DraymondGold wrote:Further Skill Comparison: Magic vs CurryLet me address this first, since this might be a somewhat fundamental disagreement.70sFan wrote:We can look at other years though, to conclude that Magic was consistently great against elite defensive competition. That was my point, we shouldn't stick to one year in such comparisions. The bigger sample, the better.
Question: What do we mean by peak? A 1 year sample? 2-3 year sample? or a 4-5+ year sample? To me, a peak is anywhere between 1-3 years, while a prime is 4-5+ years. To you, it sounds like a peak might be 4-5+ years (87-91 is 5 years... including 86 makes it 6). Which is perfectly okay! But we're discussing different things if I only look at 1-3 year samples and you only do 4-5 year samples.
If we take 5+ year samples, I'm more amenable to your suggestion that Prime Magic beats Prime Curry on offense (e.g including a comparison of 90/91 Magic offense vs 22 Curry offense)... But If we stick to samples of 3 years or less, I think the data supports Peak Curry when healthy over Peak Magic, at least to me.
As a reminder, this project is supposedly a '1 year' sample. That's not to say we can't ever look at years that are further out -- like you say, they provide more context and give us insight into different situations (e.g. healthy prime Curry without Durant in 2022 might give us more info about Curry's resilience). But the further out we go, the more cautious I am of taking averages (of impact metrics, team performance, opponents faced, etc.), because then we're more likely to be conflating prime comparisons with peak comparisons.
1. Scoring / Shooting: Curry >> Magic.Haha, glad I figured you didn't really mean "just a better shooter"70sFan wrote: Maybe I didn't specify well what I meant by that, because I never argued that Curry is "just a better shooter" than Magic. He's significantly better, tiers ahead. Everybody knows thatThe question is how much of a value it has in comparison to Magic's advantages.
But yeah I'm glad you clarified the point. And agreed, the question then becomes who has more value.
Good points! I agree Magic's 3 Point volume is low, and we need to apply league context. So let's look at their relative shooting percentages:70sFan wrote:I think Magic was all-star level shooter in 1987. You just can't look at three point shooting from that era as an indicator of shooting ability. Magic didn't take threes, it's pointless to provide three point efficiency to draw conclusion of his shooting ability. He was already excellet FT shooter that later became all-time great one at very high volume. I remember one tracking numbers from Magic's prime games (can't find it now) suggesting that his midrange shooting efficiency is top tier as well, which resonates well with my impression from watching his games.DraymondGold wrote:It's true that Magic does have the passing advantage, like y'all suggest. But Curry's more of an outlier with shooting than Magic is with passing. Curry's still an all-star level passer in his own right -- I'd argue he's a better passer than 87 Magic's 21% 3 point shooting (though to be clear this comparison doesn't apply era context).
87 Magic
rTS% +6.4% (playoff +6.9%)
rFT% +8.5%
r3P% -9.6%
17 Curry:
rTS% +7.2% (playoff +11.8%)
rFT% +12.6%
r3P% +5.3 (with immense volume and difficulty advantage over league average)
87-89 Magic:
rTS% +7.4% (playoff +7.4)
rFT% +10.6%
r3P% -3.9%
Inflation Adjusted Pts/75: 21.8
15-17 Curry:
rTS% +10.1% (playoff +8.7 with playoff injury)
rFT% +14.7%
r3P% +8.2%
Inflation Adjusted Pts/75: 29.5
Over a 3 year sample, Curry beats Magic by: 3.5 rTS%, 4.1 rFT%, 12.1 r3P%, and 7.7 Pts/75 relative to their league, and these advantages remain in their peak playoff performances. Magic's a good shooter and a good scorer. But Curry's the GOAT shooter and an all-time scorer. Curry >> Magic in shooting and scoring, even relative to era.
2. Creation: Magic > Curry, but Curry closes much of the GapDoes Curry's superior screening single-handedly close the creation gap? Of course not70sFan wrote:This offball skill also helps Curry close the creation gap. Curry's the GOAT off-ball movement creator, the GOAT perimeter gravity player, an all-time playmaker with hockey assists, an all-time screen setter among guards.
It certainly helps, but the question is - does it close the creation gap? I'm not sure we can say that certainly.
As much as I love subtle skills in basketball, I don't think Curry's screen setting ability is important in this discussion![]()
But it's not about Curry's individual off-ball skills... it's about the culmination of his off-ball creation closing the creation gap far more than Magic can close the scoring gap.
I think we have to ask ourselves: Why does Curry consistently create better shots for his teammates and improve his teammates' efficiency more than older LeBron, Harden, Jokic, Luka, Westbrook, and older Chris Paul, whether we're looking at a 1-year peak or a 5 Year prime? Where does this playmaking come from?
Curry's an all-star level passer, but it's clearly not passing. So that's where the culmination of all the little forms of creation come into play, where Curry is consistently all-time to GOAT level in these skills. He's constantly near the top of the league in guards' Screening Assists, at just under 1 per game. He's constantly near the top of the league in Secondary/Hockey Assists, at just over 1 per game. And per manal tracking, he has multiple off-ball movement assists and gravity-dragging assists per game. This says nothing about the subtler cases where Curry's presence makes it harder for opponents to double, help on, or close out on Curry's teammates.
Per my film study earlier in this project: in the 2017 Finals, Curry drew the primary attention of at least 2 defenders on 62% of possessions where he was involved (34/55), and his teammates' points were made easier by this 89% of the time (34/38 points benefited from the attention Curry drew).
Per NBA Tracking Data: In the 2018 Finals, Curry received double teams 2000% more (that's two-thousand times more) than KD.
Additional Film Study here:And remember: None of these examples are captured by the traditional box score, so people who just look at assist numbers or box-score only metrics are likely underrating Curry's playmaking. But they would show up in more advanced stats. For example 2017 Curry improved his teammates' scoring efficiency by almost twice as much as the next best playmaking star in the league in LeBron.Spoiler:
I think if people aren't considering Curry a possible top 5 playmaking offensive engine of all time, they're seriously underrating Curry. To be clear, I still have Magic as the superior playmaker, largely from his volume advantage as a playmaker. But Curry is Tier 1 All Time in terms of playmaking efficiency, and I think these advanced stats/film analysis support that the playmaking gap is smaller than the scoring gap, at least to me.
Sources:Spoiler:
3. Overall Impact: Curry > MagicGood point that we have to look at the whole package, not just individual skills! To me, that's what I'm doing when I'm looking at the metrics. For example, if we look at their ScoreVal + PlayVal (to approximate combined scoring and playmaking value):70sFan wrote: I also have problems comparing specific skills regarded separately from themselves. Magic's offense wasn't so impressive strictly because of his passing game. You have to combine all of his size, ball-handling, foul drawing ability, post game, agressiveness to get an idea why he's so special. The same thing applies to Curry actually - his shooting alone wouldn't turn him into GOAT-level offensive player either. I just think Magic's overall package proved to be more dangerous, while being extremely portable as well.
Magic's passing isn't strictly attached to him being ball-dominant though. As I said, Magic played with ball-dominant players in his career and it didn't stop him from giving his team massive boost. Magic was a capable off-ball player, of course not in Curry's league but his passing brings enormous value even without dominating the ball.
I also don't agree that passing doesn't fit well next to other creators. Having more creators is always extremely beneficial for a team. I don't think it's proven that two shooters are necessarily more impacful than two creators.
3-year Regular Season: 15-17 Curry's 4.2 >87-89 Magic's 3.3.
Peak Playoffs: 17 Playoff Curry's +4.3 > 87 Playoff Magic's +3.7.
And like I've mentioned, the other 1-3 year metrics favor Curry (see below or my Ballot on page 1). I also still feel confident about this after the film study, though we do seem to disagree here. Would you recommend a different way to look at their wholistic value?A) The point that "Curry didn't anchor better offensive teams than Magic" isn't quite true. The 2017 Warriors were a better relative offensive team than any Magic-led offense ever. And they faced better playoff defenses than peak 1987 Magic. And remember: this world-beating offense is only present with Curry, and tracks far more closely with Curry's minutes than with any other star's. They were better than the 86 Celtics with just Curry on and all 3 stars off, while they were worse than the 2022 Cavs for the reverse situation. But you're right, in larger 5-year samples, Magic's non-peak Lakers are a better relative offense than Curry's non-peak Warriors.70sFan wrote: Quite a lot of people recently believe that Curry's shooting is enough to put him ahead of any player, but I want strong evidences for that. Curry didn't anchor better offensive teams than Magic. He looks top tier in imapct metrics, but the little we have from Magic shows him just as spectacular.
B) When you say "Magic... [is] just as spectacular" by the data... are we sure that's true?
Pure Impact Metrics: Curry >= Magic, though we're missing some of Magic's data. Curry's playoff-only PIPM is higher, and this applies for a 3-year playoff sample (17-19 Curry's 8th all time > 15-17 Curry (with injury) 17th all time > 87-89 Magic's 18th). Curry's estimated prime WOWY is higher (1st all time > 5th all time). 85 Magic's 41-game sample regular season RAPM edges out 2017 Curry's regular season, though 88 Magic's 54-game sample regular season RAPM falls behind 2017 Curry's regular season, and many people argue Curry's 2016 regular season was better.
Box-metrics: Curry >> Magic. What about box models of plus minus data? Curry again has the advantage, and the stronger advantage in the playoffs. 2017 Curry's higher than 1987 Magic in postseason Backpicks BPM, BR’s Postseason BPM, and WS/48. (I can't seem to convince people that PER is a bad stat... so if you can't beat em, join em: 2017 Curry's PER is higher than 1987 Magic's PER too). Magic never beat Curry's 2017 playoff numbers in Backpicks BPM, BR’s Postseason BPM, and WS/48, or PER.
And remember, Curry is Top 2 All Time in regular season AuPM, postseason AuPM, on/off, ESPN’s RPM, and RAPOR +/-. I think your point that Magic's non-peak Prime years may surpass Curry statistically certainly has a case. But peak for peak, in 1/2/3 year samples, I'm not sure the data supports the idea that Magic is just as spectacular as Curry.
Anyway, that's why I have Curry > Magic on offense. And since the film study shows they're similar on defense, I think this explains why Curry has the overall higher impact metrics. Let me know where y'all disagree!
Excellent post.
I understand you are really high on portability. Are you concerned at all, that by many of the impact metrics we have, that Curry never approached his 16 impact when Durant joined?
RAPTOR, ESPN RPM, BPM, LEBRON, Total Wins (link might be broken) and other stuff consider 16 his best year by far.
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