Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus

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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#41 » by OhayoKD » Tue Dec 19, 2023 12:37 pm

f4p wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
Heej wrote:SRS is kinda just a function of the teams you played no? If the league was weak or had worse parity (which one night expect in an Expansion scenario) then is it fair to say SRS itself isn't a good measure of "opponent goodness" outside of comparing teams within the same timeframes?

A "great" team in the 90s isn't necessarily a "great" team in 2020

if someone wants to argue the current nba is the most talented ever, i would say they are correct. we've had one expansion team since 1996 plus a bunch of international talent added, along with the background population growth and an expansion of the talent pool due to all the extra money in sports. but obviously the 03/05/07 spurs weren't playing now and weren't in some massively different league than the 1990's bulls. maybe the 2013/14 spurs were, but that's 2 out of 6 finals. and obviously the 1999 spurs were playing in a flaming ****heap of a year and got the 1999 knicks in the finals.

Foreign nba talent doubled between 1998 and 2003. The talent pool expanding didn't start in the 2020's.



Heej wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
Regarding SRS, one could argue that league expansion increases SRS of non-expansion teams by a bit. But it wouldn’t be a hugely drastic effect (expansion teams’ SRS is typically bad for the first few years but it mathematically can’t redistribute *that* much SRS to the rest of the league). This is more a factor on the margins. It’s not making a 4 SRS team into a 7 SRS team. And it’s counteracted in significant part by substantially increased tanking these days.

But let’s say wanted to try to adjust for parity (not sure we should want to do that since part of a lack of parity is the existence of such “great” teams, but let’s just go with it for argument’s purposes). We could instead look at the number of standard deviations above the mean a team was in SRS. The Bulls’ Finals opponents averaged being 1.384 standard deviations above the mean in SRS. You mentioned 2020, so I’ll choose to use that as a reference point. 1.384 standard deviations above the mean in SRS in the 2020 season would correspond to a 6.63 SRS—which is quite high and not meaningfully different from the actual SRS average of the Bulls’ Finals opponents (which was 6.84). (We can infer from this that the effect of tanking and expansion on parity essentially canceled out). Even in this past NBA season, which had a level of parity rarely seen before (in large part due to increased load management of stars IMO), 1.384 standard deviations above the mean in SRS would correspond to 5.27 SRS, which would’ve been higher than any team except the Celtics. Basically, we can adjust for parity differences, and the Bulls’ Finals opponents still look great.

In any event, I also discussed other indicators that have nothing to do with SRS. For instance, the fact that the pre-playoffs title odds for the Bulls’s Finals opponents were typically the best of any non-Bulls team (and always at least the 2nd best).

Overall, it’s pretty clear that the Bulls faced opponents in the Finals that were great in the context of their era. I don’t really see any valid argument against that. Their SRS was high, their SRS was still high when we adjust for league parity, they all had consistently high SRS across several seasons in that time period, their title odds were typically the best of any non-Bulls team (and always at least the 2nd best), and they had star power that often is so important in the playoffs. Sure, at a certain level, we could just say that the talent level in the NBA is higher these days and so no team in the past was “great” by today’s standards. But, while there’s logic to that, it’s ultimately just an example of a type of dogmatic modernist argument that I think most people reject, and in any event I don’t think it’s the type of thing that was being referred to when it was suggested that those Finals opponents weren’t great.

I appreciate the work you put in with the standard deviations which I can see why you would go that route but I don't think it really makes sense if the point I'm making is that the talent pool itself was diluted from top to bottom relative to other eras. There's no real method you could use to determine 90s teams were x% as good as modern teams or even as stacked as the 60s and 80s teams that had enormous concentrations of talent.
[/quote]
Yeah, as has been brought up(and ignored) repeatedly, lessthanjake's adjustment only works if you assume equal talent distribution. In reality, SRS for a top 60's team is being generated against "weak teams" that are much higher up the totem pole relative to the general talent pool than a "weak team" from a much bigger league.

raw srs comparisons just don't work there. A team posting comparable SRS during Russell's time would be much much stronger than their 90's equivalent. Russell is also certainly not the player you should be trying to target in terms of finals competition:
He closed his career by serving as a player-coach and was consequently one of the few players to be the best player on title teams with distinct rosters and head coaches. In that role, he:
- came back 3-1 on the road against an 8-SRS defending champion 76ers team;
- won the title over a Lakers team that had generated an even higher MoV when West played than the MoV of those 76ers;
- and then repeated as champions by winning three road series (only matched by the 1995 Rockets), including series against the Wilt/West/Baylor super-team and against a Knicks team that with DeBusschere had been even better than those 1968 76ers and Lakers teams.


Ironically the modernist argument is not yours (heej) but f4p and lessthanjake's.

As for expansion, the effects are reflected when we look at the PSRS of Chicago's opponents rather than their RSRS:

For example, The 1997 Jazz go from 27th to 68th despite their PSRS getting boosted by their performance vs Chicago. And in case you were wondering, the 1997 Jazz posted the highest playoff-rating of any MJ finals opponent.

SRS is ultimately useful as a proxy for predicting championships/playoff success. That is the reason why we care about M.O.V. When it fails to predict that(as it often does for 90's teams irregardless of their performance vs Jordan's Bulls), the original prediction is besides the point.
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#42 » by f4p » Tue Dec 19, 2023 2:44 pm

OhayoKD wrote:
f4p wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:if someone wants to argue the current nba is the most talented ever, i would say they are correct. we've had one expansion team since 1996 plus a bunch of international talent added, along with the background population growth and an expansion of the talent pool due to all the extra money in sports. but obviously the 03/05/07 spurs weren't playing now and weren't in some massively different league than the 1990's bulls. maybe the 2013/14 spurs were, but that's 2 out of 6 finals. and obviously the 1999 spurs were playing in a flaming ****heap of a year and got the 1999 knicks in the finals.

Foreign nba talent doubled between 1998 and 2003. The talent pool expanding didn't start in the 2020's.


yes, i'm sure the league got way, way better in the exact timeframe that makes MJ look bad and tim duncan look good, lol. MJ never had to beat Nikoloz Tskitishvili.

Yeah, as has been brought up(and ignored) repeatedly, lessthanjake's adjustment only works if you assume equal talent distribution. In reality, SRS for a top 60's team is being generated against "weak teams" that are much higher up the totem pole relative to the general talent pool than a "weak team" from a much bigger league.


and that only works if we assume that the league talent pool didn't expand to accommodate the new teams being added. the 60's weren't some similarly talented world, but with just 9 or 10 teams. maybe the super-expansion (including the effect of the ABA) of the 70's weakened things compared to the 60's, but not by the time we get to the 90's with so much more money in the game and increased population and a much larger percentage of black players, which possibly was a bigger shift than the other factors.

Ironically the modernist argument is not yours (heej) but f4p and lessthanjake's.


noting that talent has expanded for 30 years, even more than the baseline american level of talent from the first 40 years of the league, with only one new team isn't modernist. nor is thinking that talent has probably expanded faster than the number of teams since the 60's. as it probably has for most of the major sports as sports has become a bigger and more economically significant part of the modern world, which can be seen in things like player salaries and the massive increase in team valuations.
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#43 » by Franco » Tue Dec 19, 2023 3:05 pm

Jordan having a negative net in a Finals because the Bulls' bench beat the piss out of the Jazz' in that one game is funny to me
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#44 » by Heej » Tue Dec 19, 2023 4:26 pm

f4p wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
f4p wrote:

Foreign nba talent doubled between 1998 and 2003. The talent pool expanding didn't start in the 2020's.


yes, i'm sure the league got way, way better in the exact timeframe that makes MJ look bad and tim duncan look good, lol. MJ never had to beat Nikoloz Tskitishvili.

Yeah, as has been brought up(and ignored) repeatedly, lessthanjake's adjustment only works if you assume equal talent distribution. In reality, SRS for a top 60's team is being generated against "weak teams" that are much higher up the totem pole relative to the general talent pool than a "weak team" from a much bigger league.


and that only works if we assume that the league talent pool didn't expand to accommodate the new teams being added. the 60's weren't some similarly talented world, but with just 9 or 10 teams. maybe the super-expansion (including the effect of the ABA) of the 70's weakened things compared to the 60's, but not by the time we get to the 90's with so much more money in the game and increased population and a much larger percentage of black players, which possibly was a bigger shift than the other factors.

Ironically the modernist argument is not yours (heej) but f4p and lessthanjake's.


noting that talent has expanded for 30 years, even more than the baseline american level of talent from the first 40 years of the league, with only one new team isn't modernist. nor is thinking that talent has probably expanded faster than the number of teams since the 60's. as it probably has for most of the major sports as sports has become a bigger and more economically significant part of the modern world, which can be seen in things like player salaries and the massive increase in team valuations.

While I agree talent has expanded further than teams have in the past 60 years, I don't think it was just a steady incline. There absolutely were eras where the talent didn't commensurately expand to match expansion imo.

Like in almost all things humanity, progression was cyclical with lulls and explosions. The 70s were pretty damaging to the NBAs reputation with the cocaine controversies, and the effects of that were felt a generation later when the late 80s early 90s produced unusually weak draft classes that I assume occurred due to plain statistical variance (I remember reading an article a while back about how specifically 1990 babies iirc were the backbone of the NBA for a while and a lot of core players in the league were born that year for some reason); and some depressive effects from basketball not being as big a deal growing up as it was in the league's golden media eras.

In regards to the timeframe of foreign talent doubling in the NBA...he's right lol. Technically it doubled in the 90s too where teams went from drafting 2-5 internationals/yr in the 80s to about 5-10 in the 90s and hitting 20+ consistently by 2000 or so.

People accusing me of a modernist argument are just stopping to low blows (not the first time I've seen out of place personal attacks from the poster). There's just some decades and eras that due to plain statistical variance and other contextual factors that are going to be stronger than others, and it's weird to see someone use one of the objectively weaker eras as an opportunity to give Jordan extra points on his numbers ya know?
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#45 » by OhayoKD » Tue Dec 19, 2023 8:54 pm

f4p wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Foreign nba talent doubled between 1998 and 2003. The talent pool expanding didn't start in the 2020's.


yes, i'm sure the league got way, way better in the exact timeframe that makes MJ look bad and tim duncan look good, lol.

Actually, I lied:
Ty4191 wrote:Image

Foreign nba talent more than doubled between 1998 and 2002.

Oops.
MJ never had to beat Nikoloz Tskitishvili.

Or Dirk. Or Steve Nash.

And that is besides the fact that PSRS paints a very different picture of those final opponents than srs does. Regardless of talent pool, expansion bolstered the ratings of top-end 90's teams in a way it didn't for Duncan's 2000's opponents.

Yeah, as has been brought up(and ignored) repeatedly, lessthanjake's adjustment only works if you assume equal talent distribution. In reality, SRS for a top 60's team is being generated against "weak teams" that are much higher up the totem pole relative to the general talent pool than a "weak team" from a much bigger league.


and that only works if we assume that the league talent pool didn't expand to accommodate the new teams being added. the 60's weren't some similarly talented world, but with just 9 or 10 teams. maybe the super-expansion (including the effect of the ABA) of the 70's weakened things compared to the 60's, but not by the time we get to the 90's with so much more money in the game and increased population and a much larger percentage of black players, which possibly was a bigger shift than the other factors.

Ironically the modernist argument is not yours (heej) but f4p and lessthanjake's.
[/quote]
Having a more talented "world" is not paticularly relevant when the claim was specifically "for their own time". And SRS doesn't really care about "world talent" as is. The league is far more talented now, yet SRS is at a relative nadir. SRS does care about league-size and distribution.
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#46 » by f4p » Wed Dec 20, 2023 4:43 am

OhayoKD wrote:
f4p wrote:
yes, i'm sure the league got way, way better in the exact timeframe that makes MJ look bad and tim duncan look good, lol.

Actually, I lied:
Ty4191 wrote:Image

Foreign nba talent more than doubled between 1998 and 2002.

Oops


yeah, teams drafted a bunch of euros starting in 1998. but like internet stocks, the early part was a bubble. thus the massive increase at the beginning and then the line barely changes for a decade as the good players are offset by the busts. and a bunch of 20 year old prospects in 2000 aren't substantially affecting the nba. we can see this in the mvp voting. from 1998 to 2002, one international player makes the top 10 in one year. dirk in 2002 in 8th. that's less effect per year over those years than the effect of hakeem during jordan's years.

MJ never had to beat Nikoloz Tskitishvili.

Or Dirk. Or Steve Nash.


yeah, steve nash is about as international as i am. he's from canada and went to a 4 year college in the US. same as someone like patrick ewing (or even duncan himself) during jordan's career. people born in the nba's geographical sphere of influence who went to college in the US. we didn't need sophisticated scouting departments or novel scouting approaches, or trips to deepest, darkest saskatchewan to locate steve nash. we could just watch espn (well, maybe santa clara wasn't on tv, i don't know). nash would've played in jordan's nba if he had been born 10 years earlier.

and of course, without nash, the international influence on the mvp top 10 voting basically goes back to dirk filling the hakeem role during the 2000's.

And that is besides the fact that PSRS paints a very different picture of those final opponents than srs does. Regardless of talent pool, expansion bolstered the ratings of top-end 90's teams in a way it didn't for Duncan's 2000's opponents.


what does PSRS say? and why would it matter anyway compared to the actual SRS? it's just a small sample SRS calculation that will tell you things like the 2020 celtics were one of the best teams ever.

Yeah, as has been brought up(and ignored) repeatedly, lessthanjake's adjustment only works if you assume equal talent distribution. In reality, SRS for a top 60's team is being generated against "weak teams" that are much higher up the totem pole relative to the general talent pool than a "weak team" from a much bigger league.


and that only works if we assume that the league talent pool didn't expand to accommodate the new teams being added. the 60's weren't some similarly talented world, but with just 9 or 10 teams. maybe the super-expansion (including the effect of the ABA) of the 70's weakened things compared to the 60's, but not by the time we get to the 90's with so much more money in the game and increased population and a much larger percentage of black players, which possibly was a bigger shift than the other factors.

Ironically the modernist argument is not yours (heej) but f4p and lessthanjake's.

Having a more talented "world" is not paticularly relevant when the claim was specifically "for their own time". And SRS doesn't really care about "world talent" as is. The league is far more talented now, yet SRS is at a relative nadir. SRS does care about league-size and distribution.


a nadir of what? it's always 0 league-wide. and yes, it does care about distribution. all the 1960's SRS's say is that talent outside of the celtics was distributed evenly. and that was it was fairly well-distributed in the 1970's and seemingly now in the 2020's. which is good if you are the favorite. beating 2 or 3 teams that are 0.500 is easier than beating 1 really great team and 2 teams that are below 0.500. SRS only cares about league size if league size deviates substantially from total league talent. of course, even if it did, even the player we are looking at would presumably have their own team diluted as well.
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#47 » by McBubbles » Thu Feb 1, 2024 8:42 pm

The real controversy in this thread...

Why're y'all saying "Modernist Argument" instead of "Modern Argument" :x? Modernity and modernist aren't synonymous adjectives, if anything they're actually antonymous because postmodernism is modern and modernism is antiquated. Expansion era grammar talent levels up in here :nonono:

No lol but seriously it's a given that raw SRS is like raw True Shooting in that it doesn't tell us all that much when being used across eras.

It's also a given that the late 90's and early 2000's were absolute booty cheeks in terms of NBA talent. Their talent level is directly disproportional to the amount of nostalgia people have got for the time period. Every time someone says "X player wouldn't survive" in this era, reality warps to retroactively make it even worse as punishment for humanities ignorance.
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#48 » by falcolombardi » Thu Feb 1, 2024 8:54 pm

McBubbles wrote:The real controversy in this thread...

Why're y'all saying "Modernist Argument" instead of "Modern Argument" :x? Modernity and modernist aren't synonymous adjectives, if anything they're actually anonymous because postmodernism is modern and modernism is antiquated. Expansion era grammar talent levels up in here :nonono:

No lol but seriously it's a given that raw SRS is like raw True Shooting in that it doesn't tell us all that much when being used across eras.

It's also a given that the late 90's and early 2000's were absolute booty cheeks in terms of NBA talent. Their talent level is directly disproportional to the amount of nostalgia people have got for the time period. Every time someone says "X player wouldn't survive" in this era, reality warps to retroactively make it even worse as punishment for humanities ignorance.


Late 90's was specially unique because outside of reggie miller and a still pre peak shaq who was hurt with injuries a bit you didnt really have many late 20's/very early 30's superstars which are usually the lion share of any given era top player pool

1998 having declining ageing versions of karl malone and jordan duking it out for league best player is somewhat exemplary of this
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#49 » by AEnigma » Thu Feb 1, 2024 10:45 pm

EDIT: Whooshed again…
McBubbles wrote:The real controversy in this thread...

Why're y'all saying "Modernist Argument" instead of "Modern Argument" :x? Modernity and modernist aren't synonymous adjectives, if anything they're actually anonymous because postmodernism is modern and modernism is antiquated. Expansion era grammar talent levels up in here :nonono:

Language exists as a vehicle for semantic understanding and accordingly evolves through colloquial application.

However, if you truly want to be pedantic about these semantics…

1) Malapropism would be a much more precise term than a generalised critique of “grammar” in the absence of any structural objections.

2) Going back to that key point of semantic understanding, there is no “postmodernist” league. Perhaps there could be and eventually will be, but that is not a recognised term.

3) There is also not a widely recognised “postmodern” league for pretty much the same reasons — which suggests some synonymity (or perhaps you would prefer synonymousness or even synonymy…) in itself.

4) Furthermore, “modernity” and “postmodernity” are similarly recognised as denoting specific eras, because words can have varied meanings depend on the context. For some reason you chose not to demand all “modern arguments” actually be called “postmodern arguments” or “late modern arguments” despite those terms being available and potentially applicable to 2023/24.

5) “Modernism” does not apply universally across different fields, e.g. modernist artwork and modernist film are distinguished by different ranges of years. The same can be reasonably extended to sports or to specific sports leagues.

6) Speaking for myself, I do have a vision of what a “modernist argument” entails as applied to basketball, distinct from whatever the “modern argument” will be in twenty years.

7) Finally, most dictionaries recognise “modernist” as validly used in that way. In fact, the use of the term significantly predates “modernism,” which itself predates formal recognition of “modernism” as a specifically defined cultural era. :blank:
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#50 » by McBubbles » Thu Feb 1, 2024 11:08 pm

AEnigma wrote:
McBubbles wrote:The real controversy in this thread...

Why're y'all saying "Modernist Argument" instead of "Modern Argument" :x? Modernity and modernist aren't synonymous adjectives, if anything they're actually anonymous because postmodernism is modern and modernism is antiquated. Expansion era grammar talent levels up in here :nonono:

Language exists as a vehicle for semantic understanding and accordingly evolves through colloquial application.

However, if you truly want to be pedantic about these semantics…

1) Malapropism would be a much more precise term than a generalised critique of “grammar” in the absence of any structural objections.

2) Going back to that key point of semantic understanding, there is no “postmodernist” league. Perhaps there could be and eventually will be, but that is not a recognised term.

3) There is also not a widely recognised “postmodern” league for pretty much the same reasons — which suggests some synonymity (or perhaps you would prefer synonymousness or even synonymy…) in itself.

4) Furthermore, “modernity” and “postmodernity” are similarly recognised as denoting specific eras, because words can have varied meanings depend on the context. For some reason you chose not to demand all “modern arguments” actually be called “postmodern arguments” or “late modern arguments” despite those terms being available and potentially applicable to 2023/24.

5) “Modernism” does not apply universally across different fields, e.g. modernist artwork and modernist film are distinguished by different ranges of years. The same can be reasonably extended to sports or to specific sports leagues.

6) Speaking for myself, I do have a vision of what a “modernist argument” entails as applied to basketball, distinct from whatever the “modern argument” will be in twenty years.

7) Finally, most dictionaries recognise “modernist” as validly used in that way. In fact, the use of the term significantly predates “modernism,” which itself predates formal recognition of “modernism” as a specifically defined cultural era. :blank:


I'm sorry to say you've been whooshed again :lol: The "90's expansion era grammar :nonono:" was so silly I thought it'd be clear. That and for whatever reason the average PC Board user has an extremely high education level so I actually assumed that it wasn't even a mistake and that point #7 was the case lol, just thought it'd be a funny comment. Was in a very goofy mood after waking up from my nap.

Appreciate the knowledge bomb though :) malapropisms is my word of the year.
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Re: Michael Jordan -- Complete Finals Plus Minus 

Post#51 » by AEnigma » Fri Feb 2, 2024 12:20 am

Oof, twice in one week. :uhoh: My sense for irony is on life support.

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