RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 (Paul Pierce)

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RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 (Paul Pierce) 

Post#1 » by trex_8063 » Fri Sep 15, 2017 5:36 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. Dwyane Wade
23. Chris Paul
24. Bob Pettit
25. George Mikan
26. Steve Nash
27. Patrick Ewing
28. Kevin Durant
29. Stephen Curry
30. Scottie Pippen
31. John Havlicek
32. Elgin Baylor
33. Clyde Drexler
34. Rick Barry
35. Gary Payton
36. Artis Gilmore
37. Jason Kidd
38. Walt Frazier
39. Isiah Thomas
40. Kevin McHale
41. George Gervin
42. Reggie Miller
43. ????

Go!

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#2 » by penbeast0 » Fri Sep 15, 2017 6:44 pm

Bob Cousy's early to mid 50s years were certainly elite (in a weak league) but I actually have Paul Arizin's 50s run as stronger than Cousy's and Cousy's post-Russell years were characterized by a lot of truly awful playoff inefficiency. Westbrook is interesting too. Short and spectacular, but I can't support someone whose primary argument is his ridiculous point/assist totals when his efficiency and turnovers are so poor; at least not yet. Harden is an efficient scorer but his defense is worse than George Gervin's and his turnovers are equally high. If I am going for a short prime player, it's going to be Russell Westbrook or Sidney Moncrief who was an extremely efficient 20 point/game scorer for the 4-5 years his body held up while also being probably the greatest perimeter man defender in the history of the NBA.

However, there are still wings with long, high scoring careers. The aforementioned Arizin, Alex English, Ray Allen, and Paul Pierce are the ones I look at first, before the inefficiency and poor leadership of an Allen Iverson or Pete Maravich. Defensive forwards Bobby Jones and Shawn Marion (maybe James Worthy and Larry Nance as well) could also be in the mix.

All my top rated bigs are in. There are still the great defenders like Dikembe Mutombo and Nate Thurmond and the great offensive threats like Bob McAdoo, Amare Stoudamire, and Neil Johnston. Plus you have Elvin Hayes and Dave Cowens to fit in somewhere. I actually have some of these ahead of Willis Reed who got some play last time.

But, since Pierce was the guy with support last time, let's compare him to Paul Arizin and Alex English. Pierce has the longevity advantage, having played 19 seasons to English's 15 and Arizin's 10 but the others didn't hang around as a role player like Pierce did at the end so between those two it's reasonably close. Arizin played less (and had his late career numbers depressed by playing with early Wilt) but in an era where players didn't have the medical and financial advantages of today. So I don't rate him too far behind the other two. To eliminate the role player seasons, let's just take the first 15 for Pierce (before the ill fated Brooklyn trade), the first 14 for English (he did go to Dallas in his last season), and all 10 of Arizin's (he had one season he spent in the military) to give us a feel for what their games looked like in their prime.

In one less season, English plays more games but Pierce more minutes. Taking their per 36 numbers:

Arizin (38.4min) 21.9/7.9/2.2 (no turnover data) .506ts%
English (32.6min) 24.6/6.2/4.2 (2.7to) .552ts%
Pierce (36.6mpg) 21.4/5.9/3.8 (2.9to) .568ts%

English scores the most by about 10% (no surprise since he outscored Larry Bird, Nique, and everyone else for most points in the 1980s), he's also clearly the best playmaker with more assists and less turnovers than Pierce . . . and a slightly better rebounder too. Pierce has an efficiency edge from his 3 point shooting (English was not a 3 point threat) and has a better defensive reputation too though English was a willing defender. Arizin may be the most efficient relative to era but that era was the 1950s and so it's no surprise that his rebounding is inflated a bit. Between his shorter career, weaker era, and lesser playmaking, I will eliminate him.

So, English did more per minute, Pierce played more minutes. English played in a faster pace but as part (the primary scorer part usually) of a modern share the ball offense, Pierce was the featured player in a two or three star offense (with Toine or Garnett/Allen). It's still too close to call. Let's look at their playoffs.

English (68 games) 35.7min 24.6/5.5/4.3 (2.1to) .556ts% right at his RS numbers
Pierce (136 games) 39.8min 18.9/5.8/3.6 (3.2to) .549ts% more turnovers, lower scoring than RS

Pierce has a strong edge in number of playoff games but English played better in his.

Vote: Alex English
Alternate: Pierce or one of the defensive stars: Mutombo, Thurmond, or Bobby Jones
and the answer is:
Paul Pierce
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#3 » by trex_8063 » Fri Sep 15, 2017 6:59 pm

There was an 8-year span of time during which my primary candidate (Paul Pierce) was fairly clearly the best player on his team ('00-'07). During that 8-year span he collectively averaged 24.1 ppg/6.5 rpg/4.0 apg @ 55.8% TS, and with good defense, too.
He averaged out as a 21.7 PER, .160 WS/48, +3.8 BPM player (while averaging a boss 38.1 mpg) in that span.

And despite there being a fair bit of cast and coaching turnover in that span (as I elaborated on in the last thread), and the supporting casts ranged from outright putrid up to mediocre at its best, they never failed to win fewer than *33 games with Pierce pulling them along (*except in '07---24 wins---when Pierce missed a huge chunk of the season: it needs to be noted that in the 47 games he played they were 20-27 [on pace for about 35 wins], but went 4-31 [on pace for 9 wins] in the 35 games he missed).
When "gifted" with an actual mediocre [as opposed to terrible] supporting cast, Pierce helped lead them to 49 wins and game 6 of a conference finals.

After that, he distinguished himself as the clear 2nd-best player on an historically great title-winning team (garnering a FMVP, for what that's worth in terms of legacy). He would continue to generally be the ~2nd-best player on a team that was at least a fringe contender for three more years after that.

And then he had still FOUR MORE "pretty good" years, rounding out a career that has left him #1 among players still on the table in career rs VORP, #2 in career rs WS (behind only Dan Issel; Pierce is #1 in NBA-only).

His candidacy seems more than legit at this point.


With Miller off the table, I need to zero in on a new alternate though. I'm going with Dwight Howard.
The dings against Howard are his [often OFF court] teammate intangibles, impact which seems to lag behind his box production and efficiency, and longevity which falls at least a tad behind most of the other people I'm considering at this spot (guys like Pau Gasol, Robert Parish, Dolph Schayes).
But he easily has the statistical resume, the accolades/awards/MVP shares, etc to be competitive here; probably to be HIGHER than here, actually. I opened with the negative points about him to illustrate why I've NOT lent him my support sooner.

Howard arrived in the league a "decent" player, and as of his 13th season was still a "decent" player, and only two seasons in which he missed relevant games. Has a 3-year peak region of his career which is [imo] as good or better than anyone left on the table. For me, it's probably past time he had a little traction.

1st vote: Paul Pierce
2nd vote: Dwight Howard
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#4 » by Winsome Gerbil » Fri Sep 15, 2017 7:52 pm

So, we are coming off a runoff vote where the two losers were Willis Reed and Paul Pierce. Let's look at that.

Part I
as I mentioned in that thread, Willis Reed had one of the very shortest careers of anybody who is going to get consideration in this Top 100. In fact I pointed this out in that thread:

WillisReed 650gms 23073min
Westbrook 668gms 22786min

And people have remarkably been almost completely ignoring Westbrook, coming off an MVP season when he averaged, oh, 31.6pts 10.7reb 10.4ast and carried a 30.6PER (only Wilt, LeBron, Michael, Steph, Admiral, Shaq and A.D. have ever gone so high, and all but A.D. are long since taken) .

Speaking of which, I made this point long ago, 14 picks ago:

Per Game
StephCurry 34.7min 22.8pts 4.4reb 6.8ast 1.8stl 0.2blk 3.2TO = 23.4PER OBPM 6.8 DBPM -0.5 BPM 6.3 VORP 41.8
Westbrook 34.1min 22.7pts 6.2reb 7.9ast 1.7stl 0.3blk 3.9TO = 23.8PER OBPM 5.2 DBPM 1.3 BPM 6.5 VORP 48.5

Meanwhile:
WillisReed 7x All Star, 5x All NBA (1/4), 1x All Def (1/0), 1x MVP
StephCurry 4x All Star, 4x All NBA (2/2/0), 2x MVP
Westbrook 6x All Star, 6x All NBA (2/4/0), 1x MVP

So what is good for the goose is good for the gander here. Or should be if people want to be honest. We took Curry long ago. His exact same era competitor, with remarkably similar per game averages, who just beat Curry for his own MVP, isn't even being mentioned? Now we have turned to Willis Reed, who actually played in less NBA games than Westbrook, who's calling card is his own much more dubious MVP, and we aren't even talking Westbrook, who is doubtless going to leave Willis's career far in the rearview mirror before he is done? How's that work?


Part II
and our other prime candidate is of course Paul Pierce. Except of course as I have pointed out numerous times, Paul Pierce is repeatedly being pumped up against another candidate who was clearly, and I do mean CLEARLY more decorated and successful than he was up until, voila! Kevin Garnett parachutes in to save the day. Oddly I find "Kevin Garnett arrives to carry me to the promised land" to be a singularly unpersuasive criteria for individual greatness.

So how clear was Iverson's dominance compared to Pierce in the NINE YEARS we got to see them both try to carry shaky supporting casts as solo artists, in the same division even? This clear:

-- Iverson's teams went 373-333 over that span, a 52.8% win percentage. Pierce's teams went 321-385, a 45.5% win percentage.
-- Iverson's teams played in 67 playoff games over that span. Pierce's teams played in 37.
-- not once in the 9 year span did Pierce ever finish above Iverson in all NBA voting. Pierce made 3rd team 2 times. Iverson made 1st team 3 times, 2nd team 3 times, and 3rd team once
-- Iverson made the All Star game 8 of 9 years, only missing in a year in which he was injured. Pierce made the All Star team 5 times
-- not once in the 9 year span did Pierce ever finish above Iverson in MVP voting. Over the span he finished 11th, 11th, and 13th. In various years Iverson finished 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th and 10th.

So to recap, Iverson won more regular season games, won more playoff games, made more All Star teams, made more All NBA teams, was the much stronger annual MVP candidate, actually won an MVP, and won 4 scoring titles.

And Pierce is the "greater" player. Because Kevin Garnett got traded to his team.

Answer me this. If Danny Ainge falls on his face. If he never trades for the "Big Three", is there ANY way given what we know about how the two players were doing, that you could have with a straight face said oh, Pierce was greater? And if not, then what are we rating here? Luck of the GM? We saw these players matched up in comparable circumstances in the same era, the same Conference, the same division even. One of them consistently, for almost a decade straight, did better than the other. Bigger individual stats, bigger accolades, more winning...you name it.

And yet the other guy was greater. Because his GM pulled off a trade for a Top 20 all time player. And of course, because let's be honest, because we don't like Allen Iverson and he threatens current basketball orthodoxy. Those are highly dubious reasons to rewrite history.

43) Allen Iverson
44) Russell Westbrook
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#5 » by Winsome Gerbil » Fri Sep 15, 2017 8:12 pm

penbeast0 wrote:
Spoiler:
Bob Cousy's early to mid 50s years were certainly elite (in a weak league) but I actually have Paul Arizin's 50s run as stronger than Cousy's and Cousy's post-Russell years were characterized by a lot of truly awful playoff inefficiency. Westbrook is interesting too. Short and spectacular, but I can't support someone whose primary argument is his ridiculous point/assist totals when his efficiency and turnovers are so poor; at least not yet. Harden is an efficient scorer but his defense is worse than George Gervin's and his turnovers are equally high. If I am going for a short prime player, it's going to be Russell Westbrook or Sidney Moncrief who was an extremely efficient 20 point/game scorer for the 4-5 years his body held up while also being probably the greatest perimeter man defender in the history of the NBA.

However, there are still wings with long, high scoring careers. The aforementioned Arizin, Alex English, Ray Allen, and Paul Pierce are the ones I look at first, before the inefficiency and poor leadership of an Allen Iverson or Pete Maravich. Defensive forwards Bobby Jones and Shawn Marion (maybe James Worthy and Larry Nance as well) could also be in the mix.

All my top rated bigs are in. There are still the great defenders like Dikembe Mutombo and Nate Thurmond and the great offensive threats like Bob McAdoo, Amare Stoudamire, and Neil Johnston. Plus you have Elvin Hayes and Dave Cowens to fit in somewhere. I actually have some of these ahead of Willis Reed who got some play last time.

But, since Pierce was the guy with support last time, let's compare him to Paul Arizin and Alex English. Pierce has the longevity advantage, having played 19 seasons to English's 15 and Arizin's 10 but the others didn't hang around as a role player like Pierce did at the end so between those two it's reasonably close. Arizin played less (and had his late career numbers depressed by playing with early Wilt) but in an era where players didn't have the medical and financial advantages of today. So I don't rate him too far behind the other two. To eliminate the role player seasons, let's just take the first 15 for Pierce (before the ill fated Brooklyn trade), the first 14 for English (he did go to Dallas in his last season), and all 10 of Arizin's (he had one season he spent in the military) to give us a feel for what their games looked like in their prime.

In one less season, English plays more games but Pierce more minutes. Taking their per 36 numbers:

Arizin (38.4min) 21.9/7.9/2.2 (no turnover data) .506ts%
English (32.6min) 24.6/6.2/4.2 (2.7to) .552ts%
Pierce (36.6mpg) 21.4/5.9/3.8 (2.9to) .568ts%

English scores the most by about 10% (no surprise since he outscored Larry Bird, Nique, and everyone else for most points in the 1980s), he's also clearly the best playmaker with more assists and less turnovers than Pierce . . . and a slightly better rebounder too. Pierce has an efficiency edge from his 3 point shooting (English was not a 3 point threat) and has a better defensive reputation too though English was a willing defender. Arizin may be the most efficient relative to era but that era was the 1950s and so it's no surprise that his rebounding is inflated a bit. Between his shorter career, weaker era, and lesser playmaking, I will eliminate him.

So, English did more per minute, Pierce played more minutes. English played in a faster pace but as part (the primary scorer part usually) of a modern share the ball offense, Pierce was the featured player in a two or three star offense (with Toine or Garnett/Allen). It's still too close to call. Let's look at their playoffs.

English (68 games) 35.7min 24.6/5.5/4.3 (2.1to) .556ts% right at his RS numbers
Pierce (136 games) 39.8min 18.9/5.8/3.6 (3.2to) .549ts% more turnovers, lower scoring than RS

Pierce has a strong edge in number of playoff games but English played better in his.


Vote: Alex English
Alternate: Pierce or one of the defensive stars: Mutombo, Thurmond, or Bobby Jones
and the answer is:
Paul Pierce


As I've mentioned before, calling what Iverson demonstrated "lack of leadership" is a considerable misnomer. Iverson's oncourt drive and competitiveness was second to none. He drove those teams, and they were always scrappy. Indeed, his "lack of leadership" resulted in a lot more wins in comparable settings than nice safe polished players like Pierce and Allen. Being a pain in the ass is not the same thing as being not a leader. Having authority issues isn't the same thing either. The #1 trait you always want to see in your team when you're about to get in a fight is competitiveness, fearlessness, the fight in the dog. You can be the smoothest, most educated, most urbane and sophisticated person in the world and lose a fight to a guy who flat just wants it more.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#6 » by Doctor MJ » Fri Sep 15, 2017 9:06 pm

Winsome Gerbil wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
Spoiler:
Bob Cousy's early to mid 50s years were certainly elite (in a weak league) but I actually have Paul Arizin's 50s run as stronger than Cousy's and Cousy's post-Russell years were characterized by a lot of truly awful playoff inefficiency. Westbrook is interesting too. Short and spectacular, but I can't support someone whose primary argument is his ridiculous point/assist totals when his efficiency and turnovers are so poor; at least not yet. Harden is an efficient scorer but his defense is worse than George Gervin's and his turnovers are equally high. If I am going for a short prime player, it's going to be Russell Westbrook or Sidney Moncrief who was an extremely efficient 20 point/game scorer for the 4-5 years his body held up while also being probably the greatest perimeter man defender in the history of the NBA.

However, there are still wings with long, high scoring careers. The aforementioned Arizin, Alex English, Ray Allen, and Paul Pierce are the ones I look at first, before the inefficiency and poor leadership of an Allen Iverson or Pete Maravich. Defensive forwards Bobby Jones and Shawn Marion (maybe James Worthy and Larry Nance as well) could also be in the mix.

All my top rated bigs are in. There are still the great defenders like Dikembe Mutombo and Nate Thurmond and the great offensive threats like Bob McAdoo, Amare Stoudamire, and Neil Johnston. Plus you have Elvin Hayes and Dave Cowens to fit in somewhere. I actually have some of these ahead of Willis Reed who got some play last time.

But, since Pierce was the guy with support last time, let's compare him to Paul Arizin and Alex English. Pierce has the longevity advantage, having played 19 seasons to English's 15 and Arizin's 10 but the others didn't hang around as a role player like Pierce did at the end so between those two it's reasonably close. Arizin played less (and had his late career numbers depressed by playing with early Wilt) but in an era where players didn't have the medical and financial advantages of today. So I don't rate him too far behind the other two. To eliminate the role player seasons, let's just take the first 15 for Pierce (before the ill fated Brooklyn trade), the first 14 for English (he did go to Dallas in his last season), and all 10 of Arizin's (he had one season he spent in the military) to give us a feel for what their games looked like in their prime.

In one less season, English plays more games but Pierce more minutes. Taking their per 36 numbers:

Arizin (38.4min) 21.9/7.9/2.2 (no turnover data) .506ts%
English (32.6min) 24.6/6.2/4.2 (2.7to) .552ts%
Pierce (36.6mpg) 21.4/5.9/3.8 (2.9to) .568ts%

English scores the most by about 10% (no surprise since he outscored Larry Bird, Nique, and everyone else for most points in the 1980s), he's also clearly the best playmaker with more assists and less turnovers than Pierce . . . and a slightly better rebounder too. Pierce has an efficiency edge from his 3 point shooting (English was not a 3 point threat) and has a better defensive reputation too though English was a willing defender. Arizin may be the most efficient relative to era but that era was the 1950s and so it's no surprise that his rebounding is inflated a bit. Between his shorter career, weaker era, and lesser playmaking, I will eliminate him.

So, English did more per minute, Pierce played more minutes. English played in a faster pace but as part (the primary scorer part usually) of a modern share the ball offense, Pierce was the featured player in a two or three star offense (with Toine or Garnett/Allen). It's still too close to call. Let's look at their playoffs.

English (68 games) 35.7min 24.6/5.5/4.3 (2.1to) .556ts% right at his RS numbers
Pierce (136 games) 39.8min 18.9/5.8/3.6 (3.2to) .549ts% more turnovers, lower scoring than RS

Pierce has a strong edge in number of playoff games but English played better in his.


Vote: Alex English
Alternate: Pierce or one of the defensive stars: Mutombo, Thurmond, or Bobby Jones
and the answer is:
Paul Pierce


As I've mentioned before, calling what Iverson demonstrated "lack of leadership" is a considerable misnomer. Iverson's oncourt drive and competitiveness was second to none. He drove those teams, and they were always scrappy. Indeed, his "lack of leadership" resulted in a lot more wins in comparable settings than nice safe polished players like Pierce and Allen. Being a pain in the ass is not the same thing as being not a leader. Having authority issues isn't the same thing either. The #1 trait you always want to see in your team when you're about to get in a fight is competitiveness, fearlessness, the fight in the dog. You can be the smoothest, most educated, most urbane and sophisticated person in the world and lose a fight to a guy who flat just wants it more.


And you can be the US and still manage to get beat by Puerto Rico in the Olympics, despite Puerto Rico having no one on the team anywhere near as good as the worse player on the US team...if Iverson is the dominant personality in your locker room and he sets the tone for what team play looks like.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#7 » by dhsilv2 » Fri Sep 15, 2017 11:49 pm

I'm more and more interested in better alts, but I'm sticking with my last vote.

Vote Reed- I want to touch a bit more on Reed's longevity as while it is clearly the issue for him, I think he had a few more quality level seasons than people are giving him credit for.

Reed was a strong defender. I would argue he's perhaps a Reggie Miller level defender post peak, which is pretty solid, IMO offense tends to be more valuable than defense. So lets get to it.

The best proxy I can think of to show quality defense is going to be rebounds. Reed has 6 years in the top 10 in the league in rebounds and he had 7 years in the top 10 in per game.

PER - I've often called this the "allstar" stat as it seems one of the better proxies for who end sup being an allstar, though the overall value imo is a bit lower than some of our newest and better metrics. The issue here is that PER seems to undervalue this whole era, so we are either to believe that the top players were far worse than they are now or that the middle of the league is somehow better, or that the PER formula isn't that great without steals and blocks. I think the era was weak, but not THIS weak, so I tend to value where a player ranks vs just the raw number.

65- 12th
67- 6th
68- 6th
69- 4th
70- 8th
71- 17th

WS - I'd guess this is our best metric from this era unless we have more. I think the look at PER and WS give us a pretty good story, and we can add in the missing elements which I think have been covered.

67- 11th
68- 10th
69- 1st
70- 3rd (1st in defensive win share)
71- 10th

Now I will openly admit on this alone I wouldn't be ranking Reed where I am ranking him, but I wanted to illustrate that he had more than the 4 years that people give him credit for. FYI 7 allstar games and 5 all nba's.

From there it's really about if you believe his intangibles were as high as has teammates seem to think. It's about if you think winning an MVP when West, Oscar, and Wilt were all still pretty darn good matters or if that was a down year. It is about where you see his defense. And ultimately if you are willing to give him credit for 6 years and not just the 4, plus his 73 finals. I've been voting Reed here a while and i admit fully that his career length is giving me a lot of pause. It's odd I hear about how the 60's were the peak of centers from some (90's generally get that award), and here is a guy who won an MVP at the end (69-70) of the decade. I also see guys like Miller last round getting credit for playing ahead of his time, I'd think a under sized center with a decent jump shot would fall into at least a lesser version of that.

If you're not sold at Reed here, then that's great. I'm open to moving up a guy like Cowens or Unseld pretty easily. I might even be open to an Iverson or maybe someone from even further back. I haven't seen his name yet, but I'd be interested if people are thinking about Dan Issel, on centers who might have a case. Seems odd Gilmore is in and we haven't even had an Issel mention (Not odd he isn't in). Anyway rant over. But for me I'd like to see an argument for someone over Reed vs why Reed shouldn't be here.

Alt D Howard - Howard is an odd choice in a way. I'm not sure he is a traditional "best player" on a title team. That said I'll boldly say I think he was better at his peak than Mutombo as a defender. His speed and close out ability was just amazing and it made him a much more difficult guy to deal with.

Interestingly he does provide me a "WTF" moment on the RAPM stats, Rashard Lewis had a higher defensive RAPM in 09 than Howard? Lets just say I love RAPM but it's missing a lot here imo. It oddly thinks Howard was a better offensive player than most people generally rank him which is interesting but I also feel misleading.

Anyway Howard is an all time great rebounder. He ranks 23rd in total rebounds already. Keep in mind that list is loaded with early era players where rebounds were in higher numbers and some of the rebounding stats were insane, and then some of our longest careers (Duncan, Malone, Parish, KG). Howard has passed the modern rebounding king, Rodman, who's career wasn't that much shorter.

Howard was a great shot blocker, but the stats are somewhat missleading. I'm sure most here have read the Howard (or was it Dwight?) effect article that went up from the slone conference. If not the article illustrated how Howard seemed to reduce the number of field goal attempts made around him, which given he's a center and stands around the paint, is reducing the most valuable shots. Clearly he isn't the first to do this or the best, but he was the poster child of this when they did the this paper. It has however jaded me towards wondering about players who had high blocks per game to where a guy like Camby I somewhat wonder if maybe teams knew he could block anything but would also fall for a fake and would get out of position for rebounds if he missed the block.

Anyway the WS and VORP and PER stats aren't mind blowing for Howard. He does well. This actually where I think he opens himself up, but I'm just not sold that these very good scorers and ok to decent defenders that are getting considered right now are good choices. Thus I'll take imo the best defender left and if he isn't, he was better offensively than any of the other defensive stand outs.

I'm also looking at Iverson, Unseld, Cowens, Cousy, and I'm interested in some good cases for Schayes who is a guy I know pretty much in name only (much like Arzin also from that era). The next group is going to be Miller, Pierce, Westbrook (I think he'll be close to 60 for me), and then we'll get into a lot of the defensive specialists. Oh and Manu is coming very soon.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#8 » by dhsilv2 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 12:01 am

Winsome Gerbil wrote:So, we are coming off a runoff vote where the two losers were Willis Reed and Paul Pierce. Let's look at that.

Part I
as I mentioned in that thread, Willis Reed had one of the very shortest careers of anybody who is going to get consideration in this Top 100. In fact I pointed this out in that thread:

WillisReed 650gms 23073min
Westbrook 668gms 22786min

And people have remarkably been almost completely ignoring Westbrook, coming off an MVP season when he averaged, oh, 31.6pts 10.7reb 10.4ast and carried a 30.6PER (only Wilt, LeBron, Michael, Steph, Admiral, Shaq and A.D. have ever gone so high, and all but A.D. are long since taken) .

Speaking of which, I made this point long ago, 14 picks ago:

Per Game
StephCurry 34.7min 22.8pts 4.4reb 6.8ast 1.8stl 0.2blk 3.2TO = 23.4PER OBPM 6.8 DBPM -0.5 BPM 6.3 VORP 41.8
Westbrook 34.1min 22.7pts 6.2reb 7.9ast 1.7stl 0.3blk 3.9TO = 23.8PER OBPM 5.2 DBPM 1.3 BPM 6.5 VORP 48.5

Meanwhile:
WillisReed 7x All Star, 5x All NBA (1/4), 1x All Def (1/0), 1x MVP
StephCurry 4x All Star, 4x All NBA (2/2/0), 2x MVP
Westbrook 6x All Star, 6x All NBA (2/4/0), 1x MVP

So what is good for the goose is good for the gander here. Or should be if people want to be honest. We took Curry long ago. His exact same era competitor, with remarkably similar per game averages, who just beat Curry for his own MVP, isn't even being mentioned? Now we have turned to Willis Reed, who actually played in less NBA games than Westbrook, who's calling card is his own much more dubious MVP, and we aren't even talking Westbrook, who is doubtless going to leave Willis's career far in the rearview mirror before he is done? How's that work?


Part II
and our other prime candidate is of course Paul Pierce. Except of course as I have pointed out numerous times, Paul Pierce is repeatedly being pumped up against another candidate who was clearly, and I do mean CLEARLY more decorated and successful than he was up until, voila! Kevin Garnett parachutes in to save the day. Oddly I find "Kevin Garnett arrives to carry me to the promised land" to be a singularly unpersuasive criteria for individual greatness.

So how clear was Iverson's dominance compared to Pierce in the NINE YEARS we got to see them both try to carry shaky supporting casts as solo artists, in the same division even? This clear:

-- Iverson's teams went 373-333 over that span, a 52.8% win percentage. Pierce's teams went 321-385, a 45.5% win percentage.
-- Iverson's teams played in 67 playoff games over that span. Pierce's teams played in 37.
-- not once in the 9 year span did Pierce ever finish above Iverson in all NBA voting. Pierce made 3rd team 2 times. Iverson made 1st team 3 times, 2nd team 3 times, and 3rd team once
-- Iverson made the All Star game 8 of 9 years, only missing in a year in which he was injured. Pierce made the All Star team 5 times
-- not once in the 9 year span did Pierce ever finish above Iverson in MVP voting. Over the span he finished 11th, 11th, and 13th. In various years Iverson finished 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th and 10th.

So to recap, Iverson won more regular season games, won more playoff games, made more All Star teams, made more All NBA teams, was the much stronger annual MVP candidate, actually won an MVP, and won 4 scoring titles.

And Pierce is the "greater" player. Because Kevin Garnett got traded to his team.

Answer me this. If Danny Ainge falls on his face. If he never trades for the "Big Three", is there ANY way given what we know about how the two players were doing, that you could have with a straight face said oh, Pierce was greater? And if not, then what are we rating here? Luck of the GM? We saw these players matched up in comparable circumstances in the same era, the same Conference, the same division even. One of them consistently, for almost a decade straight, did better than the other. Bigger individual stats, bigger accolades, more winning...you name it.

And yet the other guy was greater. Because his GM pulled off a trade for a Top 20 all time player. And of course, because let's be honest, because we don't like Allen Iverson and he threatens current basketball orthodoxy. Those are highly dubious reasons to rewrite history.

43) Allen Iverson
44) Russell Westbrook


Leadership and intangibles imo are pretty important. For me westbrook is in the bottom 5% of MVP's in that area. Iverson I rank higher than some, but he's well below average. Iverson I think is right here and likely my 3rd pick. Westbrook has only once been the guy on his team and to be honest the raw per game numbers were nice last year, but then I think...he was the 5th or 6th best player last year and I kinda lose my interest. Now there's a bias here in that we have soooooooo much better data and stats that we can see these things clearly where as in the past we didn't, but Westbrook was better in 16 than in 17 imo. Like a pretty darn good bit better and I wasn't talking about him as a top player then either. That said I think westbrook is nearing consideration though at this point I have too many concerns with him and they're mostly about his mental state, intangibles, and leadership.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#9 » by penbeast0 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 1:06 am

dhsilv2 wrote:...

Re: Dan Issel

I don't think offense is more important than defense, especially for a big. For a point or even a wing (particularly in the modern era of playmaking wings), but for bigs, defense is more important.

Issel was a very good offensive player but was a poor defensive center. He's a guy like Alvin Adams in Phoenix or even McAdoo . . . not really a true center but played there out of necessity. He could score, had decent range, was a mediocre passer and rebounder. It's telling that Kentucky only finally won in the only year they deemphasized Issel's offense and made Gilmore the focal point and that Denver had its deepest playoff run of the 80s in Issel's last year when he was moved to the bench behind the immortal Wayne Cooper. So, no, Issel isn't on my radar for a long time yet even though Kentucky was my second favorite team growing up.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#10 » by trex_8063 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 2:54 am

Moved this discussion back here, as I think it pertains directly to candidates being argued for.....

dhsilv2 wrote:The hardest part of these lists is always when/where you start doing cutoffs. Some people use the stats, some awards, some rings, some eye test, and then there's always some kind of adjustment.

Thus my view that neither of these guys were true franchise cornerstone players who bring teams titles.....


The results of his study (and apparently those of others) is that it's not only "true franchise cornerstone players" who increase a team's odd of winning a title. Yes, a "true franchise player" increases it more than a "2nd tier" star; and a "2nd-tier" star needs a "1st-tier" star by his side (and some additional decent players besides) to win a title in any competitive era, or else maybe 2-3 other 2nd-tier types, etc.......but a top tier star needs a 2nd tier star (or two) or some similar assemblage of talent.

His study was looking at the chances of various tiers/calibers of players to win a title in a vacuum (that is: across a random spectrum circumstances). It's sort of averaging out the whole broad spectrum of team possibilities/circumstances:
having a top tier---Jordan, Lebron, etc---type star by your side, having another 2nd tier star (or maybe two), having an average supporting cast, having a putrid supporting cast, and every other potential occurring along the usual lines of probability........across that entire distribution of possibilities, what is the average likelihood that Player X wins a title? That's what his study attempted to answer, based on what average lift Player X provides (in light of portability).

e.g. Suppose it's determined that a 2nd tier star like Pierce during his prime has a 10% chance (in any given year) of winning a title......that's not saying that throw him on any team and it's automatically a 10% chance that team wins it all: in some circumstances his chances would be well above 50%; in other circumstances it would be virtually 0%. But his average across all potential team circumstances is 10%.


Now if comparing Paul Pierce to Willis Reed, let's say Reed's prime is 4 years, Pierce's is 10 years (we don't have to agree exactly on those numbers; this is just for argument's sake, though those numbers are probably fairly accurate descriptors of their relative prime lengths). Let us also say that Pierce has a 10% chance of a title in any given year (I'm just pulling that number out of the air, btw, though it's probably pretty close to what Elgee found), and let's say Reed's chance in any given year is 20% (because he's a higher caliber player).

In that instance, Reed's chance of aiding his team toward a title at least once in those four years is 59.0%. The chance of Pierce aiding his team to a title at least once in those 10 years is 65.1%.
If I've done my math correct, the odds of multiple titles is even more firmly in Pierce's favor, due to all the extra years.

Suppose Reed's chances in a given prime year is 25% (more than double what we've allotted for Pierce in this example, and probably stretching things a bit, based on the caliber of player that Reed was, but I'm doing so for the sake of argument): there Reed's chance of aiding his team to at least one title is 68.4%, although I believe his chance of multiple titles in those four years is still marginally less than Pierce's in this example (if my math is correct).

Anyway, food for thought wrt how to consider good longevity.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#11 » by pandrade83 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 2:58 am

1st choice: Wes Unseld
Honorable Mention: Dwight Howard



If you're not giving Unseld a look, you're missing a gem. You're getting a guy who is recognized as a high impact performer (VORP, BPM), was selected to be an MVP, was a strong playoff performer & enjoyed strong team success.

Advanced Metrics

Unseld hit 5+ scores for both BPM 3 times & VORP twice - that we know of - one of which didn't come in a double digit WS year. If we make the reasonably safe assumption that he hit those scores in ALL of his double digit WS year, that gives him 6 years of a BPM Score of 5+ and 5 years of a VORP Score of 5+ and It's highly likely that if we had RAPM, the metric would've loved him as well.

What's so impressive about that? If we assume that Reed got there in all four of his double digit WS years, that means that our 3 run-off candidates from last run combined to have as many BPM 5+ years and only one more VORP 5+ years than Unseld.


MVP Season

In the '68-'69 season, Unseld was selected MVP over guys who are already in like Wilt, Russell, West, Baylor, Frazier & Hondo. He is clearly well respected by his peers. People have said that Unseld's MVP was a little weak - and I get that - but remember you're voting for slot #43, not slot #13 or even #23. It's noteworthy that Unseld's arrival coincided with a 21 win improvement without a change in the team's core, or a change in the coach. Washington went from 36 to 57 wins and finished with the best record in the league - that's why he won MVP - he had a major impact on winning. A team with Unseld & Monroe as it's two best players beat out Wilt/West, Russell/Hondo, Frazier/Reed, which is pretty impressive.

Strong playoff performer

In the playoffs, he maintains his strong performance - averaging 10/15/4/with 1.8 TOs (on fairly limited data) which is right on par with his career averages.

The most infamous defeat one of his teams suffer isn't really on him (the '75 Finals). He does his thing - 12-17-4 on 54% TS. That's who he was. Hayes crippled the team offensively - yes, he scored 20 PPG but he shot a miserable TS% of just 46%.

Strong Team Success

Unseld was the team playoff leader in WS and then VORP/BPM for 4 Finals Teams* as he was vital to his teams' playoff success as mentioned by his strong playoff numbers above. Unseld only misses the playoffs once in a strong 13 year career that sees him pace his team in every year but 2# in VORP & BPM - and before that in WS.

* - Hayes outpaced Unseld in Playoff VORP; Unseld outpaced Hayes in Playoff BPM as well as regular season VORP and BPM
# - ('74 - injuries & '81 - injuries + final year)

Unseld would make a fantastic addition to our List. You're getting an MVP who is recognized as a high impact performer by advanced metrics, who had decent longevity, was a strong playoff performer and was the driver of a consistent winner.

You just don't see guys who achieved that much this late; there's guys left who achieved higher peaks, but had much worse longevity - Unseld brings very high impact years over a sustained run as a winner; the really high peak players remaining (Westbrook, Tmac, McAdoo, Walton) can't say that.



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

As much as I hate him, Howard is the next guy up. I wouldn't want to play with him and I think he's cancerous. Let's just get that out of the way off the bat. The problem is, he's too good to not put in at this point - he's too powerful of a defensive anchor and at his peak, was too much of an offensive weapon.

Orlando goes from +7.5 to +1.2 in his first year. They improve to 3rd or better from '09 to '11 - peaking out at a relative -6 - even though the rest of that team had no business being an elite defense and he dominated in '09 - keeping Lebron out of the Finals. Those Magic teams shouldn't have been contenders - but there they were - in the ECF & Finals and winning 59 games in back to back years. Even during his post-peak, we can see his defensive impact on the '15 Rockets and even the '17 Hawks who finished 4th in defensive efficiency.

His playoff #'s are strong - 18/14 on 2.5 blocks and his offense isn't a drag on your team - he has 4 years over 20 PPG plus 6 more with at least 15 on 60% TS.

His 4 year RAPM from '08-'11 is 4th, he hits VORP 5+ twice & has > .200 WS/48 4 times.

He's a major pain in the rear but his impact is too high to keep out for much longer and here's the best way I can illustrate this:

Let's say an AI had all the information that we know about basketball dumped into it's core. It only knew the data - all of it that we have & the team results. It doesn't know about locker room stuff, it doesn't know about off the court stuff. The AI is told that it can have any player left put into a time machine, given nutritional benefits to compensate for the era and that's it. The AI is told that it has to give the player a gigantic $400 M contract - but it can figure out how to pay the player that $400 M any way it wants over the next 20 years, and it's locked into it's production.

The AI's goal is to maximize likelihood of success and told that over a 20 year window, building around this player if it doesn't achieve 30 points based on the below scale, it will be destroyed.

Playoff Series Win = 1 Point
Division Title = 1 Point
Playoff Appearance = 1 Point
Finals Appearance = 4 points
Title = 10 Points

I feel pretty confident that the AI would be picking Howard in this spot - and that the AI would select Howard over a fair number of players we've already voted in if given the choice. That last part - that's how I know that Howard has been punished enough. It's time to start the process of getting him in there.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Reed & Longevity

I'm only focusing on this because Reed made the run-off last run.

Reed had 7 years I'm willing to call quality ('65, '67-'73).

The problem is, Unseld has 12 years of that level of quality (all but '74), and you can definitely call all but Howard's 15 season quality seasons - that gives Howard 12.

So, if you're taking Reed over those guys, you have to like Reed's peak a lot more than those guys.

I'm not sure that's justifable at all. From '09-'12, Howard was a Top 5 guy in the league - potentially longer - and in a stronger league than what Unseld/Reed played in. I don't think you can say that about Reed for as long of a stretch.

Reed's peak is probably a little better than Unseld's but I'm not sure the difference is that large; I know both guys' MVPs are a little dubious - but I think Unseld's is slightly more defensible.
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Request for guidance about my continued participation in these GOAT threads 

Post#12 » by Pablo Novi » Sat Sep 16, 2017 3:56 am

Request for guidance about my continued participation in these GOAT threads

Some threads ago, I had a kind of request of guidance. In that case it was about whether a kind of "strategic" voting was "allowed" within the spirit of this GOAT voting system. In particular, it was in regards to switching my vote from Cousy to somebody I had just below him - because Cousy was not getting much traction at all (sounds kind of familiar); while the other player was. (btw, I appreciate both the advice I was given and the style in which it was offered.)

I have another request for guidance. This time it involves my continuing participation in these threads. My doubts have to do with: 1) I'm pretty much a minority of one when it comes to how I evaluate players for my GOAT list - and this is reflected in how few responses are made to my posts AND how infrequently I end up voting for the player that actually gets selected. I assume that most of the other posters here are not learning much from my posts; and, while I learn from the other posts, I haven't been, and don't anticipate being, much influenced by other people's arguments.

2) I may well have forgotten more than I remember about individual player's pluses and minuses AND am behind the curve when it comes to stats-analysis - so I feel like I really don't have much beyond the above to contribute.

Given the above, I'm just wondering if I should continue to participate?

(I also wonder if, given the lowering vote counts, it might be worth considering another change to our system; call it, "Voting In Advance" if you will. This would simply involve posting one's list of upcoming votes (along with one's reasoning) - and having those counted in upcoming vote-totalling?)

In the meantime ...
VOTE: Bob Cousy
ALT: Dolph Schayes


Adding a bit on Schayes while repeating "VOTE: Bob Cousy ..." from (dozens? of) other previous threads:
Cousy was selected 1st-Team ALL-NBA TEN times (one of only 10 players ever so honored in the 80 combined years of the: NBL, ABA, NBA); plus two additional 2nd-Team ALL-NBA selections. Sure most of his Great Years were during the 1950's, a decade definitely weaker than all subsequent decades - but he DOMINATED his position for a decade - one can hardly do more or ask for more than that. He revolutionized his position too. (Btw, I'm no Celtics' or Cousy fan)

I have Cousy as my GOAT #15, and GOAT PG #3 (behind: Magic and then "O"; ahead of: Stockton, CP3 & then J.Kidd)

Schayes was selected ALL-League TWELVE times (6 X 1st-Team, 6 X 2nd-Team) (by far the highest number of selections for any player we have not yet voted-in not-named Cousy). Way more dominant of his position than any other remaining PF.

Cousy (and Schayes) had WAY MORE Great Years (as defined here as being selected ALL-League 1st-Team or 2nd-Team) than many of the players we've already voted in to our GOAT list; and WAY MORE Great Years than ALL of the players currently getting more traction than they are. In fact, after Cousy's & Schayes 12 ALL-League 1st+2nd Teams each; double (or more) all remaining players except the following 6 guys, who each had "only" 7 combined:

Greer (1963-1969 seasons),
Davies (1947-53),
Sharman (1953-60)
McDermott (1942-48),
Edwards (1938-46) &
Shipp (1938-44)
--------------------------------------------------
The significance of being selected to ALL-League teams can not be over-stated. The 100++ people who are the selectors are PAID to report on the sport - who could possibly be in a better position to report on which players dominated each year. Further, the large number of them is super-effective in canceling out any individual biases (much like, but much better than: Olympic Diving voting (where the top and bottom votes are eliminated, and the diver's score is based on the remaining votes)).

The ALL-League selection process is so good, that since I've been paying attention to it (the 59-1960 season); I've never had any MAJOR problems with it. Imo, it TRUMPS by a huge margin any and all reliance on any other factor / stat or combination of them. Again, THEY were there, it was THEIR JOB to observe closely and report accurately. They did get it right.
----------------------------------
In what follows: in each descending set of 5 GOAT spots, there's one player per position. GOAT POSITIONAL rankings are determined primarily by "Points" which are determined by the number of ALL-League selections (pro-rated upwards for each succeeding decade; in other words, particularly players who played before 1960 are significantly "penalized" for their "Great Years" during weak eras). So players such as Cousy & Schayes have significant deductions on their "Points" totals; still they have the most "Points" of all remaining players:

my GOAT #15, PG #03:1st-Teams:10, 2nd-Teams: 2: (40.5 "Points") Bob Cousy
ALT VOTE:
my GOAT #33, PF #07: 1st-Teams: 6, 2nd-Teams: 6: (28.2 "Points") Dolph Schayes

Honorable Mention:
my GOAT #30, SG #06: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (18.0 "Points") Sidney Moncrief
my GOAT #35, SG #07: 1st-Teams: 0, 2nd-Teams: 7: (17.5 "Points") Hal Greer

Upcoming (in my GOAT Top 50)
my GOAT #36,, C #08: 1st-Teams: 5, 2nd-Teams: 1: (31.4 "Points") Dwight Howard
my GOAT #37, PG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 3: (25.6 "Points") Allen Iverson
my GOAT #38, SF #08: 1st-Teams: 2, 2nd-Teams: 3: (22.1 "Points") Tracy McGrady
my GOAT #39, PF #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (17.5 "Points") Jerry Lucas
my GOAT #40, SG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 1: (17.5 "Points") Paul Westphal
my GOAT #43, SF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (19.3 "Points") Dominique Wilkins
my GOAT #44, PF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Amar'e Stoudemire
my GOAT #45, SG #09: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 0: (16.8 "Points") James Harden
my GOAT #48, SF #10: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Grant Hill
my GOAT #50, PF #10: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (15.8 "Points") George McGinnis
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#13 » by Dr Positivity » Sat Sep 16, 2017 3:59 am

I appreciate your votes Pablo, if you are willing to keep voting despite the frustration of your player not getting in.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#14 » by ThaRegul8r » Sat Sep 16, 2017 4:19 am

dhsilv2 wrote:I'm sure most here have read the Howard (or was it Dwight?) effect article that went up from the slone conference. If not the article illustrated how Howard seemed to reduce the number of field goal attempts made around him, which given he's a center and stands around the paint, is reducing the most valuable shots.


It was “The Dwight Effect: A New Ensemble of Interior Defense Analytics for the NBA.”
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters


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Re: Request for guidance about my continued participation in these GOAT threads 

Post#15 » by pandrade83 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 4:21 am

Pablo Novi wrote:Request for guidance about my continued participation in these GOAT threads

Some threads ago, I had a kind of request of guidance. In that case it was about whether a kind of "strategic" voting was "allowed" within the spirit of this GOAT voting system. In particular, it was in regards to switching my vote from Cousy to somebody I had just below him - because Cousy was not getting much traction at all (sounds kind of familiar); while the other player was. (btw, I appreciate both the advice I was given and the style in which it was offered.)

I have another request for guidance. This time it involves my continuing participation in these threads. My doubts have to do with: 1) I'm pretty much a minority of one when it comes to how I evaluate players for my GOAT list - and this is reflected in how few responses are made to my posts AND how infrequently I end up voting for the player that actually gets selected. I assume that most of the other posters here are not learning much from my posts; and, while I learn from the other posts, I haven't been, and don't anticipate being, much influenced by other people's arguments.

2) I may well have forgotten more than I remember about individual player's pluses and minuses AND am behind the curve when it comes to stats-analysis - so I feel like I really don't have much beyond the above to contribute.

Given the above, I'm just wondering if I should continue to participate?

(I also wonder if, given the lowering vote counts, it might be worth considering another change to our system; call it, "Voting In Advance" if you will. This would simply involve posting one's list of upcoming votes (along with one's reasoning) - and having those counted in upcoming vote-totalling?)

In the meantime ...
VOTE: Bob Cousy
ALT: Dolph Schayes


Adding a bit on Schayes while repeating "VOTE: Bob Cousy ..." from (dozens? of) other previous threads:
Cousy was selected 1st-Team ALL-NBA TEN times (one of only 10 players ever so honored in the 80 combined years of the: NBL, ABA, NBA); plus two additional 2nd-Team ALL-NBA selections. Sure most of his Great Years were during the 1950's, a decade definitely weaker than all subsequent decades - but he DOMINATED his position for a decade - one can hardly do more or ask for more than that. He revolutionized his position too. (Btw, I'm no Celtics' or Cousy fan)

I have Cousy as my GOAT #15, and GOAT PG #3 (behind: Magic and then "O"; ahead of: Stockton, CP3 & then J.Kidd)

Schayes was selected ALL-League TWELVE times (6 X 1st-Team, 6 X 2nd-Team) (by far the highest number of selections for any player we have not yet voted-in not-named Cousy). Way more dominant of his position than any other remaining PF.

Cousy (and Schayes) had WAY MORE Great Years (as defined here as being selected ALL-League 1st-Team or 2nd-Team) than many of the players we've already voted in to our GOAT list; and WAY MORE Great Years than ALL of the players currently getting more traction than they are. In fact, after Cousy's & Schayes 12 ALL-League 1st+2nd Teams each; double (or more) all remaining players except the following 6 guys, who each had "only" 7 combined:

Greer (1963-1969 seasons),
Davies (1947-53),
Sharman (1953-60)
McDermott (1942-48),
Edwards (1938-46) &
Shipp (1938-44)
--------------------------------------------------
The significance of being selected to ALL-League teams can not be over-stated. The 100++ people who are the selectors are PAID to report on the sport - who could possibly be in a better position to report on which players dominated each year. Further, the large number of them is super-effective in canceling out any individual biases (much like, but much better than: Olympic Diving voting (where the top and bottom votes are eliminated, and the diver's score is based on the remaining votes)).

The ALL-League selection process is so good, that since I've been paying attention to it (the 59-1960 season); I've never had any MAJOR problems with it. Imo, it TRUMPS by a huge margin any and all reliance on any other factor / stat or combination of them. Again, THEY were there, it was THEIR JOB to observe closely and report accurately. They did get it right.
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In what follows: in each descending set of 5 GOAT spots, there's one player per position. GOAT POSITIONAL rankings are determined primarily by "Points" which are determined by the number of ALL-League selections (pro-rated upwards for each succeeding decade; in other words, particularly players who played before 1960 are significantly "penalized" for their "Great Years" during weak eras). So players such as Cousy & Schayes have significant deductions on their "Points" totals; still they have the most "Points" of all remaining players:

my GOAT #15, PG #03:1st-Teams:10, 2nd-Teams: 2: (40.5 "Points") Bob Cousy
ALT VOTE:
my GOAT #33, PF #07: 1st-Teams: 6, 2nd-Teams: 6: (28.2 "Points") Dolph Schayes

Honorable Mention:
my GOAT #30, SG #06: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (18.0 "Points") Sidney Moncrief
my GOAT #35, SG #07: 1st-Teams: 0, 2nd-Teams: 7: (17.5 "Points") Hal Greer

Upcoming (in my GOAT Top 50)
my GOAT #36,, C #08: 1st-Teams: 5, 2nd-Teams: 1: (31.4 "Points") Dwight Howard
my GOAT #37, PG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 3: (25.6 "Points") Allen Iverson
my GOAT #38, SF #08: 1st-Teams: 2, 2nd-Teams: 3: (22.1 "Points") Tracy McGrady
my GOAT #39, PF #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (17.5 "Points") Jerry Lucas
my GOAT #40, SG #08: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 1: (17.5 "Points") Paul Westphal
my GOAT #43, SF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (19.3 "Points") Dominique Wilkins
my GOAT #44, PF #09: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Amar'e Stoudemire
my GOAT #45, SG #09: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 0: (16.8 "Points") James Harden
my GOAT #48, SF #10: 1st-Teams: 1, 2nd-Teams: 4: (17.0 "Points") Grant Hill
my GOAT #50, PF #10: 1st-Teams: 3, 2nd-Teams: 2: (15.8 "Points") George McGinnis


I question the methodology that you have in general for reasons not worth getting into here, but I wouldn't say that you should drop out just because others are voting differently from you by any means.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#16 » by dhsilv2 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 11:19 am

trex_8063 wrote:Moved this discussion back here, as I think it pertains directly to candidates being argued for.....

dhsilv2 wrote:The hardest part of these lists is always when/where you start doing cutoffs. Some people use the stats, some awards, some rings, some eye test, and then there's always some kind of adjustment.

Thus my view that neither of these guys were true franchise cornerstone players who bring teams titles.....


The results of his study (and apparently those of others) is that it's not only "true franchise cornerstone players" who increase a team's odd of winning a title. Yes, a "true franchise player" increases it more than a "2nd tier" star; and a "2nd-tier" star needs a "1st-tier" star by his side (and some additional decent players besides) to win a title in any competitive era, or else maybe 2-3 other 2nd-tier types, etc.......but a top tier star needs a 2nd tier star (or two) or some similar assemblage of talent.

His study was looking at the chances of various tiers/calibers of players to win a title in a vacuum (that is: across a random spectrum circumstances). It's sort of averaging out the whole broad spectrum of team possibilities/circumstances:
having a top tier---Jordan, Lebron, etc---type star by your side, having another 2nd tier star (or maybe two), having an average supporting cast, having a putrid supporting cast, and every other potential occurring along the usual lines of probability........across that entire distribution of possibilities, what is the average likelihood that Player X wins a title? That's what his study attempted to answer, based on what average lift Player X provides (in light of portability).

e.g. Suppose it's determined that a 2nd tier star like Pierce during his prime has a 10% chance (in any given year) of winning a title......that's not saying that throw him on any team and it's automatically a 10% chance that team wins it all: in some circumstances his chances would be well above 50%; in other circumstances it would be virtually 0%. But his average across all potential team circumstances is 10%.


Now if comparing Paul Pierce to Willis Reed, let's say Reed's prime is 4 years, Pierce's is 10 years (we don't have to agree exactly on those numbers; this is just for argument's sake, though those numbers are probably fairly accurate descriptors of their relative prime lengths). Let us also say that Pierce has a 10% chance of a title in any given year (I'm just pulling that number out of the air, btw, though it's probably pretty close to what Elgee found), and let's say Reed's chance in any given year is 20% (because he's a higher caliber player).

In that instance, Reed's chance of aiding his team toward a title at least once in those four years is 59.0%. The chance of Pierce aiding his team to a title at least once in those 10 years is 65.1%.
If I've done my math correct, the odds of multiple titles is even more firmly in Pierce's favor, due to all the extra years.

Suppose Reed's chances in a given prime year is 25% (more than double what we've allotted for Pierce in this example, and probably stretching things a bit, based on the caliber of player that Reed was, but I'm doing so for the sake of argument): there Reed's chance of aiding his team to at least one title is 68.4%, although I believe his chance of multiple titles in those four years is still marginally less than Pierce's in this example (if my math is correct).

Anyway, food for thought wrt how to consider good longevity.


I suppose I tend to think a bit more in economic terms. The cost of replacement if you will. While a pierce is a rare and expensive player, a Reed to me while maybe only 30% better peak vs peak, he could cost 3x more (as with your example not exact numbers but approximation's to make the point).

My line of thinking is subject to grossly over valuing a player due to the ever increasing cost of marginal additional quality. It is also sometimes at this level where the true gems are gone, perhaps just a bit off in general. My best approximation is going to be MVP award share which we all know gets pretty poor after the top 20 or 25. As I'm also having to look at the 70's and soon the 50's to make sure I haven't missed any stand outs, I'm also going to be more and more reliant on other posters, other goat lists, and past reading so of course I'll be getting generally a skewed view on how good players were (rarely do writers historically speak poorly of players like they do today).

The greater point in that study I don't want to be ignored as I agree with it. I am just looking at this point at guys who's peaks were that tiny bit higher where they became a bit more irreplaceable.

In regards to Pierce, I just can't put him on that harder to replace level. If I thought his peak was even 10% better, I could move him up. Anyway that's my line of thinking and for those looking to influence me, I still place considerably more value on peaks and primes than others it seems.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#17 » by dhsilv2 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 11:43 am

Pablo Novi - I've enjoyed your posts here. I also like your method overall. I just discount the 50's MUCH more than you do, I value MVP voting in addition to the all nba voting, and I think all nba's have to be position reviewed.

Just an example, I think the center position was overly deep and talented during cousy's era. Meanwhile the all nba teams do not separate shooting guards and point guards. This means 2 centers made the teams while 4 guards (could be either position made it). This makes it easier for a guard to get in and given I think there was a huge imbalance in the stars from that era it makes me not just era adjust down all nba's but I also discount the guard spots on the all nba teams from then. Meanwhile today 15 out of the 150 starters (5x30) make an all nba team, 5 out of 40 starters made it in an 8 team league (5x8). That's 10% vs 12.5%.

FYI I've looked at your list a few times as a sanity check on where my head was at, especially when I start thinking about 5 or so spots. I however discount older eras and upgrade some of the newer guys while I do it because of talent growth.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#18 » by LA Bird » Sat Sep 16, 2017 12:01 pm

dhsilv2 wrote:PER - I've often called this the "allstar" stat as it seems one of the better proxies for who end sup being an allstar, though the overall value imo is a bit lower than some of our newest and better metrics. The issue here is that PER seems to undervalue this whole era, so we are either to believe that the top players were far worse than they are now or that the middle of the league is somehow better, or that the PER formula isn't that great without steals and blocks. I think the era was weak, but not THIS weak, so I tend to value where a player ranks vs just the raw number.

65- 12th
67- 6th
68- 6th
69- 4th
70- 8th
71- 17th

WS - I'd guess this is our best metric from this era unless we have more. I think the look at PER and WS give us a pretty good story, and we can add in the missing elements which I think have been covered.

67- 11th
68- 10th
69- 1st
70- 3rd (1st in defensive win share)
71- 10th

Now I will openly admit on this alone I wouldn't be ranking Reed where I am ranking him, but I wanted to illustrate that he had more than the 4 years that people give him credit for. FYI 7 allstar games and 5 all nba's.

I see your point with this was to show Reed had more than just 4 quality seasons but overall, it really shows how lacking his longevity was. Bellamy in the 60s had 8 top 10 WS and 6 top 10 PER seasons and actually topped Reed in both categories when they were on the Knicks together yet he probably won't be getting any votes for a while. For me personally, Reed's offense is his calling card over the other DPOY centers (Mourning and Howard for example) yet he only maintained his elite scoring efficiency from his jumpers for 4 seasons. Reed peaked as the 3rd best player in 1969 IMO but there are other players with much better longevity who were top 3 at some point in their careers as well.

It's about if you think winning an MVP when West, Oscar, and Wilt were all still pretty darn good matters or if that was a down year.

There is the question of whether Reed actually deserved the MVP and it's debatable if he was even the best player on the Knicks ahead of Walt Frazier. West was clearly #1 in my opinion for 1970 and it was definitely a down year for Oscar (missed playoffs) and Wilt (missed entire season).
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Re: Request for guidance about my continued participation in these GOAT threads 

Post#19 » by penbeast0 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 12:08 pm

Pablo Novi wrote:Request for guidance about my continued participation in these GOAT threads

...

One thing you might do as an adjustment for your All-Pro voting is multiply each all-pro selection by the number of teams in the league at the time. This reflects the increased competition for limited slots from greater numbers of teams. It might still overvalue the 50s (and undervalue the 60s) but not by nearly as much and it allows you to keep your mathematical rigor while coming much closer to the general consensus.
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #43 

Post#20 » by pandrade83 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 2:04 pm

dhsilv2 wrote:I'm more and more interested in better alts, but I'm sticking with my last vote.

Vote Reed- I want to touch a bit more on Reed's longevity as while it is clearly the issue for him, I think he had a few more quality level seasons than people are giving him credit for.

Reed was a strong defender. I would argue he's perhaps a Reggie Miller level defender post peak, which is pretty solid, IMO offense tends to be more valuable than defense. So lets get to it.

The best proxy I can think of to show quality defense is going to be rebounds. Reed has 6 years in the top 10 in the league in rebounds and he had 7 years in the top 10 in per game.

PER - I've often called this the "allstar" stat as it seems one of the better proxies for who end sup being an allstar, though the overall value imo is a bit lower than some of our newest and better metrics. The issue here is that PER seems to undervalue this whole era, so we are either to believe that the top players were far worse than they are now or that the middle of the league is somehow better, or that the PER formula isn't that great without steals and blocks. I think the era was weak, but not THIS weak, so I tend to value where a player ranks vs just the raw number.

65- 12th
67- 6th
68- 6th
69- 4th
70- 8th
71- 17th

WS - I'd guess this is our best metric from this era unless we have more. I think the look at PER and WS give us a pretty good story, and we can add in the missing elements which I think have been covered.

67- 11th
68- 10th
69- 1st
70- 3rd (1st in defensive win share)
71- 10th

Now I will openly admit on this alone I wouldn't be ranking Reed where I am ranking him, but I wanted to illustrate that he had more than the 4 years that people give him credit for. FYI 7 allstar games and 5 all nba's.

From there it's really about if you believe his intangibles were as high as has teammates seem to think. It's about if you think winning an MVP when West, Oscar, and Wilt were all still pretty darn good matters or if that was a down year. It is about where you see his defense. And ultimately if you are willing to give him credit for 6 years and not just the 4, plus his 73 finals. I've been voting Reed here a while and i admit fully that his career length is giving me a lot of pause. It's odd I hear about how the 60's were the peak of centers from some (90's generally get that award), and here is a guy who won an MVP at the end (69-70) of the decade. I also see guys like Miller last round getting credit for playing ahead of his time, I'd think a under sized center with a decent jump shot would fall into at least a lesser version of that.

If you're not sold at Reed here, then that's great. I'm open to moving up a guy like Cowens or Unseld pretty easily. I might even be open to an Iverson or maybe someone from even further back. I haven't seen his name yet, but I'd be interested if people are thinking about Dan Issel, on centers who might have a case. Seems odd Gilmore is in and we haven't even had an Issel mention (Not odd he isn't in). Anyway rant over. But for me I'd like to see an argument for someone over Reed vs why Reed shouldn't be here.




Here's why I'm not sold on Reed here.

Reed had 7 years I'm willing to call quality ('65, '67-'73).

The problem is, Unseld has 12 years of that level of quality (all but '74), and you can definitely call all but Howard's 15 season quality seasons - that gives Howard 12.

So, if you're taking Reed over those guys, you have to like Reed's peak a lot more than those guys.

I'm not sure that's justifable at all. From '09-'12, Howard was a Top 5 guy in the league - potentially longer - and in a stronger league than what Unseld/Reed played in. I don't think you can say that about Reed for as long of a stretch.

Reed's peak is probably a little better than Unseld's but I'm not sure the difference is material; I know both guys' MVPs are a little dubious - but I think Unseld's is slightly more defensible.

In '70, my MVP vote would be:

-Kareem
-West
-Frazier - part of the reason I'm relatively lower than you on Reed is I don't think Reed was the best player on the '70 Team
-Reed
-Unseld

In '69, here's why Unseld won in a nutshell:

Unseld's arrival coincided with a 21 win improvement without a change in the team's core, or a change in the coach. Washington went from 36 to 57 wins and finished with the best record in the league - that's why he won MVP - he had a major impact on winning. A team with Unseld & Monroe as it's two best players beat out Wilt/West, Russell/Hondo, Frazier/Reed.

If you still think it's a dubious MVP, that's fair - but I don't think it's anymore dubious than Reed's.

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