean much.

Yes, offense run through Kareem was somewhat effective relative to other offenses in his time, but we now know far more about basketball strategy and know there are more effective ways to attack, which is why ORTG is up by huge margins across the league. If we focus on relative numbers, obviously Kareem will look good compared to Lebron since the league in his time was far less efficient offensively.


So when you are proven wring you just decided that whole era sucked? I'm sure that all these advanced and amazing offense wouldn't do well under 1970s rules. Lack of three point line alone would reduce ORTG numbers by a large margin.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#50 » by VDT » Wed Jun 24, 2020 3:17 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
Right but, for example, that team you mention, the '93-94 Rockets, ranked 15th out of 27 in ORtg but 2nd out of 27 in DRtg. It certainly isn't the case that prime Westbrook wasn't capable of leading his team to an above average offense.

I'll add that while I'm certainly not looking to put a ceiling on Hakeem's team offense and I'm not a big fan of Westbrook, Reggie Miller was also part of the conversation. And Miller was a guy who in back-to-back years had the single highest on-court ORtg of any big minute player in the league while playing a style that was exceptionally scalable to working with other great players and making the offense even better.

All this is to say that anyone who simply has Hakeem in a completely different offensive category than these other guys because his team won the championship with him as their alpha needs to step back and ask "But how elite was that team offense compared to the other guys' team offenses?" The question of who the overall basketball player was is one thing, but that doesn't means we should assume he was better in every facet of the game.


There are two different things here.

One is what this guy said, namely that Westbrook is a much better offensive player which i think is beyond defense.

The other is more general and concerns the assessment of the offensive prowess of different players.

People try to compare team Ortg for example as you did, and imo this is a risky business even when done for the same year as you did (cross era comparison is even more risky).

How are you going to account for playstyle differences among teams? A team that plays a more run and gun style will tend to have a higher off rating (since the defense is not settled) and will also for the same reason get scored more. A team that plays half court basketball will score less and get scored less (in general). Is this a matter of being a bad offensive team and good defensive team or is it (at least partly) style related differences. In other words are men running 400m faster sprinters than those running 400m hurdles because they run the distance in less time or is style related?

Take Hakeem for example. In the playoffs in his career (not just in his prime) he scored 25.9ppg on 56.9%TS. That's elite for being basically a half court scorer. Can he lead an offense as good as someone like Nash? No. But what his team can do is force a more half court slow brand of basketball in which setting his team can score more than Nash's (i am using the names just to give an example, this is a more general issue, beyond Hakeem or Nash). Of course this will look like a bad offense good defense kind of games but is it really that, or is just a different style of basketball in which Hakeem is a better offensive player. In other words Hakeem might be better in a different style of basketball. Does it produce as good offenses in terms of points per possession? No (just like the 400m hurdles runners are slower). Can he win with that style? Yes if his team can force the other team to play in that way.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#51 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Jun 24, 2020 4:23 pm

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Right but, for example, that team you mention, the '93-94 Rockets, ranked 15th out of 27 in ORtg but 2nd out of 27 in DRtg. It certainly isn't the case that prime Westbrook wasn't capable of leading his team to an above average offense.

I'll add that while I'm certainly not looking to put a ceiling on Hakeem's team offense and I'm not a big fan of Westbrook, Reggie Miller was also part of the conversation. And Miller was a guy who in back-to-back years had the single highest on-court ORtg of any big minute player in the league while playing a style that was exceptionally scalable to working with other great players and making the offense even better.

All this is to say that anyone who simply has Hakeem in a completely different offensive category than these other guys because his team won the championship with him as their alpha needs to step back and ask "But how elite was that team offense compared to the other guys' team offenses?" The question of who the overall basketball player was is one thing, but that doesn't means we should assume he was better in every facet of the game.


There are two different things here.

One is what this guy said, namely that Westbrook is a much better offensive player which i think is beyond defense.

The other is more general and concerns the assessment of the offensive prowess of different players.

People try to compare team Ortg for example as you did, and imo this is a risky business even when done for the same year as you did (cross era comparison is even more risky).

How are you going to account for playstyle differences among teams? A team that plays a more run and gun style will tend to have a higher off rating (since the defense is not settled) and will also for the same reason get scored more. A team that plays half court basketball will score less and get scored less (in general). Is this a matter of being a bad offensive team and good defensive team or is it (at least partly) style related differences. In other words are men running 400m faster sprinters than those running 400m hurdles because they run the distance in less time or is style related?

Take Hakeem for example. In the playoffs in his career (not just in his prime) he scored 25.9ppg on 56.9%TS. That's elite for being basically a half court scorer. Can he lead an offense as good as someone like Nash? No. But what his team can do is force a more half court slow brand of basketball in which setting his team can score more than Nash's (i am using the names just to give an example, this is a more general issue, beyond Hakeem or Nash). Of course this will look like a bad offense good defense kind of games but is it really that, or is just a different style of basketball in which Hakeem is a better offensive player. In other words Hakeem might be better in a different style of basketball. Does it produce as good offenses in terms of points per possession? No (just like the 400m hurdles runners are slower). Can he win with that style? Yes if his team can force the other team to play in that way.


To me you're looking to assert a notion of "slow it down, half court grind" being the better way to win in the playoffs, which was very much the classical thought on the subject.

But Hakeem won in a proto-pace & space offense that specifically looked to play faster than their playoff competition. From a perspective of ranking Hakeem's offense, that has everything to do with why I rank him so much higher than someone like Patrick Ewing who was much more of a dinosaur who would have been more impactful with a lesser offensive role. But in terms of "half court grind" supremacy, Hakeem's titles ain't that.

What is certainly the case is that Hakeem in that role is specifically winning with an effective half court offense rather than transition, and that's something you can bring up in a debate with Westbrook or, say, Jason Kidd. It has absolutely no teeth against Reggie Miller or Steve Nash though.

In general I disagree with the idea of "but they can win with that offense" type thinking. The Spurs won titles with offenses built around Tim Duncan...but their best offenses came after they were forced to turn away from this as Duncan aged. No one expected the offense would get better with old man Duncan playing a smaller role, but it did, and it would have a hell of a lot earlier if Pop had just known to run the offense that way. (To be clear, I'm not saying this about 2003, but by 2005, absolutely.)

All this to say, the fact you had success doing A, B, C, D, and E, doesn't mean that all of those aspects of your strategy were optimal. Getting by with an inferior technique is not the same as having a competitive advantage based on it, and it's important not to conflate the two scenarios precisely because people have always tended to conflate the scenarios.

Again, none of this is really meant to knock Hakeem. In Hakeem you have a world class defensive player who proved that he could thrive in a more modern offensive scheme. I just object to the notion that there was something about that offensive scheme that was fundamentally in opposition to the schemes of Nash's Suns. They were literally pulling in the same direction, which has everything to do with why Hakeem won titles and his rivals did not. And hence the fact that Nash's teams had a better offense largely just is what it is.

Also, to be clear, I do understand that Nash's team can be said to have sacrificed defense for offense specifically with Amar'e at the 5. But pace & space is certainly not dependent on having a 5 who isn't great on defense and also can't shoot 3's. Amar'e was better than most at his position, but he wasn't actually ideal, which is why in more modern offenses you don't actually see 5's that look like Amar'e.

Optimal offense comes generally from having a floor general who cam make the right decisions rapidly all over the court, or a team that is super-in-sync with each other and can improvise together. Hakeem's Rockets, with Hakeem in the role he had, isn't quite that. Surrounding him with 3-pointers to give him space is a great idea, but it doesn't change the fact he's not as devastatingly efficient as other half-court scoring threats, he's not able to run the transition game like others, etc.

In general, if you want the best offense, you build around someone who can keep his dribble anywhere on the court. Hakeem isn't quite that, and this is why it's not really a serious conversation whether Hakeem could be the best player in the game today - he could not. But you could build a great overall team around him no doubt, and frankly it would be wise to consider building the defense around him while considering different approaches to offense depending on the talent on your roster. Imagine Hakeem in a more Amar'e-type role for example.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#52 » by Joey Wheeler » Wed Jun 24, 2020 5:30 pm

70sFan wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:The three main roles on offense are ball handling, playmaking and scoring, Lebron can do all 3 at an elite level. Setting screens and spacing the floors are things that can be and are done by players who don't have star level primacy.

Why do you keep mentioning relative ORTG? Offense in Kareem's prime was mostly extremely primitive compared to today, ORTG accross the entire league was even sometimes below 100. Simply put, offenses were garbage, mostly because teams insisted on running them through their big men in the post. The fact that Kareem was slightly above a terrible league average doesn't really mean much.

Yes, offense run through Kareem was somewhat effective relative to other offenses in his time, but we now know far more about basketball strategy and know there are more effective ways to attack, which is why ORTG is up by huge margins across the league. If we focus on relative numbers, obviously Kareem will look good compared to Lebron since the league in his time was far less efficient offensively.


So when you are proven wring you just decided that whole era sucked? I'm sure that all these advanced and amazing offense wouldn't do well under 1970s rules. Lack of three point line alone would reduce ORTG numbers by a large margin.


You didn't prove anything substantial; you proved that if we hold Kareem to a much lower standard than modern players, he looks good on offense.

"The whole era sucked" is too much of a blanket statement. However, the league was still young, so naturally strategies and schemes have evolved, as well as the understanding of what constitutes good offense. Basing your offense around Kareem in the post was somewhat effective back when other teams were behind the curve as well, but we now know it's far from optimal offense and it can't generate the offensive efficiency needed to contend. We also know that Kareem's inability to be a primary ballhandler or playmaker for a team means he can't have offensive primacy for a modern contending team.

I'll gladly admit I'm wrong if/when we see another championship level team with elite offense build their offense around a post scoring big man, but I wouldn't hold my breath on that. For that strategy to have any chance of being effective in the current meta, we'd need a Kareem/Shaq level low post scorer who can actually make their free throws at a high rate.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#53 » by 70sFan » Wed Jun 24, 2020 5:42 pm

Joey Wheeler wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:The three main roles on offense are ball handling, playmaking and scoring, Lebron can do all 3 at an elite level. Setting screens and spacing the floors are things that can be and are done by players who don't have star level primacy.

Why do you keep mentioning relative ORTG? Offense in Kareem's prime was mostly extremely primitive compared to today, ORTG accross the entire league was even sometimes below 100. Simply put, offenses were garbage, mostly because teams insisted on running them through their big men in the post. The fact that Kareem was slightly above a terrible league average doesn't really mean much.

Yes, offense run through Kareem was somewhat effective relative to other offenses in his time, but we now know far more about basketball strategy and know there are more effective ways to attack, which is why ORTG is up by huge margins across the league. If we focus on relative numbers, obviously Kareem will look good compared to Lebron since the league in his time was far less efficient offensively.


So when you are proven wring you just decided that whole era sucked? I'm sure that all these advanced and amazing offense wouldn't do well under 1970s rules. Lack of three point line alone would reduce ORTG numbers by a large margin.


You didn't prove anything substantial; you proved that if we hold Kareem to a much lower standard than modern players, he looks good on offense.

"The whole era sucked" is too much of a blanket statement. However, the league was still young, so naturally strategies and schemes have evolved, as well as the understanding of what constitutes good offense. Basing your offense around Kareem in the post was somewhat effective back when other teams were behind the curve as well, but we now know it's far from optimal offense and it can't generate the offensive efficiency needed to contend. We also know that Kareem's inability to be a primary ballhandler or playmaker for a team means he can't have offensive primacy for a modern contending team.

I'll gladly admit I'm wrong if/when we see another championship level team with elite offense build their offense around a post scoring big man, but I wouldn't hold my breath on that. For that strategy to have any chance of being effective in the current meta, we'd need a Kareem/Shaq level low post scorer who can actually make their free throws at a high rate.


You know that in 1980 Kareem led better offense than 6 of James teams (and comparable to two others), despite not using three point line at all? You know that in 1979 he led better offense than three of James teams without three point line at all?

I mean, 1980 Lakers and 2016 Cavs were almost identical in terms of raw ORtg. How are you going to explain that? Are you going to tell me that rookie Magic run this offense? If so, then I'll have to doubt if you've seen any of 1979/80 Lakers games.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#54 » by Odinn21 » Wed Jun 24, 2020 6:14 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:In general I disagree with the idea of "but they can win with that offense" type thinking. The Spurs won titles with offenses built around Tim Duncan...but their best offenses came after they were forced to turn away from this as Duncan aged. No one expected the offense would get better with old man Duncan playing a smaller role, but it did, and it would have a hell of a lot earlier if Pop had just known to run the offense that way. (To be clear, I'm not saying this about 2003, but by 2005, absolutely.)

Come on man, we've been over this. :D

The Spurs
in 2004-05 season; 6th in ORtg with +3.0 rORtg, until Timmy's injury ( https://on.nba.com/2VaV0fm )
in 2005-06 season; 10th in ORtg with +1.3 rORtg, Timmy played the entire season with jogger's heel, it was his worst season to date
in 2006-07 season; 5th in ORtg with +3.3 rORtg, no issues

This shouldn't be your go-to example for this issue. They weren't historically good offenses. But they were elite offenses compared to the league average.

For comparison
The Spurs
in 2010-11 season; 3rd in ORtg with +4.2 rORtg
in 2011-12 season; 1st in ORtg with +8.5 rORtg
in 2012-13 season; 7th in ORtg with +2.2 rORtg
in 2013-14 season; 5th in ORtg with +3.6 rORtg
in 2014-15 season; 7th in ORtg with +2.9 rORtg
in 2015-16 season; 4th in ORtg with +3.7 rORtg
in 2016-17 season; 9th in ORtg with +2.1 rORtg

2011-12 season is a clear outlier. And the rest aren't particularly better than the offense around Timmy in the mid '00s.
The issue with per75 numbers;
36pts on 27 fga/9 fta in 36 mins, does this mean he'd keep up the efficiency to get 48pts on 36fga/12fta in 48 mins?
The answer; NO. He's human, not a linearly working machine.
Per75 is efficiency rate, not actual production.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#55 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Jun 24, 2020 6:46 pm

Odinn21 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:In general I disagree with the idea of "but they can win with that offense" type thinking. The Spurs won titles with offenses built around Tim Duncan...but their best offenses came after they were forced to turn away from this as Duncan aged. No one expected the offense would get better with old man Duncan playing a smaller role, but it did, and it would have a hell of a lot earlier if Pop had just known to run the offense that way. (To be clear, I'm not saying this about 2003, but by 2005, absolutely.)

Come on man, we've been over this. :D

The Spurs
in 2004-05 season; 6th in ORtg with +3.0 rORtg, until Timmy's injury ( https://on.nba.com/2VaV0fm )
in 2005-06 season; 10th in ORtg with +1.3 rORtg, Timmy played the entire season with jogger's heel, it was his worst season to date
in 2006-07 season; 5th in ORtg with +3.3 rORtg, no issues

This shouldn't be your go-to example for this issue. They weren't historically good offenses. But they were elite offenses compared to the league average.

For comparison
The Spurs
in 2010-11 season; 3rd in ORtg with +4.2 rORtg
in 2011-12 season; 1st in ORtg with +8.5 rORtg
in 2012-13 season; 7th in ORtg with +2.2 rORtg
in 2013-14 season; 5th in ORtg with +3.6 rORtg
in 2014-15 season; 7th in ORtg with +2.9 rORtg
in 2015-16 season; 4th in ORtg with +3.7 rORtg
in 2016-17 season; 9th in ORtg with +2.1 rORtg

2011-12 season is a clear outlier. And the rest aren't particularly better than the offense around Timmy in the mid '00s.


Odinn I really have enjoyed our interactions. :beer:

But we just come at this from two different angles that don't quite meet.

To try to sum it up:

Because I believe in looking back at previous eras forearmed with knowledge from the present, I'm looking for evidence of what seems to be expected we will see: Teams mysteriously peaking outside of their expected age prime. I see it with the Spurs.

What you see dismiss as an outlier, I just can't.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#56 » by BenoUdrihFTL » Wed Jun 24, 2020 6:55 pm

Worth noting here that HOU posted a ridiculous 115.2 ORTG in the '95 playoffs when they were fully committed to pace/space

And it was actually Drexler who led this PS offense in both OWS and OBPM, which not only speaks to Drexler's greatness in general but also the portability aspect of both Drexler and Hakeem in essentially adjusting on the fly to unlock a pretty amazing offensive synergy

It seems like I'm making the case that Hakeem didn't "lead" that offense, but he really did in the sense that he was still the volume-scoring anchor to the tune of: 33 ppg (41 per 100) on 56% TS (RS league avg 54%) and 36% USG. His quick-hitting interior primacy and the gravity it produced is the reason it was referred to as inside-out offense rather than outside-in
1.61803398874989484820458683436563811772030917980576286
2135448622705260462818902449707207
204189391137484754088
0753868917521
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#57 » by VDT » Wed Jun 24, 2020 8:41 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
To me you're looking to assert a notion of "slow it down, half court grind" being the better way to win in the playoffs, which was very much the classical thought on the subject.


No, the winner is the team that is the best at the style (at least on average as this can change from game to game and within the game) that the series is played. And a lot of the times it is the team that can force their own play style on their opponents.

Doctor MJ wrote:But Hakeem won in a proto-pace & space offense that specifically looked to play faster than their playoff competition. From a perspective of ranking Hakeem's offense, that has everything to do with why I rank him so much higher than someone like Patrick Ewing who was much more of a dinosaur who would have been more impactful with a lesser offensive role. But in terms of "half court grind" supremacy, Hakeem's titles ain't that.


I think it was more space than pace. Sure any team can try and score transition baskets but the team's go to plan offensively in the title years was to get the ball to Hakeem in the post and take it from there, with either Hakeem trying to score or pass to the open man. I wouldnt call Ewing a dinosaur, he was just a worse player. You couldnt build the offense around him (and Robinson) because he was not as dominant of a scorer and 1v1 threat as Hakeem or Shaq.

Doctor MJ wrote:What is certainly the case is that Hakeem in that role is specifically winning with an effective half court offense rather than transition, and that's something you can bring up in a debate with Westbrook or, say, Jason Kidd. It has absolutely no teeth against Reggie Miller or Steve Nash though.


But why? I never said that the Hakeem lead offense is more efficient in vacuum. I said that it is a different style than the D'Antoni Suns for example.

Doctor MJ wrote:In general I disagree with the idea of "but they can win with that offense" type thinking. The Spurs won titles with offenses built around Tim Duncan...but their best offenses came after they were forced to turn away from this as Duncan aged. No one expected the offense would get better with old man Duncan playing a smaller role, but it did, and it would have a hell of a lot earlier if Pop had just known to run the offense that way. (To be clear, I'm not saying this about 2003, but by 2005, absolutely.)


That's not wrong, but comparing 99 or 03 to 14 you are talking about a league with different rules and different trends. You are making a cross era comparison which is a risky proposition.

Doctor MJ wrote:All this to say, the fact you had success doing A, B, C, D, and E, doesn't mean that all of those aspects of your strategy were optimal. Getting by with an inferior technique is not the same as having a competitive advantage based on it, and it's important not to conflate the two scenarios precisely because people have always tended to conflate the scenarios.


That's true. In principle one would expect that due to the acquired experience the tactics are becoming better with time and inefficiencies are eliminated, At the same time it is hard to know what is optimal when parameters like rules or players constantly change. What was optimal 20 years ago might not be now and what is optimal with a certain roster might not be with another. It is even more complicated because there is always an opponent. So the optimal might be different depending on the opponent. So yes you can win with sub optimal schemes but figuring out what is the optimal is often quite challenging. Certain aspects are obvious in our era (more three point shooting) but others are not. For example the Rockets are very analytically heavy team, would you say their schemes are optimal? Or maybe Warriors' schemes? Or maybe Lebron ball is optimal? How are you going to declare something as the optimal? Sure you can rank them based on something like Off rating but i think this is half the story as you cant separate the game into two non-overlapping areas (offense and defense).

Doctor MJ wrote:Again, none of this is really meant to knock Hakeem. In Hakeem you have a world class defensive player who proved that he could thrive in a more modern offensive scheme. I just object to the notion that there was something about that offensive scheme that was fundamentally in opposition to the schemes of Nash's Suns. They were literally pulling in the same direction, which has everything to do with why Hakeem won titles and his rivals did not. And hence the fact that Nash's teams had a better offense largely just is what it is.


Yes if you mean the 3 point shooting. But otherwise one was a post heavy offense and the other was a D'Antoni offense who hates post play and wanted to get a shot before the defense is set. Trying to answer which one is better in vacuum is often (not always) a bit meaningless in my opinion. You can compare offenses that are similar enough (e.g. a Hakeem vs Shaq led offense or to go back to my example you can compare two 400m runners). Comparing two completely different playstyles (with different strengths and weaknesses) based on only one part of the game (offense or defense) doesnt feel correct and it is not the way teams are operating. Teams are trying to score more points than their opponents, trying to limit the discussion only to how many points they score is only half of the discussion. For example the Rockets have traded Capella and are not playing with a traditional center. Assume that (i havent checked their stats and it is early anyway) their offense becomes better and their defense worse. Does it makes sense to say that their off schemes are better or that Harden is a better offensive player because of increased off efficiency or it makes more sense to view the situation as a set of losses and gains which makes sense viewed as whole? Or, to take it to the extreme (although the Rockets are not far away), assume a team plays without bigs, just wing players + guards. It is likely that their offensive rating will improve at the detriment of their defensive rating. Does it make sense to say that their offense is better than before or even more that the player leading the offense became a better offensive player? To me it doesnt because they are two completely different playstyles with different advantages and disadvantages.

Doctor MJ wrote:Also, to be clear, I do understand that Nash's team can be said to have sacrificed defense for offense specifically with Amar'e at the 5. But pace & space is certainly not dependent on having a 5 who isn't great on defense and also can't shoot 3's. Amar'e was better than most at his position, but he wasn't actually ideal, which is why in more modern offenses you don't actually see 5's that look like Amar'e.


Yes sacrificing, as a team, offense for defense doesnt make the leading player a better offensive player. This is not only true with players though but also with playstyles. A team playing a pace and space style against an equal team with the same style will score more and get scored more than if they were both playing a slow half court style. Does it make sense to say that the same players become worse offensive players in the second case or to say that it is the style that changed. Which style is then better depends on which style gives them the best chance to win not necessarily the one that allows them to score more points.


Doctor MJ wrote:Optimal offense comes generally from having a floor general who cam make the right decisions rapidly all over the court, or a team that is super-in-sync with each other and can improvise together. Hakeem's Rockets, with Hakeem in the role he had, isn't quite that. Surrounding him with 3-pointers to give him space is a great idea, but it doesn't change the fact he's not as devastatingly efficient as other half-court scoring threats, he's not able to run the transition game like others, etc.


I never argued that Hakeem is the best offensive player ever. What i said is that simply comparing Off ratings doesnt tell the whole story in how good of an offensive player someone is. It was a more general point, not simply about Hakeem



Doctor MJ wrote:In general, if you want the best offense, you build around someone who can keep his dribble anywhere on the court. Hakeem isn't quite that, and this is why it's not really a serious conversation whether Hakeem could be the best player in the game today - he could not. But you could build a great overall team around him no doubt, and frankly it would be wise to consider building the defense around him while considering different approaches to offense depending on the talent on your roster. Imagine Hakeem in a more Amar'e-type role for example.


That is an assumption that is quite hard to prove imo.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#58 » by Odinn21 » Wed Jun 24, 2020 9:32 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:Odinn I really have enjoyed our interactions. :beer:

But we just come at this from two different angles that don't quite meet.

To try to sum it up:

Because I believe in looking back at previous eras forearmed with knowledge from the present, I'm looking for evidence of what seems to be expected we will see: Teams mysteriously peaking outside of their expected age prime. I see it with the Spurs.

What you see dismiss as an outlier, I just can't.

Here's entire numbers;

(season; r. season // playoffs)

2004-05; the Spurs 107.1 ORtg with +3.0 rORtg // 109.1 ORtg with +2.7 rORtg
2005-06; the Spurs 106.2 ORtg with +1.3 rORtg // 112.0 ORtg with +5.2 rORtg
2006-07; the Spurs 108.6 ORtg with +3.3 rORtg // 106.5 ORtg with +1.1 rORtg
Average; the Spurs 107.3 ORtg with +2.5 rORtg // 108.9 ORtg with +2.7 rORtg

2010-11; the Spurs 110.5 ORtg with +4.2 rORtg // 101.6 ORtg with -3.3 rORtg
2011-12; the Spurs 110.0 ORtg with +8.5 rORtg // 109.3 ORtg with +6.7 rORtg
2012-13; the Spurs 107.0 ORtg with +2.2 rORtg // 107.6 ORtg with +3.7 rORtg
2013-14; the Spurs 109.5 ORtg with +3.6 rORtg // 113.3 ORtg with +5.7 rORtg
Average; the Spurs 109.2 ORtg with +4.4 rORtg // 109.4 ORtg with +4.4 rORtg

2014-15; the Spurs 107.6 ORtg with +2.9 rORtg // 107.7 ORtg with +3.3 rORtg
2015-16; the Spurs 109.3 ORtg with +3.7 rORtg // 109.8 ORtg with +4.0 rORtg
2016-17; the Spurs 110.3 ORtg with +2.1 rORtg // 112.8 ORtg with +2.1 rORtg
Average; the Spurs 109.2 ORtg with +2.9 rORtg // 110.8 ORtg with +2.9 rORtg

It's probably like that due to it being lockout season but 2011-12 season is definitely an outlier.

2009-10 season; the L average 106.6 ORtg in r. season and 107.4 ORtg in playoffs
2010-11 season; the L average 106.3 ORtg in r. season and 104.9 ORtg in playoffs
2011-12 season; the L average 101.5 ORtg in r. season and 102.6 ORtg in playoffs
2012-13 season; the L average 104.8 ORtg in r. season and 103.9 ORtg in playoffs
2013-14 season; the L average 105.9 ORtg in r. season and 107.6 ORtg in playoffs

2011-12 season is definitely an outlier. Not because the Spurs performed that good, it's because the league had an ORtg that wasn't consistent with before or after.
In 2011-12 season, rORtg of the Spurs almost doubled despite having a slightly less ORtg than the previous season.

I'm not even saying the Spurs didn't improve on offense. They did. But not to the extent that would support your opinion. That's my point.
The issue with per75 numbers;
36pts on 27 fga/9 fta in 36 mins, does this mean he'd keep up the efficiency to get 48pts on 36fga/12fta in 48 mins?
The answer; NO. He's human, not a linearly working machine.
Per75 is efficiency rate, not actual production.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#59 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Jun 24, 2020 10:02 pm

Odinn21 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:Odinn I really have enjoyed our interactions. :beer:

But we just come at this from two different angles that don't quite meet.

To try to sum it up:

Because I believe in looking back at previous eras forearmed with knowledge from the present, I'm looking for evidence of what seems to be expected we will see: Teams mysteriously peaking outside of their expected age prime. I see it with the Spurs.

What you see dismiss as an outlier, I just can't.

Here's entire numbers;

(season; r. season // playoffs)

2004-05; the Spurs 107.1 ORtg with +3.0 rORtg // 109.1 ORtg with +2.7 rORtg
2005-06; the Spurs 106.2 ORtg with +1.3 rORtg // 112.0 ORtg with +5.2 rORtg
2006-07; the Spurs 108.6 ORtg with +3.3 rORtg // 106.5 ORtg with +1.1 rORtg
Average; the Spurs 107.3 ORtg with +2.5 rORtg // 108.9 ORtg with +2.7 rORtg

2010-11; the Spurs 110.5 ORtg with +4.2 rORtg // 101.6 ORtg with -3.3 rORtg
2011-12; the Spurs 110.0 ORtg with +8.5 rORtg // 109.3 ORtg with +6.7 rORtg
2012-13; the Spurs 107.0 ORtg with +2.2 rORtg // 107.6 ORtg with +3.7 rORtg
2013-14; the Spurs 109.5 ORtg with +3.6 rORtg // 113.3 ORtg with +5.7 rORtg
Average; the Spurs 109.2 ORtg with +4.4 rORtg // 109.4 ORtg with +4.4 rORtg

2014-15; the Spurs 107.6 ORtg with +2.9 rORtg // 107.7 ORtg with +3.3 rORtg
2015-16; the Spurs 109.3 ORtg with +3.7 rORtg // 109.8 ORtg with +4.0 rORtg
2016-17; the Spurs 110.3 ORtg with +2.1 rORtg // 112.8 ORtg with +2.1 rORtg
Average; the Spurs 109.2 ORtg with +2.9 rORtg // 110.8 ORtg with +2.9 rORtg

It's probably like that due to it being lockout season but 2011-12 season is definitely an outlier.

2009-10 season; the L average 106.6 ORtg in r. season and 107.4 ORtg in playoffs
2010-11 season; the L average 106.3 ORtg in r. season and 104.9 ORtg in playoffs
2011-12 season; the L average 101.5 ORtg in r. season and 102.6 ORtg in playoffs
2012-13 season; the L average 104.8 ORtg in r. season and 103.9 ORtg in playoffs
2013-14 season; the L average 105.9 ORtg in r. season and 107.6 ORtg in playoffs

2011-12 season is definitely an outlier. Not because the Spurs performed that good, it's because the league had an ORtg that wasn't consistent with before or after.
In 2011-12 season, rORtg of the Spurs almost doubled despite having a slightly less ORtg than the previous season.

I'm not even saying the Spurs didn't improve on offense. They did. But not to the extent that would support your opinion. That's my point.


1. The Spurs best relative offensive regular season came in the later era.
2. The Spurs best relative offensive playoffs came in the later era ('13-14).
3. The fact that other teams were getting better at playing offense in the later era, which damps the relative edge, is based on other adopting some of the same paradigms the Spurs were adopting, and thus should not be used simply to tear down the later era accomplishment. I'm not simply comparing teams to the contemporaries, I'm comparing them to what else was possible. And more was possible back then.
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Re: OBPM changes of the superstars in playoffs 

Post#60 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Jun 24, 2020 10:54 pm

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
To me you're looking to assert a notion of "slow it down, half court grind" being the better way to win in the playoffs, which was very much the classical thought on the subject.


No, the winner is the team that is the best at the style (at least on average as this can change from game to game and within the game) that the series is played. And a lot of the times it is the team that can force their own play style on their opponents.


Okay, fair enough.

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:But Hakeem won in a proto-pace & space offense that specifically looked to play faster than their playoff competition. From a perspective of ranking Hakeem's offense, that has everything to do with why I rank him so much higher than someone like Patrick Ewing who was much more of a dinosaur who would have been more impactful with a lesser offensive role. But in terms of "half court grind" supremacy, Hakeem's titles ain't that.


I think it was more space than pace. Sure any team can try and score transition baskets but the team's go to plan offensively in the title years was to get the ball to Hakeem in the post and take it from there, with either Hakeem trying to score or pass to the open man. I wouldnt call Ewing a dinosaur, he was just a worse player. You couldnt build the offense around him (and Robinson) because he was not as dominant of a scorer and 1v1 threat as Hakeem or Shaq.


There's truth in this, but specifically with the arrival of Drexler and into those '95 playoffs is when you see 1) more pace, 2) more space, and 3) actual elite playoff offense.

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:What is certainly the case is that Hakeem in that role is specifically winning with an effective half court offense rather than transition, and that's something you can bring up in a debate with Westbrook or, say, Jason Kidd. It has absolutely no teeth against Reggie Miller or Steve Nash though.


But why? I never said that the Hakeem lead offense is more efficient in vacuum. I said that it is a different style than the D'Antoni Suns for example.


I don't understand what you're asking. I get that you see ORtg as something that's less about pure quality and more about strategic choice, but you can't talk about Hakeem's team's half court superiority in comparisons with guys leading teams that were great in the half court. I mean, you can go into granular detail and try to say X > Y, but you can't talk categorically about these other guys being a problem in the half court when some of them didn't have half court problems.

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:In general I disagree with the idea of "but they can win with that offense" type thinking. The Spurs won titles with offenses built around Tim Duncan...but their best offenses came after they were forced to turn away from this as Duncan aged. No one expected the offense would get better with old man Duncan playing a smaller role, but it did, and it would have a hell of a lot earlier if Pop had just known to run the offense that way. (To be clear, I'm not saying this about 2003, but by 2005, absolutely.)


That's not wrong, but comparing 99 or 03 to 14 you are talking about a league with different rules and different trends. You are making a cross era comparison which is a risky proposition.


3s > 2s. Everyone before was just plain wrong not to use them. Period. If that's 'dangerous' of me to say, so be it.

I'm not going to call Pop a bad coach because he, like everyone else, didn't properly grasp the implications of this until recently, but I'm not going to pretend that 3's were actually a bad idea in Duncan's prime.

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:All this to say, the fact you had success doing A, B, C, D, and E, doesn't mean that all of those aspects of your strategy were optimal. Getting by with an inferior technique is not the same as having a competitive advantage based on it, and it's important not to conflate the two scenarios precisely because people have always tended to conflate the scenarios.


That's true. In principle one would expect that due to the acquired experience the tactics are becoming better with time and inefficiencies are eliminated, At the same time it is hard to know what is optimal when parameters like rules or players constantly change. What was optimal 20 years ago might not be now and what is optimal with a certain roster might not be with another. It is even more complicated because there is always an opponent. So the optimal might be different depending on the opponent. So yes you can win with sub optimal schemes but figuring out what is the optimal is often quite challenging. Certain aspects are obvious in our era (more three point shooting) but others are not. For example the Rockets are very analytically heavy team, would you say their schemes are optimal? Or maybe Warriors' schemes? Or maybe Lebron ball is optimal? How are you going to declare something as the optimal? Sure you can rank them based on something like Off rating but i think this is half the story as you cant separate the game into two non-overlapping areas (offense and defense).


I think this is a lot less complicated than you make it out to be. The realization that humans could hit 3's well enough they went from gimmick to gospel is the single biggest change in the history of the game since they made a rule about goaltending. We're not talking about 25 different minor coaching scheme variations, we're talking about one really big thing, and quite literally every coach from the '80s until the present needs to have his team's re-examined to analyze how much better they could have been had they been thinking properly.

Now as I say that: I don't actually think any of these guys were idiots. There's a really clear reason why there was so much delay in understanding the value of the 3, and it's unreasonable to have expected them to adopt it without this understanding. That it literally took decades to try stuff out is damning of the profession as a whole and speaks to groupthink and fear of trying anything too "out there", but it wasn't any kind of a given that the 3 would be able to be hit with this success rate early on.

I can forgive the coaches without pretending they were thinking optimally.

As far as "How do we know what's optimal?" now. While the 3>2 revolution is a one time thing that I think it unlikely to ever be followed with as big of a shift in the future, we're always finding a new optimal. And when we do, we go back and analyze what came before. I don't know why it would be any other way.

I feel like there's this urge to protect players who "were doing the thing they were told was right" at the time, and I think it's important to make clear where that makes sense and where it doesn't. It makes sense when defending the player's IQ (and related things), where a guy was literally doing what was thought to be the odds-on best play. It doesn't make sense when evaluating a guy's actual impact.

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:Again, none of this is really meant to knock Hakeem. In Hakeem you have a world class defensive player who proved that he could thrive in a more modern offensive scheme. I just object to the notion that there was something about that offensive scheme that was fundamentally in opposition to the schemes of Nash's Suns. They were literally pulling in the same direction, which has everything to do with why Hakeem won titles and his rivals did not. And hence the fact that Nash's teams had a better offense largely just is what it is.


Yes if you mean the 3 point shooting. But otherwise one was a post heavy offense and the other was a D'Antoni offense who hates post play and wanted to get a shot before the defense is set. Trying to answer which one is better in vacuum is often (not always) a bit meaningless in my opinion. You can compare offenses that are similar enough (e.g. a Hakeem vs Shaq led offense or to go back to my example you can compare two 400m runners). Comparing two completely different playstyles (with different strengths and weaknesses) based on only one part of the game (offense or defense) doesnt feel correct and it is not the way teams are operating. Teams are trying to score more points than their opponents, trying to limit the discussion only to how many points they score is only half of the discussion. For example the Rockets have traded Capella and are not playing with a traditional center. Assume that (i havent checked their stats and it is early anyway) their offense becomes better and their defense worse. Does it makes sense to say that their off schemes are better or that Harden is a better offensive player because of increased off efficiency or it makes more sense to view the situation as a set of losses and gains which makes sense viewed as whole? Or, to take it to the extreme (although the Rockets are not far away), assume a team plays without bigs, just wing players + guards. It is likely that their offensive rating will improve at the detriment of their defensive rating. Does it make sense to say that their offense is better than before or even more that the player leading the offense became a better offensive player? To me it doesnt because they are two completely different playstyles with different advantages and disadvantages.


I would object to the idea that D'Antoni is fundamentally opposed to post offense. To me the common thread in D'Antoni's schemes is hyper customization around his stars forcing other players into assembly line pieces. He tends to let one or two guys be the real brains of the operation (rather than himself) during a game, and everyone else is just supposed to be running their routes. He's known for playing fast, but the team was specifically slow with the Harden/Paul duo. I think frankly D'Antoni would love a guy like Hakeem.

Where D'Antoni is going to tend to favor perimeter guys is the same reason all sane offensive strategy should: You can begin the possession with the ball in the hands of the guy who needs the ball in his hands. Hakeem would be better than most bigs because he very agile and can operate in areas beyond simply the shadow of the rim.

Re: tilting scheme toward offense doesn't change the players, just their offensive effectiveness. Absolutely true, and I'm not fundamentally opposed to someone making the case that a team could have a more impressive offense performance with a lesser ORtg when you consider how much of the team's resources are marshaled on behalf of the defense. But as I say, there are specific issues to associate with big man based offenses. These issues don't make it a given that basing your offense around your big will be a mistake, but they do mean that we shouldn't be assuming that X's big man volume scoring would have led to a 120 ORtg if only his teammates were better on offense.

When you decide to initiate your offense from the interior you're always adding an unnecessary weak link in your offense because the opponent can disrupt your attempt to get the ball to your initiator.

When you decide to focus your offense on someone who can't shoot 3's and can't shoot free throws all that well, you're adding in more things that lower your ceiling.

When your lead scorer had a mediocre efficiency compared to what we know is possible, that's lowering your ceiling further.

There are reasons why it makes sense that trends have gone as they have, and applying reasoning based on these trends back to evaluate guys from the past just makes too much sense not to do. If burgers some sacred cows along the way, well, that's food for thought.

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:Also, to be clear, I do understand that Nash's team can be said to have sacrificed defense for offense specifically with Amar'e at the 5. But pace & space is certainly not dependent on having a 5 who isn't great on defense and also can't shoot 3's. Amar'e was better than most at his position, but he wasn't actually ideal, which is why in more modern offenses you don't actually see 5's that look like Amar'e.


Yes sacrificing, as a team, offense for defense doesnt make the leading player a better offensive player. This is not only true with players though but also with playstyles. A team playing a pace and space style against an equal team with the same style will score more and get scored more than if they were both playing a slow half court style. Does it make sense to say that the same players become worse offensive players in the second case or to say that it is the style that changed. Which style is then better depends on which style gives them the best chance to win not necessarily the one that allows them to score more points.


Pace and space doesn't mean "don't play defense". Part of what it tends to means is getting back on defense rather than crashing the boards. The "space" means prioritizing players who can shoot from range rather than crash said board, and that represents a choice of specific skillsets within offense rather than a choice between offense over defense.

And big picture, this is the thing:

What is definitively the case is that role players have more scoring value now than they did before because they are primed to take and make 3's. More scoring value compared to who? Compared to stars. Stars have to be all the more efficient today to be worth the volume when they have good shooters around them, and if they can't, then you don't build your offense around them.

Again, while this doesn't mean "Never build your offense around a Big", the strategic shift is clear, as are the reasons why big men in general aren't scaling as well in the new strategy. I feel like you're saying essentially "Well how do you know that Big Man X couldn't have done as well?" while I'm looking around at a landscape wherein big men have lost their lead scorer's job almost everywhere. Seems like proof in the pudding to me.

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:Optimal offense comes generally from having a floor general who cam make the right decisions rapidly all over the court, or a team that is super-in-sync with each other and can improvise together. Hakeem's Rockets, with Hakeem in the role he had, isn't quite that. Surrounding him with 3-pointers to give him space is a great idea, but it doesn't change the fact he's not as devastatingly efficient as other half-court scoring threats, he's not able to run the transition game like others, etc.


I never argued that Hakeem is the best offensive player ever. What i said is that simply comparing Off ratings doesnt tell the whole story in how good of an offensive player someone is. It was a more general point, not simply about Hakeem


I don't disagree with that. There's always more to the story.

VDT wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:In general, if you want the best offense, you build around someone who can keep his dribble anywhere on the court. Hakeem isn't quite that, and this is why it's not really a serious conversation whether Hakeem could be the best player in the game today - he could not. But you could build a great overall team around him no doubt, and frankly it would be wise to consider building the defense around him while considering different approaches to offense depending on the talent on your roster. Imagine Hakeem in a more Amar'e-type role for example.


That is an assumption that is quite hard to prove imo.


I think you ought to speak on what you think it says that we've seen a drastic shift away from offenses built around big men at the same time as we've seen an offensive revolution based around perimeter-based sckills. To me the causality seems pretty clear cut, but you clearly see things differently.
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