OhayoKD wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:ftr, I'm not super-in-love with ultra-long RAPM samples.
I think working in 3 or 5 year chunks, and in general putting more focus on the ceiling we see from a guy tells us how good he was, though of course that doesn't factor in all context either.
Edited the post with that in mind fwiw. There's also 5-year data from ahmed in a post above.
One thing I think is pretty funny is the idea that Nash disappointed +/- in the playoffs. I'm having trouble finding my initial study on this, but when I looked at a bunch of stars and compared their playoff Team Wins to their playoff OnWins (positive +/- in the game), Nash stood out above anyone else I saw.
A quick bkref query shows Nash:
69 OnWins
57 team wins
That's a +12 edge.
While I understand this is a very coarse metric and that someone's impact can still disappoint relative to the regular season even while coming off well with the metric, just for perspective here, if I do the same thing in the regular season:
748 OnWins
764 team wins
Down 16 instead of up 12.
If that seems bizarre to you given that Nash is known for his regular season impact, just know that this is the norm. Stars on great teams often have teams capable of outscoring the opponents on the bench. So this data, while unexpected to most, is actually pretty normal from my analysis.
The spike in the playoffs though, while not utterly unique, is a definite stand out.
What does it say about a guy when is RAPM says he disappoints some in the playoffs, but a study like this shows him as a positive outlier? At the very least I'd say, it means we shouldn't run too far too fast with the data.
Could you refresh me on what "on-wins" is again?
Just something I was tracking a while back that I felt needed a succinct name.
So, an OnWin is a game where your team outscored the opponent when you were on the floor, aka, a positive +/- game.
The idea behind this is that it's not actually a player's goal to help his team win every game by as many points as possible, but just to outscore the other team. So why not make a simple threshold metrics that can be juxtaposed with actual team wins?
Actually just found the spreadsheet I was thinking of. If there's enough interest I can upload as a Google sheet.
To just give some barebones:
* I went through 100 of the guys from the +/- era and compered there team Wins to OnWins for both the regular seasons and the playoffs through their career.
* If we look at OnWin+, my short name for how many more OnWins than Wins, one of the unexpected things is that most of these great players break negative.
* When I tally this up over career, RS & PS combined, there are two players way out in front: Kevin Garnett & Dirk Nowitzki, which isn't necessarily a surprise to anyone who knows their +/- reputations, but other guys are unexpected.
Here's where the Top 10 stood when I tallied these - which I think was last off-season:
1. Kevin Garnett 37
2. Dirk Nowitzki 36
3. Thaddeus Young 20
(tie) Antawn Jamison 20
5. Kyle Lowry 18
6. Vince Carter 17
7. Steph Curry 16
8. Mike Conley 11
9. Rudy Gay 10
(tie) Lou Williams 10
And when I do it only for the playoffs:
1. Steve Nash 12
2. Jason Kidd 10
3. Chauncey Billups 9
4. Manu Ginobili 8
5. Kevin Garnett 7
(tie) James Harden 7
(tie) JJ Redick 7
(tie) Lou Williams 7
9. Paul George 6
(tie) Kyle Korver 6
I'll note that I also have a ratio stat comparing OnWin/Win, which I labeled OnWin/. I did this because it was a simple way to normalize for how much you played. When you do this, it's noteworthy in the way the top guys stand out in the playoffs.
In the regular season, Garnett had an OnWin/ of 1.043 while Nowitzki's stood at 1.037.
In the playoffs? Nash has a monster OnWin/ of 1.211. After that there's a huge drop off to Kidd at #2 with 1.127, but note how much bigger that is than 1.043. Everybody in the top 10 here has a PS OnWin/ bigger than than Garnett's RS OnWin/...which of course includes Garnett himself.
Now, big caveat: This was a hand-made list. I make no claims that I've identified the ultimate leaderboard here. It would make sense for me to scrape the necessary data, and maybe at some point I or someone else will, but this is what I have right now.