iggymcfrack wrote:Exp0sed wrote:HotRocks34 wrote:Here are the players in NBA history who have had a 31 PER season:
PER has some weaknesses compared to other stats, but the one advantage it has is that it's adjusted to the league in a given year. League average is set at 15 no matter what and then it goes from there. People setting the standard higher in a more talented league than ever actually means that it's harder to get big PER numbers that in the past. The reason that we're seeing more big outlier numbers is that teams are running more of the offense through their stars than ever before. Hence Giannis this season having a higher USG than Kobe in 2006. The incredible numbers that Giannis, Jokic, and Embiid have put up the last few years shouldn't be written off as just a consequence of the new era inflating stats. The league-adjusted nature of PER shows that even relative to their peers, they're more dominant statistically and taking on bigger loads than all but a few stars of the past. The fact that Jokic puts up elite PER numbers despite a USG rate that would be more at home with past stars just shows he's a special once in a lifetime player since he's setting records without the other stars' volume boost.
don't conflate "usage" with "load"
getting more touches and chucking up more shots isn't carrying more load
they are also load-managing heavily and regularly coasting on defenseit
much easier to funnel everything thru one player and then have him sit the next day on a back to back
a guy that knows he has to play tomorrow night as well - is in a different situation
while true that there's more running and elaborate schemes involved now, there is also alot let hurt \ phyisicality and sports science, nutrition. training regimes etc have all evolved to allow that added movement
and yes, if teams of the past would have employed helio-centric offenses - those players would have higher raw stats AND higher PER
ur right that PER adjusts for the current season but like u say - it doesn't adjust for the scheme and strategy changed
it also doesn't account for one major thing and that's FG%
it accounts for current league pace, pts, PF's etc (a long list) but it doesn't account the differeneces in efficiency
the fact that the NBA has been won over by analytics and players are taking better shots than ever (on the whole) is NOT accounted for and that's the main reason Jokic (and to a lesser extent his peers) are breaking PER records
not because they are better
you guys are barking up the wrong tree, PER is the weirdest of hills to die on imo

just use common sense instead:
are Jokic\Embiid\Giannis 3 of the top 5-6 players ever? (at least in the rs, let's stick to the rs)
because if PER accounts for "era" and we can compare between different seasons reliabily - that would mean these 3 guys have a huge % of the best regular seasons ever played
that's ludicrous and it doesn't pass the laugh test
this era's increased efficiency is the culprit here
Jokic is not having the best season ever, and Embiid \ Giannis aren't having top 10 seasons (or whatever)
chill out guys
