[/quote]Djoker wrote:OhayoKD wrote:Djoker wrote:Where are you getting 64-win pace with Hakeem and Barkley?
From one of the Fatal9 posts quoted. They were using record not SRS I think. Seems they got "lucky", or were "clutch".
Yes they were lucky. 57-win pace with a big three is not impressive whatsoever. That is context surrounding Hakeem and the Rockets in 1997.
It's a big two but sure. Hakeem's got no RS case.
Sure it's super small off sample but you usually stick with it and WOWY data isn't really telling us that Hakeem is an impact giant.
Sure, in 97 it says that. In 96 over a much larger sample of 10 games the Rockets go 1-9 and are -8 which would indeed paint Hakeem as an impact monster and a MVPish regular-season player if we combine the two samples. I don't know what the net-rating for the Barkley-less games were but at 45-wins that would be a great regular-season.
1996 Hakeem was better in the RS than 1997 Hakeem.
Not particularly relevant to how the Rockets did without him but that sample seems pretty useless so whatever. I don't know why I didn't think to look at later years but we have a larger sample with a similar roster for 98 where they're 14-20. Someone can vet how clean that is, but i'll be treating the rockets as an averagish team without Hakeem as opposed to a bad one as things stand. Maybe a little above given Bird's WOWY stuff
And then Hakeem starts shooting 8 points better in the postseason, increases his assists lowers his turnover economy and for my money ramps up his defense too. If Jordan can get POY votes making 25-win teams into 50 or 45-win ones over prime Magic, then I don't see why Hakeem, with clearer elevation, facing a much weaker competition wouldn't merit POY consideration here
Because Jordan elevated the 1988 and 1989 Bulls beyond what was expected while Hakeem elevated the 1997 Rockets less than what was expected. Jordan in those years didn't have two all-stars on his team.
The 45-win being used here is specifically without Barkley. Not sure why you're arguing vs results with perception. With Barkley they were alot better than Chicago anyway.
Jordan's true-shooting dropped by 4-points despite his volume also dropping by 2 ontop of a slightly higher tov average. Seems like there's reason to believe Jordan got significantly worse while Hakeem got alot better.
Jordan's volume didn't drop 2 points. He went from averaging 29.6 ppg in the RS to 31.1 ppg in the PS so his volume actually went up. The turnovers did go up in the PS from 2.0 to 2.7 but MJ's turnovers were still insanely low for his offensive load and factor into why he was overall a very efficient offensive player. It's very odd to bring up turnovers with MJ.
You are correct, I was looking at per 36 minutes. You aren't looking at his offensive load, you're looking at how often he was the last or second last to touch the ball. Very different things.
Also worth noting that MJ faced a very strong slate of defenses in the 1997 PS which can explain a 4-point efficiency drop.
Bullets: -1.8 rDRtg
Hawks: -4.4 rDRtg
Heat: -6.1 rDRtg
Jazz: -2.7 rDRtg
Also Hakeem didn't elevate his D in the PS at all. In fact, he probably dropped off on that end. In the RS, the Rockets were a -2.7 rDRtg team and in the PS a +0.3 rDRtg team.
Okay but then they went
+16
+10
and
+5
with Hakeem going from just being their lead scorer to being their most efficient scorer by far
You're disappointed in them for being +5 but then they go
+9 PSRS
+8 PSRS
+6 PSRS
with Hakeem going off while the other two wilted in the most important one.
That being said...
1997 Chicago from +10 went to
+8 PSRS
+13 PSRS
+14 PSRS
+8 PSRS
Considering the issues with the 96 sample, Hakeem having a bad WOWY in 97(not so bad if 98 is reasonable for use but still), the Bulls improving in the playoffs as well, and I think I have to agree Jordan should be POY for 97 or at least over Hakeem even though my eyetest liked Hakeem alot better in the POs, especially the Jazz.
I do think Hakeem was definitely better vs Utah, but I've been pretty consistent about letting the data outweigh my priors for POY purposes and the case Hakeem clearly outplayed Jordan in the playoffs isn't very strong empirically.
Still, the Rockets are very good in the postseason and Hakeem is clearly their best player on both ends so I'd probably put him 2. It's also possible i'm overindexing on how both played vs the Jazz. I didn't end up putting Ewing ahead of MJ for outplaying him in 1993, so it would be wierd to put Hakeem over MJ for winning an indirect comparison for one series. There's also actual full RAPM which i'm pretty sure favors Jordan for 97-98 no matter what.
Hakeem never faced more defensive attention than Jordan. Get out of here with that. In the first two rounds, Barkley and Drexler were playing like all-stars.
He definitely did vs Utah.
20 ppg is very low volume. That's not offensive carrying LOL.
He definitely carried vs the Jazz, but you could be right on the first two rounds.
Oh and MJ happens to be not just in front of Hakeem but 1st in RAPM,
I don't doubt he's ahead but name your source?
First sourced set I found comes from "A Screaming Comes Across the Court" on google has MJ 2nd
https://ascreamingcomesacrossthecourt.blogspot.com/2013/10/introducing-1990s-rapm.html?m=1RPM, RAPTOR for the season too.
And Hakeem is ahead in IBM's metric. If you are not going to justify the relevance of the inputs, I am not going to care about the outputs.
You not caring doesn't make the data magically not exist.[/quote]
It exists as much as the IBM thing exists. Why are we relirigiating this convo from the 1988 thread?
Spoiler:
I don't care and it seems the voters don't either, for good reason.
Here are the sources. For RAPTOR, you have to download the Excel file.
RPM: https://web.archive.org/web/20230320184333/http://www.espn.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/year/1997
RAPTOR: https://github.com/fivethirtyeight/data/tree/master/nba-raptor
I asked for RAPM. Not made-up blah blah blah.