2022-23 NBA Season Discussion

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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5141 » by HeartBreakKid » Wed Jun 14, 2023 6:56 pm

parsnips33 wrote:
Peregrine01 wrote:
parsnips33 wrote:
Well yeah, they didn't have to. Didn't stop people from doing it


He absolutely played like a scrub in last years playoffs. Draymond was completely in his head and dared him into doing exactly what he wanted him to do. He’s become a radically different player this year.


Draymond sonned him for sure

I think there's certain players that get underrated in an effort to prop up a star they play with. AG is (was?) one of them. The constant race to "HE HAS NO HELP" leads to very good players becoming footnotes and I think it's a shame


There's a lot of context to that though. If Aaron Gordon is the 2nd best player on your team then you do not have any help.

The Nuggets were missing their 2nd and 3rd best players and its not like they were superstars either. The Nuggets were criticized for some for getting eliminated early in which case they didn't have enough help was valid for sure.

Gordon as your 4th best player is quite good, ideal even.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5142 » by AEnigma » Wed Jun 14, 2023 7:00 pm

I recognise Jamal was great on offence, but Gordon absolutely has a case as their second most important player this run. Certainly not a case where he might be fourth. A lot of those close games they won were possible precisely because of how good Gordon was as the team’s backup centre. There are a lot of guards I think could replicate Jamal’s role — Brunson, for one — but Gordon’s versatility is akin to having a more offensively competent Mobley on the team.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5143 » by eminence » Wed Jun 14, 2023 7:06 pm

I've got Gordon still pretty securely their #3 guy.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5144 » by parsnips33 » Wed Jun 14, 2023 7:09 pm

Zero argument for MPJ over Gordon for me
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5145 » by OhayoKD » Wed Jun 14, 2023 8:00 pm

Okay, why are we burying the lede here?
eminence wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:That doesn't seem too shabby for a season most wouldn't have at the very top of MJs years.

The 97 Bulls were Jordan's second best regular-season team, relevant when you are doing "on+on". Jordan being worse also does not necessitate his situational value is lower when he is playing in a watered down-league. Most people would not have 97 as Jordan's peak, but by the metric you're using, it should probably score as one of his highest. All considered, him scoring 8th is not really positive evidence towards parity with Lebron. Nor is him ranking 11th in 98 after the Bulls posted their 5th best regular season. You are using what is partially a team-stat with Jordan's 2nd best and 5th best regular season teams(relative to the league). There is no reason to be treating these as off-years.

A) On-Off shouldn't really be compared between players on different teams (except as a measure of importance to their own team, but that's a largely meaningless measure on its own), it measures teamwide hierarchy (even more accurately positional hierarchy).

It measures the difference between a team's mov when a player is on and a player is off. It is noisy, but it is also all-inclusive. If you want to curve for team-quality you can, if you want to curve for positional backups, you can. If you want to weigh it less than other pieces of data, you can. But "it should be used here and not here" is not well-founded, and whatever merits on+on holds, it is not a substitute.

As is, neither metric helps Jordan. If you go with on+on/off, Jordan is scoring lower than nearly half of Lebron's career when the first "on" should be at it's highest. If you go with on/off, 2 presumed down-years at the back-end of his prime score right at the bottom. And that's not even getting into...
B) Large sample APM stats aren't particularly vulnerable to collinearity (it could theoretically happen, but lineups aren't generally strict enough that I'm ever worried about it).

They absolutely are, as Lamar Odom and the 09 Lakers can attest. Having your minutes tied with your best-teammates can spike it(96-98), having your minutes staggered with your best teammates can suppress it(12-14). And even, if, none of that is at play, historic outliers tend to see their value misattributed to supporting pieces. Adjustments and all, the premise of APM is still "winning on the court is good, as is seeing your team become worse without you on the court". One of the advantages of something like WOWY/Indirect is that you can see what truly happens when a player is removed from a team. And when we use that for Jordan, with the largest possible samples(it doesn't get bigger 82), and the most favorable possible assumptions(oakley does not exist), Jordan does not grade out as a rival for Lebron. He doesn't even gain separation over someone like Hakeem(concentrated samples or extended). Mind you, that's just the regular season. As it so happens, the two guys whose teams elevate the most post-merger are...Lebron and Jordan's draft-mate.

Actual APM also doesn't help mike but...partial samples so whatever. As of right now, the only real arguments for Jordan(rs-box excepted) is the assumption that there is, somewhere, better data that helps him, or reasons to disregard the evidence that actually is available and doesn't favor him.

This is not a matter of "absence of evidence". This is a matter of some evidence favoring one guy, and virtually no evidence favoring the other. That is not considered "equality" almost anywhere else, but I guess basketball built different.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5146 » by HeartBreakKid » Wed Jun 14, 2023 8:02 pm

Probably true at least that's what the momentum is this season that Gordon > MPJ.

Regardless, if you have a team that has a superstar and by far the 2nd best player is Aaron Gordon then that team is not a contender (like everyone else are just replaceable roleplayers or even poor). I think that can be very plainly said. Even if Murray and MPJ are worse than Gordon they are not worse by significant amount.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5147 » by OhayoKD » Wed Jun 14, 2023 8:22 pm

ardee wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
ardee wrote:
Generally agree, I only switch Wilt and Kareem, plus move Russell down a tier. I think Wilt in '67 did enough to be in the Jordan/Shaq/LBJ tier, while Kareem for me can be ranked in any order with Hakeem and Duncan. Jokic belongs with them in the 5-8 range.

kareem probably had less help when he pulled his own 67 in his 2nd year in the league. Your tiering doesn't make much sense unless you disregard defensive impact


Wilt was better than Kareem defensively.

True
Also, Kareem was playing with a still prime Oscar Robertson who some think actually had more impact than him (I don't agree with that but he was still one of the best no. 2s of all time). He also had Bobby Dandridge at the forward spot.

Considering that the Lakers literally played like a 62-win team without Oscar the following year and outscored an atg 72 Lakers side with Oscar playing like an injured shell, I'm going to go and say no, post-prime Oscar was not "one of the best no2s" ever regardless of the hype.

Juiced Oakley is nice, but an exceptional 3rd option he was not. As is, rookie Kareem already had the Bucking jumping somewhere from 18-23 wins with rookie bob who really was just 88 Oakley-lvl.
I don't think it was necessarily better than Wilt's '67 cast but it's definitely a debate.

The Sixers cast that played like a 53-win team without him? I'm skeptical to say the least.
My tiers are by overall impact. I see LeBron, Jordan, Shaq and Wilt as GOAT level on both ends in those peak years. Kareem, Duncan and Hakeem were all GOAT on one end and "just" elite on the other, which is why I have them one tier down (along with Jokic now).

None of your first four guys were close to "goat" on the defensive end. Jordan and Shaq are not even close to second-tier defenders like Pippen and Lebron. And Kareem is pretty clearly ahead of those two in defensive impact over extended samples(The bucks defense improved by 4-points with Kareem on the court from 70-74).

As it so happens when we base "Overall impact" on the actual disparities between team performance rather than random assumptions(shooting-guard who has led exactly one good regular season defense(-2) is now a goat-lvl defender? BIg-man whose defenses got better without him over extended stretches?), your list does not track with what's actually there. Russell clocks Wilt, Hakeem rivals Jordan, and Duncan and KG match/edge-out Shaq. Kareem and Lebron are relative outliers who stand out more the more you factor in surrounding years/prime.

Methinks you overrate the value of man defense.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5148 » by LukaTheGOAT » Wed Jun 14, 2023 8:22 pm

Jamal has had quite literally around all-nba level production in the 2020 and 2022 PS. You could argue that Murray asked to be a #1 lowers his intrigue and he might be heavily benefitting from Jokic...even still he would be a clear all-star level guy. We have over a 30 game sample size as well.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5149 » by OhayoKD » Wed Jun 14, 2023 8:25 pm

LukaTheGOAT wrote:Jamal has had quite literally around all-nba level production in the 2020 and 2022 PS. You could argue that Murray asked to be a #1 lowers his intrigue and he might be heavily benefitting from Jokic...even still he would be a clear all-star level guy. We have over a 30 game sample size as well.

That doesn't really work with the 2020 playoffs. Jamal was not getting less attention from the defenses he faced, and he was especially efficient inside facing a Lakers side consisting of several behomeths
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5150 » by ardee » Wed Jun 14, 2023 8:32 pm

OhayoKD wrote:
ardee wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:kareem probably had less help when he pulled his own 67 in his 2nd year in the league. Your tiering doesn't make much sense unless you disregard defensive impact


Wilt was better than Kareem defensively.

True
Also, Kareem was playing with a still prime Oscar Robertson who some think actually had more impact than him (I don't agree with that but he was still one of the best no. 2s of all time). He also had Bobby Dandridge at the forward spot.

Considering that the Lakers literally played like a 62-win team without Oscar the following year and outscored an atg 72 Lakers side with Oscar playing like an injured shell, I'm going to go and say no, post-prime Oscar was not "one of the best no2s" ever regardless of the hype.

Juiced Oakley is nice, but an exceptional 3rd option he was not. As is, rookie Kareem already had the Bucking jumping somewhere from 18-23 wins with rookie bob who really was just 88 Oakley-lvl.
I don't think it was necessarily better than Wilt's '67 cast but it's definitely a debate.

The Sixers cast that played like a 53-win team without him? I'm skeptical to say the least.
My tiers are by overall impact. I see LeBron, Jordan, Shaq and Wilt as GOAT level on both ends in those peak years. Kareem, Duncan and Hakeem were all GOAT on one end and "just" elite on the other, which is why I have them one tier down (along with Jokic now).

None of your first four guys were close to "goat" on the defensive end. Jordan and Shaq are not even close to second-tier defenders like Pippen and Lebron. And Kareem is pretty clearly ahead of those two in defensive impact over extended samples(The bucks defense improved by 4-points with Kareem on the court from 70-74).

As it so happens when we base "Overall impact" on the actual disparities between team performance rather than random assumptions(shooting-guard who has led exactly one good regular season defense(-2) is now a goat-lvl defender? BIg-man whose defenses got better without him over extended stretches?), your list does not track with what's actually there. Russell clocks Wilt, Hakeem rivals Jordan, and Duncan and KG match/edge-out Shaq. Kareem and Lebron are relative outliers who stand out more the more you factor in surrounding years/prime.

Methinks you overrate the value of man defense.


Ok fair enough, I think I misworded that, don't know why I put it that way. You're right, neither Jordan nor Shaq were GOAT level defensively.

It really just comes down to how I perceive overall impact... the offensive gap they have on guys like Duncan/Hakeem outweighs the defensive gap that Duncan/Hakeem have on them. Simple as really.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5151 » by Clyde Frazier » Wed Jun 14, 2023 8:32 pm

LukaTheGOAT wrote:Jamal has had quite literally around all-nba level production in the 2020 and 2022 PS. You could argue that Murray asked to be a #1 lowers his intrigue and he might be heavily benefitting from Jokic...even still he would be a clear all-star level guy. We have over a 30 game sample size as well.


We'll see what happens going forward (and hopefully that includes good health), but maybe murray ends up being a guy who just consistently scales up come playoff time. That may be a function of playing with jokic as usage gets spread around him game to game. Murray also seems to be fine with that if deep playoff runs come in place of individual accolades.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5152 » by OhayoKD » Wed Jun 14, 2023 8:45 pm

ardee wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
ardee wrote:
Wilt was better than Kareem defensively.

True
Also, Kareem was playing with a still prime Oscar Robertson who some think actually had more impact than him (I don't agree with that but he was still one of the best no. 2s of all time). He also had Bobby Dandridge at the forward spot.

Considering that the Lakers literally played like a 62-win team without Oscar the following year and outscored an atg 72 Lakers side with Oscar playing like an injured shell, I'm going to go and say no, post-prime Oscar was not "one of the best no2s" ever regardless of the hype.

Juiced Oakley is nice, but an exceptional 3rd option he was not. As is, rookie Kareem already had the Bucking jumping somewhere from 18-23 wins with rookie bob who really was just 88 Oakley-lvl.
I don't think it was necessarily better than Wilt's '67 cast but it's definitely a debate.

The Sixers cast that played like a 53-win team without him? I'm skeptical to say the least.
My tiers are by overall impact. I see LeBron, Jordan, Shaq and Wilt as GOAT level on both ends in those peak years. Kareem, Duncan and Hakeem were all GOAT on one end and "just" elite on the other, which is why I have them one tier down (along with Jokic now).

None of your first four guys were close to "goat" on the defensive end. Jordan and Shaq are not even close to second-tier defenders like Pippen and Lebron. And Kareem is pretty clearly ahead of those two in defensive impact over extended samples(The bucks defense improved by 4-points with Kareem on the court from 70-74).

As it so happens when we base "Overall impact" on the actual disparities between team performance rather than random assumptions(shooting-guard who has led exactly one good regular season defense(-2) is now a goat-lvl defender? BIg-man whose defenses got better without him over extended stretches?), your list does not track with what's actually there. Russell clocks Wilt, Hakeem rivals Jordan, and Duncan and KG match/edge-out Shaq. Kareem and Lebron are relative outliers who stand out more the more you factor in surrounding years/prime.

Methinks you overrate the value of man defense.


Ok fair enough, I think I misworded that, don't know why I put it that way. You're right, neither Jordan nor Shaq were GOAT level defensively.

It really just comes down to how I perceive overall impact... the offensive gap they have on guys like Duncan/Hakeem outweighs the defensive gap that Duncan/Hakeem have on them. Simple as really.

Why though? I guess I can get the skepticism with Hakeem or Garnett given their resumes. But over his 8-year prime, Duncan won 4 championships, two against historically strong competition(05, 07), one as a lone-star, one where they ran over everyone else(1999) and was able to win with the core/approach completely changing. Not much to suggest those teams were stacked empirically(they played worse without Duncan than the Shaq-less Lakers, the Wilt-less Sixers, or the Jordan-less Bulls) and none of them seem loaded to me the way people conventionally assess these things.

Injuries crippled the length of his prime, but Duncan's peak is pretty hard to construct a case against
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5153 » by eminence » Wed Jun 14, 2023 9:23 pm

OhayoKD wrote:.


I know a fan of the ABA/expansion years did not just bring up the 90s as watered down.

But yeah, we're going to disagree on your usage for on-off. Estimate player impact on team quality but forget to track team quality, you're an innovator baby.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5154 » by ShaqAttac » Wed Jun 14, 2023 10:24 pm

eminence wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:.


I know a fan of the ABA/expansion years did not just bring up the 90s as watered down.

But yeah, we're going to disagree on your usage for on-off. Estimate player impact on team quality but forget to track team quality, you're an innovator baby.

but bron kills mjjj in the double-on thing too? seem like u forgot to track team quality when u say 97 wasnt peak
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5155 » by eminence » Wed Jun 14, 2023 10:41 pm

ShaqAttac wrote:
eminence wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:.


I know a fan of the ABA/expansion years did not just bring up the 90s as watered down.

But yeah, we're going to disagree on your usage for on-off. Estimate player impact on team quality but forget to track team quality, you're an innovator baby.

but bron kills mjjj in the double-on thing too? seem like u forgot to track team quality when u say 97 wasnt peak


What I said:

-On/off doesn't measure what it was used for there.

-On+On/off does an okayish (not great) job of doing so if one doesn't have the time/capability to run an APM variant or have one laying around.

-MJ looks better by that measure than he does by the non-measure.

I have LeBron>MJ (peak, prime, whatever period you want to measure). Directly comparing on/off between players on different teams is just not a very good way to support that.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5156 » by OhayoKD » Wed Jun 14, 2023 10:59 pm

eminence wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:.


I know a fan of the ABA/expansion years did not just bring up the 90s as watered down.

But yeah, we're going to disagree on your usage for on-off. Estimate player impact on team quality but forget to track team quality, you're an innovator baby.

You've crossed your t's here. I've specifically argued that you can't assume pre-expansion Kareem's situational impact is lower just because he played in a weaker league and have expressly advocated for 72 as a peak-year. You're trying to scale "peak" jordan's value off of "non-peak" jordan because he was older.

if people assessed early Kareem the way they assess late Jordan, Kareem’s 1977 would be treated as an inevitably more impactful version of 1971 and 1972.

Also, uh
ShaqAttac wrote:
eminence wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:.


I know a fan of the ABA/expansion years did not just bring up the 90s as watered down.

But yeah, we're going to disagree on your usage for on-off. Estimate player impact on team quality but forget to track team quality, you're an innovator baby.

but bron kills mjjj in the double-on thing too? seem like u forgot to track team quality when u say 97 wasnt peak

Yea, Shaq's on the money.

Jordan "looking not too shabby" with On+on is reliant on you treating 97 as his post-prime like I was(perhaps generously) with his raw on/off. The vast majority of 97 Jordan's on+on comes from the strength of his 69-win team. You cannot just assume that Jordan's on+on was better in years he was winning 45-60 games because "it's not one of his best years".

If you're going to track team performance, then track team performance. You cannot have it both ways.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5157 » by MyUniBroDavis » Thu Jun 15, 2023 12:21 am

Make a thread yall
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5158 » by eminence » Thu Jun 15, 2023 12:39 am

OhayoKD wrote:.


Pre-expansion Kareem was in HS. I have no idea what you're trying to reference there. Late 60's into early 70's is by far the worst period for expansion in the shot-clock era.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5159 » by OhayoKD » Thu Jun 15, 2023 1:05 am

eminence wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:.


Pre-expansion Kareem was in HS. I have no idea what you're trying to reference there. Late 60's into early 70's is by far the worst period for expansion in the shot-clock era.

I was talking about the 4-team expansion post-merger.

Is there a reason you haven't addressed...
You've crossed your t's here. I've specifically argued that you can't assume pre-expansion Kareem's situational impact is lower just because he played in a weaker league and have expressly advocated for 72 as a peak-year. You're trying to scale "peak" jordan's value off of "non-peak" jordan because he was older.

or...
Jordan "looking not too shabby" with On+on is reliant on you treating 97 as his post-prime like I was(perhaps generously) with his raw on/off. The vast majority of 97 Jordan's on+on comes from the strength of his 69-win team. You cannot just assume that Jordan's on+on was better in years he was winning 45-60 games because "it's not one of his best years".

This marks the second time this week you've implied I'm not being consistent because you didn't pay attention to what I was saying or have said.
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Re: 2022-23 NBA Season Discussion 

Post#5160 » by GSP » Thu Jun 15, 2023 1:09 am

Bruce Brown has a far better case over Mpj than Mpj does over Gordon............... Bruce was their 4th best playoff performer IMO kind of like Iggy over Klay for playoff runs. Nuggets are gonna take a big hit when they cant pay him

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