OhayoKD wrote:Weren't you pushing pythagorean wins as real and real wins as fake in the 96 thread?
I don't get what you mean by this. SRS from which Pythagorean Wins are derived are a better indicator of team quality than just plain W-L record. It's not me pushing it. It's just fact. Of course a big discrepancy between the two can indicate really good/poor clutch play so that can mean something.
Honestly you're just about the only Duncan voter who gave rationale for why you have him #1 although, no offense, I find it dubious at best. I'll break down what you wrote on it.
Voting Post
1. Tim Duncan
-> Biggest catalyst for a 36-win and 11-point turnaround. Most impressive signal to me since 96 MJ or peak RS Drob.
Why was Duncan the catalyst?
1996 Spurs: +5.98 SRS (with Robinson, without Duncan)
1997 Spurs: -7.93 SRS (without Robinson, without Duncan)
1998 Spurs: +3.30 SRS (with Robinson, with Duncan)
How does anyone look at that and conclude that Duncan is the key to the improvement...
-> Replication giant, different systems, co-stars, blah blah blah.
And this matters how in a single year project?
-> Bigger prime delta in temrs of team wins or net-rating than Magic, MJ, or Hakeem. Shaq might edge him there but Shaq loses to Duncan in RAPM in a much more favorable context for that metric in general and I think Duncan played the best vs Utah of any of the big 3. Honestly even in terms of pure impact Duncan is limited by drob being his teammate.
Actually I posted seven different impact stats. Shaq leads Duncan in all seven, Jordan in six, Malone in five.
-> Averaging 5 more minutes than anyone in the rs, 3 more minutes than anyone in the playoff, and that gap just is going to grow and grow
You must mean on his own team. Yes. Duncan played more minutes than Robinson and that's a big reason why I had him ahead.
-> Turns it up for the latter half of the season kind of like Kareem in 70.
Mmm no.. not even close. Kareem proceeded to have one of the most dominant offensive postseasons by a big man whereas Duncan was just plain average.
Was thinking Shaq first initially but I've been convinced by some voters here it would be inconsistent with my previous reasoning/votes which have been very high on paint-protectors and lots of good stuff has been shown about Shaq's defensive limitations this series.
Shaq at #1 is actually a sensible choice. If you're not penalizing him for missed games (per your theory, it doesn't affect title odds) then he can be first. He actually looks like an impact monster and despite defensive deficiencies looks an easily superior player to rookie Duncan based on both box and impact metrics.
One_and_Done wrote:I don't care about those stats tho?
RE: 'Duncan did nothing in the playoffs'. I don't think that's true. Duncan did about as expected in the PS, it's just he had a far worse team than the Jazz. It's not like he played badly or something.
Which stats do you care about? See my breakdown of OhayoKD's post above. What is the argument for Duncan at #1? Because I seriously don't see it...
He lost 4-1 in the 2nd round of the PS to a team that didn't win the title and played pretty subpar. Averaged 21.0/8.4/1.2 on 54.8 %TS (+2.4 rTS). Considering the Spurs were -19 with him on the court and +18 without him, I doubt he was super impactful on defense either. Like to put him #1 with that PS run, his RS better be by far the best in the league. It obviously wasn't.