migya wrote:OhayoKD wrote:migya wrote:
Best ten or twelve years is the best way to compare players at their best. Obviously that doesn't favor Lebron as he is further behind Jordan but it fits your point.
Averaging their best scoring 10 year playoff stretches with
ws/48:
09-18 Lebron: .264.3
88-98 Jordan: .233
PER:
09-18 Lebron: 29.67
88-98 Jordan: 28.95
BPM:
88-98 Jordan: 11.74
09-18 Lebron: 10.83
So lebron comes out ahead in 2 out of 3 stats. Off course if we actually compare them at their best as opposed to pretending their worst years are indicative of where they were at their peak(lebron's 2 lowest scoring years come in this stretch), the gap widens for the first 2 and bpm flips.
Off course these are probably the worst metrics to use here because
A. they are the least predictive:
https://fansided.com/2019/01/08/nylon-calculus-best-advanced-stat/and
B. Box-score metrics skew towards offense
If we use metrics that account for defense better:
viewtopic.php?t=2212552
That's a paddlin.
If we use the most accurate metric, RAPM, Lebron has
5 different seasons that score signifcantly higher than Jordan's best data(+7.4 from 88):
viewtopic.php?f=64&p=100076062
Ditto for playoff on/off where, 16-18 Lebron come out ahead of jordan's best 3 year stretch which is tied with the best from shaq and curry
While we're at it, Tim Duncan's best years score higher in RAPM and playoff AUPM and playoff on/off.
And this is all with the artiifical caps that come with using adjusted plus minus data.
Using real-impact signals, mj's gap with lebron widens, but he's also stuck with a lot of unfavorable comparison to other non-lebron greats, including, most prominently, Russell
Like most Lebron lovers you didn't show the right numbers and you didn't give fair comparison.
Like most Jordan fanatics you did not bother to read the argument being made and assume that any disadvantages for Jordan are “unfair”.
To be clear, he talked about best seasons but generously capitulated to just doing specific consecutive stretches, and you are here going nuh uh you have to use basketball-reference to skew to the highest minute postseasons to make it fair!!!
Best ten seasons, have to use consecutive seasons on BR,
That is not what best means, and you transparently cut out 1988 (making it nine postseasons for Jordan…) just to give Jordan a better WS/48. Even though absolutely no one takes 1988 over 1998.
We could do twelve seasons, as you initially suggested, and that would give both of them an equal number of postseasons… ah, but then those basketball-reference win share averages would again lean back to Lebron, and we cannot have that.
so can't exclude Jordan's 95, only played a month after two year layoff, playoffs.
So… not one of his best.
the softer, less physical era Lebron's in

Yeah, poor Jordan, had to deal with man coverage from Craig Ehlo and Gerald Wilkins.
makes a big difference because your efficiency is easier to be higher when you are getting roughed up when trying to get off your shots.
Lebron, famous for shying from contact.
Ludicrous to think Lebron was ever a better defender than Jordan.
Why, because of steals per game? Literally no measure of defensive
impact favours Jordan — although predictably you ignore those entirely. Jordan’s teams barely missed him defensively; meanwhile, Lebron spent a decade as his team’s top defender. Turns out being big and one of the league’s smartest help defenders matters a lot more than squaring up 1 on 1 with opposing wings.
Christ, how are we even supposed to have conversations with the type of “fans” who are this incapable of watching half the activity on the court.