Djoker wrote:falcolombardi wrote:Djoker wrote:
Yes they only got outscored by 7 points in Lebron's minutes but that's not telling the whole story.
2017 Finals
Game 1: -22 with Lebron in 40:02; 0 without Lebron in 7:58 bad with Lebron, better without
Game 2: -11 with Lebron in 39:22; -8 without Lebron in 8:38 bad with Lebron, collapsed without
Game 3: +7 with Lebron in 45:37; -12 without Lebron in 2:23 good with Lebron, collapsed without
Game 4: +32 with Lebron in 40:46: -11 without Lebron in 7:14 good with Lebron, collapsed without
Game 5: -13 with Lebron in 46:13; +4 without Lebron in 1:47 bad with Lebron, better without
So the team being good with Lebron and collapsing without him is only true in Game 3 and Game 4. In Game 1, Game 2 and Game 5 the team is getting blown out with Lebron and actually does better without him in Game 1 and Game 5.
And of course the Cavs only great game in the series was in Game 4 down 0-3 in the series when the Warriors had a predictable letdown game. In the four losses, the Cavs were -39 with Lebron (-10.9 points per 48 minutes) and -16 without Lebron (-37.0 points per 48 minutes). Of course they were a total disaster without Lebron but even with him they were getting beat by a hefty margin. Not what you expect from a team on the level of 90's Bulls that's for sure.
Let me be honest but this seems some serious nitpicking of a player who averaged being -1.4 against a team that was 15-0 in the playoffs and had the best srs of all time when healthy by far
The cavs with lebron averaged over 40 minutes per game against that monstrosity and on average wete outscored by less than 1 basket per 48
They faced a 14~ SRS kind of team (their srs with dursnt in the regular season) that was 12-0 in the playoffs and with lebron playing they played them to less than 1 basket per 48 amd outscored them in 2 of 5 games.
If that is not doing well against them and i dont know what it is. Any bit better than that and you are talking about outscoring them or playing them to a literal tie
Being better than that essentially means you think bulls with jordan playing could have outscored the warriors in jordan minutes
And i mean that literally as the difference was less than 2 points when lebron played, any single extra basket jordan bulls did better than the cavs would mean they outscored what was essentially a +14 srs team
In Games 1, 2 and 5 the Cavs were getting blown out WITH Lebron on the court. The -1.4 numbers is the series average but isn't representative of what was happening on a game-by-game basis.
So genuine, honest question ... what do you mean by this? What would you have us take from it. What is the virtue of splitting the series?
My priors would be:
+/- is a noisy measure.
1 series is a very, very small sample size to be working with.
Thus I'd already be reluctant to put much stock into this (but I suppose if people are going to talk about team level results in the playoff then seeing if they were on for the winning/losing at least gives some context to that)
From that I'd be reluctant to further chop it into smaller pieces ... and then ... your latest post seems only on focused on the bad games and then not the ones that implicitly must get to that average where they're exceptional (g4) or good (g3) versus this elite team with him on (and incidentally destroyed with him off). And presently I don't see the virtue or purpose of that chopping. If you want to say GS quit one game and can support it I'd see the case for saying that number is inflated (though the game is still relevant and they still have to get to the point where opponents quit) that would be relevant. Or if in
every series a player gave you 3 great games and 4 bad ones maybe you could argue it harms your odds versus what is typical of the raw average of a player at a certain "level" [am assuming +/- is being used as a proxy for player's level of play] (though 1 bad player doesn't necessarily kill a team and for there to be a good or reasonable average the positive games would have to be more positive than the negative ones negative ... in short unless it's super extreme and they're taking and making or missing every shot I don't actually know what this does to the odds and it may be significantly contextual anyway, e.g. as underdog versus as favourite), though I suspect this doesn't happen beyond chance. Or maybe if you're results oriented rather than process you could say it's a bad series for the player even though they haven't played badly (though here cf above on
uncertainty whether 3 good, 4 poor individual games type balance actually does for odds).
I don't know I just ... especially in the context of such a noisy measure ... presently I can't see the virtue of carving up a series (especially absent deeper and systematic analysis). What am I missing?
fwiw, from your numbers and given the variance in the scores of individual games (versus seasonal averages) I wouldn't have called LeBron on in G2, G5 them getting "blown out", though I don't generally converse a lot on game to game level so it may be me not being attuned to norms.