Sign5 wrote:OP has a weird disdain for Wade so these threads aren't in good faith these days.
Even if that were true, what does his opinion have to do with anything? It's not like we're mind controlled.
Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ
Sign5 wrote:OP has a weird disdain for Wade so these threads aren't in good faith these days.
Sign5 wrote:OP has a weird disdain for Wade so these threads aren't in good faith these days.
70sFan wrote:Owly wrote:OhayoKD wrote:Is fatigue affecting free-throw shooting just semi-plausible?
Because if fatigue does effect free-throw shooting than how those free-throws were earned(as well as the volume) would probably be relevant
Fatigue affecting anything if there's enough of it is plausible.
And yes the manner earned would matter. But neither is measured by opponent team level regular season defense. That would be physiological and the manner of the foul.
For the broader picture see the full response that's taken from. If this were a real thing, I'd imagine we'd see greater variance at a career level in free throw shooting, especially on the downside. Based on the evidence cited above, I believe it isn't there and bucket variations, like yearly variations, are noise from small samples (in this instance a single player, playoff only, partial career, 621 attempts split into smaller buckets, exact size of each bucket not given).
If you actually do this analysis with all players, look at their RS splits between defense levels because you think fatigue-based free throw team level defense is real and significant thing and you have the evidence I'm willing to listen. (Or if you now find it a compelling theory and want to try it now, perhaps compelled by the theory of David Robinson being 85% against bad defenses and 65% against good ones as sustainable ...)
However my suspicion is that you don't do this and this theory is, per above, an ad hoc back-fitting of a rationalization onto noise.
I said I won't engage anymore, but I have seen this discussion in the last thread and I actually made such calculations for defense faced production in RS for 5 years stretches and I did 1992-96 Robinson. Here are the results:
Against bad (+2.0 or better per Basketball-Reference) defenses: 27.6/10.9/3.6 with 2.7 tov on 55.2 FG%, 75.3 FT% and 61.5 TS% (+7.8 rTS%) in 136 games and 37.1 mpg
Against good (-2.0 or better per Basketball-Reference) defenses: 25.1/11.5/3.3 with 2.8 tov on 49.4 FG%, 73.7 FT% and 56.5 TS% (+3.0 rTS%) in 114 games and 39.8 mpg
Don't have pace adjustments unfortunately, but for per36 here are the differences:
-4.1 points p36
-0.2 reb p36
-0.5 ast p36
-0.1 tov p36
-5.8 FG%
-1.6 FT%
-5.0 TS%
-4.8 rTS%
If you want to see any other center in comparison, please let me know.
DraymondGold wrote:Voting Post
Vote: David Robinson
Alternate: Dirk Nowitzki
Really struggling with this one. I have Robinson as the superior player to Dirk, both in absolute goodness and in context-dependent value. I have Robinson with the better 1 year peak, the better 3 year peak, the better 5 year extended peak, and the better 8–10 year prime. Adjusting for the shortened 99 season, Robinson was on pace to play 716 games in his 10 year primes, while Dirk played 782 games in his 10 year primes — i.e.e Dirk only 9% more prime games even with Robinson’s missed season, and I have prime Robinson as more than 9% better than prime Dirk.
But Dirk has significantly more longevity. Even with Robinson’s superior prime, he still missed a full season in 1997. He was injured in the 1992 playoffs (although Dirk was injured in 2003). Dirk played *5* seasons before age 24 when Robinson was a rookie, and Dirk played *3* more seasons after age 37 when Robinson retired. Some of this is explainable by era: high-minutes players played an average of 10% more games in Dirk’s era than Robinson. Some of this is also explainable by context: Robinson played all 4 years of college, and lost 2 years to military service, while Dirk had neither. Both of these (along with Robinson’s Top 10 level play as a rookie in 1990) suggest that Robinson was capable of having greater longevity in another situation, which makes me weight Robinson’s poorer longevity slightly less. But Dirk’s raw longevity advantage is massive, so even adjusted for context, it’s still clearly a point for Dirk.
Dirk vs Robinson: Perusing the stats
What do the box stats and box-estimates of plus-minus stats say? Our best 3 box stats are Backpicks BPM, PIPM, and RAPTOR.
-Backpicks RS + PS VORP: Dirk > Robinson
-Career PIPM: Dirk > Robinson
-Career RAPTOR: Robinson > Dirk
So Dirk’s longevity wins out in 2/3 stats, although it’s not universal.
What about WOWY based metrics?
-Prime WOWY: Robinson +4.7 (13th all time) >> Dirk +1.8 (94th all time)
-Prime Adjusted WOWY metrics: Robinson +9.1 > Dirk +6.1. Dirk would have to be +3.34 better than Robinson in his non-prime years to surpass him in career adjusted WOWY. Unlikely, but possible.
-Moonbeam’s RWOWY: Robinson > Dirk.
Robinson: 4 samples over 95th percentile, 11 over 90th percentile, 16 over 75th percentile, 16 over 50th percentile (18 total).
Dirk: 0 samples over 95th percentile, 9 over 90th percentile, 15 over 75th percentile, 18 over 50th percentile (24 total)
So WOWY based metrics favor Robinson. Although Robinson is the type of player that WOWY would overrate: 1) he *is* the system, both offensively and defensively through much of his prime, and 2) the Spurs tanked in their year without him. Regardless, he’s clearly better than Dirk here, possibly for his career.
What about plus minus based metrics? Let’s start with AuPM, since we have a greater portion of Robinson’s prime (though we’re still missing 4 years in 90–93).
-Robinson (missing 90–93): 3 years over +6.0, 3 years over +5.0, 3 years over +4.0, 6 years over +3.0
-Dirk: 1 year over +6.0, 3 years over +5.0, 9 years over +4.0, 12 years over +3.0
So this supports Robinson having a better peak and… not much else. Robinson does have 4 missing years, and given his box performance, his 1991 on/off and Squared2020 RAPM, and 1994 on/off and AuPM, I’d say it’s likely Robinson had at least three more (perhaps four more) 4.0+ AuPM years… which would get him to 6–7, compared to Dirk’s 9.
What about RAPM? Rather than looking at the actual value across different metrics (Squared2020 RAPM in 91 and 96, AuPM estimates of RAPM in 94–96, Goldstein RAPM post 97)… let’s look at league ranking.
-Robinson (missing 90, 92, 93): 1st two times, Top 3 four times, Top 5 six times, Top 10 nine times
-Dirk (no missing years): 1st one times, Top 3 4 times, Top 5 eight times, Top 10 fourteen times
So Robinson looks better in peak by Top 1 and Top 3 appearances, they look about the same in Top 5 appearances (if you predict Top 5 in 91 and 1st in 94 to mean Top 5 in 92 and 93, and possibly 90). Predicting out for the missing years, Robinson would have twelve Top 10 appearances to Dirk’s fourteen.
All in all, the plus minus stats were closer for their whole career. Robinson has the better peak, Dirk the longer prime.
Dirk vs Robinson: Some Contextual Considerations
What about resilience and scalability? I tend to think resilience / playoff improvement is an overrated quality. People in this project have valued how much a player improved in the playoffs more than the actual playoff value itself, which just doesn’t make sense to me. I don’t care if Hakeem improves more in Playoff BPM than Jordan if Jordan still has 10/10 of the best playoff runs according to Playoff BPM.
Still, resilience is still a factor to consider, especially since we’re discussing Robinson. Robinson declined in the playoffs during the heart of his prime. But interestingly, he actually improved quite a bit once he got a better fitting team. Post 1997, Robinson improved by 29% in the playoffs in AuPM! Now much of this is boosted by an ideal fit, some issues of collinearity in lineups, perhaps some coasting in the regular season as an older player. I don’t expect Robinson to be a true 29% playoff improver. He might even be a negative if we had the data for the majority of his prime. But! It does suggest Robinson might have declined significantly less throughout his prime if he had a better fitting situation around him.
Compare that to Dirk who, on average, declined -1% across his full career in the playoffs. Like Robinson, I suspect some of this was a decline in his younger years, and improvement in a better situation and with more experience in his later years. I absolutely see late-prime Dirk as a playoff improver. But it does suggest that, over the course of his career, Dirk wasn’t a massive improver like we would want for him to gain some separation over Robinson, even if we give Dirk the slight advantage.
Scalability, I see as a slight point for Robinson. His prime defense might be Top 5 ever. You can — and the Spurs did — create an all-time defense around Robinson. Even if Dirk’s isn’t negative, I’d argue it could be slightly problematic from a team building perspective, particularly as a big man. Offensively, Dirk definitely has fantastic spacing and a strong off-ball game. He could play as a finisher. But he also had strong isolation tendencies, and wasn’t good as a creator. Robinson did not have the spacing, but he definitely had the off-bal game. He was fantastic as a screener, he could roll to the basket or pop for an efficient midrange jumpsuit. He was a much better offensive rebounder (peaking at +5.4 per 100 possessions to Dirk’s +2.3). And he was the better creator, drawing double teams and willingly passing out.
With another situation, I could see Robinson having a far different reputation among basketball fans. Say Robinson played for the Utah Jazz instead of Karl Malone. All of a sudden, he has a 2nd all star to help set up the offense. With Stockton, he would have to focus far less on isolation face-up offense in the playoffs and do what he was better at. He was a pick and roll monster -- great screener, great face-up roll man, ability to pop to the midrange. I did some film analysis of the 94 playoffs back for the Greatest Peaks project, and saw consistent double teams leading to missed open shots for Robinson teammates. The other option was for Robinson to shoot into the double team, which was not his forte. He would not have this problem on the Jazz. He could draw double teams constantly, he was a willing passer, and with Utah's shooting, he would have teammates who could actually make the shots. And of course defensively, Robinson would be a huge boost over Malone. I could absolutely see the Robinson Jazz winning a ring or two somewhere in 94, 95, 98, or 99. And what would we think of him then...
Hypotheticals aside, Robinson's scalability advantage is born out in the actual team performance. Robinson's best team was the 1999 Spurs, while Dirk's was the 2011 Mars. The 1999 Spurs were 17th ever in overall SRS (+10.37) while the 2011 Mavs 41st (+8.93). And Robinson was more valuable to the 1999 Spurs than Duncan was: Robinson had 35% better full-season Goldstein RAPM than Duncan, and Duncan did not play 35% more minutes than Robinson did.
…
In sum: this is a tough one. I’m not happy with it. I value peak and prime more than longevity. I tend to take longevity as (somewhat) era-relative, and I’m at least more forgiving when there’s a lack of longevity due to extenuating circumstances (like military) not related to the player’s goodness. I think scalability is as important as resilience.
So I’m going with Robinson, at least at the moment. But Dirk’s longevity advantage is significant, and I really don’t think it would require much change to my criteria or the evidence to vote for Dirk.
Doctor MJ wrote:AEnigma wrote:Dirk’s result is a bit interesting because while I knew he had a strong rate of success in Game 7s (4-1 is a top ten mark for superstars), he was 10-12 in game 5s and 4-8 in game 6s. I was actually planning to comment on how he might have a similar issue as you see with Shaq, where he may be resilient in a truly close series, in a more immediately imbalanced series, he has no real path to a comeback. With Shaq of course still being a substantial distance higher as an overall talent.
If you're just interested in Game 7's, it's easier for me to share certain queries from bkref.
Here's the leaderboard for total +/- in Game 7's.
I'll share the Top 10 and then some other relevant names:
1. Marcus Smart +77 (8 games)
2. Raja Bell +70 (5)
3. Al Horford +70 (10)
4. Steve Nash +67 (4)
5. Chauncey Billups +64 (5)
6. Jayson Tatum +57 (7)
7. Steph Curry +55 (5)
8. Jason Terry +55 (4)
9. Michael Finley +51 (5)
10. Ray Allen +50 (11)
Kevin Garnett +42 (7)
Pau Gasol +42 (3)
Manu Ginobili +42 (6)
Kevin Durant +40 (5)
Ben Wallace +38 (6)
Dwight Howard +36 (3)
LeBron James +36 (8)
Dirk Nowitzki +16 (5)
Shaquille O'Neal +11 (4)
Tracy McGrady -53 (3)
Chris Paul -61 (8)
AEnigma wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:AEnigma wrote:Dirk’s result is a bit interesting because while I knew he had a strong rate of success in Game 7s (4-1 is a top ten mark for superstars), he was 10-12 in game 5s and 4-8 in game 6s. I was actually planning to comment on how he might have a similar issue as you see with Shaq, where he may be resilient in a truly close series, in a more immediately imbalanced series, he has no real path to a comeback. With Shaq of course still being a substantial distance higher as an overall talent.
If you're just interested in Game 7's, it's easier for me to share certain queries from bkref.
Here's the leaderboard for total +/- in Game 7's.
I'll share the Top 10 and then some other relevant names:
1. Marcus Smart +77 (8 games)
2. Raja Bell +70 (5)
3. Al Horford +70 (10)
4. Steve Nash +67 (4)
5. Chauncey Billups +64 (5)
6. Jayson Tatum +57 (7)
7. Steph Curry +55 (5)
8. Jason Terry +55 (4)
9. Michael Finley +51 (5)
10. Ray Allen +50 (11)
Kevin Garnett +42 (7)
Pau Gasol +42 (3)
Manu Ginobili +42 (6)
Kevin Durant +40 (5)
Ben Wallace +38 (6)
Dwight Howard +36 (3)
LeBron James +36 (8)
Dirk Nowitzki +16 (5)
Shaquille O'Neal +11 (4)
Tracy McGrady -53 (3)
Chris Paul -61 (8)
This is actually a decent example of why I am more interested in record than plus/minus in these smaller samples. I have a tough time caring that the Mavericks went on a +13 run in the 3.5 minutes Dirk was off the court in 2006 Spurs Game 7, that he was merely +26 in a 40-point win over the 2005 Rockets, or that he was -30 in a 23-point loss to the 2014 Spurs. None of that in itself has any real bearing on how I assess Dirk when I know who was the engine of those teams.Spoiler:
To me, Game 7 blowouts may be more likely when a team underperforms, so accumulating a higher plus/minus in a game that probably should not have been necessary is not itself worth much to me. The Smart/Jaylen/Tatum/Horford Celtics have been extraordinarily impressive… but I am not sure I would brag about being taken to seven games that regularly by the competition in question.Similar for the 2003-06 Pistons, who won 108-93 against a weak 2003 Magic team, won 90-69 against a mediocre 2004 Nets team, and won 79-61 against a mediocre 2006 Cavaliers team.
As an individual result, I am more impressed by Curry’s +2 against the 2014 Clippers than I am by his +25 against the Kings or his +13 against a Rockets team missing Chris Paul (and 27 consecutive threes). And similarly, Dirk’s +0 against a more talented Spurs team in between two titles is one of the two or three most impressive Game 7 performances I can recall from the past twenty-five years.
There is certainly room to question Dirk in the postseason outside of 2011 and that 2006 Spurs series. One hypothesis with which I am fiddling is that his outlier scoring inelasticity made him a tougher matchup for elite defences than for elite offences. Still, he and Malone are the players with the most aggregate career value here, and I would rather roll with Dirk’s highs — exemplified by the 2006 conference semifinals and the entirety of 2011 — than with Malone’s relatively consistent play. Put in place of Malone, Dirk may have some worse upsets or clearer postseason failures, but I also suspect he would be more likely to win a title in that 1995-98 period.
VOTE: Dirk Nowitzki
Sign5 wrote:OP has a weird disdain for Wade so these threads aren't in good faith these days.
Oh stfu I dont frequent realgm every 2 seconds like some of you. Im also entitled to post whatever I please in parameters of the rules on this board. If you don't like my post so much then place me on ignore. You don't control what I post on here pal.Colbinii wrote:Sign5 wrote:OP has a weird disdain for Wade so these threads aren't in good faith these days.
You have said nothing in the first 16 threads only to pop up and accuse someone of being biased against Wade...yet they are the only one to nominate Wade so far?
Do us all a favor and do what you did the first 16 threads...
"crickets"
HeartBreakKid wrote:Sign5 wrote:OP has a weird disdain for Wade so these threads aren't in good faith these days.
Even if that were true, what does his opinion have to do with anything? It's not like we're mind controlled.
Alright, the Nominees for you to choose among for the next slot on the list (in alphabetical order)
DraymondGold wrote:DraymondGold wrote:
So I’m going with Robinson, at least at the moment. But Dirk’s longevity advantage is significant, and I really don’t think it would require much change to my criteria or the evidence to vote for Dirk.
Sign5 wrote:HeartBreakKid wrote:Sign5 wrote:OP has a weird disdain for Wade so these threads aren't in good faith these days.
Even if that were true, what does his opinion have to do with anything? It's not like we're mind controlled.
I figure he's the one who controls nominations based ofAlright, the Nominees for you to choose among for the next slot on the list (in alphabetical order)
If not then it's my bad.
.
Sign5 wrote:Oh stfu I dont frequent realgm every 2 seconds like some of you. Im also entitled to post whatever I please in parameters of the rules on this board. If you don't like my post so much then place me on ignore. You don't control what I post on here pal.Colbinii wrote:Sign5 wrote:OP has a weird disdain for Wade so these threads aren't in good faith these days.
You have said nothing in the first 16 threads only to pop up and accuse someone of being biased against Wade...yet they are the only one to nominate Wade so far?
Do us all a favor and do what you did the first 16 threads...
"crickets"
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
trelos6 wrote:
How I view the current group + a few of the potential nominee’s
HeartBreakKid wrote:trelos6 wrote:
How I view the current group + a few of the potential nominee’s
How did Dr.J have only 1 MVP season? He was the 2nd best player of the entire decade.
HeartBreakKid wrote:trelos6 wrote:
How I view the current group + a few of the potential nominee’s
How did Dr.J have only 1 MVP season? He was the 2nd best player of the entire decade.
trelos6 wrote:2. Steve Nash
Giannis has hit a decent peak and plays top level defense for a non-center. Nash was an all time creation guy. I give Nash the nod over Harden due to a few extra years in longevity.