Jaivl wrote:Wow, so much competition for a new signature, man.
The “you think you are some chat GPT where you can shift between bias and criteria” was very elite territory for me to beat
Moderators: Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier
Jaivl wrote:Wow, so much competition for a new signature, man.
Mogspan wrote:I think they see the super rare combo of high IQ with freakish athleticism and overrate the former a bit, kind of like a hot girl who is rather articulate being thought of as “super smart.” I don’t know kind of a weird analogy, but you catch my drift.
MyUniBroDavis wrote:lessthanjake wrote:OhayoKD wrote:Because a word overrules what is actually argued/addressed when interpreting what someone is saying...
Oh I'm sure.
A tip though: You don't need to add "clearly" when you've already said "easily". They both essentially serve the same function in your sentence and that sort of redundancy often makes readers think the writer isn't really confident.
Lol, I promise you that you’re way out of your depth in trying to didactically lecture me on how to properly word things, as you’re obviously a college-aged kid at most and I’m a Harvard Law School educated lawyer who was an editor of the Harvard Law Review and basically write legal briefs for a living including in cases that I guarantee you you’ve read about in the national news. Sorry, but I definitely don’t need a writing “tip” or advocacy advice from you.
there is no way ur bringing up ur resume in a basketball forum to user whose name is ohayokd
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.
lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
toodles23 wrote:Lmao. This is definitely one of the most pathetic things I've ever read.
As somebody who grew up in an upper class town and knows plenty of people who went to elite schools, including Harvard: nothing said here should impress anybody in the slightest.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
Heej wrote:As the great philosopher Draymond Green once said: insecurity is loud.
Would rather have hoped to see some of the stats heads Continue their discussions on the advanced metrics vs any of this childish stuff. Am I right in my assumption that at the end of the day it's all apples and oranges discussing LeBron vs MJ impact stats because we don't have a full set of Jordan's plus minus numbers during his career?
I know Squared and others seem to have gotten close for some seasons
Heej wrote:Would rather have hoped to see some of the stats heads Continue their discussions on the advanced metrics vs any of this childish stuff. Am I right in my assumption that at the end of the day it's all apples and oranges discussing LeBron vs MJ impact stats because we don't have a full set of Jordan's plus minus numbers during his career?
I know Squared and others seem to have gotten close for some seasons
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
lessthanjake wrote:OhayoKD wrote:lessthanjake wrote:
Okay, this is just completely ridiculous, not least of which because, again, I was the only person in the entire quoted chain that even used the word “minutes,” which your response then focused on.
Because a word overrules what is actually argued/addressed when interpreting what someone is saying...But I’m not going to argue about it further, since it is a dumb rabbit hole that doesn’t substantively matter and I am confident that any reasonable person who actually read through this would easily see that I’m clearly right about what happened and that your behavior is odd.
Oh I'm sure.
A tip though: You don't need to add "clearly" when you've already said "easily". They both essentially serve the same function in your sentence and that sort of redundancy often makes readers think the writer isn't really confident.
Lol, I promise you that you’re way out of your depth in trying to didactically lecture me on how to properly word things, as you’re obviously a college-aged kid at most and I’m a Harvard Law School educated lawyer who was an editor of the Harvard Law Review and basically write legal briefs for a living including in cases that I guarantee you you’ve read about in the national news. Sorry, but I definitely don’t need a writing “tip” or advocacy advice from you.
jalengreen wrote:lessthanjake wrote:OhayoKD wrote:Because a word overrules what is actually argued/addressed when interpreting what someone is saying...
Oh I'm sure.
A tip though: You don't need to add "clearly" when you've already said "easily". They both essentially serve the same function in your sentence and that sort of redundancy often makes readers think the writer isn't really confident.
Lol, I promise you that you’re way out of your depth in trying to didactically lecture me on how to properly word things, as you’re obviously a college-aged kid at most and I’m a Harvard Law School educated lawyer who was an editor of the Harvard Law Review and basically write legal briefs for a living including in cases that I guarantee you you’ve read about in the national news. Sorry, but I definitely don’t need a writing “tip” or advocacy advice from you.
Not Yale? (joke)
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
Djoker wrote:Jordan clearly has a higher peak than Lebron in my eyes.
As Ben Taylor showed in his analysis looking at the four offensive dimensions:
- Jordan scored at a much higher volume ~5 points/75 possessions
- similar scoring efficiency
- similar playmaking volume; note that even though Lebron is undoubtedly a more gifted passer, Jordan's scoring attracts so much defensive attention that he generates a lot more open shots for his teammates to close the gap in this category
- Jordan had lower turnover rate
All in all, this puts Jordan a tier higher as an offensive player.
And here is the part that everyone glosses over. For non-bigs, individual offense carries way more impact than individual defense. Thus Lebron would probably have to be at least two tiers ahead as a defensive player to close the gap. And of course he is not. Lebron at his best may have been a bit better but it isn't enough to make him as good or better overall when Jordan has a clear offensive gap in his favor. And of course it's impossible to judge their defense without relying almost solely on the eye test which is subjective.
lessthanjake wrote:Heej wrote:Would rather have hoped to see some of the stats heads Continue their discussions on the advanced metrics vs any of this childish stuff. Am I right in my assumption that at the end of the day it's all apples and oranges discussing LeBron vs MJ impact stats because we don't have a full set of Jordan's plus minus numbers during his career?
I know Squared and others seem to have gotten close for some seasons
I’ve made an entire thread exhaustively compiling that data: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2314587. The bottom line is that we don’t have Jordan’s on-off numbers for his whole career, but we can actually piece together quite a lot of on-off data for him between the various sources we have (overall, there’s data for about half of his Bulls games) and it looks extremely good.
zimpy27 wrote:lessthanjake wrote:Heej wrote:Would rather have hoped to see some of the stats heads Continue their discussions on the advanced metrics vs any of this childish stuff. Am I right in my assumption that at the end of the day it's all apples and oranges discussing LeBron vs MJ impact stats because we don't have a full set of Jordan's plus minus numbers during his career?
I know Squared and others seem to have gotten close for some seasons
I’ve made an entire thread exhaustively compiling that data: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2314587. The bottom line is that we don’t have Jordan’s on-off numbers for his whole career, but we can actually piece together quite a lot of on-off data for him between the various sources we have (overall, there’s data for about half of his Bulls games) and it looks extremely good.
Sample sizes are too small really.
The basketball reference numbers for 96-97 and 97-98 in regular season are eye-opening. Look at that drop down from 95-96 and seasons prior where there's smaller samples provided.
Plus it's very possible that the small sample of games that squared or thinking basketball have captured are ones where Jordan was more impactful and that's why they were available to begin with. Thus superficially elevating his +/- stats.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
AdagioPace wrote:Djoker wrote:Jordan clearly has a higher peak than Lebron in my eyes.
As Ben Taylor showed in his analysis looking at the four offensive dimensions:
- Jordan scored at a much higher volume ~5 points/75 possessions
- similar scoring efficiency
- similar playmaking volume; note that even though Lebron is undoubtedly a more gifted passer, Jordan's scoring attracts so much defensive attention that he generates a lot more open shots for his teammates to close the gap in this category
- Jordan had lower turnover rate
All in all, this puts Jordan a tier higher as an offensive player.
And here is the part that everyone glosses over. For non-bigs, individual offense carries way more impact than individual defense. Thus Lebron would probably have to be at least two tiers ahead as a defensive player to close the gap. And of course he is not. Lebron at his best may have been a bit better but it isn't enough to make him as good or better overall when Jordan has a clear offensive gap in his favor. And of course it's impossible to judge their defense without relying almost solely on the eye test which is subjective.
in your opinion:
Would Jordan be able to lead a 2017 Cavs-level offense? (It doesn't matter how do it. Heliocentric, 99% midrange shooting, whatever....).
Not a rhetorical question.
lessthanjake wrote:zimpy27 wrote:lessthanjake wrote:
I’ve made an entire thread exhaustively compiling that data: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2314587. The bottom line is that we don’t have Jordan’s on-off numbers for his whole career, but we can actually piece together quite a lot of on-off data for him between the various sources we have (overall, there’s data for about half of his Bulls games) and it looks extremely good.
Sample sizes are too small really.
The basketball reference numbers for 96-97 and 97-98 in regular season are eye-opening. Look at that drop down from 95-96 and seasons prior where there's smaller samples provided.
Plus it's very possible that the small sample of games that squared or thinking basketball have captured are ones where Jordan was more impactful and that's why they were available to begin with. Thus superficially elevating his +/- stats.
Yes, there’s not a full sample. But we have info on hundreds of games outside of the second three peat years. So it’s not some tiny sample at all. And it’s just as possible that the sampled games are ones where Jordan was *less* impactful. Indeed, for instance, the 56 games from the 1991 regular season that we have are way less good of games from the Bulls than the season as a whole (the Bulls completely dominated the remaining games) which would suggest Jordan was probably more impactful in the unsampled games (though we can’t know for sure of course).
Relatedly, as for whether the sampled games are systematically chosen because they’re ones where Jordan was more impactful, I don’t think that’s an issue. Thinking Basketball’s sampled games were just all the playoff games from 1988 onwards (and we also have data from the entire 1985 playoffs from Squared). So we basically have virtually every playoff game, not some sample of his best ones. Meanwhile, the Squared regular season data is, as I understand it, just based on Squared having footage from the NBA of essentially all games and just going through them at random (and as I said, that randomness has, for example, resulted in Squared actually sampling a notably bad sample of games for the Bulls from 1991).
zimpy27 wrote:lessthanjake wrote:zimpy27 wrote:
Sample sizes are too small really.
The basketball reference numbers for 96-97 and 97-98 in regular season are eye-opening. Look at that drop down from 95-96 and seasons prior where there's smaller samples provided.
Plus it's very possible that the small sample of games that squared or thinking basketball have captured are ones where Jordan was more impactful and that's why they were available to begin with. Thus superficially elevating his +/- stats.
Yes, there’s not a full sample. But we have info on hundreds of games outside of the second three peat years. So it’s not some tiny sample at all. And it’s just as possible that the sampled games are ones where Jordan was *less* impactful. Indeed, for instance, the 56 games from the 1991 regular season that we have are way less good of games from the Bulls than the season as a whole (the Bulls completely dominated the remaining games) which would suggest Jordan was probably more impactful in the unsampled games (though we can’t know for sure of course).
Relatedly, as for whether the sampled games are systematically chosen because they’re ones where Jordan was more impactful, I don’t think that’s an issue. Thinking Basketball’s sampled games were just all the playoff games from 1988 onwards (and we also have data from the entire 1985 playoffs from Squared). So we basically have virtually every playoff game, not some sample of his best ones. Meanwhile, the Squared regular season data is, as I understand it, just based on Squared having footage from the NBA of essentially all games and just going through them at random (and as I said, that randomness has, for example, resulted in Squared actually sampling a notably bad sample of games for the Bulls from 1991).
Ok so taking the total of his playoff games would be good to see but regular season is much less biased. When a team loses a series on the playoffs they are a worse team but they don't keep playing. So yeah there's biased towards only showing data when a team is winning.
Interesting that squared2020 is doing it at random, that definitely helps. I thought it was off that they had a larger sample from Bulls games than any other team by quite a large margin, didn't look random to me.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
Djoker wrote:AdagioPace wrote:Djoker wrote:Jordan clearly has a higher peak than Lebron in my eyes.
As Ben Taylor showed in his analysis looking at the four offensive dimensions:
- Jordan scored at a much higher volume ~5 points/75 possessions
- similar scoring efficiency
- similar playmaking volume; note that even though Lebron is undoubtedly a more gifted passer, Jordan's scoring attracts so much defensive attention that he generates a lot more open shots for his teammates to close the gap in this category
- Jordan had lower turnover rate
All in all, this puts Jordan a tier higher as an offensive player.
And here is the part that everyone glosses over. For non-bigs, individual offense carries way more impact than individual defense. Thus Lebron would probably have to be at least two tiers ahead as a defensive player to close the gap. And of course he is not. Lebron at his best may have been a bit better but it isn't enough to make him as good or better overall when Jordan has a clear offensive gap in his favor. And of course it's impossible to judge their defense without relying almost solely on the eye test which is subjective.
in your opinion:
Would Jordan be able to lead a 2017 Cavs-level offense? (It doesn't matter how do it. Heliocentric, 99% midrange shooting, whatever....).
Not a rhetorical question.
I'm assuming you're talking about 2017 Cavs playoff offense of +11.5. Their RS offense was just a +4.8.
Yes. He would be able to. Based on his profile that I touched on above Jordan does everything Lebron does except scores on higher volume and turns the ball over less.
lessthanjake, esq wrote:zimpy27 wrote:lessthanjake wrote:
Yes, there’s not a full sample. But we have info on hundreds of games outside of the second three peat years. So it’s not some tiny sample at all. And it’s just as possible that the sampled games are ones where Jordan was *less* impactful. Indeed, for instance, the 56 games from the 1991 regular season that we have are way less good of games from the Bulls than the season as a whole (the Bulls completely dominated the remaining games) which would suggest Jordan was probably more impactful in the unsampled games (though we can’t know for sure of course).
Relatedly, as for whether the sampled games are systematically chosen because they’re ones where Jordan was more impactful, I don’t think that’s an issue. Thinking Basketball’s sampled games were just all the playoff games from 1988 onwards (and we also have data from the entire 1985 playoffs from Squared). So we basically have virtually every playoff game, not some sample of his best ones. Meanwhile, the Squared regular season data is, as I understand it, just based on Squared having footage from the NBA of essentially all games and just going through them at random (and as I said, that randomness has, for example, resulted in Squared actually sampling a notably bad sample of games for the Bulls from 1991).
Ok so taking the total of his playoff games would be good to see but regular season is much less biased. When a team loses a series on the playoffs they are a worse team but they don't keep playing. So yeah there's biased towards only showing data when a team is winning.
Interesting that squared2020 is doing it at random, that definitely helps. I thought it was off that they had a larger sample from Bulls games than any other team by quite a large margin, didn't look random to me.
Yeah, I can’t speak to Squared’s exact process. There’s definitely more games of certain teams than others (so there’s more Bulls games than, say, Kings games, and I doubt that that’s random), but what I was saying is I don’t think the specific Bulls games chosen were chosen because they’re particularly good Jordan games. I’m admittedly not an expert in Squared’s exact process though.
As for playoffs, that’s correct to some degree. Not sure how big of an effect it has though, since a team is definitely worse when they lose, but a team doing badly doesn’t actually necessarily mean a specific player’s on-off will be worse (maybe the team did badly because they did horribly with that player on the bench!). And, indeed, Jordan’s playoff on-off actually tends to be higher in the years his team did less well (basically because, in the better years, the team does a lot better with him on the bench than they’d done in the worse years). Anyways, even if we think about playoff on-off as in its own separate bucket, Jordan’s playoff on-off looks extremely impressive as compared to other peoples’ playoff on-off (it’s like an estimated +15 with our data only missing 3 playoff games).
OhayoKD wrote:lessthanjake, esq wrote:zimpy27 wrote:
Ok so taking the total of his playoff games would be good to see but regular season is much less biased. When a team loses a series on the playoffs they are a worse team but they don't keep playing. So yeah there's biased towards only showing data when a team is winning.
Interesting that squared2020 is doing it at random, that definitely helps. I thought it was off that they had a larger sample from Bulls games than any other team by quite a large margin, didn't look random to me.
Yeah, I can’t speak to Squared’s exact process. There’s definitely more games of certain teams than others (so there’s more Bulls games than, say, Kings games, and I doubt that that’s random), but what I was saying is I don’t think the specific Bulls games chosen were chosen because they’re particularly good Jordan games. I’m admittedly not an expert in Squared’s exact process though.
As for playoffs, that’s correct to some degree. Not sure how big of an effect it has though, since a team is definitely worse when they lose, but a team doing badly doesn’t actually necessarily mean a specific player’s on-off will be worse (maybe the team did badly because they did horribly with that player on the bench!). And, indeed, Jordan’s playoff on-off actually tends to be higher in the years his team did less well (basically because, in the better years, the team does a lot better with him on the bench than they’d done in the worse years). Anyways, even if we think about playoff on-off as in its own separate bucket, Jordan’s playoff on-off looks extremely impressive as compared to other peoples’ playoff on-off (it’s like an estimated +15 with our data only missing 3 playoff games).
Well as it pertains to this discussion, Lebron matches his on/off over more years so...
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
zimpy27 wrote:OhayoKD wrote:lessthanjake, esq wrote:
Yeah, I can’t speak to Squared’s exact process. There’s definitely more games of certain teams than others (so there’s more Bulls games than, say, Kings games, and I doubt that that’s random), but what I was saying is I don’t think the specific Bulls games chosen were chosen because they’re particularly good Jordan games. I’m admittedly not an expert in Squared’s exact process though.
As for playoffs, that’s correct to some degree. Not sure how big of an effect it has though, since a team is definitely worse when they lose, but a team doing badly doesn’t actually necessarily mean a specific player’s on-off will be worse (maybe the team did badly because they did horribly with that player on the bench!). And, indeed, Jordan’s playoff on-off actually tends to be higher in the years his team did less well (basically because, in the better years, the team does a lot better with him on the bench than they’d done in the worse years). Anyways, even if we think about playoff on-off as in its own separate bucket, Jordan’s playoff on-off looks extremely impressive as compared to other peoples’ playoff on-off (it’s like an estimated +15 with our data only missing 3 playoff games).
Well as it pertains to this discussion, Lebron matches his on/off over more years so...
That’s objectively untrue. You’d have to posit that you think the estimations I’ve provided in that thread are substantially wrong to get to that conclusion.
OhayoKD wrote:Djoker wrote:AdagioPace wrote:
in your opinion:
Would Jordan be able to lead a 2017 Cavs-level offense? (It doesn't matter how do it. Heliocentric, 99% midrange shooting, whatever....).
Not a rhetorical question.
I'm assuming you're talking about 2017 Cavs playoff offense of +11.5. Their RS offense was just a +4.8.
Yes. He would be able to. Based on his profile that I touched on above Jordan does everything Lebron does except scores on higher volume and turns the ball over less.
Fantasy MJ maybe. The actual Micheal Jordan is not as good of a passer or effecient as a creator,(passer-rating peaks alot higher, box-creation peaks a bit higher with the gap expanding when we extend the sample) handles the ball alot less(contributing to that "turns over the ball less"), faces less defensive attention(also helps mj with his turnover economy AND scoring effeciency(, and isn't running his team as an on-court general(on both ends of the floor)
Maybe you shouldn't be trying to create player profiles based on PER? As is, Lebron has scaled up to jpeak ordan esque scoring numbers(effeciency and volume) at points(jordan has never matched Lebron's effeciency as a playmaker)
"Player x is this but better" applies much better to 2009 Lebron than any Jordan ironically. Yet you had them on the "same tier"
As it happens the Cavs also led a "better than any mj" playoff offense in 2016 with Lebron --also-- anchoring an elite playoff defense next to multiple lineup negatives
Go figure...lessthanjake, esq wrote:zimpy27 wrote:
Ok so taking the total of his playoff games would be good to see but regular season is much less biased. When a team loses a series on the playoffs they are a worse team but they don't keep playing. So yeah there's biased towards only showing data when a team is winning.
Interesting that squared2020 is doing it at random, that definitely helps. I thought it was off that they had a larger sample from Bulls games than any other team by quite a large margin, didn't look random to me.
Yeah, I can’t speak to Squared’s exact process. There’s definitely more games of certain teams than others (so there’s more Bulls games than, say, Kings games, and I doubt that that’s random), but what I was saying is I don’t think the specific Bulls games chosen were chosen because they’re particularly good Jordan games. I’m admittedly not an expert in Squared’s exact process though.
As for playoffs, that’s correct to some degree. Not sure how big of an effect it has though, since a team is definitely worse when they lose, but a team doing badly doesn’t actually necessarily mean a specific player’s on-off will be worse (maybe the team did badly because they did horribly with that player on the bench!). And, indeed, Jordan’s playoff on-off actually tends to be higher in the years his team did less well (basically because, in the better years, the team does a lot better with him on the bench than they’d done in the worse years). Anyways, even if we think about playoff on-off as in its own separate bucket, Jordan’s playoff on-off looks extremely impressive as compared to other peoples’ playoff on-off (it’s like an estimated +15 with our data only missing 3 playoff games).
Well as it pertains to this discussion, Lebron matches his on/off over more years so...
(and of course if we take out rotations as a factor and look at their teams completely without it becomes extremely lopsided)
Djoker wrote:2016 Cavs had a +9.1 rORtg and a -0.4 rDRtg in the postseason. That's hardly an elite playoff defense. That's average defense!
2009 Lebron is a classic case of an outlier
And you're confusing passing with playmaking. Jordan matched Lebron in box creation despite being a lesser passer because the scoring pressure he exerted collapsed defenses and gave teammates open shots.
Lebron never consistently scored at Jordan's volume... that's a flat out lie.