OhayoKD wrote:DraymondGold wrote:-WOWY: he's 3rd to last in average prime WOWYR at 5.5 (barely above Wilt/Bird, with a massive gap below Jordan's 8.2, LeBron's 7.7, Magic's 9, Curry's ~10.2, Russell's 6.7, etc.). And WOWYR is a stat that tends to be high on defensive anchors. His un-regularized WOWY data is also not GOAT-tier... he looks phenomenal in the late 80s (though still below players like Walton/Bird/Shaq), but his 90s data looks far more pedestrian for a GOAT player (and again this stat should capture defensive value)
What 90's data are you referring to specifcally? 92 wowy is as impressive from anything else we have for him. Un-regularized samples are outlier-level between 86 and 93 and 94 and 95 he wins b2b titles as the sole superstar.
Appreciate the question OyahoKD!
86 is definitely great in un-regularized WOWY! For the 1991/1992 seasons, he has an un-regularized WOWY score of +2.7 with a nice 38-game off sample. That's good stuff! But my point was it's not clear GOAT-level stuff. Walton, Nash, Bird, Kobe, Duncan, Garnett, West, Shaq, Oscar, Curry all have a 10+ off-sample WOWY stretch with nearly twice that score, or better. The best argument for Hakeem using un-regularized WOWY relies on using non-peak years, which is one of the reasons I typically tend to be higher on non-peak Hakeem and lower on peak-Hakeem than the RealGM member.
** (note: this WOWY +/- score is based on how much the player's absence changed the team's margin of victory / SRS, after adjusting for opponent faced / who else missed the games).
OhayoKD wrote:DraymondGold wrote:AEnigma wrote:
Non-regularized impact pretty consistently favors Hakeem as more valuable than MJ in the regular season and the postseason throughout their primes.
Saying there's "no argument" is pretty absurd. Its much stronger evidence than what you've offered for hypothetical cieling raising at any rate.
Would agree with you for an overall goat argument because lebron and kareem exist, but there's really nothing to warrant that degree of confidence regarding a jordan specifc comaprison
Perhaps "no argument" is an exaggeration. Allow me to clarify!

To make my point of view clearer: In truth, I tend to see each player as having some confidence interval. The ranking I give them is where I think the most likely are. But there's a possibility that they're significantly better or significantly worse than I rank them. It might be a fairly small probability (e.g. 5/10/10/20% chance), but it's at least not zero percent... it's at least not impossible.
So when I said there's "no argument," what I actually mean is that you'd have to be so much higher on Hakeem and so much lower on Jordan that I just don't see it as a reasonable take. Theoretically possible? Sure, absolutely! But is it something we should give any real weighting to? To me, no -- it would just require such a big change in how I value Hakeem / Jordan that it doesn't seem reasonable.
While Hakeem does have higher un-regularized WOWY streaks than Jordan... there's not much else to support the argument for peak Hakeem, at least as I see it. Jordan has higher regularized WOWY, and is massively ahead in basically every other stat... RAPM data, PIPM estimates, postseason PIPM estimates, BPM, postseason BPM, AuPM... and this statistical advantage remains when we look at 3-yr or 5-yr estimates. Add that to the fact that Jordan has better scalability, doesn't have clearly worse resilience, has massively better team performance (although this is biased by teammates), and looks better in my film analysis... it just becomes quite hard to mount a clearly compelling case for Hakeem over Jordan.
And more broadly, I have similar issues with trying to mount an argument for Hakeem against other peaks (e.g. LeBron) and other careers (e.g. also Kareem). To make this case, I'd have to weigh unregularized WOWY more than the mountain of other statistical evidence, my qualitative analysis, and my film analysis.... personally I just don't buy it.