OhayoKD wrote:Since mj-topics tend to boil over, i'd like to preface this with a request that we all try our best to be nice to each other
Now, to jump into the deep end...
ceiling raiser wrote:Do any?
My short answer is
no. But getting to that short answer is a more involved process. Let's start by establishing what should qualify as "GOAT" lvl data:
colts18 wrote:The better question is what impact metrics do not show MJ as a GOAT candidate? Literally all available data we have has MJ as a GOAT level candidate.
-Every single Plus/Minus stat we have shows MJ is an Elite
-Every single RAPM shows MJ as an Elite (I'm not counting Wizards MJ)
-He played on some of the best teams in NBA history. 3 10+ SRS teams, 6 teams with a 6+ SRS
Sure. Jordan looks
elite. And if we consider being
elite the same as being a
goat candidate, then there's no metric I'm aware of that suggests he isn't. However, the G in "GOAT" stands for
greatest not elite. I'd argue that "elite" isn't really the bar we should set here. And it's worth noting that
none of what Colts cited has him scoring the "greatest" even when many of these metrics he references
don't include historical candidates like kareem and russell.
The only "winning" metric where he actually looks like "the greatest" is if you go by team success as colts does in point 3, but consider that "impact" is usually considered distinct from "total success". Impact, as its commonly used, denotes "isolated influence" on winning, not the whole pie, and
even then, if we focus on winning championships, as opposed to srs(which can fluctuate in how indicative it is of championship probablity from era to era), Jordan quite clearly loses to Russell who
also seems to outpace him in all the available
impact data we have.
So in short, no. I don't think there are
impact metrics which generally suggest Jordan as "the greatest." There are
box-metrics which put him in the range, but these are not extrapolated from
winning. Typically "impact" denotes when you isolate "individual influence on winning". Not when you look at different box-stuff and ascribe this or that many points to this or that category working with assumptions such as "blocks from a guard must be more valuable than blocks from a center." With that in mind...
DraymondGold wrote:
The data being referenced here
does not have plus-minus before 1997 and even then, whatever data is present is heavily informed by priors from seasons. These metrics, as they exist for Jordan are effectively variants of stuff like PER. They are looking at Jordan's box-stuff and then extrapolating offensive and
defensive value. This is notable as using available
impact data as opposed to box-stuff, Jordan's defense does not compare well to Lebron's at any point in his prime. As Lebron and Jordan are virtually tied on the offensive portion of all these metrics, simply replacing the defensive component with actual impact data, knocks Jordan off his perch. And remember, this is not including Kareem whose defenses were
4 points better, or Russell who won the most, by a landslide, on the strength of his team's
defense.
Furthermore, if we use a more general frame as opposed to a specific one(3 year consecutive)...
OhayoKD wrote:Ben only lists 1 three year sample for jordan
For Lebron Ben lists three different three year samples(08-10, 12-14, 15-17) in AUPM:
He only lists 12-14 for both bpm and aupm:
So if we just use his three year averages, we see that lebron has a bunch of three-year stretches close to MJ but MJ's 89-91 scores highest. However it's interesting that lebron has three 3 year stretches that rank so high(2nd, 3rd, and 7th) and the lowest score came from the years ben rated as Lebron's peak. If we take a look at lebron's best two years from each of those three year stretches...(aupm/bpm is averaged)
You get 5 different seasons which would boost the average of MJ's 89-91 peak.
As draymond has covered with PIPM, even using a three-year frame, Lebron has
2 better samples, and the gap naturally widens when we just look at the best years as opposed to a 3-year lens. Notably, DPIPM's weightings are most closely tied to DRAPM making it the most "impacty" of the metrics in question. It shouldn't come as a surprise then that Jordan does the worst here looking at these box-score proxies. Playoff PIPM is also notably the one box-metric where Hakeem, arguably the most valuable defender since Bill Russell, has the second highest career average after...Lebron.

If we go onto
actual plus-minus data, Jordan falls short in playoff on/off with 88-93 coming significantly behind 16-21 Lebron and being on par with the on/off for shaq and curry. Notably, Lebron's teams were as good with Lebron on the court as the Bulls were with Jordan. Keep in mind we don't have the data for players like Kareem, Hakeem, Bill, Magic, Bird, Walton, Wilt, or Russell. Jordan is competing in a very, very narrow field here and still doesn't look the best.
We have regular season on/off for Jordan's 97/98 and again, this doesn't look GOAT-worthy. Using Lebron as a reference, 98 scores lower than
18 different Lebron seasons. 97 scores lower than
17.
What we have from Jordan in RAPM, including data from 2 years often included in GOAT regular season conversations, also doesn't compare well to what we have for Lebron:
OhayoKD wrote:From the peaks project...
LeBron:
Jordan:
Finally we have WOWY, which offers us the largest and most inclusive samples of data per-game and per-season and which isn't subject to in-era bias as long as you keep in-era srs fluctuation in mind(The Celtics were the greatest team ever at 50-60 wins a season while the Bulls, Lakers, and Warriors were
not close at 60-70 wins a season). And here, when pre-97 greats finally get their shot, Jordan looks significantly worse. With an optimistic appraisal of 23 win lift using an 82 game sample in 84(going by record instead of srs and assuming no improvement despite Oakley spiking the Bulls D-rating), Jordan comes out about even with post-prime Duncan(30 games 04/05), somewhat behind the best stuff we see from Hakeem(25 and 30 game lift in 20 game samples in 88 and 90), consistently behind Kareem throughout the 70's(30 win lift in 75, a 29 win improvement with a player similar to oakley as a rookie, 62 wins without his co-star, and takes the depleted remnants of a 30 win team to 45 wins in 77), and a pretty sizable gap compared to Lebron who has multiple 40 win signals for 09 and 10, 30 win signals in his second cavs stint, and is mostly operating at,
at least 20+ win lift throughout his prime leading multiple teams to 60 or near-60 win basketball
without co-stars on top-heavy rosters(cavs, heatles).
Then we have Russell, leader of the greatest team ever, who, using an 82 game WOWY sample, seems to have beat two superteams on his last-legs with subpar help in 69, who has the best pre-nba impact alongside kareem in a more stacked league, saw the highest point differential at the olympics, and was able to consistently succeed with teammates going in and out of the lineup.
There are various other players who look alright in different frames, but to keep this succinct, WOWY(and the various derivations you can use to estimate it) really marks the "purest" family of impact signals and Jordan just doesn't look like the best, or even close to the best here. This holds true even if you insist on operating with the tiniest possible samples.
And just like we can "adjust" raw plus-minus to create APM and RAPM to correct for the other players, we can do the same for WOWY.