What more does Curry need to do, in your opinion, to overtake Kobe?
Posted: Mon Mar 6, 2023 10:46 am
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Doctor MJ wrote:So, the logic of "Needs more longevity to overtake the guy with a long career" makes sense in general, but people need to remember what Kobe's longevity actually entailed.
If I look at raw +/- comparing Curry to Tim Duncan, I get this:
Duncan +10,000
Curry +6,474
While I certainly don't rank guys just by this stat, Duncan spent a lot of years playing a critical role on a contending team, and it's reasonable to feel that until Curry rivals that, Duncan's always going to have a good argument over Curry.
What about Curry vs Kobe?
Curry +6,474
Bryant +4,721
By this metric, what Curry needs to "overtake" Kobe is to go about -1700 the rest of his career, which frankly isn't realistic imho. Curry blew past Kobe a while ago and has just kept going. So, this race is almost certainly over, and it leaves a pro-Kobe argument with a "but he played with such weak supporting talent" type arguments, which I would argue doesn't make sense for Kobe.
Doctor MJ wrote:So, the logic of "Needs more longevity to overtake the guy with a long career" makes sense in general, but people need to remember what Kobe's longevity actually entailed.
If I look at raw +/- comparing Curry to Tim Duncan, I get this:
Duncan +10,000
Curry +6,474
While I certainly don't rank guys just by this stat, Duncan spent a lot of years playing a critical role on a contending team, and it's reasonable to feel that until Curry rivals that, Duncan's always going to have a good argument over Curry.
What about Curry vs Kobe?
Curry +6,474
Bryant +4,721
By this metric, what Curry needs to "overtake" Kobe is to go about -1700 the rest of his career, which frankly isn't realistic imho. Curry blew past Kobe a while ago and has just kept going. So, this race is almost certainly over, and it leaves a pro-Kobe argument with a "but he played with such weak supporting talent" type arguments, which I would argue doesn't make sense for Kobe.
Cavsfansince84 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:So, the logic of "Needs more longevity to overtake the guy with a long career" makes sense in general, but people need to remember what Kobe's longevity actually entailed.
If I look at raw +/- comparing Curry to Tim Duncan, I get this:
Duncan +10,000
Curry +6,474
While I certainly don't rank guys just by this stat, Duncan spent a lot of years playing a critical role on a contending team, and it's reasonable to feel that until Curry rivals that, Duncan's always going to have a good argument over Curry.
What about Curry vs Kobe?
Curry +6,474
Bryant +4,721
By this metric, what Curry needs to "overtake" Kobe is to go about -1700 the rest of his career, which frankly isn't realistic imho. Curry blew past Kobe a while ago and has just kept going. So, this race is almost certainly over, and it leaves a pro-Kobe argument with a "but he played with such weak supporting talent" type arguments, which I would argue doesn't make sense for Kobe.
Using that as a major form of criteria though, does it make sense to you then that Curry in say 2018 was that much better than Kobe in say 2006 when his +/- was likely only slightly more than neutral and then also taking into account Kobe's +/-'s in his last couple of years which likely dragged down his careers totals by a lot due to both being past his prime and on sub par teams.
Black Feet wrote:Cavsfansince84 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:So, the logic of "Needs more longevity to overtake the guy with a long career" makes sense in general, but people need to remember what Kobe's longevity actually entailed.
If I look at raw +/- comparing Curry to Tim Duncan, I get this:
Duncan +10,000
Curry +6,474
While I certainly don't rank guys just by this stat, Duncan spent a lot of years playing a critical role on a contending team, and it's reasonable to feel that until Curry rivals that, Duncan's always going to have a good argument over Curry.
What about Curry vs Kobe?
Curry +6,474
Bryant +4,721
By this metric, what Curry needs to "overtake" Kobe is to go about -1700 the rest of his career, which frankly isn't realistic imho. Curry blew past Kobe a while ago and has just kept going. So, this race is almost certainly over, and it leaves a pro-Kobe argument with a "but he played with such weak supporting talent" type arguments, which I would argue doesn't make sense for Kobe.
Using that as a major form of criteria though, does it make sense to you then that Curry in say 2018 was that much better than Kobe in say 2006 when his +/- was likely only slightly more than neutral and then also taking into account Kobe's +/-'s in his last couple of years which likely dragged down his careers totals by a lot due to both being past his prime and on sub par teams.
by his backwards logic if curry plays long past his prime and his +\- declines then he will move him down on his all time list lol.
eminence wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:So, the logic of "Needs more longevity to overtake the guy with a long career" makes sense in general, but people need to remember what Kobe's longevity actually entailed.
If I look at raw +/- comparing Curry to Tim Duncan, I get this:
Duncan +10,000
Curry +6,474
While I certainly don't rank guys just by this stat, Duncan spent a lot of years playing a critical role on a contending team, and it's reasonable to feel that until Curry rivals that, Duncan's always going to have a good argument over Curry.
What about Curry vs Kobe?
Curry +6,474
Bryant +4,721
By this metric, what Curry needs to "overtake" Kobe is to go about -1700 the rest of his career, which frankly isn't realistic imho. Curry blew past Kobe a while ago and has just kept going. So, this race is almost certainly over, and it leaves a pro-Kobe argument with a "but he played with such weak supporting talent" type arguments, which I would argue doesn't make sense for Kobe.
Two thoughts.
I don't think most would agree with a metric where a player can relatively easily move backwards. '05/'14/'15/'16 certainly don't add a ton to Kobes career, but backwards progress feels strange in such a discussion. Certainly not to the extremes Kobe actually moved by this metric (it would imply his '16 season essentially negated one of his best seasons).
I think the better pro-Kobe argument here would not be that he played with weak supporting talent, but that the Shaq/Kobe Lakers were RS underachievers, and so a RS based metric will underate them. Which I find a pretty defensible position.
Anywho, I don't think it's too crazy to have Steph having already caught Kobe either, so do as you will
Owly wrote:On 1:
Conceptually, rather more than on the specifics of this metric. I don't think I'd be inclined to do it much but at the same time, I can see it an might struggle to argue against it. You speak about a bad season nearly wiping out a best season but ... his team was historically awful with him on the floor (merely poor/bad otherwise) ... it has to be really bad to take out great seasons and it was and that happened and is part of his career. And there's multi-year signal of a real and significant negative impact ... and it's not like he took some huge discount (at the margins ... nor was he recruiter who made other stars feel at home playing with him and he's still at 33 usage, above career average those last 3 years) those are years that it seems would make it really difficult to have a good, contending team around him.
There's value beyond titles. And the optics of cutting someone like that don't bear thinking about. And those Lakers weren't going to be good. Still ... I could be more sympathetic to what I think could be considered outright bad at a lower chunk of the cap or if showing more signs of bending your game to try to do something different. On an actually potentially good team it seems cutting might have be the best move.
There's something uncomfortable dinging a great for negative value. At the same time I don't know that I could tell someone they were wrong for factoring it into cumulative value.
AEnigma wrote:I have said before what I think about this heavy on-court approach. For everyone else, though, including those who find Statmuse unfamiliar to navigate or otherwise would like to cast aspersions on its accuracy in marking plus/minus, here is a basic career leaderboard since 1997:
Steph far from the only player to have cleared Kobe by this measure — even if you add back the value lost from 2014-16.
Black Feet wrote:AEnigma wrote:I have said before what I think about this heavy on-court approach. For everyone else, though, including those who find Statmuse unfamiliar to navigate or otherwise would like to cast aspersions on its accuracy in marking plus/minus, here is a basic career leaderboard since 1997:
Steph far from the only player to have cleared Kobe by this measure — even if you add back the value lost from 2014-16.
goes to show it’s not a very useful stat for comparing players. Duncan,Ginobli,Parker all top 6 says more about the Spurs than them as individual players.
eminence wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:So, the logic of "Needs more longevity to overtake the guy with a long career" makes sense in general, but people need to remember what Kobe's longevity actually entailed.
If I look at raw +/- comparing Curry to Tim Duncan, I get this:
Duncan +10,000
Curry +6,474
While I certainly don't rank guys just by this stat, Duncan spent a lot of years playing a critical role on a contending team, and it's reasonable to feel that until Curry rivals that, Duncan's always going to have a good argument over Curry.
What about Curry vs Kobe?
Curry +6,474
Bryant +4,721
By this metric, what Curry needs to "overtake" Kobe is to go about -1700 the rest of his career, which frankly isn't realistic imho. Curry blew past Kobe a while ago and has just kept going. So, this race is almost certainly over, and it leaves a pro-Kobe argument with a "but he played with such weak supporting talent" type arguments, which I would argue doesn't make sense for Kobe.
Two thoughts.
I don't think most would agree with a metric where a player can relatively easily move backwards. '05/'14/'15/'16 certainly don't add a ton to Kobes career, but backwards progress feels strange in such a discussion. Certainly not to the extremes Kobe actually moved by this metric (it would imply his '16 season essentially negated one of his best seasons).
I think the better pro-Kobe argument here would not be that he played with weak supporting talent, but that the Shaq/Kobe Lakers were RS underachievers, and so a RS based metric will underate them. Which I find a pretty defensible position.
Anywho, I don't think it's too crazy to have Steph having already caught Kobe either, so do as you will
Colbinii wrote:Black Feet wrote:AEnigma wrote:I have said before what I think about this heavy on-court approach. For everyone else, though, including those who find Statmuse unfamiliar to navigate or otherwise would like to cast aspersions on its accuracy in marking plus/minus, here is a basic career leaderboard since 1997:
Steph far from the only player to have cleared Kobe by this measure — even if you add back the value lost from 2014-16.
goes to show it’s not a very useful stat for comparing players. Duncan,Ginobli,Parker all top 6 says more about the Spurs than them as individual players.
Which stat do you find more useful as an all-in-one, career value statistic?