eminence wrote:OhayoKD wrote:eminence wrote:
A) I would certainly agree with the base that there are arguments against Jokic being that high as well. I was just trying to voice that I could see him having an argument to be in that high end discussion.
B) Depending on ‘top group’ meaning Dirk is very much in that area for career impact type numbers.
C) Personally I’m not a fan of playoff impact data aggregating like that. It’s small sample, very specific, and just not something I have much faith in. For individual series it can be used to see which player/players were driving a series win, but that’s about all I really want to do with it.
I would put less stock in the playoff on/off if it wasn't the 3rd-straight postseason where it happened. His 3-year RAPM also trails embid in multiple sets and the gap is much bigger there than it is between peak Steph(who scored higher than embid) and 30+ Lebron using the rapm stuff you linked.
Even 1-year, taking rs without at face-value, taking a bad team to a championship is something retiree player-coach Russell has done against better competition.
Would still take Jokic as a top-10 peak ever and entertain arguments for him against players with similarly flawed portfolios(shaq, jordan, magic, duncan, hakeem) but top 2-3 is hard to justify with a purely era-relative lens. Uncertainty opens the door, but it does not actually constitute a strong positive case inofitself.
I'm not one to bag on Embiids level of play. I think he's nearly always been quite excellent when he can play. Availability... not so great. His fragility is surpassed only by Walton.
We've been over '69 Russell a time or two. Let's not.
Alright but that puts 3 3-year stretches ahead of Jokic from the last 10-years. Luck-adjustment flips things but it feels wrong to be using that for larger samples.