RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 - 1963-64 Bill Russell

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RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 - 1963-64 Bill Russell 

Post#1 » by LA Bird » Sun Jul 10, 2022 1:00 pm

RealGM Greatest Peaks List (2022)
1. 1990-91 Michael Jordan
2. 2012-13 LeBron James
3. 1999-00 Shaquille O'Neal
4. 1976-77 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
5. 1966-67 Wilt Chamberlain
6. 2002-03 Tim Duncan
7. 1993-94 Hakeem Olajuwon
8. ?

Spoiler:

Please vote for your 3 highest player peaks and at least one line of reasoning for each of them.

Vote example 1
1. 1991 Jordan: Explanation
2. 2013 LeBron: Explanation
3. 2000 Shaq: Explanation

In addition, you can also list other peak season candidates from those three players. This extra step is entirely optional

Vote example 2
1. 1991 Jordan: Explanation
(1990 Jordan)
2. 2013 LeBron: Explanation
(2012 LeBron)
(2009 LeBron)
3. 2000 Shaq: Explanation

You can visit the project thread for further information on why this makes a difference and how the votes will be counted at the end of the round.

Voting for this round will close on Wednesday July 13, 9am ET.
f4p
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#2 » by f4p » Sun Jul 10, 2022 1:24 pm

Since it will come up more here I assume, I will ask again like I did in thread #7:

For the people picking Steph in 2017, why would he be up here if he wasn't even better than Kawhi in 2017? Kawhi played nearly a full season for once with 74 games, had very good offensive numbers and was extremely good on defense (27.6 PER, 0.264 WS48), and then took all of that to another level in the playoffs. 31.5 PER and 0.314 WS48 on 67.2 TS% in the playoffs, numbers like are rarely seen in nba history (have they been seen?). And we actually got to see him play Steph's team and play a nearly perfect game while trouncing the most talented roster of all time. Normally I would say we have to consider injuries, but that should clearly not be the case when a goon on the other team just takes you out on a dirty play because you are playing too well.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#3 » by iggymcfrack » Sun Jul 10, 2022 3:37 pm

1. 2004 Kevin Garnett- Led the league in PER, WS, and BPM while also being the best defensive player in the league with absolutely insane on/off stats. +21 in the RS and +26 in the postseason. Unheard of.

2. 2021 Giannis Anteokounmpo- Great numbers with DPOY-caliber defense and stepped it up more and more as the stage got bigger capped off with 50 and 14 with 5 blocks on .749 TS% in Game 6 of the Finals.

3. 2022 Nikola Jokic- Greatest season of all-time by PER with absolutely incredible unprecedented passing/playmaking for a big man and even more dominant impact stats in an all-time MVP race. His playoff PER was 5th all-time.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#4 » by DraymondGold » Sun Jul 10, 2022 4:29 pm

1. 2017 Steph Curry
1b. 2016 Curry
2. 1986 Bird
3. 1964 Russell

HM: 2004 Garnett. I might end up switching Russell and KG depending on the arguments.

1. Reasoning for Curry:
In short, I think by the data, Curry clearly outperforms Hakeem.

1a. Curry >> Hakeem (even though he's been voted in):
Spoiler:
Plus-minus based stats:
Ai. AuPM: 2017 Curry > 1994 Hakeem
Aii. Postseason AuPM: (no data for peak Hakeem. 2017 Curry 2nd all time)
Bi. Goldstein RAPM / Historical Square2020 RAPM: (no data for peak 93-95 Hakeem. Partial data in 85/88/91/96 and full data in 97 are far below Curry, who’s 7th all time).
Bii. Goldstein Playoff PIPM (3 years for sample size): 2017 Curry (8th all time) > 1994 Hakeem
Additional plus minus stats: C. on/off: (no data available for Hakeem. Curry 1st all time)
Additional plus minus stats: D. WOWY: 1993-1995 Hakeem > 2016-2017 Curry (not sure about full prime WOWY. I brought in 16 Curry because Ben hasn't finished publishing Curry's mid/post-2017 WOWY numbers yet).
Additional plus minus stats: E. ESPN’s RPM: (no data for Hakeem. 16 Curry 2nd all time)
Additional plus minus stats: F. Backpicks’ CORP evaluation: 2017 Curry > 1994 Hakeem (healthy 2016 Steph Curry and 1993 Hakeem tied 4th all time)

Box score-based data
Gi. Backpicks BPM: 2017 Curry > 1994 Hakeem (and healthy 2016 Curry is 2nd all time)
Gii. Postseason Backpicks BPM: 2017 Curry (4th all time) > 1994 Hakeem
Additional box score stats: Hi. BR’s BPM: 2017 Curry > 1994 Hakeem (but healthy 2016 Curry (4th all time) > 2003 Duncan)
Additional box score stats: Hii. BR’s Postseason BPM: 2017 Curry > 1994 Hakeem
Additional box score stats: Ii. WS/48: 2017 Curry > 1994 Hakeem (but healthy 2016 Curry (3rd all time) > 2003 Duncan)
Additional box score stats: Iii. Postseason WS/48: 2017 Curry > 1994 Hakeem
2017 Curry beats 1994 Hakeem 4/4 of our most trusted stats, 4/4 playoff-only stats, and by 9/10 stats total. If we add 2016 Curry and either 1993 or 1994 Hakeem (whichever helps Hakeem more), Curry beats Hakeem in 8/10 stats with 1 tie. The only stats Hakeem ties or beats Curry in are WOWY (which is famously noisy and missing data for Curry) and CORP (which is Ben Taylor's personal evaluation). In the four of the stats that aren’t old enough for Hakeem, Curry is at least 2nd all time in three of them. In short: I don't think there's any statistical argument for Hakeem > Curry. :o

1b. Curry > Russell:
Spoiler:
Plus-minus based stats:
Ai. AuPM: [No Russell data. 2016 Curry would be 2nd all time, 2017 Curry (4th all time)]
Aii. Postseason AuPM: [No Russell data. 2017 Curry (2nd all time)]
Bi. Goldstein RAPM / Historical Square2020 RAPM: (no Russell data. 2017 Curry (7th all time))
Bii. Goldstein Playoff PIPM (3 years for sample size): (no Russell data. 2017 Curry 8th all time)
Additional plus minus stats: C. on/off: (No Russell data. 2017 Curry (1st all time)
Additional plus minus stats: D. WOWY: Russell > Curry (sample incomplete for Curry)
Additional plus minus stats: E. ESPN’s RPM: (No Russell data. 2016 Curry would be 2nd all time. 17 Curry 6th all time)
Additional plus minus stats: F. Backpicks’ CORP evaluation: (2016 Healthy Curry would be 4th all time) > 2017 Curry (8th all time) > 1962-1964 Russell (10th all time)

Box score-based data
Gi. Backpicks BPM: (2016 Curry 2nd all time) > 2017 Curry (15th all time) > (65 Russell not top 20 all time) > (62-64 Bill Russell)
Gii. Postseason Backpicks BPM: 2017 Curry (6th all time) > 1962/64/65 Russell
Additional box score stats: Hi. BR’s BPM: (No Russell data. 2016 Curry would be 3rd all time)
Additional box score stats: Hii. BR’s Postseason BPM: (No Russell data. 2017 Curry 13th all time)
Additional box score stats: Ii. WS/48: (2016 Curry 3rd all time) > 1964 Russell > 2017 Curry > (1962 Russell)
Total WS: (2016 Curry) > 1964 Russell > 1962 Russell) > 2017 Curry
Additional box score stats: Iii. Postseason WS/48: (1965 Russell) > 2017 Curry > (1962 Russell) > 1964 Russell
In preferred stats, Curry wins 2/2. Playoff-only stats are tied 1-1 while in total stats we have, Curry wins 4-2. The only stats where Russell is ahead is WOWY (which is missing much of Curry's data), and WS/48, which is the least trusted stat here. If we expand the years (16 for curry and any year in 62-65 for russell), Curry still wins 4-2. 16/17 Curry is also top 2 all time in 4/8 of the stats we don’t have for Russell, and top 10 all time in 7/8 of the stats we don’t have for Russell.

1c. Curry > Bird
Spoiler:
Plus-minus based stats:
Ai. AuPM: [No Bird data. 2016 Curry would be 2nd all time, 2017 Curry (4th all time)]
Aii. Postseason AuPM: [No Bird data. 2017 Curry (2nd all time)]
Bi. Goldstein RAPM / Historical Square2020 RAPM: 2017 Curry (7th all time) > 1986 Bird (~20th all time, but small sample)
Bii. Goldstein Playoff PIPM (3 years for sample size): 2017 Curry (8th all time) > 1986 Bird (9th all time)
Additional plus minus stats: C. on/off: (No Bird data. 2017 Curry (1st all time)
Additional plus minus stats: D. WOWY: Bird > Curry (sample incomplete for Curry)
Additional plus minus stats: E. ESPN’s RPM: (No Bird data. 2016 Curry would be 2nd all time. 17 Curry 6th all time)
Additional plus minus stats: F. Backpicks’ CORP evaluation: (2016 Healthy Curry would be tied 4th all time) > 2017 Curry (8th all time) > 1986 Bird (11th all time)

Box score-based data
Gi. Backpicks BPM: (2016 Curry 2nd all time) > 1986 Bird (10th all time) > 2017 Curry (15th all time)
Gii. Postseason Backpicks BPM: 1986 Bird (4th all time) > 2017 Curry (6th all time)
Additional box score stats: Hi. BR’s BPM: (2016 Curry 3rd all time) > (1987 Bird 17th all time) > 1986 Bird > 2017 Curry
Additional box score stats: Hii. BR’s Postseason BPM: 1986 Larry Bird > 2017 Curry (13th all time)
Additional box score stats: Ii. WS/48: (2016 would be Curry 3rd all time) > 1986 Bird > 2017 Curry
Total WS: (2016 Curry) > 1986 Bird > 2017 Curry
Additional box score stats: Iii. Postseason WS/48: 2017 Curry > 1986 Bird
1986 Bird and 2017 Curry are tied 2-2 in our more trusted stats and in playoff-only stats, so it's clearly close. If we include less-trusted stats, 1986 Bird beats 2017 Curry 6-4. But: If we look at a larger sample (2016 for Curry and either 1985 or 1987 for Bird, whichever helps Bird more), Curry dominates in 7/10 stats. 16/17 Curry is also top 2 all time in all 4 stats that don’t have data for Bird.

1d. Curry > Magic
Spoiler:
Plus-minus based stats:
A. AuPM (no data available for magic)
Bi. Goldstein RAPM / Historical Square2020 RAPM: 1985 Magic (4th all time) > 2017 Steph Curry (7th) (But only a 41 game sample for Magic.)
Bii. Goldstein Playoff PIPM (3 years for sample size): 2017 Curry (8th all time) > 1987 Magic
Additional plus minus stats: C. on/off: (no data available for magic)
Additional plus minus stats: D. WOWY: 2016/2017 Curry > 1987 Magic (not sure about full prime WOWY).
Additional plus minus stats: E. ESPN’s RPM: (no data available for magic)
Additional plus minus stats: F. Backpicks’ CORP evaluation: 2017 Curry > 1987 Magic (and healthy 2016 Steph Curry is 4th all time)

Box score-based data
Gi. Backpicks BPM: 1987 Magic > 2017 Curry (but healthy 2016 Curry (2nd all time) > 1985 Magic)
Gii. Postseason Backpicks BPM: 2017 Curry (4th all time) > 1987 Magic
Hi. BR’s BPM: 1987 Magic > 2017 Curry (but healthy 2016 Curry (4th all time) > 1987 Magic)
Hii. BR’s Postseason BPM: 2017 Curve > 1987 Magic
Additional box score stats: Ii. WS/48: 1987 Magic > 2017 Curry (but healthy 2016 Curry (5th all time) > 1987 Magic)
Additional box score stats: Iii. Postseason WS/48: 2017 Curry > 1987 Magic
So Curry beats Magic in 6/10 of these total stats, and in 4/4 of the playoff-only stats. If we add 2016 Curry and either 87 Magic or 88 Magic (whichever helps Magic more), Curry wins even more in 7/10 Stats. Magic also faced the weakest playoff competition of any player at this level: 87 Magic's average opponent overall SRS was +1.53 to 17 Curry's +4.59, so if you value playoff difficulty, this makes the playoff gap look even larger.

1e. A Statistical Case for Curry > Jokic, Giannis, Chris Paul, Durant, Kawhi, and Harden can be found here: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=100432654#p100432654. Curry's favorable statistical comparison to Duncan, and Shaq are also in previous threads.

Counter to Curry 1: Did better fit allow Curry to put up better stats than other players? Not enough to matter.
The team around Steph did have an optimal fit, and the team was dominant. But the data seems to suggest the team's dominance was primarily driven by Curry. The other all stars obviously helped the team win, but superstars' individual stats usually decline when they have better teammates, because the better teammates take on-ball time away from the superstar. Instead, Curry's numbers seem as dominant as ever. This indicates Curry's GOAT-level ceiling raising ability.

From 2017–2019 (larger sample to give more stable values), here's the net rating with each of the stars on or off:
-All 4 stars on: +17. (that's 20% better than the 1996 Chicago Bulls across 3 seasons!)
-Only Klay off: +15.64.
-Only KD off: +13.54 (still better than the 96 Chicago Bulls even with KD off)
-Only Draymond off: +12.77
-Only Steph on, all 3 other stars off: +10.81
-Only Steph off: +1.94
With all 3 other all stars off, and just Steph on, the 17-19 Warriors have a better net rating than the 16 Warriors, 13 Heat, 2000 Lakers, 91 Bulls, 87 Lakers, or 86 Celtics. With all 3 all stars on, and just Steph off, the 17-19 Warriors are worse than this season's 2022 Cavs. This pattern remains in the playoffs (more info below).

Counter to Curry 2: Did other players have better resilience to justify them over Curry? No.
Bird, Magic, and KG are all not major playoff improvers over the course of their career. Curry's playoff decline almost entirely correlates with postseason health. Per Per BPM and AUPM, Curry actually improves in the playoffs when he's healthy. Even if the others improve more in the playoffs, the difference isn't significant enough for them to catch up to Curry (e.g. Shaq's career +0.67% improvement vs Curry's career +0.57% improvement), particularly when 2017 Curry outperforms his opponents per the above statistics.
More in depth discussion of Curry's Resilience here: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=100017661#p100017661

Counter to Curry 3: Did Curry face sufficiently weak playoff opponents to allow his postseason success?
Here are the average playoff opponents' Overall SRS (playoff + regular season SRS) or SRS for relevant teams:
2004 Mavs' opponents: +5.09 (hardest opponent: Lakers at +7.6)
2017 Warriors' opponents: +4.59 (hardest opponent: Cavs at +9.5)
2003 Spurs' opponents: +4.45 (hardest opponent: Mavs at +7.5)
1964 Celtics' opponents: +4.42 (hardest opponent: Royals at +4.43)
1991 Bulls' opponents: +4.10 (hardest opponent: Lakers at +8.1)
1986 Celtics' opponents: +2.77 (hardest opponent: Rockets at +7.4)
1962 Celtics' opponents: +2.22 (hardest opponent: Warriors at +2.22)
1963 Celtics' opponents: +1.90 (hardest opponent: Lakers at +2.67)
1965 Celtics' opponents: +1.76 (hardest opponent: Lakers at +4.41)
1987 Lakers' opponents: +1.53 (hardest opponent: Celtics at +5.3)

2017 Curry's average playoff opponents were better the opponents of 2003 Tim Duncan, 1991 Jordan, 1986 Larry Bird, 1987 Magic Johnson, and 1962-1965 Bill Russell. Accounting for opponent injury, Curry still faced harder competition than Magic, Bird, or Russell. 1962-1965 Russell's best opponent was statistically worse than Curry's average opponent. The 2017 Cavs were statistically a better opponent than any opponent faced by 1994-95 Hakeem, 2004 Garnett, 2003 Duncan, 1991 Jordan, 1986 Bird, 1987 Magic, or 1962-1965 Bill Russell. Source for opponent SRS: Basketball Reference, Sansterre's Top 100 Teams: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?t=2012241.

This overall opponent difficulty does not account for the disproportionate defensive attention that Curry faced. For example, in the 2018 Finals, Curry faced double teams more than 20x more (that's 2000% more) than Durant (Source: Nbalogix and Clutch Points). Per my personal film analysis, this GOAT-level defensive attention persists in the 2017 Finals, even when playing next to KD. It's also worth noting that in my film analysis, Curry had a good rate of good defensive plays to defensive mistakes, and the Cavs did not produce good offense by putting LeBron against Curry in isolation.
Film study of a 2017 Curry here: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=100386706#p100386706.

Counter to Curry 4: Does health matter? Maybe.
Curry was healthy throughout the entire 2017 season, which is one of the reasons I take 2017 over 2016. However, if you want to dock Curry for being a health risk (even though he stayed healthy this season), that's understandable.

Counter to Curry 5: Should we have 2016 Curry > 2017 Curry?
I certainly see the arguments for 2016 Curry. If he had a healthy playoffs (or if you only care about players' chances of getting injured in a season, rather than whether they actually got injured or not), I could see 2016 Curry > 2017 Curry.
Still, Doctor Mj and I have argued before that Curry actually was a better player in 2017. Specifically, I see him improving in his health, resilience (e.g. better strength, decision making, and handle), and scalability. I'm not concerned by that his decline in metrics from 2016 to 2017 show a decline in skill -- Curry openly admitted in interviews that mentally, he took too much of a step back and and got into a small slump when trying to accommodate KD. This shows good leadership and chemistry. Once he figured out how to play alongside KD, metrics / the eye test / player interviews all say 2017 Curry returned to 2016 form by the end of the 2017 regular seasons.
More discussion on 2017 Curry > 2016 be found here: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=100017661#p100017661

2. Reasoning for Bird:
What about Bird against the competition of KG or Hakeem?
Spoiler:
Hakeem vs Duncan vs KG vs Bird:
Plus-minus based stats:
Ai. AuPM: 2004 KG (3rd all time) > 2003 Duncan (7th all time) > 1994 Hakeem (9th all time)
Aii. Postseason AuPM: 2003 Duncan (3rd all time) > 2004 Garnett (12th all time) [No older players]
Bi. Goldstein RAPM / Historical Square2020 RAPM: 2004 Garnett (1st all time) > 2003 Duncan (3rd all time) > Bird (~20th all time, but small sample) > Hakeem (~20th all time, small sample)
Bii. Goldstein Playoff PIPM (3 years for sample size): 2003 Duncan (1st all time) > 1986 Bird (9th all time) > 1994 Hakeem (16th all time) > 2004 Garnett (20th all time)
Additional plus minus stats: C. on/off: 2003 Duncan > 2004 Garnett [no older players]
Additional plus minus stats: D. WOWY: Garnett > Duncan = Hakeem > Bird
Additional plus minus stats: E. ESPN’s RPM: (2005 Duncan) > 2004 Garnett (7th all time) > 2003 Duncan (8th all time)
Additional plus minus stats: F. Backpicks’ CORP evaluation: (1993 Hakeem) > 2004 Garnett (5th all time) > (2002 Duncan) > 2003 Duncan (9th all time) > 1986 Larry Bird > 1994 Hakeem (would be 14 all time)

Box score-based data
Gi. Backpicks BPM: 1986 Bird (10th all time) > 2004 Garnett (15th all time) > (1993 Hakeem 17th all time) > (2002 Duncan 20th all time) > 2003 Duncan > 1994 Hakeem
Gii. Postseason Backpicks BPM: 1986 Bird (4th all time) > 2003 Duncan (tie 6th all time) > 1967 Wilt (12th all time) > 1994 Hakeem (13th all time) > (1993 Hakeem) > 2003/04 Garnett
Additional box score stats: Hi. BR’s BPM: 2004 Garnett (13th all time) > 1986 Bird > (2004 Duncan) > 2003 Duncan > (1993 Hakeem) > 1994 Hakeem
Additional box score stats: Hii. BR’s Postseason BPM: (2002 Duncan would be 8th all time) > 2003 Duncan > 1986 Larry Bird > (1993 Hakeem) > 1994 Hakeem > 2004 Garnett [No Russell, Will]
Additional box score stats: Ii. WS/48: 2004 Garnett > (2002/04 Duncan) > 2003 Duncan > 1986 Larry Bird > (1993 Hakeem) > 1994 Hakeem
Total WS: 2004 Garnett > (2002 Duncan) > 2003 Duncan > (1993 Hakeem 93) > 1986 Larry Bird > 1994 Hakeem
Additional box score stats: Iii. Postseason WS/48: 2003 Duncan > 1986 Larry Bird > (1993 Hakeem) > 1994 Hakeem > 2004 Garnett
Bird > KG: 2004 KG and 1986 Bird are tied 4 stats to 4, but Bird’s up 3-1 in our most trusted stats, and Bird leads in 4/4 playoff-only stats.

Bird > Hakeem: 86 Bird beats 94 Hakeem in 4/4 of the most trusted stats, 4/4 of the playoff-only stats, and 9/10 of the total stats. If we add 93 Hakeem to the mix, 86 Bird still wins in 8/10 total stats (or 7/8 if you prefer total WS over WS/48).

Any contextual factors (1. Scalability, 2. Resilience, 3. Health, 4. Defense not captured in impact metrics, 5. Team Fit exaggerating/limiting impact, 6. Time machine.)? Bird is definitely more scalable and performs better in a time machine to today the Hakeem (though it's close for KG). KG doesn't have a resilience advantage, and Hakeem's Resilience advantage isn't enough to make up the difference according to playoff-only stats. Overall, the contextual factors aren't enough in KG or Hakeem's favor to make up for Bird's clear impact advantage.

3. Thoughts on Russell vs KG
Spoiler:
Plus-minus based stats:
x Ai. AuPM: 2004 KG (3rd all time) [No older players]
x Aii. Postseason AuPM: 2004 Garnett (12th all time) [No older players]
x Bi. Goldstein RAPM / Historical Square2020 RAPM: 2004 Garnett (1st all time) [No older players]
x Bii. Goldstein Playoff PIPM (3 years for sample size): 2004 Garnett (20th all time) [No older players]
x Additional plus minus stats: C. on/off: 2004 Garnett [no older players]
Additional plus minus stats: D. WOWY: Russell > Garnett
x Additional plus minus stats: E. ESPN’s RPM: 2004 Garnett (7th all time) [no older players]
Additional plus minus stats: F. Backpicks’ CORP evaluation: 2004 Garnett (5th all time) > 1962-1964 Russell (10th all time) > (1965 Russell)

Box score-based data
Gi. Backpicks BPM: 2004 Garnett (15th all time) > (65 Russell) > (62-64 Bill Russell)
Gii. Postseason Backpicks BPM: (1965 Bill Russell) > 1962/64 Russell (not top 20) > 2003/04 Garnett
x Additional box score stats: Hi. BR’s BPM: 2004 Garnett (13th all time) [no older players]
x Additional box score stats: Hii. BR’s Postseason BPM: 2004 Garnett [no older players]
Additional box score stats: Ii. WS/48: 2004 Garnett > 1964 Russell > 1965 Russell > 1962 Russell
Total WS: 2004 Garnett > 1964 Russell > 1965 Russell > 1962 Russell
Additional box score stats: Iii. Postseason WS/48: (1965 Russell) > (1962 Russell) > 1964 Russell > 2004 Garnett
KG and Russell are tied 1-1 in trusted stats and 3-3 in total stats. Russell wins in 2/2 postseason only stats. KG is top 3 all-time in 2 of the more trusted stats which we don’t have for Russell.

Does context help? 1. Scalability: KG > Russell. KG is clearly more scalable. His offensive spacing, better passing, and off-ball ability all fit perfectly on a good offense.
2, Resilience: Russell > KG. Russell is clearly more resilient at his peak, winning both playoff-only stats. Russell's team had a 10-0 record in Game 7s and a 22-0 record in elimination games (https://www.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/l81hr6/its_pretty_well_known_that_bill_russell_was_210/). That's just crazy!
3. Health: KG = Russell. Both are healthy.
4. Defense not captured in impact metrics: Both players are defense-oriented, and Russell is missing many of the impact metrics. It's possible WinShares is underrating Russell more, but WOWY is likely accurate to Russell's defensive value.
so I'm not too concerned that there's a bias against one over the other based on defense being missed in the stats.
5. Fit: KG > Russell. KG had a much worse fit at his peak, which may limit his impact metrics more than Russell's.
6. Time Machine: KG > Russell. KG would perform better if they both took a time machine to the modern era.

Overall, both are close statistically, with lots of stats missing for Russell. The argument for Russell relies on his playoff resilience. The argument for KG relies on portability and the time machine argument, while arguing that his poor postseason performance was caused by atrocious fitting team, rather than an inherent lack of skill on his part. There’s some evidence for this, since 2001 and 2008 both have better postseason metrics than 2004, but it’s hard to know just how much better the 2004 postseason would be with better fit. All in all, there’s high uncertainty for both players, and I’m not sure who to go with.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#5 » by capfan33 » Sun Jul 10, 2022 5:15 pm

1. 2017 Curry
This is where everything starts to get very hazy, as I think 4-5 guys are essentially a coinflip here. Ultimately, I went with Curry in 2017 albeit I'm not convinced at all by it. It came down to Curry, Bird and KG to me. KG is someone I really struggle to rank, some of the recent posts have made me reconsider his case. While I love his versatility and IQ, I just can't put him in yet due to his scoring limitations. I just feel that no matter how good KG is at other aspects of basketball, he needs a very good to elite perimeter scorer next to him to be able to win a title, and I think that's a relatively high bar to clear to the point where I can't justify putting him in quite yet. As for Bird, I think Curry is similar to Bird but better at what Bird does best in terms of off-ball portability and offensive scalability.

2. 1986 Bird
The smartest basketball player ever IMO and probably the best passer ever pass for pass (very close with Magic). Whenever I watch highlights of him I see him do something new or creative and it really is incredible to witness just how far ahead of his opponents he was on both ends of the floor. I love his skillset because of how well it plays next to anyone, and how he makes any offense gel incredibly well. His scoring ability is definitely somewhat questionable in the playoffs, but this wasn't as much an issue from 84-86 outside of the bar fight games in 85, and the impact metrics we have of his offense in the playoffs suggest that from 84-88 he had plenty of impact regardless of his scoring numbers. His defense keeps him from being higher, but one of the highest offensive peaks ever.

3. 2004 KG
Probably the greatest 2nd option ever (debatable between him and Robinson) I have to remind myself sometimes of how absurd KG was as a complete package. A 6-10+ physical freak that moved like a forward, could handle and pass the ball like the best point-forwards, but played horizontal defense better than anyone outside of Russell and maybe Walton/Olajuwon. Oh and he was an elite mid-range shooter with a beautiful array of post-moves. Just an absurd combination when you realize the full-breadth of his skills. It's hard to rank him because of how awful his teams were in his prime, and maybe with better talent around him he would be more viable as a #1 scoring option, but just based on what I've seen both watching him and statistically I have too many questions about his ability to be the #1 option on a title team to rank him any higher. However, his unrivaled versatility and portability make it hard to put him too much lower than here, even though it was close between him and Magic for me.

Next up will be Magic probably, and then I'll consider Russell, West, and probably a host of other players.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#6 » by No-more-rings » Sun Jul 10, 2022 5:39 pm

Glad to see Hakeem get some respect even though I personally would’ve had him 3-5 range. Should be fun to see the slugfest between Steph and guys like Bird, Magic and KG.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#7 » by DraymondGold » Sun Jul 10, 2022 5:51 pm

SickMother wrote:
DraymondGold wrote:Hi y'all! I think we rate Curry vs the competition a bit differently, and I haven't seen your replies to any of the arguments in favor of Curry yet, so I thought I might start a discussion to understand your perspective better. (apologies if you have and I just missed it!)

To me, there's been some pretty convincing arguments for Curry over this competition (though I am biased since I'm one of the ones making the arguments :lol: ). For example, people have shown he has a favorable case over Hakeem by the impact stats, by a skill comparison (e.g. comparing scoring vs playmaking vs defense), by in-depth film analysis, and by qualitative analysis (e.g. using scalability arguments, time-machine arguments, etc.)

Is there any reason why you're rating Curry lower? Is there anything in those arguments do you don't find convincing? Feel free to raise any points in favor of other players too if you think I'm underrating them :)


For me personally I've got Curry in my next grouping of three along with Russell & Hakeem, though I haven't decided on the exact order just yet (& depending on who wins this round I might have some time still to sort it out).

There's essentially two reasons I voted for Doctor/Magic/Bird's peaks over Curry. The main one is I think the three guys I voted for all have more well rounded games than Steph does.

A secondary reason is Steph doesn't have one season where he put it all together start to finish. 15-16 is a greatest regular season ever contender, but he got hurt in the playoffs. 16-17 is a greatest postseason ever contender, but Curry had the worst shooting regular season of his prime & the waters are muddied by KD on top of it all.

One thing I am pretty sure of is I'll be voting for 14-15 Curry once he makes my ballot because it's a combo of his 2nd best regular season & playoff run, plus it kicked off the whole GSW dynasty in the first place. That he did it with no KD makes it all the more impressive.
Thanks for the reply SickMother! This definitely helps me get a sense of a different perspective. I'd agree that Bird and Erving might be more well rounded than Curry (though I still see their total value as less).

But I'm surprised to hear you say Magic is more well rounded. What makes Magic more well rounded?

In the three main areas of basketball (scoring, playmaking, defense), Magic's definitely the better playmaker, but he’s also definitely the worse scorer, and I don’t see him as better on defense. On Offense, I imagine I don't have to go into much detail for having Magic > Curry as a playmaker and Curry > Magic as a scorer, haha. I will say though, Curry's also more versatile both on and off the ball, which helps me see him as more well rounded on offense (or it helps close the gap if you have Magic as more versatile on offense).

Re: Defense, there’s a ~4 minute section video on Magic’s peak that summarizes his defensive limitations better than I could (see 11:25-15:44).
Spoiler:
[url];list=PLtzZl14BrKjSMb4IFWSy0qh_nFGiy7PoZ&index=5[/url]
The main points are:
-On defense, Magic lacked later quickness and had poor footwork. This made him easy to isolate against from the perimeter. Curry’s clearly better in man defense against guards, which is surprising given man defense is one of Curry’s worst traits. Players like this would be hunted more today (though you may not care for time machine arguments).
-He didn’t have the best hands, and was somewhat foul prone.
-Off ball, he didn’t have the best awareness. This is again one of Curry’s strengths in defense: he’s a great communicator and weak side helper, which requires good timing and an ability to balance awareness of the ball with awareness of your man.
-Magic did roam off his man on defense and could generate some steals, but actually Curry generated more steals going by Steals per 100 possessions or by STL%.
-Magic does have size, which helps him against larger opponents. But for his size, he offered almost no rim protection. And it’s worth mentioning that although Curry could be hunted by bigger players in isolation, this rarely lead to great team offense against him. In my film analysis against the Cavs on page 1, LeBron hunted Curry in isolation, but often the best shot they could get from this was a late clock contested 3 point shot.

It’s also worth mentioning that although Magic is a better rebounder, Curry's still in the All-time Top 20 in rebounding percentage among point guards. Magic of course has the size advantage, but Curry is better at boxing out despite his smaller stature.

Personally, I see Magic and Curry about the same on defense. Curry’s of course the better scorer and more versatile off-ball player, while Magic’s of course the better passer and better ball-dominant player. Anyway, let me know if you disagree at all!

---

Your comment about Curry's year is very valid though. I've discussed some of the differences between a season's value (which changes based on context) and goodness (context-independent goodness). To me, 2017 Curry is just as "good" in the regular season as 2016 Curry, but he wasn't as "valuable" because he had that shooting slump when learning to fit with KD. I personally try to rate goodness, but if you prefer to rank value or prefer more "complete" seasons, that's perfectly valid!

Quick second question if you have time :D Do you not have any concerns about Magic's relative playoff value? 2017 Curry's higher than 87 Magic in Playoff PIPM, Backpicks playoff BPM, Basketball Reference's playoff BPM, and playoff WS/48. 87 Magic also faced much weaker playoff competition. His average opponent were +1.53 overall, while Curry's were +4.59 (or about +3.53 accounting for opponent injury). The 2017 Cavs were also a much better team than any opponent Magic faced (they were +9.5 compared to the 87 Celtics' +5.3).

f4p wrote:Since it will come up more here I assume, I will ask again like I did in thread #7:

For the people picking Steph in 2017, why would he be up here if he wasn't even better than Kawhi in 2017? Kawhi played nearly a full season for once with 74 games, had very good offensive numbers and was extremely good on defense (27.6 PER, 0.264 WS48), and then took all of that to another level in the playoffs. 31.5 PER and 0.314 WS48 on 67.2 TS% in the playoffs, numbers like are rarely seen in nba history (have they been seen?). And we actually got to see him play Steph's team and play a nearly perfect game while trouncing the most talented roster of all time. Normally I would say we have to consider injuries, but that should clearly not be the case when a goon on the other team just takes you out on a dirty play because you are playing too well.
Sorry I missed this! But thanks for raising this question again :D

The reason why I have 2017 Curry over 2017 Kawhi is pretty simple... he was better than Kawhi in 2017 :P

PER and WS/48 are okay stats to use back in the day, but they're measurably far worse at predicting team success than any of the plus-minus based stats (e.g. AuPM, RAPM, PIPM, BPM, and RPM all are measurably better predictors of current value and future success). Basically nobody who work for NBA teams use PER or WS/48, but there's plenty of reports of actual NBA analysts using plus-minus based stats.

What do the wider spectrum of stats say? 2017 Curry beats 2017 Kawhi in AuPM/game, Postseason AuPM/game, RAPM, playoff PIPM, Fivethirtyeight's RAPTOR +/-, Basketball Index's LEBRON, DARKO, ESPN’s RPM, CORP, Backpicks BPM, and Backpicks Playoff BPM. The only stats where Kawhi comes out on top were the two you mentioned: Basketball Reference's BPM and WS/48.

The 2017 Warriors are commonly considered possibly the best team of all time, and I've made statistical and film-based arguments throughout this project that their dominance is predominantly driven by Curry. For example, the Curry-KD dynasty played better than Larry Bird's 86 Celtics and Magic's 87 Lakers with just Curry on and all 3 other all-stars off... while they were worse than the 2022 Cavs with all 3 other all stars on and just Curry off.

As for that one game, I'm pretty hesitant to value 1 half of a basketball game over the army of evidence we have from the entire playoffs and regular season. If we just looked at one half of Game 1 of a series, we might think the 1991 Lakers would beat the 91 Bulls, or that the 2001 76ers would beat the 2001 Lakers, or that the 2022 Celtics would beat the 2022 Warriors. If just one half of a Game 1 can be such a poor predictor of a team's value, why should it be any better for a star player?

_________________________

Discussion question for people voting for Russell: What do people think about the difficulty Russell's playoff opponents?

Going by average opponent difficulty: 04 KG ~ 17 Curry (KG faced better average team, Curry faced better hardest opponent) >> 86 Bird ~ 64 Russell > 1962/63/65 Russell > Magic

1964 was the hardest playoff run for Russell of any year in 1962-1965, but the opponents rated at +4.42, which is still worse than the +4.59 rating of 2017 Curry's opponents and the +5.09 rating of 2004 KG's opponents. Russell's best opponent was Oscar Robertson's Royals at +4.43, but that's a far cry from KG's best opponent (04 Lakers at +7.6) or Curry's best opponent (17 Cavs at +9.5).

Looking at 1962, 1963, or 1965 Russell's opponents, the opponent disparity is even worse. 1962 was Russell's next hardest year with an average opponent of +2.22... but that's far below Curry or KG's average opponent. It's also a bit below Bird's average opponent, though it is better than 87 Magic's average opponent of +1.53.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#8 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Jul 10, 2022 7:17 pm

1. Steph Curry '16-17 (or '15-16 or '20-21 or '21-22)

As I've said, I think it's a really big deal that Curry effectively represents the cutting edge of the game we currently see.

We're no longer in a league where things are mostly pretty static like were arguably for about 40 years from somewhere in the '60s to the mid-00s. We've reached a new hockey stick in the sigmoid function.

Image

We don't know where it will end, or what will come next. All we really know is that the game is more strategically optimized today because of greater use of the 3-point shot with a massively improved skill at this shot and complementary/oppositional skills.

And so the best teams today would beat the best teams of the past so long as the 3-point line is on the court.

And Curry's teams keep coming out as the best teams of today.

I respect folks' philosophy who are trying to be more era-neutral than this, but regardless of how it factors into your rankings, I think it's something to really chew on, because it's certainly not how most of us expected the game to go.

2. Magic Johnson '86-87 (pretty accepted I think)
3. Larry Bird '85-86 (pretty accepted I think)

Previously I focused on Magic's "solving" of the game as the reason why I just have a smidge more confidence in Magic than Bird.

But honestly I'd rather just gush about the two of them together. I think these guys might be the two greatest offensive geniuses we've ever seen, and for them to come out of college at the same, first as NCAA Championship rivals, and then proceeding the best in the West and the East for the better part of the following NBA decade...I mean just, wow, the basketball gods smiled upon the NBA at that time.

There's a part of me that feels like these guys would prove to be the best offensive players in the world in any era, and so anyone who has Magic or Bird ahead of Curry, I certainly get it and question myself.

Honorable Mention:

Julius Erving remains the next guy on my mind, and frankly I can definitely see arguments for him over all of the guys on my list above.

Also, I wanted to specifically shout out Bill Russell here after seeing '70s posts. Certainly gives me more confidence in continuing to think of Russell not simply as the defensive GOAT, but as a defensive talent remains unique in what we've seen since. I
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#9 » by 70sFan » Sun Jul 10, 2022 7:25 pm

Coming back from the previous thread.

DraymondGold wrote:Great stuff as always 70sFan :D

Thanks! :D

Rim protection: I think it's worth noting that Russell has higher volume than 93-94 Hakeem, but both have roughly the same rate of success (~80% high quality rim contests to 20% low quality contests). Hakeem does close the volume gap if we just look at 93, per your numbers, but then again it's worth remembering that you gave the numbers for Russell's full prime! Who knows how much better Russell would look if we just gave his peak (e.g. somewhere in ~1962-1965).

Yeah, we have to keep in mind that big portion of the footage I've collected is from post 1965, when Russell was past his physical peak. I can only imagine how spectacular his numbers would look like.

Another thing worth mentioning is Russell's incredibly low foul rate for someone so active and engaged on defensive end.

To me, their similar rate of good rim protection matches that they're also similar as man defenders. Both clearly fit as 2 of the top 3 best big-man man defenders of all time, along with Nate Thurmond. [source: See time 19:37 in the video I link here:]

Yeah, Hakeem and Russell are very similar man defenders - both in terms of style and effectiveness. Hakeem gambled a bit more with his quick hands, while Russell was very active without the ball, while being more conservative while playing behind post players.

Thurmond is on another tier to these two in terms of man defense to me. This comaprison created by Ben truly underestimates what Nate was capable of against the best scoring bigs of his era.

Help rotations inside: it makes sense that Russell has a higher rate of help rotations inside (~78% good rotations to Hakeem's 73%). Still, I'm surprised by Hakeem's volume advantage. Perhaps once again this is a case of Russell's prime vs 1 year for Hakeem?

This also could be caused by the quality of the footage I have - a lot of silent films I have don't show full actions or are with poor camera angles. That makes my job of tracking rotation much tougher than with broadcast video.
Perimeter Defense: and here we yet again see Russell on top, matching the reputation. To me, what makes Russell such a compelling defender is not necessarily that he's the absolute best in every skill, or that he's an absolute outlier at one skill -- it's that he's so near the top in every category. Top 3 man defender, probably top 3 rim protector, top 3 with inside help rotations inside per your metrics, and probably top 3 PNR defender / perimeter defender too. Wow!

Yeah, Russell's versatility is indeed incredible. Add to that one of the greatest defensive rebounding and you don't need to guess why he was so successful.

I wonder -- I know you haven't done tracking for KG yet, but how would you guess Russell's PNR/perimeter defensive ability compares to KG's?

I'd say that KG was more willing to go outside from what I've seen and he had probably more experience defending perimeter players full time (he did that a lot early in his career). At the same time, Garnett was never as athletic as Russell and didn't have his shotblocking ability. I think Russell might have quicker hands as well, although I'm less sure about it.

In terms of perimeter defense, Russell to me is somewhere between Hakeem (GOAT-level physical talent, but focused more on inside defense) and Garnett (GOAT-level fundamentals, but not as spring as Hakeem/Russell).
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#10 » by Doctor MJ » Sun Jul 10, 2022 7:26 pm

f4p wrote:Since it will come up more here I assume, I will ask again like I did in thread #7:

For the people picking Steph in 2017, why would he be up here if he wasn't even better than Kawhi in 2017? Kawhi played nearly a full season for once with 74 games, had very good offensive numbers and was extremely good on defense (27.6 PER, 0.264 WS48), and then took all of that to another level in the playoffs. 31.5 PER and 0.314 WS48 on 67.2 TS% in the playoffs, numbers like are rarely seen in nba history (have they been seen?). And we actually got to see him play Steph's team and play a nearly perfect game while trouncing the most talented roster of all time. Normally I would say we have to consider injuries, but that should clearly not be the case when a goon on the other team just takes you out on a dirty play because you are playing too well.


I think the Game 1 of that series is so frustrating from an analysis perspective, as well as a damn shame and something that really irritates me whenever it happens.

I can absolutely understand someone ranking Kawhi higher in this project than Curry, and feeling like what we saw in Game 1 told us what would have happened if Kawhi had just not been injured by a Warrior.

I just don't feel comfortable doing that. I don't think interpreting a hot start by the star of the underdog team in one game as the same thing as him successfully leading a team to an upset series when in decisive fashion. Tantalizing as that moment was, it's something I don't feel comfortable using to draw big conclusions about Kawhi.

In general, I just have more confidence in my ability to build a great team around Steph than I do Kawhi, and so it should make sense why I hold Curry being the MVP of the greatest team in history in higher esteem than what Kawhi did that year, even as I want to make clear that I think Kawhi was fantastic and deserves to be brought up in this project.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#11 » by Proxy » Sun Jul 10, 2022 7:51 pm

DraymondGold wrote:Discussion question for people voting for Russell: What do people think about the difficulty Russell's playoff opponents?

Going by average opponent difficulty: 04 KG ~ 17 Curry (KG faced better average team, Curry faced better hardest opponent) >> 86 Bird ~ 64 Russell > 1962/63/65 Russell > Magic

1964 was the hardest playoff run for Russell of any year in 1962-1965, but the opponents rated at +4.42, which is still worse than the +4.59 rating of 2017 Curry's opponents and the +5.09 rating of 2004 KG's opponents. Russell's best opponent was Oscar Robertson's Royals at +4.43, but that's a far cry from KG's best opponent (04 Lakers at +7.6) or Curry's best opponent (17 Cavs at +9.5).

Looking at 1962, 1963, or 1965 Russell's opponents, the opponent disparity is even worse. 1962 was Russell's next hardest year with an average opponent of +2.22... but that's far below Curry or KG's average opponent. It's also a bit below Bird's average opponent, though it is better than 87 Magic's average opponent of +1.53.


It was much harder to create team point differential separation back then so if anything i'm more impressed by him being able to consistently anchor teams that are pretty much outliers relative to era when there was evidence his supporting cast wasn't TOO far off the norms of the era in quality(I think from '60 to '65 they averaged something like being 3.5 to 4 points better than the next best team).
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#12 » by SickMother » Sun Jul 10, 2022 8:01 pm

01 Erving 75-76: 28.7 PER | .569 TS% | 110 TS+ | 17.7 WS | .262 WS/48
01 Erving 75-76 Playoffs?!?: 32.0 PER | .610 TS% | 3.7 WS | .321 WS/48
[a peak so high the NBA absorbed a whole other league to get this guy under their banner. Doctor turned in a top tier regular season, then followed it up with one of thee largest postseason efficiency increases of all time.]

02 Magic 86-87: 27.0 PER | .602 TS% | 112 TS+ | 15.9 WS | .263 WS/48
02 Magic 86-87 Playoffs?!?: 26.2 PER | .607 TS% | 3.7 WS | .265 WS/48
[topped the league in assists with career best scoring volume en route to 65-17 regular season, 8.32 SRS & a smooth 15-3 postseason cruise. Peak Magic Showtime.]

03 Larry 85-86: 25.6 PER | .580 TS% | 107 TS+ | 15.8 WS | .244 WS/48
03 Larry 85-86 Playoffs?!?: 23.9 PER | .615 TS% | 4.2 WS | .263 WS/48
[went back & forth on who to place higher between Magic & Larry, but ultimately gave the edge to Johnson on the strength of a stronger regular season.]
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#13 » by 70sFan » Sun Jul 10, 2022 9:02 pm

My voting:

1. 1961/62 Bill Russell
(1964/65 Bill Russell)
(1962/63 Bill Russell)
(1963/64 Bill Russell)
2. 1949/50 George Mikan
3. 1986/87 Magic Johnson
(1989/90 Magic Johnson)
(1987/88 Magic Johnson)


Russell is my next choice, clearly above any other one-way player left. I get why people feel concerned about Russell's portability across eras, but:

a) I don't care about time machine argument
b) I think Russell would lose significantly less in 2017 than Curry in 1962

Russell had the ultimate body for NBA center and he combined that with his cat-like quickness, elite timing and GOAT level BBIQ. On offensive end, he wasn't a good scorer and lacked creation ability, but he was smart player who did every little things to help his teammates and he was physically capable enough that he could dominate favorable matchups like he did vs Lakers in 1962 finals.

I haven't finished tracking Russell games yet, but I have finished the majority of them for now. Here are the numbers similar to the ones I posted for Hakeem, Kareem, Wilt and Shaq before:

Rim protection

1962-69 Russell (estimated): 9.4 high quality contests per game, 2.5 weak contests per game

1993-94 Hakeem: 7.7 high quality contests per game, 1.9 weak contests per game
1962-67 Wilt (estimated): 7.1 high quality contests per game, 2.7 weak contests per game
1971-79 Kareem: 6.4 high quality contests per game, 2.5 weak contests per game
2000 Shaq: 3.7 high quality contests per game, 2.8 weak contests per game
1982-83 Moses: 3.2 high quality contests per game, 3.0 weak contests per game

Help rotations inside

1962-69 Russell (estimated): 2.8 high quality rotations per game, 0.8 bad rotations per game

1993-94 Hakeem: 3.6 high quality rotations per game, 1.3 bad rotations per game
1962-67 Wilt (estimated): 1.0 high quality rotations per game, 1.2 bad rotations per game
1971-79 Kareem: 3.1 high quality rotations per game, 2.2 bad rotations per game
2000 Shaq: 1.4 high quality rotations per game, 1.8 bad rotations per game
1982-83 Moses: 1.3 high quality rotations per game, 1.4 bad rotations per game

I will post a few Russell clips to help you understand why I think his defense would translate to future eras better than anyone's.

Perimeter Defense



Rookie Russell pressures Pettit on perimeter and Bob tried to blow him by with a quick first step. Notice Russell's unreal recovery time and very light footwork. He blocked Pettit's layup attempt with his right hand - that's important since a lot of shotblockers are one hand dominant, but not Russell.



Russell in his last year, at 35 years old switching onto perimeter, pressuring opponent and closing out long jumpshots. Look how effortless he moved despite the age.

I will post more when I get a new footage from 1964 ECF (it should be ready next week).

Over 46% of P&Rs defended by Russell were switched by Bill. In comparison:

Hakeem: 22%
Wilt: 21%
Kareem: 20%
Shaq: 10%
Moses: 15%

Note that Shaq's and Wilt's numbers could be a bit overstated due to them playing in deep drop coverage, to the point that I didn't count all of their P&R defensive possessions.

Sample of size isn't massive, but it seems that Russell was more willing to pressure perimeter players than any other center that I tracked so far. The numbers can change after I finish my evaluation, but it is a clear pattern when I watch Russell.

Mikan is my 2nd choice, because I don't see any other player reaching his level of dominance. We have to adjust that for significantly weaker competition, but still - I don't care about time machine argument. He did everything he could against the best competition he faced. Although some might view him as some kind of slow, lumbering oaf who relied heavily on his size, I don't view him that way from what I've seen. He was a very smart passer with soft shooting touch and he seemed to have a very strong defensive impact (although this one likely wouldn't translate to the same degree as his offense).

To look at prime Mikan footage, here is a small sample (by the way, you can the ball being far from round in this game, something to consider when we talk about shooting performance of these players):



Here is another nice Mikan play that shows his high level vision as a post playmaker (one of my favorite ones):



My last choice goes to the greatest offensive player in NBA history (in my personal opinion). Late career Magic solved basketball in a way no other offensive anchor ever did. There was absolutely no defense you could throw at him, because he was always three steps ahead of you. With improved shooting and post game, he became the walking mismatch on the court. He also was the master at finding and exploiting openings and other mismatches on the court. That made him so portable, despite being on-ball playmaker.

Some people find his defense concerning, but I don't - at least not compared to Bird or Curry. He wasn't the most consistent defender in the world, but with the right personel he could be really impactful on that end. His slower feet don't concern me that much, because he didn't defend small guards at this point of his career.

Next tier is Curry/Oscar/West/Bird/Julius/Garnett/Jokic/Walton. I know, quite a long tier but for now I don't have a clear favorites.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#14 » by LukaTheGOAT » Sun Jul 10, 2022 9:44 pm

DraymondGold wrote:
SickMother wrote:
DraymondGold wrote:Hi y'all! I think we rate Curry vs the competition a bit differently, and I haven't seen your replies to any of the arguments in favor of Curry yet, so I thought I might start a discussion to understand your perspective better. (apologies if you have and I just missed it!)

To me, there's been some pretty convincing arguments for Curry over this competition (though I am biased since I'm one of the ones making the arguments :lol: ). For example, people have shown he has a favorable case over Hakeem by the impact stats, by a skill comparison (e.g. comparing scoring vs playmaking vs defense), by in-depth film analysis, and by qualitative analysis (e.g. using scalability arguments, time-machine arguments, etc.)

Is there any reason why you're rating Curry lower? Is there anything in those arguments do you don't find convincing? Feel free to raise any points in favor of other players too if you think I'm underrating them :)


For me personally I've got Curry in my next grouping of three along with Russell & Hakeem, though I haven't decided on the exact order just yet (& depending on who wins this round I might have some time still to sort it out).

There's essentially two reasons I voted for Doctor/Magic/Bird's peaks over Curry. The main one is I think the three guys I voted for all have more well rounded games than Steph does.

A secondary reason is Steph doesn't have one season where he put it all together start to finish. 15-16 is a greatest regular season ever contender, but he got hurt in the playoffs. 16-17 is a greatest postseason ever contender, but Curry had the worst shooting regular season of his prime & the waters are muddied by KD on top of it all.

One thing I am pretty sure of is I'll be voting for 14-15 Curry once he makes my ballot because it's a combo of his 2nd best regular season & playoff run, plus it kicked off the whole GSW dynasty in the first place. That he did it with no KD makes it all the more impressive.
Thanks for the reply SickMother! This definitely helps me get a sense of a different perspective. I'd agree that Bird and Erving might be more well rounded than Curry (though I still see their total value as less).

But I'm surprised to hear you say Magic is more well rounded. What makes Magic more well rounded?

In the three main areas of basketball (scoring, playmaking, defense), Magic's definitely the better playmaker, but he’s also definitely the worse scorer, and I don’t see him as better on defense. On Offense, I imagine I don't have to go into much detail for having Magic > Curry as a playmaker and Curry > Magic as a scorer, haha. I will say though, Curry's also more versatile both on and off the ball, which helps me see him as more well rounded on offense (or it helps close the gap if you have Magic as more versatile on offense).

Re: Defense, there’s a ~4 minute section video on Magic’s peak that summarizes his defensive limitations better than I could (see 11:25-15:44).
Spoiler:
[url];list=PLtzZl14BrKjSMb4IFWSy0qh_nFGiy7PoZ&index=5[/url]
The main points are:
-On defense, Magic lacked later quickness and had poor footwork. This made him easy to isolate against from the perimeter. Curry’s clearly better in man defense against guards, which is surprising given man defense is one of Curry’s worst traits. Players like this would be hunted more today (though you may not care for time machine arguments).
-He didn’t have the best hands, and was somewhat foul prone.
-Off ball, he didn’t have the best awareness. This is again one of Curry’s strengths in defense: he’s a great communicator and weak side helper, which requires good timing and an ability to balance awareness of the ball with awareness of your man.
-Magic did roam off his man on defense and could generate some steals, but actually Curry generated more steals going by Steals per 100 possessions or by STL%.
-Magic does have size, which helps him against larger opponents. But for his size, he offered almost no rim protection. And it’s worth mentioning that although Curry could be hunted by bigger players in isolation, this rarely lead to great team offense against him. In my film analysis against the Cavs on page 1, LeBron hunted Curry in isolation, but often the best shot they could get from this was a late clock contested 3 point shot.

It’s also worth mentioning that although Magic is a better rebounder, Curry's still in the All-time Top 20 in rebounding percentage among point guards. Magic of course has the size advantage, but Curry is better at boxing out despite his smaller stature.

Personally, I see Magic and Curry about the same on defense. Curry’s of course the better scorer and more versatile off-ball player, while Magic’s of course the better passer and better ball-dominant player. Anyway, let me know if you disagree at all!

---

Your comment about Curry's year is very valid though. I've discussed some of the differences between a season's value (which changes based on context) and goodness (context-independent goodness). To me, 2017 Curry is just as "good" in the regular season as 2016 Curry, but he wasn't as "valuable" because he had that shooting slump when learning to fit with KD. I personally try to rate goodness, but if you prefer to rank value or prefer more "complete" seasons, that's perfectly valid!

Quick second question if you have time :D Do you not have any concerns about Magic's relative playoff value? 2017 Curry's higher than 87 Magic in Playoff PIPM, Backpicks playoff BPM, Basketball Reference's playoff BPM, and playoff WS/48. 87 Magic also faced much weaker playoff competition. His average opponent were +1.53 overall, while Curry's were +4.59 (or about +3.53 accounting for opponent injury). The 2017 Cavs were also a much better team than any opponent Magic faced (they were +9.5 compared to the 87 Celtics' +5.3).

f4p wrote:Since it will come up more here I assume, I will ask again like I did in thread #7:

For the people picking Steph in 2017, why would he be up here if he wasn't even better than Kawhi in 2017? Kawhi played nearly a full season for once with 74 games, had very good offensive numbers and was extremely good on defense (27.6 PER, 0.264 WS48), and then took all of that to another level in the playoffs. 31.5 PER and 0.314 WS48 on 67.2 TS% in the playoffs, numbers like are rarely seen in nba history (have they been seen?). And we actually got to see him play Steph's team and play a nearly perfect game while trouncing the most talented roster of all time. Normally I would say we have to consider injuries, but that should clearly not be the case when a goon on the other team just takes you out on a dirty play because you are playing too well.
Sorry I missed this! But thanks for raising this question again :D

The reason why I have 2017 Curry over 2017 Kawhi is pretty simple... he was better than Kawhi in 2017 :P

PER and WS/48 are okay stats to use back in the day, but they're measurably far worse at predicting team success than any of the plus-minus based stats (e.g. AuPM, RAPM, PIPM, BPM, and RPM all are measurably better predictors of current value and future success). Basically nobody who work for NBA teams use PER or WS/48, but there's plenty of reports of actual NBA analysts using plus-minus based stats.

What do the wider spectrum of stats say? 2017 Curry beats 2017 Kawhi in AuPM/game, Postseason AuPM/game, RAPM, playoff PIPM, Fivethirtyeight's RAPTOR +/-, Basketball Index's LEBRON, DARKO, ESPN’s RPM, CORP, Backpicks BPM, and Backpicks Playoff BPM. The only stats where Kawhi comes out on top were the two you mentioned: Basketball Reference's BPM and WS/48.

The 2017 Warriors are commonly considered possibly the best team of all time, and I've made statistical and film-based arguments throughout this project that their dominance is predominantly driven by Curry. For example, the Curry-KD dynasty played better than Larry Bird's 86 Celtics and Magic's 87 Lakers with just Curry on and all 3 other all-stars off... while they were worse than the 2022 Cavs with all 3 other all stars on and just Curry off.

As for that one game, I'm pretty hesitant to value 1 half of a basketball game over the army of evidence we have from the entire playoffs and regular season. If we just looked at one half of Game 1 of a series, we might think the 1991 Lakers would beat the 91 Bulls, or that the 2001 76ers would beat the 2001 Lakers, or that the 2022 Celtics would beat the 2022 Warriors. If just one half of a Game 1 can be such a poor predictor of a team's value, why should it be any better for a star player?

_________________________

Discussion question for people voting for Russell: What do people think about the difficulty Russell's playoff opponents?

Going by average opponent difficulty: 04 KG ~ 17 Curry (KG faced better average team, Curry faced better hardest opponent) >> 86 Bird ~ 64 Russell > 1962/63/65 Russell > Magic

1964 was the hardest playoff run for Russell of any year in 1962-1965, but the opponents rated at +4.42, which is still worse than the +4.59 rating of 2017 Curry's opponents and the +5.09 rating of 2004 KG's opponents. Russell's best opponent was Oscar Robertson's Royals at +4.43, but that's a far cry from KG's best opponent (04 Lakers at +7.6) or Curry's best opponent (17 Cavs at +9.5).

Looking at 1962, 1963, or 1965 Russell's opponents, the opponent disparity is even worse. 1962 was Russell's next hardest year with an average opponent of +2.22... but that's far below Curry or KG's average opponent. It's also a bit below Bird's average opponent, though it is better than 87 Magic's average opponent of +1.53.


Kawhi has a higher PS PIPM and PS RAPTOR than Curry.

Kawhi also has the highest 3-year stretch of PS LEBRON of any player dating back to 2014.

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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#15 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sun Jul 10, 2022 10:41 pm

LukaTheGOAT wrote:
DraymondGold wrote:
SickMother wrote:
For me personally I've got Curry in my next grouping of three along with Russell & Hakeem, though I haven't decided on the exact order just yet (& depending on who wins this round I might have some time still to sort it out).

There's essentially two reasons I voted for Doctor/Magic/Bird's peaks over Curry. The main one is I think the three guys I voted for all have more well rounded games than Steph does.

A secondary reason is Steph doesn't have one season where he put it all together start to finish. 15-16 is a greatest regular season ever contender, but he got hurt in the playoffs. 16-17 is a greatest postseason ever contender, but Curry had the worst shooting regular season of his prime & the waters are muddied by KD on top of it all.

One thing I am pretty sure of is I'll be voting for 14-15 Curry once he makes my ballot because it's a combo of his 2nd best regular season & playoff run, plus it kicked off the whole GSW dynasty in the first place. That he did it with no KD makes it all the more impressive.
Thanks for the reply SickMother! This definitely helps me get a sense of a different perspective. I'd agree that Bird and Erving might be more well rounded than Curry (though I still see their total value as less).

But I'm surprised to hear you say Magic is more well rounded. What makes Magic more well rounded?

In the three main areas of basketball (scoring, playmaking, defense), Magic's definitely the better playmaker, but he’s also definitely the worse scorer, and I don’t see him as better on defense. On Offense, I imagine I don't have to go into much detail for having Magic > Curry as a playmaker and Curry > Magic as a scorer, haha. I will say though, Curry's also more versatile both on and off the ball, which helps me see him as more well rounded on offense (or it helps close the gap if you have Magic as more versatile on offense).

Re: Defense, there’s a ~4 minute section video on Magic’s peak that summarizes his defensive limitations better than I could (see 11:25-15:44).
Spoiler:
[url];list=PLtzZl14BrKjSMb4IFWSy0qh_nFGiy7PoZ&index=5[/url]
The main points are:
-On defense, Magic lacked later quickness and had poor footwork. This made him easy to isolate against from the perimeter. Curry’s clearly better in man defense against guards, which is surprising given man defense is one of Curry’s worst traits. Players like this would be hunted more today (though you may not care for time machine arguments).
-He didn’t have the best hands, and was somewhat foul prone.
-Off ball, he didn’t have the best awareness. This is again one of Curry’s strengths in defense: he’s a great communicator and weak side helper, which requires good timing and an ability to balance awareness of the ball with awareness of your man.
-Magic did roam off his man on defense and could generate some steals, but actually Curry generated more steals going by Steals per 100 possessions or by STL%.
-Magic does have size, which helps him against larger opponents. But for his size, he offered almost no rim protection. And it’s worth mentioning that although Curry could be hunted by bigger players in isolation, this rarely lead to great team offense against him. In my film analysis against the Cavs on page 1, LeBron hunted Curry in isolation, but often the best shot they could get from this was a late clock contested 3 point shot.

It’s also worth mentioning that although Magic is a better rebounder, Curry's still in the All-time Top 20 in rebounding percentage among point guards. Magic of course has the size advantage, but Curry is better at boxing out despite his smaller stature.

Personally, I see Magic and Curry about the same on defense. Curry’s of course the better scorer and more versatile off-ball player, while Magic’s of course the better passer and better ball-dominant player. Anyway, let me know if you disagree at all!

---

Your comment about Curry's year is very valid though. I've discussed some of the differences between a season's value (which changes based on context) and goodness (context-independent goodness). To me, 2017 Curry is just as "good" in the regular season as 2016 Curry, but he wasn't as "valuable" because he had that shooting slump when learning to fit with KD. I personally try to rate goodness, but if you prefer to rank value or prefer more "complete" seasons, that's perfectly valid!

Quick second question if you have time :D Do you not have any concerns about Magic's relative playoff value? 2017 Curry's higher than 87 Magic in Playoff PIPM, Backpicks playoff BPM, Basketball Reference's playoff BPM, and playoff WS/48. 87 Magic also faced much weaker playoff competition. His average opponent were +1.53 overall, while Curry's were +4.59 (or about +3.53 accounting for opponent injury). The 2017 Cavs were also a much better team than any opponent Magic faced (they were +9.5 compared to the 87 Celtics' +5.3).

f4p wrote:Since it will come up more here I assume, I will ask again like I did in thread #7:

For the people picking Steph in 2017, why would he be up here if he wasn't even better than Kawhi in 2017? Kawhi played nearly a full season for once with 74 games, had very good offensive numbers and was extremely good on defense (27.6 PER, 0.264 WS48), and then took all of that to another level in the playoffs. 31.5 PER and 0.314 WS48 on 67.2 TS% in the playoffs, numbers like are rarely seen in nba history (have they been seen?). And we actually got to see him play Steph's team and play a nearly perfect game while trouncing the most talented roster of all time. Normally I would say we have to consider injuries, but that should clearly not be the case when a goon on the other team just takes you out on a dirty play because you are playing too well.
Sorry I missed this! But thanks for raising this question again :D

The reason why I have 2017 Curry over 2017 Kawhi is pretty simple... he was better than Kawhi in 2017 :P

PER and WS/48 are okay stats to use back in the day, but they're measurably far worse at predicting team success than any of the plus-minus based stats (e.g. AuPM, RAPM, PIPM, BPM, and RPM all are measurably better predictors of current value and future success). Basically nobody who work for NBA teams use PER or WS/48, but there's plenty of reports of actual NBA analysts using plus-minus based stats.

What do the wider spectrum of stats say? 2017 Curry beats 2017 Kawhi in AuPM/game, Postseason AuPM/game, RAPM, playoff PIPM, Fivethirtyeight's RAPTOR +/-, Basketball Index's LEBRON, DARKO, ESPN’s RPM, CORP, Backpicks BPM, and Backpicks Playoff BPM. The only stats where Kawhi comes out on top were the two you mentioned: Basketball Reference's BPM and WS/48.

The 2017 Warriors are commonly considered possibly the best team of all time, and I've made statistical and film-based arguments throughout this project that their dominance is predominantly driven by Curry. For example, the Curry-KD dynasty played better than Larry Bird's 86 Celtics and Magic's 87 Lakers with just Curry on and all 3 other all-stars off... while they were worse than the 2022 Cavs with all 3 other all stars on and just Curry off.

As for that one game, I'm pretty hesitant to value 1 half of a basketball game over the army of evidence we have from the entire playoffs and regular season. If we just looked at one half of Game 1 of a series, we might think the 1991 Lakers would beat the 91 Bulls, or that the 2001 76ers would beat the 2001 Lakers, or that the 2022 Celtics would beat the 2022 Warriors. If just one half of a Game 1 can be such a poor predictor of a team's value, why should it be any better for a star player?

_________________________

Discussion question for people voting for Russell: What do people think about the difficulty Russell's playoff opponents?

Going by average opponent difficulty: 04 KG ~ 17 Curry (KG faced better average team, Curry faced better hardest opponent) >> 86 Bird ~ 64 Russell > 1962/63/65 Russell > Magic

1964 was the hardest playoff run for Russell of any year in 1962-1965, but the opponents rated at +4.42, which is still worse than the +4.59 rating of 2017 Curry's opponents and the +5.09 rating of 2004 KG's opponents. Russell's best opponent was Oscar Robertson's Royals at +4.43, but that's a far cry from KG's best opponent (04 Lakers at +7.6) or Curry's best opponent (17 Cavs at +9.5).

Looking at 1962, 1963, or 1965 Russell's opponents, the opponent disparity is even worse. 1962 was Russell's next hardest year with an average opponent of +2.22... but that's far below Curry or KG's average opponent. It's also a bit below Bird's average opponent, though it is better than 87 Magic's average opponent of +1.53.


Kawhi has a higher PS PIPM and PS RAPTOR than Curry.

Kawhi also has the highest 3-year stretch of PS LEBRON of any player dating back to 2014.

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Tbf kawhis 3 year sample is really just his 2017 and 2019 run because he wasn’t playing 2018, I’d be curious how a 2017 Curry or Bron LEBRON would look considering how far ahead of the pack their RAPM was (and since their playoff impact metrics weren’t the greatest in one of the years in all their three year stretches).

On a side note: Kawhi is so weird for me to rank.

On one hand, offensively for sure I think of him as a pretty clearly inferior player to Kobe

On the other hand, pure level of play I’m not against 2017 playoff Kawhi being above 2017 playoff Curry, and I think level of play 2017 playoff Curry is probably closer to 5 than 10 all things considering.

2019 even with his off ball D slowing down post bucks injury, he was a great defender that was a great asset with his absurd man defense, and offensively he speaks for himself

To an extent it feels like all time great regular seasons followed by early first or second round playoff exits are more valued than all time great playoff runs which come after cruising through regular seasons, and I don’t really understand why

There’s a bit of a hesitation to rank really recent players high, because of the idea that it’s decency bias, but in all honesty

Kawhi/Durant/giannis/Curry all should have arguments for a top 15 peak, I think there are certain players that might not be a top 15 peak that might be if they were born into this era, which is where I feel some of the pushback comes from, but certain highly rated players translate to today far worse as well

I don’t think the statement is rather have peak Kawhi than peak Curry is that crazy of a statement (not saying I agree), and I don’t think that’s mutually exclusive with Curry is a top 5-10 peak while Kawhi isn’t really close to a top 10 one because of circumstance.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#16 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sun Jul 10, 2022 11:08 pm

f4p wrote:Since it will come up more here I assume, I will ask again like I did in thread #7:

For the people picking Steph in 2017, why would he be up here if he wasn't even better than Kawhi in 2017? Kawhi played nearly a full season for once with 74 games, had very good offensive numbers and was extremely good on defense (27.6 PER, 0.264 WS48), and then took all of that to another level in the playoffs. 31.5 PER and 0.314 WS48 on 67.2 TS% in the playoffs, numbers like are rarely seen in nba history (have they been seen?). And we actually got to see him play Steph's team and play a nearly perfect game while trouncing the most talented roster of all time. Normally I would say we have to consider injuries, but that should clearly not be the case when a goon on the other team just takes you out on a dirty play because you are playing too well.


I think that if you think Kawhi if healthy beats that Warriors team then his peak becomes the GOAT peak by such a hilarious amount it’s not even funny lol

I mean I have bron as the GOAT peak by a pretty substantial amount, If Kawhi beat the Warriors and the cavs that year Kawhi clears the field by more than he does for me
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#17 » by trelos6 » Sun Jul 10, 2022 11:35 pm

#8. 2017 Steph Curry.

I’d rather 2016 if not for the injury. Curry is the ultimate gravity guy. His presence alone makes life easier for the rest of his teammates.

#9. 1986 Larry Bird.

The legend was a dominant scorer and passer. Defended well and his shooting makes him a threat in any era.

#10. 2004 Kevin Garnett

It was a tossup between KG, and other defensive bigs like Hakeem 94 and Russell 64. Ultimately, KG’s offence gets him over the line. I think his spacing was a little better than Hakeem. Very close though.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#18 » by f4p » Mon Jul 11, 2022 12:07 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
f4p wrote:Since it will come up more here I assume, I will ask again like I did in thread #7:

For the people picking Steph in 2017, why would he be up here if he wasn't even better than Kawhi in 2017? Kawhi played nearly a full season for once with 74 games, had very good offensive numbers and was extremely good on defense (27.6 PER, 0.264 WS48), and then took all of that to another level in the playoffs. 31.5 PER and 0.314 WS48 on 67.2 TS% in the playoffs, numbers like are rarely seen in nba history (have they been seen?). And we actually got to see him play Steph's team and play a nearly perfect game while trouncing the most talented roster of all time. Normally I would say we have to consider injuries, but that should clearly not be the case when a goon on the other team just takes you out on a dirty play because you are playing too well.


I think that if you think Kawhi if healthy beats that Warriors team then his peak becomes the GOAT peak by such a hilarious amount it’s not even funny lol

I mean I have bron as the GOAT peak by a pretty substantial amount, If Kawhi beat the Warriors and the cavs that year Kawhi clears the field by more than he does for me


to be clear (since i saw it in another post also), i do not think kawhi was going to win that series. i think it was very, very likely (>95%) that he was going to win game 1 and i would say better than a coin flip that the spurs add another win but not guaranteed. but the teams were clearly not equal teams. the warriors were much, much more talented. the fact kawhi wasn't phased and made it look like the warriors had no idea what to do as the spurs machine just hummed along in game 1 says that 2017 curry over kawhi is far from certain and the preponderance of the evidence is in kawhi's favor before he was taken out. kawhi's 31.5 PER is 13th all time based on 100 MP and 8th all time for multi-series playoffs. his WS/48 of .314 is 9th all time based on 100 MP and 6th all time for multi-series playoffs. and that's with 1954 mikan included above him. even with very generous 100 MP and 20 PPG limits, his TS% of 67.2 is 24th. for 200 MP and 24 PPG, it jumps to 6th, and one of the people ahead of him is himself.

if this was a one year phenomenom, i might understand the hesitancy. but "kawhi puts up huge playoff performance" is not a one year phenomenom. from 2017 to 2021, you could argue kawhi's 2019 epic title run is only his 3rd best playoff run, which is crazy. i think we have plenty of evidence kawhi is a better playoff performer than steph (and frankly, quite a few guys ranked above kawhi on all-time lists), but 2017 comes with the added bonus that you actually got a full regular season out of kawhi and you have at least 30 minutes of evidence that kawhi could make the greatest team ever look stupid, to the point that hurting him seemed like the best option.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#19 » by f4p » Mon Jul 11, 2022 1:58 am

1. 1964 Bill Russell

I don't know as much about individual Russell seasons as I would like to, but it seems a Bill Russell season should show up at some point. They dominated 4-1/4-1 in the playoffs and this is the all-time rDRtg season I believe, so it might as well be this season for the most dominant defender ever.

2. 2017 kawhi

I actually talked myself into this. This is an excellent regular season with a monster playoffs where he showed that his playoff resilience didn't even care about facing the greatest roster ever, only to be taken out on one of the more famous cheap shots in recent memory. from my preivious post:

...kawhi's 31.5 PER is 13th all time based on 100 MP and 8th all time for multi-series playoffs. his WS/48 of .314 is 9th all time based on 100 MP and 6th all time for multi-series playoffs. and that's with 1954 mikan included above him. even with very generous 100 MP and 20 PPG limits, his TS% of 67.2 is 24th. for 200 MP and 24 PPG, it jumps to 6th, and one of the people ahead of him is himself.

if this was a one year phenomenom, i might understand the hesitancy. but "kawhi puts up huge playoff performance" is not a one year phenomenom...



3. 1987 Magic

Bounced back from 1986 playoff failure and won 65 games. Huge scoring increase. 27.0 PER as a high assist point guard is pretty crazy. Kept up the stats in the playoffs and comfortably won the title while going 15-3.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #8 

Post#20 » by MyUniBroDavis » Mon Jul 11, 2022 2:30 am

f4p wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
f4p wrote:Since it will come up more here I assume, I will ask again like I did in thread #7:

For the people picking Steph in 2017, why would he be up here if he wasn't even better than Kawhi in 2017? Kawhi played nearly a full season for once with 74 games, had very good offensive numbers and was extremely good on defense (27.6 PER, 0.264 WS48), and then took all of that to another level in the playoffs. 31.5 PER and 0.314 WS48 on 67.2 TS% in the playoffs, numbers like are rarely seen in nba history (have they been seen?). And we actually got to see him play Steph's team and play a nearly perfect game while trouncing the most talented roster of all time. Normally I would say we have to consider injuries, but that should clearly not be the case when a goon on the other team just takes you out on a dirty play because you are playing too well.


I think that if you think Kawhi if healthy beats that Warriors team then his peak becomes the GOAT peak by such a hilarious amount it’s not even funny lol

I mean I have bron as the GOAT peak by a pretty substantial amount, If Kawhi beat the Warriors and the cavs that year Kawhi clears the field by more than he does for me


to be clear (since i saw it in another post also), i do not think kawhi was going to win that series. i think it was very, very likely (>95%) that he was going to win game 1 and i would say better than a coin flip that the spurs add another win but not guaranteed. but the teams were clearly not equal teams. the warriors were much, much more talented. the fact kawhi wasn't phased and made it look like the warriors had no idea what to do as the spurs machine just hummed along in game 1 says that 2017 curry over kawhi is far from certain and the preponderance of the evidence is in kawhi's favor before he was taken out. kawhi's 31.5 PER is 13th all time based on 100 MP and 8th all time for multi-series playoffs. his WS/48 of .314 is 9th all time based on 100 MP and 6th all time for multi-series playoffs. and that's with 1954 mikan included above him. even with very generous 100 MP and 20 PPG limits, his TS% of 67.2 is 24th. for 200 MP and 24 PPG, it jumps to 6th, and one of the people ahead of him is himself.

if this was a one year phenomenom, i might understand the hesitancy. but "kawhi puts up huge playoff performance" is not a one year phenomenom. from 2017 to 2021, you could argue kawhi's 2019 epic title run is only his 3rd best playoff run, which is crazy. i think we have plenty of evidence kawhi is a better playoff performer than steph (and frankly, quite a few guys ranked above kawhi on all-time lists), but 2017 comes with the added bonus that you actually got a full regular season out of kawhi and you have at least 30 minutes of evidence that kawhi could make the greatest team ever look stupid, to the point that hurting him seemed like the best option.


I didn’t disagree with hyping up kawhi, I just don’t think it makes steph worse relatively.

Kawhis thing really is just he got hurt, his level of play was definately up there, esp considering pre injury Kawhi was capable of DPOY level defense when he tried (and it looked better in the postseason fwiw). Even 2019 Kawhi should probably be higher than he is (I wasn’t here for that project but I’m really suprised as some of the names above him)

Another thing with kawhi, the teams offense was at
121.5 off rtg, 110.3 def rtg, his in off net rtg was +22.3 overall, although alot of this comes from the Warriors series I’d assume, but it’s not as if team performance with him on the court was inconsistent with it.

I think had Kawhi never gotten hurt he’d probably be the second or third best player of the 2010s, I wouldnt have a 2020-2021 Kawhi with 2016 defense far from the best perimeter peaks ever, mainly because he was legitimately a DPOY level defender from the perimeter spot, and in a playoff matchup a lockup switchy defender like Kawhi is really valuable

I’d probably put 2019 Kawhi top 20 honestly

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