NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!)

Moderators: Clav, Domejandro, ken6199, bisme37, Dirk, KingDavid, cupcakesnake, bwgood77, zimpy27, infinite11285

2 questions- 1) Who WILL win MVP -- 2) Who SHOULD win MVP (vote for 2)

Jokic will win MVP
129
25%
Giannis will win MVP
47
9%
Embiid will win MVP
95
18%
Tatum will win MVP
3
1%
Luka will win MVP
3
1%
Jokic should win MVP
102
20%
Giannis should win MVP
75
14%
Embiid should win MVP
55
11%
Tatum should win MVP
5
1%
Luka should win MVP
4
1%
 
Total votes: 518

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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#41 » by eyeatoma » Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:06 am

Rapcity_11 wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:From a Philly journalist, but absolutely breaks down the issues with this seasons MVP.

#1 - Voter fatigue has been used as a way to shine a light on other incredible players of the league. It gets stale and boring when it's the same player.

My point is essentially that I’d like it to be the way that it’s always been – that the old way is superior for telling the story of that NBA season/decade/era. The rush to do away with it is, in my opinion, the result of a combination of Jokic favoritism as well as the rush to make everything (including the purposefully vague Most Valuable Player award) purely empirical; no media member wants to be yelled at on Twitter for succumbing to a silly bias such as voter fatigue. NBA media has become, perhaps more so than any other sport, a battle for intellectual superiority, and holding onto voter fatigue is seen as anti-intellectual.

As great as Jokic was last season, he was simply irrelevant to the story of that NBA season. There was never a single moment where anyone considered the Nuggets to be a title contender. It wasn’t like he had a fascinating storyline behind him, or a bunch of iconic moments of late-game heroics, both of which helped to bolster Russell Westbrook’s case in 2017 (flawed as it was). Jokic was just mowing down the competition away from the spotlight, carrying an underwhelming roster to the sixth seed in the West and a first round exit. The season just didn’t feel like it was about him – and with him having just won, it would have felt appropriate to highlight someone else for that particular season.


#2 There isn't racism, but there are inherant biases and goal post moving that seems to happen amongst the media. Given that most media are basketball nerds they love Jokic, and use their biases to rationalize why he is winning MVPs, at times moving goal posts that were placed for other players in the previous years, which are then seemingly ignored for Jokic.

To put it simply: Jokic is most media members’ favorite player, and so, you move goalposts and make certain arguments that you wouldn’t make for other players, because that’s what you do for your favorite player. It’s an incredibly human thing.

I absolutely despise all-in-one advanced stats (more on that in a bit), which have obviously helped to bolster Jokic’s MVP case over the past few years. I have always brushed aside players who are doughy and slow, compared to those who are more traditionally athletic – I was too low on Luka Doncic coming out of the draft, I always found the Joe Ingles hype annoying, and clumsy ass Brook Lopez is my least favorite player in the NBA. And, most importantly, I watch Joel Embiid play basketball every night, and it’s hard for me to fathom that there’s another center who is significantly better than him; saying Jokic is better than Embiid goes against my basketball world view, and that’s where my anger comes from on this subject.

The problem isn’t the existence of biases – on either side. The problem is that the biases have overloaded in one direction; if there were a more even balance of biases – if the MVP voting demographic were more evenly split between basketball nerds and scoring/bag fanatics (often these are former players) – we’d see a more closely contested vote to represent what should have been two closely contested races, and you wouldn’t see the rewriting of unwritten MVP voting rules that have been around for decades, like voter fatigue.


#3 Overvaluing advanced stats. Basically, states that some of these stats have huge outliers where 15-20% of players are ranked very high, and they're basically scrubs. So these stats ranks scrubs high, but then Jokic is at the top. Instead of taking these stats with a grain of salt, it becomes the end all and be all way to determine the best players.

Also, VORP and DPM highly value rebounds and assists are given more value for big men, it's the main reason why Jokic is always at the top. Some of these stats will always have Jokic leading because it's the style of basketball he plays.


Let’s start on the surface, before digging into how they’re made. If I were to put out my own personal, subjective rankings of the top 50 NBA players, and they mirrored the rankings of FiveThirtyEight’s RAPTOR, I would be laughed at and called the single dumbest pundit on NBA Twitter. In the top 50 alone – which should be far and away the easiest group to rank – there are many comically out of place players.

Alex Caruso is 12th. Delon Wright is 18th. Josh Okogie and Derrick White are tied for 20th. Isaiah Joe is 32nd. Alec Burks is 41st. Austin Reaves and John Konchar are tied for 48th. I’m sure many people will call this cherry picking, but if 15-20% of the rankings that your metric spits out are obvious bull (spoiler: it’s more than 15-20%), then dare I say, your metric is not very good and should not receive widespread credence from NBA media members.

The first litmus test for these stats should always be common sense. If they directly conflict with common sense, it’s fine to disregard them.

Where these metrics are particularly bad is on the defensive end. RAPTOR, for example, has Jokic rated as the 3rd best defensive player in the NBA. That’s right – this guy is the 3rd best defensive basketball player alive.

RAPTOR very obviously overvalues rebounding (which, by the way, one could argue is a separate phase of the game from defense – you can be a great defender and bad rebounder, and vice versa). It also isn’t an ironclad argument to say that a center defending a high volume of shot attempts is a good thing; there are obviously a considerable number of shots that guards may be willing to attempt at the rim versus Jokic, that they wouldn’t against, say Embiid or Rudy Gobert.

Box plus/minus (and VORP, which is based on BPM) provides another such example. BPM places different valuations of stats based on what position you play. For centers, an assist is worth nearly twice as much as it is to a guard. Defensive rebounding is also far more valued for centers, and missed shot attempts are penalized more for centers than it is for guards. In other words: BPM massively overvalues everything Jokic is good at. It inflates the value of his assists and rebounds, and rewards him for being hyper-efficient and not attempting a super high volume of shots.

The idea that centers are getting twice the credit for assists as guards do is backwards; I would argue that, generally, assists from centers are less valuable, because a considerable volume of them comes from dribble hand-offs, where the center simply dumps the ball to a guard, who then creates the shot. Regardless, the point, once again, is that all of these evaluations are debatable, and all we are really observing is someone’s evaluation.

Jokic also ranks first (FIRST!) in the league in defensive box plus/minus, because it’s based on box score stats, which means it heavily weights, you guessed it, rebounding and steals. Jokic also ranks seventh in the league in individual defensive rating, and ninth in defensive win shares.

Individual defensive rating, contrary to what some people assume, is not simply your team’s defensive rating when you are on the court. It is an estimate of how many points that particular player allowed per 100 possessions while on the court. Here is an excerpt from Basketball-Reference’s website on how it is calculated:

“The core of the Defensive Rating calculation is the concept of the individual Defensive Stop. Stops take into account the instances of a player ending an opposing possession that are tracked in the boxscore (blocks, steals, and defensive rebounds).”

Noticing a pattern here? All of these stats are heavily based upon steals and defensive rebounding. Defensive win shares is based heavily upon individual defensive rating. You can find the formula for its calculation here.

A common rebuttal I get from people who use these kinds of stats is something to the following effect: “if they’re all saying the same thing, that has to mean something.”

Yes, it does mean something – that all of these stats are heavily based upon one another and clearly overvalue the same ****. They are essentially Collateralized Debt Obligations. That’s how you get a player who is very, very obviously a barely above average defender being considered one of the best defensive players in the entire league, because he gets a high amount of steals and is an excellent rebounder.




Great article!

https://www.rightstorickysanchez.com/the-good-oconnor-mike/031123


Not a great article. It's basically just whining that boils down to 3 things:

- Voting fatigue is dumb but it should continue because it favours my guy now (also admits that Jokic has the stronger case this year)
- Too many nerds are voting and we need more scoring enthusiast/bag voters (lol)
- Certain advanced stats are dumb, because I said so

Please.

Also, that author really needs to understand that something can be close but still definitive. A close MVP race isn't going to mean 50/50 votes.
That's a pretty poor summary on your end. I'd say what he mentioned about advanced stats has a lot of merit. People say all NBA shouldn't change because that's how it's always been done. But with MVP voting is okay to constantly change it?

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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#42 » by Rapcity_11 » Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:08 am

eyeatoma wrote:
losmi wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:https://www.reddit.com/r/sixers/comments/11owmwe/zach_lowe_in_2019_on_why_he_voted_for_giannis_as/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android_app&utm_name=androidcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button

Perfect example of Zach Lowe moving the goal posts.

When voting for Giannis over Harden defense is important but not now for Embiid or Giannis or Jokic. This is what we're talking about.

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Who said that defense isn't important? It's one of the factors. In the quote you linked, he says "But the gap on offense, is not big enough to trump the gap on defense".
Yeah and in this case it isn't better. If you look at the article I linked before you can see how much advanced stats have been misinterpreted.

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Hate to break it to you but Jokic is better defensively than Harden was and Embiid is worse than Giannis was. Sorry.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#43 » by Rapcity_11 » Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:10 am

eyeatoma wrote:
Rapcity_11 wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:From a Philly journalist, but absolutely breaks down the issues with this seasons MVP.

#1 - Voter fatigue has been used as a way to shine a light on other incredible players of the league. It gets stale and boring when it's the same player.



#2 There isn't racism, but there are inherant biases and goal post moving that seems to happen amongst the media. Given that most media are basketball nerds they love Jokic, and use their biases to rationalize why he is winning MVPs, at times moving goal posts that were placed for other players in the previous years, which are then seemingly ignored for Jokic.



#3 Overvaluing advanced stats. Basically, states that some of these stats have huge outliers where 15-20% of players are ranked very high, and they're basically scrubs. So these stats ranks scrubs high, but then Jokic is at the top. Instead of taking these stats with a grain of salt, it becomes the end all and be all way to determine the best players.

Also, VORP and DPM highly value rebounds and assists are given more value for big men, it's the main reason why Jokic is always at the top. Some of these stats will always have Jokic leading because it's the style of basketball he plays.




Great article!

https://www.rightstorickysanchez.com/the-good-oconnor-mike/031123


Not a great article. It's basically just whining that boils down to 3 things:

- Voting fatigue is dumb but it should continue because it favours my guy now (also admits that Jokic has the stronger case this year)
- Too many nerds are voting and we need more scoring enthusiast/bag voters (lol)
- Certain advanced stats are dumb, because I said so

Please.

Also, that author really needs to understand that something can be close but still definitive. A close MVP race isn't going to mean 50/50 votes.
That's a pretty poor summary on your end. I'd say what he mentioned about advanced stats has a lot of merit. People say all NBA shouldn't change because that's how it's always been done. But with MVP voting is okay to constantly change it?

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It's a very un-biased summary actually.

Some of the advanced stats commentary is fine, but why are we pretending Jokic is some advanced stat darling when he's averaging 25/12/10 on GOAT level efficiency?

And evolution to better voting methods is a good thing, yes.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#44 » by eyeatoma » Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:12 am

Rapcity_11 wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:
Rapcity_11 wrote:
Not a great article. It's basically just whining that boils down to 3 things:

- Voting fatigue is dumb but it should continue because it favours my guy now (also admits that Jokic has the stronger case this year)
- Too many nerds are voting and we need more scoring enthusiast/bag voters (lol)
- Certain advanced stats are dumb, because I said so

Please.

Also, that author really needs to understand that something can be close but still definitive. A close MVP race isn't going to mean 50/50 votes.
That's a pretty poor summary on your end. I'd say what he mentioned about advanced stats has a lot of merit. People say all NBA shouldn't change because that's how it's always been done. But with MVP voting is okay to constantly change it?

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It's a very un-biased summary actually.

Some of the advanced stats commentary is fine, but why are we pretending Jokic is some advanced stat darling when he's averaging 25/12/10 on GOAT level efficiency?

And evolution to better voting methods is a good thing, yes.
Sure then change it for All NBA. In what world is it ok that one of the top 5 NBA players and a 2 time MVP runner up is 2nd team all NBA.

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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#45 » by Rapcity_11 » Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:13 am

eyeatoma wrote:
Rapcity_11 wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:That's a pretty poor summary on your end. I'd say what he mentioned about advanced stats has a lot of merit. People say all NBA shouldn't change because that's how it's always been done. But with MVP voting is okay to constantly change it?

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It's a very un-biased summary actually.

Some of the advanced stats commentary is fine, but why are we pretending Jokic is some advanced stat darling when he's averaging 25/12/10 on GOAT level efficiency?

And evolution to better voting methods is a good thing, yes.
Sure then change it for All NBA. In what world is it ok that one of the top 5 NBA players and a 2 time MVP runner up is 2nd team all NBA.

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Fine by me.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#46 » by Wolfgang630 » Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:14 am

eyeatoma wrote:
Rapcity_11 wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:That's a pretty poor summary on your end. I'd say what he mentioned about advanced stats has a lot of merit. People say all NBA shouldn't change because that's how it's always been done. But with MVP voting is okay to constantly change it?

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It's a very un-biased summary actually.

Some of the advanced stats commentary is fine, but why are we pretending Jokic is some advanced stat darling when he's averaging 25/12/10 on GOAT level efficiency?

And evolution to better voting methods is a good thing, yes.
Sure then change it for All NBA. In what world is it ok that one of the top 5 NBA players and a 2 time MVP runner up is 2nd team all NBA.

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All NBA should change to front court and backcourt
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#47 » by kuclas » Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:30 am

AleksandarN wrote:
kuclas wrote:
AleksandarN wrote:Except guard Jokic in the second half of their game. Jokic guarded embiid the whole game even after getting /cooked throughout the second half of the game. It was a good call by doc though turned the game around in the second half. Because the first half the 76ers were the one getting cooked. Can’t wait for the rematch in 2 weeks. Will Embiid guard Jokic one on one? Since you think embiid is a great one on one defender he should lock down jokic. Regardless of what happens this will be a great game. Playoff atmosphere


That’s because Doc recognizes Jokic will pull embiid away from the paint. And with Jokic vision passing. He’s gonna to find open cutters towards the wide open paint layups or wide the open shooters.

Pj tucker is 6 foot 5. Jokic can pound him in the low post all day. But Jokic recognizes the futility in that with embiid lurking close by as the help defender.

Jokic isn’t gonna to post embiid often in the paint. It’s wasting his energy as well to pound offensively inside with embiid.

Bigs centers are like lions in the wild. They can only expand so much energy at one time. Jokic isn’t gonna to waste his time if he has to pound pj tucker for 10 seconds with embiid near by. Waste of energy and the shot clock


Might have worked for one half but it won’t going forward. That’s the thing with greats with high bbiq they find a way. If Embiid has to guard jokic it will be hard.


We will see next game in Denver how Jokic responds.

Jokic can camp out mid free throw area/hi post and direct the offense like he usually does. He does back down smaller defenders. I see him play a lot with league pass the past 4 years. So this is not me watching highlights.

He likely will make his move or read a lot quicker next game if he sees tucker on him.

That’s what embiid has been doing the past two seasons on offense. A lot of that is because Ben Simmons is not there.

Before embiid would be methodical and back down opponents. And waste shot clock. Of course Ben Simmons man would sag and really help out once embiid reached within 10 feet.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#48 » by eyeatoma » Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:39 am

Wolfgang630 wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:
Rapcity_11 wrote:
It's a very un-biased summary actually.

Some of the advanced stats commentary is fine, but why are we pretending Jokic is some advanced stat darling when he's averaging 25/12/10 on GOAT level efficiency?

And evolution to better voting methods is a good thing, yes.
Sure then change it for All NBA. In what world is it ok that one of the top 5 NBA players and a 2 time MVP runner up is 2nd team all NBA.

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All NBA should change to front court and backcourt
Agreed

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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#49 » by moderndarwin » Sun Mar 12, 2023 4:40 am

2 way Steph showing why he’s the real MVP again
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#50 » by Infinite Llamas » Sun Mar 12, 2023 5:48 am

moderndarwin wrote:2 way Steph showing why he’s the real MVP again


Real MVP’s don’t miss 25 games in a season, sorry. More like a part-time MVP.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#51 » by Mick Dundee » Sun Mar 12, 2023 6:28 am

eyeatoma wrote:From a Philly journalist, but absolutely breaks down the issues with this seasons MVP.

#1 - Voter fatigue has been used as a way to shine a light on other incredible players of the league. It gets stale and boring when it's the same player.

My point is essentially that I’d like it to be the way that it’s always been – that the old way is superior for telling the story of that NBA season/decade/era. The rush to do away with it is, in my opinion, the result of a combination of Jokic favoritism as well as the rush to make everything (including the purposefully vague Most Valuable Player award) purely empirical; no media member wants to be yelled at on Twitter for succumbing to a silly bias such as voter fatigue. NBA media has become, perhaps more so than any other sport, a battle for intellectual superiority, and holding onto voter fatigue is seen as anti-intellectual.

As great as Jokic was last season, he was simply irrelevant to the story of that NBA season. There was never a single moment where anyone considered the Nuggets to be a title contender. It wasn’t like he had a fascinating storyline behind him, or a bunch of iconic moments of late-game heroics, both of which helped to bolster Russell Westbrook’s case in 2017 (flawed as it was). Jokic was just mowing down the competition away from the spotlight, carrying an underwhelming roster to the sixth seed in the West and a first round exit. The season just didn’t feel like it was about him – and with him having just won, it would have felt appropriate to highlight someone else for that particular season.


#2 There isn't racism, but there are inherant biases and goal post moving that seems to happen amongst the media. Given that most media are basketball nerds they love Jokic, and use their biases to rationalize why he is winning MVPs, at times moving goal posts that were placed for other players in the previous years, which are then seemingly ignored for Jokic.

To put it simply: Jokic is most media members’ favorite player, and so, you move goalposts and make certain arguments that you wouldn’t make for other players, because that’s what you do for your favorite player. It’s an incredibly human thing.

I absolutely despise all-in-one advanced stats (more on that in a bit), which have obviously helped to bolster Jokic’s MVP case over the past few years. I have always brushed aside players who are doughy and slow, compared to those who are more traditionally athletic – I was too low on Luka Doncic coming out of the draft, I always found the Joe Ingles hype annoying, and clumsy ass Brook Lopez is my least favorite player in the NBA. And, most importantly, I watch Joel Embiid play basketball every night, and it’s hard for me to fathom that there’s another center who is significantly better than him; saying Jokic is better than Embiid goes against my basketball world view, and that’s where my anger comes from on this subject.

The problem isn’t the existence of biases – on either side. The problem is that the biases have overloaded in one direction; if there were a more even balance of biases – if the MVP voting demographic were more evenly split between basketball nerds and scoring/bag fanatics (often these are former players) – we’d see a more closely contested vote to represent what should have been two closely contested races, and you wouldn’t see the rewriting of unwritten MVP voting rules that have been around for decades, like voter fatigue.


#3 Overvaluing advanced stats. Basically, states that some of these stats have huge outliers where 15-20% of players are ranked very high, and they're basically scrubs. So these stats ranks scrubs high, but then Jokic is at the top. Instead of taking these stats with a grain of salt, it becomes the end all and be all way to determine the best players.

Also, VORP and DPM highly value rebounds and assists are given more value for big men, it's the main reason why Jokic is always at the top. Some of these stats will always have Jokic leading because it's the style of basketball he plays.


Let’s start on the surface, before digging into how they’re made. If I were to put out my own personal, subjective rankings of the top 50 NBA players, and they mirrored the rankings of FiveThirtyEight’s RAPTOR, I would be laughed at and called the single dumbest pundit on NBA Twitter. In the top 50 alone – which should be far and away the easiest group to rank – there are many comically out of place players.

Alex Caruso is 12th. Delon Wright is 18th. Josh Okogie and Derrick White are tied for 20th. Isaiah Joe is 32nd. Alec Burks is 41st. Austin Reaves and John Konchar are tied for 48th. I’m sure many people will call this cherry picking, but if 15-20% of the rankings that your metric spits out are obvious bull (spoiler: it’s more than 15-20%), then dare I say, your metric is not very good and should not receive widespread credence from NBA media members.

The first litmus test for these stats should always be common sense. If they directly conflict with common sense, it’s fine to disregard them.

Where these metrics are particularly bad is on the defensive end. RAPTOR, for example, has Jokic rated as the 3rd best defensive player in the NBA. That’s right – this guy is the 3rd best defensive basketball player alive.

RAPTOR very obviously overvalues rebounding (which, by the way, one could argue is a separate phase of the game from defense – you can be a great defender and bad rebounder, and vice versa). It also isn’t an ironclad argument to say that a center defending a high volume of shot attempts is a good thing; there are obviously a considerable number of shots that guards may be willing to attempt at the rim versus Jokic, that they wouldn’t against, say Embiid or Rudy Gobert.

Box plus/minus (and VORP, which is based on BPM) provides another such example. BPM places different valuations of stats based on what position you play. For centers, an assist is worth nearly twice as much as it is to a guard. Defensive rebounding is also far more valued for centers, and missed shot attempts are penalized more for centers than it is for guards. In other words: BPM massively overvalues everything Jokic is good at. It inflates the value of his assists and rebounds, and rewards him for being hyper-efficient and not attempting a super high volume of shots.

The idea that centers are getting twice the credit for assists as guards do is backwards; I would argue that, generally, assists from centers are less valuable, because a considerable volume of them comes from dribble hand-offs, where the center simply dumps the ball to a guard, who then creates the shot. Regardless, the point, once again, is that all of these evaluations are debatable, and all we are really observing is someone’s evaluation.

Jokic also ranks first (FIRST!) in the league in defensive box plus/minus, because it’s based on box score stats, which means it heavily weights, you guessed it, rebounding and steals. Jokic also ranks seventh in the league in individual defensive rating, and ninth in defensive win shares.

Individual defensive rating, contrary to what some people assume, is not simply your team’s defensive rating when you are on the court. It is an estimate of how many points that particular player allowed per 100 possessions while on the court. Here is an excerpt from Basketball-Reference’s website on how it is calculated:

“The core of the Defensive Rating calculation is the concept of the individual Defensive Stop. Stops take into account the instances of a player ending an opposing possession that are tracked in the boxscore (blocks, steals, and defensive rebounds).”

Noticing a pattern here? All of these stats are heavily based upon steals and defensive rebounding. Defensive win shares is based heavily upon individual defensive rating. You can find the formula for its calculation here.

A common rebuttal I get from people who use these kinds of stats is something to the following effect: “if they’re all saying the same thing, that has to mean something.”

Yes, it does mean something – that all of these stats are heavily based upon one another and clearly overvalue the same ****. They are essentially Collateralized Debt Obligations. That’s how you get a player who is very, very obviously a barely above average defender being considered one of the best defensive players in the entire league, because he gets a high amount of steals and is an excellent rebounder.




Great article!

https://www.rightstorickysanchez.com/the-good-oconnor-mike/031123


It is a well written Article indeed.

But it's also dishonest.

I can guarantee you, that the Writerr would not throw out Lines like this ...

"My point is essentially that I’d like it to be the way that it’s always been – that the old way is superior for telling the story of that NBA season/decade/era."

... if Embiid and not Jokic, was about to win his third MVP Award.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#52 » by eyeatoma » Sun Mar 12, 2023 6:32 am

Mick Dundee wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:From a Philly journalist, but absolutely breaks down the issues with this seasons MVP.

#1 - Voter fatigue has been used as a way to shine a light on other incredible players of the league. It gets stale and boring when it's the same player.

My point is essentially that I’d like it to be the way that it’s always been – that the old way is superior for telling the story of that NBA season/decade/era. The rush to do away with it is, in my opinion, the result of a combination of Jokic favoritism as well as the rush to make everything (including the purposefully vague Most Valuable Player award) purely empirical; no media member wants to be yelled at on Twitter for succumbing to a silly bias such as voter fatigue. NBA media has become, perhaps more so than any other sport, a battle for intellectual superiority, and holding onto voter fatigue is seen as anti-intellectual.

As great as Jokic was last season, he was simply irrelevant to the story of that NBA season. There was never a single moment where anyone considered the Nuggets to be a title contender. It wasn’t like he had a fascinating storyline behind him, or a bunch of iconic moments of late-game heroics, both of which helped to bolster Russell Westbrook’s case in 2017 (flawed as it was). Jokic was just mowing down the competition away from the spotlight, carrying an underwhelming roster to the sixth seed in the West and a first round exit. The season just didn’t feel like it was about him – and with him having just won, it would have felt appropriate to highlight someone else for that particular season.


#2 There isn't racism, but there are inherant biases and goal post moving that seems to happen amongst the media. Given that most media are basketball nerds they love Jokic, and use their biases to rationalize why he is winning MVPs, at times moving goal posts that were placed for other players in the previous years, which are then seemingly ignored for Jokic.

To put it simply: Jokic is most media members’ favorite player, and so, you move goalposts and make certain arguments that you wouldn’t make for other players, because that’s what you do for your favorite player. It’s an incredibly human thing.

I absolutely despise all-in-one advanced stats (more on that in a bit), which have obviously helped to bolster Jokic’s MVP case over the past few years. I have always brushed aside players who are doughy and slow, compared to those who are more traditionally athletic – I was too low on Luka Doncic coming out of the draft, I always found the Joe Ingles hype annoying, and clumsy ass Brook Lopez is my least favorite player in the NBA. And, most importantly, I watch Joel Embiid play basketball every night, and it’s hard for me to fathom that there’s another center who is significantly better than him; saying Jokic is better than Embiid goes against my basketball world view, and that’s where my anger comes from on this subject.

The problem isn’t the existence of biases – on either side. The problem is that the biases have overloaded in one direction; if there were a more even balance of biases – if the MVP voting demographic were more evenly split between basketball nerds and scoring/bag fanatics (often these are former players) – we’d see a more closely contested vote to represent what should have been two closely contested races, and you wouldn’t see the rewriting of unwritten MVP voting rules that have been around for decades, like voter fatigue.


#3 Overvaluing advanced stats. Basically, states that some of these stats have huge outliers where 15-20% of players are ranked very high, and they're basically scrubs. So these stats ranks scrubs high, but then Jokic is at the top. Instead of taking these stats with a grain of salt, it becomes the end all and be all way to determine the best players.

Also, VORP and DPM highly value rebounds and assists are given more value for big men, it's the main reason why Jokic is always at the top. Some of these stats will always have Jokic leading because it's the style of basketball he plays.


Let’s start on the surface, before digging into how they’re made. If I were to put out my own personal, subjective rankings of the top 50 NBA players, and they mirrored the rankings of FiveThirtyEight’s RAPTOR, I would be laughed at and called the single dumbest pundit on NBA Twitter. In the top 50 alone – which should be far and away the easiest group to rank – there are many comically out of place players.

Alex Caruso is 12th. Delon Wright is 18th. Josh Okogie and Derrick White are tied for 20th. Isaiah Joe is 32nd. Alec Burks is 41st. Austin Reaves and John Konchar are tied for 48th. I’m sure many people will call this cherry picking, but if 15-20% of the rankings that your metric spits out are obvious bull (spoiler: it’s more than 15-20%), then dare I say, your metric is not very good and should not receive widespread credence from NBA media members.

The first litmus test for these stats should always be common sense. If they directly conflict with common sense, it’s fine to disregard them.

Where these metrics are particularly bad is on the defensive end. RAPTOR, for example, has Jokic rated as the 3rd best defensive player in the NBA. That’s right – this guy is the 3rd best defensive basketball player alive.

RAPTOR very obviously overvalues rebounding (which, by the way, one could argue is a separate phase of the game from defense – you can be a great defender and bad rebounder, and vice versa). It also isn’t an ironclad argument to say that a center defending a high volume of shot attempts is a good thing; there are obviously a considerable number of shots that guards may be willing to attempt at the rim versus Jokic, that they wouldn’t against, say Embiid or Rudy Gobert.

Box plus/minus (and VORP, which is based on BPM) provides another such example. BPM places different valuations of stats based on what position you play. For centers, an assist is worth nearly twice as much as it is to a guard. Defensive rebounding is also far more valued for centers, and missed shot attempts are penalized more for centers than it is for guards. In other words: BPM massively overvalues everything Jokic is good at. It inflates the value of his assists and rebounds, and rewards him for being hyper-efficient and not attempting a super high volume of shots.

The idea that centers are getting twice the credit for assists as guards do is backwards; I would argue that, generally, assists from centers are less valuable, because a considerable volume of them comes from dribble hand-offs, where the center simply dumps the ball to a guard, who then creates the shot. Regardless, the point, once again, is that all of these evaluations are debatable, and all we are really observing is someone’s evaluation.

Jokic also ranks first (FIRST!) in the league in defensive box plus/minus, because it’s based on box score stats, which means it heavily weights, you guessed it, rebounding and steals. Jokic also ranks seventh in the league in individual defensive rating, and ninth in defensive win shares.

Individual defensive rating, contrary to what some people assume, is not simply your team’s defensive rating when you are on the court. It is an estimate of how many points that particular player allowed per 100 possessions while on the court. Here is an excerpt from Basketball-Reference’s website on how it is calculated:

“The core of the Defensive Rating calculation is the concept of the individual Defensive Stop. Stops take into account the instances of a player ending an opposing possession that are tracked in the boxscore (blocks, steals, and defensive rebounds).”

Noticing a pattern here? All of these stats are heavily based upon steals and defensive rebounding. Defensive win shares is based heavily upon individual defensive rating. You can find the formula for its calculation here.

A common rebuttal I get from people who use these kinds of stats is something to the following effect: “if they’re all saying the same thing, that has to mean something.”

Yes, it does mean something – that all of these stats are heavily based upon one another and clearly overvalue the same ****. They are essentially Collateralized Debt Obligations. That’s how you get a player who is very, very obviously a barely above average defender being considered one of the best defensive players in the entire league, because he gets a high amount of steals and is an excellent rebounder.




Great article!

https://www.rightstorickysanchez.com/the-good-oconnor-mike/031123


It is a well written Article indeed.

But it's also dishonest.

I can guarantee you, that the Writerr would not throw out Lines like this ...

"My point is essentially that I’d like it to be the way that it’s always been – that the old way is superior for telling the story of that NBA season/decade/era."

... if Embiid and not Jokic, was about to win his third MVP Award.
Maybe not but I get it when it's a 3 peat. It's just boring...

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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#53 » by RB34 » Sun Mar 12, 2023 7:39 am

Lotta talk in here about Embiid being an impervious defender. He loves to leave shooters open what are we talking about.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#54 » by eyeatoma » Sun Mar 12, 2023 7:50 am

RB34 wrote:Lotta talk in here about Embiid being an impervious defender. He loves to leave shooters open what are we talking about.


He is a top 5 defender in the league, and has some weaknesses at times. During the death of the game, he plays like the DPOY. His defensive ability is night and day when compared to Jokic.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#55 » by RB34 » Sun Mar 12, 2023 7:53 am

eyeatoma wrote:
RB34 wrote:Lotta talk in here about Embiid being an impervious defender. He loves to leave shooters open what are we talking about.


He is a top 5 defender in the league, and has some weaknesses at times. During the death of the game, he plays like the DPOY. His defensive ability is night and day when compared to Jokic.


And there are parts of Jokers game that are night and day to Embiid. Nobody is scared of Phillys defence.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#56 » by DutchManDanFan » Sun Mar 12, 2023 7:54 am

I think the part of the article about the advanced stats favoring Jokic is very good. Jokic should not win because these stats are ‘historic’. They’re not. They’re historicly flawed.
I have nothing against Jokic, but I dislike all the Jokic stans who keep mentioning these advanced stats as being historic without context or nuances.

Jokic is great and should win MVP, because Denver has the best record behind the Bucks and Giannis missed too many games. Phily is just 1 loss away so it’s still a close race with Embiid. Tatum is just not good enough to compete against these 3.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#57 » by eyeatoma » Sun Mar 12, 2023 7:58 am

RB34 wrote:
eyeatoma wrote:
RB34 wrote:Lotta talk in here about Embiid being an impervious defender. He loves to leave shooters open what are we talking about.


He is a top 5 defender in the league, and has some weaknesses at times. During the death of the game, he plays like the DPOY. His defensive ability is night and day when compared to Jokic.


And there are parts of Jokers game that are night and day to Embiid. Nobody is scared of Phillys defence.


Did anyone say there wasn't?
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#58 » by Sgt Major » Sun Mar 12, 2023 8:14 am

Jokic is winning it
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#59 » by sixers4real » Sun Mar 12, 2023 11:38 am

I’m a Philly fan and I the only way I see Embiid winning MVP if the Sixers have a better record then Denver and Philly has to beat the Nuggets in Denver March 27th.
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Re: NBA MVP Discussion Thread 2022-23 (part 4 - The Final MVP Countdown!) 

Post#60 » by antonac » Sun Mar 12, 2023 11:41 am

The entire premise of that "advanced stats" argument is flawed.

Here's the top 20 VORP
1. Nikola Jokić • DEN 7.5
2. Luka Dončić • DAL 6.0
3. Joel Embiid • PHI 4.9
4. Jimmy Butler • MIA 4.6
5. Damian Lillard • POR 4.6
6. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander • OKC 4.6
7. Jayson Tatum • BOS 4.3
8. Donovan Mitchell • CLE 4.3
9. Giannis Antetokounmpo • MIL 4.3
10. Tyrese Haliburton • IND 4.2
11. Domantas Sabonis • SAC 4.2
12. Julius Randle • NYK 3.9
13. James Harden • PHI 3.7
14. Stephen Curry • GSW 3.7
15. Ja Morant • MEM 3.6
16. Kevin Durant • TOT 3.5
17. LeBron James • LAL 3.5
18. Jalen Brunson • NYK 3.3
19. Lauri Markkanen • UTA 3.1
20. Anthony Davis • LAL 3.0


Here's the top 20 PER

1. Nikola Jokić • DEN 31.4
2. Joel Embiid • PHI 30.9
3. Luka Dončić • DAL 29.6
4. Giannis Antetokounmpo • MIL 28.4
5. Anthony Davis • LAL 28.1
6. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander • OKC 27.3
7. Damian Lillard • POR 27.3
8. Jimmy Butler • MIA 26.8
9. Kevin Durant • TOT 26.6
10. Stephen Curry • GSW 24.8
11. LeBron James • LAL 24.2
12. Kawhi Leonard • LAC 24.0
13. Ja Morant • MEM 23.8
14. Tyrese Haliburton • IND 23.8
15. Jayson Tatum • BOS 23.7
16. Domantas Sabonis • SAC 23.2
17. Kristaps Porziņģis • WAS 22.9
18. Donovan Mitchell • CLE 22.8
19. Devin Booker • PHO 22.7
20. James Harden • PHI 22.7


Here's the top 20 scoring (which everyone is building embiid's case on)

1. Joel Embiid • PHI 33.4
2. Luka Dončić • DAL 33.0
3. Damian Lillard • POR 32.1
4. Giannis Antetokounmpo • MIL 31.2
5. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander • OKC 31.2
6. Jayson Tatum • BOS 30.3
7. Donovan Mitchell • CLE 27.7
8. Kyrie Irving • TOT 27.2
9. Ja Morant • MEM 27.1
10. Trae Young • ATL 26.7
11. Jaylen Brown • BOS 26.4
12. De'Aaron Fox • SAC 25.5
13. Lauri Markkanen • UTA 25.4
14. Julius Randle • NYK 25.2
15. DeMar DeRozan • CHI 24.9
16. Anthony Edwards • MIN 24.8
17. Zach LaVine • CHI 24.7
18. Nikola Jokić • DEN 24.5
19. Pascal Siakam • TOR 24.4
20. Jalen Brunson • NYK 23.8


Where are all these scrubs that advanced stats are propping up?

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