All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker?

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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#81 » by Gooner » Sun Oct 23, 2022 2:40 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:
Gooner wrote:
70sFan wrote:Let's compare 2P% then:

2007-13 Parker: 51.7% in RS, 49.0% in PS
2005-11 Manu: 50.3% in RS, 49.1% in PS

Parker doesn't have significant advantage even for two pointers and Manu crushes him as a three point shooter and FT shooter.

It's basic math, how can you not get it?


Number of attempts is missing in this equation.


But that would hurt your argument, wouldn't it?

Manu scores about the same amount of points as Tony on less attempts. That's exactly why he is more efficient. That's what efficiency means.


This pertains to 2 point shooting. Parker is a bit more efficient on many more attempts.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#82 » by Ryoga Hibiki » Sun Oct 23, 2022 2:44 pm

I think this is just troll-feeding, at this point
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#83 » by 70sFan » Sun Oct 23, 2022 2:46 pm

Gooner wrote:
70sFan wrote:
Gooner wrote:Well, considering Parker shot over 49% from the field in his career, and over 50% from the field in his best seasons, I would say he took plenty of smart 2's.

Let's compare 2P% then:

2007-13 Parker: 51.7% in RS, 49.0% in PS
2005-11 Manu: 50.3% in RS, 49.1% in PS

Parker doesn't have significant advantage even for two pointers and Manu crushes him as a three point shooter and FT shooter.

It's basic math, how can you not get it?


Number of attempts is missing in this equation.

Of course, but you are talking about efficiency here.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#84 » by Colbinii » Sun Oct 23, 2022 2:53 pm

Can we all just stop feeding the guy who is either A) Trolling or B) Refusing to critically think or C) Unable to think critically about these topics?

There is something to be said that TS% doesn't equate someone to being a better scorer. TS% =/ Better Scorer, TS% = More efficient scorer.

When determining the better scorer, one must provide ample evidence in support of the less efficient scorer as to why the player is a better scorer. For example, Shaquille O'Neal is a better scorer than Karl-Anthony Towns due to his ability to draw tons of fouls, score within the flow of the offense and provide significantly more gravity with his scoring arsenal than Karl-Anthony Towns.

Once again, Gooner failed to articulate this--either incapable of articulating coherently or he simply didn't realize this.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#85 » by Gooner » Sun Oct 23, 2022 3:07 pm

Colbinii wrote:Can we all just stop feeding the guy who is either A) Trolling or B) Refusing to critically think or C) Unable to think critically about these topics?

There is something to be said that TS% doesn't equate someone to being a better scorer. TS% =/ Better Scorer, TS% = More efficient scorer.

When determining the better scorer, one must provide ample evidence in support of the less efficient scorer as to why the player is a better scorer. For example, Shaquille O'Neal is a better scorer than Karl-Anthony Towns due to his ability to draw tons of fouls, score within the flow of the offense and provide significantly more gravity with his scoring arsenal than Karl-Anthony Towns.

Once again, Gooner failed to articulate this--either incapable of articulating coherently or he simply didn't realize this.


Everything has been articulated, but I know from the start that we are never gonna agree on this and we don't have to.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#86 » by AEnigma » Sun Oct 23, 2022 3:16 pm

I too like to tell my kids that a failed math test is just a difference of opinion.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#87 » by Gooner » Sun Oct 23, 2022 3:18 pm

AEnigma wrote:I too like to tell my kids that a failed math test is just a difference of opinion.


Basketball is not math. Math is just part of basketball. This is supposed to be a basketball forum, not elementary school math forum. Food for thought.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#88 » by Owly » Sun Oct 23, 2022 3:43 pm

Back on topic (and glad I avoided discussing/explaining shot distribution, foul draw, FT% and how fg% mixes 2 point and 3 point attempts and how "modern" composites [efg% being called ts% was definitely around in the 90s, used by Dunleavy and in publications and I imagine thinking along the lines of points per possession was around before then] can better aggregate them... because ... yeah).

No-more-rings wrote:
HeartBreakKid wrote:I think Manu is a top 40 player all time. I take into account non-NBA play as well.

Tony is not in my top 100, possibly not in my top 130 as well.

So I think there is a large difference between them. Manu is a premium #2 guy, while Tony is more of an ideal #3 guy.

Feels a bit like Pippen vs his #3's, albeit Tony did have a nice albeit short peak in his own right.

I’m not gonna say for certain if having Parker outside the top 130 is reasonable or not, but going by our last 2 top 100 projects Parker went in the 70s. So that would definitely be an unpopular opinion to have him that low.

When it comes down to it we’re still talking about a guy who was a 6 time all star, a fmvp and an integral piece of a 4 time champion and annual 50+ win team. You know I mean he wasn’t just a guy that was along for the ride either he had a lot of great moments.

So to come up with 130 players with better careers I think would take a lot of work. Not saying it’s impossible, but it seems on the surface you’re selling him short quite a bit.

1) All-star isn't a great measuring stick cf Joe Johnson. In Parker's case he might benefit from Spurs need representation though I've not looked closely because per above it's a bad yardstick.

2) FMVP. I could say ditto and ask where Maxwell or Iggy are. But there's also cynicism about whether Parker deserved that FMVP (cf: Thinking Basketball podcast) ... he played well, people will differ more in evaluations over a small sample ... but it's a fairly heavily disputed choice. Fwiw, Parker was ... less than stellar versus their toughest opponent (on paper and in reality) that year.

3) Integral piece of all 4? Is he really though? The Spurs had a better points dif with Parker off the floor in 3 of the 4 title postseasons. And for 2003 in particular jarringly so (-16.9). Now this is a very noisy tool in player evaluation, especially in such small samples. But if the case is being made on the back of the team achievement and his role in it and the team at first glance seems to do better without him in those samples ... I'm not saying he isn't good or useful or that measure is perfect or the only tool, just that others might have had as many less heralded moments and some of the push factors for Parker might be things often not primarily down to his play/ability/contribution [titles, maybe ASG] or not hugely relevant to his total career (FMVP in a reasonably comfortable sweep - the two closest games were Cleveland winning the 4th quarter, in Cleveland, and SA already 2-0 then 3-0 up - against a not great on paper opponent and ... well just see above).

I don't know where I'd land for him, and as ever much depends (as was noted on page 2) on criteria but circa 130 didn't immediately strike me as wild. It instinctively seems on the bearish side but that may be anchoring to a mainstream (and even here) view that I think is too bullish.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#89 » by No-more-rings » Sun Oct 23, 2022 4:52 pm

HeartBreakKid wrote:

Every player in the top 100 had moments and wasn't just a guy. Saying someone was a 6 time all-star isn't really all that sexy. I think 6 time all-star is quite common in the top 100. The success of the Spurs make him look very regal.


Well again you stretched out the possibility of lower than top 130, so we're getting further and further out there.

HeartBreakKid wrote:Also citing the top 100 in the later ranks is pointless. The top 100 is a project consisting of many different posters. It isn't a consensus oriented list, someone has to win that spot.


It's an imperfect project, but don't know how it's "pointless". That's the whole point is to try to get a collective determination on where those players should rank. Anyone is allowed to have someone much higher or lower, but a ranking of say 135th is likely going far beyond what most people on this board would have. That ranking would indeed be unpopular, doesn't mean it's indefensible.

HeartBreakKid wrote:Literally, every poster has a significantly different top 100 than the realgm top 100.

Gee I didn't know that, thanks for telling me :noway:.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#90 » by Stalwart » Sun Oct 23, 2022 5:15 pm

Having Tony Parker outside of the top 100 is a big stretch. Having him outside of the top 130 is indefensible.

Having Manu inside the top 40 is also indefensible.

Bad takes all around.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#91 » by Ryoga Hibiki » Sun Oct 23, 2022 5:15 pm

Owly wrote:3) Integral piece of all 4? Is he really though? The Spurs had a better points dif with Parker off the floor in 3 of the 4 title postseasons. And for 2003 in particular jarringly so (-16.9). Now this is a very noisy tool in player evaluation, especially in such small samples.

well, the funny thing is that I suspect the primary reason of Parker's subpar on/off (and Duncan coming back to earth after 2003) is very related to this topic: they were staggered with Manu who was just killing bench units.

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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#92 » by Ryoga Hibiki » Sun Oct 23, 2022 5:17 pm

Colbinii wrote:Can we all just stop feeding the guy who is either A) Trolling or B) Refusing to critically think or C) Unable to think critically about these topics?

There is something to be said that TS% doesn't equate someone to being a better scorer. TS% =/ Better Scorer, TS% = More efficient scorer.

When determining the better scorer, one must provide ample evidence in support of the less efficient scorer as to why the player is a better scorer. For example, Shaquille O'Neal is a better scorer than Karl-Anthony Towns due to his ability to draw tons of fouls, score within the flow of the offense and provide significantly more gravity with his scoring arsenal than Karl-Anthony Towns.

Once again, Gooner failed to articulate this--either incapable of articulating coherently or he simply didn't realize this.
I think that there's also a D) unable to properly articulate his view confusing efficiency and effectiveness

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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#93 » by No-more-rings » Sun Oct 23, 2022 5:39 pm

Owly wrote:1) All-star isn't a great measuring stick cf Joe Johnson.


No one called it a "great measuring stick", that was just an off the cuff accomplishment that's at least worthy of something.

Joe Johnson is more an outlier case, but yeah Joe Johnson was a good player sure.

Owly wrote: In Parker's case he might benefit from Spurs need representation though I've not looked closely because per above it's a bad yardstick.


Parker deserves some credit for their success, so not sure what you mean by this exactly. If you're saying that he got those selections because of Spurs name recognition that's not really fair.

Owly wrote:2) FMVP. I could say ditto and ask where Maxwell or Iggy are. But there's also cynicism about whether Parker deserved that FMVP (cf: Thinking Basketball podcast) ... he played well, people will differ more in evaluations over a small sample ... but it's a fairly heavily disputed choice. Fwiw, Parker was ... less than stellar versus their toughest opponent (on paper and in reality) that year.


Yeah well fine, but we're still talking about career ranking which isn't completely devoid of awards, and accomplishments.

It was a good series, and he was still their best offensive player against an elite Cavs defense. He mattered a good deal.

Owly wrote:3) Integral piece of all 4? Is he really though? The Spurs had a better points dif with Parker off the floor in 3 of the 4 title postseasons. And for 2003 in particular jarringly so (-16.9). Now this is a very noisy tool in player evaluation, especially in such small samples. But if the case is being made on the back of the team achievement and his role in it and the team at first glance seems to do better without him in those samples ... I'm not saying he isn't good or useful or that measure is perfect or the only tool, just that others might have had as many less heralded moments and some of the push factors for Parker might be things often not primarily down to his play/ability/contribution [titles, maybe ASG] or not hugely relevant to his total career (FMVP in a reasonably comfortable sweep - the two closest games were Cleveland winning the 4th quarter, in Cleveland, and SA already 2-0 then 3-0 up - against a not great on paper opponent and ... well just see above).

I don't really think Parker came into his prime until 2007 or so, and probably peaking in 2009 or 2013. He definitely had more importance to the later teams than than he did early on, especially considering Duncan's slow but steady decline. If you look at a year like 2009, I think most would agree Duncan was past prime at that point, and Manu missed a lot of games they managed a 112.4 ORTG with Parker on and running the show on offense. That was higher than Duncan, higher than Ginobili, etc. And then he had a pretty good series, averaging around 29/7 on 59 ts% but without Manu there wasn't really a reliable 2nd ball handler.

Or we can talk about 2012 where they were a 7+SRS and ran the best offense with Parker as the floor general. Or we can talk about what they were able to do in 2013 or 2014, a lot of which Parker doesn't seem to receive much credit for but his dribble penetration in those years more than ever was pretty critical to the Spurs ball movement.

I guess it depends on your definition of integral. 2003 probably isn't worth that much, but generally speaking I do think his mediocre or sometimes even bad on/off isn't a good representation of his value since the Spurs were usually a team with a good bench especially with someone like Manu coming off of it. Everyone agrees Manu is a better player, but his lack of minutes is something holding him back a lot.

Like I said though, it would take a lot of work to get 130 guys ahead of him. I'm leaving open the door of possibility, but I haven't really seen anything that makes me think that's the case.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#94 » by Owly » Sun Oct 23, 2022 6:29 pm

Ryoga Hibiki wrote:
Owly wrote:3) Integral piece of all 4? Is he really though? The Spurs had a better points dif with Parker off the floor in 3 of the 4 title postseasons. And for 2003 in particular jarringly so (-16.9). Now this is a very noisy tool in player evaluation, especially in such small samples.

well, the funny thing is that I suspect the primary reason of Parker's subpar on/off (and Duncan coming back to earth after 2003) is very related to this topic: they were staggered with Manu who was just killing bench units.

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For clarity are you talking postseason or in general?

If you have evidence for this feel free to provide it.

Do other bench Spurs benefit from this lift?

If RS shouldn't most RAPM variants account for this and adjust accordingly (yet doesn't Manu tends to look very strong by such measures)?

If primarily, per the post it was in response to, playoffs how much action would you say "bench units" see in the playoffs?

Does this explain 2003, the most jarring negative Parker example, where Manu is pre-prime.

Fwiw, I don't have certainty on what strength of lineups was faced and could see more versus bench time in certain in certain years (not sure to what degree) but via RAPM and some WoWY/lineup +/- (where my impression is that Manu+Duncan (no Parker) - not a pair I'd think likely to see much time versus bench lineups - was, 2004 up to 2011 always better than Parker+Duncan (no Manu) regularly substantially so, and more often than not better than with all three on - all three on, as expected always better than Parker+Duncan no Manu) was that Manu was more just really good than killing bench lineups and Parker's profile mostly doesn't support him as great player (not to say that he wasn't good).
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#95 » by Colbinii » Sun Oct 23, 2022 6:40 pm

Ryoga Hibiki wrote:
Owly wrote:3) Integral piece of all 4? Is he really though? The Spurs had a better points dif with Parker off the floor in 3 of the 4 title postseasons. And for 2003 in particular jarringly so (-16.9). Now this is a very noisy tool in player evaluation, especially in such small samples.

well, the funny thing is that I suspect the primary reason of Parker's subpar on/off (and Duncan coming back to earth after 2003) is very related to this topic: they were staggered with Manu who was just killing bench units.

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Many played 410 of his 661 post-season minutes in 2003 with Tony Parker. They were +9.9 Points/100 in those shared minutes.

The truth is Parker struggled immensely as a creator in 2003 while Manu didn't. The line-ups with Manu/Bowen/Jackson struggled immensely.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#96 » by ShotCreator » Sun Oct 23, 2022 7:10 pm

Pretty far. Manu was a more dynamic, creative, and effective penetrator despite it being Parkerms primary thing.

Parker struggled with decision making and approach even as a an older guard, when that park is usually peaking for PG’s, early 30’s on the early to mid 2010’s teams that were loaded.

Pretty good passer, pretty narrow willingness and creativity with his passes.


Parker helped the offense in a narrow set of ways.

Ginobili OTOH was a hurricane of confusion and disruption for a defense from every possible angle. Cut game, slash game, pull-up game in screen and rolls, spot-up game off pin-downs and screens, isolation, transition, with foul-drawing which always throws a defenses rhythm off when guarding.

All this coming from a pretty ideal athletic body for a SG, with the pure instincts of a PG on-ball.

This tenacity was not lost on defense either. Great, borderline elite defender with same anticipation and instincts for it.

Parker was no slouch defensively himself, but didn’t particularly thrive at anything.

This went on into middle age for both of them. And started as early. Manu was tiered up over Parker in a big way for a long time.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#97 » by Owly » Sun Oct 23, 2022 7:38 pm

No-more-rings wrote:
Owly wrote:1) All-star isn't a great measuring stick cf Joe Johnson.


No one called it a "great measuring stick", that was just an off the cuff accomplishment that's at least worthy of something.

Joe Johnson is more an outlier case, but yeah Joe Johnson was a good player sure.

Fine it's a poor measuring stick. One that might do as a proxy in specfic eras where there weren't team maximums but we're missing a bunch of more modern data to nudge a player in one direction but honestly in the era discussed tells us nothing.

On Johnson what do you mean by he was good? Versus being "bad" (not anything said)? Or that you're happy with him tied 64-88 all-time and think he was 7 times a top 24 player in the league?

I don't think it is intrinsically worthy of something. I don't think BJ Armstrong with his all-star or Steve Johnson or James Donaldson or Jamaal Magloire or Kevin Duckworth (x2) are better for having been named all-stars than they would be if they hadn't.
No-more-rings wrote:
Owly wrote: In Parker's case he might benefit from Spurs need representation though I've not looked closely because per above it's a bad yardstick.


Parker deserves some credit for their success, so not sure what you mean by this exactly. If you're saying that he got those selections because of Spurs name recognition that's not really fair.

Well the whole question here is how much he contributed. And not name recognition. Rather I raise the possibility that all-stars become about "this team need representation", rather than judging on the merits of the players.

No-more-rings wrote:
Owly wrote:2) FMVP. I could say ditto and ask where Maxwell or Iggy are. But there's also cynicism about whether Parker deserved that FMVP (cf: Thinking Basketball podcast) ... he played well, people will differ more in evaluations over a small sample ... but it's a fairly heavily disputed choice. Fwiw, Parker was ... less than stellar versus their toughest opponent (on paper and in reality) that year.


Yeah well fine, but we're still talking about career ranking which isn't completely devoid of awards, and accomplishments.

It was a good series, and he was still their best offensive player against an elite Cavs defense. He mattered a good deal.

On point one, that's your criteria, you shouldn't assume it's everyone's.

On a "good series", see the post you're responding to. That much isn't in question. On best offensive player, I don't know, would deffer to better minds and have to come to a better idea on what the best measures are for short samples. On "mattered" ... don't know what this means ... per above I don't think this was a series that as it transpired or conceptually if it were run over again is one the Spurs were likely to lose so any one of their stars playing their best matters less though all three played well. As alluded to above in small samples what your preferred measures are, what the best measures are will matter more, haven't really settled on anything here, I sometimes raise it in passing, haven't seen it discussed greatly, fwiw I believe TB (ep 131) had him below the other two in composite measures mention and was fairly dismissive of Parker's case. I'm open to whatever, I don't go in heavily on one series. Also as above I think versus Phoenix would be the greater threat and thus more significant if one were into focusing in on one series.

Owly wrote:3) Integral piece of all 4? Is he really though? The Spurs had a better points dif with Parker off the floor in 3 of the 4 title postseasons. And for 2003 in particular jarringly so (-16.9). Now this is a very noisy tool in player evaluation, especially in such small samples. But if the case is being made on the back of the team achievement and his role in it and the team at first glance seems to do better without him in those samples ... I'm not saying he isn't good or useful or that measure is perfect or the only tool, just that others might have had as many less heralded moments and some of the push factors for Parker might be things often not primarily down to his play/ability/contribution [titles, maybe ASG] or not hugely relevant to his total career (FMVP in a reasonably comfortable sweep - the two closest games were Cleveland winning the 4th quarter, in Cleveland, and SA already 2-0 then 3-0 up - against a not great on paper opponent and ... well just see above).

I don't really think Parker came into his prime until 2007 or so, and probably peaking in 2009 or 2013. He definitely had more importance to the later teams than than he did early on, especially considering Duncan's slow but steady decline. If you look at a year like 2009, I think most would agree Duncan was past prime at that point, and Manu missed a lot of games they managed a 112.4 ORTG with Parker on and running the show on offense. That was higher than Duncan, higher than Ginobili, etc. And then he had a pretty good series, averaging around 29/7 on 59 ts% but without Manu there wasn't really a reliable 2nd ball handler.

Or we can talk about 2012 where they were a 7+SRS and ran the best offense with Parker as the floor general. Or we can talk about what they were able to do in 2013 or 2014, a lot of which Parker doesn't seem to receive much credit for but his dribble penetration in those years more than ever was pretty critical to the Spurs ball movement.

I guess it depends on your definition of integral. 2003 probably isn't worth that much, but generally speaking I do think his mediocre or sometimes even bad on/off isn't a good representation of his value since the Spurs were usually a team with a good bench especially with someone like Manu coming off of it. Everyone agrees Manu is a better player, but his lack of minutes is something holding him back a lot.

Like I said though, it would take a lot of work to get 130 guys ahead of him. I'm leaving open the door of possibility, but I haven't really seen anything that makes me think that's the case.[/quote]
So ... I don't think there's a defense here to integral to all 4. There definitely are years where he's very good. On '14 disagree unless there's some semantic game where he's critical to ball movement but not their overall offense. GotBuckets luck-adjusted ORAPM is above average but not notably good (Manu's is elite) which suggests that offensive on-off is fairly mean (https://www.cleaningtheglass.com/stats/player/2837/onoff#tab-team_efficiency) but doesn't support that he was "critical" to what they were doing.

I've covered minutes (and minutes of quality) earlier in the thread. Ditto to a lesser extent 130 though I suppose the best way to feel confident would be having a criteria, doing it consistently to create that list and having some notion of ranges of uncertainty and then also having an understanding of what different criteria you think are reasonable for a GOAT list and doing or finding those. Suspect though that different criteria such as (for just one example) weighting of different eras and the much reduced gaps the further out you go mean much wider viable ranges get.
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#98 » by Owly » Sun Oct 23, 2022 7:46 pm

Colbinii wrote:
Ryoga Hibiki wrote:
Owly wrote:3) Integral piece of all 4? Is he really though? The Spurs had a better points dif with Parker off the floor in 3 of the 4 title postseasons. And for 2003 in particular jarringly so (-16.9). Now this is a very noisy tool in player evaluation, especially in such small samples.

well, the funny thing is that I suspect the primary reason of Parker's subpar on/off (and Duncan coming back to earth after 2003) is very related to this topic: they were staggered with Manu who was just killing bench units.

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Many played 410 of his 661 post-season minutes in 2003 with Tony Parker. They were +9.9 Points/100 in those shared minutes.

The truth is Parker struggled immensely as a creator in 2003 while Manu didn't. The line-ups with Manu/Bowen/Jackson struggled immensely.

Should this read Parker/Bowen/Jackson. As in line 5 of 3 man playoff lineups (https://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/SAS/2003/lineups/). To be fair the Duncan with those two, or the 4 man with both are in the same boat. But the the numbers for lineups with two are good when Manu joins ...
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Re: All-time ranking: how far apart do you have Ginobili and Parker? 

Post#99 » by HeartBreakKid » Mon Oct 24, 2022 2:25 am

No-more-rings wrote:

HeartBreakKid wrote:Literally, every poster has a significantly different top 100 than the realgm top 100.

Gee I didn't know that, thanks for telling me :noway:.


Okay...your post stated a bunch of obvious things like stating that Tony Parker is on the realgm top 100 and you have a statement like this?


I was writing a laundry list of things to represent why citing the realgm top 100 in this instance is pointless. It doesn't represent what would be an unpopular opinion as it isn't constructed in that way. Someone ranking a player in the 90s and then citing well the realgm top 100 had this guy at #68 It doesn't address the issue in any direct or meaningful way and the implication of its use is based on conjecture (ie, your opinion is unpopular, which is not necessarily true, and it has an implication of ostracizing a statement for the sake of it as well).

A really basic example is if Tony Parker is rank 70 then the voter pool from rank 70 is significantly different from the voter pool in rank #1. So it's not even accurate that that is the consensus of where Tony Parker would go, as the list isn't a consensus based list. It's not its function, you might as well be citing FG% for efficiency.

It is an recreational project where the winner wins on popularity not agreement from an open pool of voters with no unification of criteria who change in every thread. There are threads and posts made all the time where the results (massively) contradict the RealGM top 100 rankings, as the RealGm top 100 isn't representative of RealGm or even the Player Comparison. It is just a contest for discussion and originally education.

It's the last thing I'll say on this topic because....it's pointless.

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