homecourtloss wrote:DraymondGold wrote:That's exactly what I was thinking!OhayoKD wrote:kinda suprised lebron and shaq's playoff teams had comparable on-differential with the players on. I would have expected the playoff bulls to be significantly ahead of everyone but the warriorsIt's not shocking to me at all that LeBron/Shaq have a higher on/off. They're absolutely top Tier in on/off. What is surprising is that their team's performance with them on was as good as the GOAT-level Jordan Bulls, or that Jordan doesn't get more separation when looking at his on-court differential. He doesn't get this, inspire of his teams being clearly the best of the non-Curry bunch over a 5-year average... like the video suggests, the team's success does indeed seem more tied with teammates and less with Jordan than his Legend would suggest.
By my count, Jordan has one 5-year stretch that's top 15 in on/off ever and both stretches are top 15 ever in on-court differential. Considering we're using unadjusted plus-minus, one of the noisiest stats around, Thinking Basketball's point that this doesn't preclude Jordan from being the GOAT is a good one.
The fact that he doesn't dominate in this first ever comprehensive plus-minus study does raise some questions.
First, if we're saying the noise of unadjusted plus minus shouldn't make us that lower (yet) for Jordan, should this data make us higher for peak Shaq/LeBron/Robinson/Curry?
-While Shaq isn't as statistically as dominant as people usually suggest (e.g. in RAPM/PIPM), his on-off is otherworldly.
-While people often detract from LeBron because he needs to play LeBron ball, having his team play LeBron ball produces Jordan-Bulls-level success.
-While people detract from Robinson's supposed lack of resilience, he seems GOAT level when he has a good team around him.
-Similarly, while people detract Curry for a lack of resilience / well fitting teammates, he also seems GOAT level.
Second, should we expect changes in the relative rankings when adding adjustments to this on/off data? For example, it would be hard to estimate Jordan's teammate impact without just flat out calculating APM for everyone. But we could estimate Jordan's relative opponent difficulty (vs Shaq/LeBron/Robinson/Curry) by looking at opponent SRS. Might Jordan be facing more difficult opponents, on average? Even with a small boost in relative opponent difficulty, Jordan might pop into Tier 1 All Time in (semi-)Adjusted Plus Minus.
It has always been interesting speculated about with Jordans plus minus numbers look like and before we really didn’t have anything. Then we got the 97 and 98 data and then the 94 to 96 data, and now some data from the other years.
I always thought there would be one of three outcomes to knowing this data:
1. +/- numbers are so staggering that the GOAT talk increases and his position amongst the majority is strengthened.
2. +/- numbers are about what we thought so he stays where he is for most
3. +/- numbers are underwhelming and some serious cracks open up.
From what we have so far, #1 hasn’t happened and we’re really in the #2 range.
I think the lebron comparision is even more interesting now that we know lebron teams with him "ON" are similar to peak bulls with jordan "ON"
One of the most common arguments for jordan over bron is that the bulls peaked higher than lebron teams after all
The whole ceiling raising and off-ball vs lebron-ball ceilings thingh becomes a weaker argument now
















