OhayoKD wrote:-> A highlight reel and excerpts have moved people on his defense even though a Kobe-fan could pretty easily find better versions of both with Kobe(yet his defense was cited as a negative by some in the #12 thread)
This is pretty blatant strawmanning.
Film from some of the best experts of 1960s film has been analyzed by people discussing in this project, and they have concluded that West is the better defender than Oscar (and Kobe).
Impact metrics, based on actual impact, which actually measures defense, was provided which supported that West was better than Oscar at his peak, and significantly better than Kobe relative to era (which is your own criteria).
With limited film and data, reports from players at the time have been provided citing West was one of the best defensive guards ever, clearly over Oscar defensively.
And furthermore, this board agrees with me, voting Jerry West in the Top 5 best point guard defenders ever… while Kobe didn't sniff the top 10 and Oscar didn’t even sniff the honorable mentions for top 24. This post doesn’t address any of this.
OhayoKD wrote:-> Finals appearances were listed as an advantage over Oscar as if he is a better player because his team was in a separate conference from Bill's
Well that’s another straw man.
You: West wasn’t able to lead teams to the championship. “Would your models support that was a result of help? “
Me: Yes. Changing his help by just having them shoot at their own season average from the foul line in 1 game per series would have resulted in 3 more championships for West.
You: Why are people bringing up finals appearances??
Me: …
You suggested West wasn’t able to win a championship against Russell (as if Oscar was…?). I pointed out that West was so close to winning a championship that variability and minor changes to teammate performance, separate from West, would have easily given West *3 more rings against Russell*.
And furthermore, that his team actually over performed their SRS expectations. The 60s had two playoff rounds. 2 datapoint samples are going to be a lot of noise. So don’t look at series wins, look at *playoff record*. The Celtics had +4.58 better SRS over the Lakers in 1963, +1.58 better SRS in 1966, +1.51 better SRS in 1969, and the Knicks had +6.66 better SRS in 1970. And yet West’s teams took them all to 7 games. This *is* team over performance in the playoffs, and many of the Game 7s were within one shot of going the other way… i.e. they were within the range variability and luck. This suggests that West *was* capable of leading championship teams in the 60s. Moreso than Oscar by the results.
And if we start looking at more accurate measures than just "Oscar dominant rangz West only 1 Rangz" like playoff SRS, we again see that West is leading teams better than Oscar.
OhayoKD wrote:-> Impact numbers which also indicate he was left with one-ring not because of weaker help, but because he was simply a less valuable player than the guy who kept beating him
As opposed to Oscar? How is this a point in Oscar's favor?
"Russell is better than West, therefore I'm voting for Oscar instead of West."
Impact numbers (WOWY) portray West has having a better peak than Oscar. The best adjusted WOWY metric we have, Moonbeam’s RWOWY, puts West just over Oscar in terms of impact (better in 11/18 samples).
And for the record, the impact metrics we have for both West and Kobe again put West as the clearly superior player.
OhayoKD wrote:-> "he was 10 points away from 4 championships" but no commentary on how he was outscored in the conference finals for the ring he did win(despite clearly having better support than Kareem)
Oscar won one ring, but no commentary about how Oscar didn’t face healthy West in the conference finals for the ring he did win.
(despite clearly having better support than Kareem) [Citation needed].
OhayoKD wrote:-> The same mythology of "iq" and "genius" we see with Bird(even on defense where it really doesn't apply)
And the majority of people agreed that the film analysis you provided actually supported that Bird was a high value offensive player, in a play that actually showed generating an open shot that you missed. So i'm going to keep sticking with the expert and majority interpretation of the film here
