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#921 » by Chanel Bomber » Sun Jul 16, 2023 5:53 am

OhayoKD wrote:Just want to note I appreciate your civility here. That said...
Chanel Bomber wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:It’s a shame if RAPTOR from the 1990s doesn’t incorporate +/- data. It’d kind of defeat the purpose.

I think RAPM’s an interesting metric which shows some relevant trends but the calculation doesn’t adjust for environment nearly enough (compared to RAPTOR for instance which does a much better job of extracting noise). I wouldn’t use RAPM at face value in this exercise is my point.

Unfortunately RAPM is a little --too-- inclusive to be as accurate writ large(needs very long stretches to stabalize). RAPTOR is also advantaged with player-tracking. However, all that said, when tested against metrics which make use of similar tech:
https://dunksandthrees.com/blog/metric-comparison
Metric accuracy was compared overall and in the context of changing rosters. EPM and RPM, which were the only metrics that used RAPM directly with a Bayesian prior, consistently performed the best among all metrics, with EPM taking the lead overall. RAPTOR was the clear third-place metric with the revamped BPM putting the pressure on in fourth place. New player metrics using the latest methodologies and data are better built for today’s game.

We find that RAPTOR is both less accurate and [/b]less stable[/b] than data which more directly inputs RAPM. We also find box-aggregates like PER still lose out to RAPM on both fronts(BPM 2.0 matches) despite their theoretical advantages being "stability" and "accuracy" over smaller time-frames. Even though RAPM is far more inclusive(which one hand means it is noisy, but on the otherhand means it avoids most systematic biases), it still mantains an advantage in terms of both accuracy and stability.

This does not include PIPM which is currently owned by the Wizards and to my knowledge, also outperforms RAPTOR with it's defensive scores being more closely tied to DRAPM(something something linear vs branching). Maybe that's why, but IIRC Ben says it's better at capturing defensive value even without on/off data.

All of this is to say, I do not know RAPTOR is the most "promising" of approaches. FWIW, I do not think it's well respected in analytical circles and I've always had some suspicion towards it because in the-lead-up to it being revealed, it's creator was saying that the "competition" so to speak did not respect two-way wings enough and that kawhi leonard was the best defender in the league(as of 2019).

Moving on...
You mention cherry-picked stats but I don’t think there is yet an all-encompassing metric that incorporates finely-adjusted data that we can use for cross-generation comparisons. Although I need to learn more about WOWYR. But as a general point, we also need to think critically about the accuracy of those metrics by the way they are put together.

There is not. I linked my own appraisal of WOWYR in the post you replied to, but even if you like the adjustments, it's still working off tiny samples(for bill russell for example, all those adjustments are being applied to 2.2 games a season of off).

And this gets us to the uncomfortable reality of historic player assessment. Uncertainty is inevitable. That would still be true if we had RAPM or RAPM derivatives(more on that later), but if you want to compare the "value" of players historically, you just need to get comfortable with that.

We can mitigate this issue somewhat by
-> looking for replication(bonus if it's across contexts)
-> tracking what skills generally produce value(can look at data-ball as well) and then map that onto established skill-sets
-> using "production" to internally scale players and teammates
-> using "production" to map to similar players we have more data for(hakeem -> duncan)
-> applying knowledge and context

As an example of point 2, we can look at the greatest defenses in history, the defensive kings of data-ball, real-world signals(Marc Gasol joins raptors -> atg d, Gasol leaves Raptors -> average d), and see how things unfold when teammates join or leave(Kawhi Leave, Raptors stay an atg d) and reasonably conclude that paint-protection>>>>>perimiter man d(can also look to what happened to the clippers defense without strong rim-protection and two elite "two-way wings" the next few postseasons).

Similarly we can extrapolate that guards do not move-the-needle like wings do and wings do not move the needle like bigs do(giannis coasts bucks defense collapses to average, giannis goes all out, bucks return to atg in the playoffs). The notable exception here is probably CP3, someone who by many accounts, serves as a on-court coach who directs his teammates where to go. This is a pretty rare trait among players, also shared by Draymond Green. Another guy who is relatively undersized relative to the results(greatest defender of his generation?)

(PS: you get one guess which non-big is an outlier regarding those two traits and has a consistently sees their defenses fall off without them)

The point is we are not bound to just looking at what happens to a team when x player leaves. That said, I think it's probably good to start there, rather than to just make assumptions regarding the values of different contributions(which is what you implicitly do when you use PER as a heat-check). Reality is noisy, but it is not biased, and should not just be disregarded when inconvenient for our priors. And to be clear, this does not just apply to box-stuff, which gets us to...
An over-reliance on impact metrics then also opens the door for questions like is Jokic or Curry the GOAT (over James and Jordan)? If you’re willing to have these discussions, then fair enough.

...Okay I have seen this alot and(feel free to check me if it does not apply to you), but I believe for Steph this claim is largely based on
-> Comparing the highest single-year scores on apm or apm derivatives(04 kg single highest score on JE'S RAPM SET! Best RS ever!)
-> Raw plus-minus and on/off?

I think people need to remember that RAPM(and it's derivatives) are artificial. They are also(like on/off) prone to issues with colinearity. While they make adjustments they are still susceptible to wonky rotations. Beyond that, they also curve down outliers. What you should be looking for in something like LEBRON, EPM or RAPM(ideally over extended samples) is how often a player hits at or near the top historically. It is there to establish a baseline. Not to establish how the best year of Draymond compares to the best year of Steph or CP3.

Per LEBRON, a "state of the art" apm derivative, here are the most valuable seasons(overall) since 2010:
Image

Here are the most valuable seasons(per-possession) since 2010:
Image

notice how best single-scoring years look around the same? That is not real. RAPM is not a substitute for real-world signals. The main benefit of something like WOWY(especially if you are looking at seasons without a player), is that you can truly see what happens to a team when a player leaves.

Adjustments and all, the premise of APM is ultimately still that “winning on the court is good, as is seeing your team become worse without you on the court”. RAPM can approximate that in most cases(given enough time), and it is advantaged in terms of stability(and probably even accuracy looking at hundreds of players), but it is not a replacement for the real thing.

RAPM is also a rate stat. KG may have scored the highest in 2008, but he averaged substantially less minutes than his peers(. Something to keep in mind for those who think Kobe was undeserving of his MVP(he was not).

All that considered, here's an example of a 1-year "impact" comparison I did 2 days ago:
Spoiler:
OhayoKD wrote:I think there are arguments to be had for Russell, Kareem(and by extension 77 Walton) on a "corp" or "era-relative impact" lens, but with what you seem to be looking at(box-score playing a factor, post-merger years), yeah. Do not think there is much of a "statistical" counter-case. If we look at the seasons you've picked:
1993playoffs wrote:Other’s candidates include 88-91 MJ . 67 Wilt , Curry 16 etc

2016 Curry? No, not really. For those tempted to toss 1-year rapm or rapm derivatives as positive evidence they're similar...
HeartBreakKid wrote:

As far as baseline goes(cheema's been used a bunch, so why don't we use the scaled-apm set Ben likes)
James is, arguably, the king of overall plus-minus stats. 2018 is the 25th season of league-wide plus-minus data, which covers nearly 40 percent of the shot-clock era and touches 12 of the top-20 players on this list. None have achieved LeBron’s heights: He holds four of the top-five scaled APM seasons on record, and six of the top eight. Since 2007, 10 of his 11 years land in the 99th percentile.

Even 15-17 regular-season Lebron grades out as a direct rival for 15-17 Steph by raw or adjusted data(1-year is directly comparable to), even with something relatively bearish on Lebron like shotcharts:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=106319069#p106319069

Getting into the "weeds" of 2009...
Like Nash, LeBron was supercharging dependent talent — finishers who disproportionately benefited from shots served to them on a silver platter. So with his talents in South Beach, Cleveland crumbled in 2011. While most teams fall off after losing a superstar, none imploded like the Lebron-less Cavs; in 21 games with a similar group of players, they played at an anemic 18-win pace (-8.9 SRS) before injuries ravaged their lineup. LeBron’s not worth 40 wins on a typical club, but no player in history has correlated more strongly with such massive, worst-to-first impact.

FWIW over a small sample(7 gms/szn) the 08-10 cavs played like a 19-win team) in games without Lebron. Perhaps more impressively, during 09/10, in 1785 minutes without Mo-Willams(best offensive teammate) and Ben Wallace(best defensive teammate), the cavs were +14. For a smaller-sample, in 630 minutes without either in 09, they were +10.

Over a much smaller sample(a bit under 700 minuites) 15/16 Steph holds up surprisingly well but not that well with his lineups scoring at +8.55 without Dray and +9 in 389 minutes without dray or klay. Note that these are much shorter stretches. Curry's minutes are significantly more tied to his best teammates than LeBron's are. Very small sample, but for comphrensiveness, in less than 300 minutes in 2016, Steph lineups score at +3.38 without Dray and(tiny 169 minute sample) -0.69 without Draymond or Klay.

And then we get into volume
Image
(Lebron)

Image
(Steph)

All considered I'd say there's an the evidence consistently supports 2009 Lebron being more valuable per-possession in the regular season. He's probably more valuable in 2010 too. And probably a peer in in his second Cleveland stint while coasting. And we know the postseason is not a winning case for Steph:
Image
Image
(Check where Steph's best teammate is)

Jordan's argument is probably weaker(though he benefits from uncertainty). He's drafted onto a better team(27-win without) and does not lead a better regular-season team until 1992 despite great fit by the back-half of 90.

Frankly, while one could point to conventional box-score as a marginal rs advantage, I think we should apply some context here.

Steph(and Jordan) created(volume) and scored at a nigh unprecedented level. Lebron also did that, but was also a strong secondary paint-protector, a mj-esque man defender(refer to the colts quote before), who was communicating and orchestrating on both-ends, was a more effecient creator(feel free to reference ben's passer-rating), handled the ball significantly more(making the turnover economy very impressive), and was facing substantially more defensive attention.

Then by box he(2009) blows right by both in the postseason(bpm/aupm/pipm/raptor). All considered, I think the "stats" are very clearly in Lebron's favor. And who knows how in his favor they'd be with a more reasonable(imo) set of weightings(BBR BPM puts jordan and steph within range of hakeem and dikembe respectively).

Feel free to do your own adjustments and come to a different conclusion, but good empirical comps do not start and end with RAPM.

I would also note that while Jokic's 1-year stuff looks awesome(2023) it does not look that good when we extend the sample(shotchart 3-year rapm and cheema career rapm favors embid oddly enough, raw-stuff still looks great(lineup-ratings, extended wowy, lineups and wowy without Murray, ect.).

I think from a 1-year "impact only" perspective(only looking at the rs), the potential standouts are Kareem(72, 74, 77), Lebron(9/10), Walton(77), Wilt(67, era-tresholds come into play here), and Russell(pick a year honestly). Steph's 2016(and 2015-2017) looks awesome, but not like the "greatest in nba history" outlier people potray it as. Obviously the pre-data ball stuff is super-murky, but I see a strong possiblity there(can elaborate for those who are curious). Accounting for the postseason makes things more interesting(A bunch of Wilt years, For Kareem, 71 and 72 potentially jumps, 12 and 15-17 Lebron, ect.)

Thanks for the time and effort you put into this. I honestly won’t have time to immerse myself this week, but this is really interesting and I hope to find some time next weekend to absorb, reflect, and engage. Because this will take at least a couple hours to advance the discussion in a meaningful way. Cheers.

PS1: To be clear, I personally don’t use PER.
PS2: I agree that RAPTOR is flawed and always assumed that it was intended for the general public moreso than analytical circles. I just have limited access to these resources (different metrics) and have found RAPTOR to be quite remarkable if interpreted through the lens of players’ roles and not just at face value. It does a decent job, especially at challenging preconceptions based on narratives rather than data. But I’d love to extend my scope, of course.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#922 » by twyzted » Sun Jul 16, 2023 11:13 am

JordansBulls wrote:Lebron has lost to virtually every elite big in his era. Ben Wallace, Tim Duncan, Dwight Howard with HCA, KG with HCA, Dirk with HCA, Durant, Jokic to name a few. Only beat old 36 year old Duncan when Lebron was at his peak and needed heroics for that from the other team making a dumb decision to not have there elite big in the game at the end. He has a losing record on the highest stage which isn't a good thing. He also won multiple bronze medals for America with Peak Duncan and Iverson on his squad and then Wade, Dwight, Melo. Was down in a series every year of his career at least 3-2 with fans in the arena. Missed the playoffs as much as titles won. Other players have more titles in the same amount of years or less without stacking the deck and moving from one team to the next. Only player to ever get swept in 3 different decades 4-0 in a series.

Lebron is soo good that he has a losing record on the highest stage, the most finals losses of players who won league mvp, 2 bronze medals, 3 series in which he lost with HCA and down every year where fans were in the arena 3-2. Also lost in round 2 with Shaq and stacked the deck his career and still doesn't have more titles than Curry who came in after him and beat him head to head more times. :o
He also only won 1 title in 11 years for the franchise that drafted him. Dirk did as good as did Isiah, Hakeem to name a few.
Has also missed the playoffs as much as titles won.
Jordan also has more accolades than Lebron in 5 less seasons at that.


Apperantly Lebron is so good that losing is better than winning.

Funny how these guys think “rangz” argument is weak but then argue that 4 titles are better then 6…
Having a worse rs&pl&finals winning % is also better.
Pennebaker wrote:Jordan lacks LeBron's mental toughness.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#923 » by Marrrcuss » Sun Jul 16, 2023 2:30 pm

Midwest219 wrote:
Marrrcuss wrote:I am a bron stan who has no issue with someone feeling Mike is the goat.

I just think the finals record as proof is stupid af.

I'm goin' in for the kill.
MJ - on court

Cool. I don't agree, but that should be fine too.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#924 » by OdomFan » Sun Jul 16, 2023 3:21 pm

Marrrcuss wrote:
Midwest219 wrote:
Marrrcuss wrote:I am a bron stan who has no issue with someone feeling Mike is the goat.

I just think the finals record as proof is stupid af.

I'm goin' in for the kill.
MJ - on court

Cool. I don't agree, but that should be fine too.


How is it a stupid argument though? the purpose of the top guy is to lead. Thats why they get majority of the credit when the team wins, and why they take mostly all the blame when they lose. When Magic lost in the 80s media started calling him Tragic Johnson. It's nothing new. When he won again they went back to calling him Magic.

This is why Michaels Finals record is held in such a high degree. For one, its two three peats in a decade that he led his team to. With that said, the way I also look at it with Lebron and MJ is the difference in what both men did to impact the overall squad.

On the one hand you have Lebron. Guy that does all these things as the point forward. Rebound, score and be the playmaker. It looks great on the stat sheet but when it comes down to it it also effects the team in a not so good way due to all of the focus being on him as the system of that team. This is why Bosh, Love, Wade, Hughes, etcs numbers went down when they played alongside him vs their time on opposite teams from him. Who is Lebrons most memorable coach? whos going to go down in history as the iconic coach for him? No one I can think of. They all made it about him.

On the other side you have Mike. Great player before Phil came along, but became even better with Phil. Why? the triangle offense. The triangle is what made him a better player and leader. The triangle is what helped Pippen develop into the second best player on that team next to Mike, and the triangle is what made the overall squad the powerhouse that they would be throughout the 90s. Every single player understood what they were supposed to do, and Michael as the leader made sure that they were going to go out there and do it to the best of their ability.

No memorable coach in Lebrons legacy, and no young talent ever developed into a star next to him.

This is also why I hold Duncan ahead of Lebron. Duncan wasn't a playmaker but his unselfishness is what helped Popovich be able to usher in that style of team play that the Spurs were known for year after year for so long. It is what helped develop Manu and Parker into stars alongside Tim and keep the Spurs winning when the 1999 squad was out the door. The Spurs constantly bringing in guys that could keep that way of play going next to Duncan. To me that is the strongest argument for a talent to be the best for their team. not having everything ran through one guy.

but hey, just my 2 cents.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#925 » by Marrrcuss » Sun Jul 16, 2023 3:28 pm

OdomFan wrote:
Marrrcuss wrote:
Midwest219 wrote:I'm goin' in for the kill.
MJ - on court

Cool. I don't agree, but that should be fine too.


How is it a stupid argument though? the purpose of the top guy is to lead. Thats why they get majority of the credit when the team wins, and why they take mostly all the blame when they lose. When Magic lost in the 80s media started calling him Tragic Johnson. It's nothing new. When he won again they went back to calling him Magic.

This is why Michaels Finals record is held in such a high degree. For one, its two three peats in a decade that he led his team to. With that said, the way I also look at it with Lebron and MJ is the difference in what both men did to impact the overall squad.

On the one hand you have Lebron. Guy that does all these things as the point forward. Rebound, score and be the playmaker. It looks great on the stat sheet but when it comes down to it it also effects the team in a not so good way due to all of the focus being on him as the system of that team. This is why Bosh, Love, Wade, Hughes, etcs numbers went down when they played alongside him vs their time on opposite teams from him. Who is Lebrons most memorable coach? whos going to go down in history as the iconic coach for him? No one I can think of. They all made it about him.

On the other side you have Mike. Great player before Phil came along, but became even better with Phil. Why? the triangle offense. The triangle is what made him a better player and leader. The triangle is what helped Pippen develop into the second best player on that team next to Mike, and the triangle is what made the overall squad the powerhouse that they would be throughout the 90s. Every single player understood what they were supposed to do, and Michael as the leader made sure that they were going to go out there and do it to the best of their ability.

No memorable coach in Lebrons legacy, and no young talent ever developed into a star next to him.

This is also why I hold Duncan ahead of Lebron. Duncan wasn't a playmaker but his unselfishness is what helped Popovich be able to usher in that style of team play that the Spurs were known for year after year for so long. It is what helped develop Manu and Parker into stars alongside Tim and keep the Spurs winning when the 1999 squad was out the door. The Spurs constantly bringing in guys that could keep that way of play going next to Duncan. To me that is the strongest argument for a talent to be the best for their team. not having everything ran through one guy.

but hey, just my 2 cents.

Maybe not stupid, just unscientific and low intelligence.
First, it's a team game. Second, it's far from in a vacuum.
If a boxer won his title fights but got knocked out in tune ups, you wouldn't ignore those losses.
It's so unimaginably stupid to think losing to the eventual champ is worse than losing to a team that lost in the very next round.
It's also pretty lead paint chip exposure-ish to feel winning 3 rounds before losing is worse than losing before even winning a round or two.
Again, I think choosing MJ by the eye test makes much more sense.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#926 » by OdomFan » Sun Jul 16, 2023 3:42 pm

Marrrcuss wrote:
OdomFan wrote:
Marrrcuss wrote:Cool. I don't agree, but that should be fine too.


How is it a stupid argument though? the purpose of the top guy is to lead. Thats why they get majority of the credit when the team wins, and why they take mostly all the blame when they lose. When Magic lost in the 80s media started calling him Tragic Johnson. It's nothing new. When he won again they went back to calling him Magic.

This is why Michaels Finals record is held in such a high degree. For one, its two three peats in a decade that he led his team to. With that said, the way I also look at it with Lebron and MJ is the difference in what both men did to impact the overall squad.

On the one hand you have Lebron. Guy that does all these things as the point forward. Rebound, score and be the playmaker. It looks great on the stat sheet but when it comes down to it it also effects the team in a not so good way due to all of the focus being on him as the system of that team. This is why Bosh, Love, Wade, Hughes, etcs numbers went down when they played alongside him vs their time on opposite teams from him. Who is Lebrons most memorable coach? whos going to go down in history as the iconic coach for him? No one I can think of. They all made it about him.

On the other side you have Mike. Great player before Phil came along, but became even better with Phil. Why? the triangle offense. The triangle is what made him a better player and leader. The triangle is what helped Pippen develop into the second best player on that team next to Mike, and the triangle is what made the overall squad the powerhouse that they would be throughout the 90s. Every single player understood what they were supposed to do, and Michael as the leader made sure that they were going to go out there and do it to the best of their ability.

No memorable coach in Lebrons legacy, and no young talent ever developed into a star next to him.

This is also why I hold Duncan ahead of Lebron. Duncan wasn't a playmaker but his unselfishness is what helped Popovich be able to usher in that style of team play that the Spurs were known for year after year for so long. It is what helped develop Manu and Parker into stars alongside Tim and keep the Spurs winning when the 1999 squad was out the door. The Spurs constantly bringing in guys that could keep that way of play going next to Duncan. To me that is the strongest argument for a talent to be the best for their team. not having everything ran through one guy.

but hey, just my 2 cents.

Maybe not stupid, just unscientific and low intelligence.
First, it's a team game. Second, it's far from in a vacuum.
If a boxer won his title fights but got knocked out in tune ups, you wouldn't ignore those losses.
It's so unimaginably stupid to think losing to the eventual champ is worse than losing to a team that lost in the very next round.
It's also pretty lead paint chip exposure-ish to feel winning 3 rounds before losing is worse than losing before even winning a round or two.
Again, I think choosing MJ by the eye test makes much more sense.
I

Ok and with that eye test it still comes back to watching what he was doing to lead his team to those 2 three peats, its not just saying "Mike the the goat because he won 6 championships.

As I pointed out above he did a lot to help shape that Bulls squad into what it became in the 90s. Accepted the Phil and the triangle, helped Pippen develop into a star, and trusted his teammates enough to know that they would do their part. He might have been a-hole at times instead of their buddy, but when it came down to it it worked and I'd rather have that over what Lebron brought in comparison.

Being everyones buddy when things are going great, but then jumping to another squad after losing so much. Thats how I view a eye test, and why I have Mike as the goat.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#927 » by Marrrcuss » Sun Jul 16, 2023 7:01 pm

The bulls won 57 games in 1993.

MJ retired.

The bulls then won 55 games in 1994.

Maybe you should hush with team accomplishments. He obviously had a superior team that most stars.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#928 » by MavsDirk41 » Sun Jul 16, 2023 9:26 pm

Marrrcuss wrote:The bulls won 57 games in 1993.

MJ retired.

The bulls then won 55 games in 1994.

Maybe you should hush with team accomplishments. He obviously had a superior team that most stars.



Couple things Marcus

Yes, Bulls won 55 games in 94 without Jordan. Great accomplishment very true. No argument.

In 95 the Bulls were 34-31 without Jordan

They finished 13-4 with Jordan that year. So basically one year is what you are basing your argument on. Yes, Jordan had plenty of help. All star players do, but:

Scottie Pippen has a losing playoff record without Jordan although he played with Hakeen/Barkley in Houston and Sabonis, Rasheed Wallace, Damon Stoudamire, and Steve Smith in Portland. Let that sink in.

Also….

What team in the east between 2010 - 2018 was better than these teams?

Miami with James, Bosh, and Wade = 3 all star players

Cleveland with James, Love, and Irving = 3 all star players

If any team beat either Miami of Cleveland would that have been a major upset? I would say yes.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#929 » by Taj FTW » Sun Jul 16, 2023 9:30 pm

MavsDirk41 wrote:
Marrrcuss wrote:The bulls won 57 games in 1993.

MJ retired.

The bulls then won 55 games in 1994.

Maybe you should hush with team accomplishments. He obviously had a superior team that most stars.



Couple things Marcus

Yes, Bulls won 55 games in 94 without Jordan. Great accomplishment very true. No argument.

In 95 the Bulls were 34-31 without Jordan

They finished 13-4 with Jordan that year. So basically one year is what you are basing your argument on. Yes, Jordan had plenty of help. All star players do, but:

Scottie Pippen has a losing playoff record without Jordan although he played with Hakeen/Barkley in Houston and Sabonis, Rasheed Wallace, Damon Stoudamire, and Steve Smith in Portland. Let that sink in.

Also….

What team in the east between 2010 - 2018 was better than these teams?

Miami with James, Bosh, and Wade = 3 all star players

Cleveland with James, Love, and Irving = 3 all star players

If any team beat either Miami of Cleveland would that have been a major upset? I would say yes.

There was that Celtics teams with KG, Ray Allen, Paul Pierce and Rondo. Not sure if you remember them, but they were pretty freaking good.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#930 » by MavsDirk41 » Sun Jul 16, 2023 9:41 pm

Taj FTW wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:
Marrrcuss wrote:The bulls won 57 games in 1993.

MJ retired.

The bulls then won 55 games in 1994.

Maybe you should hush with team accomplishments. He obviously had a superior team that most stars.



Couple things Marcus

Yes, Bulls won 55 games in 94 without Jordan. Great accomplishment very true. No argument.

In 95 the Bulls were 34-31 without Jordan

They finished 13-4 with Jordan that year. So basically one year is what you are basing your argument on. Yes, Jordan had plenty of help. All star players do, but:

Scottie Pippen has a losing playoff record without Jordan although he played with Hakeen/Barkley in Houston and Sabonis, Rasheed Wallace, Damon Stoudamire, and Steve Smith in Portland. Let that sink in.

Also….

What team in the east between 2010 - 2018 was better than these teams?

Miami with James, Bosh, and Wade = 3 all star players

Cleveland with James, Love, and Irving = 3 all star players

If any team beat either Miami of Cleveland would that have been a major upset? I would say yes.

There was that Celtics teams with KG, Ray Allen, Paul Pierce and Rondo. Not sure if you remember them, but they were pretty freaking good.



Yes i will give you that team was obviously good but Garnett and Allen were over 30. Rondo was never on the level of these other players.

James, Wade, Bosh, Love, and Irving were in their prime or entering their prime.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#931 » by ShaqAttac » Sun Jul 16, 2023 10:32 pm

TheGOATRises007 wrote:I do find it curious somewhat to piggyback off of WarriorGM's point(though I disagree with his overall ranking of Curry) that beating a 70 win team seems to garner far more credit than leading a team to 70 wins.

maybe coz steph had waay more help?

old brons rs impaact as good as peak stephs those years. i also dont know why u and gm n jake keep ignorin that draymond went crazy those pos
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#932 » by JordansBulls » Mon Jul 17, 2023 2:58 am

Marrrcuss wrote:The bulls won 57 games in 1993.

MJ retired.

The bulls then won 55 games in 1994.

Maybe you should hush with team accomplishments. He obviously had a superior team that most stars.

Lebron lost with HCA with Ben Wallace who won a title as the only allstar on a team. Lebron lost with HCA with Shaq in round 2 while Shaq won 3 titles with Kobe and a title with Wade. Lebron won bronze medal with peak Duncan and Iverson and the first time America lost in the Olympics with superstar players and then lost again in FIBA with Peak Wade, Dwight and Melo. He also lost with HCA to Dirk who at the time wasn't considered a career loser. He lost with HCA to Dwight Howard who was considered a career loser. Despite all of this a guy in his own era has as many titles and beat him head to head more despite playing less years and not switching from team to team. Prove me wrong!
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#933 » by mysticOscar » Mon Jul 17, 2023 5:20 am

Lebron deserves to be in conversation to be GOAT just because of his longevity.

It's unprecedented right now how much his still producing at his age and mileage.

If people's criteria is accumulative impact then I don't see a problem of fans putting him above MJ...because his not only having longevity his also getting team success and getting the individual accolades even if it falls short of MJ.

But my perception is majority of peoples criteria of GOAT is who would you have in there prime to give you the best chance at winning multiple rings for your team.

MJ having accomplished more in short period than Lebron...and once he was at the top, there were really no one able to challenge MJ like we see with Lebron.

For me personally I just see a more complete player in MJ than Lebron who has more weaknesses in the game which has cost him a chip or 2 and some lopsided results in the post season.

His fans will cry that its because of circumstances and are willing to gloss over his weaknesses.

The results bear this out....people not only on this board but other forums really understate how difficult it is to get a 3peat not once but twice in the post 3pt era.

And both 3peats are achieved with almost different circumstances and teammates...one with team development and 2nd by putting together old vets.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#934 » by WarriorGM » Mon Jul 17, 2023 5:22 am

WarriorGM wrote:A lot of time spent explaining RAPM and other adjusted plus-minus variants but what are we to make of John Stockton having the highest average 5-year RAPM from 1998 to 2002 at the age of 35 to 39?


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

Post#935 » by Gusto1903 » Mon Jul 17, 2023 6:36 am

Marrrcuss wrote:The bulls won 57 games in 1993.

MJ retired.

The bulls then won 55 games in 1994.

Maybe you should hush with team accomplishments. He obviously had a superior team that most stars.


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

Post#936 » by mariller » Mon Jul 17, 2023 7:06 am

dirkdiggler4177 wrote:6/6


Not counting the years where he didn't went to finals at all is border line "not smart".
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#937 » by remiga007 » Mon Jul 17, 2023 8:10 am

Gusto1903 wrote:
Marrrcuss wrote:The bulls won 57 games in 1993.

MJ retired.

The bulls then won 55 games in 1994.

Maybe you should hush with team accomplishments. He obviously had a superior team that most stars.


Did they win the chip?


Also, in 94 they added Kukoc, Kerr, Wennington, which was not insignificant. Lost in second round versus winning the chip three years In a row. Still a very solid team but that year proves a point in favor of MJ, not against him lol. Not to mention the season of 94-95 where they were basically a .500 team.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#938 » by OldCeltics » Mon Jul 17, 2023 10:15 am

Lebron is not even in the tough 5. Anyone riding this self-proclaimed king is a loser.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#939 » by twyzted » Mon Jul 17, 2023 10:26 am

WarriorGM wrote:
WarriorGM wrote:A lot of time spent explaining RAPM and other adjusted plus-minus variants but what are we to make of John Stockton having the highest average 5-year RAPM from 1998 to 2002 at the age of 35 to 39?


Anyone...?


I dont think they have it saved in their notes which they copy/paste from.
They usually dissapear when asked to provide data or sources :dontknow:
Pennebaker wrote:Jordan lacks LeBron's mental toughness.
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Re: What's the strongest data-driven argument for Michael Jordan as GOAT? 

Post#940 » by twyzted » Mon Jul 17, 2023 10:31 am

Marrrcuss wrote:The bulls won 57 games in 1993.

MJ retired.

The bulls then won 55 games in 1994.

Maybe you should hush with team accomplishments. He obviously had a superior team that most stars.


The lakers won 35 games in 2018 srs of -1.44.

added Lebron.

won 37 games srs of -1.33.

Wasnt enough having 2x#2 picks on the team needed more help.
Pennebaker wrote:Jordan lacks LeBron's mental toughness.

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