Taj FTW wrote:VanWest82 wrote:I could just as easily say Bulls went from a +7 SRS team to -8 SRS after Jordan left. It'd be totally misleading and devoid of all the important context, but that's basically what you're doing when you say they lost 42 fewer because of Lebron. It's BS.
Some of what you wrote here is flat out false. Since it has been explained a million times, can we stick to the facts?
1. If they built the team SPECIFICALLY for LeBron, and they won't 42 less without him, doesn't that mean he was worth 42 wins for THAT team?
2. Lol who? Delonte West, 37 year old Shaq and 34 year old Big Z? They lost nobody of consequence aside from LeBron.
3. They were 8-40 from October to January, and 11-23 from February to April, so this one really makes no sense. They won more games in the 2nd half of the season.
4. Sure, so what your saying is LeBron CARRIED THEM and without him, they were more like a 19-63 team?
5. Again, they were 8-33 in the first half of the season, and 11-30 in the 2nd half. They were BETTER when they were "tanking" apparently?
Yeah, the tanking bit's a stretch. When teams tank, they do so by weakening the roster or putting weaker lineups. Role players don't tank, role players are playing for their careers. The cavs, after their owner insisted they would do just fine without Lebron, played those same teammates, and those teammates simply weren't that good without Lebron as an amplifier. As for this contrived analogy:
VanWest82 wrote:Imagine you build a car with parts you source from different places and it works great. You drive around all summer and then tarp it for the winter. Next spring when you take it out you can't find your fob, so you replace it but the new one doesn't always work for whatever reason and the car won't start without it. It's hit and miss. You get another one but it's also hit and miss. Now instead of driving every day, you're only driving half the time because it's either in the shop or you're not taking your car certain places fearing that it might not be reliable to start and get you home.
It's clear at this point that having a working fob is really valuable, but at no point do you do the math and decide that original starter fob was actually worth 50% of the value of the car just because you only drove 50% of the time with the crappy replacement fobs.
Pretty much all role players are "hit or miss". Replacement level parts tend to be inconsistent. The thing about Lebron is he's not really just a fob. He's a fob(play-calling), engine(scoring/creation), and a cooling-system(defensive anchor). Fixing your analogy, we would expect such a player to be extremely valuable in a wide variety of settings, and...surprise, surprise, he is!
He achieved outlier-level value again in the regular season from 15-17 and then arguably replicated his 2009/2010 lift in the postseason as the cavs played 65+ win basketball in 16/17, and 60-win ball in 15 with poor-spacing when his top-heavy roster lost its two heavy hitters. Even when playing/staggering with another engine, at a position which tends to make cooling systems function worse(yeah this is getting a bit extra), Lebron
still looked as valuable as anyone from the last 40 years.
When one player is an engine, and the other player is an engine, fob, and system-cooler, we don't need to pretend the disparity in "value" is simply a result of situation. Especially when the other player has succeeded in a wide variety of contexts while player one has not. And it's telling the theoretical excuses rely on reductive skillset-breakdowns that don't lineup with what's actually happened...
NO-KG-AI wrote:I do think there is a lot of things you can do in terms of putting multiple bigs that are defensive and rebounding specialists with Jordan and not experience significant drop off offensively because he's just more versatile and malleable as a scorer and his style doesn't suffer from lack of spacing as much as Bron's does. , and unless you are playing with unlimited cap, it means you are sacrificing one thing to bolster another.
One, the idea that great passers are disproportionately dependent on guys with "scoring acumen" doesn't really lineup with history, and it certainly doesn't lineup with what's actually happened when a young Lebron played with "defensive and rebounding specialists"(more on that later). Lebron is also a much better ball-handler allowing questionable decision makers(like kyrie) to focus on what they're special at(We saw this with Pippen/Jordan with Jordan's and playoff on/off peaking in 90/91 as Pippen running the offense allowed Jordan to play a significantly more specialized role).
Two, Lebron orchestrates both the defense and the offense for his teams. Something that offers value beyond a player's physical skillset has value basically anywhere, and is quite rare/hard to replace:
Heej wrote:Highly reminiscent of what Phil wrote in Eleven Rings about Scottie being the quarterback and middle linebacker for offense and defense, being the guy who bore mental load of running the offense and getting people in their spots on defense and directing people. This allowed MJ to singularly focus on getting buckets as well as following his own defensive plan alongside the common Jordan steal improvisations. When you play, it can't be overstated how draining and constricting it is to be the guy responsible for rhe majority of the communication on the floor for one end, let alone both ends.
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.
Three, Lebron is a much better defender. More specifically he sports a major advantage as a paint-protector. And If we look to history...
OhayoKD wrote:Dutchball97 wrote:All to say, I think history suggests actually stacking the same type of archetype tends to be suboptimal, and scoring wings are not exempt from this. In fact I think we can say stacking paint protectors has been as or more successful. Since 2000 we've had the Twin-Towers, Brook-Giannis, and the two Wallaces win. Defensive value in general is more "portable" than offense if you believe Ben. Going by individual data, Paint protectors consistently mantain value when they switch teams, do fine when paired with other capable paint protectors.
...
Perhaps at a higher theoretical treshold the gap between playmaker stacking and wing-scorer stacking becomes evident, but that treshold hasn't been reached and "paint-protectors" currently look like the least "situation-dependent" archetype. At an individualwhich level, Duncan and Russell are probably the quintessential metronomes if we go by team success and if we go by individual impact, Russell and Kareem stand-out in terms of a lack of fluctuation. From rookie year to 1980 Kareem's "impact" stays pretty consistent with small postseason samples being where most of the fluctuation happens. Russell is still winning with seemingly average help right as he's about to retire.
...Paint protection is the skill which best leads to consistent, situation-independent value.
When we move past simply describing one as a "gifted passer" and the other as a "versatile scorer", assumptions like "this guy's style suffers more without spacing" don't seem so obvious. And(shock!), when we check these theories against reality...
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=103648795#p103648795While an older Jordan joined a better "non-shooting" offense and managed to lead it to average heights pre-triangle(Iirc the Bulls peaked as a +1 offense?), a younger Lebron sees a bigger offensive improvement when he joins the Cavs, and reaches significantly higher heights with a roster of non-shooters(+6.6!). Even if I was to subtract Boozer's net-rating in 05(essentially pretending he didn't get better, and wasn't on the cavs before Lebron), that would leave a 4-point improvement from a 19 year old Lebron(before the cavs improve further in 05 with Boozer departing).
The aforementioned defensive component shows up in 2015 when Lebron outright looks more valuable in a situation with bad era-relative spacing(both per lineup-adjusted and raw data), and similarly valuable in 2020(one of the few recent examples of a mediocre-spaced champion) well, well into his 30's.
We can speculate where Jordan would shine and not shine, but really, the actual results with "defensive/rebounding specialists" favor Lebron, and the Bulls were never really at a disadvantage in the shooting department(it just wasn't really a thing in the 80's and Chicago were ahead of the curve in the 90's). Again, reality just doesn't lineup with the assumption, and that really shouldn't just be dimissed...
uberhikari wrote:Heej wrote:f4p wrote:However, in any fact-based discussion, empirical evidence trumps all. And when the theory and empirical evidence conflict, the empirical evidence takes precedence. The problem Ben Taylor has when it comes to LeBron James is that Ben has a predetermined set of skills that he thinks makes a player more scalable or portable. He doesn't think LeBron excels at those skills, therefore, he concludes that LeBron has lower scalability and portability than other players who excel at those skills.
Except we have a decade of empirical evidence suggesting that LeBron's portability and scalability are apparently not necessarily contingent upon the predetermined skills that Ben Taylor has identified. But instead of changing his theory to fit the evidence, Taylor simply ignores the evidence in favor of his theory. So, he concludes that LeBron is less scalable or portable than other players.
But the evidence is on the side of LeBron being scalable and portable. Therefore, either LeBron has some skills that Taylor is unable to identify that make LeBron more portable and scalable than Taylor is assuming or Taylor's theory of scalability and portability is wrong. I'm pretty sure it's the former.
Instead of throwing one poorly supported hypothesis after another to try and make reality conform to our priors, maybe we should acknowledge the truth is different from what we expected and try and gleam why. Lebron has been extremely valuable in a bunch of contexts for basically his whole career. Even nearing 40 on a team with poor spacing, the lakers looked much, much better with him and lineups featuring Lebron and a second helio well past his peak were very, very strong(Lebron and Westbrook were something like +30! IIRC). But yeah, Lebron is a "fob".
Not really related to anything above but...
TheLand13 wrote:= While I don't necessarily agree that LeBron's the entire reason Cleveland lost 45 more games the following season (I do think that Cleveland losing both of their big centers had a major impact and we have to keep in mind that Cleveland did have injury issues throughout the season), he was no less the difference between them being a finals contender and being a bottom of the pack team.
We actually have a 29 game sample before injuries blew things up and the cavs weren't any better before the injuries(same by srs, worse by record I think). As for the centers, presumably you're talking about Wallace and Big Z but er...Wallace was already off the team in 2010(and really became a non-factor after he got injured mid-season in 2009) while Big Z was only playing 20 mpg.
Also, maybe elaborate on what you saw defensively since "very bad rim-protecting big" and "very good defender" feels close to an oxymoron.