Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition)

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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#281 » by Colbinii » Fri Apr 7, 2023 12:30 am

homecourtloss wrote:
eminence wrote:
AEnigma wrote:It does not measure up because it was an awful environment. I do not actually think if you swapped 2022 Lebron with 2021 or 2023 Lebron that 2022 Lebron would be comfortably the worst, no.

Over that three-year stretch, Curry’s LA-RAPM is 4.12 in 34.5 minutes a game, and Lebron’s is 4.1 in 35.6 minutes a game. Lebron’s LEBRON over the past three seasons is marginally higher than Curry’s, but Curry has played more so he has the higher total wins above replacement (which is of course a valid enough reason to prefer him, but the margins are slim). These two have been extremely comparable overall, but that 2022 gap is almost entirely a consequence of their situational fluctuations rather than of Curry having a uniquely spectacular year and Lebron having some unique individual collapse.


Best I can tell '22 LeBron played on the '22 Lakers, not the '21 or '23 Lakers. The road you're taking us down lets one make up whatever they want. Hell, let's give Curry ''12-'14, having to deal with Mark Jackson in your locker room, I shudder to imagine.

And even if I gave you the whole argument, it's a bad one at best for the original statement of LeBron being 'much better' than Curry in the '22 RS.

A side note - LA isn't LA over large samples. LeBron just doesn't contest the 3 all that well any more (somewhat similar situation to Jokic).


By “anymore” you mean just this year, right? Even now, in the 8 games post the All star break he’s played, opponents are shooting 7.1% worse on threes James contests than on threes everyone else contests.

2023: Opponents are shooting 1.8% better on threes James contests than on shots everyone else contests
2022: Opponents shot 2.1% worse on threes James contested
2021: Opponents shot 6.7% worse on threes James contested
2020: Opponents shot 5.2% worse on threes James contested


How good is this statistic if it doesn't count Corner 3's? I don't think LeBron contests Corner 3's based on how the team rotates. If LeBron is never in a position to contest corner 3's, his opponents will never be shooting the highest % shot from 3 against him.
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#282 » by zimpy27 » Fri Apr 7, 2023 1:55 am

parsnips33 wrote:
zimpy27 wrote:
parsnips33 wrote:
Why wouldn't this same logic apply to winning 1 championship? I.E. is winning a championship an individual achievement at all?


Because it's the main goal of what these guys play for. Being able to lead a team to a championship.

Of course it's not everything, I don't think you can be top 10 without a championship but you can be top 25.


I guess my questions is why would winning one championship be an individual achievement, but winning two or three in a row be "a great combination of factors that put together a team and system that was able to maintain health"?


They are both but less impactful for individual legacy.

I will explain in a points system to make it easier to understand what I'm saying:

Players leads team to win championship = 100 points
Player leads 100% same championship team to win championship = 40 points
Player leads <20% same championship team to win championship = 100 points
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#283 » by rate_ » Fri Apr 7, 2023 2:00 am

Jimmy Butler is a TOP 5 player in the game
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#284 » by OhayoKD » Fri Apr 7, 2023 2:00 am

zimpy27 wrote:
parsnips33 wrote:
zimpy27 wrote:
Because it's the main goal of what these guys play for. Being able to lead a team to a championship.

Of course it's not everything, I don't think you can be top 10 without a championship but you can be top 25.


I guess my questions is why would winning one championship be an individual achievement, but winning two or three in a row be "a great combination of factors that put together a team and system that was able to maintain health"?


They are both but less impactful for individual legacy.

I will explain in a points system to make it easier to understand what I'm saying:

Players leads team to win championship = 100 points
Player leads 100% same championship team to win championship = 40 points
Player leads <20% same championship team to win championship = 100 points

I think an argument could be made that winning consecutively while switching teams is the most "impressive" with this sort of lens though I can't think of a superstar whose successfully done that
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#285 » by parsnips33 » Fri Apr 7, 2023 2:11 am

zimpy27 wrote:
parsnips33 wrote:
zimpy27 wrote:
Because it's the main goal of what these guys play for. Being able to lead a team to a championship.

Of course it's not everything, I don't think you can be top 10 without a championship but you can be top 25.


I guess my questions is why would winning one championship be an individual achievement, but winning two or three in a row be "a great combination of factors that put together a team and system that was able to maintain health"?


They are both but less impactful for individual legacy.

I will explain in a points system to make it easier to understand what I'm saying:

Players leads team to win championship = 100 points
Player leads 100% same championship team to win championship = 40 points
Player leads <20% same championship team to win championship = 100 points


I think this overly discounts a lot of the "soft tissue" stuff that makes repeating so difficult, but I get your point. Gotta manage egos, fatigue, potentially less motivation
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#286 » by zimpy27 » Fri Apr 7, 2023 2:19 am

OhayoKD wrote:
zimpy27 wrote:
parsnips33 wrote:
I guess my questions is why would winning one championship be an individual achievement, but winning two or three in a row be "a great combination of factors that put together a team and system that was able to maintain health"?


They are both but less impactful for individual legacy.

I will explain in a points system to make it easier to understand what I'm saying:

Players leads team to win championship = 100 points
Player leads 100% same championship team to win championship = 40 points
Player leads <20% same championship team to win championship = 100 points

I think an argument could be made that winning consecutively while switching teams is the most "impressive" with this sort of lens though I can't think of a superstar whose successfully done that


Consecutive part doesn't matter though it's more likely to be the same team with consecutive seasons.

It's really just suggests that leading a team to a championship is impactful for a players legacy but finding a combo that works and spamming the same combo over multiple years doesn't add so well for me.

I think winning 2 championships with 2 separate teams is more valuable than winning 3 championships with.the same team.

Duncan is a good example. He won 5 with varying degrees of team similarity even though it was for one franchise.

Jordan winning in 91 and 96 were more impressive than 92, 93, 97, 98
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#287 » by zimpy27 » Fri Apr 7, 2023 2:27 am

parsnips33 wrote:
zimpy27 wrote:
parsnips33 wrote:
I guess my questions is why would winning one championship be an individual achievement, but winning two or three in a row be "a great combination of factors that put together a team and system that was able to maintain health"?


They are both but less impactful for individual legacy.

I will explain in a points system to make it easier to understand what I'm saying:

Players leads team to win championship = 100 points
Player leads 100% same championship team to win championship = 40 points
Player leads <20% same championship team to win championship = 100 points


I think this overly discounts a lot of the "soft tissue" stuff that makes repeating so difficult, but I get your point. Gotta manage egos, fatigue, potentially less motivation


Yeah agreed. That's exactly why I was saying that I find repeating to be a very significant team achievement. The management of health, egos, finances, staff to keep the team going is so tough.
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#288 » by OhayoKD » Fri Apr 7, 2023 2:52 am

zimpy27 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
zimpy27 wrote:
They are both but less impactful for individual legacy.

I will explain in a points system to make it easier to understand what I'm saying:

Players leads team to win championship = 100 points
Player leads 100% same championship team to win championship = 40 points
Player leads <20% same championship team to win championship = 100 points

I think an argument could be made that winning consecutively while switching teams is the most "impressive" with this sort of lens though I can't think of a superstar whose successfully done that


Consecutive part doesn't matter though it's more likely to be the same team with consecutive seasons.

It's really just suggests that leading a team to a championship is impactful for a players legacy but finding a combo that works and spamming the same combo over multiple years doesn't add so well for me.

I think winning 2 championships with 2 separate teams is more valuable than winning 3 championships with.the same team.

Duncan is a good example. He won 5 with varying degrees of team similarity even though it was for one franchise.

Jordan winning in 91 and 96 were more impressive than 92, 93, 97, 98

There is an argument to be made that the league not being able to adjust to you is impressive but your point is taken. As is, I don't really focus on team results, so whatever.


Will note that 91 and 96 Bulls weren't really that different, or at least, different in a way that would ask for significant adaption from Mike.
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#289 » by zimpy27 » Fri Apr 7, 2023 3:05 am

OhayoKD wrote:
zimpy27 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:I think an argument could be made that winning consecutively while switching teams is the most "impressive" with this sort of lens though I can't think of a superstar whose successfully done that


Consecutive part doesn't matter though it's more likely to be the same team with consecutive seasons.

It's really just suggests that leading a team to a championship is impactful for a players legacy but finding a combo that works and spamming the same combo over multiple years doesn't add so well for me.

I think winning 2 championships with 2 separate teams is more valuable than winning 3 championships with.the same team.

Duncan is a good example. He won 5 with varying degrees of team similarity even though it was for one franchise.

Jordan winning in 91 and 96 were more impressive than 92, 93, 97, 98

There is an argument to be made that the league not being able to adjust to you is impressive but your point is taken. As is, I don't really focus on team results, so whatever.


Will note that 91 and 96 Bulls weren't really that different, or at least, different in a way that would ask for significant adaption from Mike.


No they weren't but I'd say they were 70% the same. So with the points example I might rate it like this.
91: 100
92: 40
93: 40
96: 75
97: 40
98: 40
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#290 » by LukaTheGOAT » Fri Apr 7, 2023 7:08 am

Ein Sof wrote:The "Nash had 37856 number 1 offenses" argument is basically just ring counting for people who think they're too smart to ring count.


Would counting number of seasons leading the league in O-RAPM count as ring counting too?
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#291 » by f4p » Fri Apr 7, 2023 1:08 pm

OhayoKD wrote:
f4p wrote:
eminence wrote:2022 lebron had a much better regular season than 2022 curry. this doesn't seem debatable. and 2014 is a huge advantage to lebron. we're still talking about almost 30 PER lebron one

Huh? Even after distorting things(tossing out losses where the Warriors missed players while not tossing out wins where the opposing team missed players), 2021/2022 Steph grades out as a historically strong floor-raiser


if 2022 regular season steph grades out as historically strong at something, i would say we probably should not use that thing. he collapsed from a 121/115/115 TS+ guy the previous 3 years to 106, almost matching his rookie year for by far the worst season of his career. we spent like the last 50 games of the season wondering what happened to his shot, with him shooting some pretty bad percentage on open shots and actually going below 40% on 3's for the first time. yes he started strong, but overall ended up with a down year. now maybe that wasn't his true talent level and it was just randomness, but it was still what actually happened in the regular season that we are talking about. i've brought this up before in curry discussions, but his "impact" can't just be independent of his own level of play, where it doesn't matter if he actually makes his shots or doesn't, or turns it over or doesn't, etc. that essentially isn't true of any player ever and makes no sense why it would be true of steph. i've mentioned this in general with impact stats, but they have to at least sort of tell a story that makes sense. steph individually had a bad year, but never fear, RAPM still says he didn't have a bad year, he was the 2nd best player in the league. that's not really a story worth believing. it tells us the situation probably affected the impact numbers more than we think.

you yourself preach chapter and verse from the WOWY gospel of lebron, so we know you don't think lebron is empty calories. i'm really supposed to think that, in a season where lebron showed enough that he could have won the scoring title if he wanted to and a season where steph looked as bad as he's looked in a long time, that steph was still able to out-impact an impact giant in lebron? right before lebron went back to having huge impact in 2023? that's the difference in their intangibles? that a bounce back year from lebron is still outshown by a down year from steph? not buying it. sounds situation/team dependent.

as far as 2021 steph vs 2022 steph, wanna tell me steph has more impact than someone else with better numbers? sure. fine, we have plenty of history that says that can be true based on how much the warriors win with steph. want to tell me steph is somehow maintaining impact relative to himself while playing way worse? not really going to buy it. does he have some magical ability to up his "impact" when his shot isn't falling and then decreases it (for no apparent reason) when his shot is falling? i believe RPM has steph as better in 2022 than 2021, when the whole world would say steph looked pretty amazing in 2021 and the whole world was wondering what happened in 2022. that sound extremely team/situation dependent. these numbers aren't infallible.

i'll keep referencing that article you posted comparing the EPM/BPM/RPM/PER's of the world. the "best" measurement (EPM) had an error of 2.48. things like WS48 and BPM were a few tenths behind. PER, without even trying to to really be an impact metric, with as blind a look as you can get and only using box score data, still was at 3.2, a mere 0.72 net rating points behind. 2 wins over a whole 82 game season. is that the difference in "dramatically more accurate"? it all seems pretty close to me. certainly not worth claiming that you can vastly move up and down in box score type measurement but it all means nothing.


(supported with much metrics dramatically more accurate than PER)


you have to stop having a such a visceral reaction to the box score. i mention "30 PER" lebron not for an in-depth description, but shorthand for "still basically peak lebron", not "PER is all that matters". lebron's 4 mvp seasons, which would probably grade out as his 4 best regular seasons if we did a poll here, are also his 4 best PER seasons (by a bit), 4 best WS48 seasons (by a bit), and 4 best BPM seasons (1 season tied for 4th). the box score isn't a random number generator. and it seems to grade the best lebron seasons as the best lebron seasons. so yes, if i think the season where lebron had his 5th best PER, 5th best WS48, and 7th best BPM was probably a pretty amazing season just a step below his best regular seasons, and if i think it was better than 2014 steph curry, that doesn't seem off.


You claiming things aren't debatable while making assertions you can't defend is getting old.


i can defend that steph looked a lot worse in the 2022 regular season than he has since maybe 2012 or 2013. impact metrics (at least some of them) acting like he was actually better than just the season before where he was getting mvp talk seem much less defensible.
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#292 » by MyUniBroDavis » Fri Apr 7, 2023 7:14 pm

If we’re going Lakers Bron vs Warriors Curry, I don’t think it’s a particularly hard argument to make that Curry has been better over the past 4 years than bron on a season to season basis. At the same time that doesn’t mean that situational factors aren’t a root cause for that either.

2020 Bron is the best season of the bunch though, and 2023 bron has had a better RS when playing than 2023 Curry imo.

People tend to forget these are the same people sometimes lol

Brons worse on defense now but the falloff is overstated because of last year, he’s been good outside of a dumb mistake here and there and Being lazy man to man this year on D
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#293 » by MyUniBroDavis » Fri Apr 7, 2023 7:17 pm

rate_ wrote:Jimmy Butler is a TOP 5 player in the game


If Playoff Jimmy happens again u right
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#294 » by OhayoKD » Fri Apr 7, 2023 9:36 pm

Well, we're not off to a great start:
f4p wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:i'll keep referencing that article you posted comparing the EPM/BPM/RPM/PER's of the world. the "best" measurement (EPM) had an error of 2.48. things like WS48 and BPM were a few tenths behind. PER, without even trying to to really be an impact metric, with as blind a look as you can get and only using box score data, still was at 3.2, a mere 0.72 net rating points behind. 2 wins over a whole 82 game season. is that the difference in "dramatically more accurate"? it all seems pretty close to me. certainly not worth claiming that you can vastly move up and down in box score type measurement but it all means nothing.

You referenced this once, and then proceeded to ignore the explanation:
Okay, so I'm very much out of my comfort zone here, but reading the articles it seems like they're specifically using a regressed net-rating(it says "adjusted", but i'm changing the first word to avoid confusion with actual SRS"). IOW the scale here is generated via regression which means you can't really just extrapolate "raw wins" cleanly.

Also, i'm not a mathematician, but isn't this like asking why a 90% confidence interval is better than an 85% confidence interval? Numbers are kinda random like. Like using your thermometer/checking the clouds may have an analogous error disparity against weather-forecasting, but you'd still prefer the weather forecast, right?

Inserting question marks so you wouldn't read it so aggressively seems to have backfired, so let me be more definitive:

1. The scale is artificial, you cannot extrapolate "closeness" like that

2. The "inaccuracies" can widen as you move from whole to part(team to player) which is why we can get much bigger deltas when looking at individual players. This is especially true when those players have or dont have contributions that are overweighed or not weighed at all in the methodology of the various stats(ex: nash/lebron have 4x as many "good" passes(high quality reads) as MJ despite similar box OC, Kareem's presence defensively deters players from attempting shots(not counted), Curry creates shots without completing the final pass a bunch)

3. Per usual you are "referencing" **** you don't understand and assuming things because that assumption aligns with a desired conclusion

You have a talent for stretching out bad logic and weak argumentation into moderately amusing word salads so I'm going to attempt a concise summary of what you've argued in this post:

1. Holistic data(lineup-adjusted, raw or otherwise) is wrong because... Curry's scoring efficiency fell
2. Holistic data(lineup-adjusted, raw or otherwise) is wrong because... I have a different opinion on Steph Curry
3. 2014 is basically peak Lebron because...it's one year removed from arguable peak Lebron which is arguable because PER and PER is good here because.... the 4 consensus best regular seasons of Lebron's career happen to be the four highest PER scores of Lebron's career
4. You think Lebron is great because WOWY(the straw strikes again!) so that means a PER advantage Lebron holds over someone must be accurate
5. 2022 Lebron is awesome because... he could have won a scoring title
6. The stats are close in accuracy because... 2.48!
7. Per isn't the only reason I think 2014 Lebron is basically peak Lebron, it's PER AND a bunch of other things with the same failings as PER

Keeping in mind I contested "2022 Lebron was much better than 2022 Steph", not "2022 Steph vs 2021 Steph"

1 and 2 are memes

3 pushes for conclusion I'm not strongly opposed to, but the logic falls apart when you use regular season consensus as justification while disregarding that 2014 is seen as a consensus down year in the regular season because his defensive effort was at a nadir before the playoffs. Defense of course being something "PER" can't really track.

For 4...
a. I think Lebron because every emperical approach from PER to RAPM to WOWY paints him as "arguably #1" or "clearly #1" with the possible exception of Russell. You are, once again, projecting the relatively narrow empirical lens your own rankings rely on, and pretending that it's equivalent to what I do with a wider variety of data

b. that I think Lebron is great because of he looks great in everything does not logically lead to "in a specific year, his mark in a box-aggregate being higher proves he had a better regular season"

5 is a bigger meme than 1 because scoring titles only track volume and Lebron didn't even win. Moreover with the logic you use for 21 vs 22 Steph, 2022 should be much better than 2020 Lebron because he was more efficient on much higher volume

6 has already been covered

And 7 responds to an accusation that was never made

You have defended nothing. In fact, one post in and you're already pivoting:
i can defend that steph looked a lot worse in the 2022 regular season than he has since maybe 2012 or 2013.

Cool. Here's what I challenged:
2022 lebron had a much better regular season than 2022 curry. this doesn't seem debatable. and 2014 is a huge advantage to lebron. we're still talking about almost 30 PER lebron one

I stand by my original reply. Showmanship like "it's not debatable" doesn't work when everything is held together with cherry picking, half-baked theories, and internally inconsistent drivel.

You took impact data, distorted it, and are now "referencing" articles you don't understand because even the distortion doesn't support what you're pushing. You're in no position to decide what's "defensible" or not
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#295 » by f4p » Sat Apr 8, 2023 3:22 pm

OhayoKD wrote:Well, we're not off to a great start:
f4p wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:i'll keep referencing that article you posted comparing the EPM/BPM/RPM/PER's of the world. the "best" measurement (EPM) had an error of 2.48. things like WS48 and BPM were a few tenths behind. PER, without even trying to to really be an impact metric, with as blind a look as you can get and only using box score data, still was at 3.2, a mere 0.72 net rating points behind. 2 wins over a whole 82 game season. is that the difference in "dramatically more accurate"? it all seems pretty close to me. certainly not worth claiming that you can vastly move up and down in box score type measurement but it all means nothing.


You referenced this once, and then proceeded to ignore the explanation:

Okay, so I'm very much out of my comfort zone here, but reading the articles it seems like they're specifically using a regressed net-rating(it says "adjusted", but i'm changing the first word to avoid confusion with actual SRS"). IOW the scale here is generated via regression which means you can't really just extrapolate "raw wins" cleanly.

Also, i'm not a mathematician, but isn't this like asking why a 90% confidence interval is better than an 85% confidence interval? Numbers are kinda random like. Like using your thermometer/checking the clouds may have an analogous error disparity against weather-forecasting, but you'd still prefer the weather forecast, right?


please explain why my explanation of the article is wrong. in fact, i proffered my same explanation before and someone on here said:

"Seems about right, yeah."

it was a person with the screen name OhayoKD, so I'm going to assume that was you.

the word regression shows up once in the article, in the section about continuity, and has nothing to do with the table i referenced.

are you thinking of where they said "retrodiction"? now, admittedly, i didn't know what that word meant before reading the article, but they make it clear enough:

"The analysis is called a retrodiction test because the metric values were weighted by actual minutes played in the season that is being projected to. "

in other words, they weighted the metrics by the minutes actually played in the season they were predicting. if you were trying to predict the 2020 warriors with predicted minutes, and then steph curry didn't play the whole season, your prediction would suck. but if you use the minutes they ended up playing, and could basically put curry at a weight of 0, your prediction would be much better. that's all they did. the final result is still in terms of net rating. as for the errors, they say:

"The table below shows the overall prediction error for each metric (in terms of Root Mean Squared Error, or RMSE). The lower the error, the better the metric predicted the following season’s team ratings."

now, unless they are being very haphazard with their wording, they are predicting net rating (because that's what they said), so RMSE should be in units of net rating. i.e. they guess 7 net rating, the team ends up at a 5 net rating, that's an error of 2.0 for their method. it is not arbitrary. where do you see it say the scale is arbitrary at all? what would the scale even arbitrarily be if not net rating? even if it was arbitrary, it is almost certainly based at 0 and so the relative differences of a few tenths would be the same as what i said anyway. it would have to like arbitrarily start at 2.4 and end at 3.3 for the differences to actually be large.

are you thinking z-scores where small changes in percentiles at the very end of the scale could represent large changes in z-scores?

this is an article by the guy who created EPM, with precisely calibrated numbers from all of 6 years of data, showing that his metric can very slightly outpredict other things when used in the era where all the EPM numbers were calibrated, even if those other metrics apply to all of nba history and not just 2014-2020 (when the article was written). good for him, but again, outside of PER, all of the numbers are jumbled up and even PER is only 2 wins away from EPM.

2 of the 3 "big 3" from BBRef in BPM and WS48 are right there with everything else, even right there with (and ahead of sometimes) the PC board's beloved RAPM and RPM and PIPM. and as i've mentioned, for the types of players we tend to talk about (all-time greats), PER tends to track right along with BPM and WS48. and if you noticed how i mostly use it, it is as a comparison between similar things like the postseason and regular season of a particular player, or the current season and previous season of a particular player. we can't be sure how well it models different players (like any of the metrics), but it's extremely unlikely that someone drops from a 26 PER to 21 PER without being a worse player because otherwise, you would have to explain that it somehow measures the same player, with the same strengths and weaknesses, completely differently from one season to the next.


Inserting question marks so you wouldn't read it so aggressively seems to have backfired, so let me be more definitive:

1. The scale is artificial, you cannot extrapolate "closeness" like that


based on what? where the does the article say it is artificial? it says they are predicting net rating. and how would even an artificial RMSE not be close if the numbers are 2.6 and 2.85? it's still only a difference of 10% of the overall error.

2. The "inaccuracies" can widen as you move from whole to part(team to player) which is why we can get much bigger deltas when looking at individual players. This is especially true when those players have or dont have contributions that are overweighed or not weighed at all in the methodology of the various stats(ex: nash/lebron have 4x as many "good" passes(high quality reads) as MJ despite similar box OC, Kareem's presence defensively deters players from attempting shots(not counted), Curry creates shots without completing the final pass a bunch)


well yes, we know the box score doesn't see everything. but it does track direct things that you do. the things you describe all have to be sussed out secondarily from gobs of lineup data, where we hope the metrics figure out who gets credit for what. results which can also be team/situation-dependent more than the box score in my experience. we also know that the box score sees a lot and the best players tend to be ones who grab more rebounds, score more points, be more efficient, turn it over less, etc. and we especially can see that it is very handy for comparing things like regular seasons to postseasons because it doesn't need the massive sample sizes of the other metrics. and as discussed above, we see that its errors aren't actually that much different.

your aversion to anything box score related, based on the errors from that article, is like saying hurricane tracker A has proven slightly better at predicting than hurricane tracker B in certain situations, and since A says it is going to miss your hometown and B says it is going to be a direct category 5 direct hit, you aren't making any preparations.

3. Per usual you are "referencing" **** you don't understand and assuming things because that assumption aligns with a desired conclusion


am i? what didn't i understand about the article?


You have a talent for stretching out bad logic and weak argumentation into moderately amusing word salads so I'm going to attempt a concise summary of what you've argued in this post:

1. Holistic data(lineup-adjusted, raw or otherwise) is wrong because... Curry's scoring efficiency fell


not "wrong". simply too situation-dependent and with error bars too large to trust that it has to be right, especially in the face of more primary evidence of steph playing worse.


2. Holistic data(lineup-adjusted, raw or otherwise) is wrong because... I have a different opinion on Steph Curry


no, because i saw him look way worse and he probably didn't develop massive new levels of intangibles specifically in the 2021 offseason, after having a whole career to develop them, to offset his worse play.

3. 2014 is basically peak Lebron because...it's one year removed from arguable peak Lebron which is arguable because PER and PER is good here because.... the 4 consensus best regular seasons of Lebron's career happen to be the four highest PER scores of Lebron's career


yeah, basically. along with WS48 and BPM and watching him play.


4. You think Lebron is great because WOWY(the straw strikes again!) so that means a PER advantage Lebron holds over someone must be accurate


it means lebron isn't empty calories and has a career of both box score and impact/WOWY dominance, indicating they are closely tied together and wouldn't separate just for one particular season, before becoming closely tied together again.


5. 2022 Lebron is awesome because... he could have won a scoring title


lebron wasn't old and falling apart and a shell of himself because... he could have won a scoring title.


6. The stats are close in accuracy because... 2.48!


because the RMSE is 2.48 net rating points and for like 10 other metrics, it's 2.85 or lower, meaning they are all basically the same.


7. Per isn't the only reason I think 2014 Lebron is basically peak Lebron, it's PER AND a bunch of other things with the same failings as PER


well load me up with seventeen other metrics that all end in the letters "PM" or basically get all of their data from "PM".

Keeping in mind I contested "2022 Lebron was much better than 2022 Steph", not "2022 Steph vs 2021 Steph"

1 and 2 are memes


the dankest

3 pushes for conclusion I'm not strongly opposed to, but the logic falls apart when you use regular season consensus as justification while disregarding that 2014 is seen as a consensus down year in the regular season because his defensive effort was at a nadir before the playoffs. Defense of course being something "PER" can't really track.

For 4...
a. I think Lebron because every emperical approach from PER to RAPM to WOWY paints him as "arguably #1" or "clearly #1" with the possible exception of Russell. You are, once again, projecting the relatively narrow empirical lens your own rankings rely on, and pretending that it's equivalent to what I do with a wider variety of data

b. that I think Lebron is great because of he looks great in everything does not logically lead to "in a specific year, his mark in a box-aggregate being higher proves he had a better regular season"


while it was much higher than steph's, the point wasn't that it was higher than steph, merely that it wasn't that much lower than lebron's own peak. unless you have steph way better than i do (maybe you do), then 2014 steph is not close enough to peak lebron that it can surpass "just a little below peak" lebron.

5 is a bigger meme than 1 because scoring titles only track volume and Lebron didn't even win. Moreover with the logic you use for 21 vs 22 Steph, 2022 should be much better than 2020 Lebron because he was more efficient on much higher volume


you have to learn debate shorthand, or whatever a good word for it is. i'm not going to describe lebron's entire 2022 season. he almost won the scoring title is just a quick way to reference that we aren't talking about lebron being a shell of himself. the effort and quality of play needed for him to win a scoring title should tell us he didn't just specifically forget how to play basketball in 2022 because some impact metrics dipped for a season. when the team surroundings seem like a much more logical reason for the dip. also, he did it on his highest TS+ in 4 years so i'm not sure why it's just volume.

and i don't recall this thread comparing 2022 steph to 2020 lebron, the "unpopular" opinion was going season to season saying steph had won 9 straight except for the obvious 2020.


6 has already been covered

And 7 responds to an accusation that was never made

You have defended nothing. In fact, one post in and you're already pivoting:
i can defend that steph looked a lot worse in the 2022 regular season than he has since maybe 2012 or 2013.

Cool. Here's what I challenged:
2022 lebron had a much better regular season than 2022 curry. this doesn't seem debatable. and 2014 is a huge advantage to lebron. we're still talking about almost 30 PER lebron one

I stand by my original reply. Showmanship like "it's not debatable" doesn't work when everything is held together with cherry picking, half-baked theories, and internally inconsistent drivel.

You took impact data, distorted it, and are now "referencing" articles you don't understand because even the distortion doesn't support what you're pushing. You're in no position to decide what's "defensible" or not


decorous to a fault as usual hayo. i understood the article (twice now). the contention you made was 2022 steph must be better than 2022 lebron because 2021 and 2022 steph have great floor-raising impact. that's how we got on the topic of comparing 2021 and 2022 and why it seems unlikely that 2022's impact numbers, including a RAPM thrown in by another poster and contested by AEnigma, were accurately measuring steph as opposed to just the overall warriors situation.
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#296 » by Lou Fan » Sat Apr 8, 2023 9:54 pm

eminence wrote:Guards/wings are generally overrated

Gobert was the ‘21 MVP

Oscar was notably better on offense than West

Mikan should be in the top 20

Sloan was not a particularly great coach (maybe just unpopular in Jazz circles) and he significantly stunted Stockton relative to what Layden would’ve

Curry is a notably better defensive player than often credited for (as in bordering on All-D level for most of his prime)

Tatum is by far the best Celtic and Brown being sold as a duo with him is ridiculous

I'm curious what your justification for this is. I've seen a lot of people argue he's underrated as a defender (because his reputation is that he sucks) and that in reality he's about average or maybe a slight positive based on his high IQ and rotation skills but I've never seen an argument for why he is a strong plus. Can you expand on this claim for me?
smartyz456 wrote:Duncan would be a better defending jahlil okafor in todays nba
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#297 » by OhayoKD » Sun Apr 9, 2023 7:57 am

I see we're doubling down...
f4p wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Well, we're not off to a great start:
f4p wrote:

You referenced this once, and then proceeded to ignore the explanation:



please explain why my explanation of the article is wrong. in fact, i proffered my same explanation before and someone on here said:

"Seems about right, yeah."

Another someone on here who I shan't name also saw that explanation, called you an idiot, offered a much ruder variant of my response, and then deleted it in timely manner after realizing their emotions had gotten the best of them. I'm glad you felt validated by a line of support, but that approval was not unanimous. :lol:

But whatever, maybe mathing this out will illustrate my point more clearly
Inserting question marks so you wouldn't read it so aggressively seems to have backfired, so let me be more definitive:

1. The scale is artificial, you cannot extrapolate "closeness" like that


based on what? where the does the article say it is artificial? it says they are predicting net rating. and how would even an artificial RMSE not be close if the numbers are 2.6 and 2.85? it's still only a difference of 10% of the overall error.

If I just guessed the net-rating of every team was 0, I would get an error-rate around 3. Actually IIRC, Unibro did that calc in January and got an error rate of 2.8 which you might notice is "lower" than 2.85. But hey, let's just be nice and go with 3. Maybe the blowouts got more frequent since?

Taking this scale at face-value, PER is much closer to a random guess than EPM is. Quantifying things, we are comparing a difference of .25 to .05. You might notice that first number is 5x bigger than the second.

And, as you've managed to side-step(again), that gap comes from looking at 30 teams. Assuming the box-stuff offers any improvement over random guessing, the fluctuations naturally even out when you're measuring bigger sets of data. So the gap could get much bigger when we look at a much smaller part of the whole(an individual player)

In fact...
well yes, we know the box score doesn't see everything. but it does track direct things that you do. the things you describe all have to be sussed out secondarily from gobs of lineup data, where we hope the metrics figure out who gets credit for what.

Well, with all due respect to "your own experience", the lineup-data does a better job of sussing out who deserves what credit based on the article you referenced. You keep forgetting this, but those metrics didn't just grade out as more predictive, they graded out as less susceptible to roster turnover. TLDR: They're less...
Spoiler:
situationally-dependent
IOW, the accuracy gap we looked at above is one we'd expect to widen as we started looking at individual players.

We also don't have to "blindly hope", we can look at winning directly(raw-signals), track historical trends, and directly vet how these metrics are evaluating specific types of players in specific situations. In this case the raw stuff, rapm, and the stuff that is both stabler and more predictive than all the box-stuff you like seem to disagree with you. Hence you've resorted to blurring the lines between different approaches so you can argue based on "my own experience" that they should all be disregarded because they all have the same definitely real disadvantages compared to box-aggregates.

The "box-score" does actually need "larger sample sizes" than something like EPM and LEBRON. The "box-score" sees less than something like RAPM and sees alot less than something like wowy, let alone an indirect full season sample.

Counting things with some loose correlation with "goodness" can make a metric less accurate if it overvalues those contributions(uncontested rebounds are worth alot less than contested rebounds), or it fails to count negative counterparts(a blown steal attempt can lead to a good shooting opportunity), or it fails to account for schematic or team-based context(Curry for example is a player who we've repeatedly seen trade scoring for off-ball creation when playing with more capable scorers(the 2017 finals being a premier example))

You're just saying things that you think sound good without actually vetting if they hold up under any sort of scrutiny. What exactly is your basis for "the best players" if you're going to disregard that which is more directly related to winning?

All this "gish galloping" leads to an analogy that sucks...
your aversion to anything box score related, based on the errors from that article, is like saying hurricane tracker A has proven slightly better at predicting than hurricane tracker B in certain situations, and since A says it is going to miss your hometown and B says it is going to be a direct category 5 direct hit, you aren't making any preparations.

I'm going to explain to you all the reasons this analogy doesn't work and then replace it with one that actually makes sense

1. It's not "just based on errors from that article", it's based on errors from many articles, and historical trends(what correlates with team success, and what players/skills correlate directly with team success), and film-tracking(ex: generationally gifted ball passers -> "frequency of good passes per 100 is much higher even with similar box OC" -> all-controlling guys like Magic, Nash, and Lebron direct impact/team results outpace their box-score while "delegators" see the opposite effect)

2. Following A incorrectly and following B incorrectly lead to the exact same outcome(being wrong), yet somehow your hypothetical sees a much higher downside for following A.

3. As covered above, we have no reason to prediction A think is "slightly" more accurate

A proper analogy would go something like this:

A hurricane is coming but we don't know which city. A weather predictor that is consistently more accurate in all sorts of situations says it's going to come at Tokyo. A less accurate predictor says it's going to come in Kyoto. Moreover, predictor A's prediction rate declines less when there are more situational variables(like a sudden influx of weather mages) while predictor B does about as well as Steve who decides which city a hurricane will hit based on how much he likes the pancakes his wife, Clara, makes him in the morning.

There also happens to be a guy named Ohtani, named after the late great baseball player after he was killed by a blood-thirsty unicorn, who has memorized every single time a hurricane has hit a city and can see all of Japan with a bird's eye view. He happens to see more warning signs for a hurricane near Tokyo than Kyoto and these same signs have repeatedly correlated with Tokyo being hit over the last 10 years.

Finally we have you, claiming that actually the hurricane is going for Kyoto because predictor B has brilliantly ascertained that things there are more felled trees when a hurricane is around. Did our predictor check with Ohtani? No. He blames Ohtani for cursing his cow and insists that because there are 4 more felled trees in Kyoto, the hurricane is more likely to go there.

You, hearing this, decide the hurricane "is much more likely" to head towards Kyoto and Tokyo actually doesn't have a high chance of getting a hurricane at all because there aren't so many felled trees.

And when I, Ohtani's secret lover(he's got great legs fwiw), point out that's a bad argument, you pivot to "a hurricane hitting tokyo is less likely than it was last year" because the original thing you were arguing isn't something you can properly defend.

Again, I challenged "2022 Lebron clearly had a much better regular season than 2022 Curry". This is a dodge. Ohtani would never. :nonono:


You have a talent for stretching out bad logic and weak argumentation into moderately amusing word salads so I'm going to attempt a concise summary of what you've argued in this post:

1. Holistic data(lineup-adjusted, raw or otherwise) is wrong because... Curry's scoring efficiency fell


not "wrong". simply too situation-dependent and with error bars too large to trust that it has to be right, especially in the face of more primary evidence of steph playing worse.

The primary evidence supports the evidence with lower error bars. Unless we don't agree that a player's job is to make teams win, box-aggregates are not "primary", they are secondary and have a weaker connection to our "primary" evidence both methodically and in terms of results.

You're 0 for 1
2. Holistic data(lineup-adjusted, raw or otherwise) is wrong because... I have a different opinion on Steph Curry


no, because i saw him look way worse and he probably didn't develop massive new levels of intangibles specifically in the 2021 offseason, after having a whole career to develop them, to offset his worse play.

"Intangibles" being whatever isn't captured in the box-score. And somehow this gets us to 2022 Lebron>>>2022 Steph

You're 0 for 2
3. 2014 is basically peak Lebron because...it's one year removed from arguable peak Lebron which is arguable because PER and PER is good here because.... the 4 consensus best regular seasons of Lebron's career happen to be the four highest PER scores of Lebron's career


yeah, basically. along with WS48 and BPM and watching him play.

So two metrics with the same issues as PER propping up a season that one, I never compared with Steph's, and two is not actually seen as a high-end regular season by the same consensus you're using to justify "near 2013" specifically because of something that PER would do a terrible job accounting for.

0 for 3
4. You think Lebron is great because WOWY(the straw strikes again!) so that means a PER advantage Lebron holds over someone must be accurate


it means lebron isn't empty calories and has a career of both box score and impact/WOWY dominance, indicating they are closely tied together and wouldn't separate just for one particular season, before becoming closely tied together again.

Yeah, but being "dominant" does not mean the metrics view him as comparably dominant, nor does it mean that when he's nearing 40, and the main source of him being underrated has gone away(his ability to function as a defensive anchor), his PER is bound to be accurate vs a guy who is tangibly an all-time creator(effect on teammate efficiency is all-time) in spite of simple box-score not seeing him as one(assists require you complete the final pass).

0 for 4
5. 2022 Lebron is awesome because... he could have won a scoring title


lebron wasn't old and falling apart and a shell of himself because... he could have won a scoring title.

And 06 Lebron is obviously peak Lebron because he actually won a scoring title.

0 for 5

6. The stats are close in accuracy because... 2.48!


because the RMSE is 2.48 net rating points and for like 10 other metrics, it's 2.85 or lower, meaning they are all basically the same.

And that makes you 0 for 6

Ohtani would never.

EDIT: The 2.8 comes from "MAE"(margin average error) as opposed to the method used in the article, "RSME"(Root-squared Margin error). Since these are different methods you can't derive a gap this way. In order to make the case for "closeness" or lackthereof we'd probably need to take the "RSME" of our control methodology and then look at the difference between the methods. Taking the percentage difference between 2.45 and 2.85 doesn't really achieve anything without an additional reference.
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#298 » by MyUniBroDavis » Sun Apr 9, 2023 9:54 am

^ this is a horrible discussion going on up here btw

Also I didn’t calculate the RMSE lol how would I even do that
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#299 » by ShaqAttac » Sun Apr 9, 2023 10:22 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
rate_ wrote:Jimmy Butler is a TOP 5 player in the game


If Playoff Jimmy happens again u right

butler built diff fo sho


also this thread long as f
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Re: Your unpopular takes? (PC Board Edition) 

Post#300 » by OhayoKD » Sun Apr 9, 2023 11:18 am

MyUniBroDavis wrote:^ this is a horrible discussion going on up here btw

Also I didn’t calculate the RMSE lol how would I even do that

I never said you did?
If I just guessed the net-rating of every team was 0, I would get an error-rate around 3. Actually IIRC, Unibro did that calc in January and got an error rate of 2.8 which you might notice is "lower" than 2.85. But hey, let's just be nice and go with 3. Maybe the blowouts got more frequent since?

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