Special_Puppy wrote:f4p wrote:70sFan wrote:I hope you don't have LeBron anywhere close to POY in 2018.
well there's beatdowns, and then there's beatdowns. lebron did take a pretty good whoopin' in the finals, but it was "only" by a net rating of 16 and he was carrying a +1.0 team to the finals.
the 2018 warriors had the following series net ratings (opponent regular season net rating + series net rating)
Round 1: +12.4
Round 2: +9.4
Round 3: +18.2
Round 4: +17.0
So lebron was quite the highest and was only a little above the other series average of +13.3
now the 2001 lakers:
Round 1: +20.8
Round 2: +14.6
Round 3: +33.2 (!!)
Round 4: +12.1
that +33 is double the other series average of +15.8. is there another +33 by any team in history? probably, but it must be a short list. it's almost certainly the worst net ratings (-24.6) by a +8 team in history. it really might be the greatest beatdown in playoff history. directly by the guy challenging for the POY. who also basically swept all the box score stats (#1 PER/#2 WS48/#1 BPM in regular season, #1 PER/#1 WS48 in playoffs). sweeping the box score stats while your team basically sweeps the playoffs should be an ironclad POY season by any standard. unless the other challenger just massively outplays you in a series losing effort. or keeps what should be a lopsided series real close. neither of which happened.
and making it a little even more out of line, it's not even like this is 2002/3 duncan being compared to arguably peak shaq. it's not even 2004/5 duncan. it's a DOWN YEAR from duncan. all his numbers are worse than 2000 and much worse than they would be in his amazing 2002-2005 peak. considering the previous project apparently didn't have a single vote for duncan (i just started reading this project's thread and someone said that), this is a massive shift in favor of a down year from someone who lost by maybe the wildest margin of all time. 2018 lebron has a good argument for best regular season player and no one would call his playoffs a "down year".
Has there been an explanation for why the 2001 Lakers did dramatically better in the post-season than the 2000+2002 Lakers? Like 9+ SRS better?
1. Team defense. Probably Shaq's best most active run.
2. Near outlier run offensivley from Kobe.
3. Luck