OhayoKD wrote:rk2023 wrote:f4p wrote:
since there seem to be a million RAPM's and i don't know most of them, which one's say nash is good in RAPM (i certainly don't see why we would just look at O-RAPM)? The Cheema 97-21 set seems to have him at only +2.22 in the postseason, and pretty much all of nash's playoffs are prime seasons so he's not being drug down by off-prime years.
Engelmann's (from what it seems, the most prominent one) and Doctor MJ's chronology spreadsheet have been the ones I have cited thus-far in pushing for Nash.
Nash also looks pretty good in ben's scaled set iirc with his 5-year stretch ranking 6th.
He also looks very good in cryptbeam's scaled set with 8 yeaqrs in the top 250(for comparison Wade has 5).
With the 4 databall spanning rapm sources I know of I'd interpret it as
Cheema: favors Wade
JE: Favors Nash
Ben: Favors Nash
Crypt: Favors Nash
so is this database that rk2023 referenced in other threads different than the ones listed above:
https://web.archive.org/web/20201024055547/https://sites.google.com/site/rapmstats/97-14-rapm-2
it has Wade 7th and Nash 35th for 97-14, which is basically the perfect time period for their whole careers. also worth noting nash's 4 year peak in this measure is 2008-2011 (rk2023 references this peak). if this is counting postseason in the calculation, then his best 4 years are the years he plays least in the playoffs (2 playoff misses and a short first round in another year). 2005-2007 don't look nearly as good.
also, JE 97-22 has wade 167th, just above greg minor. it seems weird that you find the box score to be crazy useless but dwade and AD being tied with max strus and brian cardinal in the 160's and a little behind trent forrest is fine.
Nash is also a darling in terms of real-world signals(2004->2005 turnaround, team still being really good without amare) but I have not really done any sort of in-depth analysis for him or wade
ok, but didn't his old team literally get better without him? that's what i mean, it's all a one way street for nash. offense is great, who cares if his teams collapse defensively. new team gets way better, who cares if his old team gets better also (i'm sure there will be a bunch of adjustments that somehow prove they actually got worse).
And then of course Nash has goated creation and leads the best regular-season and playoff offneses ever
playoff offenses that managed to lose because the defense somehow fell off even more than the offense got better in some of the bigger series. right? i mean the 2005 and 2010 WCF offenses do look truly incredible, like off the charts type stuff, but somehow the defenses fell off by more than 10 points, indicating that his teams are just hardcore leaning into offense at the expense of defense. is that not a reasonable interpretation? it can't just be that nash made the offense good and then, for completely unrelated reasons, the defense got terrible.
You can poke holes(why were dallas not better than they were?)
so why don't people poke holes? it's one of those things people mention then quickly brush past. he played with a guy who has already been voted in, both in their primes and definite all-star seasons for nash according to this project, and they managed a 1-2 conference finals deficit against one of duncan's weaker teams for their peak accomplishment. that's not inaccurate is it?
nash was terrible in the elimination series in 2001 and 2004. after dirk got hurt in 2003, seemingly his chance to step up, he averaged 15/6 on 53 TS% for the remaining 3 games. and that's his age 28 season, not some early career season where it's reasonable to think he wouldn't be ready.
and "scalability" is a more legitimate concern here(relies heavily on offense, doesn't have a strong post-game, not an all-time cutter/slasher), but emperically speaking he has a very strong rs impact portfolio(with the most favorable interpretations even top 10-worthy but I think dallas needs to factor in somewhat).
His best teams also grade out reasonably well in the playoffs(overall) by sans method despite external context hindering bothSpoiler:Spoiler:
that's because there's nothing Sans spreadsheet loves more than a big win over a decent opponent in rounds 1 and 2. it gives you a quick boost against non-contenders that doesn't necessarily mean that much . it's how you get a team like 2020 boston being really highly ranked. 2005/07/10 phoenix is basically this setup to a tee, winning big in rounds 1 and 2 before underperforming (by SRS at least) in the WCF in both 2005/10, though they did basically play up to their SRS in 2007.
in fact, looking at the losses in 2003/05/06/07/10, nash's teams were +6.8 nRtg teams and his opponents were +7.2 nRtg teams. these weren't impossible wins.
Nash has been on 2 teams that can reasonably argue they were the 2nd best team in the playoffs(took the most games and the best point-differential) and was the best player on one and was without his team's best player on the other. His suns are realistically one of the best non-champions ever despite early exits specifically because they faced the eventual champions earlier. The yeah they didn't face the eventual champions, they faced an eventual finalist who also gave the actual their toughest fight in a razor-close series
okay, but that's not as good as 2006 dwade, wouldn't you agree? i mean 2006 dwade shows us massive performance and stepping up in a big situation that we've never seen from nash. look at those heat teammate numbers from the finals again. there is no way wade should have been able to make that team win with almost negative offense from his teammates. and nothing about 2009/10/11 wade tells us he's any different. would you have any steve nash season above dwade's top 4? and given that we've seen nash's dallas seasons just aren't that great (even RAPM seems to agree), this feels like a peak to peak contest that wade wins and then still has seasons like 2005/12 to eclipse dallas nash.
moses is the same case, with a dominant 5 year peak above nash's best 5 year run (2005 to 2010 if you take out 2009) and then lesser years surrounding that like nash.
and of course, you just nominated harden, who basically feels like nash with better numbers and an even better "oh so close" title argument against an even better team with more mitigating circumstances.
Spoiler:
You are welcome to run "my simple box has a 96% correlation with the top 100 so far"(or 0% or 40% or 60% if we use different frames),
a. there was no 0%. you just missed someone in the range you specified.
b. you seem to talk about sample size a lot but sure are proud that the box score thing, which was only based on prime, ever so slightly had different placements for longevity giants for the exact small sample cut-off you picked, right before that same measure quickly listed the longevity giants and then basically ran the table on the rest of the project. i mean you guys just referenced something that had wade 167th between 1997 and 2014 so i think a small deviation can be handled.
i wrote this in the last thread and did not see you respond so i'll ask again:
a simple box score measure of just primes only got a mere 23 out of 24 right. i can only guess you are sitting on a bunch of metrics that are 24 for 24? i'm not saying that you aren't, you very well might be. if you are, i would be very interested to know about them because i would use them pretty heavily to inform my future rankings. if you are not, please respond to indicate you are not so we can close this item one way or the other.
which measures are doing so much better?
i even went through the trouble of adding longevity (with a bonus for an FMVP) to the calculation. we're now lined up enough to say "Box*Longevity plus best player on a title team" does a pretty good job of explaining the votes so far. even if i give nash the full 12 years, he'd still be by far the biggest outlier if he got in at 26. 22 spots above this ranking. the previous biggest outliers are steph of course (+12) and bird (+13), an impact god with 4 titles and a legend from the past with 3 titles. no one else is even +9. it just seems weird that the new biggest outlier, by a lot (an outlier's outlier), is going to be a 0 title guy without a real playoff moment to his name:
Code: Select all
Rk Player Name Box*Longevity
1 LeBron James 1.4668
2 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 1.2683
3 Michael Jordan 1.2142
4 Wilt Chamberlain 1.0446
5 Tim Duncan 1.0031
6 Bill Russell 0.8489
7 Shaquille O'Neal 0.8392
8 George Mikan 0.8117
9 Hakeem Olajuwon 0.7426
10 Dirk Nowitzki 0.7109
11 Magic Johnson 0.6964
12 Karl Malone 0.6945
13 Kevin Garnett 0.6565
14 Jerry West 0.6422
15 Kevin Durant 0.6394
16 Julius Erving 0.6323
17 Dolph Schayes 0.6192
18 Charles Barkley 0.5976
19 Kobe Bryant 0.5876
20 Oscar Robertson 0.5856
21 Chris Paul 0.5753
22 Nikola Jokić 0.5277
23 Stephen Curry 0.5187
24 James Harden 0.5118
25 John Stockton 0.5012
26 David Robinson 0.4945
27 Larry Bird 0.4933
28 Bob Pettit 0.4602
29 Reggie Miller 0.4568
30 Giannis Antetokounmpo 0.4481
31 Moses Malone 0.4354
32 Kawhi Leonard 0.4303
33 Elgin Baylor 0.4203
34 Ray Allen 0.3995
35 Dwyane Wade 0.3913
36 Pau Gasol 0.3796
37 Anthony Davis 0.3785
38 Clyde Drexler 0.3771
39 Dwight Howard 0.3704
40 Rick Barry 0.3694
41 Manu Ginóbili 0.3576
42 Paul Pierce 0.3563
43 Chauncey Billups 0.3194
44 Adrian Dantley 0.2996
45 Walt Frazier 0.2881
46 George Gervin 0.2819
47 Vince Carter 0.2763
48 Steve Nash 0.2598
49 Isiah Thomas 0.2553
50 Carmelo Anthony 0.2517
51 Russell Westbrook 0.2512
52 Patrick Ewing 0.248
53 Scottie Pippen 0.2411
54 Shawn Kemp 0.2343
55 Kyrie Irving 0.2335
56 Cliff Hagan 0.2309
57 Sam Jones 0.2268
58 Jimmy Butler 0.2206
59 Rudy Gobert 0.2205
60 Bobby Jones 0.2017
61 Clyde Lovellette 0.1958
62 Kevin McHale 0.1936
63 Amar'e Stoudemire 0.1919
64 George Yardley 0.1855
65 Blake Griffin 0.1604
66 Terry Porter 0.1544
67 Joel Embiid 0.1505
68 Gus Williams 0.1415
69 Frank Ramsey 0.1337
70 Clint Capela 0.1178
71 Anfernee Hardaway 0.0968
72 Jamal Murray 0.0791
but that aside not seeing any real reason Nash shouldn't be in a discussion for nomination here when players like Barkley(being in a conference away from the actual champions does not mean you were better), Durant(generally looks alot worse by impact including rapm(rs or playoffs), pretty much always sees his teams underperform when he's clearly or even arguably the #1), or chris paul are in this conversation(has never had the "took the champions the furthest" case outside of 1 year as a clear 2nd fiddle, big big playoff dropper despite great rs heights, ect).
2 MVPS, 2 "2nd best" teams, great impact on winning emperically, and fits the player profile of the most valuable offensive players ever while leading the best offenses ever with top 2 all-time creation metrics seems pretty reasonable.
He is a better scorer than Durant is...er, anything that isn't scoring and a better playmaker than Durant is a scorer(clear best of era vs a guy who ranges from 2-4 among contemporaries(lebron and kawhi are definitively better in the playoffs)). Is that overcome by situationally negative defense? The data(that which is tied to winning) would suggest no.
For the "Longetvity isn't that important" crowd, Nash over Durant is pretty easy
well i would say this project definitely leans in the longevity direction.