jjgp111292 wrote:OhayoKD wrote:jjgp111292 wrote:So in other words...they struggled to find an identity without MJ before figuring out how to play together and exceeded expectations

! Never seen that before. Nowhere have I said that Pippen wasn't a great player and capable of leading a team on his own, just that this idea that MJ was just some rich man's Adrian Dantley eating off his supporting cast seems like logic that only comes from people that can be charitably described as overindexing on heliocentric ball and at worst, trying to push an agenda for a certain guy and the ideology behind him (an ideaology I actually kinda support!).
Inventing strawmen is fun. There is a certain fanbase which has spent the last 3 days spamming threads attacking project and poster credibility because results didn't go the way they wanted them to. All of whom disengaged under the first sign of pushback, excepting one who disengaged soon after when their first attempt at offering substantive was challenged. You want to argue helios impact signals overrate them, then prove it. The #1 in rs and playoff win percentage is Magic Johnson but I'm sure you have a basis for thinking we "overindex" on heliocentic ball beyond cherrypicked team results and arbitrary tresholds ("yes you won the title, but did you win 70 games!!!!!").
And wouldn't you know, I wouldn't balk at anyone who would put Magic over Jordan! You have me confused with other people.
But you insist his archetype of play leads to lower ceilings, even when the passing is traded more off-ball actions and scoring volume and the ability to anchor defenses...
MJ's impact signals are pretty hard to measure compared to his peers when you consider the fact that from 86-93 he missed a grand total of 7 games with a supporting cast that improved year-by-year while other guys had less reliable help from season to season (and even then, the tiny sample we have looks...pretty favorable to him?). Again, never said that MJ didn't have advantages compared to his peers, but this idea penalizing him for it seems like trying to engineer a problem, and I'm gonna have to echo One_And_Done when I say this bizarro world bredwedwine shtick of yours isn't doing as much convincing for me.
He's being penalised for not improving his teams
anywhere near the degree your opinion him suggests he should. Also not sure what you're getting
7 games from. We have 3 and a half seasons worth of full games concentrated over 4 seasons to form a basis for assessing Jordan's teammates. That's about as good of a sample as possible in the sport and even the most generous assumptions don't put him near "perhaps the goat" in 88 or 92, or on a "perhaps goat trajectory" at any point in his career. Now it's 93 and the poster you're echoing has 180'd from the signals mattering alot to barely mattering at all.
I'm assuming the other season is '86? They go from a -4 in MJ-less games that season to +.9 in '87...not spectacular and that version of MJ is plenty flawed as it were, and I'm sure you credit even their improvement more to Charles Oakley's defense.
And do you characterise
88 and
92 Jordan as "plenty flawed"? Because the same exercise does not yield outcomes near what other stars have done
repeatedly, nor does it match best marks we have for the likes of...93 Hakeem Olajuwon. Yet peak Hakeem faced with a MJ down-year is apparently not as good. Even though their showcased lift is comparable prime for prime with Olajuwon in a significantly disadvantageous scenario
Then after that we have 94 which I still say is dubious...you pointed out that +4 MJs lift for them in 95 wasn't that great and like...yeah, my entire point was even a crappy version of MJ was able to produce a pretty decent lift in the team's play just through offensive value. And again, given the roster differences I pointed out from the first-three-peat Bulls supporting cast, wouldn't 96 be a more apt comparison to the 93/94 roster?
Obviously Rodman/Harper vs. Horace/Armstrong is a worthwhile debate and I'd lean towards the former given that again, league was tilting towards defense, but even if you want to hedge Jordan's impact, +13.4 vs. +3.3...I mean I ain't no mathemtician but, y'know that looks like a healthy Jordan providing a pretty big lift.
I mean, I'd think
92 would be the most natural comp(+5 with health adjustment, +7 without) but sure whatever
Yes that's great impact (it's +8 if you go by 1995 or stick to games Pippen played in 94 and the SRS is lower but I digress). It's not goat-ish(a certain small forward is popping +15 again and again without expansion-effects or multi-season hopping, can get to +19 if we just use your approach here), and it's
not clearing the best stuff we can derive for Hakeem, (93 can literally be put at
+15 simply using an adjacent year). No one here is denying Jordan is an all-time-great or under the impression he's just Adriant Dantley. No one is even claiming Jordan, at his best, can't be favored over peak Hakeem or Magic. What we are saying is that in the year he posts sub 50 true shooting in 4 out of 6 games in the conference finals(with his teammates shooting far more efficiently in the close-out), his team and he performs the worst of his title teams, and he has the worst signal of his prime, saying he and peak Hakeem is "neck and neck" is baseless. Especially when you've made signals the biggest component of your ballot and also gave Jordan the #1 when Magic was posting the best signals and winning titles.
Do I think MJ is a defensive anchor like Hakeem or can run an offense like LeBron? Absolutely not. Do I think his scoring prowess, ball protection, decent enough playmaking and defense, and off-ball gravity combined to make him perhaps the GOAT?
"Do I think John Stockton can score or rebound like Jordan? Absolutely not. Do I think his passing prowess, positionally sound if not flashy defense, and floor game could make him perhaps the best player of the 90s?"
The math checks out for an infinite amount of explanations for how the universe works. Plausibility is not evidence.
???????????????
Theoretical Physics, not the most natural analogy though so forget it.
Moreover, a significant "off-ball gravity" effect, the common refrain of "aha ceiling raising" has yet to be documented meaningfully anywhere for perimeter players in the 80s/90s. Early returns are not promising:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=114336565#p114336565Now people are actually looking for it outside of isolated clips. We're still looking. "Perhaps" assuming having a better jumpshot garuntees a big "off-ball gravity" advantage is dubious, particularly when the better jumpshooter is being left undefended from range(you know the area of the court that creates the most
spacing?), is a far worse roller (attacks at the rim tend to require defenders to cover more ground than mid-range jumpshots), and is in a scheme where he is trying to
avoid extra defensive attention?
Or maybe just eat up whatever people "who were there" tell you on faith. That works too.
As others in that same thread pointed out, I'm not sure this is saying what you want it to say when the game was substantially different in the 80s/90s and more tilted towards iso-ball.
The game being titled towards players not having significant off-ball gravity does not change they lack significant off-ball gravity.
I know that would require shifting away from the idea that all-time greatness is determined the most by a team being entirely dependent on you to even function, but...
No, it would require evidence (observations with actual explanatory power). And it will also require you to apply logic consistently. If we shall assume that your team overall relying on the totality of your abilities isn't greatness, why should we assume Jordan's teams relying on him to score makes him a great scorer?
Funny how "your team functioning better with you" is only meaningless when that functioning covers things other than what Jordan's great at.
Well it's not a 1-size fits all comparison. A balanced team is far more likely to get itself together to some extent with missing pieces than a team that leans so much on one guy, to the point where value becomes a chicken and egg scenario even though the chicken is definitely more important.
And such teams are extremely rare and hard to come by. At a certain point "punish players who contribute in a wider variety of ways because they need more balanced support" hurts Jordan too. A championship team around Dantley is more balanced than one around Jordan.
I mean hell, we see that with the 98 Bulls still being a +5.6 in the 36 games without Pippen even with MJ playing hurt in the first month of the season.
Sure? I still don't see what that shows in a comparison to Hakeem(or Magic). See, Houston without Otis Thorpe, or Sampson (Or the Lakers as Kareem ages). No one is questioning if Jordan is great.