oaktownwarriors87 wrote:70sFan wrote:oaktownwarriors87 wrote:
Correct, I do not think he has a respectable argument over Jordan
At the end, these are all only opinions but don't you think that you sells James short here?
I still consider him a top 10 player.
Statistically throughout their career they have a lot of similarities. Jordan won more against tougher competition, and he did it while being #1 guy in the league on the #1 team.
Jordan dominated advanced metrics in 5 of his 6 Championships
LeBron dominated advanced metrics in 2 of his 4 Championships
Jordan had the #1 rated team in 5 of his 6 Championships
LeBron had the #1 rated team in 0 of his 4 Championships
Jordan is 14-7 (66.66%) against teams with an SRS of 5.0+
LeBron is 4-9 (30.77%) against teams with an SR of 5.0+
Jordans Championship teams rank #2, #5, #9, #20, #63, & #127 All-Time in SRS
LeBrons Championship teams rank #74, #119, #153, & #174 All-Time in SRS
LeBron's career is crazy impressive, it's just very clear that Jordan and his teams were better and more dominant. Jordan tops him in both volume and quality.
I don't value LeBron putting up big numbers on mediocre teams in the NBA over Jordan winning a national championship in college. I don't really value LeBron putting up big numbers on mediocre teams after 35, either. Sure, it's impressive, but playing more games and staying in the league doesn't make him better, because he's not better. He's worse, and he's hanging around longer. If he was putting up extra years where he was actually dominant and winning I could value it, but he isn't.
LeBron has been missing a bunch of games, losing, and he's at the bottom of the league in movement/speed on both the offensive and defensive end. That's not really longevity, it's more just stat padding.
Their statistical similarities make them easy to compare, and Jordan comes out on top.
Could you elaborate on what you mean by dominate advanced metrics?