Great! I gave the larger sample to compare to Jordan's larger sample.falcolombardi wrote:DraymondGold wrote:I never got back to this, so I figured I'd give a quick answer since LeBron's scalability came up in the other thread.falcolombardi wrote:
Those higher SRS's advantages are strongly correlated to jordan bench minutes vs lebron bench minutes. The playoffs ON-OFF suggests lebron could take worse teams (OFF) to roughly the same heights (ON)
The idea that lebron is at fault for his teams being weaker without him goes against the much simpler occam razor that they were not as well built as jordan teams
Remember this is 16-21 sample vs jordan 88-93 sample. Jordan cast was already fairly good by 90 and lebron cast includes 19 lakers, 18 cavs and davis-less 21 lakers who were not that great rosters
Add to it pippen being a clearly better player than kyrie. And horace grant being honestly a comparable player to love and lebron only having 1 and a half year of davis in this 6-year sample and it doesnt seem outlandish at all that jordan teams were just better and that was why they had better results without their respective Goat contender
With any other comparision when we see guys have similar ON but one has a worse OFF we find it more impressive the guy who takes a worse roster to similar heights. See: jokic vs other mvp contenders this season by on/off
Why do we change the whole framework to reason ourselves backwards here?
It honestly feels like reasoning backwards why jordam having the slightly worse impact metrics at peak is not actually worse. And we use a comtrived reasoning that is only applied this one time (the worse your team is without you tje less impressive it is how much you raise them)
Would we argue this logic if the results were reversed?
Honest question. If jordsn had the same ON and worse OFF than lebron would anyone be arguing lebron as actually more impressive and more of a ceiling raiser or saying jordan makes his teams worse without him?
Did anyone argue giannis over jokic last regular season cause both had similar ON but nuggets had much worsr off
Even the common arguments against lebron ceiling raising always focus on offense (as making a case that curry or bird or magic are better defenders is really hard and even making the case jordan is a significatively enough better defender to explain the srs gap is also hard)
Offense being an area where lebron teams arguably reached higher heights than the bulls or warriors
The argument aleays goes curry warriors or jordan bulls > lebron heat/cavs because they fit better with better offensive talent
The answer always is "lebron teams actually peaked as high or higher on offense"
and since arguing curry>lebron or bird>lebron or whoever offensive star>lebron as ceiling raisers based on defense doesnt usually pass the sniff test
it just goes into very vague and overcomplicated (imo) reasonings about why is actually lebron fault he makes his teammates bad ar basketball and stuff like that![]()
You ask why we downgrade LeBron for having roughly the same On rating (though it is lower than Jordan's) and much worse off. You ask whether we'd do the same treatment for other players if the situation was reversed, like Jordan/Curry/Jokic.
There's a simple answer: we're trying to explain the puzzling situation of the LeBron Miami heat, where LeBron shows greater diminishing returns than Jordan/Curry/Jokic.
Let me shift your questions to a different question, as I think this new one speaks to our primary disagreement. Why is LeBron's on-rating so poor (relative to other Tier 1 peaks) with the Miami heat?
The Miami Heat in 11/12 and 13/14 have the best off-rating of LeBron's entire prime. That suggests these are the years with better teammates, which fits what you said that healthy Wade/Bosh are LeBron's best supporting cast when LeBron's off. It also fits popular opinion.
Yet... LeBron's on-court differential in 11/12 and 13/14 is clearly worse than 09/10, 15/16, 16/17, and 20/21. If this Heat dynasty was LeBron's best teams, why did they underperform so much when LeBron was on the court, especially since 2012/2013 is most people's choice for peak LeBron?
The only answer that makes sense to me and that fits with occam's razor (which you suggested focusing on), is that LeBron has diminishing returns with better teammates. That's a case of poor scalability.
You suggest the on-court rating is close to Jordan's. Let's check. Per 100, 11-14 LeBron's 4-year playoff-only on-court differential is +6.1 per 100. Converting to per 48, we get
11-14 LeBron's playoff on-court differential per 48: +5.3 (but LeBron's best off-court rating)
89-93 Jordan's playoff on-court differential per 48: +8.0 (better off-rating)
91-96 Jordan's playoff on-court differential per 48: +8.5 (better off-rating)
16-21 LeBron's playoff on-court differential per 48: +9.0 (drastically worse off-rating).
So with the better supporting cast, LeBron has drastically worse on-court performance. That's over 33% worse than Jordan's on-court differential. To me, that suggests worse scalability with better teammates.
LeBron only has his best on-court performance during the years that he had better fitting but far less valuable teammates, who completely fell apart without him (to a sufficient extent that LeBron's best teams ended up being overall worse than Jordan's, see my SRS post here: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=100798717#p100798717). This suggests better floor raising by LeBron (but floor raising again comes at a cost, since the worse teammates perform significantly worse without LeBron).
To reiterate: do you not see diminishing returns with the Miami Heat? Why else would LeBron's on-court performance be significantly worse than Jordan's or other LeBron teams?
That is quite the extrapolation to take here
Specially because you are not considering the fact wade was literally playing injured in 2013 with his legs shot (look up wade on-off numbers vs san antonio, they are absurd and way beyond mere diminishing returns cause portability)
And by 2014 he was just straight up out of his prime
That is half of the miami playoffs run with a incredibly diminished wade
But let's throw out 2014 for Wade being old and throw out 2013 for Wade being injured
11-12 LeBron's playoff on-court differential per 48: +5.4 (but LeBron's best off-court rating)
11-14 LeBron's playoff on-court differential per 48: +5.3 (but LeBron's best off-court rating)
89-93 Jordan's playoff on-court differential per 48: +8.0 (better off-rating)
91-96 Jordan's playoff on-court differential per 48: +8.5 (better off-rating)
16-21 LeBron's playoff on-court differential per 48: +9.0 (drastically worse off-rating).
So if we take look when Wade is younger and healthy, we see LeBron's on court performance improves by a whopping... 0.1.
Yeah, that seems to send us back to the original question. When LeBron's teammates were best in 2011/2012, LeBron's on-court performance was over 30% worse than Jordan's 5-year sample, and also clearly worse than when LeBron was playing with better fitting (but less valuable) teammates.
So... what's going on here? What would be the better explanation than diminishing returns with better teammates?
Edit: Enigma suggested that this just shows LeBron fits worse with Wade than Jordan does with Pippin. Indeed... that's what people on my side are trying to argue! The question then becomes... 1) who should take the blame for LeBron and Wade's poor fit? (I've been arguing both play a role), 2) Who should take the credit for Jordan and Pippin's better fit? (I've been arguing both play a role), and 3) How often do these situations of poor fit impact chances at a championship relative to each other (I think it matters enough that you can make the case for peak Jordan over peak LeBron)