LukaTheGOAT wrote:AEnigma wrote:^ I think if anything you are dismissing those “trailblazers” by dismissing Russell and Wilt and Kareem despite claiming to care so much about era relative dominance.
Which is time and time again the refrain when it comes to Jordan. Oh, Jordan was better relative to his era than Lebron was his own era, but also, we cannot do the same thing for the guys who were even bigger outliers because reasons.
I would greatly disagree that
Russ, Wilt, and Kareem were larger outliers relative to era then MJ and I imagine that would be the case for a lot of people when evaluating them.
In terms of With or Without regressions, I would say MJ comes out looking strong, and the outlier of the group.
Yeah, this is misleading. Setting aside WOWYR's questionable utility (more on that later), you don't seem to be accounting for the fact that srs=/championship probability, and that the threshold for dominance in the 60's was vastly lower than the threshold required for dominance in the 60's. Going off the person who created the WOWRY metrics you're using here:
At the height of their dynasty, the Celtics were comically dominant. From 1962-65, their average margin-of-victory (MOV) was over 8 points per game. During the same time span, only two other teams even eclipsed 4 points per game – the ’64 Royals and the ’64 Warriors. And all of Boston’s separation was created by its historic defense, anchored by Russell:.
When we tie WOWYR to championships as opposed to "who has the best M.O.V",
Russell(and to a lesser extent, Wilt), not Jordan is the outlier of the group you just referenced.
Boston was a 35-win team (-1.9 SRS) in 28 games he missed from 1958-69, and for the other 915 games of his career they played at a 59-win pace (6.4 SRS). This is a tiny piece of evidence – the years are spread out, teams change, and so on — but it echoes the same story as Russell’s other value signals.
WOWYR isn't saying
"Russell is less valuable than Jordan", WOWYR is saying that
"Russell needed far less help to win 11 Rings than Jordan needed to win 6". We can also extrapolate, based on Wilt mostly matching Russell in these metrics, that
Wilt grades as a bigger contributor to championship probability than Jordan managed.
TLDR: WOWYR says Russell, and Wilt, are
much bigger outliers than Jordan.
Of course, I don't think we should be putting this much stock into WOWYR, and fwiw, WOWYR's inventor seems to agree. Looking at both the Kareem and Russell "impact evaluations", that quoted portion is the only time WOWYR numbers are listed(they are linked but not stated specifically regarding 1970 Kareem) and its attached with the caveat of "tiny sample". Instead Ben focuses on
unregularized data from stretches where stars miss significant time. To quote myself:
Over 10 year spans or so, wowy will typically be based on a handful of games per season with players who've probably changed signifcantly during that time span. That's not really all that useful. What you want to do is look for moments where players or teammates miss(or are absent) from an unusally high number of games so you can get the largest samples. A good starting point for this would be the year before a player joins a team or the year after a leaves a team as you get a full season sample of data(70 Celtics, 84 Bulls, 84 Rockets, 69 Bucks, ect.) Then you can track roster changes, and granular stuff to adjust or guesstimate if the team improved got worse, ect. Lookign for concentrated stretches of missed game time, or how teams do when a star's teammates go out also can be useful. Ideally you want as much of this type of data for a player in various contexts and then you can compare players in these various situations directly.
Even with RAPM, a more polished variant of what you're citing for Russell, Ben will defer to unregularized samples when dealing with outlier impact:
Like Nash, LeBron was supercharging dependent talent — finishers who disproportionately benefited from shots served to them on a silver platter. So with his talents in South Beach, Cleveland crumbled in 2011. While most teams fall off after losing a superstar, none imploded like the Lebron-less Cavs; in 21 games with a similar group of players, they played at an anemic 18-win pace (-8.9 SRS) before injuries ravaged their lineup. LeBron’s not worth 40 wins on a typical club, but no player in history has correlated more strongly with such massive, worst-to-first impact.
This is because regularization, a process that is used in generating RAPM and WOWYR sets artificial caps on player value:
Jaivl wrote:In layman terms, the process of calculating RAPM involves some math that distorts the "real scale" of the numbers in favor of accuracy.
When impact exceeds this scale, value is misattributed to role players.
Luckily, we don't need to rely on a smattering of minutes to assess Russell, because we actually have an 82 game sample of "without" for Russell in 1970. The celtics, despite seeing their offense improve(second best player sees his volume skyrocket), dropped to 35 wins with Russell retiring. The previous year, Bill beat a superteam to win a championship as a player-coach on his last legs. With more help in 1990(The Bulls were a 27 win team before they drafted Jordan, incrementally improved after drafting Pippen and Grant, then saw their srs skyrocket with the introduction of the triangle) Apex Jordan managed 55 wins and a close loss in the Conference Finals.
Russell's success was also substantially less tied to his teammates. While Jordan's success correlates with Pippen as strongly as Steph's correlates with Draymond, the Celtics were able to win, win, and keep winning regardless of who left and who stayed.
Both WOWY and WOWYR suggest Russell actually had
less help than Jordan. Considering that the Celtics were vastly more dominant than the Bulls, I don't think there's much of a case here for Jordan as an era-relative outlier.
I also find it questionable to use "prime-wowyr" with Kareem and Jordan when Kareem's prime was vastly longer than MJ's(averages tend to dip the more you play). When we focus on their best years with the largest(and most inclusive) samples. "raw" impact also favors Kareem:
70sFan wrote:[
About WOWY - Jordan's biggest samples don't show him as the better one than Kareem (from Ben's database):
1986 Jordan: +2.0 SRS change, 1.2 WOWY score
1995 Jordan +2.7 SRS change, 1.9 WOWY score
1975 Kareem: +7.1 SRS change, +3.6 WOWY score
I'm afraid Ben's database has an error with 1978 sample, as it shows as clear negative for Kareem, despite all the calculations I made and his own words in Kareem profile:
At the beginning of the ’78 season, Kareem cold-cocked Bucks center Kent Benson and missed substantial time with another broken hand. However, it’s hard to infer much from the injury since LA fired off two trades around that period.10 With Jabbar — and ignoring all the other lineup activity — the Lakers played like a 53-win team (4.1 SRS) in ’78. With a similar roster in ’79 (minus Charlie Scott), LA ticked along at a 50-win clip when healthy (3.1 SRS). Below, I’ve plotted the ’78 team’s performance in 21 games without Kareem, in which the Lakers played at a 36-win pace (-1.7 SRS) after a major offensive drop-off.
Which shows a +5.8 SRS change again. The biggest samples we have show Kareem having a clear advantage. We can also look at the more nuanced samples, when a player even joins or leaves his team:
1984 Bulls without MJ: -4.7 SRS, 27 wins
1985 Bulls with MJ: -0.5 SRS, 38 wins
Change: +4.2 SRS and +11 wins
1993 Bulls with MJ: +6.2 SRS, 57 wins
1994 Bulls without MJ: +2.9 SRS, 55 wins
Change: +3.3 SRS, +2 wins
1995 Bulls without MJ: +3.8 SRS, 52 wins pace
1996 Bulls with MJ: +11.8 SRS, 72 wins
Change: +8 SRS, 20 wins
I wouldn't include 1998-1999, because the whole team changed, including a coach.
1969 Bucks without Kareem: -5.1 SRS, 27 wins
1970 Bucks with Kareem: +4.3 SRS, 56 wins
Change: +9.4 SRS, 29 wins
1975 Bucks with Kareem: +2.6 SRS, 49 wins pace
1976 Bucks without Kareem: -1.6 SRS, 38 wins
Change: +4.2 SRS, 11 wins
1975 Lakers without Kareem: -3.9 SRS, 30 wins
1976 Lakers with Kareem: +0.2 SRS, 40 wins
Change: +4.1 SRS, 10 wins
The difference is that Kareem left Bucks in a trade, which means that Lakers gave a lot of value to Bucks. Jordan samples are clean, as Jordan didn't go to the Bulls in exchange.
I don't know, I don't see the case for MJ > Kareem in terms of WOWY.
As for RAPTOR:
Overall, however, RAPTOR weights the “box” component more highly than the “on-off” component. In testing RAPTOR on out-of-sample data, we found that while on-court/off-court stats provide useful information, they’re nonetheless quite noisy as compared with individual measures of player value that are used in the “box” part of RAPTOR.
We would
expect it to rate guards over two-way bigs, especially considering
it does not have plus-minus data pre-1997. As with most box-heavy things, RAPTOR elevates Jordan to competitiveness with Lebron, though even here, at least for a 1-year peak, Jordan doesn't quite reach the summit:
By RAPTOR (Since 77)
09 Lebron: 12.6
91 MJ: 12.3
Assuming we think individual defense is relevant, this sort of metric probably shouldn't play too big of a role in comparisons between guards and two-way bigs.
Indeed, as one might expect, things flip quickly when box-stuff is toned down:
For posterity going to list the best looking "real" apm(sample size is not even) for GOAT candidates(and players who grade similarly) and y'all can work off that I guess. (range is based on best two scoring seasons)
+9/+8: Lebron
+8/+7: Duncan, D-Rob
+7/+6: KG, MJ, Curry
Idk quite how you translate apm to wins added but I'll also post unregularized wowy(as outlier value gets mis-distributed via apm and wowyr):
(Caveat, while Russell doesn't score so high here based on wins, high championship probaility required a much lower srs in his era and Russell should probably be seen as the "most likely to win" individual relative to era, at least for his prime). Same idea where range goes off two best signals
40/30 win lift: Lebron, Hakeem, KG
30/20 win lift: Kareem, Curry, Bird, D-rob, Giannis
20/10 win lift: Jordan, Shaq, Russell
To his credit, Jordan
still looks like one of the best players ever. Unprecedented outlier? No. And he's doesn't come particularly close.