An Unbiased Fan wrote:This is a different kind of thread. Not about who is on your Top 10 list, or Greatest Peaks list, etc. But instead on what everyone feels is the best way to compare and actual pick a GOAT list.
First question I always asked in projects is...what's the criteria used, and how are we comparing. So what methodology does everyone use to derive various lists? And is there better ways we can improve how we choose player A vs player B?
For example, what's the best way to compare Russell vs Lebron? Very different eras, accolades, stats.
So, held off on this because it feels like it deserves a longer post than I'm ready to give, but with it popping up again let me at least say this:
1. It's a great question.
2. The truth is that it's not just that there different people approach this differently, but there are many different variations on these sort of lists that are meaningful, and that while you have to choose one approach as the one you use when participating in something like the Top 100, that doesn't mean you don't find the other approaches worth doing as well.
In terms of approaches that come to mind:
1. Career vs Prime vs Peak.
2. In-Era Dominance vs Talent-Adjusted In-Era Dominance vs Rule&Skill-Adjusted In Era Dominance
3. Competitive Impact vs Influence vs Aesthetics
4. Whole Game vs Offense vs Defense vs Specific Skills
Can't quite say that every possible permutation is meaningful, but many of them are.
For my own Top 100 approach, where I've been struggling is in the subtle distinction between what I called Talent-Adjusted vs Rule& Skill-Adjusted approaches.
By "Talent Adjusted", I mean a coarse approach where you look at the general talent pool and try to adjust accordingly. The big guy this tends to hurt, compared to the raw In-Era Dominance is George Mikan. And I'll note the fact that Mikan basically never gets talked about as a #1 contender on any of our Top 100 or Peaks projects tells us that no one is using raw In-Era Dominance as their criteria for these projects.
By "Rule&Skill-Adjusted", what I mean is that when the actual shape of the game changes, some guys scale better to the new landscape than others. So Bill Russell was the best player of his time (shout out to Wilt's '67 peak tho), but I think it's very possible that the best prospect of players in that era for the modern game is Jerry West. What do I do with this?
Many push back against this sort of thought, and understandably so. It puts you in a place where you get ugly comparison triangle where A > B in era, but B > C > A when comparing the two against a 3rd player from a more recent time. How do you decide who "wins" the comparison then? There's no cathartic answer. The only true answer is that these players are more complicated than can be conveyed by a ranked list, and that we shouldn't lose sight of the fact that the rankings are only ever a means to a more meaningful end of understand basketball players and through them, understanding basketball a bit better.