Kobe vs Shai
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Kobe vs Shai
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Kobe vs Shai
If Shai continues this pace for the rest of the year, has Kobe had a individual regular season as good as what Shai is doing this season?
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
The answer here is no, IMO. SGA is playing extremely well—to me, he’s playing at a level above what Kobe reached. That said, Kobe will have had “greater” years unless the Thunder win the title.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
Re: Kobe vs Shai
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
No he hasnt. Both offensively and defensively
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
Offense is close enough. I still want to see Shai in the playoffs a little more.
Defensively I think it's a blow out for Shai. Better everywhere.
Shai's the most complete guard since prime CP3 for me. A creative 3 level scorer who can pass and defend in his sleep.
Kobe had more gaps in his game IMO. In a variety of ways.
Defensively I think it's a blow out for Shai. Better everywhere.
Shai's the most complete guard since prime CP3 for me. A creative 3 level scorer who can pass and defend in his sleep.
Kobe had more gaps in his game IMO. In a variety of ways.
Swinging for the fences.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
... I def. don't see a 5 time title winner in Shai. Shai's def. top 5 right now, but he has some work to do if he wants to be this good.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
Shai is already better peak to peak.
Warspite wrote:Billups was a horrible scorer who could only score with an open corner 3 or a FT.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
Kobe clears him even just for the RS. What he did in 2006 is better than what SGA is doing now IMO. The Thunder rely mostly on their defense.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
the appropriate comparison is Jordan.
its my last message in this thread, but I just admit, that all the people, casual and analytical minds, more or less have consencus who has the weight of a rubberized duck. And its not JaivLLLL
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
wafflzgod wrote:If Shai continues this pace for the rest of the year, has Kobe had a individual regular season as good as what Shai is doing this season?
No need to put the caveat. Shai '23-24 topped Kobe already.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
Doctor MJ wrote:wafflzgod wrote:If Shai continues this pace for the rest of the year, has Kobe had a individual regular season as good as what Shai is doing this season?
No need to put the caveat. Shai '23-24 topped Kobe already.
70-win pace without his 2nd best player (in a period-of non-expansion no less). Just popped the defending champs missing 3 key teammates. Barring a mega drop-off, a Kobe comp is outright disrespectful.
its my last message in this thread, but I just admit, that all the people, casual and analytical minds, more or less have consencus who has the weight of a rubberized duck. And its not JaivLLLL
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
OhayoKD wrote:the appropriate comparison is Jordan.
I know you meant this as a dig at Jordan, but unironically SGA is playing at a high enough level so far this year that it’s not a crazy comparison IMO. Obviously, we’re not even halfway through the season and Jordan was at a ridiculous level for many years (which I doubt SGA will be able to match, but we’ll see!), so it’s perhaps premature to make such comparisons. That said, I think SGA’s year so far is pretty comparable to a Jordan year. And, while I don’t think discussion about “archetypes” is very helpful since every player is different, the success that SGA and the Thunder are having so far this year does tend to cut against arguments that we should take a presumptively negative view of the impact of players in this general mold. It also cuts against the idea that a player that generally is like Jordan wouldn’t be really successful and impactful in today’s NBA. Obviously SGA and Jordan are different players, but there’s a ton of similarities—both great scorers with fantastic mid-range games but not fantastic three-point shots who can and do play off-ball more than a lot of other great offensive players, both are good but not all-time great playmakers, and both are fantastic guard defenders who force lots of turnovers. And we see SGA leading a team to incredibly high heights so far this year (a 70-win pace so far, with a 12 SRS), with a very well-constructed but not exactly ridiculously star-laden team. We’ll see if SGA can keep things up the rest of the year and into the playoffs, but if he does then it does seem like a valid comparison to me. But that’s a reflection of how incredible SGA would’ve been if that were the case, rather than being a dig at Jordan.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
lessthanjake wrote:OhayoKD wrote:the appropriate comparison is Jordan.
I know you meant this as a dig at Jordan.
Not really. Would agree it bodes well for a theoretical Jordan modernized in all the right ways. That said, you seem to be conflating outcomes with attributes.
Obviously SGA and Jordan are different players, but there’s a ton of similarities—both great scorers with fantastic mid-range games but not fantastic three-point shots who can and do play off-ball more than a lot of other great scorers
Shai shoots far more threes, makes them at a higher clip, and makes them facing significantly more defensive attention. In context, SGA is a very good three-point shooter. Jordan was an average one in a league where the bar was much lower. In Jordan's league, SGA would be the best.
That's a pretty critical difference for a shooting guard who doesn't want to get swallowed near the basket in a league filled to the brin with mobile giants like Wemby, Giannis, JJJ, and Davis.
both are good but not all-time great playmakers
Sure, but for translation purposes what matters is the "how". And there's a rather significant chasm in passing skill and processing speed to consider there:
Spoiler:
Jordan created by making the simple decisions archaic defenses asked him to make, much like Hakeem. SGA creates by being a far more dynamic and ambidextrous ball-handler, with better vision and anticipation, and much quicker decision-making, as well as being able to leverage both rim pressure and pressure from deep to keep more sophisticated defenses, featuring more dynamic defenders, honest. The outcome is similar, but the process is different. And the process is what matters when one claims a player will do well in a different league.
Finally
and both are fantastic guard defenders who force lots of turnovers.
Guard defenders who force turnovers is about where the similarity stops. As covered, mot much suggests the "getting your hand to the ball" part is of great intrinsic value:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=116226778#p116226778
To the extent it does matter, the how makes a difference. Jordan forced turnovers at the expense of being one of the most error-prone defenders in the league. Shai forces them being one of the least. Shai is blownby less, is out of position less, and fouls less, all of which he does dealing with vastly more versatile offensive stars playing on vastly more dynamic offenses, run or led by a an unprecedented glut of basketball supercomputers like Jokic, Lebron, Luka, and to some degree Draymond, either personally or via teammates, finding and exploiting the gaps left by excessive "defensive activity".
Courtesy of playing in a league where the likes of Bird and Drexler shined, Jordan may well retain an era-relative case. But Shai is better at basketball. We're yet to see if he's better by enough to be as or more impactful though early returns are promising.
its my last message in this thread, but I just admit, that all the people, casual and analytical minds, more or less have consencus who has the weight of a rubberized duck. And its not JaivLLLL
Re: Kobe vs Shai
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
Fundamentals21 wrote:... I def. don't see a 5 time title winner in Shai. Shai's def. top 5 right now, but he has some work to do if he wants to be this good.
Did Kobe win 5 titles in one season? A lot of people don't even use a season in which he won a ring as his peak.
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Pretty easy for me to imagine Shai winning an MVP and two Finals MVPs, and then theoretically being able to win three additional titles next to a player like peak Shaq (e.g. current Jokic or future Wemby).
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
With the future OKC should have, if theyre not destroyed by injuries ***knock on wood***, Shai has a real path to being a top 10 all time great
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
OhayoKD wrote:Obviously SGA and Jordan are different players, but there’s a ton of similarities—both great scorers with fantastic mid-range games but not fantastic three-point shots who can and do play off-ball more than a lot of other great scorers
Shai shoots far more threes, makes them at a higher clip, and makes them facing significantly more defensive attention. In context, SGA is a very good three-point shooter. Jordan was an average one in a league where the bar was much lower. In Jordan's league, SGA would be the best.
That's a pretty critical difference for a shooting guard who doesn't want to get swallowed near the basket in a league filled to the brin with mobile giants like Wemby, Giannis, JJJ, and Davis.
I think it’s pretty reasonable to assume that Jordan would be a better three-point shooter in today’s league than he was in his own league. It’s not *certain*, but the league as a whole has gotten much better at three-point shooting and it is surely in large part because players are practicing threes to a way larger degree than they did in the past. If he were in today’s era, Jordan would surely focus a lot more on three-point shooting. And we have seen countless examples of players improving drastically at three-point shooting when they do that. It is *possible* that Jordan could’ve focused on threes more and just not improved on them at all. But I don’t think that should be our baseline assumption, especially with someone that we know was a GOAT-level mid-range jump shooter. Given that SGA makes threes at pretty much exactly league-average rate (albeit I’m sure with a higher-than-average difficulty on those shots), it doesn’t take a big leap to think Jordan could’ve scaled up to be at least similarly good. Indeed, given how good he was as a mid-range shooter, I personally would probably guess he’d be better at threes in this era than SGA, but it is of course all speculative and highly dependent on how much returns Jordan got for the inevitable additional practice he’d put into it. At the very least, I don’t think it’s an off-base comparison to compare the three-point shooting of the two, given that they’re fairly similar in era-relative terms.
both are good but not all-time great playmakers
Sure, but for translation purposes what matters is the "how". And there's a rather significant chasm in passing skill and processing speed to consider there:Spoiler:
Jordan created by making the simple decisions archaic defenses asked him to make, much like Hakeem. SGA creates by being a far more dynamic and ambidextrous ball-handler, with better vision and anticipation, and much quicker decision-making, as well as being able to leverage both rim pressure and pressure from deep to keep more sophisticated defenses, featuring more dynamic defenders, honest. The outcome is similar, but the process is different. And the process is what matters when one claims a player will do well in a different league.
I think this all basically translates to “basketball offenses and defenses were simpler in the 1990s than they are now.” Which is true. And you can speculate that Jordan would not have been able to translate his playmaking to today’s more complicated era. But that’s definitely just a speculative argument, since Jordan was not in today’s offenses and did not face today’s defenses.
I also think what you’re really talking about is the inevitable improvement of human beings at thinking through any game or other complicated endeavor. In anything, people will keep coming up with new and better ways of doing things, and those things will eventually become widely understood and implemented by people playing that game or engaging in that endeavor. And then people will innovate further upon that, and it’ll happen again. In some sense, I think we can look at that and say that that means that people today are better at virtually everything than they were in the past. In a sense, that’s true! But it doesn’t really tell us much about what someone in the past would be like in today’s era if they were the beneficiary of accumulated knowledge/insight that came after their time. If Jordan played in today’s era, it is highly unlikely that his thinking regarding basketball would be the same as it was in the 1990s. Our default assumption should be that his knowledge and understanding of the game would scale up along with everyone else’s. Is that definitely what would happen? No, we can’t say for sure what would happen in any time-machine speculation exercise. But I definitely don’t think we should assume otherwise. And I don’t think we can say that SGA is a better playmaker than Jordan in era-relative terms (probably the opposite actually IMO), so I don’t think our baseline assumption should be that Jordan in today’s era would be worse.
Finallyand both are fantastic guard defenders who force lots of turnovers.
Guard defenders who force turnovers is about where the similarity stops. As covered, mot much suggests the "getting your hand to the ball" part is of great intrinsic value:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=116226778#p116226778
To the extent it does matter, the how makes a difference. Jordan forced turnovers at the expense of being one of the most error-prone defenders in the league. Shai forces them being one of the least. Shai is blownby less, is out of position less, and fouls less, all of which he does dealing with vastly more versatile offensive stars playing on vastly more dynamic offenses, run or led by a an unprecedented glut of basketball supercomputers like Jokic, Lebron, Luka, and to some degree Draymond, either personally or via teammates, finding and exploiting the gaps left by excessive "defensive activity".
Courtesy of playing in a league where the likes of Bird and Drexler shined, Jordan may well retain an era-relative case. But Shai is better at basketball. We're yet to see if he's better by enough to be as or more impactful though early returns are promising.
We’ve been down this road before regarding defense, so I don’t care to rehash the same things again with you. Suffice to say that there’s a lot of evidence that steals are very impactful at an individual level (people can see here for an example post addressing this: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=113832610#p113832610) and your use of team-wide data to the contrary is not convincing for a lot of reasons. These reasons include (1) because a lot of things that would make a team as a whole tend to get more steals are also things that would tend to make them give up defensive impact in other ways—for instance, playing small ball lineups; (2) the evidence you pointed to largely amounted to really obvious things like how a team’s FG% correlates more with winning than steals, which is just…not even remotely surprising and doesn’t at all suggest steals aren’t super impactful; and (3) there is team-level data that indicates steals *are* very impactful. We can also suffice to say that the overall evidence we have of Jordan’s defensive impact throughout his career is very strong (as are the testimonials from his contemporaries about it FWIW). You’ve tended to just exit discussions whenever I’ve rigorously gone through it all, but one example of such a discussion is the following thread, which I encourage anyone to read through if they’re curious about this topic, since I don’t have much interest in rehashing this topic again: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2384374&hilit. I think people can read through our discussion in that thread and draw their own conclusions. Another post from the General Board that wasn’t directed to you might also be helpful for people to look at: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=113820883#p113820883.
As it relates to this thread, I don’t think there’s really much of anything telling us that SGA is a better defensive player than Jordan was. You’re free to subjectively believe otherwise—it’s tough to prove much of anything about defense in the NBA in general, and definitely about defense from older eras. But I think you really just want to reach a certain conclusion and it’s easy for you to reach a preferred conclusion about something that it is difficult to prove much about either way. That said, to draw this back to the thread topic, I do think we have enough data to tell us that SGA probably is a better defender than Kobe was, since we have more fulsome impact data for Kobe.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
SGA was arguably better last season than any of Kobe's best seasons.
This season is even more clear.
But we need to see how the playoffs unfold. Maybe he dips a level(unlikely based on last season).
This season is even more clear.
But we need to see how the playoffs unfold. Maybe he dips a level(unlikely based on last season).
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
I think there's a lot of people that already have it in their heads that Shai can't possibly be as good as Kobe or MJ because they are legends and its blasphemy to put him in the same sentence as them until he's won x amount of rings. Which is not really fair to Shai though I get that generally until a player does win at least 1 ring and have some strong playoff runs under their belt they will be doubted. So it's either wait and see how Shai/Okc do in the playoffs this year or go off the regular seasons he's had the last two years. I honestly don't think MJ would do much more in the rs than what Shai is doing now. Maybe he'd shoot more but I don't think his efficiency would match Shai. Defensively it's hard to say but its possible Shai is a better defender than both. Being part of such a great defensive team only makes his case stronger.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
OhayoKD wrote:the appropriate comparison is Jordan.
98’ Jordan? 25 year old MJ was an alien and would’ve been for any era.
fromthetop321 wrote:I got Lebron number 1, he is also leading defensive player of the year. Curry's game still reminds me of Jeremy Lin to much.
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Re: Kobe vs Shai
Cavsfansince84 wrote:I think there's a lot of people that already have it in their heads that Shai can't possibly be as good as Kobe or MJ because they are legends and its blasphemy to put him in the same sentence as them until he's won x amount of rings. Which is not really fair to Shai though I get that generally until a player does win at least 1 ring and have some strong playoff runs under their belt they will be doubted. So it's either wait and see how Shai/Okc do in the playoffs this year or go off the regular seasons he's had the last two years. I honestly don't think MJ would do much more in the rs than what Shai is doing now. Maybe he'd shoot more but I don't think his efficiency would match Shai. Defensively it's hard to say but it’s possible Shai is a better defender than both. Being part of such a great defensive team only makes his case stronger.
I think the bolded is right. And that’s because SGA has been having an all-time-level regular season this year, not because of anything negative about Jordan. I do think it is right to have a little bit of skepticism of what we’re seeing now, because he and the Thunder might slow down as the regular season progresses, and he also hasn’t yet shown this kind of level in the playoffs. Personally, though, I’m hoping that SGA and the Thunder keep going at this level including in the playoffs. It’s fun to watch historic greatness. I’m definitely a Jokic fan, but I dunno who I’d root for between the Thunder and the Nuggets in a playoff series (not that there’s much question which one of those teams would win a series between them, even if Jokic played like an alien), and I would definitely root for the Thunder over any other team.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.