dr positivity wrote:When it comes to box score, "skillset analysis", accolades, or +/-, in my opinion going 100% all in on any will lead to flaws, especially for 60s players when the data is worse such as having to use shoddy injured game +/- instead of modern day RAPM. If +/- was the end all
Yeah, but good stat-use is not a democracy.
the "box-score" and "skillset analysis" are completely subjective and who they "favor" is entirely dependent on what you count which of course, can only be tied to winning if you use...winning. If I wanted to make a box-score that only counted defensive components, Russell would likely have the best defensive box-score. If I wanted to do skillset analysis that way, he would have the best skillset too. And there's no real reason to think that would be less accurate for the 60(or even the 70's really) than ws/48 or per or the like.
The same thing is also true for accolades to a degree though Russell covers so many bases that a majority of frames will come up with him as a distant top.
If we can agree that players are ultimately "good" based on how much they can improve a team, then the question of "who is likelier to improve a team by more" is an objective/falsifiable(if hard to answer) one which you can only answer with winning baked in.
On a more technical note, WOWY is not +/-. +/- works off much smaller samples per-game and per-season. WOWY has the largest possible ones. +/- is also not as inclusive as whatever effect a player can have on the bench or in terms of intangibles is also less accounted for, never mind it being prone to colinearity and such in a way WOWY largely isn't.
+/- sees all the top players near each other because it's based on what teams do in a few minutes without a guy. Force those teams to survive without a guy longer and suddenly we see big deltas; some players are easier to adapt for when you overcome the uh "emotional shock". Some players are harder to. And some players are so hard to adapt for you can literally replace them when they're retiring, see their teammates improve, see a hof-coach replace a player-coach and...
massive drop-off. Which gets us to...
These are all examples of "emotional factors" in a game with humans. I don't know if the Celtics decline in 1970 had anything to do with losing Russell and Jones leadership in addition to their play, but it could be a factor among other ones I listed like player and coach changes but it could be a factor among other ones I listed like player and coach changes.
They are all examples of emotional factors that could have had a bigger effect for teams that dropped off less than russell's celtics did. But you are not presenting that possiblity. And it's especially wierd doing this with the Bulls:
The Bulls in 93 played worse in regular season than in 91 and 92 probably cause they had less to prove in regular season and were getting burned out, which affects the comparison with 94 and 95 Bulls
The 94 and 95 Bulls had a best player who was far more discontent than he was in 93 with a very real hatred of one of the teammates they added. I do not recall Hondo filing a trade request after Russell's depature. I also do not recall hondo lambasting his coach as a racist(which by the way phil jackson absolutely was), or begging russell to come back.
Have you considered the possiblity that the "emotional factor" could have hindered Chicago more?
The actual reason the "the bulls were worn down in 93 and revitalized in 94" is trotted out is that a flat reading of what happened supports the(uncomfortable for some) idea that scoring titles and per and steals per game aren't worth nearly as much as people initially assumed.
It is not something built on what players actually did(filing trade requests, sitting out possessions, ect), or even a consistent application of the justifying theory(how are four title pushes in a row less emotionally exhausting than 3?)
The larger point here though is that by noting the possiblity of a hindrance for one set of teammates, and not the other, you are painting variance as factor that could only possibly have boosted Russell's impact signal when it also could have
hindered it.
Evidence is not about proving beyond all shadow of a doubt. Even scientific truths have a kernel of uncertainty. It is about marking one thing as more likely than another. Then we look for replication to determine uncertainty(with the line of what is considered a fact being drawn based on precedent, not objective percentages). Variance can go both ways. Emotional factors can go both ways. The signal could underrate Russell relative to Steph and Jordan. Or it can overrate him. But because his signals are stronger, him being overrated(and overrated by enough) is a necessary for him to be worth less. It is not necessary that he is underrated.
But that's just probablistic thinking 101. What is worth considering is what we consider a fact in a field.
In basketball Lebron>Dereck Fisher is a fact. Jordan>Pippen is a fact. Jordan>Kobe is a fact. There is uncertainty here, and we don't really know the percentage of likelihood, but there are just too many correlates and too much replication for anyone to care.
Let's apply this to "is 70 the signal or the noise". What do the other data-points around 70 say?
69 has the celtics very bad without Russell over 8 games.
71 has the celtics as less above average than what realistically should have been a fire-sale in 95
72 has the celtics still as very weak 2018-raptors calibre contender
The celtics without russell's teammates during his tenure, paticularly in the 60's, has the team doing just fine regardless of who leaves and doesn't leave. Over a small 2.2 game/season sample, it has the team collapse from greatest outlier ever to bad
They are very good without him in his and before his rookie-year with a team whose roster would be depleted by 62, and before that we see russell win b2b ncaa titles with a team that did not ever make the ncaa tournament before his arrival.
The worst data-point from russell sees the most different roster and is the second most removed temporally from the year in question. Everything else pretty much corraborates the same narrative. The data closest in temporal proximity is the best for russell. The data that is tiny but covers his career says the same.
The only data where his team is even above average without him comes in circumstances nba history would suggest dynasties should be at least contention-worthy without.
Why are you taking 1970 to be the noise as opposed to the signal? 1970 is what has the corroboration. And it implies something wild. Because in certain years of russell's tenure, being worth 4-points of srs makes you
the clear best team in the league. In other words, if Russell, who as a player-coach saw an 8-point full-strength drop off in 69 and 70, is merely worth
half that on a random team, you are significantly more likely to win a title with him than an
8-point player is likely to win during the 90's or early 70's or 10's.
In other words, at face-value, the data suggests russell is scale-breaking. And that data has far more corroborating it than it has challenging it. Which leaves us with,
When it comes to Russell I do think it's meaningful that the Celtics got worse without him, but it's one of several meaningful factors, such as how I value that he has more regular season MVPs than regular season god Wilt, but I'm not going to stake my entire Russell opinion on it.
What exactly do you consider a "meaningful" factor which you can "stake your opinion" on which doesn't support Russell as a scale-breaker?
WS/48 is no more meaningful than a defensive only box-score with defensive only weightings describing how a team with an average offense and the best ever defense won 11 times. You could probably get more accurate title predictions those years just counting whose center deterred or deflecting more shots than you would get with per or ws/48 or whatever meaningful factor you are considering that suggests russell is worse than lebron or jordan or whoever.
That might not matter if you are playing the time-machine game, but the original contention was that Russell was lacking in
individual dominance. It's all well and good saying "well it's not 100 percent because of variance", but if we are going to positively argue Russell was not the most dominant(or actually less individually dominant than Lebron, Kareem, and Jordan), then you I'd expect evidence that actually supports that, not simply a criticism of a stat as "flawed".