RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (LeBron James)

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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#21 » by DQuinn1575 » Sat Jul 1, 2023 11:43 pm

AEnigma wrote:
70sFan wrote:Jordan played with perfectly optimized rosters throughout his career and I'm 100% sure he'd fit worse with Wade/Bosh or even Kyrie/Love than LeBron actually did.

I'm almost shocked how easily Jordan's portability is taken for granted to be honest. Jordan never played with other high level creators. He never had to change his game because of roster construction. I very much doubt anything would change the way he played.

You may argue that in most situations, Jordan wouldn't need to change his style to make it work. I can see that, although it's far from given. At the same time though, I don't think Jordan shooting 25 times per game next to another high volume perimeter scorer would be a good thing. I doubt Jordan would bring that much value (relative to other GOAT candidates) next to someone like Wade or Kobe. I don't even love his fit with someone like Curry.



Jordan did not play with an average center or point guard for any season in the league. To say he was with perfectly optmized roster throughout his career is just wrong. The team did try to build the team around him, and got lucky in the fact that Pippen turned out as well as he did. And you can add HoGrant to a lesser extent. Rodman yes, but some of the reason Rodman did work out for the Bulls was because of Jordan's presence.
OTOH the Bulls had a lot of failures : Rodney McCray, Pete Myers, Brad Sellers, Sam Vincent.

Portability? Hard to say. The times young MJ had to fit in as not "the superstar" was a frosh in college, and Team USA in PanAm Games and 84 Olympics. All 3 wound up as championships, but I dont know how MJ would have fit in with Wade, Kobe, or Curry, as it was never a consideration.

In the end, Pippen will get voted here as a top 30 player, and HoGrant/Rodman will probably make the Top 100. But again, the center and point guard were in all those years below league average.
I dont know how many instances there were with a Top 10-15/ Top 40/ Top 75-100 player paired up in their prime - but there is a fair number.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#22 » by Tim Lehrbach » Sat Jul 1, 2023 11:55 pm

Of course Lillard requests a trade on the same day this launches.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#23 » by One_and_Done » Sun Jul 2, 2023 12:05 am

That is just a terrible take Quinn. Bill Cartwright and Longely were most definitely average or better. In his younger days Dollar Bill made an all-star team, and there was a reason the Bulls traded a top notch guy like Oak for him (and were praised for it). He was solid af. Even Michael later conceded that maybe trading his buddy Oak had been the right move. Longely was another very solid 5 man. Sure, he didn't post big stats, but he made good smart plays and was certainly average.

The point guard comment is similarly wrong. BJ Armstrong even made an all-star team on Chicago. Sure, he didn't really deserve it, but he was definitely average or above. Ron Harper was a former all-star quality player who took a lesser role to win in Chicago. As a result his stats dove, because there's only 1 ball, but he was averaging over 20ppg the year before he came to Chicago. It's absurd to suggest he wasn't at least average.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#24 » by eminence » Sun Jul 2, 2023 12:16 am

I would not call the Harper that played in Chicago an average starter. He'd already put up a near full season averaging 24 mpg, 8 pts and 2 ast before MJ returned in '95. The '95 Bulls were not loaded enough to put most of that down to him taking a lesser role, he'd just fallen off.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#25 » by One_and_Done » Sun Jul 2, 2023 1:06 am

He was still an excellent defender though.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#26 » by Tim Lehrbach » Sun Jul 2, 2023 1:17 am

I will have my a post up sharing my general thoughts by Monday morning, but I will wait to vote until Monday evening. I hope there are others planning to abstain from voting until we've had some discussion over the top candidates.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#27 » by AEnigma » Sun Jul 2, 2023 1:33 am

DQuinn1575 wrote:
AEnigma wrote:
70sFan wrote:Jordan played with perfectly optimized rosters throughout his career and I'm 100% sure he'd fit worse with Wade/Bosh or even Kyrie/Love than LeBron actually did.

I'm almost shocked how easily Jordan's portability is taken for granted to be honest. Jordan never played with other high level creators. He never had to change his game because of roster construction. I very much doubt anything would change the way he played.

You may argue that in most situations, Jordan wouldn't need to change his style to make it work. I can see that, although it's far from given. At the same time though, I don't think Jordan shooting 25 times per game next to another high volume perimeter scorer would be a good thing. I doubt Jordan would bring that much value (relative to other GOAT candidates) next to someone like Wade or Kobe. I don't even love his fit with someone like Curry.

Jordan did not play with an average center or point guard for any season in the league. To say he was with perfectly optmized roster throughout his career is just wrong.

Casting aside the statement being wrong (at minimum, 1993 Armstrong is an exception)*, there is a difference between optimised and “could not possibly be better”. Having a weaker starter does not in itself mean the starter meaningfully clashes with your playstyle. And to be clear, the 2009 Cavaliers were well-optimised for Lebron to put up giant numbers. They were not good, and they lacked anything close to a Pippen equivalent (for Lebron that would have been someone like Reggie), but if that had been his team structure throughout his career, he could have posted disgusting box aggregate numbers just like he did in 2009.

[*n.b. I also suspect if you were to really commit to ranking every starting centre in the league you might be surprised at the results.]

OTOH the Bulls had a lot of failures : Rodney McCray, Pete Myers, Brad Sellers, Sam Vincent. In the end, Pippen will get voted here as a top 30 player, and HoGrant/Rodman will probably make the Top 100. But again, the center and point guard were in all those years below league average.
I dont know how many instances there were with a Top 10-15/ Top 40/ Top 75-100 player paired up in their prime - but there is a fair number.

Sure, teams whiff. Title teams have mediocre players. The point guard for the Heatles was Mario Chalmers and their centre rotation was Haslem and Joel Anthony. That is why I stressed the production. If a bunch of names look bad but still produce wins even without their star, then they are evidently good enough. Reliance on Pete Myers imo may have kept the 1994 Bulls from going to the title game, but you know, the rest of the team was still good enough to look like a conference contender with him.

You can dismiss Ron Harper, but five years after he joined the Bulls, he was again a starter on a 67-win team. As a fourth or fifth guy, he worked pretty well. Were Danny Green and KCP great names for the 2020 Lakers? Not really, no, but they fulfilled their roles well, just as on other title teams. Derek Fisher after Harper. 37-year-old Gary Payton. The playoff sixth man for the 2007 Spurs was Fabricio Oberto. :o

Judging names is tough. You look at those Showtime Lakers, and their depth is pretty strong… all the names seem recognisable as good players who can step up when needed… Yet whenever Magic missed time, he left a massive impression. The names do not interest me so much as the results. If a team with a low talent roleplayer still functions, then my read would be that the roleplayers are doing something right all the same.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#28 » by eminence » Sun Jul 2, 2023 1:54 am

Brief thoughts on why I didn't include MJ as a serious contender for #2, looking mostly at his negatives, but including his positives as I see them:
-MJ has a longevity problem at this level, only 11 full seasons at Allstar+ level, doesn't have the 60's longevity boost, he was just a dude who liked retiring
-I'm relatively lower on mid 80's MJ, more impressed by Hakeem at the start of their careers, thought it took MJ til about '88 to really get going
-Didn't really prove it away from Phil/Scottie
+teams did reach very high heights with him at the head
+ATG scorer, quite arguably the most effective in NBA history, which is the most directly obvious way to have impact for an individual player
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#29 » by Moonbeam » Sun Jul 2, 2023 2:03 am

For this project, I've developed some new metrics to help me make my list. I'm still working on the write-up for it, but in short, I've built some models for predicting the team seeds based on player performance, models for predicting playoff series won based on player performance, and a model that ties those together to give a sense of how a player's complete season (regular season and playoffs) translates to playoff success as measured by expected series wins and championship probability.

The main predictor variables I've included in the models from the player performance side are Win Share variants and the remaining minutes played per game by the team. I've developed a new Adjusted Win Shares metric that reallocates a team's offensive and defensive Win Shares based on the team's offensive and defensive performance relative to expectations, with those expectations being calculated on the basis of age curves. In this way, players with a pattern where teammates tend to underperform expectations will have their Adjusted Win Shares relatively reduced, and players with a pattern where teammates tend to overperform expectations will have their Adjusted Win Shares relatively improved. These models were built using data from 1984-present (since the 16-team playoff format) and use the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd most Win Shares/Adjusted Win Shares for a player so I can get a sense of a team's prospects with the player as the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd most impactful player on the team.

Importantly, the models that use Adjusted Win Shares as opposed to raw Win Shares were significantly better at capturing the variation in the observed data. In the end, this has given me 48 metrics with which to judge player careers, but also peaks and primes. It's a lot. :lol:

As this is for the GOAT, I'll be looking at metrics for these players as the most impactful player.

Across the various metrics I've developed, there are 4 players who seem to stand head and shoulders above the rest: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain, LeBron James, and Michael Jordan. I think these 4 will likely end up being the top 4 in my list. Here are some details of how these players fare in the best models (which include Adjusted Win Shares and remaining team minutes per game), first looking at regular season value only and then regular season + postseason value.

Expected number of #1 seeds:

1. Wilt Chamberlain: 8.988
2. Michael Jordan: 8.093
3. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: 6.985
4. LeBron James: 6.899
(5. David Robinson: 5.354)

Expected number of top 3 seeds:

1. LeBron James: 11.655
2. Wilt Chamberlain: 11.612
3. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: 10.990
(4. Karl Malone: 10.568)
5. Michael Jordan: 10.048

Expected Series Wins:

1. Wilt Chamberlain: 33.783
2. LeBron James: 32.501
3. Michael Jordan: 29.457
4. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: 29.449
(5. Karl Malone: 21.716)

Expected Championships:

1. Wilt Chamberlain: 4.681
2. Michael Jordan: 4.097
3. LeBron James: 3.877
4. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: 3.439
(5. George Mikan: 2.702)

There's generally a sizable gap between these 4 and the rest, particularly when combining regular season and postseason play. Wilt generally grades out on top, but a limitation of my models currently is that they have been built using data from 1984 onward only, so Wilt (and most of Kareem's career) might be subject to some extrapolation effects.

I'm not voting yet, but I'm just putting some thoughts down with reference to these new metrics. I am pretty confident that my GOAT vote will be one of these 4, however.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#30 » by OhayoKD » Sun Jul 2, 2023 2:19 am

Hello everyone! As this is my first top 100 I'll do my best to make a decent mark as a debutant. Saving my sophmore slump for 2026 :wink:

That said, while I think I know who I'm voting for here, I am going to take my time to be thorough with my reasoning before I submit a final vote. That said, I am open to being convinced so for those who seek to move me...

Criteria/Methodology for player evaluation
For now, player-assessments are strictly era-relative. Am considering a shift to "impact averaged over time" or modernist-era-translation as factors, but for now it's really just how much you increase a random team's chances of winning it all. I'm not exclusively looking year to year necessarily(other teams may take a season or post-season to adjust), but outside of tie-breaks, "better league" will not be considered. Surrounding years also matter to me, and for a rough rant explaining the steps, you can look here(I think I've fine-tuned that in ways but still):

https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=103144819#p103144819


Other Considerations
Basing these guesses on historical and contemporary results, I'm working on a few assumptions:

-> Protecting the Rim is the most consistent source of value across different situations and contexts:
OhayoKD wrote:
Dutchball97 wrote:Perhaps at a higher theoretical treshold the gap between playmaker stacking and wing-scorer stacking becomes evident, but that treshold hasn't been reached and "paint-protectors" currently look like the least "situation-dependent" archetype. At an individual level, Duncan and Russell are probably the quintessential metronomes if we go by team success and if we go by individual impact, Russell and Kareem stand-out in terms of a lack of fluctuation. From rookie year to 1980 Kareem's "impact" stays pretty consistent with small postseason samples being where most of the fluctuation happens. Russell is still winning with seemingly average help right as he's about to retire.

-> Offensive players who are highly efficient-creators(think passer-rating instead of box-creation or ast:tov%) are the most resilient in playoff-settings
-> Players who function as on-court coaches(telling teammates where to go, prompting coaching decisions at key spots) on one or both-ends are extremely resilient to changes in situation and provide value higher than their physical production might indicate
-> Players who cannot require more specific conditions to reach their situational ceilings and therefore are curved down
Blackmill wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:it's not just about what you create. It's also about the quality of what you're creating AND how much you're leaving on the table with suboptimal decisions. Players on this tier have better discernable offensive "lift" than players the tier below, and often this is blamed entirely or pre-dominantly on "this is just because of who their teammates are", but I actually think the real source of this offensive advantage is the "quality" of what they're creating(and some of the backseat coaching stuff has an off-court effect that can't be tracked via impact stuff):



Don't have access to the numbers(paywall) rn but passer-rating also sees this. Curry and Jordan graded out as comparable or right behind creators in a pure volume metric like playval(based on ben's bpm which is using assist totals I think) or Box-OC, to guys like say Lebron, Magic, and Nash, but they had teammates telling players where to go(draymond/pippen respectively), and don't make the best possible reads as often(I think ben said it was something like 60% vs 80% of the high quality passes in his peaks video and we have the "good passes" number above).

Incidentally they don't seem to have the same level of offensive lift in the absence of a specific structure where those decisions are delegated to someone else:


By comparison, the best pre-triangle Jordan stretch(with Jordan arguably at his peak) sees a 52(Ben) or 53-win(E-balla) team over a 30-game sample going at +4.4 offensively(you can reach a +4.6 if you swap minuite distributions for the 5th and 7th mpg guys for 20 games and ignore the team didn't actually improve), Curry wasn't close to leading all-time offenses(and had worse metrics than both westbrook and durant) with Draymond on the bench.

-> All else being equal, being able to impact without the ball offers an advantage of being reliant on having the ball(KD vs Westbrook):
However, Nash’s situational value clearly changed from Dallas to Phoenix, as multiple APM methodologies demonstrate marginal impact in Dallas and seismic correlations in Phoenix. Improved health and the freedom-of-movement rule change were both factors, but I view these competing measurements as a classic case of fit. Similar to LeBron and Wade, Nash’s style of play created some diminishing returns. Unlike LeBron or Wade, Nash’s unheralded background and diminutive stature masked his poor fit in Dallas. Nash was more of a situational floor-raiser who could wash out in certain lineups next to ball-dominant scorers; he wasn’t as versatile as someone like LeBron, so pairing him with other centerpieces didn’t automatically supercharge such teams.

-> Players who disproportionately rely on being elite man-defenders to boost defenses are less likely to reach their situational ceilings than players who are not
-> Players who have limitations as ball-handlers are less likely to reach their situational ceilings than players who are not(There are levels to this, a Kareem or Jordan is dramatically less reliant on lower-ball-handling load to maximize their scoring value compared to players like Bird or Durant)
-> Credit is warranted when a player succeeds in-spite of roster-turnover or fo-drama, as it is harder to perform well in such situations
-> Failure is more forgivable in such circumstances(If the Suns go ballistic with an off-season to figure things out I'll retroactively raise Durant's 2023 a bit)

Off-court "impact on winning" matters, but I am going to be going off direct accounts and tangible actions/examples as opposed to media-narratives(am going to get into this with certain "coach-killer" claims at some point). Steph may be considered the leader of the Warriors, but as Dray is the one who is telling teammates what to do when he's on the sideline(you could hear this on mic'd up in game 2), is called the emotional leader by teammates, and is coaching up young-talent, he gets the lion's share of off-court credit. Not too relevant to a single-season ranking, but I'm planning to copy and paste this preamble(mostly) for the top 100 so humor me.

Off-court "gming" good and bad, taking pay-cuts, ensuring teammates sign contracts, side-line(or on-court) coaching(and the actual results), all come into play. I am not going to assume "the best player" is the "leader" even though people(teammates included) tend to assume that, but I will account for what specifically players in the organization say a player did or didn't do.

What is "Likely" to happen or how replicable something is(across different situations) is also relevant(not as much in a descriptive POY ranking). This is an important thing to consider with injuries(not so much with POY voting but still).

Competition quality matters but in terms of winning championships, the top-end is more relevant than the bottom-end. Beating the better "best" opponent matters more than beating a better "2nd best" opponent. Can be applied to looking at how strong a "year" is or how strong the path to a championship is. Regular season srs is also less relevant than something like say "San's psrs" in comparisons featuring teams from the last 10 years.

lessthanjake wrote:1. Michael Jordan
2. LeBron James

I don’t really think you can go wrong with either of these two, but I’ve got a slight preference for Jordan.

A couple notes:
The combination of regular season and postseason dominance that we saw from Jordan’s Bulls is unprecedented.

It is unprecedented post-merger but I think we need to be careful about just using raw srs here. While those gaudy win-totals were better than any other dynasty, that is separate from them being more "dominant". It was after all, not the Bulls who won 11 championships in 13 years, and it was also not the Bulls who won 8-straight. As far as championships go, a 50-win team in the 60's or the post-merger 70's is better(or more likely to win), than a 50-win team in the 90's or the 2000's. Ceiling-raising indicates to me you are specifically focused on championships. With that in mind, when we look at standard deviations as opposed to raw-srs totals...
F4P wrote:just using regular season SRS and playing out the playoffs, i have russell with 7.0 expected titles and jordan with 2.9.

...we see the Celtics were far more dominant than the Bulls. And if that wasn't enough, they were also better playoff risers winning 4 more rings than expected as opposed to the Bulls only winning 3.1 more rings.

Keep in mind, unlike with Lebron, there's really no evidence for Jordan being a comparable or better "floor-raiser". Russell has won with less help than Jordan has ever won with(1969), has won with two completely different cores, and has kept the Celtics at a best in the league-level(peaking from 60-64 as a bigger outlier than any of Jordan's bulls). If you are going to opt for ceiling raising(justified with more impressive team success), isn't Bill a better choice?

I also think you're missing some context with your "help" evaluations...
And I simply don’t see this as being caused by the Bulls being more talented. Indeed, I don’t actually see those Bulls as being more talented than many of LeBron’s teams. It’s clear that they were a good team without Jordan—since they did well during his first retirement (though the 55 wins in 1994 obscures that the SRS wasn’t nearly as good).

Yeah, uh no. Their SRS was "nor nearly as good" because Pippen and Grant missed games. When both were in the lineup they posted a regular season srs of 4.7, aka, a 55-win pace:
Pippen’s non-Jordan seasons were particularly impressive because of the overall heights of the team. In ’94, the Bulls played at a 55-win pace when healthy (4.7 SRS).

In the playoffs they played like a +8 team, boosting their srs from +4.7 to +5 for the season. Aka, a 58-win pace. Then without Grant(who would see the Magic jump from first-round outs to finalists), the Bulls won at a 52-win pace:
In 1995, with key cog Horace Grant lost to Orlando (and Ron Harper aboard), a healthy Bulls team still played at a 52-win pace (3.8 SRS) with an rORtg of +1.1 before Michael Jordan returned.

The names might not impress you, but they made a decent offense without Jordan and Grant, and a good one when they were just down Jordan. Pair that with an excellent defense, and you get one of the few teams in nba history that was capable of contending for a championship without their best player. For comparison, let's look at how Cleveland(second stint) and Miami fared without Lebron:
From 12-14 Miami posted a net-rating of -3.5 in games without Lebron(7.5 with). In the title-winning years Miami were a +8.4 team with Lebron and a -2.5 team without. That actually looks like a 30ish win team rather than a 40ish won but presumably missed time and opponent quality shift the lebron-less heat towards neutrality with SRS.

Switching from WOWY, to lineup-ratings, the Heat were +11.04 with Lebron/Wade lineups, +2.7 with with Wade, no Lebron lineups, 10.87 with Lebron/Bosh lineups, -1.19 with Bosh, no Lebron lineups, +10.28 with the big-three, and -4.48 with the big-three minus Lebron. The heat were also +2.77 in lineups with Lebron and without Wade or bosh. Overall, Lebron lineups scored at +9.62 while Lebron-less lineups scored at +0.75

In the title-winning years, the Heat were -3.25 with just Wade and Bosh and +12 with all three, +5.88 with Lebron and no wade or bosh, and +0.48 without any of the big three. Overall, for 12 and 13, Lebron lineups scored at 11.96 while Lebron-less lineups were -0.36.

Let's start with 2015. To set the table, the lebron-less cavs with kyrie and love are a bad defense and average offense if you go by net-rating(-1.73 overall, 30ish wins). This is also true in 2016(-1.7), 2017(-2.81) which adds up to -1.99 for all 3-seasons. Without any of the 3, the cavs are -14.62.

With Lebron and no kyrie or love, the Cavs are +6.79. With all 3 they're +10.76(PBPstats). with both and without both Lebron looks historically valuable.

But maybe this is just a matter of wonky lineups/rotations? Well, we can then look at WOWY, only including games where the Cavaliers knew they'd be playing without Lebron. In 2015 they were 3-10 without Lebron. Extending our sample the Cavs out to 2017 and the Cavs were 4-23. In games without Lebron and with Kyrie and Love, the cavs were 4-11, a 21-win pace.

With Lebron, the 2015 Cavs went 50-19(59-win). Without they went 3-10 going at a 19-win pace. With all three of Love, Kyrie, and Lebron, the Cavs were 42-5(73-win) improving from 4-11 with just kyrie and love 21-win(note that's a 3-year sample, not just 2015).

If we take the higher-scores, Lebron-Miami were a 40ish win team without Lebron. The Cavs were 30ish wins. They may look similar just looking at a couple of names at the top(though frankly, kyrie was probably closer to grant as an isolated talent than he was to Pippen), but that does not mean the help was comparable...
All in all, a second superstar in a league where the other contenders had one, excellent tertiary pieces, excellent depth, a system which turned a 50-win team into a 65-win one overnight, and perfect-fit is stacked. And if there's any doubt we can just look what they were capable of without the player they were built around. Because Lebron wasn't getting help on the team that drafted him, finding comparable talent at the top of the roster required gutting depth and sacrificing fit. Then when those stars got injured(wade was getting his knee operated in playoff games by 2012), the teams became limited

Whatever you feel about the "names", those casts were not comparable. Yet, if we account for things like health and competition, that gap in team-performance mostly goes away by the postseason...
They only had one 60-win season together. Their SRS averaged 5.92 in those years. And they won two titles in four years, with multiple game 7’s in those two title-winning years.

Yeah, uh, that game 7 in 2012 came after losses where Lebron's co-stars weren't playing. With the big-three starting, Miami posted a MOV of 13.5, going 8-1 despite bosh and wade entering and leaving the lineup and Dwayne literally getting his knees operated in the middle of playoff games. Moreover they crushed an OKC side that, per San's PSRS(which gives 3/4 weight to playoff performance), looks better than any team Jordan has beat at any round of the playoffs. For that matter, all 8 of Lebron's first final opponents from 2011 to 2018 score higher than any team Jordan's Bulls vanquished including 3 teams, he's beaten with significantly worse support such as the 13 Spurs who look as good or better, using psrs or regular season srs, than the 90 Pistons, a team peak Jordan lost to despite having very good help.

Going by PSRS, here is the most daunting opponent Jordan defeated:
Round 1: Los Angeles Clippers (-2.7), won 3-0, by +12.7 points per game (+10.0 SRS eq)
Round 2: Los Angeles Lakers (+5.4), won 4-1, by +3.6 points per game (+9.0 SRS eq)
Round 3: Houston Rockets (+6.6), won 4-2, by +2.3 points per game (+8.9 SRS eq)
Round 4: Chicago Bulls (+11.9), lost 2-4, outscored by 0.6 points per game (+11.3 SRS eq)

Overall: +9.81

(note that playing the Bulls boosted Utah's PSRS)

Here are the three teams Miami faced before the gang was well and truly washed:
Playoff Offensive Rating: +7.34 (27th), Playoff Defensive Rating: -4.32 (62nd)
Playoff SRS: +11.45 (39th), Total SRS Increase through Playoffs: +3.59 (29th)
Average Playoff Opponent Offense: +3.32 (18th), Average Playoff Opponent Defense: -1.74 (56th)

Round 1: Portland Trail Blazers (+1.9), won 4-2, by +5.1 points a game (+7.0 SRS eq)
Round 2: Los Angeles Lakers (+7.9), won 4-0, by +14.0 points a game (+21.9 SRS eq)
Round 3: Oklahoma City Thunder (+5.6), won 4-1, by +4.0 points a game (+9.6 SRS eq)
Round 4: Miami Heat (+8.1), won 4-2, by +2.4 points a game (+10.5 SRS eq)

(2011 Mavs)

Playoff Offensive Rating: +7.73 (19th), Playoff Defensive Rating: -3.19 (73rd)
Playoff SRS: +10.62 (49th), Total SRS Increase through Playoffs: +2.84 (42nd)
Average Playoff Opponent Offense: +2.48 (44th), Average Playoff Opponent Defense: -2.03 (50th)

Round 1: Dallas Mavericks (+1.8), won 4-0, by +5.5 points per game (+7.3 SRS eq)
Round 2: Los Angeles Lakers (+2.3), won 4-1, by +9.4 points per game (+11.7 SRS eq)
Round 3: San Antonio Spurs (+11.0), won 4-2, by +4.5 points per game (+15.5 SRS eq)
Round 4: Miami Heat (+10.3), lost 1-4, outscored by 4 points per game (+6.3 SRS eq))

[(b]2012 Thunder, note that playing Miami suppressed their PSRS[/b])

Playoff Offensive Rating: +4.58 (60th), Playoff Defensive Rating: -7.25 (26th)
Playoff SRS: +13.07 (25th), Total SRS Increase through Playoffs: +4.11 (21st)
Average Playoff Opponent Offense: +2.45 (45th), Average Playoff Opponent Defense: -1.78 (55th)
Round 1: Los Angeles Lakers (+1.5), won 4-0, by +18.7 points per game (+20.2 SRS eq)
Round 2: Golden State Warriors (+4.1), won 4-2, by +3.8 points per game (+7.9 SRS eq)
Round 3: Memphis Grizzlies (+8.3), won 4-0, by +11.0 points per game (+19.3 SRS eq)
Round 4: Miami Heat (+9.2), lost 3-4, by +0.7 points per game (+9.9 SRS eq)

(2013 Spurs, and again Lebron brings their average down)

In 2014 they ran into an even better opponent with Lebron having very weak support. In 2015 the Cavs(similar to the pre-jordan Bulls without Lebron), posted a better regular season and postseason rating than 88, 89, or 90 Chicago(+10 PSRS) despite Lebron having an off-year and his co-stars largely missing the playoffs. They went 42-5 with all three in the lineup.

Then in 2016 they beat the 73-win Golden State Warriors who also posted a higher PSRS than the Jazz despite their unanimous MVP Steph missing a large chunk of the playoffs.

The Bulls advantage in "dominance" mostly comes down to better health and better movs vs weaker opposition. Against the best of the best(the most relevant matches for championship acquisition), Lebron's teams do just as well despite often being disadvantaged in terms of talent, fit, and health:
Then when those stars got injured(wade was getting his knee operated by 2012), the teams became limited(2012-2014 heat were 40-win without James and 58-win with James and without Wade) Nonetheless, Lebron capitalized by securing two championships against teams arguably better than all of Jordan's conquests(2013 spurs were playing like the 89/90 pistons at full-strength, 2012 thunder were young but already been impressive in the 2010, 2011, regular seasons and postseasons and then performed better than the 97 jazz(highest psrs for a jordan victory) before getting smoked by the heat). In 2014 wade and bosh fell completely off(while pippen and grant/or rodman remained at a similar level in the playoffs from 90 to 98), so again, in order to have comparable talent at the top, Lebron would need to leave and then play with a top-heavy roster with worse top-end talent(kyrie/love). The cavs without lebron were a 30ish win(20ish if you used wowy but eh) team with an average offense and a below average defense. With Lebron they beat another team better than anyone Jordan beat(2016 warriors), play like a 65+ win team in the 16 and 17 postseasons(losing to a 73-win team +durant). With kyrie and love barely factoring in, the cavs sweep the 60-win hawks and take the 67-win warriors to 6 playing better basketball with lebron in an off-year than the 88-90 Bulls managed with Jordan at his peak.

All considered we have 3-eras for Lebron's prime:
-> is in a worse situation than Jordan with the team he's drafted too, is more successful
-> has a worse version of what jordan has once phil enters, faces four finals opponents better or arguably better than anyone jordan's beat(finals or before), chokes vs one(in what wouldn't even be a top 10 season for his career), dominates one(2012 thunder), beats another(2013 spurs) and then is back to the situation he was in his first era when he loses handily to the 4th
-> pretty clearly has less help in cleveland, beats a 73-win team when he has healthy costars, leads a better team than anyone peak jordan led pre-jackson when his co-stars are out(in an off-year!), loses to a 73-win team+kd b2b

The biggest knock here is that in one of his worst seasons, on the back of one of his worst performances, Miami would lose narrowly to...a team better than anyone Jordan didn't lose to. Everywhere else he's either winning as much or more with as much or winning as much with significantly less.

Incidentally, Lebron dominates Jordan statistically when it comes to "impact on winning"...

-> scorches an inflated peak signal repeatedly if we use real-world samples, blooking like a larger outlier in terms of RAPM,
-> Looks much better in most of his down years than Mj does in 97/98 going by on/off
-> has 7 and 10 years score better than Jordan on his 2nd and 5th best regular season teams going by on+on/off
-> dominates in playoff on/off(we have data for Jordan's prime there)
-> looks like a bigger outlier in rapm(prime data for jordan there too) even on career-wide samples where he has a massive advantage in possessions played(whic typically leads to averages dropping)
-> advantaged in most frames using AUPM(jordan is advantaged if you just go with 3-year consecutive) despite it being partially derived from BPM
-> has a massive advantage in data-ball over several players who compare well to jordan with other approaches(Duncan, Shaq, KG, ect) over basically any-time frame

There's very little to suggest the two are similarly valuable, and frankly, beyond putting disproportionate emphasis on the names at the top of a roster, there's not much of an argument for Lebron having more or as much help when he beat not one, not two, but three opponents better than anyone Jordan's beat. Even "if" Jordan was more portable(and there's really not much suggesting he is), I'm not sure how much it matters when Lebron can win championships being better opponents with weaker help.

I also allude to this above, but Jordan being more portable at all is pretty dubious considering
-> Lebron has repeatedly been more or as valuable as Jordan in situations which ceiling raising theory would predict he'd be less valuable in(2006, 2015, 2020, 2023, ect)
-> Lebron has a massive advantage as a paint-protector, a skill which historically is the least vulnerable to "situation" in terms of general-winning or individual influence
-> Lebron is an excellent off-ball player if you look at things more holistically than "how well does Lebron do shooting off curls"
-> Lebron is one of very few players who can effectively operate as an on-court coach on both sides of the floor, a skill that does not require one to physically take away anything from one's teammates
-> Lebron, not Jordan has replicated his value/success in a variety of situations
-> Jordan, not Lebron is unproven without optimal fit and roster construction

All considered, if this is the framing...
Ultimately, the NBA is about winning titles,

Taking the guy who needs help to win and needs less help to win against better competition seems kind of obvious to me.

And off course there's also Bill Russell who won 6 rings with one core, 5 rings with a completely different core, has only lost when not healthy, and still found a way to get to the mountain top when his cast was at its weakest and his competition was at its strongest.

Even if you're going to go with "proof of concept" for Jordan over Lebron here, I don't really see how one justifies Jordan over Bill without some sort of cross-era weighting.

ShaqAttac wrote:Eni cookin, but ill try and do my best. I aint ever write this muuch but imma try to format proper like ppl tell me too.

I know we aint votin on em all, but imma list the 6 players who i think should get noms first

1 Russ, will say more down under
2 Mikan, will say more down under
3 Bron, Nukes every1 but russ n cap in "Impact", crazy longetvity, plays in way better league, apm goes craaazy
4 Cap, Crazzy longetvity, also better in "impact" for his peak than every1 but bron n russ from what im seein, was awesome before he even entereed nba
5. Timmy D, always on a good team, all-time carry job in 03, all-time leadeer who took paycuts to help antonio win, n honestly, was prob the best player of the 2000's, I thought shaq was 1 but i cant argue with da facts.
6. Dream, I know its crazy soundin, but I think he got a good arg here from what im seein. same rs impaact, n went nova in the pos. Eni n KD make really goood points so ill let em d up. basically tho his "impact' In rs is comp and he gets way better in the yoffs. He also carried meh help to b2b chips while MJ literallly only won with an uberduper superteam. Unless im missin sumthn MJ would be the only nom whose never won without a deathsquad.

This won't count to the ballot, but I do think it would be interesting to also see some unofficial nominee lists.

Honestly, your list is pretty similar to mine but I'd probably take off Mikan(nba-longetvity is pretty limited) and then have Jordan or Wilt at 6. Duncan, Hakeem, Jordan, and Wilt rankings are all subject to change/persuasion if anyone wants to give it a shot.

If anyone's interested I make a case of sorts for Hakeem here...
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=107218620#p107218620
(Regular season parity with Magic/Jordan)
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=107291730#p107291730
(Playoff-advantage, methodological discourse, ect)

I also made a case of sorts for Duncan here:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2261950&start=80

I don't see much of a pathway towards a GOAT-vote, but I think they have great arguments for 4 with Duncan being advantaged in longetvity/strong data-ball indicators and Hakeem being advantaged in length of prime and career-wide playoff elevation
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#31 » by OhayoKD » Sun Jul 2, 2023 2:26 am

Moonbeam wrote:For this project, I've developed some new metrics to help me make my list. I'm still working on the write-up for it, but in short, I've built some models for predicting the team seeds based on player performance, models for predicting playoff series won based on player performance, and a model that ties those together to give a sense of how a player's complete season (regular season and playoffs) translates to playoff success as measured by expected series wins and championship probability.

The main predictor variables I've included in the models from the player performance side are Win Share variants and the remaining minutes played per game by the team. I've developed a new Adjusted Win Shares metric that reallocates a team's offensive and defensive Win Shares based on the team's offensive and defensive performance relative to expectations, with those expectations being calculated on the basis of age curves. In this way, players with a pattern where teammates tend to underperform expectations will have their Adjusted Win Shares relatively reduced, and players with a pattern where teammates tend to overperform expectations will have their Adjusted Win Shares relatively improved. These models were built using data from 1984-present (since the 16-team playoff format) and use the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd most Win Shares/Adjusted Win Shares for a player so I can get a sense of a team's prospects with the player as the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd most impactful player on the team.

Could you go more into the methodology for these metrics? Given you list win-shares as a base and seem to have a consistent top 3 of Lebron, Wilt, and Jordan, I'm guessing the box-score factors heavily here? Am especially curious how you are ascertaining defensive value as box-heavy stuff tends to systematically misread that in a way which undersells(at least going by "Impact") most bigs and oversells most guards.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#32 » by eminence » Sun Jul 2, 2023 2:37 am

Moonbeam wrote:.


Could you provide a season by season measure for Wilt of your metric?
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#33 » by Clyde Frazier » Sun Jul 2, 2023 2:45 am

Tim Lehrbach wrote:Of course Lillard requests a trade on the same day this launches.


And twitter goes down amongst dozens of NBA moves made lol
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#34 » by Moonbeam » Sun Jul 2, 2023 2:51 am

OhayoKD wrote:
Moonbeam wrote:For this project, I've developed some new metrics to help me make my list. I'm still working on the write-up for it, but in short, I've built some models for predicting the team seeds based on player performance, models for predicting playoff series won based on player performance, and a model that ties those together to give a sense of how a player's complete season (regular season and playoffs) translates to playoff success as measured by expected series wins and championship probability.

The main predictor variables I've included in the models from the player performance side are Win Share variants and the remaining minutes played per game by the team. I've developed a new Adjusted Win Shares metric that reallocates a team's offensive and defensive Win Shares based on the team's offensive and defensive performance relative to expectations, with those expectations being calculated on the basis of age curves. In this way, players with a pattern where teammates tend to underperform expectations will have their Adjusted Win Shares relatively reduced, and players with a pattern where teammates tend to overperform expectations will have their Adjusted Win Shares relatively improved. These models were built using data from 1984-present (since the 16-team playoff format) and use the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd most Win Shares/Adjusted Win Shares for a player so I can get a sense of a team's prospects with the player as the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd most impactful player on the team.

Could you go more into the methodology for these metrics? Given you list win-shares as a base and seem to have a consistent top 3 of Lebron, Wilt, and Jordan, I'm guessing the box-score factors heavily here? Am especially curious how you are ascertaining defensive value as box-heavy stuff tends to systematically misread that in a way which undersells(at least going by "Impact") most bigs and oversells most guards.


I'm putting together a big document to demonstrate the methodology. I'll probably share it as a link to a Google Drive file, as it's a PDF with text, equations, and code. :lol:

The key thing is that the models I'm favoring are using Adjusted Win Shares, which are an attempt to mop up some of these inconsistencies you mention. The basic idea is that team level win shares are reliable, but the way they are distributed among players can be concerning. Stealing a bit from my doc in preparation, the correlation between relative O Rating and Offensive Win Shares is 0.995, and between relative D Rating and Defensive Win Shares is -0.998. This means that for teams, Win Shares are a reliable way to assign expected wins based on their relative Offensive and Defensive Ratings. As such, concerns about the validity of Win Shares should be more targeted to how the Win Share formulas divide a team's Offensive and Defensive Win Shares among its players than about how team Win Shares themselves are calculated.

As a simple example, let's consider the 2005 Phoenix Suns and the 1962 Philadelphia Warriors.

For the 2005 Suns, Nash's teammates were expected (using age curves) to produce 23.866 Offensive Win Shares, but they ended up producing 32.297 Offensive Win Shares instead. That's 135% of expectations. So maybe Nash deserves more credit than he was given with 9.657 Offensive Win Shares. But we also should consider the other players on the team. Using, for example, Amar'e Stoudemire as the reference point, Amar'e's teammates were expected to produce 26.383 Offensive Win Shares and ended up being awarded 30.693 Offensive Win Shares. That's still an overperformance (116%), but not as much as Nash. The adjustment I do ensures that these ratios of over- or underperformance are the same for all players on the team. So Nash improves from an official 9.657 Offensive Win Shares to 11.716 Adjusted Offensive Win Shares, while Amar'e slides from the official 11.261 Offensive Win Shares to 8.526 Adjusted Win Shares.

Now let's look at the 1962 Warriors. Wilt's teammates were expected to put up a paltry 8.103 Offensive Win Shares, but ended up being awarded only 6.243 Offensive Win Shares, good for 77% of expectations. In a similar manner after looking at teammate expectations for all other players on the team, Wilt's official 17.112 Offensive Win Shares (!) are adjusted to a still eye-popping 14.722 Adjusted Win Shares.

This process also works for Defensive Win Shares. For example, Hakeem in 1994 officially got 8.101 Defensive Win Shares, but this method adjusts it to 9.617 Adjusted Defensive Win Shares.

There are a lot of caveats to be made (and I'll include them in the document when it's ready), but it's the Adjusted Win Shares that I'll use mostly in my analysis. The models that use Adjusted Win Shares outperformed the ones using raw Win Shares by quite some distance (over 100 lower AIC/BIC, for those statistical geeks out there like me!), for predicting Team Seed at least.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#35 » by lessthanjake » Sun Jul 2, 2023 2:59 am

AEnigma wrote:
I think it is fair to say that LeBron’s teams never were even particularly close to the heights of dominance that Jordan’s teams reached. And, aside from the first Cavs stint, this isn’t for lack of playing on really talented teams. LeBron’s Heat, second-stint Cavs, and Lakers teams have been really talented. The Heat in particular were unbelievably talented—so talented that LeBron himself thought they’d just waltz to countless titles. Part of that not happening was Wade eventually breaking down, but they simply weren’t very dominant even before that. They only had one 60-win season together. Their SRS averaged 5.92 in those years. And they won two titles in four years, with multiple game 7’s in those two title-winning years. They were a great team, but they struggled, despite all the talent. Meanwhile, as explained above, Jordan’s Bulls were very dominant for a long stretch. They had multiple years where they really didn’t struggle.

And I simply don’t see this as being caused by the Bulls being more talented. Indeed, I don’t actually see those Bulls as being more talented than many of LeBron’s teams. It’s clear that they were a good team without Jordan—since they did well during his first retirement (though the 55 wins in 1994 obscures that the SRS wasn’t nearly as good). Pippen was great, of course, but LeBron has had one or two similarly good teammates. And then you’re looking at guys like Horace Grant (and later Rodman) and role players. The Bulls were a really good team, of course, and were well coached, but I don’t think one can fairly say that they’d look at the names of the supporting players on Jordan’s Bulls teams and the names of the supporting players on some of LeBron’s teams and fairly conclude that Jordan’s Bulls team would be substantially more dominant.

So the conclusion I draw from all this is that Jordan was a notably better ceiling raiser than LeBron. When they both were on really good teams, Jordan made his team into a historically dominant powerhouse, while LeBron’s teams were not dominant and still struggled a good deal. And I think this is actually not surprising, when we realize that LeBron’s style of play is so ball-dominant that it genuinely does make it harder for other great players to be maximized on a team with him. Jordan liked the ball too, but his style really was nowhere near as ball dominant—with a lot more getting shots within the rhythm of the offense (especially with the triangle, but even before that too).

This is an extremely common refrain and the type of thinking that is inevitable when we spend more times looking at name than at real production.

The 1994 Bulls played at a 4.7 SRS pace when healthy, but because we need to portray the Bulls as untalented, we instead need to ignore Pippen and Grant separately missing ten games for the first time in their career. There we need to look past the “55-wins”. And then the following year, when Grant is replaced with Ron Harper and they play at a 3.8 SRS pace before Jordan’s return, well, we look at the win totals painting them as a barely over .500 team. They play like more of 6.5 team with Jordan (3.8 —> 6.5 quite the feat of ceiling raising!), and when Rodman is added to that 6.5 core, Jordan is the one who receives all the credit for that lift.

That last point is a very common trend for Jordan’s teams. 2.74 SRS in 1990, then a massive spike up to 8.57 in 1991. What changed? Jordan played 160 fewer minutes. His TS ADD went down from 315 to 301. His VORP went up 0.2, his win shares went up 1.3, and his PIPM wins went up 1.4… Then the following year the Bulls are even better: 10.07 SRS, rarefied air. But Jordan? TS ADD down to 196. VORP down 1.6, win shares down 2.6, and PIPM wins up 0.5. But of course it is not a super team. 1993, they take a step back to 6.19 SRS. A 4 SRS fall out of nowhere! And contributing to that fall, Jordan’s TS ADD is now down to 124. His win shares are down 0.5, his PIPM wins are down 0.9, and his VORP… is up 1.

So if Jordan is not the one driving these massive swings, I wonder who else possibly could be. :wink:

We see elements of this in effect more clearly in 1998, where Pippen misses a large chunk of the season. With Pippen out, the Bulls play at a +6 pace. With Pippen returns, the Bulls play at a +9.5 pace, and this is where I urge readers to remember 1995.

This entire line of thought is another instance of classic Jordan double-speak where we praise Jordan because he lifts teams people claim are less talented teams… but we also call him a “ceiling raiser” because he supposedly fits so much better with the same talent! :lol:

The reality is that (until this past trade deadline) Lebron has never played with a roster that produced +4-SRS results without him. For all that talent, for all that talk about “overlap”, none of his teams show any signals of the sort (the 2013 Heat is the only roster conceivably in that realm). Is Lebron a “good” fit with players who derive much of their value from being a high volume scorer or primary ball-handler? No, not especially… but whenever this idea comes up, we ignore that Jordan’s teams were perfectly catered to his every skillset. :-?
70sFan wrote:Jordan played with perfectly optimized rosters throughout his career and I'm 100% sure he'd fit worse with Wade/Bosh or even Kyrie/Love than LeBron actually did.

I'm almost shocked how easily Jordan's portability is taken for granted to be honest. Jordan never played with other high level creators. He never had to change his game because of roster construction. I very much doubt anything would change the way he played.

You may argue that in most situations, Jordan wouldn't need to change his style to make it work. I can see that, although it's far from given. At the same time though, I don't think Jordan shooting 25 times per game next to another high volume perimeter scorer would be a good thing. I doubt Jordan would bring that much value (relative to other GOAT candidates) next to someone like Wade or Kobe. I don't even love his fit with someone like Curry.
AEnigma wrote:Fitting with Pippen is nothing like fitting with Wade. Jordan made an adjustment (or more accurately was advised to make an adjustment by Phil Jackson) to give Pippen more ballhandling primacy, and that is used as de facto proof of his offensive (reminder that defence scales too…) scalability next to players like Wade. … But Jordan’s dominant skill is not ballhandling, it is scoring. And he cared about that skill a lot.
Phil Jackson wrote:Basically I was planning to ask Michael, who had won his third scoring title in a row the previous season, to reduce the number of shots he took so that other members of the team could get more involved in the offense. I knew this would be a challenge for him: Michael was only the second player to win both a scoring title and the league MVP award in the same year, the first being Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1971.
I told [Michael] that I was planning to implement the triangle and, as a result, he probably wouldn’t be able to win another scoring title. “You’ve got to share the spotlight with your teammates,” I said, “because if you don’t, they won’t grow.”
"Okay, I guess I could average thirty-two points,” he said. “That’s eight points a quarter. Nobody else is going to do that.”
“Well, when you put it that way, maybe you can win the title,” I said. “But how about scoring a few more of those points at the end of the game?”
Looking back, Michael says that he liked this approach because it “allowed me to be the person I needed to be.” Sometimes I would tell him that he needed to be aggressive and set the tone for the team. Other times I’d say, “Why don’t you try to get Scottie going so that the defenders will go after him and then you can attack?”
In general, I tried to give Michael room to figure out how to integrate his personal ambitions with those of the team. “Phil knew that winning the scoring title was important to me,” Michael says now, “but I wanted to do it in a way that didn’t take away from what the team was doing.”

Does that sound like a guy who is legitimately worried about not deferring enough? No. Now, as I said, Wade was not Pippen. I do not think Jordan would have taken the same approach with Wade, although obviously we have no real way of knowing. But I do think Jordan was dramatically less likely to be worried about not stepping on the toes of this other elite scorer. Jordan supporters might chalk that up to superior mentality; “Jordan knew he was the best scorer and would rightly force Wade to adjust at the outset!” Whatever. But that is not really a point for his “scalability”.

So then we look at what is being sacrificed, and here we have a nice little sample of what Pippen looks like with no Jordan eating up the entire scoring load. And… he takes like one or two extra shots a game. Pippen was not really being asked to sacrifice anything by playing with Jordan — not in the way someone like Wade, who on his own was taking just as many shots as Jordan (albeit much less effectively). And for all those comments from Phil, what did Jordan sacrifice from 1988? Again, like a shot or two a game. The mentality may have changed as advised, but the total scoring load? Pretty much the same. As mentioned, he also sacrificed some general control of the offence to Pippen, and that was very successful, because Pippen was (or at least developed into) a better passer than Jordan, and passing was his best offensive skill. Contrast this with Wade, who is a worse scorer than both Jordan and Lebron, is a worse playmaker than Lebron, and has explicitly talked about not wanting to act as the point guard on offence… but who is an elite player because on any other team he would be one of the best scorers and playmakers in the game. Suddenly that question of who sacrifices what and how much becomes a lot murkier.

It is not original to say that in many ways Lebron is like taking Pippen and giving him some of Jordan’s scoring acumen. Lebron does not really care much about scoring titles (despite how many of his detractors refuse to admit that). He is an all-time scorer regardless, so it makes sense for him to score a lot, and he does have some ego about scoring (in before the “ten points in every game!” streak gets brought up), but that is not his primary game, and even though he has basically always been the best scorer on his teams, he is perfectly happy to share the scoring load, whether it be with Wade, Kyrie, or Davis.

Lebron likes playmaking in general. This is more traditionally his best skill… but there too he is not exactly unwilling to share — with Wade, with Kyrie, or with Westbrook. Westbrook, in sort of a similar situation as Pippen, really only has abstract value now as a passer, although without his scoring threat, and without any spacing ability, it is not exactly a high value offering. But to accommodate that, what does Lebron do? He tries to pull a Jordan. He relinquishes ballhandling, focuses more on scoring, for the first time in over a decade legitimately pushes for a scoring title… but the team’s defence is bad with Davis “suffering from hurt”, the roster overall is a mess, and a diminished Westbrook is still a pretty active negative who cannot be any actual analogue for even a younger Scottie Pippen. But is any of that a real consequence of some fundamental inability of Lebron to score next to a lead ballhandler?

Kyrie and Wade like ballhandling too. Neither have anything on Lebron’s playmaking or passing ability, and to some extent they both probably know that (questionable with Kyrie lol), but Lebron is happy enough to share. With Kyrie, this works well because Kyrie is an elite spacer. With Wade, this does not work as well, because Wade is a relatively poor spacer. But then we consider Jordan and Pippen again. Is Pippen a good spacer? Not really, and not to an extent I would put him beyond Wade. Well, alright, then is Jordan a better spacer and more capable of working past the spacing limitations of players like Wade and Westbrook and Pippen? There I would say the answer is maybe, and the reason why it is maybe is why era differences are important to this question (as has been discussed).

Jordan was a pretty strong spacer in his era. 3s were not a focus and illegal defence rules limited the extent to which an individual top scorer could be hounded compared to what happened once those rules were dropped… but nevertheless, he is one of the best ever midrange scorers, and he has a degree of raw scoring gravity that really only Curry has competed with as a perimetre player. Lebron, on the other hand, has no leniency from illegal defence. Lebron takes threes, and is enough of a threat to make them that he does draw attention out there, while always having a pretty strong degree of raw scoring gravity of his own. In Jordan’s era, I definitely give the advantage as a spacer to Jordan. In a more modern era? Well, obviously some fans like to argue Jordan would become a strong three-point shooter, but if we take his skills at face value, and his own commentary about feeling that reliance on threes is bad for his own mentality, it seems a lot more debatable whether at that point he actually fits all that much better as a spacer with Pippen or Westbrook or Wade.

So we know Lebron is willing to relinquish ballhandling, as Jordan did. We know he is willing to relinquish scoring primacy, as Jordan did not do and expressly did not want to do but hypothetically could have done if given the opportunity. We know era disparities penalise spacing in different ways, to an extent that it is not clear whether in Lebron’s era Jordan would fare better playing with non-spacing (/non-defending) teammates than Lebron did. We know that Pippen did not particularly eat into Jordan’s scoring and that Jordan’s presence barely affected Pippen’s scoring load. What exactly does all that tell us about how much better Jordan fits with random teammates than Lebron does?

I would say exceedingly little. What I am comfortable saying is that Jordan fits better on offence in his own era with non-spacers than Lebron would — and in that sense, relative to their own respective eras too. I am comfortable saying Jordan fits better with non-scoring ballhandlers than Lebron would, pretty much regardless of era, in the specific sense that Lebron loses more of his innate value from that situation than Jordan does. But on the other side, I think Lebron fits better with spacers and/or off-ball players than Jordan does, by virtue of being better able to take advantage of their skillsets with his passing. I think Lebron fits better with poor defenders than Jordan does. I think Lebron also fits better with Kyrie-type playmakers than Jordan does — scorers who space and like to have some offensive control but are overtaxed as a team’s first choice to perform either skill. And I think it is unclear which of the two fits better on offence in the modern era with that particular breed of player who does not space well yet is best maximised as an on-ball scorer… such as Dwyane Wade.

Mind you, this analysis has been mostly about duos. Think back to that comment about wanting to win the scoring titles. Is that easier with Horace Grant and/or Dennis Rodman, or with Chris Bosh and/or Kevin Love? We talk all about how these third stars oh so tragically were placed into a box next to Lebron. Okay, what does Chris Bosh look like next to Wade and Jordan? Is he suddenly freed up? Is a higher volume scorer asking Bosh to score more too? Is a weaker defender letting Bosh lower is defensive load? Does the team no longer want him to space the floor? Kevin Love has more of a passing game, so he is more interesting (not that either Blatt or Lue seemed to figure out how to make that work well even with Kyrie), but there too it is hard to say his scoring volume would increase next to Jordan or that he would struggle less on defence or that his spacing would be less important.

Jordan pretty much always got to play his way. He was never forced into a situation where he seriously had to consider relinquishing his league high scoring load (his principle and most personally valued skill). He was almost never asked to take a role that did not suit him. Because we know that Lebron struggled a little bit in those situations that Jordan never faced, we conclude that Jordan is an easier fit with more players? Nonsense. This guy is not Steph — not as a spacer (obviously), nor as someone who seems at all willing to sacrifice scoring volume. And he is also not Kobe or Iverson or Carmelo, in the sense that it almost always should be best practice for him to be that primary scorer… but then it similarly has almost always been best practice for Lebron to be both the primary scorer and creator, and despite his clear willingness to compromise on either, that is being held against him, with zero evidence of whether Jordan could maintain his “impact” next to players who would force him to adapt his game or otherwise see their own games disrupted next to him. When Lebron gets strong fit teams that allow him to balance his skills, they are dismissed because he was not as good on bad fitting teams. But when Jordan wins six titles on teams that allow him to maximise his scoring above any other responsibilities? Well, that is just a good example of how scalable he is!

I have said it before, but we are essentially rewarding Jordan for having a less dynamic skillset: “well, both of them probably see diminishing returns as scorers next to other high volume scorers by virtue of both being some of the highest volume scorers ever, but Lebron’s superior passing sees more diminishing returns next to high volume creators, so that means Jordan fits better with more players!” Like, fine, for those of you who want to give Jordan an easy 38% three-point shot on good volume, this is not going to matter for you as much. Just like there are those of you who will never move past six titles, or how scoring is the number one skill, or what a failure 2011 was, or how Jordan was actually a god-tier defender, or how Lebron is a coward for not sticking with the Cavaliers from the start. But for those of you looking at the type of spacers they actually are and are ostensibly trying to be objective and properly critical of the context in which each played? You should be asking a lot more.

More briefly: I am not a fan of the demonstrable groupthink that elite scalability is when a team is built around a single volume scorer, comprised of players who are not looking to be volume scorers themselves (Pippen took an extra two shots a game without Jordan in 1994 and Grant took an extra shot and a half). There is only one ball, and on the Bulls, that ball was relentlessly funnelled straight to Jordan. It is not especially distinct from throwing Lebron onto a roster with George Hill and Mikal Bridges and Shane Battier and Rasheed Wallace, and then declaring him an all-time scaleable force for not taking more away from their playstyles. It is an inconsistent standard built around a hypothetical never evidenced.


I guess I’ll respond since you’re actually being sort of civil here, and I’m hoping we can keep it friendly. I’m not sure I see the point with saying the Bulls were at about a +6.5 SRS pace in the games after Jordan came back in 1995 or the games Pippen missed in the 1997-1998 season. I guess the point is to suggest that Rodman and Pippen were the element that made those teams super elite?

But there’s a few issues with that line of argument:

1. Obviously Pippen mattered a lot. Obviously, after they lost Grant, getting Rodman was a big deal. No one would ever suggest that those weren’t really good and really important players. And that’s inherent to someone who was a ceiling raiser—you can’t be a ceiling raiser if your team isn’t really good, and your team wouldn’t be really good if it is missing really good players! Jordan isn’t going to turn a relatively mediocre-talent-level or injured team into a 10 SRS team. No one is. But I have real doubts that LeBron could turn any team into a 10 SRS team. He certainly never showed he could, despite being on very talented teams. Jordan showed he could do it, and did it a bunch of times, and IMO that matters a lot.

2. You talk about Jordan’s teams playing at a 6.5 SRS and 6.0 SRS pace without Rodman/Pippen as if that’s not very good. But that’s actually roughly equivalent, if not better, than the Heat’s SRS in LeBron’s years there. It’s roughly the same as the Lakers’ SRS in 2019-2020. And it’s higher than the Cavs’ SRS in any of the second-stint years. It’s really not an indictment on Jordan for the Bulls to have played as well or better without Pippen or without Rodman/Grant than LeBron’s most talented teams played! That’s actually suggestive of strong floor-raising from Jordan—especially the no-Pippen time period, which was both longer than the 1995 period (and therefore a much more meaningful sample size) and missing a better player (such that the team actually wasn’t really good at that point).

3. Not sure what the point is about Jordan’s stats year to year. Stats always fluctuate some year to year, and Jordan played great in all the relevant years. I guess your point is that he played great before they were dominant and he played great but not necessarily any better while they were dominant, so clearly he wasn’t the reason they were dominant? To some extent there’s truth to that, in that obviously the team had to improve around him (in particular, Pippen and Grant had to develop) before they could become dominant. But the fact that the team improved around him does not mean he wasn’t an enormous ceiling raiser. It just means that it took some time for the team around him to become really good such that they were even eligible to be ceiling raised to that hyper-dominant level. Jordan was obviously the biggest factor that made them that dominant, even if he was not the last piece of the puzzle to be put into place. And, ultimately IMO, LeBron had teams with the talent level to be eligible to be ceiling raised to a hyper-dominant level, but LeBron was not the type of player to be able to do that, since his style is more of a floor-raiser style.

4. As for LeBron not playing on teams that produce 4+ SRS without him, it’s really just comparing apples and oranges. LeBron didn’t play on teams that lost him for an entire year in the team’s heyday. How a team plays in a few games that a star player is out is really not the same as how a team plays in an entire season that player is retired. It’s much harder for a team to play well in occasional games its star player misses, because the team is otherwise built around that star in terms of how they play together. So when that star misses games, the team is a bit like a fish out of water. And that’s exacerbated when you have a ball-dominant player like LeBron—for whom the team’s systems were built around to a huge degree. And again, for reference, the KD Warriors only won 51% of their games that Steph missed. Do we honestly think that team would’ve been only a .500 team if they had a whole season they were playing without Steph? Almost certainly not. It’s just a completely different thing and not remotely comparable. As is any assessment of how LeBron’s teams did after he left, when he’d specifically leave teams when he saw their cycle as a really good team ending. It’d be like if we saw what the Bulls would’ve done in 1999 without Jordan—very likely wouldn’t have been a +4 SRS team! I think we can use our common sense and look at the talent on some of LeBron’s teams and see that they were clearly really good teams. He just didn’t create really dominant teams from them. And it’s not rocket science why that’d be—ball-dominance doesn’t scale up all that well as you add more talent to a team.

5. As for Jordan having a uniquely fit team around him, I’m not really sure I see it. Was it a good fit? Well, in a sense the team obviously fit well because they were extremely dominant. But the 1990’s Bulls were really two different teams, with the only common denominators being Jordan and Pippen. So the only argument that Jordan had some uniquely great fit team would basically *have* to be about Pippen. And, to begin with, is a team uniquely fit around a guy just because of one teammate? I’m not so sure. Moreover, it’s hard to really see how Pippen is some uniquely incredible fit with Jordan. He was a good fit in the sense that he could get a lot of value on the defensive end and could be trusted to playmake on the break and while Jordan was off the ball. But that’s pretty basic stuff. It seems fairly obvious to me that Jordan could’ve fit well (and perhaps even better) with a great center—after all, Kobe did so, and their styles of play were very similar (intentionally so from Kobe). Would a ball-dominant perimeter scorer have been the best fit alongside Jordan? No, I don’t think so. But I think it would’ve been a better fit than it was with LeBron, because Jordan genuinely didn’t need the ball nearly as much. He played off-ball a lot. Indeed, that’s part of what made Pippen a good fit—he was a good playmaker on the ball when Jordan was off the ball. In any event, this is all just in the land of speculation. The bottom line is that LeBron played on several really talented teams and never had a team reach the level of dominance that Jordan’s team reached a bunch. If someone wants to say that that’s only because Pippen was just such a uniquely great fit with Jordan, then I guess that’s fine, but I don’t see it.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#36 » by Moonbeam » Sun Jul 2, 2023 3:00 am

eminence wrote:
Moonbeam wrote:.


Could you provide a season by season measure for Wilt of your metric?


I suspect these predictions are at least partly the result of extrapolation, but I'll post them, sure!

Code: Select all

Season  #1 Seed  Top 3 Seed   ESW   EChamp
1960     0.736     0.948     2.884   0.423
1961     0.712     0.942     2.886   0.427
1962     0.946     0.991     3.225   0.548
1963     0.833     0.970     2.816   0.383
1964     0.996     0.999     3.534   0.706
1965     0.146     0.529     1.677   0.152
1966     0.834     0.971     2.646   0.321
1967     0.945     0.991     3.243   0.557
1968     0.839     0.972     2.651   0.322
1969     0.533     0.883     2.282   0.241
1970     0.002     0.011     0.057   0.002
1971     0.159     0.555     0.956   0.042
1972     0.701     0.939     2.614   0.325
1973     0.605     0.910     2.279   0.233


And the other GOAT candidates according to this:

Kareem:

Code: Select all

Season  #1 Seed  Top 3 Seed   ESW   EChamp
1970     0.785     0.960     3.036   0.481
1971     0.936     0.990     3.097   0.488
1972     0.981     0.997     2.588   0.285
1973     0.865     0.977     1.980   0.141
1974     0.915     0.986     3.374   0.628
1975     0.190     0.606     1.498   0.109
1976     0.445     0.841     2.092   0.201
1977     0.644     0.922     3.055   0.507
1978     0.080     0.364     0.858   0.042
1979     0.326     0.761     2.045   0.204
1980     0.383     0.803     2.084   0.206
1981     0.214     0.641     1.491   0.105
1982     0.083     0.373     0.756   0.032
1983     0.060     0.298     0.746   0.034
1984     0.023     0.133     0.426   0.017
1985     0.030     0.167     0.447   0.017
1986     0.016     0.094     0.266   0.009
1987     0.008     0.049     0.145   0.004
1988     0.003     0.018     0.035   0.001
1989     0.001     0.009     0.015   0.000


MJ:

Code: Select all

Season  #1 Seed  Top 3 Seed   ESW   EChamp
1985     0.089     0.390     1.123   0.071
1986     0.002     0.010     0.044   0.001
1987     0.605     0.910     2.108   0.189
1988     0.803     0.964     2.741   0.359
1989     0.489     0.863     2.501   0.314
1990     0.799     0.963     2.979   0.454
1991     0.948     0.992     3.340   0.606
1992     0.974     0.996     2.829   0.371
1993     0.779     0.959     2.840   0.400
1995     0.003     0.023     0.095   0.003
1996     0.957     0.993     3.223   0.545
1997     0.921     0.987     2.894   0.403
1998     0.718     0.944     2.760   0.376
2002     0.003     0.020     0.054   0.001
2003     0.002     0.010     0.026   0.001


LeBron:

Code: Select all

Season  #1 Seed  Top 3 Seed   ESW   EChamp
2004     0.006     0.039     0.119   0.003
2005     0.113     0.456     1.134   0.068
2006     0.204     0.628     1.342   0.083
2007     0.275     0.714     1.867   0.169
2008     0.114     0.459     1.236   0.081
2009     0.928     0.988     3.536   0.715
2010     0.793     0.962     2.747   0.362
2011     0.624     0.916     2.386   0.261
2012     0.681     0.934     2.907   0.439
2013     0.885     0.981     2.956   0.434
2014     0.721     0.944     2.637   0.331
2015     0.266     0.704     1.672   0.130
2016     0.547     0.888     2.557   0.325
2017     0.282     0.721     2.171   0.244
2018     0.346     0.777     2.176   0.235
2019     0.008     0.053     0.154   0.004
2020     0.091     0.397     1.216   0.083
2021     0.006     0.037     0.094   0.002
2022     0.007     0.045     0.127   0.004
2023     0.002     0.013     0.054   0.002
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#37 » by OhayoKD » Sun Jul 2, 2023 3:27 am

Moonbeam wrote:
eminence wrote:
Moonbeam wrote:.


Could you provide a season by season measure for Wilt of your metric?


I suspect these predictions are at least partly the result of extrapolation, but I'll post them, sure!

Code: Select all

Season  #1 Seed  Top 3 Seed   ESW   EChamp
1960     0.736     0.948     2.884   0.423
1961     0.712     0.942     2.886   0.427
1962     0.946     0.991     3.225   0.548
1963     0.833     0.970     2.816   0.383
1964     0.996     0.999     3.534   0.706
1965     0.146     0.529     1.677   0.152
1966     0.834     0.971     2.646   0.321
1967     0.945     0.991     3.243   0.557
1968     0.839     0.972     2.651   0.322
1969     0.533     0.883     2.282   0.241
1970     0.002     0.011     0.057   0.002
1971     0.159     0.555     0.956   0.042
1972     0.701     0.939     2.614   0.325
1973     0.605     0.910     2.279   0.233


And the other GOAT candidates according to this:

Kareem:

Code: Select all

Season  #1 Seed  Top 3 Seed   ESW   EChamp
1970     0.200     0.580     1.954   0.217
1971     0.950     0.990     3.017   0.453
1972     0.989     0.998     2.372   0.223
1973     0.938     0.988     1.820   0.111
1974     0.728     0.937     3.161   0.552
1975     0.136     0.465     1.188   0.078
1976     0.559     0.875     2.168   0.215
1977     0.653     0.912     3.072   0.522
1978     0.096     0.369     0.781   0.037
1979     0.249     0.647     1.790   0.167
1980     0.291     0.694     1.854   0.174
1981     0.240     0.636     1.394   0.094
1982     0.048     0.220     0.469   0.018
1983     0.053     0.235     0.604   0.027
1984     0.020     0.100     0.341   0.014
1985     0.060     0.259     0.614   0.027
1986     0.050     0.226     0.506   0.020
1987     0.010     0.052     0.146   0.005
1988     0.003     0.018     0.031   0.001
1989     0.001     0.005     0.008   0.000


MJ:

Code: Select all

Season  #1 Seed  Top 3 Seed   ESW   EChamp
1985     0.209     0.594     1.466   0.110
1986     0.000     0.003     0.011   0.000
1987     0.542     0.867     1.913   0.157
1988     0.914     0.983     2.859   0.393
1989     0.837     0.966     2.955   0.444
1990     0.765     0.947     2.935   0.446
1991     0.865     0.973     3.245   0.572
1992     0.633     0.905     2.352   0.257
1993     0.580     0.884     2.565   0.332
1995     0.001     0.004     0.015   0.000
1996     0.874     0.975     3.129   0.515
1997     0.701     0.928     2.584   0.322
1998     0.414     0.796     2.295   0.270
2002     0.001     0.006     0.013   0.000
2003     0.005     0.029     0.063   0.002


LeBron:

Code: Select all

Season  #1 Seed  Top 3 Seed   ESW   EChamp
2004     0.003     0.016     0.033   0.001
2005     0.240     0.636     1.441   0.101
2006     0.462     0.826     1.698   0.122
2007     0.205     0.588     1.540   0.124
2008     0.343     0.743     1.745   0.143
2009     0.870     0.974     3.536   0.725
2010     0.726     0.936     2.622   0.331
2011     0.378     0.771     1.905   0.173
2012     0.673     0.919     2.834   0.419
2013     0.792     0.955     2.806   0.390
2014     0.416     0.798     2.184   0.238
2015     0.041     0.191     0.557   0.026
2016     0.183     0.553     1.658   0.152
2017     0.131     0.454     1.519   0.136
2018     0.206     0.589     1.823   0.183
2019     0.009     0.049     0.147   0.005
2020     0.070     0.292     0.990   0.066
2021     0.006     0.032     0.074   0.002
2022     0.010     0.053     0.157   0.005
2023     0.004     0.021     0.080   0.003

I guess a decent test for this approach would be seeing how Russell ranks comparatively.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#38 » by Moonbeam » Sun Jul 2, 2023 3:32 am

Whoops: I posted the versions using raw Win Shares and not adjusted ones for Kareem, MJ, and LeBron. Will update shortly.

EDIT: I've fixed them now.

By the way, LeBron's 2009 season has the highest estimated championship probability under this model of any player season, at 0.715.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#39 » by eminence » Sun Jul 2, 2023 3:42 am

I'll wait for the updated versions to say too much, and it certainly sounds like it has team-wide applications, but on an individual evaluation level I'm wary of a stat that has such extreme value swings from season to season. EChamp - which I read as expected championships - being approximately 11x higher for '09 LeBron than for '20 LeBron (as an example) is not an evaluation that works with my current understanding of basketball talent/impact distributions and their effects on championship odds.
I bought a boat.
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Re: RealGM 2023 Top 100 Project - #1 (Deadline: July 3rd 11:59 PM Pacific) 

Post#40 » by ShaqAttac » Sun Jul 2, 2023 3:51 am

lessthanjake wrote:
AEnigma wrote:
never evidenced.


I guess I’ll respond since you’re actually being sort of civil here, and I’m hoping we can keep it friendly. I’m not sure I see the point with saying the Bulls were at about a +6.5 SRS pace in the games after Jordan came back in 1995 or the games Pippen missed in the 1997-1998 season. I guess the point is to suggest that Rodman and Pippen were the element that made those teams super elite?

But there’s a few issues with that line of argument:

1. Obviously Pippen mattered a lot. Obviously, after they lost Grant, getting Rodman was a big deal. No one would ever suggest that those weren’t really good and really important players. And that’s inherent to someone who was a ceiling raiser—you can’t be a ceiling raiser if your team isn’t really good, and your team wouldn’t be really good if it is missing really good players! Jordan isn’t going to turn a relatively mediocre-talent-level or injured team into a 10 SRS team. No one is. But I have real doubts that LeBron could turn any team into a 10 SRS team. .

Uhhh. didnt the cavs hit 10 in bron's 1st stint? they sucked when he left. also i didnt bron hit 10 in the 15 yoffs without kyrie n love? u also say "bron team very goood" but they were bad withoout and the bulls were very good without. this seems p desperate tbh

alsooo

thbig-three starting, Miami posted a MOV of 13.5, going 8-1 despite bosh and wade entering and leaving the lineup and Dwayne literally getting his knees operated in the middle of playoff games. Moreover they crushed an OKC side that, per San's PSRS(which gives 3/4 weight to playoff performance), looks better than any team Jordan has beat at any round of the playoffs. For that matter, all 8 of Lebron's first final opponents from 2011 to 2018 score higher than any team Jordan's Bulls vanquished including 3 teams, he's beaten with significantly worse support such as the 13 Spurs who look as good or better, using psrs or regular season srs, than the 90 Pistons, a team peak Jordan lost to despite having very good help.

doesnt that debunk mj bein a better ceilin lifter

how can mj be better at liftin cielings or winnin chips when brons beatin better teams with less helps?

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