RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22

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RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#1 » by trex_8063 » Mon Jul 31, 2017 11:13 pm

1. Michael Jordan
2. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
3. Lebron James
4. Bill Russell
5. Tim Duncan
6. Wilt Chamberlain
7. Magic Johnson
8. Shaquille O'Neal
9. Hakeem Olajuwon
10. Larry Bird
11. Kobe Bryant
12. Kevin Garnett
13. Oscar Robertson
14. Karl Malone
15. Jerry West
16. Julius Erving
17. Dirk Nowitzki
18. David Robinson
19. Charles Barkley
20. Moses Malone
21. John Stockton
22. ????

Go!

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#2 » by JordansBulls » Mon Jul 31, 2017 11:20 pm

1st Vote: Dwyane Wade - 3x champ, led the franchise of the Heat to it's first title in historic fashion putting up one of the greatest finals ever. Led the league in scoring as well. A great defender and a player who plays both ends of the floor. A true player who can lead a franchise to the promised land of winning a title.

2nd Vote: Bob Pettit
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#3 » by penbeast0 » Mon Jul 31, 2017 11:23 pm

Bob Pettit was the dominant player in the 50s between Mikan and Russell and remained a top 5 player even as the game drastically changed from the set shot/hook shot era of the 50s into the more modern game of the 60s. Although not as spectacular as Elgin Baylor, he was more efficient, a better rebounder, and stronger defensively though Baylor's playmaking is superior. John Stockton is the choice if you value longevity; he ran ATG offenses at Utah despite having weak players at C and PF; only 4 years of truly ATG v. 6 for Nash but Nash had better offensive players around him and a personnel system where D'Antoni sacrificed defense to create mismatches and Stockton easily outmatches Nash in durability and defensive impact. Two modern players are in the mix too. Kevin Durant has a decade as a top 5 player in the league even if he's never been #1. Stephen Curry had one of the GOAT seasons in 2016 and two others where he was in consideration of best player our of his short 7 year (has it been that long?) career. He also deserves a mention but I am not sure he deserves to be ahead of Durant yet though he's well on the way. I am open to change weighting in the Durant/Curry debate, but Dwyane Wade is behind both for me. He never had Curry's dominance and peak, not even Durant's, and Durant has had a longer prime as a top 5 player in the league too.

Although he played in the weakest NBA era, George Mikan is 2 levels above anyone else left in terms of dominance. He put up Jordan level scoring numbers (relative to his peers), great rebounding, and from all reports, was the dominant defender of the early 50s as well. He dominated physically with his strength and athleticism (he wasn't appreciably taller than his peer, but he was built strong . . . like Shaq v. Shawn Bradley wasn't about height). He won consistently, almost every year during his prime. He is the only truly dominant player left with more than a 3 year or so resume.

Vote: George Mikan
Alternate: Kevin Durant
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#4 » by Bad Gatorade » Mon Jul 31, 2017 11:29 pm

Vote 1 - Chris Paul

Spoiler:
So, for this spot, I’m going to go slightly homer.

He won’t win this spot, and I don’t even know if I’m 100% sure that I’d want him right at this spot, but he’s certainly worthy in my mind, and I thought that I’d throw the case out for him now. I’m voting for the guy I’m arguably most highly associated with on this board – Mr Christopher Emmanuel Paul.

This will probably garner a bit of controversy, thanks to his playoff success and (relatively) incomplete career, but IMO, he’s had a ridiculously good prime, and supplemented it with just enough longevity that he should absolutely be discussed around this point in the convo. And honestly, there are quite a few candidates whose placement at this stage of the project is entirely valid, and it’s up to us to concoct a case for guys we feel should be ranking highly.

Box Score
I don’t even think I need to expand on this all that much, due to general incompleteness of the box score, and due to how highly CP3 performs here. CP3’s numbers are generally quite good – he’s been a consistent 19-10-2 type guy on some very good efficiency. These numbers don’t truly jump out at people though, until we look at his advanced statistics.

Just as a very quick summary – his PER ranks 6th all time, his WS/48 ranks 2nd all time, and his BPM ranks 3rd all time. In the playoffs, these numbers change to… 5th all time, 5th all time, 3rd all-time respectively. Now, I’ll be the first to admit that this isn’t an entirely fair ranking – playing in a 30-team era, it’s a bit easier for top end players to accrue higher advanced stats, because they’re greater outliers with respect to their league than in the 80s and 90s. CP3’s career hasn’t finished yet, so he hasn’t had post-prime play diminishing his averages. Box score stats aren’t the be all and end all. But considering we’re now outside of the top 20 of the project, and CP3 is ranking so highly after 12 years in the league should showcase that his advanced box score stats are… awesome.

Even looking at his PER 100 stats (normalising for pace and what not), he actually seems to be better than he first appears.

For his career, CP3 has averaged 27.6 points per 100 and 14.6 assists per 100. If we look at the amount of seasons every player has had accruing at least 25 PP100 and 10 AP100 with at least 10 WS (qualifiers well below his career averages), CP3 has had 8 seasons eclipsing these milestones. The next highest out of everybody in league history (since 1974, i.e. since per 100 stats became a thing) is Magic Johnson/LeBron James, with 5 each. I included WS as a quick catch-all for things such as team success and efficiency – obviously not a resolute metric, but for a brief litmus test, CP3’s got some great box scores on some very good teams.

Looking at him compared to Magic/Nash (the two guys who ran arguably the two greatest offensive dynasties ever) -

Prime Magic, from 85-91 averaged 27.2 PP100 and 16.2 assists.
Prime Nash, from 05-10 averaged 24.8 PP100 and 15.9 assists.
Over the past 10 years, CP3 averaged 28.3 PP100 and 15.1 assists.

Considering all 3 of these guys were highly efficient, the cursory glance is that CP3 threw together some awesome box scores given the minutes/pace he played. Box score doesn’t even matter all that much in isolation, really – it’s more so some information for those who prefer the box score to other methods of assessment. At least, it shows that he’s carrying a load that compares to the other passing orientated premier offensive players in NBA history. And that's the biggest thing about box scores - they show you why high impact players are useful, and Paul is simply an efficient point/assist production machine.

Impact
For all of his excellence in the box score, this is where I feel like CP3 really shines. His impact stats are similarly awesome.

Looking at a couple of our larger datasets –

08-11 RAPM – 6th with 7.3, with 2nd place being 7.8 and 7th place being 6.7 (i.e. he was closer to being 2nd than being 7th).

15 year RAPM – 5th in the 2001-2015 dataset behind LeBron, Garnett, Duncan and Stockton with the age adjustment (dubious in the case of Stockton due to Stockton being 40...), and 3rd (behind LeBron and Garnett) without the age adjustment.

Year by year PI RAPM – from 2009 onwards (i.e. once he entered his prime + no longer had enough non-prime minutes depressing his prior) he ranked in the top 10 every single year, and was in the top 5 every single year as a Clipper.

Team rating
– on court, he’s been a +8.6, with a +13.8 on/off rating since 2008. This became as high as +14.2 in 2016-17 for the former, and +20.9 in 2014-15 as the latter!

Win Probability
– 5th behind LeBron (the clear leader), Garnett, Duncan and Nowitzki. His effect on win probability is only 1 point behind #2 (Garnett). Aside from Ginobili (19.1), CP3 is well ahead of everybody else in the dataset.

Simply put – he’s had some amazing impact results. All of CP3’s peers with regard to impact since 2001 have already been voted in (i.e. LeBron and the “big 3” power forwards of the 2000s), and a number of the players often perceived to be in his impact realm, or greater (e.g. Kobe, Wade) are actually well below CP3 here! Now, simply looking at RAPM is not entirely conclusive either (in particular, I think there are elements of Kobe that underrate his impact) but the cursory glance, much like the box score, appears to bode well for CP3 too.

So far, his raw metrics paint him very favourably, so let’s look at a few of the reservations people have about him –

His perceived “drop off”


There’s a lot of chatter around CP3’s peak seasons being 2008 and 2009. IMO, a lot of this is simply due to aesthetics (fans remember that CP3 was more “drive-heavy” back then) and because he had better per game stats.

The former is because guards that drive to the hoop with reckless abandon generally resonate better with the eye test (and CP3 has gradually gravitated more to the perimeter during his career) and the latter is due to a combination of reduced minutes and playing alongside Blake. Blake is a very good player, and compared to most bigs, controls the ball quite a lot – in fact, he ranked as high as 10th in 2014-15 and 11th in 2015-16 in “touches per game,” which is a statistic traditionally dominated by guards and LeBron James. So, not only does this depress CP3's stats a bit, but the idea that CP3 is so ball dominant that guys like Blake aren't fully used (which is often proposed around here) just seems like a silly narrative at this point.

If we observe CP3's traditional statistics from the 2008 and 2009 seasons, and look at the past 3 seasons without Blake via WOWY data, here are CP3’s per 100 statistics –

2008-09
31.2 PTS, 6.8 REB, 16.1 AST, 3.9 STL, 3.9 TOV, 58.8 TS%

Past 3 seasons without Blake (2,681 minutes)
30.8 PTS, 7.2 REB, 16.0 AST, 3.0 STL, 4.1 TOV, 57.6 TS%

There is almost no major difference between these stats – scoring, rebound, assist and turnover volume are almost identical. There’s a reduction in his steals, and a minor reduction in his TS%, but these aren’t actually due to a reduction in skill – CP3, despite accruing less steals, is actually a better defender by DRAPM, because his defensive instincts and man defence have improved in order to compensate – his highest DRAPM results are actually his Clipper results, not his 2008/2009 results. And he’s got a minor reduction in TS%, but this is because he’s actually having a larger effect on team spacing now, and allows DeAndre to occupy the interior more. Without DeAndre, he has (in an admittedly small sample of 805 minutes) been averaging 34.4 points per 100 possessions on 60.1 TS% because he’s more free to occupy the space under the rim!

And heck, he’s actually been producing his best RAPM results as a Clipper, rather than as a Hornet. I cannot stress this enough - for all the talk about how 2008 and 2009 was "peak" Paul, andnowhere near this level now, RAPM actually says the exact opposite story.

A lot of CP3 “dropping off” is honestly pure narrative, and because his athleticism isn’t quite as impressive nowadays – it’s not uncommon to hear that CP3 has been getting onto the all-defensive NBA teams by his reputation, and that he’s dropped off… although his best DRAPM results have actually been in the past 4 seasons, finishing as high as 4th in DRAPM last season! This doesn’t mean I’d peg him as the #4 defender, but the best empirical tool we have for measuring defence actually paints him as improving on this front, rather than getting worse!

So, for those who view his 2008/09 seasons highly, is there really any reason to place them above CP3 of the recent seasons?

Playoff success/Big game play

This is the big one. The monkey that has plagued CP3 throughout his career is his play in the big moments. How much of this is actually due to CP3 himself?

I’ve been a bit strapped for time in general (thank you fatherhood), so I’ll blatantly copy-paste one of my former posts:

[spoiler]Really, the only series that CP3 has played in where his team “should” have won prior to the start of the series are the 2015 Rockets series, and the 2016 Trailblazers series. I’m definitely on board with the idea that a few of these series could have been won, but weren’t, but it doesn’t hurt to look over CP3’s elimination series career in a bit more detail.

2008 Spurs
Even though the Spurs were the defending champions, I don’t think they were really notably better than the Hornets. The series went to 7 games, with the Hornets losing games 6 and 7.

The Hornets lost game 3, with CP3 playing excellent basketball, so there’s not really anything else he could have done. Game 4, he wasn’t quite as good, but he still threw in a solid performance on the whole, and the Hornets lost by 20. It could be argued that CP3 may have done better siphoning some shots away from West (4/15) or Pargo (4/14), but it wasn’t made easier when the Hornets were right in this game after the 1st quarter (-2), and then went down to -13 once CP3 went to the bench for 5 minutes. The team outside of CP3 had a TS% of 0.410… that’s pathetic, so I’m almost entirely certain that CP3 trying to look for his own shot may have made things closer, but his teammates were downright poor, and this game was likely lost anyway due to how poor his teammates were.

Game 6, CP3 played a solid game, but one that wasn’t remarkable by any means (although the Spurs were clearly better on the whole, and likely would have won anyway). Game 7, similar story – his game wasn’t bad, per se, but unlike game 6, I think CP3 approaching his “standard” level of play would have likely won them the game. So, on the whole, I think that the Hornets could have taken game 7, making this series quite “winnable.” In a way, the Hornets don’t have that chance without CP3 playing as well as he did throughout the series, but I think they could have taken game 7 had CP3 approached his normal standard of play. So, he had a very good series overall, but had he had one of his “great” games in game 6, or had a “normal quality” game in game 7, I think the Hornets make it through. Probably one of the more winnable series that CP3 didn’t win in his career.

2009 Nuggets
CP3 was banged up in this series, and the Nuggets were a better team than the Hornets – I think a healthy, regular season quality CP3 keeps it competitive, so I’m not entirely sure how to assess this any further.

2011 Lakers
A lot of people are saying this series should have been winnable for the Hornets, but I think people are being quite harsh here – the Lakers were defending champions, and a much better team than this Hornets squad. The Hornets lost games 2, 3, 5 and 6.

Game 2, CP3 had quite a nice game overall, IMO. Very efficient 20 points and 9 assists, and his team shot very poorly on the whole. More than anything, Bynum and Odom were killing the Hornets this game, IMO. Game 3, the Lakers were simply the better team. CP3 played a solid, but unspectacular game, and spectacular game would have been what was needed to trump the Lakers. I think game 5 was a similar story – the Hornets actually went on their best runs in games 3 and 5 when CP3 was playing particularly pass-first, so I’m not so sure “aggression” is where the key factor is here, as much as it was the Lakers simply being better. Game 6, CP3 didn’t have a great game, but the Lakers were likely better anyway, and there’s no guarantee that they win game 7.

Calling this series “winnable” is a stretch, IMO, even if it’s “technically” accurate – the Hornets were a far worse squad than the Lakers, but CP3 played an excellent series (22 and 11.5, incredible shooting efficiency) and the rest of the Hornets were out of their depth. Their best stretches in their “loss” games occurred when CP3 wasn’t really looking for his shot, so I’m not sure you can even pin this down to aggression – the Hornets (who were already a much worse squad, and lost West) were simply out of their depth. I don’t really call this series winnable, just because CP3 was incredible in game 1 – the Hornets won that game by 9, and that’s with CP3 rocking 33 points and 14 assists on 2 turnovers and 71 TS% - this is the sort of standard he would have needed for the series to be winnable, and, well, those expectations are a bit too high, IMO.

2012 Spurs
They weren’t winning this series anyway, but this was one of the rare “poor” playoff series that CP3 has played.

2013 Memphis
This is another series that people often say is winnable, so let’s look at games 3 to 6, and see if it really was –

Game 3, CP3 played like crap. No two ways about it. If he played better, they go up 3-0, and they get the series. Game 4, CP3 was pretty good, but the Clippers lost by 21 due to the utter annihilation their frontcourt faced by Memphis. Gasol, Randolph and Prince, of all people, were savaging the Clippers frontcourt. CP3 isn’t changing this game.

Game 5, none of the Clippers play well aside from CP3, who roasted the Grizzlies for 35 points on efficient shooting with only 1 turnover. Nothing coming from CP3 is changing this game. Game 6, CP3 was excellent again, but the Grizz won comfortably. It wasn’t really the team’s offence that was subpar either – it was their team’s defence.

And that is the story of the 2013 Memphis series, IMO – CP3’s overall play was actually really good, and the Clippers were a +8 ORTG against the league’s second best defence that year, so I’m not entirely sure his “aggression” was at fault here. He played like crap in game 3, and it’s utterly true that winning game 3 may have changed the outcome of the series. But games 4-6, CP3 was clearly not the problem. The problem was Blake’s injury, as well as the team’s defence – the Clippers were destroyed by Gasol and Randolph (with solid performances from Conley and Allen). Honestly, even though the Clippers may have seemed on a similar playing field to the Grizzlies before the series, CP3 played a great series overall, and games 4-6 weren’t really his to blame. In one way, the series was “winnable” but the fact that they lost the series isn’t on CP3, and aside from game 3, I’m not sure how much he could have done. And these games happen – teams often go up 2-0, and then don’t play quite as well in game 3. But after that point, CP3 was really the only Clipper doing anything worthwhile against a very strong Memphis team.

2014 Thunder
I think the Thunder were the better team (I was very high on the Durant/Westbrook era Thunder, and thought they were an excellent squad). This series was unique, in the sense that all of the stars (CP3, Westbrook, Durant, Blake) played a really good series, and it went down to the wire. The Thunder won by less than 1 point per game.

Game 2 – CP3 was okay, but he was absolutely outplayed by Westbrook. I think he could have played better and made the result more competitive, but he didn’t “choke” or anything this game. Game 3, he was awesome, but so were Durant (who was downright unreal) and Westbrook. The biggest difference in this game is that the Thunder role players were better than the Clippers role players, IMO. Game 5 was settled by 1 point, and there’s the infamous “choke” that people allude to quite frequently on this board – not a terrific game from him, but his presence still led the Clippers to a +11 with him on the court. The biggest negative (much like the rest of the series) was Crawford, who absolutely killed the game whenever he was on the court. So, CP3 wasn’t great, and he could have helped take the elusive game 5 with better play, but the biggest impact on the Clippers in the rest of the game occurred when CP3 left the court, and OKC began feasting. So, I’m a bit undecided on game 5. He choked the ending, definitely, but I’m not sure that it’s a choke-job without him on the court in the first place.

Game 6, CP3 was great, but the Clippers lost because Durant was more awesome, and because his team sucked again.

I don’t know how to feel about this series – I think this series could very well be a series where CP3 played some excellent basketball throughout, but had clear elusive junctions in which he could have played better and captured another game or two. But then again, there were also games where there’s no chance that the Clippers win if CP3 didn’t play as well as he did. I think it was a winnable series, overall (and the end result was very close) but I don’t actually hold the series against him, because his actual level of play was quite good on the whole, and the series doesn’t seem like a “choke” if he didn’t play quite as well at certain other junctions to begin with. It’s worth mentioning that CP3 was a net +6.6 per 100 when on the court, so even if he didn’t capture a couple of moments that could have won the series, he was also the primary reason that the series was as close as it was. If Jamal Crawford wasn’t such a playoff choke artist that annihilated his own team whenever he takes the court in the playoffs, there’s a good chance the Clippers win, and a different narrative occurs.

2015 Rockets
A lot is made of the Rockets series, and how the Clippers “choked,” but to be short and sweet – it was the rest of the team, not CP3, and I fully believe this. CP3 put up 26 points and 10-11 assists per game in the infamous final 3 games of the series on elite efficiency.

The rest of the team? TS% of 46.8. That is absolutely pathetic.

Crawford (token team killer), Redick, Rivers… they were all abhorrently bad. Especially Crawford – he shot 12/41 and was -16, -26 and -22 in the past 3 games. CP3’s teammates absolutely wet the bed here, and I really can’t blame the final 3 games on him. I know some people will disagree, but I genuinely don’t, and think that there are some clearly more egregious moments in his career that are worth being lambasted for above this series.

2016 Blazers
Injured along with Blake, so they had no chance.

So on the whole, there’s a bit of a mixed bag with CP3’s playoff career. His overall play has been excellent, IMO. He’s all over the playoff statistics leaderboard, and is just as good of a player as he is in the regular season, where he is excellent.

The main critiques regarding his playoff performance is how “passive” he is, and choking in key moments.

The latter has occurred, definitely. His worst game in 2008 was game 7, and there was the OKC game 5 that he clearly could have won. So I understand the reservations regarding his playoff history here.

I do, however, think people are notoriously harsh on him sometimes – he gets blamed for being too passive in a lot of series, but a lot of the time, there’s nobody outside of LeBron James who could carry a team playing so poorly to victory. Rockets 2015 is a prime example – people would say that he let the game get away, but a 26-10 average across the last 3 games isn’t being “too passive” at all, IMO. Heck, in the first round that year, he was averaging 23 and 8 against the Spurs, but because he happened to hit a couple of big shots in the final game, people would laud the series as an example of how CP3 managed to “perfect” his level of aggression and decision making… but I’m not fully sure that aside from a couple of big shots (which can often be due to chance), that he was all that different against the Spurs than he was against many other teams at other points in his career.

I think that CP3’s “clutch” issues are heavily magnified by how poor his team has been defensively at certain junctions. To use an example, Wade was outstanding in the 2006 NBA finals (34.7 PPG, 57.2 TS%) and he definitely took the game into his own hands (only 3.8 assists per game). He was terrific, and there are no two ways around it. But it’s also worth mentioning that despite a gargantuan performance, his team only mustered a 101 ORTG that series. His teammates were quite poor offensively (average TS% of 50.4), but yes, Wade’s performance, as herculean as it was, only lifted the team to a 101 ORTG. Of course, the Heat only gave up an ORTG of 99 in the series, so they won, and Wade’s efforts were rightfully recognised. But their defence was absolutely integral to their victory too, and if the Mavs played at their normal offensive level, they take the series. It doesn’t mean Wade was any worse – he has an outstanding series either way. But considering how low a 101 ORTG really is (a -4.0 compared to the Mavs “typical” defence that season), it shows you just how important factors such as defence can be to the outcome of a series. And in a few of these series (e.g. 2011 Lakers, 2013 Grizzlies, 2015 Rockets), the inability for the rest of the team to cope defensively is what has brought them down at crucial junctions, even more than CP3’s play/the offensive play of his teammates.

Offensively, CP3’s teams have generally been really, really good in the playoffs, and he is by far the biggest reason for this. It’s their defence that has frequently let them down in the series that they’ve lost. I’ve already made some posts about how the Clippers have still been an elite offensive team in their elimination series, but their defence has basically been “worst in the league” level in these series.

I’d also say they’re magnified, because in certain series (e.g. 2011 Lakers), CP3 comes out with a scintillating performance, and then “cools down” towards the end of the series. He’s still normally very, very good, but not quite as good as he sometimes performs at the start of a series. For this reason, I think some of his series are labelled as choke jobs/more winnable than they really should be, simply because he’s performed at such high levels at certain points in the series that people expect this to be emulated every single game, and every single moment. And sometimes, these expectations are simply far too high to reasonably expect of anybody.
It’s also likely magnified because CP3, aside from the 2016 Blazers (where he got injured), has never actually played a team in the playoffs that has won less than 51 games, so some of these series go unnoticed.

Are there moments that he’s choked? Sure. Are there are few series that he could have won that he didn’t? Sure, and there are a couple of times (2008 Spurs, 2014 Thunder) where there’s a very good chance that the series could have been won, or changed, had CP3 played better at certain moments. But it’s just as likely that without CP3’s play, his teams never reach that point in the first place.

So, really, there are series that CP3 could have won that he didn’t, but at the same time, I’m not sure that some of these series really receive a fair critique, given how well that he has had to play in order to bring his team to that point in the first place.

Apologies for formatting - blatant copy/paste there.

That’s a lot to read, and basically, it reads like this – there have absolutely been moments where CP3 has played poorly at crucial junctions. There have been moments where he has played brilliantly, and the odds were simply against him. There have been moments where he has been injured. But, I’m fairly adamant in believing that luck (and the ragtag western conference) has been a huge factor that has hampered his playoff success.

After all, CP3 has only played three and a half playoff games against a team that has won fewer than 51 games, ever. The 3.5 games he played were against Portland in 2016, where he and Blake were injured in game 4 and missed the rest of the series. In Magic’s fabled 1987 season, he played teams that won 37, 42 (on a -2.54 SRS) and 39 games before making the finals. That is a large, large dissonance, and it's the type of difference that can greatly affect team results. Heck, Kidd is often credited for his 2 finals runs in 2002 and 2003 (and rightfully so, because he was a big part of it) but he did not play a single eastern conference team that actually had a win total matching any single team that CP3 has ever played in the playoffs, ever! (sans Portland)

I’d like to repeat one notion that I brought up that really makes me think twice about the criticisms levelled CP3’s way – his “aggression” which is so frequently brought up.

CP3 was berated in the 2015 conference finals for letting the series slip away in the last 3 games, where he averaged 26-10. He was lauded for his aggression vs the Spurs, where he averaged 23-8. In the elusive game 7 (known as one of the “big game moments” in his career), he only took 13 shots, well below his playoff average. He took 4 free throws. He had only 6 assists. In other words, he was 3.4 assists below his career playoff average, 3.1 shots and 1.1 free throws below his career FGA and FTA averages. But, he shot 5/6 from 3, hit a couple of big shots and the Clippers won by 2 points in a dramatic fashion vs the defending champs, so it’s now an aggressive, big time performance.

Is there really such a discernible positive difference from how he approached the Spurs compared to how he’s approached his other postseason opposition? Honestly… there isn’t, IMO. And considering how widespread this sort of opinion is, it demonstrates just how much winning bias is at play within our perceptions. If CP3 shoots 4/6 (still an excellent percentage) in that final Spurs game, he is no longer throwing in a clutch performance, but rather, the narrative morphs to, “he only took 13 shots in a 1 point, game 7 playoff loss.” And that’s honestly why over time, this individual series has actually pushed me away from resonating with the playoff results criticism from CP3 – I’m not really a winning bias fan, and that’s exactly where I feel the attitudes to CP3’s playoff career largely stem from.

How about how he has performed in close/significant games?

In elimination/closeout games for his career in the playoffs –
20.4 PPG, 9.7 AST, 2.3 STL, 2.7 TO, 56.3 TS%

In all games –
21.4 PPG, 9.4 AST, 2.2 STL, 2.7 TO, 58.5 TS%

So, he’s shooting slightly worse (but still clearly above average) in elimination and closeout games, but the rest of his stats are… almost identical, once again.



How about clutch stats?

I haven’t added the 2016-17 numbers to my personal stats, but CP3 has averaged 26.9 PP 36 minutes in the regular season (58.0 TS%) and 26.7 PP 36 (58.3 TS%) in the playoffs prior to last season. Considering that he creates so many of his own shots, his ability as a scorer in the clutch are actually quite noteworthy. These are the numbers for his entire career, not just an arbitrarily defined prime!

Honestly, almost any variable I choose to employ shows very little difference in terms of performance for CP3 depending on the severity of the scenario. His regular season/playoff box scores are highly comparable. His elimination game statistics don’t show any large scale drop off at all. Things such as his win probability once factoring in scoring margin, his close game performance (i.e. clutch stats) all seem to show a very similar story – CP3 doesn’t hit a magical new level in the clutch (certainly not like the way, say, Isiah Thomas seems infinitely better in the playoffs than in the regular season) but his performance, across the board, tends to be highly resilient. And the largest sample baseline we have for his performance (his regular season box score + impact) is incredible.

I get the idea of knocking him for injuries – he does get injured quite a bit, and that’s something that’s going to reduce his career value. But when he’s playing, he’s unreal. And that's why I'm picking him.

My next pick is Stockton. The debate between him and Paul is really, really hard for me - Paul's the clearly better player for me, but Stockton has clearly better longevity. I'm severely in two minds between these guys.

After this, I'm leaning towards Pettit, and giving Wade and Nash a serious look. Mikan is somewhere in the mix too.

So in summation -

#21 - Chris Paul
#22 - John Stockton


Vote 2 - Bob Pettit - had some awesome all-star longevity himself. 10 years of being an elite player is probably the best we've got remaining.

I've already mentioned a few other guys on my radar (Mikan, Wade, Nash) and I'm also thinking about a few other guys, like Ewing, Durant and I'll probably need to take a good look at Hondo/Pippen to see how they'd stack up.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#5 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Jul 31, 2017 11:42 pm

Just going to riff a little here based on things I've been thinking:

Pettit vs Mikan. I just feel like Pettits a lot more proven against competition we'd still take seriously today. You can argue it's just bad luck that Mikan fell apart at a young age right when competition was getting a lot tougher...but even that doesn't seem like a great argument to me. I don't want to imply Pettits the only guy I have above Mikan, but I think everyone should compare the two specifically.

Also I totally get the impulse to side with Mikan based on his abilities as a defensive anchor. It's not quite enough for me here but I feel that pull myself.

The point guards: Nash, Wade, Paul, Curry. It really is tough to sort these guys out.

My opinions on Nash are known I think so I'll try to focus on others guys.

I respect what Wade accomplished but I think he's going to come out last of these 4 for me. The reality is that if not for the '06 finals upset I doubt he's seen the same way at all. And the more I get distance from the event the more fluky it seems. I absolutely love the way Wade can at time kick his motor up to a crazy level but I'm not in love with building around a point guard who isn't amazing at either shooing or passing.

At this moment I'm leaning toward Paul highest if these 4. I don't really buy that his teams have regularly underachieved. His teams have been excellent but have faced incredibly tough competition and in LA literally everyone around him has been a freaking knucklehead. I do think Paul is a prick that people don't enjoy playing around, and that hurts him some, but the question is how much. Oscar is already in and he was basically the exact same type of prick.

I will say this though: I think the lack of joy in Paul's teams makes them less resilient. And again, that hurts him, but I'm not sure how to quantify how much.

Curry is so hard to place compared to the other 3. His peak is transcendent but he still is so young. At the moment I'm debating a lot between he and Nash and I'm feeling like giving the tiebreak to Nash.


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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#6 » by Pablo Novi » Mon Jul 31, 2017 11:47 pm

In the last thread, #21,trex addressed the question of not voting for one's #1 choice if that player is getting no traction. So I posted the following in response:
"trex,
Thanx for taking the time & effort to spell this out.
It's pretty weird for me. Of all the players remaining, Cousy is both my highest ranked AND the one I care the least about. imo, he was the #3 PG of all time (after Magic & "O" - and treating Jerry West as a SG). He's tied for THE highest ranking remaining player in terms of ALL-NBA 1st-Team (with 10, along with Elgin Baylor & Bob Pettit) (and if we include 2nd-Team selections - he's the #1 remaining player) and even though I penalize him significantly for most of his greatness playing out in the 1950's - he still comes in 4th of the remaining players (after Baylor, Pettit & Rick Barry - all of whom I liked a good deal more than Cousy).

I've said before in these threads that I attended a number of Celtics' games in the mid-1960s at the Gaaaden - and the racist nastiness of the fans towards even the great Bill Russell - just killed my love for that team. So, fighting for Cousy over everybody else is not easy for me - still, I DO think he's the best remaining player, vis-à-vis his own position, PG - and we've only picked two so far - so this is overdue."
-----
Vote: Pettit
Alt: Elgin Baylor (Elgin's getting almost no traction; but I feel he'll go before Cousy - thus my switched vote).
H.M. Bob Cousy (who I feel strongly should go next; but is getting close to zero traction)

My #1 criteria is the number of "Great Years" each player accumulated in their careers; "Great Years" defined as: getting selected ALL-League 1st-Team or 2nd-Team. Accumulating several of these says that you dominated YOUR position in YOUR era.

These are the only three guys with 10 ALL-League 1st-Team selections not yet chosen for our GOAT list.
A "decade's" worth of domination of the players at their position is a tremendous achievement (only achieved by a total of 10 players in the 80 years of 1938 season to 2017 season!) Of those ten, only three (K.Malone, Kobe & LeBron) have 11 1st-Team selections. In other words, these three could hardly have done more.

Besides, each of them revolutionized their respective positions. We've been (collectively) putting players on our GOAT list with FAR LESS positional-era-dominance. I don't much see what more they could have done to "satisfy" this board?

Imo, all three of these guys should go next.

Permit me to add: the selectors are IDEALLY suited - it was/is their job to report on the sport; and COLLECTIVELY, there are enough of them to override pretty much any and all personal, "homerist" biases. Imo, their selection process TRUMPS all stats or combinations of them. I'd also note, that over the last 58 years of NBA-NBL-ABA "rabidity", I've never once had a MAJOR objection to their selections.

Further, there are only 22 players in total who even accumulated at least 6 1st-Team ALL-League selections - showing just how difficult getting TEN is.

btw, I consider Elgin Baylor to have been a superior player to both Pettit & Cousy (and, along with Jerry West, he's my co- All-Time favorite player - because of their bi-racial harmony and artistry (and pretty equal in skills). I have been voting Pettit & Cousy OVER Elgin because I consider it more important that there be more POSITIONAL balance in a GOAT list. I accomplish that balance by selecting one player per position per descending set of 5 GOAT spots. (Example, my GOAT Top 5: KAJ, Magic, MJ, LBJ & TD).

Surely, bigs, especially Centers have historically (especially until about the turn of the century) a bigger influence on Defense. But, generally speaking, the smaller the position / player the more they: run around, cut, stop-and-go, dribble, pass, etc. For me, this almost equals the bigs' defensive advantage. Combining the two factors, while I have, as I said, one player form each position in each descending set of 5 GOAT spots; I always have the Center as the highest ranked.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#7 » by Senior » Tue Aug 1, 2017 12:23 am

This article came out today.

https://theringer.com/chris-paul-nba-inefficiency-week-a43ade69aa3d

I wanted to call attention to this idea in the article:

[Paul] is too disciplined to take bad shots, which limits his upside against higher levels of competition.


What do we think of smart shots vs bad shots? BBIQ is definitely one of CP3's strong suits, but is it possible that he's outsmarting himself by declining what seem to be inefficient or dumb shots? Late game, would we rather have CP3 take a contested mid-range jumper vs a teammate's open three? I feel like I want to say yes, regardless of what the data says or what the smart play is. I really do think that players who are willing to take and make the bad shots are the ones who move forward more often than expected. To generate offense out of nothing is immensely valuable, and smart shots are a luxury that cannot always be relied on.

Can the "smart" play actually be the play that hinders winning chances most? Is CP3 artificially limiting his playoff ceiling by always taking the intelligent route?
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Chris Paul when it matters most... 

Post#8 » by JoeMalburg » Tue Aug 1, 2017 12:27 am

Sometimes when you deep dive into a player, you really learn a lot and you have to reevaluate what you thought. Other times do you see almost exactly what you expect to see, that's sort of comforting, makes you feel like you finally figured some things out. And every now and then, you can't really make sense of what you find. It goes against everything else that you think about the player, or at least it goes to a degree much further than you would've confidently stated previously.

This is one of those such cases. I present to you, Chris Paul in the Clutch in the ten most important games of his playoff career...

2008 WCSF Game 7 vs. San Antonio
Second Half: 2/6 fg, 2/2 ft, 6 pts 2 sat 3 to - Hornets lose at home. Janero Pargo is Hornets best player in fourth quarter.

2012 1st Round Game 7 @ Memphis
Third Q: 2/4 fg, 2/2 ft, 6 pts 1 ast 3 to
Fourth Q: 0/3 fg, 2/2 ft, 2 pts 0 ast 3 to (last six minutes)
Clippers win despite 2/7 8 pts 1 ast 6 to from Paul in second half

2013 1st Round Game 5 vs Memphis
Fourth Q: 2/6 fg, 0/0 ft, 4 pts 1 ast 2 to
Clippers lose, fall down 3-2 at home

2013 1st Round Game 6 @ Memphis
Second Half: 4/6 fg, 4/4 ft, 12 pts, 2 ast, 1 to
Ejected with 2:30 to play. Clippers lose and drop series.

2014 WCSF Game 5 vs. Oklahoma City
Fourth Q: 3/5 fg, 0/0 ft, 6 puts 1 ast 2 to
Paul has two turnovers in last fifteen seconds to complete Clipper collapse from up 13 with under 4 to play. Clippers trail series 3-2.

2014 WCSF Game 6 @ Oklahoma City
Second Half: 8/14 fg, 1/1 ft, 18 pts 1 ast 2 to
4th Q: 6/7 fg 13 pts
Clippers lose game and the series

2015 First Round Game 7 vs. San Antonio
Fourth Q: 3/5 fg, 2/2 ft, 9 pts 0 ast 0 to
Clippers win game seven and series, Paul hits clinching shot

2015 WCSF Game 6 vs. Houston
Fourth Q: 2/7 fg, 4/4 ft, 9 pts 0 ast 1 to
Clippers are outscored 40-15 in 4th quarter in game that would have clinched series. Paul hits meaningless three just before buzzer.

2015 WCSF Game 7 @ Houston
Final 18 minutes: 3/9 fg, 4/7 fts, 11 pts 7 ast 2 to
Rockets complete comeback from down 3-1

2017 First Round Game 7 vs. Utah
Second Half: 1/9 fg, 0/1 ft, 2 pts 2 ast 2 to
Clippers lose game and series. R.I.P Lob City


In total that's about 176 minutes of floor time for Paul, only a bit more than what you'd expect him to play in 4 playoff games.

In that time, he shot 30/74 from the field (41%) 3/12 from three (25%) and 22-25 from the line (88%)

He scored 85 points or roughly 19-21 per game
He accumulated 18 ast or about 4 per game
He committed 22 turnovers or about 5 per game

That's a small sample size, but it's striking considering how important all those moments were.

It seems that the best point guard by the numbers is so good when it doesn't matter that it has largely cloaked how pedestrian he is when it matters most.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#9 » by LA Bird » Tue Aug 1, 2017 1:57 am

From last thread:
penbeast0 wrote:
LA Bird wrote: ... I don't recall anybody voting for Mikan during the peak projects just a few years ago.
Bird, the last 2 projects started at the beginning of the 24 second clock because it as so difficult to weight Mikan's career so they wouldn't have Mikan because the criteria are different.

1. Correct me if I am wrong but I am not seeing where the peaks project explicitly exclude Mikan or pre shot clock era?
viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1404723#p44568036

2. Let's say Mikan is allowed on the all time peak list, where would you rank him? Top 10 ahead of Magic?
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#10 » by pandrade83 » Tue Aug 1, 2017 2:01 am

My Top Point Guard left: Working on it - but whoever it is doesn't get the vote.
My Top wing/forward left: Wade over Durant by the length of my 5 o'clock shadow.
My Top Center left: Ewing (I'd be ready for Mikan after Ewing goes in) - full disclosure - I grew up a Knicks fan. :banghead: :roll:


Wade has the highest peak of anyone left that I'm willing to consider - the '06 Finals was a GOAT Caliber Finals appearance, his '09-'10 seasons are outstanding and are on par for me with Kobe's better seasons (but Kobe had more of them) and in addition to being the best player on a Championship Team, he's a strong #2 on two more Championship teams. Yes - he played with Lebron to get them - but being the MAN on ONE championship team is more than Durant/Ewing/any PG I'm willing to consider here has achieved. He has relatively few prime years and has some (for this level) duds jammed in between prime years and while Win Shares isn't be all/end all, all the other players already in are Top 25; Wade is #52 (NBA/ABA combined).

Kevin Durant is great. He really is. For a second, I was worried he would be the Drexler to Lebron. I'm glad he's became so much more (and that's not an insult to Drexler). I loved that he figured out in the Finals that he is the best center in the league because he is the evolution of where that position is going. I loved that he really took his defensive game to another level this year. I loved that he went right at Lebron in the Finals. I sincerely believe he has the potential to become a Top 10 GOAT player and pass Bird. I want to see one more strong playoff performance from him. If he doesn't get injured those two years (I really believe OKC wins the '13 title if he doesn't get hurt), the narrative changes and I already have him in. He's still "only" 44th in Win Shares, "only" 33rd in VORP, I think he will get to where he is going - the cumulative impact is almost there for me to put him above Wade already. I think you can already make the case that Durant has more elite seasons than Wade - but I have Wade's best playoff work as better than anything Durant has done and Wade still has more quality "not prime" seasons than Durant. The pendulum tips next year (I think) but for right now I take Wade. But the spot is not secure - and there's a few others in that boat. KD is coming and I hope he fulfills the promise of a Top Ten GOAT.

Patrick Ewing anchored a defense that was best in the league for 3 straight years and Top 4 for nearly a decade. He forced MJ into a Game 7, and had MJ down 2-0 in '93. Everyone holds the '94 Finals over his head - what is forgotten is that he set the Finals blocks record in that series. He never won the big one and has some memorable defeats - but even in defeat he was a monster ('95 Gm 7 vs Indy, '97 Gm 7 vs. Miami, '92/'93 series vs. Chicago). He was what got them over the hump ('90 vs. Boston, '92 vs. Detroit) and he never played with another player in their prime who will sniff this list. It's unfortunate that he never quite got a chip - his offensive deficiencies had a way of showing up at the worst times.

I need to think more about the next point guard I am willing to vote for. I'll probably write later on in the thread on it as I think through "the Point Guard wars" as I see a run coming.

I also owe people a Mikan/Pettit explanation I think. It's reasonable for me not to vote for them - it's not reasonable to not give an explanation at this juncture - I'll keep it short as this is already getting lengthy.

Mikan: I need to reconcile the fact that at peak, for his era his impact is as great as anyone's - but the era he played in might get taken to the cleaners by the ACC - even after nutrition/medical benefits are applied. I have him slotted as my next Center to get my support after Ewing is in.

Pettit: Very impressive for his era and for his era, I think you can definitely argue he did more than Durant. His era was just a lot weaker than Durant's. He will be my next wing/forward in after Durant gets in.

1st choice: Dwayne Wade
Alternate Selection: Kevin Durant
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Re: Chris Paul when it matters most... 

Post#11 » by Bad Gatorade » Tue Aug 1, 2017 2:02 am

JoeMalburg wrote:
Spoiler:
Sometimes when you deep dive into a player, you really learn a lot and you have to reevaluate what you thought. Other times do you see almost exactly what you expect to see, that's sort of comforting, makes you feel like you finally figured some things out. And every now and then, you can't really make sense of what you find. It goes against everything else that you think about the player, or at least it goes to a degree much further than you would've confidently stated previously.

This is one of those such cases. I present to you, Chris Paul in the Clutch in the ten most important games of his playoff career...

2008 WCSF Game 7 vs. San Antonio
Second Half: 2/6 fg, 2/2 ft, 6 pts 2 sat 3 to - Hornets lose at home. Janero Pargo is Hornets best player in fourth quarter.

2012 1st Round Game 7 @ Memphis
Third Q: 2/4 fg, 2/2 ft, 6 pts 1 ast 3 to
Fourth Q: 0/3 fg, 2/2 ft, 2 pts 0 ast 3 to (last six minutes)
Clippers win despite 2/7 8 pts 1 ast 6 to from Paul in second half

2013 1st Round Game 5 vs Memphis
Fourth Q: 2/6 fg, 0/0 ft, 4 pts 1 ast 2 to
Clippers lose, fall down 3-2 at home

2013 1st Round Game 6 @ Memphis
Second Half: 4/6 fg, 4/4 ft, 12 pts, 2 ast, 1 to
Ejected with 2:30 to play. Clippers lose and drop series.

2014 WCSF Game 5 vs. Oklahoma City
Fourth Q: 3/5 fg, 0/0 ft, 6 puts 1 ast 2 to
Paul has two turnovers in last fifteen seconds to complete Clipper collapse from up 13 with under 4 to play. Clippers trail series 3-2.

2014 WCSF Game 6 @ Oklahoma City
Second Half: 8/14 fg, 1/1 ft, 18 pts 1 ast 2 to
4th Q: 6/7 fg 13 pts
Clippers lose game and the series

2015 First Round Game 7 vs. San Antonio
Fourth Q: 3/5 fg, 2/2 ft, 9 pts 0 ast 0 to
Clippers win game seven and series, Paul hits clinching shot

2015 WCSF Game 6 vs. Houston
Fourth Q: 2/7 fg, 4/4 ft, 9 pts 0 ast 1 to
Clippers are outscored 40-15 in 4th quarter in game that would have clinched series. Paul hits meaningless three just before buzzer.

2015 WCSF Game 7 @ Houston
Final 18 minutes: 3/9 fg, 4/7 fts, 11 pts 7 ast 2 to
Rockets complete comeback from down 3-1

2017 First Round Game 7 vs. Utah
Second Half: 1/9 fg, 0/1 ft, 2 pts 2 ast 2 to
Clippers lose game and series. R.I.P Lob City


In total that's about 176 minutes of floor time for Paul, only a bit more than what you'd expect him to play in 4 playoff games.

In that time, he shot 30/74 from the field (41%) 3/12 from three (25%) and 22-25 from the line (88%)

He scored 85 points or roughly 19-21 per game
He accumulated 18 ast or about 4 per game
He committed 22 turnovers or about 5 per game

That's a small sample size, but it's striking considering how important all those moments were.

It seems that the best point guard by the numbers is so good when it doesn't matter that it has largely cloaked how pedestrian he is when it matters most.


So, my question to you is, why is a game such as Game 5 in Memphis more important than Game 6 in Utah? Why is a game like Game 5 OKC (2-2) so much more important than the other 2-2 games of his career?

Furthermore, the qualifiers here are things such as "fourth quarter" "second half" "last 18 minutes" - I get that you're focusing on the end game here, but picking different time frames from games that don't even have a consistent criteria and then converting them to a "whole game" type number just seems really, really disingenuous here. There's quite a bit of cherry picking going on.

In my CP3 post, I mentioned the following -

In elimination/closeout games for his career in the playoffs –
20.4 PPG, 9.7 AST, 2.3 STL, 2.7 TO, 56.3 TS%

In all games –
21.4 PPG, 9.4 AST, 2.2 STL, 2.7 TO, 58.5 TS%

There's a small difference in favour of the non-elimination/closeout games, so in the "big" games, there's not really that much difference at all. And this is using a very complete sample size, with every team in the sample that CP3 has played winning at least 51 games (so it's not even like these stats are being accumulated against weak teams). From memory, elimination/closeout games themselves were rather comparable to one another too.

In the 4th quarter across the playoffs and on a 36 minute basis, CP3 has averaged 23.9 points and 6.5 assists on awesome efficiency (59.1 TS%, only 2.3 TOs). Choosing what games/time frames are important and which ones aren't just seems a bit off.

I was actually going to mention earlier - in your previous thread post on Isiah Thomas (which was a real interesting read, btw) you mentioned that Isiah's proclivity towards the big moments is what makes him a "superstar" and you listed some games. Interesting work... but then I thought, does this truly differ from CP3 all that much?

Isiah's played more games in the playoffs, so I decided to look up some percentiles for various numbers and thought I'd see where each of them stand (because they are percentiles, they might have decimals at certain junctions):

Code: Select all

Points   Thomas   Paul
0.05   5.55   7.8
0.1   9   10.6
0.25   13   16
0.5   20   21
0.75   26.25   27
0.9   33   32
0.95   35   34
      
Assists   Thomas   Paul
0.05   4   4
0.1   5   5
0.25   6   7
0.5   9   10
0.75   11   11
0.9   12   14
0.95   13.45   15
      
Minutes   Thomas   Paul
0.05   28   26.8
0.1   31.1   31
0.25   34   35
0.5   39   38
0.75   42   41
0.9   44   43.4
0.95   45   45
      
Turnovers   Thomas   Paul
0.05   1   0
0.1   1   1
0.25   2   1
0.5   3   2
0.75   5   4
0.9   6   5
0.95   6   6
      
TSA   Thomas   Paul
0.05   9.8   10.5
0.1   11.6   11.0
0.25   13.7   14.9
0.5   18.7   18.8
0.75   24.0   22.5
0.9   29.1   24.2
0.95   32.3   25.5


If that's a bit too messy, it basically reads like this - CP3 has a higher "floor" in terms of point scoring, and Isiah has a very slightly higher ceiling. Assists go to CP3, minutes are fairly negligible between the two, Paul is a bit better with turnovers, and their shot attempts are similar at the floor, but Isiah takes a LOT more in his big games.

So, a cursory analysis says that in terms of positive volume (e.g. points, assists) the two players aren't too far (with a slight edge to Paul generally), but CP3 wins things like assist/turnover ratio and missed shots analysis. A volume basis doesn't really paint Thomas as better, even when factoring in his "explosion" games, and his efficiency is far, far worse. Efficiency isn't the be all and end all, but when two players that play in similar manners have comparable volume, the efficiency difference tends to be more indicative than normal.

Of course, another point brought up was that Thomas plays the best basketball when he needs to, and to an extent, I'd agree with this. But there's also a possibility that his individual "success" is a lot more orthogonal to team results than his big game play would imply.

Looking at correlations between games won/lost and their statistics, I find the following -

Thomas / Paul
Points: -0.02 /0.32
TSA: -0.2 / 0.22
AST: 0.00 / 0.21
TOV: -0.14 / -0.24
TS%: 0.26 / 0.28

Although this is far from a complete analysis (there should be more team adjustments done), it's interesting to note that most of Thomas' statistics (outside of his efficiency based ones) are actually completely orthogonal to team success. If I actually isolate the 1987-1990 period, these correlations for Thomas actually get weaker. And honestly, it's not entirely a surprise when I look at it - for all of his heroics, Thomas has actually LOST the 5 highest scoring games of his playoff career, and most of these were in the later 80s!

It's worth mentioning that neither points (i.e. relying on Thomas as an offensive fulcrum) nor assists (which are also a proxy for how well your teammates are shooting) actually showed up with positively regards to Thomas... at all. And honestly, the biggest inference I make from this is, for all the narrative behind his heroics, and he was an excellent playoff performer, people became enamoured with the big volume and his never-say-die attitude, but his actual offence isn't the primary trigger behind Detroit's success. He was good. He was very good. But there's a lot of narrative behind Thomas that might be true in isolation, but just doesn't hold up against the best PGs of all time - the players that he is most frequently compared to.

And this includes Chris Paul.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#12 » by penbeast0 » Tue Aug 1, 2017 2:25 am

LA Bird wrote:From last thread:
penbeast0 wrote:
LA Bird wrote: ... I don't recall anybody voting for Mikan during the peak projects just a few years ago.
Bird, the last 2 projects started at the beginning of the 24 second clock because it as so difficult to weight Mikan's career so they wouldn't have Mikan because the criteria are different.

1. Correct me if I am wrong but I am not seeing where the peaks project explicitly exclude Mikan or pre shot clock era?
viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1404723#p44568036

2. Let's say Mikan is allowed on the all time peak list, where would you rank him? Top 10 ahead of Magic?


My mistake, I was thinking of the last two of these top 100 projects; I did not participate in the peaks project. One reason is that I tend to reach conclusions slowly on weight of a lot of evidence where possible and I didn't feel as capable of differentiating 1 year peaks as I do of sustained excellence over 5-10 years.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#13 » by eminence » Tue Aug 1, 2017 2:39 am

penbeast0 wrote:
LA Bird wrote:From last thread:
penbeast0 wrote: Bird, the last 2 projects started at the beginning of the 24 second clock because it as so difficult to weight Mikan's career so they wouldn't have Mikan because the criteria are different.

1. Correct me if I am wrong but I am not seeing where the peaks project explicitly exclude Mikan or pre shot clock era?
viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1404723#p44568036

2. Let's say Mikan is allowed on the all time peak list, where would you rank him? Top 10 ahead of Magic?


My mistake, I was thinking of the last two of these top 100 projects; I did not participate in the peaks project. One reason is that I tend to reach conclusions slowly on weight of a lot of evidence where possible and I didn't feel as capable of differentiating 1 year peaks as I do of sustained excellence over 5-10 years.


Peaks was only shot clock, decided on page 4 or 5
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Re: Chris Paul when it matters most... 

Post#14 » by pandrade83 » Tue Aug 1, 2017 2:48 am

JoeMalburg wrote:Sometimes when you deep dive into a player, you really learn a lot and you have to reevaluate what you thought. Other times do you see almost exactly what you expect to see, that's sort of comforting, makes you feel like you finally figured some things out. And every now and then, you can't really make sense of what you find. It goes against everything else that you think about the player, or at least it goes to a degree much further than you would've confidently stated previously.

This is one of those such cases. I present to you, Chris Paul in the Clutch in the ten most important games of his playoff career...

2008 WCSF Game 7 vs. San Antonio
Second Half: 2/6 fg, 2/2 ft, 6 pts 2 sat 3 to - Hornets lose at home. Janero Pargo is Hornets best player in fourth quarter.

2012 1st Round Game 7 @ Memphis
Third Q: 2/4 fg, 2/2 ft, 6 pts 1 ast 3 to
Fourth Q: 0/3 fg, 2/2 ft, 2 pts 0 ast 3 to (last six minutes)
Clippers win despite 2/7 8 pts 1 ast 6 to from Paul in second half

2013 1st Round Game 5 vs Memphis
Fourth Q: 2/6 fg, 0/0 ft, 4 pts 1 ast 2 to
Clippers lose, fall down 3-2 at home

2013 1st Round Game 6 @ Memphis
Second Half: 4/6 fg, 4/4 ft, 12 pts, 2 ast, 1 to
Ejected with 2:30 to play. Clippers lose and drop series.

2014 WCSF Game 5 vs. Oklahoma City
Fourth Q: 3/5 fg, 0/0 ft, 6 puts 1 ast 2 to
Paul has two turnovers in last fifteen seconds to complete Clipper collapse from up 13 with under 4 to play. Clippers trail series 3-2.

2014 WCSF Game 6 @ Oklahoma City
Second Half: 8/14 fg, 1/1 ft, 18 pts 1 ast 2 to
4th Q: 6/7 fg 13 pts
Clippers lose game and the series

2015 First Round Game 7 vs. San Antonio
Fourth Q: 3/5 fg, 2/2 ft, 9 pts 0 ast 0 to
Clippers win game seven and series, Paul hits clinching shot

2015 WCSF Game 6 vs. Houston
Fourth Q: 2/7 fg, 4/4 ft, 9 pts 0 ast 1 to
Clippers are outscored 40-15 in 4th quarter in game that would have clinched series. Paul hits meaningless three just before buzzer.

2015 WCSF Game 7 @ Houston
Final 18 minutes: 3/9 fg, 4/7 fts, 11 pts 7 ast 2 to
Rockets complete comeback from down 3-1

2017 First Round Game 7 vs. Utah
Second Half: 1/9 fg, 0/1 ft, 2 pts 2 ast 2 to
Clippers lose game and series. R.I.P Lob City


In total that's about 176 minutes of floor time for Paul, only a bit more than what you'd expect him to play in 4 playoff games.

In that time, he shot 30/74 from the field (41%) 3/12 from three (25%) and 22-25 from the line (88%)

He scored 85 points or roughly 19-21 per game
He accumulated 18 ast or about 4 per game
He committed 22 turnovers or about 5 per game

That's a small sample size, but it's striking considering how important all those moments were.

It seems that the best point guard by the numbers is so good when it doesn't matter that it has largely cloaked how pedestrian he is when it matters most.


I don't like the arbitrary nature of how you picked these. There needs to be a defined criteria. I'm defining "clutch" as closeout/elimination games. You can disagree if you want - but at least there's a consistent yardstick being applied. When you keep it to a specific sample, Paul holds up very very well - the #'s above feel very cherry picked.

Stud games defined as: (Points * TS%) + reb + ast + stl + block - TO at 30 or greater
Dud games defined as: (Points * TS%) + reb + ast + stl + blk - TO at 18 or below

Nash ('01-10) 32 games: 17.7 pts, 8.8 ast, 4.0 reb, 0.7 stl, 0.1 block, 3.5 TO, 59.4% TS, 6 stud games, 13 dud games. 8 of the duds came with Dallas and only one of the studs did as well.
Thomas ('84-'92) 30 games: 20.5 pts, 9.1 ast, 5.0 reb, 2.1 stl, 0.3 block, 3.1 TO 50.4% TS. 9 stud games, 9 dud games.
Paul (entire career) 21 games: 20.5 pts, 9.4 ast, 5.2 reb, 2.1 stl, 0.2 block, 2.6 TO 55.9% TS. 9 stud games, 3 dud games
Stockton ('88-'97) 33 games: 16.5 pts, 11.8 ast, 3.6 reb, 2.0 stl, 0.4 block, 3.3 TO 58.2% TS. 10 stud games, 6 dud games.

There's 3 more guys I'm looking at in the PG wars (Steph, GP, Frazier). This isn't going to be the only metric I use for sure - but I will look at it when some of the narratives associated with players' careers come up because it helps me answer the question of "Did Player X really/not really come through in the clutch" and balance out some of the biases that come with team success and the narratives that come with it. Sometimes it aligns with my memories/biases - other times not (in the Paul example).

Isiah holds up well - his numbers aren't too far off from Stockton. Paul surprisingly has done the best (so far). Nash is really dragged down by the Dallas #'s. The Phoenix numbers are on par with Thomas. The fact that Nash's production (rs, playoffs, elimination) really jumped up multiple levels under D'Antoni is something to take into consideration. The fact that his elimination game #'s are inferior to the rest (thus far) is something I'll be taking into account as well.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#15 » by Hornet Mania » Tue Aug 1, 2017 2:54 am

22. Patrick Ewing
Alt vote: Elgin Baylor


This is the area where I think Ewing belongs. He's a step below Robinson (who was a step below Hakeem), but still an elite two-way center in an era where competition at that spot was incredibly strong.

Tough to decide my alternate vote this time, I can see great cases for a whole slew of guys. Nash is definitely in consideration, as is Wade, Kidd, Pettit and Mikan. Baylor gets the very slight advantage in my eyes simply because he helped pioneer an athletic style of play at the wing position that helped revolutionize the game while also being a top-shelf performer in his era.

Seems like a lot of PGs are going to go soon, and in that
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#16 » by pandrade83 » Tue Aug 1, 2017 2:54 am

Doctor MJ wrote:Just going to riff a little here based on things I've been thinking:

Pettit vs Mikan. I just feel like Pettits a lot more proven against competition we'd still take seriously today. You can argue it's just bad luck that Mikan fell apart at a young age right when competition was getting a lot tougher...but even that doesn't seem like a great argument to me. I don't want to imply Pettits the only guy I have above Mikan, but I think everyone should compare the two specifically.

Also I totally get the impulse to side with Mikan based on his abilities as a defensive anchor. It's not quite enough for me here but I feel that pull myself.

The point guards: Nash, Wade, Paul, Curry. It really is tough to sort these guys out.

My opinions on Nash are known I think so I'll try to focus on others guys.

I respect what Wade accomplished but I think he's going to come out last of these 4 for me. The reality is that if not for the '06 finals upset I doubt he's seen the same way at all. And the more I get distance from the event the more fluky it seems. I absolutely love the way Wade can at time kick his motor up to a crazy level but I'm not in love with building around a point guard who isn't amazing at either shooing or passing.

At this moment I'm leaning toward Paul highest if these 4. I don't really buy that his teams have regularly underachieved. His teams have been excellent but have faced incredibly tough competition and in LA literally everyone around him has been a freaking knucklehead. I do think Paul is a prick that people don't enjoy playing around, and that hurts him some, but the question is how much. Oscar is already in and he was basically the exact same type of prick.

I will say this though: I think the lack of joy in Paul's teams makes them less resilient. And again, that hurts him, but I'm not sure how to quantify how much.

Curry is so hard to place compared to the other 3. His peak is transcendent but he still is so young. At the moment I'm debating a lot between he and Nash and I'm feeling like giving the tiebreak to Nash.


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I hear ya. I still think the refs played a part - and I have no dog in the fight. But the reality is it happened - and if it doesn't, Wade isn't even in consideration right now. Do you discount the series because of the fluky nature of it, or are you hesitant to put him in for the other reasons you described?
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Re: Chris Paul when it matters most... 

Post#17 » by JoeMalburg » Tue Aug 1, 2017 2:56 am

pandrade83 wrote:
JoeMalburg wrote:Sometimes when you deep dive into a player, you really learn a lot and you have to reevaluate what you thought. Other times do you see almost exactly what you expect to see, that's sort of comforting, makes you feel like you finally figured some things out. And every now and then, you can't really make sense of what you find. It goes against everything else that you think about the player, or at least it goes to a degree much further than you would've confidently stated previously.

This is one of those such cases. I present to you, Chris Paul in the Clutch in the ten most important games of his playoff career...

2008 WCSF Game 7 vs. San Antonio
Second Half: 2/6 fg, 2/2 ft, 6 pts 2 sat 3 to - Hornets lose at home. Janero Pargo is Hornets best player in fourth quarter.

2012 1st Round Game 7 @ Memphis
Third Q: 2/4 fg, 2/2 ft, 6 pts 1 ast 3 to
Fourth Q: 0/3 fg, 2/2 ft, 2 pts 0 ast 3 to (last six minutes)
Clippers win despite 2/7 8 pts 1 ast 6 to from Paul in second half

2013 1st Round Game 5 vs Memphis
Fourth Q: 2/6 fg, 0/0 ft, 4 pts 1 ast 2 to
Clippers lose, fall down 3-2 at home

2013 1st Round Game 6 @ Memphis
Second Half: 4/6 fg, 4/4 ft, 12 pts, 2 ast, 1 to
Ejected with 2:30 to play. Clippers lose and drop series.

2014 WCSF Game 5 vs. Oklahoma City
Fourth Q: 3/5 fg, 0/0 ft, 6 puts 1 ast 2 to
Paul has two turnovers in last fifteen seconds to complete Clipper collapse from up 13 with under 4 to play. Clippers trail series 3-2.

2014 WCSF Game 6 @ Oklahoma City
Second Half: 8/14 fg, 1/1 ft, 18 pts 1 ast 2 to
4th Q: 6/7 fg 13 pts
Clippers lose game and the series

2015 First Round Game 7 vs. San Antonio
Fourth Q: 3/5 fg, 2/2 ft, 9 pts 0 ast 0 to
Clippers win game seven and series, Paul hits clinching shot

2015 WCSF Game 6 vs. Houston
Fourth Q: 2/7 fg, 4/4 ft, 9 pts 0 ast 1 to
Clippers are outscored 40-15 in 4th quarter in game that would have clinched series. Paul hits meaningless three just before buzzer.

2015 WCSF Game 7 @ Houston
Final 18 minutes: 3/9 fg, 4/7 fts, 11 pts 7 ast 2 to
Rockets complete comeback from down 3-1

2017 First Round Game 7 vs. Utah
Second Half: 1/9 fg, 0/1 ft, 2 pts 2 ast 2 to
Clippers lose game and series. R.I.P Lob City


In total that's about 176 minutes of floor time for Paul, only a bit more than what you'd expect him to play in 4 playoff games.

In that time, he shot 30/74 from the field (41%) 3/12 from three (25%) and 22-25 from the line (88%)

He scored 85 points or roughly 19-21 per game
He accumulated 18 ast or about 4 per game
He committed 22 turnovers or about 5 per game

That's a small sample size, but it's striking considering how important all those moments were.

It seems that the best point guard by the numbers is so good when it doesn't matter that it has largely cloaked how pedestrian he is when it matters most.


I don't like the arbitrary nature of how you picked these. There needs to be a defined criteria. I'm defining "clutch" as closeout/elimination games. You can disagree if you want - but at least there's a consistent yardstick being applied. When you keep it to a specific sample, Paul holds up very very well - the #'s above feel very cherry picked.

Stud games defined as: (Points * TS%) + reb + ast + stl + block - TO at 30 or greater
Dud games defined as: (Points * TS%) + reb + ast + stl + blk - TO at 18 or below

Nash ('01-10) 32 games: 17.7 pts, 8.8 ast, 4.0 reb, 0.7 stl, 0.1 block, 3.5 TO, 59.4% TS, 6 stud games, 13 dud games. 8 of the duds came with Dallas and only one of the studs did as well.
Thomas ('84-'92) 30 games: 20.5 pts, 9.1 ast, 5.0 reb, 2.1 stl, 0.3 block, 3.1 TO 50.4% TS. 9 stud games, 9 dud games.
Paul (entire career) 21 games: 20.5 pts, 9.4 ast, 5.2 reb, 2.1 stl, 0.2 block, 2.6 TO 55.9% TS. 9 stud games, 3 dud games
Stockton ('88-'97) 33 games: 16.5 pts, 11.8 ast, 3.6 reb, 2.0 stl, 0.4 block, 3.3 TO 58.2% TS. 10 stud games, 6 dud games.

There's 3 more guys I'm looking at in the PG wars (Steph, GP, Frazier). This isn't going to be the only metric I use for sure - but I will look at it when some of the narratives associated with players' careers come up because it helps me answer the question of "Did Player X really/not really come through in the clutch" and balance out some of the biases that come with team success and the narratives that come with it. Sometimes it aligns with my memories/biases - other times not (in the Paul example).

Isiah holds up well - his numbers aren't too far off from Stockton. Paul surprisingly has done the best (so far). Nash is really dragged down by the Dallas #'s. The Phoenix numbers are on par with Thomas. The fact that Nash's production (rs, playoffs, elimination) really jumped up multiple levels under D'Antoni is something to take into consideration. The fact that his elimination game #'s are inferior to the rest (thus far) is something I'll be taking into account as well.


It's not that I don't see your point, I do and I'd be happy to provide you the data based on any criteria and sample size you select/define in terms of second halfs or fourth quarters of playoff games for Chris Paul.

I looked st all his game fives and beyond in every series his team won at least two games. I picked the most crucial moments of the most crucial games based on score at the time and what's at stake for the series. It is subjective, yes. But again, I invite you to offer your interpretation of clutch and I'll look into that with an open mind.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#18 » by mischievous » Tue Aug 1, 2017 3:30 am

Wade is my 1st vote and I’m looking to make his case now. I’ll go over the relevant years of his career, as well as his place in the league those years.

2004- Solid rookie year. Put up roughly 16/4/5 17.6 PER, 53 ts% .9 OBPM, 1.4 BPM. Missed 21 games, so I have to dock him some. Raised his game in the playoffs, where he arguably becomes their best player putting up 18/4/6 53 ts% 17.7 PER over 13 games. Drops 21/4/6 on 57ts% against the Pacers who were an elite team, and one of the best defenses in the league being anchored by a prime Artest and Jermaine Oneal. Overall, not a great season, but a borderline all star caliber season which should count for something when looking at his career.

2005- Wade becomes a legit superstar. and starts to become basically their de facto point guard as a term many use when a player basically takes on shooting guard and point guard duties. Along with Shaq, helps lead the heat to 59 wins and 1st seed in the east throwing up roughly 24/5/7 56 ts%, 23 PER in the regular season and again raises his game in the playoffs being one win away from the finals. Roughly 27/6/7 on 56 ts%, 24.3 PER and a 6.6 BPM over the entire playoffs. Should also be noted that Wade’s injury in the Piston series is pretty much why they didn’t advance. I mean they get completely blown out in the game 6 without him, and lose by 25 points. It’s fair to knock Wade for his injury, but at the same time, they don’t get put even close to the position they were without him.

2006- Wade this year goes from just a superstar to having an all time great season. This year, you see Wade become imo a borderline elite defensive guard, and he starts to take better care of the ball and get to the line a bit more. Shaq sees a decline from the previous year, and missed 23 games, so their record isn’t as good as the year prior. Wade wasn’t working with a whole lot outside of Shaq especially in his absence. We had Walker who was past prime, but still an alright player, Zo was still a good defensive player but was only playing 20 mpg. Haslem was never more than a good role player. I’ll use some of a post from Quotatious a few years back on Wade’s 2006 season. If he was here, I know he wouldn’t mind.

Quotatious wrote:I know that most people consider 2009 to be Wade's peak (me too), but his 2006 campaign is extremely impressive. I'm not even talking just about his playoff run, but his '05-'06 regular season is IMO underrated.

In the regular season, Wade averaged about 27.2 ppg (57.7% TS, +4.2% league average) /5.7 rpg (8.7% TRB)/6.7 apg (33.0% AST/13.2% TOV, so +2.5 ratio)/1.8 spg/0.8 bpg, 27.6 PER (4th in the league, very close to LeBron/Dirk, who had 28.1, and Kobe, with 28.0), 4th in WS/48 (after Dirk, Billups and KG), 2nd/3rd in BPM (behind LeBron, tied with KG for #2, at 7.0), 3rd in VORP (after LeBron and KG). Also, his +15.8 on/off court net is clearly higher than any other star's, including Kobe, LeBron, Dirk, Garnett, Duncan, Nash etc.

He finished #1 in the league in NPI RAPM, with a very sizeable edge over any other superstar of his caliber, #1 in prior informed, and 6th in xRAPM (behind Ben Wallace, Kirilenko, Duncan, Garnett and Shaq).

In the playoffs (23 games, obviously led his team to a title), he averaged 28.4 ppg (59.3%, so he actually improved his scoring compared to the regular season, while facing pretty good defensive teams - his first round opponents, the Bulls, had the 7th best defense in the league, second round opponent - the Nets, were #4 in DRtg, then in the ECF they faced the Pistons, #5 in DRtg, anchored by then-reigning DPOY Ben Wallace, and even the Mavs was decent defensively - #11), his rebounding stayed about the same (8.4% TRB compared to 8.7 in the regular season), playmaking declined a bit (27.9% AST/14.0% AST), but it was still pretty solid, and his defense apparently improved (it was already good in the RS). PER goes down by a bit (26.9, compared to 27.6 in the RS), WS/48 stay about the same (24.0 compared to 23.9), BPM goes up (8.9 compared to 7.5). His on/off court net is even higher than it was in the RS (+21.8).

I’ll just leave that season at that.


2007- Inury riddled year. Definitely hurts his career value, but before going down with injury Wade was playing close to his 09 level and clearly above his 06 regular season. In 46 games before injury, Wade averaged 29/5/8 on 59 ts%, while being a very good defender.

2008- Not a lot to talk about unfortunately. Beat up and injured, not playing to his usual level even when he was out there.

2009- Wade’s peak. Anybody that doesn’t know how great Wade’s peak was should educate themselves in a hurry. Hopefully Sideshowbob doesn’t mind me quoting some posts on Wade’s 09 season.

SideshowBob wrote:Wade 2009, late February-March scoring streak (34.7 GameScore!?)

Code: Select all

G    MP    PTS    TRB    AST    STL    BLK    TS%    ORTG   GmSc
11   41.5  38.3   6.3   10.4    3.0    1.3   .654    130    34.7


That has to be the best stretch so far. That's just an unreal 11 game stretch. I've seen Jordan and James with the most extended streaks of a 28+ game score, but this is phenomenal.

There's an 8 game run in there that looks like this

Code: Select all

G    MP    PTS    TRB    AST    STL    BLK    TS%    ORTG   GmSc
8    42.5  39.9   6.9   10.4    3.6    1.5   .655    131    36.9


He shoots 50% from 3, puts up an AST% of 48.7%, a USG% of 37.1%, a STL% of 4.5%, and a BLK% of 3.1%, all while putting up 40/7/10/4/2 on 66% TS no less

Here's a more detailed look at that stretch. Includes Miami's performance shifts, 4Factors, and Wade's Box lines.

----------------------------------

2009 Miami Heat

Spoiler:
Full Season

Code: Select all

Pace     ORTG     DRTG     MOV     SOS     SRS     Off     Def     Net
89.3     108.5    108.3    0.26    0.24    0.49   +0.5     0.0    +0.6


Non-Ball Dominant Stretch 66 Games

Code: Select all

Pace     ORTG     DRTG     MOV     SOS     SRS     Off     Def     Net
89.2     107.3    107.0    0.29   -0.14   -0.25   -1.0    -1.0    +0.1


Ball Dominant Stretch February 18th - March 14th, 2009, 13 Games

Code: Select all

Pace     ORTG     DRTG     MOV     SOS     SRS     Off     Def     Net
91.4     114.6    114.4    0.15    2.07    3.38   +7.5    +5.0    +2.5


Four Factors

Spoiler:
Full Season

Code: Select all

              eFG%       ORB/DRB%    TOV%       FT/FGA

Offense       50.0%      24.6%       11.6%      .212
Defense       50.1%      72.9%       14.0%      .251


Non-Ball Dominant Stretch 66 Games

Code: Select all

              eFG%       ORB/DRB%    TOV%       FT/FGA

Offense       49.6%      24.5%       11.7%      .212
Defense       49.5%      72.9%       14.2%      .249


Ball Dominant Stretch February 18th - March 14th, 2009, 13 Games

Code: Select all

              eFG%       ORB/DRB%    TOV%       FT/FGA

Offense       52.0%      24.5%       11.0%      .234
Defense       53.8%      72.2%       14.4%      .267


Dwyane Wade
Spoiler:
Average and Per 75 possessions

Full Season

Code: Select all

MPG   PPG   TRB   AST   AST%    TOV   TOV%    TS%   RelTS%  USG%   ORTG

38.6  30.2  5.0   7.5   40.3%   3.4   11.6%   57.4% +3.0%   36.2%  115
N/A   31.6  5.3   7.8   N/A     3.6   N/A     N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A


Non-Ball Dominant Stretch 66 Games

Code: Select all

MPG   PPG   TRB   AST   AST%    TOV   TOV%    TS%   RelTS%  USG%   ORTG

38.0  28.8  4.9   6.9   37.8%   3.3   11.4%   55.6% +1.2%   36.5%  111.6
N/A   30.6  7.3   8.0   N/A     3.7   N/A     N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A


Ball Dominant Stretch February 18th - March 14th, 2009, 13 Games

Code: Select all

MPG   PPG   TRB   AST   AST%    TOV   TOV%    TS%   RelTS%  USG%   ORTG

41.4  37.2  5.9  10.4   50.3%   3.9   12.2%   65.7% +11.3%  36.0%  131
N/A   35.3  5.6   9.9   N/A     3.7   N/A     N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A


----------------------------------

Miami was able to run a +7.5 offense with Wade playing out of his mind like that.




2010- Elite, all time great season imo. Box scores- roughly 27/5/7 56+ ts%, 28 PER, 7.4 OBPM, 9.4 BPM, 8.0 VORP. Wade was 2nd in RAPM by a comfortable margin in the league behind Lebron, and his box scores also show him as comfortably the 2nd best player in the league behind Lebron. Led a mediocre cast to 47 wins. In the playoffs, Wade summoned his inner MJ on the Boston Celtics who were the best defense in the league that gave Lebron and Kobe problems.

5 games- 33.2/5.6/6.8 65 ts%, 29.4 PER 11.4 OBPM, 13.7 BPM. It was just one series, but it shows what Wade was capable of doing to super elite defenses. For those docking this series for the heat being a bad offense, please. The 2nd leading scorer on the Heat in that series was Chalmers at 10.8 ppg. Pretty much everyone was shooting and playing really poorly especially Jermaine Oneal who was historically bad. Oneal was playing 23 mpg, shooting 8.8 times per game and shot 22.3 ts%. Nobody that ever lived could’ve beaten the Celtics in place of Wade, or have them playing at a significantly better offensive level.


2011-2014 the big 3 era- I’m not going to go in too much detail as I think my post is getting too long at this point.

2011 Wade, was still in his prime and an easy top 5 player in the league. Still put up elite numbers with Lebron’s play style overlapping with Wade’s. Wade like in 2010 torched the Celtics, and was very great in the finals, would’ve had a 2nd finals mvp if Lebron plays even 75% of what he’s’ capable of. They could’ve gone up 3-1 if it weren’t for Lebron’s pathetic 8 point performance in game 4.

2012- Some injuries, still played basically at his prime level when he was healthy. Decent in the playoffs, stepped up in the Pacers series when Bosh went down with injury(averaged 33/7/4 on 64.4 ts% in games 4-6) Top 10 player in the league easily.

2013- Helped the heat to an historic 27 game win streak. Mediocre playoffs, but had a big game 4 in the finals where he was the best player on the floor and this game changes the momentum of the series.

2014- Injuries, was mediocre in the playoffs. Adds little value

2015- All star caliber, but definitely slowing down

2016- Nearly leads the Heat to the ECF, while being their clear best player in the playoffs.

I think Wade’s lack of longevity tends to get overblown or exaggerated. I think his combination of peak, prime, long playoff success and awards and accomplishments is enough to get him in imo. I think outside of maybe Curry, Wade has clearly the best peak left, and versus Curry i think his peak is comparable or slightly better and has a clear longevity edge. Vs Durant, I'd still give Wade a small longevity edge and i wouldn't hesitate to take him over KD in their primes. Vs Cp3, Wade is behind in longevity now, but Cp3 isn't a very durable guy himself especially come playoff time and has hurt his team's chances to advance on several occasions because of this. I'm not at all impressed with Paul's success given what he's had to work with, and i' m pretty confident that prime Wade would've taken the Clippers to at least a couple WCF appearances and probably even further. I'm not considering Mikan yet, i'm not impressed with his longevity or the fact that he beat up on pathetic competition.

Wade over Nash because of far superior defense, and Nash doesn't really have more seasons at a legit superstar level than Wade, 05-10 for Nash vs 05-12 for Wade but the games missed for Wade probably about evens it out.

To me, Wade clearly deserves in at this point, and quite frankly it will be an utter joke if he falls any lower than 23-24.

2nd vote: Bob Pettit
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2klegend
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#19 » by 2klegend » Tue Aug 1, 2017 3:44 am

Stockton getting in at #21 early is brutal thing so far but let keep going. Since many value longevity this high, then be consistent with it.

I'm going to explain my formula a little bit this time. I said very early that my GOAT formula, I value each of the 4 primary categories to a percentage that reflect their legacy. For example, when you view a player, what is most important to you. Therefore my GOAT becomes

GOAT = (Peak x 20%) + (Prime x 35%) + (Longevity x 10%) + (Accomplishment x 35%)

When I think of a player, two categories (PRIME + AWARD) will tell me what type of player there were, how much impact they had and and how successful they were in their playing career. That's why 60% of my GOAT value depends on Prime and Accomplishment. The debate on peak vs longevity is an interesting. On one hand, you have people who value a player putting up consistent number and play very long vs one who have an impressive peak that everyone can point to and remember. Wade vs Stockston is the classic example. I simply don't value longevity that much, especially their longevity does nothing to add legacy to that player.

Now speaking of Prime Formula, I formulated them using 5 advance metrics (PER, TS%, WS48, OBPM, DBPM) and pegged them against the NBA leading average from 1960-2016. Each metric then standardize to 30points, the same as how you view 30 PER, .60TS, .300, 10 BPM as the ultimate outstanding metrics to be in. One metric may lie about a player impact but not when 5 are combined. It paints us a rather clear picture of that player ability and impact on the game, so to speak. I felt raw statistical data does not said much about a player impact without adjusting to pace, usage, system, etc.. Anwyays my Prime Formula functions based on individual 7 best seasons..

PRIME = =(AVERAGE(PER1 to PER7)*PERstd + AVERAGE(TS%1 to TS%7)*TS%std + AVERAGE(WS48-1 to WS48-7)*WS48std + AVERAGE(OBPM1 to OBPM 7)*OBPMstd + AVERAGE(DBPM1 to DBPM7)*DBPMstd)

Top 100+ Prime:

Code: Select all

      
                               Prime Years               7 years Prime
12   Karl Malone           90, 91, 93, 95, 96, 97, 98      114.970
13   Tim Duncan            00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 07      114.656
14   Dwyane Wade           05, 06, 07, 09, 10, 11, 12      113.959
15   Oscar Robertson       62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68      113.147
16   Jerry West            64, 65, 66, 67, 70, 71, 72      110.506




Depending on how you penalized Wade for missing games (a lot) during his prime, you can reduce his prime point value but ignoring his missed game, you can see that Wade prime is Top 20 material and in the vicinity of Duncan/Malone/Big O/J-West.

Without even further discuss of his all-time level peak in 2006 and 3x titles, 2x all-NBA 1st, 12 all-star selection. With those 3 categories favored wade comfortably, that's 90% of a player legacy, he definitely deserved this #22 on the list.

1st Pick: Wade
2nd Pick: CP3
My Top 100+ GOAT (Peak, Prime, Longevity, Award):
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #22 

Post#20 » by mischievous » Tue Aug 1, 2017 3:47 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
I respect what Wade accomplished but I think he's going to come out last of these 4 for me. The reality is that if not for the '06 finals upset I doubt he's seen the same way at all. And the more I get distance from the event the more fluky it seems.

Well you could go there, but at the same time, we can sit back and say if not for Lebron's fluky 2011 finals performance, Wade has 2 FMVPs, and likely 4 rings altogether.

Even so, i always hear from many posters on the board how level of play matters much more than win/loss in a series, so why would it be drastically different for him?

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