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

Moderators: bwgood77, bisme37, zimpy27, KingDavid, cupcakesnake, Domejandro, ken6199, infinite11285, Clav, Dirk

User avatar
The High Cyde
General Manager
Posts: 8,850
And1: 15,240
Joined: Jun 06, 2014
Location: Elbaf
 

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

Post#1021 » by The High Cyde » Mon Jul 17, 2023 9:08 pm

MavsDirk41 wrote:
The High Cyde wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:

You can crap on jordan for quitting and im gonna just remind you how lebron james choked in the finals lol

Worst finals performance ever by a top 5 player

*shrug I barely mentioned LeBron
I’ve read all 50 pages of this thread so I’m not surprised on this encounter



Ok man cool. I dont like james at all. No problem admitting it. You are salty towards Jordan for retiring which yea he quit. But you are bias against which is ok. Just dont act like you arent.

Lol I’m not biased against Jordan, I just don’t think he’s the GOAT. Carry on.
Image
MavsDirk41
Lead Assistant
Posts: 5,891
And1: 4,561
Joined: Dec 07, 2022
     

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

Post#1022 » by MavsDirk41 » Mon Jul 17, 2023 9:10 pm

gmoney411 wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:
gmoney411 wrote:
LeBron is the better team defender. He's also the more versatile defender based on his size and also creates more offensive mismatches based on his size.



I disagree about him being a better team defender. I will say that Jordan played with more defensive talent (Pippen, Grant, Rodman, Harper) than James while James played with more offensive talent (Wade, Bosh, Love, Irving, Davis).

But i havent seen anything that validates James being a better team defender. You can say he has more size obviously but jordan was quicker too. Creating more offensive mismatches cause his size ok. But Jordan played in the triangle that focused on ball movement. James plays with the ball in his hands most of the time on that side of the court.


Defensive is hard to track but Lebron's size and strength makes him the better team defender imo. He can switch onto basically anybody and can offer help on anybody. Jordan was probably the better man defender though.

Lebron's claim to fame is his swarm army knife skill set. Jordan didn't really play the game that way. Maybe Jordan could have been the better all around player in this era but if you are looking at both careers it's hard to argue for Jordan being the better all around player. (I will not accept this same logic for someone trying to say LeBron is a better shooter than Lebron though lol)



Opinions vary man i respect that
MavsDirk41
Lead Assistant
Posts: 5,891
And1: 4,561
Joined: Dec 07, 2022
     

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

Post#1023 » by MavsDirk41 » Mon Jul 17, 2023 9:13 pm

The High Cyde wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:
The High Cyde wrote:*shrug I barely mentioned LeBron
I’ve read all 50 pages of this thread so I’m not surprised on this encounter



Ok man cool. I dont like james at all. No problem admitting it. You are salty towards Jordan for retiring which yea he quit. But you are bias against which is ok. Just dont act like you arent.

Lol I’m not biased against Jordan, I just don’t think he’s the GOAT. Carry on.



Lol alright man
lessthanjake
Analyst
Posts: 3,510
And1: 3,136
Joined: Apr 13, 2013

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

Post#1024 » by lessthanjake » Mon Jul 17, 2023 10:02 pm

OhayoKD wrote:The Russell analogy is odd. Bill Russell, like Lebron, came close as close to monopolizing the side of the court he was gifted at and, like Lebron, functioned as an on-court coach directing his teammates where to go and making adjustments for himself and even the team based on the opposition. Bill Russell, also like Lebron, looks like an incredible floor-raiser and, like Lebron has won a championship against a better opponent than anyone Jordan's beat in any round with a team that was bad without him.

Bill Russell, like Lebron, does not take as many shots as Jordan does and could conceivably fit better next to high-volume scorers(Pippen was not that, Kyrie and Love were).

Bill Russell, like Lebron, was a capable defensive centerpiece who was able to anchor elite defenses with a variety of support, even alongside defensive negatives(smush and mosgov were that before they were traded to Cleveland, Kyrie and Love were that throughout).

Bill Russell, like Lebron, is as or more capable as a passer/ball-handler than he was as a scorer.

And Bill Russell, like Lebron, has actually proven their ability to fit-in and win with a variety of co-stars, in a variety of situations.

Micheal Jordan does not share any of these traits or achievements. Moreover many of the assumptions you've made to arrive at the conclusion that Jordan is a better cieling-raiser do not actually line-up with what has actually happened. The argument may "start there", but for it("port") to actually work you have to establish the following:

-> Lebron, with various advantages that we know are integral to high-level teams(including Chicago)(communication, rim-protection, passing, ect) is a worse fit on a majority of potential/likely championship winners that would somehow add up to more championships than the amount of teams Jordan is a worse fit on

-> Lebron, a generally more valuable player becomes less valuable as a result of this questionable fit. I imagine this is a bit difficult considering that Lebron empirically looked as or more valuable(similar rs, but his teams scale up more in the postseason) for multiple championships in what should have been a bad-fit in Miami

Without establishing those two-points, "floor-raiser" is just a buzz-word. And for those who actually look into the apparent impact Lebron has had in situations this theory predicts he should be disadvantaged relative to Jordan(poor-spacing, next to other helios, ect, ect), I think it becomes rather apparent, it doesn't really hold up.


Most of this is just your own subjective judgments. And they’re also not really relevant to the point I was making, since they’re just random comparisons about random things. The point I was making is that when you have great teammates, it can be more optimal for a player to be extremely proficient at a specialized thing or two, rather than being a player who is responsible for everything. A great team inherently has teammates that are great at stuff, and therefore they can handle a lot of things. The best way to add the most marginal value to a team like that is to be miles above the pack at a major thing—i.e. MJ with scoring, Russell with defense, Steph with shooting/gravity, etc. When on a great team, that’s the way to provide value that is as non-redundant as possible. That’s how you optimally ceiling raise.

LeBron’s style is to do everything, but he’s not just a complete historical outlier supernova at any specific thing. At his prime, he was incredible at scoring, passing, and defense, for instance. It was an amazing combination, but he was not GOAT-tier at any of those (passing is the closest, but he’s still below a guy like Magic). And that makes it harder for him not to step on other great players’ toes a bit in terms of their impact. This manifests itself fairly obviously. LeBron put together a team with the #1, #2, and #4 players in PER the year before, and in their first season together, they had just a +11.83 net rating in RS+PS when all three were on the court. It was +12.53 the next year, then +10.07 the year after that (and then down to a +4.74 the final year, when Wade was broken down, so it’s not a super relevant data point IMO). Those are great net ratings! But they’re not transcendent, GOAT-team material. They’re not what you might expect from a team that has put together that level of talent alongside a GOAT candidate—a level of talent that LeBron himself thought would be enough for them to easily waltz to a ton of titles.

For reference, with Steph, Durant, and Draymond on the floor, the 2016-2017 Warriors had a +20.04 net rating. They coasted a bit the next two seasons and it was still +13.86 and +15.45. In the pre-Durant years, they were +17.07 and +16.90 with Steph, Draymond, and Klay. We don’t have data for the Bulls dynasty as a whole or on pbsstats, but even in 1996-1997 (i.e. not even the team’s best year), the Bulls were +16.8 in the RS with Jordan, Pippen, and Rodman on the floor. Heck, the Nuggets were +14.53 with Jokic, Murray, and Porter Jr. on the court this past year. The 2008 Celtics were +14.81 with Garnett, Pierce, and Allen on the court (and then were +13.83 the next year, and +13.60 two years after that). The 2005 Spurs were +15.78 with Duncan, Ginobili, and Parker on the floor. The 2007 Spurs were +13.80 with those three. Even the 2006 Spurs were +14.50 with those three! The 2010 Lakers were +17.17 with Kobe, Gasol, and Odom on the floor. To be fair to LeBron, he did notch up a +14.17 with Kyrie and Love in 2014-2015 (but it was +10.55 the next year, and then +10.24 the year after that). But the overall story we see is one where LeBron teamed up with extremely good players for many many years, and it didn’t work with them all on the court together as much as other teams have made it work with top-tier all-time greats and a couple really good players around them (and guys like Odom and Porter Jr are pretty iffy on the “really good player” part). LeBron’s really talented teams have hit a bit of a glass ceiling. I know you’d like to look at how these teams did with LeBron out and try to say that LeBron’s teams were somehow bad despite all the talent. But I think it’s just hard to look at who was on those teams and to have watched those players play and think that they were *actually* anything other than super talented players. And it’s honestly kind of breathtaking that, with all that talent for all those years, *LeBron James* was unable to hit the kind of three-stars-on-court net rating heights that a lot of other teams have hit. It’s a phenomenon that demands an explanation, and I think there’s a fairly obvious explanation that people pretty easily diagnosed while watching them.

You’re free to reject that explanation and instead look at some fairly low-sample-size off data to try to tell us that people like Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, Kyrie Irving, and Kevin Love actually weren’t nearly as good as other guys I listed above. But it’s just not super plausible, since we know that they were really good players. Data isn’t everything, especially where all data we have on off samples has a high margin of error and lots of confounding factors. And, in any event, the data also isn’t really all that damning on LeBron’s great teammates anyways, compared to many of the above examples. For instance, in the first three years in Miami, Wade + Bosh with LeBron off had a +3.48 net rating. In three years together, Durant + Draymond + Klay with Steph off had a +3.66 net rating. And yet, when you added Steph to the mix, it went up to +15.92, while adding LeBron to that mix only made it go up to +11.36. In Garnett’s first four years in Boston, Pierce and Allen with Garnett off were +2.41 (i.e. lower than Wade + Bosh without LeBron), but they became +12.30 when Garnett was added (i.e. higher than LeBron + Wade + Bosh). It’s just genuinely true that LeBron has proven to not be an optimal ceiling raiser. And my explanation for that is this issue of specialization. You’re free to disagree if you’d like, and to either reject the premise that LeBron had really talented teammates or to come up with other explanations.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
Yank3525
Starter
Posts: 2,396
And1: 2,777
Joined: Jan 28, 2013
     

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

Post#1025 » by Yank3525 » Tue Jul 18, 2023 1:07 am

The point I was making is that when you have great teammates, it can be more optimal for a player to be extremely proficient at a specialized thing or two, rather than being a player who is responsible for everything.


Bingo.

If Bron was more willing to be a "utility" player (borrowing a term from MJ in 1992). I think his Cavs team could have reached historic heights in terms of +/- with him, Kyrie, and Love. It is frustrating too because you saw him play that way during the 2008 Olympics.
Ree4erMadness
Senior
Posts: 744
And1: 983
Joined: Nov 28, 2015
   

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

Post#1026 » by Ree4erMadness » Tue Jul 18, 2023 4:27 am

Sigh, Lebron fans just don't give up...

;t=899s
"In America you'll never be free, middle fingers up **** the police. Damn can a nikka just breathe? - Nas - 2008
KrAzY3
Starter
Posts: 2,104
And1: 2,617
Joined: Jun 26, 2016
Contact:
     

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

Post#1027 » by KrAzY3 » Tue Jul 18, 2023 1:03 pm

The High Cyde wrote: MJ isn’t head and shoulders above players like Kareem, James, Russell where he can basically take a sabbatical and come back like nothing happened.

Didn't you just say you weren't talking about LeBron when people pointed out he quit on multiple teams? The James you are referring to is LeBron is it not?

Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise. So, Russell it is then? The only one who didn't quit on a team?
User avatar
The High Cyde
General Manager
Posts: 8,850
And1: 15,240
Joined: Jun 06, 2014
Location: Elbaf
 

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

Post#1028 » by The High Cyde » Tue Jul 18, 2023 3:11 pm

KrAzY3 wrote:
The High Cyde wrote: MJ isn’t head and shoulders above players like Kareem, James, Russell where he can basically take a sabbatical and come back like nothing happened.

Didn't you just say you weren't talking about LeBron when people pointed out he quit on multiple teams? The James you are referring to is LeBron is it not?

Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise. So, Russell it is then? The only one who didn't quit on a team?

Sure
Image
NZB2323
RealGM
Posts: 14,650
And1: 11,263
Joined: Aug 02, 2008

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

Post#1029 » by NZB2323 » Tue Jul 18, 2023 3:15 pm

KrAzY3 wrote:
The High Cyde wrote: MJ isn’t head and shoulders above players like Kareem, James, Russell where he can basically take a sabbatical and come back like nothing happened.

Didn't you just say you weren't talking about LeBron when people pointed out he quit on multiple teams? The James you are referring to is LeBron is it not?

Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise. So, Russell it is then? The only one who didn't quit on a team?


Are you really giving Jordan negative points for taking some time off after winning 3 in a row when his dad died? Even though he came back after that and won 3 in a row again, winning 72, 67, and 62 games during the regular season, despite Rodman taking a Vegas Vacation during the season and Pippen having surgery during the season? And then you’re blaming Jordan for not staying with the Bulls when Krause was hell bent on destroying the team and told Phil Jackson he’d be fired even if he went 82-0?
Thaddy wrote:I can tell you right now the Bulls will collapse by mid season and will be fighting in or for the play in.

Remember it.
User avatar
The High Cyde
General Manager
Posts: 8,850
And1: 15,240
Joined: Jun 06, 2014
Location: Elbaf
 

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

Post#1030 » by The High Cyde » Tue Jul 18, 2023 3:17 pm

NZB2323 wrote:
KrAzY3 wrote:
The High Cyde wrote: MJ isn’t head and shoulders above players like Kareem, James, Russell where he can basically take a sabbatical and come back like nothing happened.

Didn't you just say you weren't talking about LeBron when people pointed out he quit on multiple teams? The James you are referring to is LeBron is it not?

Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise. So, Russell it is then? The only one who didn't quit on a team?


Are you really giving Jordan negative points for taking some time off after winning 3 in a row when his dad died? Even though he came back after that and won 3 in a row again, winning 72, 67, and 62 games during the regular season, despite Rodman taking a Vegas Vacation during the season and Pippen having surgery during the season? And then you’re blaming Jordan for not staying with the Bulls when Krause was hell bent on destroying the team and told Phil Jackson he’d be fired even if he went 82-0?

Yup.
Image
disoblige
Head Coach
Posts: 7,266
And1: 1,244
Joined: Oct 19, 2006
   

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

Post#1031 » by disoblige » Tue Jul 18, 2023 3:28 pm

TheGeneral99 wrote:His peak regular season and playoff production on both ends edges Lebron while Lebron's longevity edges Jordan.

Look at some of MJ's prime years:

1987: 37, 5 and 5 with 3 steals, 1.5 blocks on 48% shooting.
1988: 35, 6 and 6 with 3 steals, 1.6 blocks on 54% shooting.
1989: 33, 8 and 8 with 3 steals, 1 block on 54% shooting.
1990: 34, 7 and 6 with 3 steals, 1 block on 53% shooting.
1991: 32, 6 and 6 with 3 steals, 1 block on 52% shooting.
1992: 30, 5 and 6 with 2 steals, 1 block on 52% shooting.
1993: 33, 7 and 5 with 2 steals, 1 block on 50% shooting.

His peak playoff stats also outshine Lebron.

1988: 36, 7 and 5 with 2 steals, 2 blocks on 53% shooting.
1989: 35, 7 and 8 with 2.5 steals, 1 block on 51% shooting.
1990: 37, 7 and 7 with 3 steals, 1 block on 51% shooting.
1991: 31, 6 and 8 with 2.4 steals, 1.4 blocks on 52% shooting.
1992: 35, 6 and 6 with 2 steals, 1 block on 50% shooting.
1993: 35, 7 and 6 with with 2 steals, 1 block on 48% shooting.

Absolutely insane.

And even more insane is that during his peak in 1993 he decided to retire for nearly 2 years.




Because he is a chucker. His playoff usage is 35.5% . Average career playoff TS .568. His career usage in season and playoff is much higher than harden. Harden has playoff career usage 28.3%

While lebron has 31.8 playoff Usage and .583% TS
G35
RealGM
Posts: 22,529
And1: 8,075
Joined: Dec 10, 2005
     

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

Post#1032 » by G35 » Tue Jul 18, 2023 3:33 pm

Yank3525 wrote:
The point I was making is that when you have great teammates, it can be more optimal for a player to be extremely proficient at a specialized thing or two, rather than being a player who is responsible for everything.


Bingo.

If Bron was more willing to be a "utility" player (borrowing a term from MJ in 1992). I think his Cavs team could have reached historic heights in terms of +/- with him, Kyrie, and Love. It is frustrating too because you saw him play that way during the 2008 Olympics.



This has been my argument against Lebron is that he does not utilize his teammates as well as other greats. Magic could have scored more or rebounded more but why when he had Worthy, Kareem and Rambis. Bird could have done more but why when he had McHale, Parish, and DJ.

People then try and say that Lebron's teammates are not as good as other greats, but that is a fallacy argument. If you don't give your teammates the opportunity to become great, then how will you ever realize their potential. Bill Cartwright was the starting center for the Bulls first 3peat, he would not be the ideal big man to be your starting center but it worked for the Bulls. Derek Fisher was the PG for the Lakers run in the 2000's, he would not be your ideal point guard. Draymond Green is not your ideal big man to anchor your defense, but he has been the key element to the Warriors run.

With the other greats you can see how their talents complemented the rest of the team, with Lebron they try and say that he needs a bunch of shooters and 3 and D players around him. Well that's anyone. You can say that about Giannis, Jokic, Embiid, Harden, Westbrook, Durant, Curry. That is not some novel concept.

Lebron could have made some really ATG teams if he would have sacrificed some of his utility and allowed others to do more than just be 3 and D players....
I'm so tired of the typical......
WarriorGM
General Manager
Posts: 8,933
And1: 4,225
Joined: Aug 19, 2017

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

Post#1033 » by WarriorGM » Tue Jul 18, 2023 3:37 pm

G35 wrote:
Yank3525 wrote:
The point I was making is that when you have great teammates, it can be more optimal for a player to be extremely proficient at a specialized thing or two, rather than being a player who is responsible for everything.


Bingo.

If Bron was more willing to be a "utility" player (borrowing a term from MJ in 1992). I think his Cavs team could have reached historic heights in terms of +/- with him, Kyrie, and Love. It is frustrating too because you saw him play that way during the 2008 Olympics.



This has been my argument against Lebron is that he does not utilize his teammates as well as other greats. Magic could have scored more or rebounded more but why when he had Worthy, Kareem and Rambis. Bird could have done more but why when he had McHale, Parish, and DJ.

People then try and say that Lebron's teammates are not as good as other greats, but that is a fallacy argument. If you don't give your teammates the opportunity to become great, then how will you ever realize their potential. Bill Cartwright was the starting center for the Bulls first 3peat, he would not be the ideal big man to be your starting center but it worked for the Bulls. Derek Fisher was the PG for the Lakers run in the 2000's, he would not be your ideal point guard. Draymond Green is not your ideal big man to anchor your defense, but he has been the key element to the Warriors run.

With the other greats you can see how their talents complemented the rest of the team, with Lebron they try and say that he needs a bunch of shooters and 3 and D players around him. Well that's anyone. You can say that about Giannis, Jokic, Embiid, Harden, Westbrook, Durant, Curry. That is not some novel concept.

Lebron could have made some really ATG teams if he would have sacrificed some of his utility and allowed others to do more than just be 3 and D players....


That's assuming that by sacrificing he could have that effect. It may just be he wasn't capable of raising the rest of the team that much.
KrAzY3
Starter
Posts: 2,104
And1: 2,617
Joined: Jun 26, 2016
Contact:
     

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

Post#1034 » by KrAzY3 » Tue Jul 18, 2023 4:46 pm

The High Cyde wrote:
KrAzY3 wrote:
The High Cyde wrote: MJ isn’t head and shoulders above players like Kareem, James, Russell where he can basically take a sabbatical and come back like nothing happened.

Didn't you just say you weren't talking about LeBron when people pointed out he quit on multiple teams? The James you are referring to is LeBron is it not?

Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise. So, Russell it is then? The only one who didn't quit on a team?

Sure

For the record I'm not going to argue too much about Bill Russell. He basically always won no matter what, and I consider success an excellent barometer of greatness.

Having said that, the general idea that ditching a team for greener pastures is better than retiring is kind of absurd. Both are forms of quitting, and if one is to measure greatness wouldn't quitting because winning was too easy trump quitting because winning was too hard? I'm not a Jordan fan but if we're talking greatness I'm darn sure choosing him over the guy that struggled more.
User avatar
Calvin Klein
RealGM
Posts: 15,665
And1: 10,694
Joined: May 20, 2008
Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
Contact:
   

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

Post#1035 » by Calvin Klein » Tue Jul 18, 2023 4:48 pm

Somebody just said MJ was a chucker. I'm out.
Salieri
Lead Assistant
Posts: 4,740
And1: 10,366
Joined: Aug 02, 2013

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

Post#1036 » by Salieri » Tue Jul 18, 2023 4:52 pm

KrAzY3 wrote:Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise.


I've read the entire thread but tried to stay away from it because nothing new was said that wasn't addressed in the last GOAT thread we had.

But this narrative needs to end, c'mon.

Loyalty is something you personally value a lot in a basketball player. Fine. I prefer players who aren't suckers at the poker table and willing to get milked by a mediocre franchise that wants to cash in but never spend wisely enough to surround him by a good team. Also fine.

But this is not debatable: loyalty is not, has never been, a factor when it comes to quantifying how well does a player play the game of basketball. Loyalty is not like FT shooting, passing or rim protection. Loyalty does not measure any playing skill whatsoever.

If Jordan fans wanna praise MJ for being loyal to the Bulls, I have no problem with that. But when they use that narrative to elevate MJ's status among the greats, that's when I have something to say on the matter. Because his loyalty doesn't make him a better player. At most, it'd make him a better person. And that's something weird to praise in MJ, knowing how much of a douche he was (not that LeBron isn't, btw).
KrAzY3
Starter
Posts: 2,104
And1: 2,617
Joined: Jun 26, 2016
Contact:
     

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

Post#1037 » by KrAzY3 » Tue Jul 18, 2023 4:59 pm

Salieri wrote:
KrAzY3 wrote:Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise.


I've read the entire thread but tried to stay away from it because nothing new was said that wasn't addressed in the last GOAT thread we had.

But this narrative needs to end, c'mon.

Loyalty is something you personally value a lot in a basketball player. Fine. I prefer players who aren't suckers at the poker table and willing to get milked by a mediocre franchise that wants to cash in but never spend wisely enough to surround him by a good team. Also fine.

But this is not debatable: loyalty is not, has never been, a factor when it comes to quantifying how well does a player play the game of basketball. Loyalty is not like FT shooting, passing or rim protection. Loyalty does not measure any playing skill whatsoever.

If Jordan fans wanna praise MJ for being loyal to the Bulls, I have no problem with that. But when they use that narrative to elevate MJ's status among the greats, that's when I have something to say on the matter. Because his loyalty doesn't make him a better player. At most, it'd make him a better person. And that's something weird to praise in MJ, knowing how much of a douche he was (not that LeBron isn't, btw).

I think you're missing my point.

I'm saying quitting is quitting. If you quit your team because winning is too hard, that's a knock on you as a player and what you are capable of. If you quit because you are bored, because winning is too easy, how does that make you less great? It's certainly not worse than quitting because you can't succeed.

I'm not a Jordan fan, I've said that before. But to question his greatness because he basically got bored of winning is pretty ludicrous in my opinion. Let's consider another scenario, let's say he did what Pippen did instead, and joined the Rockets. So it would have been Jordan, Barkley and Hakeem and a likely cakewalk to a championship.

In what way would that have made Jordan any more great?
dickfox
Senior
Posts: 604
And1: 539
Joined: Apr 13, 2019
       

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

Post#1038 » by dickfox » Tue Jul 18, 2023 5:06 pm

Space Jam 1 is so much better than Space Jam 2.
The4thHorseman
General Manager
Posts: 9,287
And1: 5,888
Joined: Jun 18, 2011

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

Post#1039 » by The4thHorseman » Tue Jul 18, 2023 5:39 pm

KrAzY3 wrote:
Salieri wrote:
KrAzY3 wrote:Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise.


I've read the entire thread but tried to stay away from it because nothing new was said that wasn't addressed in the last GOAT thread we had.

But this narrative needs to end, c'mon.

Loyalty is something you personally value a lot in a basketball player. Fine. I prefer players who aren't suckers at the poker table and willing to get milked by a mediocre franchise that wants to cash in but never spend wisely enough to surround him by a good team. Also fine.

But this is not debatable: loyalty is not, has never been, a factor when it comes to quantifying how well does a player play the game of basketball. Loyalty is not like FT shooting, passing or rim protection. Loyalty does not measure any playing skill whatsoever.

If Jordan fans wanna praise MJ for being loyal to the Bulls, I have no problem with that. But when they use that narrative to elevate MJ's status among the greats, that's when I have something to say on the matter. Because his loyalty doesn't make him a better player. At most, it'd make him a better person. And that's something weird to praise in MJ, knowing how much of a douche he was (not that LeBron isn't, btw).

I think you're missing my point.

I'm saying quitting is quitting. If you quit your team because winning is too hard, that's a knock on you as a player and what you are capable of. If you quit because you are bored, because winning is too easy, how does that make you less great? It's certainly not worse than quitting because you can't succeed.

I'm not a Jordan fan, I've said that before. But to question his greatness because he basically got bored of winning is pretty ludicrous in my opinion. Let's consider another scenario, let's say he did what Pippen did instead, and joined the Rockets. So it would have been Jordan, Barkley and Hakeem and a likely cakewalk to a championship.

In what way would that have made Jordan any more great?

Did MJ actually say that or is it just speculation on your part?
MavsDirk41 wrote:

Utah was a dynasty in the 90s
Blazers had a mini dynasty late 80s early 90s
Salieri
Lead Assistant
Posts: 4,740
And1: 10,366
Joined: Aug 02, 2013

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

Post#1040 » by Salieri » Tue Jul 18, 2023 5:42 pm

KrAzY3 wrote:
Salieri wrote:
KrAzY3 wrote:Look, I get admiration for a player staying with a franchise, which Jordan essentially did (that comeback was ill advised and trying to prove a point). I also get admiration for a player that sticks with it through thick and thin. But, of those players only one stuck with his original franchise.


I've read the entire thread but tried to stay away from it because nothing new was said that wasn't addressed in the last GOAT thread we had.

But this narrative needs to end, c'mon.

Loyalty is something you personally value a lot in a basketball player. Fine. I prefer players who aren't suckers at the poker table and willing to get milked by a mediocre franchise that wants to cash in but never spend wisely enough to surround him by a good team. Also fine.

But this is not debatable: loyalty is not, has never been, a factor when it comes to quantifying how well does a player play the game of basketball. Loyalty is not like FT shooting, passing or rim protection. Loyalty does not measure any playing skill whatsoever.

If Jordan fans wanna praise MJ for being loyal to the Bulls, I have no problem with that. But when they use that narrative to elevate MJ's status among the greats, that's when I have something to say on the matter. Because his loyalty doesn't make him a better player. At most, it'd make him a better person. And that's something weird to praise in MJ, knowing how much of a douche he was (not that LeBron isn't, btw).

I think you're missing my point.

I'm saying quitting is quitting. If you quit your team because winning is too hard, that's a knock on you as a player and what you are capable of. If you quit because you are bored, because winning is too easy, how does that make you less great? It's certainly not worse than quitting because you can't succeed.

I'm not a Jordan fan, I've said that before. But to question his greatness because he basically got bored of winning is pretty ludicrous in my opinion. Let's consider another scenario, let's say he did what Pippen did instead, and joined the Rockets. So it would have been Jordan, Barkley and Hakeem and a likely cakewalk to a championship.

In what way would that have made Jordan any more great?


Again, those are narratives and I can spin them as much as you did.

For starters, LeBron never quit on a team. As far as I'm aware, he has finished every contract he has signed with an NBA team. And once the contract is up, he's perfectly free to ponder whether that franchise did everything in their power to put him in a position to succeed, or became complacent. Realizing he would fare better elsewhere is a sign of intelligence, not of disloyalty. And the verb quitting does not describe it.

Also, MJ did quit on basketball at the peak of his powers. Was it because he got bored of winning? Because he had an underhanded deal with Stern due to gambling? Because of the mourning of his father? Because he feared his greatness was threatened if he played and lost? We will never know, but he did quit.

Between those two players, one quit and the other one didn't. And those are the facts, devoid of narratives.

Now, for every poster trying to spin the facts in one direction, another will come trying to spin them in the opposite one. And it gets boring and repetitive. So why not aknowledge that loyalty is just not a factor when deciding who's better at winning basketball games and be done with it? That way, neither LeBron nor MJ get "demoted" for something that has no relevance with the ball in play.

Return to The General Board