trelos6 wrote:OhayoKD wrote:
Winning matters? Sure. Rephrasing "erneh rings" as "cieling raisier" so you can pretend you're not just using team-success as an argument inofitself? No.
Team success is in fact one of the few indicators we have.
Team Success only matters to someone's "ceiling raising" to the degree they are impacting that better team. Oscar went to a better team...and his signals were significantly worse. You do not show cieling raising by being on great teams, you show it by showcasing great impact on great teams. If you cannot argue for a player being more
valuable to said great team than another player would be, you are not arguing for cieling raising. An older Oscar being less impactful on a better team does not demonstrate a ceiling raising advantage over the younger Oscar.
However, play style is hugely important
As is actually verifying your play-style preferences with reality, as opposed to what convention assumes. Which I'm guessing you've not actually made an attempt at doing.
Yes, his scoring dropped. He was playing with talent.
Typically playing with talent sees your volume drop in exchange for an uptick in efficiency. The latter part is missing. "He couldn't keep doing the thing he did as well when playing with talent" is of course, not a pro-cieling raising argument.
I believe his passing was improved (perks of playing with better talent). Overall playmaking is down slightly because scoring is a big factor in tha
So let me get this straight. He was...a less productive scorer. And, iyo...a less productive playmaker, playing next to an offensive engine who doesn't need the ball much and skews towards effeciency rather than volume...with no improvement in effeciency...
and you think him becoming less valuable in every concievable way offensively demonstrates he's a "cieling raisier"?
His defence was much improved because when your team is great, you generally play harder on D.
And this is based on? Sure...you
can play harder on D. Many players of course play
less hard when they no longer need to thanks to strong defensive teammates. See: Jordan during the first-three-peat. Also see: Bird during his MVP streak. Also if you are going to be making procastinations of impact based on skillset, now's a good time to remember guards are far and away the least valuable defenders.
Thus far you've described an offensive specialist getting less valuable as both a playmaker and scorer offensively...and theoretically getting better at the thing that has the least to do with their impact based on a convention which I am hoping is not just an unsupported assumption.
Incredible ceiling raising case here.
Second banana’s need to fit the superstar. I’m rewarding Oscar for playing on one of the top 5 teams in history.
Cieling Raising is about whether you have to be a second banana to fit better teams...not whether you play on one of the top 5 teams in history