OhayoKD wrote:With that in mind, I think we can guess where that late-career RAPM is coming from:
AEnigma wrote:1997: 75% of minutes played with Malone
1998: 84% of minutes played with Malone
1999: 89% of minutes played with Malone
2000: 92% of minutes played with Malone
2001: 87% of minutes played with Malone
2002: 85% of minutes played with Malone
2003: 90% of minutes played with Malone
Poor guy!
Objection: conjecture.
The above speculates [or assumes] that:
1) It is Malone that has the greater impact
by a comfortable margin (big enough to drag Stockton's up from what would otherwise be sort of pedestrian numbers, apparently, with <85% overlap in some years [<75% in one]).
And 2) RAPM is not able to parse out the credit accurately because too much minute overlap.
However.....
In '04 Kevin Garnett led the league in [J.E.'s] RAPM by an absurd margin over 2nd place (him at +8.6, 2nd place +5.6).
Sam Cassell (a damn fine player in his own right in '04, yes?) played
89.3% of his minutes on the court with Garnett, yet his RAPM is just +3.0 (another source had him at just +2.3 while Garnett is +8.7).
Latrell Sprewell played 86.3% of his minutes alongside Garnett that same year, yet had a completely mediocre RAPM (around zero by both sources).
Troy Hudson played 90% of his '03 minutes on-court with Garnett [again league-leader in RAPM at +5.4], and yet had an RAPM of like -1.6.
In '05 he played 80% of his minutes with Garnett [+4.4, tied for 7th in league], yet had an RAPM of nearly -3.
In '98, Luc Longley played 89.1% of his minutes with Michael Jordan [who had a 4th in the league +6.15 PI RAPM]......and yet his was -0.61.
That's not a huge sample, but let me say I didn't have to search long/hard to find a number of "cherry-picked" examples (there are numerous more I can drudge up). I think it's nonetheless sufficient to suggest that time on-court with a big impact player is no guarantee (especially year over year, as is the case with Stockton) of impressive impact numbers (apparently not even when you're as good as '04 Cassell, and playing nearly 90% next to a BIGGER impact player than Karl Malone
ever was).
And if this argument did have some teeth, it's curious it never came up when its authors were championing Scottie Pippen (83.2% of his minutes next to Jordan in '97, 82.5% in '98).
And finally, at the very least I'd have to object on logisitical grounds wrt '97.
In '97....Stockton played 74.5% of his minutes with Malone. Though on the flip-side, Malone played 72% of his minutes with Stockton.
ADDITIONALLY:
Malone got 82.1% of his minutes on court with Jeff Hornacek (vs only 61.8% for Stockton [-20.3]).
Malone got 78.3% of his minutes next to Bryon Russell [4th-best player] (vs only 60.7% for Stockton [-17.6]).
Malone got 53.1% of his minutes next to Greg Ostertag [starting C] (vs only 45.9% for Stockton [-7.2]).
Also looking at the WORST rotational players on the roster (Morris, Anderson, and Foster).....
Stockton played 29.1% of his minutes next to a rookie Shandon Anderson [not good] (Malone played something less than 21% of his minutes with Anderson [don't know exactly, but it was so infrequent it doesn't register as one of the 20 most common 2-man line-ups]).
Stockton played 26.1% of his minutes next to Chris Morris [who had a godawful down year] (again, something <21% at least for Malone; too infrequent to register).
Stockton played 21.6% of his minutes next to Greg Foster (again, too infrequent to register for Malone).
Are we REALLY going to look at all of this and say with a straight face that Stockton is the one that had the line-up advantage that year?
Anyway, I'm glad as hell he's finally off the table.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire