eminence wrote:OhayoKD wrote:eminence wrote:
Not sure what you're asking here, could you clarify a bit?
Instead of looking at "rapm at x-age" we looked at "rapm with x minuties/seasons played". Does that change how he ranks?
eminence wrote:
Well there is WOWY(okay technially its indirect evidence) which paints Russell as a god among ants, but I guess you're using a stricter definition of metric then
Ahh, interesting thought, from that perspective (ignoring college minutes, which I'm not sure is completely legit) we'd be looking (roughly) at '97/'98 MJ vs '09/'10 Kobe or '14/'15 LeBron.
I imagine LeBron would have the edge in a minutes based aging model.
To put it bluntly, WOWY is a pretty poor metric compared to play-by-play data of today.
Okay so WOWY is a misnomer i think. I've been rather laxly using it to describe extrapolations from seasons before and after a player departs(which i value significantly as you get the largest per-season samples possible(82 games)). What i'm actually referring to is the Celtics having a virtually identical roster, seeing their second best player improve, and winning 35 games(there were some decreases to counter this but as I think 70's covered well in the russ teammate thread, there's really not much reason to expect a massive downgrade in cast from 1969 where they were bad anyway). Remembering the goal is championships, not raw rs win totals(depressed int he 60's), Russell, as a player coach on his last-legs(also era-longetivity adjustment boosts russell here) not only wins, but wins beating two teams that, at least per srs, were two of the best of the era. For what it's worth, there's also what happened in game 7 of that win where russell being on 5 fouls(and therefore not being able to defend nearly as effectively) almost sparked a big lakers comeback despite Wilt being off.
All in all, from what we have, 1969 Russell looks like maybe the most valuable player ever?(at least from a corp standpoint). Like straight up, looking at with/without/raw whatever, uh, 2016 Lebron?(09 gets nuked by playoffs), Wilt in his near losses with the warriors? Maaaaaaybe Hakeem in 94?(assume the cast didn't improve from 1992 and take the 62-win pace in the playoffs at face value). And that's Russell when he's a player coach about to retire. That seems kinda godly to me tbh.
I haven't seen a version that paints Russell as a god among ants that (I believe Oscar topped Bens first calculation of it). But you'll see massive swings in who is atop the leaderboard based off quite small parameter changes, not near as robust as play by play.
I think you're referencing the average over his prime? Oscar side(all the 60's greats get juiced from a corp standpoint), if we make a modern comparison, wowyr puts Russell's cast at 40-wins throughout, wowy puts it at 35-wins throughout. Winning
11 rings with, on average a 40-win cast or a 35-win cast is just video-game nonsense. I put little stock in that due to samples, but fwiw that actually paints a more impressive picture than the 1969/1970 stuff.
It's certainly not a bad thing that Russell has a great WOWY score, but if anyone is using MJs WOWY to claim he has no GOAT case they've never calculated the stat
Yeah, again, misnomer. What we're actually using is those large 82 or 60 game samples concentrated in a season. And in this case, ironically I might add, we've been juicing Jordan's stuff by ignoring his cast getting better. Basically, take Bulls performance over 82 games in 1984, ignore oakley(if we took the raw stuff at face value, that's a 2 point swing), and then take 88 MJ's srs, and pretend the improvement from 27 wins to 50 wins was entirely Micheal Jordan. Wins that's 23, by SRS that's +8. I just spiked MJ's numbers artifically and he still falls well short of the best stuff from various other players including basically being matched or exceeded by all the signals we have for kareem and Lebron's prime. When we replaced the 1993 regular season with the 1992 regular season(best bulls rs) and jucied the bulls to a full-strength rating of +10, it only gets first-three peat Mj to +5 which is way short(and uh not great for a ceiling raiser case?). Like, that is the most "complete" data we have for Jordan's prime and it doesn't really look on the level.
compared to play-by-play data of today
Well we have some play by play data for MJ's best years and er...his very best signal(88) is below an 8-year average from the only member of the big four we have data for. And honestly if we apply a little more scrutiny to your age case...basically what it amounts to is... when they were the same age, Lebron,
on way more milage got injured. Them being comparable per-possession when Lebron has much longer with no real-break isn't really a win here. And uh...
Ahh, interesting thought, from that perspective (ignoring college minutes, which I'm not sure is completely legit) we'd be looking (roughly) at '97/'98 MJ vs '09/'10 Kobe or '14/'15 LeBron.
15 Lebron scores higher than every single MJ year we have including 88.
When I said "no goat level impact" I was pretty explicit with the bar of "generally speaking, you don't look the best in any impact stuff", and I think that's definitely been met here,