Doctor MJ wrote:OhayoKD wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
I think this is important data for us to see - while being cautious about taking noisy data too far.
I completely get being skeptical of Magic & Bird relative to other superstars. Easy to have an interpretation of "Transcendent offensive players sure, but limited on defense, can they really be more impactful than 2-way stars? Maybe we've just got a narrative full of winning bias.", but I think there's good reason to think that these guys were every bit the extreme impact outliers they're made out to be.
Cool seeing the '60s stars there too, and yeah, Russell fits along with Magic & Bird as guys who seem like they should be being held back by half the game but the impact data may tell us otherwise.
Uh:
I don't see how anyone but Magic looks like an impact outlier here. Magic's career-splits are also outright matched by Duncan who looks better than Jordan where this graph would suggest his value peaked in various metrics like AUPM, WOWY, RAPM(Cheema, JE) despite playing way more minutes than any of his teammates(and as a result having to play with sub-standard teammates).
And then we have data ball where it is two two-way bigs and a guy who combines goat-tier offense with the ability to carry -5.5 defenses
I think what impact data bears out is that scoring and one-way offense is overrated if anything.
Really not sure how you can say "Magic looks like an impact outlier" and "data bears out one-way offense is overrated". We can have conversations about individuals certainly, but the idea that, say - among contemporaries, Olajuwon should rank ahead of Magic, is not helped by this data.
And while Bird doesn't look as strong as Magic, he looks pretty damn good too.
I think it would be cool to see more graphs along these lines for guys in more recent eras. That can obviously include the more fine-detailed stuff we get with legit +/- data, but apples-to-apples analyses always provide their own insight. I'd like to see how the Nashes and Kidds compare with the Stocktons and Prices, for example.
Here are those 4 PGs:
