What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT?

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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#681 » by TheGOATRises007 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 7:36 am

Chanel Bomber wrote:It would be interesting to see how RAPTOR and RAPM measure peak MJ’s on-court impact but I don’t think those metrics go that far back (on the phone now).

All those other isolated stats fail to capture the +/- (let alone adjusted +/-) data that in my opinion is a necessary ingredient to having a fully informed discussion.

Also the conversation on TS% needs to use league-adjusted TS as league average in efficiency rose significantly since the 1990s. Using raw TS% as a point of comparison is misguided.


https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/lebron-or-mj-raptor-picks-the-best-nba-players-of-the-past-40-years/

Raptor actually grades Jordan over LeBron with a sizable gap for a 7 year stretch.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#682 » by TheGOATRises007 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 7:46 am

Joao Saraiva wrote:For me the biggest argument of them all is Jordan's lack of black marks.

I literally find no series he collapsed. There is no MJ vs Dallas in 11. There is no MJ vs Pistons in 04.

Sure he had bad games, or subpar games. But his consistency is off the charts.

I don't have him as the GOAT, but I think the strongest argument he has starts here.


The rebuttal to that(as I often see) is that he 'quit' twice in his prime, but I don't consider retiring and quitting like-for-like.

If people want to go to that literal route though, others can say LeBron quit on his teams 3 times(2010, 2014 and 2018).

And you can continue throwing rebuttals back and forth constantly along these lines.

But I find both arguments silly and lacking nuance.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#683 » by TheGOATRises007 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 7:47 am

Bergmaniac wrote:As someone who is neutral in the whole GOAT debate (and mostly bored by it) the Jordan fans has always been way worse than the LeBron fans on this board when it comes to being rude and dismissive of the opinions they disagree with. So many of them act like they are personally offended when someone dares to claim someone else is their GOAT and go on and on how it's impossible for anyone reasonable to hold such an opinion.


On the GB board, I agree with you. I disagree regarding the PC board.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#684 » by TheGOATRises007 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 7:50 am

lessthanjake wrote:Lol, just read through the last few pages of this thread, and was surprised to find that my own posts in the PC board and the responses to them were discussed a bunch in this thread. My two cents is somewhere in the middle to be honest: I do actually think that there’s a lot of hostility on the PC board to anything that is perceived as pro-Jordan or anti-LeBron. I think I can reasonably say that I myself experienced quite a bit of hostility—including a boatload of sarcastic and mocking remarks—while arguing in favor of Jordan (though I won’t claim to be a delicate flower that doesn’t punch back). And those mocking remarks did start essentially immediately after I posted in the #1 thread saying I was voting for Jordan. Meanwhile, the number of voters in the project is small enough that the results aren’t really meaningful except to record what a very very small group of people think. That said, there’s also people posting a lot of interesting info in those threads and I do think I’ve learned a fair bit and been alerted to data/sources I was not previously aware of, so I think the exercise has value even if the results aren’t very meaningful and there’s a contingent that does make it unpleasant to argue views that they disagree with.

_________________

To answer the actual point of this thread:

I think the answer is that it’s not possible for there to be a super strong “data-driven argument” for Michael Jordan, if you define “data-driven” to just be about impact data, because the data that exists from his era is much more limited. I don’t think there can be an airtight “data-driven argument” regarding impact data in the era before play by play data.

That said, I do think that the argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT is supported by the limited data we have. Specifically, Jordan comes off quite well in RAPM data that exists for his career:

- Squared’s RAPM data includes RAPM for snippets of the 1984-1985, 1987-1988, 1990-1991, and 1995-1996 seasons. Jordan is #1 in all those seasons except for 1984-1985 (which was his rookie season, and he’s 6th, and 4th amongst star players). And in those three years that Jordan is #1, no one is all that close. Example: https://squared2020.com/2021/09/11/1990-1991-nba-rapm/

- GitHub RAPM data exists for Jordan’s last two seasons for the Bulls, using actual play-by-play data. It has Jordan 2nd in RAPM in the regular season and 2nd in RAPM in the playoffs in 1996-1997, and he’s 1st amongst actual star players in both. Meanwhile, it has Jordan as 11th in RAPM in the regular season (and more like 6th amongst stars) and 1st in RAPM in the playoffs in 1997-1998. https://basketball-analytics.gitlab.io/rapm-data/

- I just saw someone in this thread posted another source of 1997-1998 RAPM data, which has Jordan at #1 in RAPM that season, by a fairly significant margin: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1R_VgaKr980LMmReroItR94hzhuexf9wxM4l3cIw0QmY/edit#gid=0

- Jordan was also #1 in RPM in 1996-1997 and #5 in 1997-1998, though that is a stat with a box-score component on top of the impact component, so it’s not a pure impact measure.

- JE derived a RAPM estimate for the entire 1990s, by using quarter-by-quarter box scores and minutes data. That estimate has Jordan as #1 in RAPM in the decade, and ahead by about 30% over the next highest person who actually had a lot of playtime in the decade.

The overall picture is that, in the limited RAPM data we have, Jordan actually looks incredibly good. It’s just single-seasons, single-playoffs, snippets of seasons, and a RAPM estimate, but everything we have has Jordan ranked really highly. Indeed, most RAPM data we have literally has Jordan #1 in the NBA. And, while it’s limited data, we could reasonably make a pretty strong inference that Jordan would probably look extremely good in RAPM if we had the full sample of data. After all, it is very unlikely that someone would look so consistently great in really noisy small samples if they weren’t way above everyone in larger samples. Indeed, even if you look at someone like LeBron in this era, he simply wouldn’t be #1 most of the time in smaller samples like this. So, if anything, the RAPM data probably allows for an inference that Jordan was more dominant than LeBron in RAPM in his era. But that’s just an inference, and not something we can have a super high degree of confidence in, given the inherent lack of full data.*

So, if we can’t have a super high degree of confidence in a RAPM-based argument because of lack of data, then the additional “data” we’d have to look at would have to be box-score-based data. And, of course, Jordan fares extremely well there. He’s #1 all time in regular season PER, #1 all time in regular season win shares per 48 minutes, #1 all time in playoff win shares per 48 minutes, #1 all time in playoff BPM, and is #2 all time in both regular season BPM and playoff PER behind only Jokic. And then we also have the fact that Jordan had the highest Game Score (basically PER) in every playoff series he ever played, except barely being behind in two (and one was because they blew the other team out so much that he didn’t even play all that many minutes but was #1 in the series in per-minute Game Score; and the other was being barely behind Shawn Kemp in the 1996 Finals that Jordan won Finals MVP in). This is actually really remarkable—a consistency of playoff box-score dominance that is just completely unrivaled.

So the data-driven case is basically that he’s dominant in box-score stats in regular season and playoffs, and the limited impact data we have also supports the case.

____________________

* There’s also various With-Or-Without-You measures—some that are more raw WOWY, while others regress for individual player impact across all the various lineups that existed. These measures are all a bit flawed and aren’t something that most would use much for present-day players when we have better measures. In any event, in the interest of completeness, in the various regressed measures, Jordan looks really good all-time (ranked #4 all time based on an average of the various measures). He’s not #1 in these, so in a sense it doesn’t support a GOAT case, but he is above all the other main GOAT candidates, so in that sense it does support his case. Jordan is a lot lower in raw WOWY (32nd in prime WOWY), so that’s one data point that doesn’t support his case—basically the only one.


Just responding to this, because I actually enjoyed reading your posts dealing with constant rebuttals from a lot of posters.

It was good discourse from all parties.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#685 » by Chanel Bomber » Thu Jul 13, 2023 8:23 am

TheGOATRises007 wrote:
Chanel Bomber wrote:It would be interesting to see how RAPTOR and RAPM measure peak MJ’s on-court impact but I don’t think those metrics go that far back (on the phone now).

All those other isolated stats fail to capture the +/- (let alone adjusted +/-) data that in my opinion is a necessary ingredient to having a fully informed discussion.

Also the conversation on TS% needs to use league-adjusted TS as league average in efficiency rose significantly since the 1990s. Using raw TS% as a point of comparison is misguided.


https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/lebron-or-mj-raptor-picks-the-best-nba-players-of-the-past-40-years/

Raptor actually grades Jordan over LeBron with a sizable gap for a 7 year stretch.

Thanks, that’s useful info. Doesn’t surprise me, since I rank MJ (fairly comfortably) over Bron.

Bron’s peak RAPTOR never reached peak Curry or peak Jokic either if I’m not mistaken, which I think partly explains why two (arguably three if you count the 2012 ECF) of his championships were so, so, so close.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#686 » by twyzted » Thu Jul 13, 2023 9:45 am

OhayoKD wrote:
twyzted wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Listing ws/48, bpm, and per is bitterness? What does that make you?


No he thought those “useless” stats were my favorite.
It doesnt really make me anything tbh…
Should it?

You do post them a fair bit. Would be nice if you could remember to adjust for opponent(2012 spurs, cough)


I would also be mad if i paid a guy to track data for him, then getting torched by the “idiots” on gb.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#687 » by iggymcfrack » Thu Jul 13, 2023 1:32 pm

TheGOATRises007 wrote:
Chanel Bomber wrote:It would be interesting to see how RAPTOR and RAPM measure peak MJ’s on-court impact but I don’t think those metrics go that far back (on the phone now).

All those other isolated stats fail to capture the +/- (let alone adjusted +/-) data that in my opinion is a necessary ingredient to having a fully informed discussion.

Also the conversation on TS% needs to use league-adjusted TS as league average in efficiency rose significantly since the 1990s. Using raw TS% as a point of comparison is misguided.


https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/lebron-or-mj-raptor-picks-the-best-nba-players-of-the-past-40-years/

Raptor actually grades Jordan over LeBron with a sizable gap for a 7 year stretch.


I need to bookmark this for when it’s time to argue for CP3 and Stockton in the PC project. It’s amazing how well Stockton fares in the little bit of advanced analytics we have for the past. Everything I see about him makes me like him more and more. I’m starting to wonder if maybe Stockton > Wilt is actually a reasonable take.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#688 » by MavsDirk41 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:20 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:
TheGOATRises007 wrote:
Chanel Bomber wrote:It would be interesting to see how RAPTOR and RAPM measure peak MJ’s on-court impact but I don’t think those metrics go that far back (on the phone now).

All those other isolated stats fail to capture the +/- (let alone adjusted +/-) data that in my opinion is a necessary ingredient to having a fully informed discussion.

Also the conversation on TS% needs to use league-adjusted TS as league average in efficiency rose significantly since the 1990s. Using raw TS% as a point of comparison is misguided.


https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/lebron-or-mj-raptor-picks-the-best-nba-players-of-the-past-40-years/

Raptor actually grades Jordan over LeBron with a sizable gap for a 7 year stretch.


I need to bookmark this for when it’s time to argue for CP3 and Stockton in the PC project. It’s amazing how well Stockton fares in the little bit of advanced analytics we have for the past. Everything I see about him makes me like him more and more. I’m starting to wonder if maybe Stockton > Wilt is actually a reasonable take.


RAPTOR
PER
BPM
Championships
Finals mvps
Defensive player awards
Scoring titles
Regular season winning pct
Postseason winning pct
2 3 peats

Jordan has a couple things over James….just a couple
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#689 » by Joao Saraiva » Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:21 pm

TheGOATRises007 wrote:
Joao Saraiva wrote:For me the biggest argument of them all is Jordan's lack of black marks.

I literally find no series he collapsed. There is no MJ vs Dallas in 11. There is no MJ vs Pistons in 04.

Sure he had bad games, or subpar games. But his consistency is off the charts.

I don't have him as the GOAT, but I think the strongest argument he has starts here.


The rebuttal to that(as I often see) is that he 'quit' twice in his prime, but I don't consider retiring and quitting like-for-like.

If people want to go to that literal route though, others can say LeBron quit on his teams 3 times(2010, 2014 and 2018).

And you can continue throwing rebuttals back and forth constantly along these lines.

But I find both arguments silly and lacking nuance.


Well those are diferent things. MJ chose not to play those years, it hurts his longevity. Not his consistency.

LeBron quit like what? He changed teams? I find it very hard to have a stat system that includes not changing team. And not changing team isn't always equal. It's one thing to keep going like Lillard in Portland where you literally can't win or keep going like MJ and the Bulls where all the correct pieces were put in place for him to succeed. He's at the best franchise, why change?

I think that is very opinion based, and if we're looking for data-driven those things are very difficult to take into account. The years MJ didn't play... yeah those count. For longevity. Now it's on you how much you weight longevity.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#690 » by Chanel Bomber » Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:28 pm

I don’t see any arguments for James besides the longevity at the highest level, and the (not inaccurate) notion that he’s a more well-rounded player (better playmaker, better 3-point shooter, more versatile defender in his prime).

Nevertheless:

- Despite James’s longevity, Jordan still achieved more.

- Despite James being more well-rounded on paper, the impact numbers apparently suggest that prime MJ was a more impactful player.

There are a lot of narratives and story arcs to dissect but I think those two points kind of speak for themselves.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#691 » by iggymcfrack » Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:29 pm

MavsDirk41 wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
TheGOATRises007 wrote:
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/lebron-or-mj-raptor-picks-the-best-nba-players-of-the-past-40-years/

Raptor actually grades Jordan over LeBron with a sizable gap for a 7 year stretch.


I need to bookmark this for when it’s time to argue for CP3 and Stockton in the PC project. It’s amazing how well Stockton fares in the little bit of advanced analytics we have for the past. Everything I see about him makes me like him more and more. I’m starting to wonder if maybe Stockton > Wilt is actually a reasonable take.


RAPTOR
PER
BPM
Championships
Finals mvps
Defensive player awards
Scoring titles
Regular season winning pct
Postseason winning pct
2 3 peats

Jordan has a couple things over James….just a couple


Why did you quote my post about Stockton just to regurgitate more of the same Jordan stuff?
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#692 » by Jaivl » Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:39 pm

Chanel Bomber wrote:I don’t see any arguments for James besides the longevity at the highest level, and the (not inaccurate) notion that he’s a more well-rounded player (better playmaker, better 3-point shooter, more versatile defender in his prime).

Nevertheless:

- Despite James’s longevity, Jordan still achieved more.

- Despite James being more well-rounded on paper, the impact numbers apparently suggest that prime MJ was a more impactful player.

There are a lot of narratives and story arcs to dissect but I think those two points kind of speak for themselves.

A good chunk of the PC Board operates from a different criteria.

If we're judging the individual career in a vacuum, trying to devoid it of team context and other factors external to the player, those two first points are pretty much enough to have LeBron ahead, even if one thinks Jordan was the better player at their best (if). It's not mutually exclusive.

If we're judging acomplishments or overarching narratives, then yeah the order is probably something like Russell, then Kareem and Jordan, then Duncan, LeBron, Magic or Kobe, I guess? That's only a ways removed of listing rings+MVPs and not what most of us care about, though.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#693 » by Laimbeer » Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:46 pm

Marrrcuss wrote:
rapstarter wrote:
ceiling raiser wrote:Feels like LeBron has overtaken him in communities like this


When did this happen :lol:

Not only has it not happened, they cant discuss it without saying stupid shyt like 'fan boys'. They are so emotional about this. Has to be the social justice support.


Mike fell to second in 2020 and third in 2023 on the RealGM Top 100 in Player Comparison.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#694 » by Chanel Bomber » Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:54 pm

Jaivl wrote:
Chanel Bomber wrote:I don’t see any arguments for James besides the longevity at the highest level, and the (not inaccurate) notion that he’s a more well-rounded player (better playmaker, better 3-point shooter, more versatile defender in his prime).

Nevertheless:

- Despite James’s longevity, Jordan still achieved more.

- Despite James being more well-rounded on paper, the impact numbers apparently suggest that prime MJ was a more impactful player.

There are a lot of narratives and story arcs to dissect but I think those two points kind of speak for themselves.

A good chunk of the PC Board operates from a different criteria.

If we're judging the individual career in a vacuum, trying to devoid it of team context and other factors external to the player, those two first points are pretty much enough to have LeBron ahead, even if one thinks Jordan was the better player at their best (if). It's not mutually exclusive.

If we're judging acomplishments or overarching narratives, then yeah the order is probably something like Russell, then Kareem and Jordan, then Duncan, LeBron, Magic or Kobe, I guess? That's only a ways removed of listing rings+MVPs and not what most of us care about, though.

I didn't mean to say that these were my criteria to determine who the GOAT is, I only meant to highlight how the arguments in LeBron's favor are still not met with outcomes that speak in his favor. If anything, the longevity aspect in my opinion highlights how Jordan sustained a higher peak - just in fewer years - and that, while not completely devoid of substance, the argument can actually be used to support Jordan's case more than anything.

I agree there are factors that go beyond a player's control and they are (at least in principle) accounted for by adjusted impact metrics like RAPTOR (injuries aside), which seem to favor Jordan.

After his first stint in Cleveland, LeBron played on stacked teams (except for the last Cavs season without Kyrie and the pre-AD Lakers) so I don't think this argument weighs much in his case.

I think Jordan remains the best cross of peak and longevity (sustained peak if you will) in NBA history. In fact I think the only person who has a case over him is Bill Russell and possibly KAJ (whose career is intertwined with Magic which muddies the case imo).
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#695 » by Yank3525 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:00 pm

KembaWalker wrote:
Jaivl wrote:2023 RealGM's PC Board GOAT list:
1) LeBron
2) Kareem
3) Jordan

Ben Taylor's GOAT list:
1) LeBron
2) Kareem
3) Jordan

Cope harder.


gotta reel in those absolute suckers on Patreon who can pat themselves on the back for being such deep, contemplative thinkers, way too smart to follow the 95% consensus. It's actually inspirational that someone can make a living charging $7 a month by farting out a number that says KG > Magic Johnson and people just huff it up and actually think they're enlightened about basketball


The PC board’s love affair with KG is why the vast majority of the bball community think they are a joke.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#696 » by NbaAllDay » Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:00 pm

A lot of it will always just come back to how people weigh criteria.

If we give MJ the edge on impact data over th years he played, how many years of impact does Lebron end to match it? If Lebron is 80% as impactful for 50% longer, how does this stack up?

For a lot of people who give Lebron the nod, the long term impact outweighs the peak/Prime impact gap that MJ supposedly has.

There is also real legitimacy to context of teams they played with and teams they played against because as much as some like to believe they gauge players in a vacuum, that vacuum is different I'd that player plays under different circumstances, even if you believe that isn't the case.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#697 » by MavsDirk41 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:02 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
I need to bookmark this for when it’s time to argue for CP3 and Stockton in the PC project. It’s amazing how well Stockton fares in the little bit of advanced analytics we have for the past. Everything I see about him makes me like him more and more. I’m starting to wonder if maybe Stockton > Wilt is actually a reasonable take.


RAPTOR
PER
BPM
Championships
Finals mvps
Defensive player awards
Scoring titles
Regular season winning pct
Postseason winning pct
2 3 peats

Jordan has a couple things over James….just a couple


Why did you quote my post about Stockton just to regurgitate more of the same Jordan stuff?


My bad man i thought you were trying to argue that measurements like RAPTOR are worth looking at when ranking players. My fault! Thats on me. On a side note Stockton may be the best pure point guard to ever play. He was also very durable even for a guy his size.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#698 » by MavsDirk41 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:03 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:
iggymcfrack wrote:
I need to bookmark this for when it’s time to argue for CP3 and Stockton in the PC project. It’s amazing how well Stockton fares in the little bit of advanced analytics we have for the past. Everything I see about him makes me like him more and more. I’m starting to wonder if maybe Stockton > Wilt is actually a reasonable take.


RAPTOR
PER
BPM
Championships
Finals mvps
Defensive player awards
Scoring titles
Regular season winning pct
Postseason winning pct
2 3 peats

Jordan has a couple things over James….just a couple


Why did you quote my post about Stockton just to regurgitate more of the same Jordan stuff?


“Are not worth looking at” damn phone lol
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#699 » by MavsDirk41 » Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:05 pm

NbaAllDay wrote:A lot of it will always just come back to how people weigh criteria.

If we give MJ the edge on impact data over th years he played, how many years of impact does Lebron end to match it? If Lebron is 80% as impactful for 50% longer, how does this stack up?

For a lot of people who give Lebron the nod, the long term impact outweighs the peak/Prime impact gap that MJ supposedly has.

There is also real legitimacy to context of teams they played with and teams they played against because as much as some like to believe they gauge players in a vacuum, that vacuum is different I'd that player plays under different circumstances, even if you believe that isn't the case.



Well you also have to account for the fact that James has played with way more talent than Jordan. Thats not even debateable.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#700 » by Chanel Bomber » Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:19 pm

NbaAllDay wrote:A lot of it will always just come back to how people weigh criteria.

If we give MJ the edge on impact data over th years he played, how many years of impact does Lebron end to match it? If Lebron is 80% as impactful for 50% longer, how does this stack up?

For a lot of people who give Lebron the nod, the long term impact outweighs the peak/Prime impact gap that MJ supposedly has.

There is also real legitimacy to context of teams they played with and teams they played against because as much as some like to believe they gauge players in a vacuum, that vacuum is different I'd that player plays under different circumstances, even if you believe that isn't the case.

It's something I've been thinking about as well.

We can reach the most well-informed level of debate, but the way we weigh those different criteria will always be somewhat arbitrary and tough to rationally arbitrate.

I would just say that - assuming a level playing field in terms of external circumstances - in the peak vs longevity argument (simplistically framing the 80% vs 50% example that you brought up), the value of longevity would be to enable the player to achieve as much if not more, but definitely not less.

And this is where people lose me with the longevity argument for LeBron. Because it's not met with the outcome that would be reasonably expected from it. It rings hollow.

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