Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan

Moderators: Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier

OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,934
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#61 » by OhayoKD » Tue Nov 26, 2024 1:18 pm

Would you look at that. Sore-winners. Delightful
lessthanjake wrote:
AEnigma wrote:As a voter who had Jordan ahead, and also as a project runner who would have been a bit concerned if Jordan had lost this vote, I think it would be more productive if instead of analysing post counts, there were a committed effort to address the arguments made by those who did not vote Jordan. Regardless of my disagreement, I appreciate that most of those who did not vote for Jordan took the time to explain why. It would be nice if people bothered by their votes would take the time to address them in turn, rather than defaulting to meta-commentary which makes no actual attempt to refute the stances expressed.

Discussion is the primary purpose of these projects. If this project were comprised of voters just posting some emptily reasoned ballots which perfectly mirrored your own, would that be more valuable than a spirited back-and-forth which occasionally produced unexpected deviations?


If we’re being honest, there’s not a lot to the reasoning of most of the Magic votes here. Some pretty bare-bones explanations for a lot of them that can’t really be meaningfully engaged with,

If I'm being honest, I think you're conflating "can't really be meaningfully engaged with" with..."can't be meaningfully engaged with the level of effort I am willing or able to put forward":
Spoiler:
There is something that stops me from broadening the sample to something that would start to be meaningful, and it is that I have limited time in my life and am not able or willing to spend the massive amount of time that would take. The fact that virtually no one has done that sort of thing (with you being a potential exception?) is definitely indicative of this being the predominant stance on that, even amongst people interested enough in basketball to frequent the PC board.

Even when you are able/willing to put the time and effort required to poison the well regarding evidence you are, by your own admission, unwilling/unable to actually show is deliberately biased:
Spoiler:
I think this is a bit naive, because it is obvious that some of the tracking was done to prop up certain players (LeBron, Hakeem, and Magic), while some of it was done to tear down other players (Jordan and Bird). If you told me what poster was doing the tracking and what players they did, I could’ve absolutely told you what the general results of the tracking would be for each player before ever seeing it. It’s a subjective exercise being done by someone with a very strong ideological agenda.

Your "consistent theme" was barely mentioned. What was however commented on, consistently, was the idea that Jordan's creation is oversold by his assists. As was Magic's best teammates being injured during and before the finals.

That the Lakers in 92 looked more like an average team than an outright bad one (28-26 and -1.6 with Worthy) would not of course refute the idea that Jordan with 50+ win help and healthy postseason support was significantly advantaged. Nor would a whopping .4 regular season on/off advantage that turned into a +24 disadvantage in the series three different voters decided swung Magic vs Jordan from a toss-up to a Jordan win.

There was a wide variety of generally consistent argumentation that went towards Magic over Jordan. You ignored most of it because you were unwilling to engage with the tape. Ironic when you proceed to say the following:
It also seems wrong just by being aware of who these players were and having watched them.

Here I recall an age-old adage: He who must say they have an eyetest does not have one.

You are (poorly) meta-analyzing because you have almost nothing of substance to offer. This is what "barebones" looks like:
Spoiler:
One_and_Done wrote:1. Jordan
2. Magic
3. D.Rob
4. Barkley
5. K.Malone

Another relatively easy vote. Jordan was still the best player in the league, with Magic in 2nd place.


This also happens to be the poster offering the most meta-analysis. I'm seeing a correlation here.

Personally, if a player I wanted to win won despite nearly monopolizing the laziest and least coherent votes over nearly a decade worth of ballots, I'd be conflicted between disappointment and/or relief that lack of effort went unpunished.

What I would not do is try and pretend these sorts of votes were the lazy ones:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=115701565#p115701565

10 posts. And yet their vote offered more opportunity for "meaningful engagement" than all the complaints on this page combined. Perhaps post-count should stop being used as a proxy for post-quality. It's the old guard that's faltered. The new have shined.


Ferulci wrote:This. "Funny" is the word. While I really appreciate the whole project and posters who take time to explain their reasoning, it is "funny" to see that Peak Michael Jordan (whose consensus is a Top 3 peak ever at worst, and who won Peak Project just 2 years ago viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2203339 ), barely beats post-peak Magic. It is "funny" to see arguments that where used to bring down Jordan in 1988 or 1989 are the same that are used to bring up Magic this year.
It really puts into perspective some of 1988 and 1989 season votes.

I can't wait to see the discussions for 1993. It will be "funny"


Mind elaborating? What arguments were used against to "bring down" Jordan in 88/89 that were used to bring up Magic this thread. I suspect an attempt at answering this will turn out "funny", but I wouldn't mind being surprised.
Djoker
Starter
Posts: 2,339
And1: 2,066
Joined: Sep 12, 2015
 

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE 

Post#62 » by Djoker » Tue Nov 26, 2024 2:14 pm

TheGOATRises007 wrote:
Interesting isn't the word I'd use.

The fact that a non-peak Magic season got so many votes is pretty funny.

It'd be like multiple people trying to make an argument for anyone other than LeBron in 2009.


It's not funny. It's kind of damaging to the credibility of this project. :noway:

Not really seeing the comparison either.

Kobe in 2009 has a much better case than 1991 Magic. For one, Kobe actually won the title and the Lakers were a better offense than the Cavs. And secondly, there is reasonable doubt about how good 2009 Lebron is considering the collapses he had in 2010 and especially 2011.

With that said, I'm still leaning towards Lebron in 2009. The point is voting Magic this season is way more of a reach.
Add me on Twitter/X - Djoker @Danko8c. I post a lot of stats.
The Explorer
RealGM
Posts: 10,797
And1: 3,360
Joined: Jul 11, 2005

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE 

Post#63 » by The Explorer » Tue Nov 26, 2024 3:51 pm

Djoker wrote:It's not funny. It's kind of damaging to the credibility of this project. :noway:


Voters are also placing Jordan 3rd, and one in particular begrudgingly put him 3rd and didn't put him 4th only due to expected backlash. So voters are not voting sincerely as the instructions in every thread says to do. On top of that, several are placing Pippen in top 3 or 4 when he wasn't even top 20 in MVP voting that year is questionable as well.
B-Mitch 30
Sophomore
Posts: 156
And1: 76
Joined: May 25, 2024
         

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE 

Post#64 » by B-Mitch 30 » Tue Nov 26, 2024 4:09 pm

The Explorer wrote:
Djoker wrote:It's not funny. It's kind of damaging to the credibility of this project. :noway:


Voters are also placing Jordan 3rd, and one in particular begrudgingly put him 3rd and didn't put him 4th only due to expected backlash. So voters are not voting sincerely as the instructions in every thread says to do. On top of that, several are placing Pippen in top 3 or 4 when he wasn't even top 20 in MVP voting that year is questionable as well.

I think it's obvious at this point in the project that MVP votes shouldn't be looked at as the be-all and end-all for who the pool of best players were.
lessthanjake
Analyst
Posts: 3,502
And1: 3,128
Joined: Apr 13, 2013

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#65 » by lessthanjake » Tue Nov 26, 2024 4:18 pm

OhayoKD wrote:Would you look at that. Sore-winners. Delightful


I’m not a voter in this project, buddy. Obviously I’m not particularly concerned with the results, or I would be a voter. I’m not a “winner” or a “loser” in any thread of a project I’m not a voter in (nor do I think posters are really “winners” or “losers” in these votes regardless). I’m just making some commentary on how the votes are inconsistent with past PC board votes and giving an explanation for why I think that has occurred.

lessthanjake wrote:
AEnigma wrote:As a voter who had Jordan ahead, and also as a project runner who would have been a bit concerned if Jordan had lost this vote, I think it would be more productive if instead of analysing post counts, there were a committed effort to address the arguments made by those who did not vote Jordan. Regardless of my disagreement, I appreciate that most of those who did not vote for Jordan took the time to explain why. It would be nice if people bothered by their votes would take the time to address them in turn, rather than defaulting to meta-commentary which makes no actual attempt to refute the stances expressed.

Discussion is the primary purpose of these projects. If this project were comprised of voters just posting some emptily reasoned ballots which perfectly mirrored your own, would that be more valuable than a spirited back-and-forth which occasionally produced unexpected deviations?


If we’re being honest, there’s not a lot to the reasoning of most of the Magic votes here. Some pretty bare-bones explanations for a lot of them that can’t really be meaningfully engaged with,

If I'm being honest, I think you're conflating "can't really be meaningfully engaged with" with..."can't be meaningfully engaged with the level of effort I am willing or able to put forward":
Spoiler:
There is something that stops me from broadening the sample to something that would start to be meaningful, and it is that I have limited time in my life and am not able or willing to spend the massive amount of time that would take. The fact that virtually no one has done that sort of thing (with you being a potential exception?) is definitely indicative of this being the predominant stance on that, even amongst people interested enough in basketball to frequent the PC board.


Yes, I’m not willing to engage in a level of effort that you have not been willing to engage in either. Literally no one is sitting here tracking creation for a genuinely meaningful sample of games. Hard to see how you think it makes sense to criticize that.

But also, when I said stuff “can’t really be meaningfully engaged with,” I meant things like: “His guys have put the most effort here and that efforts convinced me that he might be the best player period. He looks like the most valuable.” There’s nothing in that to be actually engaged with.

Even when you are able/willing to put the time and effort required to poison the well regarding evidence you are, by your own admission, unwilling/unable to actually show is deliberately biased:
Spoiler:
I think this is a bit naive, because it is obvious that some of the tracking was done to prop up certain players (LeBron, Hakeem, and Magic), while some of it was done to tear down other players (Jordan and Bird). If you told me what poster was doing the tracking and what players they did, I could’ve absolutely told you what the general results of the tracking would be for each player before ever seeing it. It’s a subjective exercise being done by someone with a very strong ideological agenda.


This sentence is so vaguely written that I don’t even really know what you mean. As I’ve said many times, my issue with that tracking stuff you’ve done is *both* that it’s obviously a subjective exercise done by someone with a strong ideological agenda *and* it’s on a tiny sample size that is therefore meaningless to me even if we assumed there was no bias to it. The latter point obviously makes it not worth my time to painstakingly redo the analysis to prove your analysis was biased, because I’ll think it is basically meaningless analysis regardless. Meanwhile, the amount of tracking work it’d take to actually track meaningful sample sizes from people is an amount of work that, as I’m sure you’re well aware, is prohibitive. So yeah, as I’ve explained before, theoretically, the exercise you’ve engaged in could be meaningful if it was for a large sample and there were a bunch of people across the ideological spectrum who redid the analysis in order to allow us to control for bias/subjectivity. But since no one—yourself included—is willing to take the massive amount of time that’d entail, that’s really a moot point. Analysis that isn’t meaningful doesn’t have to be deemed meaningful just because it is unrealistic for its flaws to be fixed. Sometimes things just aren’t meaningful. I imagine you have had fun with the analysis, so I have no problem with you doing it, but I don’t have to think it is even remotely persuasive about anything.


Your "consistent theme" was barely mentioned.


Really? There were six voters for Magic. Two of them directly mentioned this 3-fewer-wins thing, and another one of them (you) explicitly quoted one of those other two as an explanation for why the poster’s vote went for Magic instead of Jordan. You then had another voter that didn’t specifically say “3 fewer wins” but basically said the same thing, since the explanation included saying that Magic “carries la to almost as many wins…” So that’s four out of six voters clearly referencing this as a significant part of their explanation. One of the other two voters did also reference Magic having a “weak” team (meaning my post directly related to that explanation too), though the 3-fewer-wins thing wasn’t referenced. Which means the only Magic vote with explanations not covered by my post was a vote that is a gimmick post and genuinely completely indecipherable to me.

What was however commented on, consistently, was the idea that Jordan's creation is oversold by his assists.


In contrast to the above, yours was the only voting post that actually directly mentioned this idea. So yeah, it’s definitely less of a consistent theme found in the votes for Magic. There’s a couple votes that vaguely talk about how the “Magic args just been too good” and “His guys have put the most effort here and that efforts convinced me.” You could try to claim that those statements refer to this creation stuff, but it’s entirely vague and completely unclear what it’s referring to—which is illustrative of why I mentioned that multiple votes had explanations that cannot be meaningfully engaged with. Similarly, konr0167’s vote does say “stats come from plays where MJ isn’t doing much,” which *could* be a reference to the creation argument, but it’s too vague to be sure. It seems clear that the theme I referred to in my prior post was much more consistently and explicitly found in the voting posts than this “creation” stuff was. Not sure why you’d think otherwise, except that you’re very focused on what your own personal voting post said. In any event, though, it’s all a bit of a moot point, because if I were to address that stuff too, I’d just refer back to posts I’ve made in other threads (and now above as well) about why that analysis isn’t meaningful. And I’d also note that no one thinks Jordan was as good a creator as Magic Johnson anyways, and he doesn’t in any way need to be in order to be the clear 1991 POY—I’d be very surprised if any one of the many people who have voted for 1991 Jordan as the greatest peak thought that he was as good a creator as Magic. So, beyond the flaws in the analysis itself, it’s not a persuasive point because it is largely straw manning anyways.

That the Lakers in 92 looked more like an average team than an outright bad one (28-26 and -1.6 with Worthy) would not of course refute the idea that Jordan with 50+ win help and healthy postseason support was significantly advantaged. Nor would a whopping .4 regular season on/off advantage that turned into a +24 disadvantage in the series three different voters decided swung Magic vs Jordan from a toss-up to a Jordan win.


The 1992 Lakers had a 4.27 SRS with an 8-3 record (60-win pace) in the games where they had Worthy and Divac. That’s actually a better SRS and better winning percentage than the Bulls had without Jordan in either 1994 or 1995 (and that’s leaving aside the Bulls supporting cast improving in subsequent years after 1991). A small sample, of course, but probably the best indication we have of how good the 1991 Lakers supporting cast was, given that those are the only games where the 1992 Lakers were healthy (while the 1991 Lakers didn’t really have any health issues). And I note that if we added the three games Magic didn’t play in 1991 onto this, you get a 4.60 SRS, with a 9-5 record (53-win pace). That’s actually a higher SRS than the 1994 Bulls had even just in games with Pippen and Grant (and the 1994 Bulls were almost certainly notably better than the 1991 Bulls supporting cast, for reasons that have been talked about many times before). So yeah, if anything, I’d say we have indication that Magic’s supporting cast was better than Jordan’s in 1991, perhaps by a substantial amount depending on how much we think the Bulls supporting cast grew over subsequent years. Magic’s team winning three fewer games and racking up a 1.84 lower SRS in that scenario definitely isn’t indicative of Magic having a better season.

As for the on-off stuff, pointing to on-off in a single series as a basis for an argument is silly because the “off” number is based on a completely tiny sample. Magic missed a grand total of 17 minutes in the 1991 Finals. And it is also a non-sequitur when the argument that was made was about the regular season. Given the injuries on the Lakers in the Finals, I think it’s fine to assert Magic had less help in the Finals, but it’s also the case that the Bulls decisively won the Finals, so that can hardly be an argument for Magic. Which is presumably why multiple voters focused on the two teams’ relative success in the regular season. And, on that front, you can say the difference between Jordan’s and Magic’s on-off isn’t big, but when the argument for Magic is premised on him purportedly having greater regular season impact, it’s obviously not sufficient for his on-off numbers to merely be slightly less good. (It’s also worth noting again that the sample of games we have for the Bulls in 1991 is genuinely very skewed, such that the unsampled games are virtually all Bulls wins, meaning the gap for the entire season was probably bigger, though that’s of course just an educated guess).


There was a wide variety of generally consistent argumentation that went towards Magic over Jordan. You ignored most of it because you were unwilling to engage with the tape. Ironic when you proceed to say the following:
It also seems wrong just by being aware of who these players were and having watched them.

Here I recall an age-old adage: He who must say they have an eyetest does not have one.

You are (poorly) meta-analyzing because you have almost nothing of substance to offer. This is what "barebones" looks like:
Spoiler:
One_and_Done wrote:1. Jordan
2. Magic
3. D.Rob
4. Barkley
5. K.Malone

Another relatively easy vote. Jordan was still the best player in the league, with Magic in 2nd place.


This also happens to be the poster offering the most meta-analysis. I'm seeing a correlation here.


I didn’t say that every Jordan vote included exhaustive explanations. I don’t see these votes as a competition over who can write the most, and I think it’s fine for Magic votes (or votes for anyone else) to be fairly bare-bones. People have limited time to spend on posting. I only mention that some votes were bare-bones as a response to criticism that I should be focusing on refuting the arguments made by those voters. I assume if someone told you to focus on refuting the arguments in One_and_Done’s voting post in this thread, you’d react similarly, and it’d be a valid reaction.

Personally, if a player I wanted to win won despite nearly monopolizing the laziest and least coherent votes over nearly a decade worth of ballots, I'd be conflicted between disappointment and/or relief that lack of effort went unpunished.


Again, if I cared enough about how these votes go to have these kinds of emotions you’re describing, I’d be a voter in this project. I’m not. I also think it’s a very odd way to think about these votes to think about a “lack of effort” by posters being “punished.” These votes shouldn’t be based on some meta-judgment of how much effort people on various sides have made. This is another theme I’ve seen, with other Magic voters in this thread in part basing their votes on things like “His guys have put the most effort here” and “MJ fans been slacking.” I think that sort of thing obviously misses the point of what people are supposed to be voting based on.

10 posts. And yet their vote offered more opportunity for "meaningful engagement" than all the complaints on this page combined. Perhaps post-count should stop being used as a proxy for post-quality. It's the old guard that's faltered. The new have shined.


I think it should be obvious that I didn’t use post-count as a proxy for post-quality. I used it to show the obvious fact that the posters who voted for Magic are mostly new posters, and then I posited that that demonstrates that these votes being inconsistent with past PC board votes is very likely a result of an influx of new posters with like-minded views. It’s a fairly obvious point that does not relate in any way to the relative “post quality” of any posters. Indeed, I actually specifically said I hoped these new posters “at least become quality long-term posters (even if they are ones I’d probably usually disagree with), rather than just being temporary vote farmers or posters that are prone to personal attacks that drive other people away.” The idea that I linked post count with post quality is just straw manning.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,934
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#66 » by OhayoKD » Tue Nov 26, 2024 6:45 pm

lessthanjake wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Would you look at that. Sore-winners. Delightful


I’m not a voter in this project, buddy. Obviously I’m not particularly concerned with the results, or I would be a voter. I’m not a “winner” or a “loser” in any thread of a project I’m not a voter in (nor do I think there’s really “winners” or “losers” in these votes regardless). I’m just making some commentary on how the votes are inconsistent with past PC board votes and giving an explanation for why I think that has occurred.

If you say so.

lessthanjake wrote:
If we’re being honest, there’s not a lot to the reasoning of most of the Magic votes here. Some pretty bare-bones explanations for a lot of them that can’t really be meaningfully engaged with,

If I'm being honest, I think you're conflating "can't really be meaningfully engaged with" with..."can't be meaningfully engaged with the level of effort I am willing or able to put forward":
There is something that stops me from broadening the sample to something that would start to be meaningful, and it is that I have limited time in my life and am not able or willing to spend the massive amount of time that would take. The fact that virtually no one has done that sort of thing (with you being a potential exception?) is definitely indicative of this being the predominant stance on that, even amongst people interested enough in basketball to frequent the PC board.


Yes, I’m not willing to engage in a level of effort that you have not been willing to engage in either.[/quote]
You are arguing with a strawman and it still doesn't make sense. I am enlarging the sample. You are not. Me failing to enlarge the sample to a degree we consider meaningful myself in a span of a month does not mean we are putting equal effort towards enlarging the sample.


As I’ve said many times, my issue with that tracking stuff you’ve done is *both* that it’s obviously a subjective exercise done by someone with a strong ideological agenda

And no one is taking issue with *both, what you are being called out for is the part in bold, where you assert bad-faith without putting any effort to back up the assertion.

Your "consistent theme" was barely mentioned.


Really? There were six voters for Magic. Two of them directly mentioned this 3-fewer-wins thing

"Two-wins" was a point among many in the section I quoted. I then went through the thought process I had reading both the posts and in doing so made a point of using net-rating, not record. 3 out of 6 voters inputting 3-wins is not a "consistent theme".

Otoh
What was however commented on, consistently, was the idea that Jordan's creation is oversold by his assists. As was Magic's best teammates being injured during and before the finals.


In contrast to the above, yours was the only voting post that actually directly mentioned this idea. So yeah, it’s definitely less of a consistent theme found in the votes for Magic.

Hmm
[spoiler]
Paulluxx9000 wrote:Barkley is far more efficient than Jordan, and I think in terms of real playmaking and defense there’s not nearly the gap people pretend at that point. Hawkins burned MJ plenty. And many of those assists are just taking what’s there rather than making things appear. Jordan’s perfect season just wasn’t really perfect. Or close. The “advanced stats” don’t count most of those

Konr0167 wrote:Considering he context, Im’ pretty comfortable saying Magic. Finals, you could say Jordan was better there but despite the assists Magic created way more, MJ’s defense wasn’t really good, and Magic was playing way steeper competition.


ILS referenced "efforts" from people arguing against Jordan. Before that vote was a ballot that explicitly commented on Jordan's assist and posited gravity as a relative weakness. Before that were arguments specifically bringing up and revolving around Jordan being disadvantaged in tracked creation volume relative to Magic by a gap that conflicts with what assist averages suggest.

Shaq has alluded to "fake assists" in previous threads with the idea being posited by Paul as early as 1987. The Lakers winning 3 less games is also mentioned less than Magic reaching the final, something noted by every magic voter.

Yet, for some reason, you only saw "the Lakers won less 3 games in the regular season" as something people could "meaningfully engage with". Not any of the claims or arguments regarding creation, rim-protection, man defense, or the particulars of the playoffs where the Lakers beat the 64-win +8.47 SRS Blazers despite Worthy being injured during the last 2 games to make the finals in the first place.



That the Lakers in 92 looked more like an average team than an outright bad one (28-26 and -1.6 with Worthy) would not of course refute the idea that Jordan with 50+ win help and healthy postseason support was significantly advantaged. Nor would a whopping .4 regular season on/off advantage that turned into a +24 disadvantage in the series three different voters decided swung Magic vs Jordan from a toss-up to a Jordan win.


The 1992 Lakers had a 4.27 SRS with an 8-3 record in the games where they had Worthy and Divac. That’s actually a better SRS and better winning percentage than the Bulls had without Jordan in either 1994 or 1995 (and that’s leaving aside the Bulls supporting cast improving in subsequent years after 1991).

It is if you, for whatever reason, ignore that Pippen and Grant got injured in 1994. That said, this suggests Magic's help was significantly better than his other signals do, providing a solid counter to much of the argumentation made in Magic's favor. Perhaps if Jordan's actual voters or the people complaining now had brought it up during the voting period, MJ comes a bit closer to the unanimous vote from last time (I probably swap back at least).

As for the on-off stuff, pointing to on-off in a single series is silly because the “off” number is based on a completely tiny sample. And it is also a non-sequitur when the argument that was made was about the regular season.

As part of a meta-analysis pretending the regular-season results were a bigger factor for Magic voters than the postseason...where the help you are adjusting for got injured. But the postseason was clearly the main focus for the voting bloc here, Magic voters and overall. Centering your meta-analysis around "3-win difference" is just terrible analysis.



I think it should be obvious that I didn’t use post-count as a proxy for post-quality. I used it to show the obvious fact that the posters who voted for Magic are mostly new posters, and then I posited that that demonstrates that these votes being inconsistent with past PC board votes is very likely a result of an influx of new posters with like-minded views. It’s a fairly obvious point that does not relate in any way to the relative “post quality” of any posters. Indeed, I actually specifically said I hoped these new posters “at least become quality long-term posters (even if they are ones I’d probably usually disagree with), rather than just being temporary vote farmers or posters that are prone to personal attacks that drive other people away.” The idea that I linked post count with post quality is just straw manning.

I suppose it's possible you mischaracterizing high-detail votes citing diverse rationale as "barebones" was an innocuous mistake unrelated to your opinion of these new voters. If so, I apologize for the strawman, and propose we charge onwards, unburdened by what has been.
Lebronnygoat
Sophomore
Posts: 197
And1: 185
Joined: Feb 08, 2024

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE 

Post#67 » by Lebronnygoat » Thu Dec 5, 2024 5:14 pm

Djoker wrote:
Lebronnygoat wrote:
Djoker wrote:
By my estimation, Jordan spent about 35-40 possessions per game guarding Magic. If we estimate 37.5 possessions which is exactly half of 75 so a convenient number, that works out to 11 pts/75. And even with 30 possessions per game, that's still only 13.75 pts/75.

That’s too much, I’m talking about Magic actually having the play designed for him or is taking up a shot when being guarded. Divac and Worthy had good amount of post volume, also am not talking about Magic being guarded by Jordan giving an entry pass to Divac or Worthy as the play was initially designed.


Well series average for Magic is 17.1 pts/75 and over the course of the series he is doing all those things so if we are comparing to that, it makes sense to include all possessions where MJ guards Magic even if Magic passes the ball into the post or whatever else he may do. Of course, a more in depth analysis would also try to look at how Jordan's defense affected Magic's playmaking. For example, we could track his assist %, post entries, good vs. bad passes etc. but I didn't go that far in my tracking.

Did you count the two 3’s Magic hit on Jordan in your tracking? I see you have 1/2, we’re you only accounting for the post?
Top10alltime
Senior
Posts: 572
And1: 157
Joined: Jan 04, 2025
   

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#68 » by Top10alltime » Fri Apr 4, 2025 12:15 pm

Hey guys I have finished tracking the 91 finals game 2 for jordan it was not as good as I thought. Check it out:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Z6j-mQ44u6XqNRSypiJj6wevc2de8Mz8WuKjZzykhl4/edit?usp=drivesdk

Final tally -
15x creation
18 DTOs
7 EDTOs
11x doubled


9 PPD
1 EPPD
6 IPPD

7 PP
2 EPP
5 IPP
OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,934
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#69 » by OhayoKD » Fri Apr 4, 2025 6:31 pm

Top10alltime wrote:Hey guys I have finished tracking the 91 finals game 2 for jordan it was not as good as I thought. Check it out:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Z6j-mQ44u6XqNRSypiJj6wevc2de8Mz8WuKjZzykhl4/edit?usp=drivesdk

Final tally -
15x creation
18 DTOs
7 EDTOs
11x doubled


9 PPD
1 EPPD
6 IPPD

7 PP
2 EPP
5 IPP


Going to convert this to per-possession so it can be used comparatively

As we don't have the # of possessions I'm going to multiply MJ minutes played/48 and multiply that by the pace (84) for an estimate which gets us about 63.

This means per-possession Jordan had around .28 DTOS and .11 EDTOS.

Defensively this would give Jordan, per-possession, around 0.143 PPDs, 0.01 EPPDs, 0.02 IPPDs, .11 PPs, 0.03 EPPs and .08 IPPs.

Just going by the numbers this is probably the second worst game tracked using this system following 1989 game 5 (also mj) though it's worth noting for this tracker all 5 games tracked (2 kareem, 1 kobe) by top10 had the players end up with more ineffective primary possessions (perimeter and paint) than effective, granted Jordan's ratio is worse(much worse than either Kareem game) and it's on much lower usage than Kareem. I suspect we're on the same page with how we look at usage but top10 is probably harsher in terms of effective vs ineffective than I am. FWIW, this game was also tracked by Djoker, albeit in less detail, though they portrayed it in a significantly more positive light:
Djoker wrote:Plus-Minus:
Jordan ON 37:05 : +25
Jordan OFF 10:55: -4

Defensive Grade: B (good)

Jordan spent half of the first quarter on Magic. He committed one non-shooting foul and drew one charge on the Magic man. Then Pippen spent much of the rest of the game on Magic. Jordan spend a few minutes on Magic in the 3rd quarter and committed a shooting foul leading to two free throws. MJ registered a nice block on Worthy, a steal on Teagle and drew a charge on Divac. All in all he was very active as a help defender compared to Game 1 even though he spent most of this game off of Magic.

With MJ as primary defender:

Magic 2 points (0/0, 2/2)

With Pippen as primary defender:

Magic 12 points (4/13, 4/4)

Magic had a far worse game here not just because Pippen was on him. Magic actually shook Pippen quite a few times but Pip didn't foul and the Bulls rotated better at the rim.

Too early for definitive conclusions but this is the third game Djoker has tracked for Jordan where their tracking potrayed Jordan alot more positively than other people's tracking/vetting with the third game of 1993 getting a much lower view (defensively) from Me, Redmoon, and Capfan33 and 1991 game 5 (defensively) getting a much lower view from me.

Djoker, rightly or wrongly, seems to have a more optimistic lens when watching the same footage.

This also marks the 6th game where edtos were tracked possession by possession rather than just per assist with 2 coming from the 2007 finals (Lebron),1 from the 1991 finals (MJ), 1 coming from the 74 Finals (Kareem), and1 from the 77 WCF (Also Kareem)

Here were the outputs from the 4 games I've done averages for (1 done by tsherkin, two by me)

2007 Game 1:

During the first 40 possessions of game 1 of this finals, Lebron averaged, per possession:
.425 EDTOs

2007 Game 4:
.44 edtos per possession

1991 Game 5:
During the first 40 possessions of game 5 vs the Lakers in 91, MJ averaged, per possession,
.225 EDTOs


Wierdly, despite Jordan averaging more assists here, his edtos more than halved from .225 to .11. Similarlly wierd, despite a big assist disparity in game 1 and 4 Lebron's edto average is pretty much the same. Would be interesting to see over more games if the relationship between EDTOS and assists keeps looking to have weak correlation.

The tracking here also does corroborate Lebronny's tracking from earlier in this thread that Jordan's assists suggesting Jordan's assists overstated his creation.

I'll calculate the averages for the two kareem games as well and add them here though even without mathing it out I can say he looks the worst by this so far.
Top10alltime
Senior
Posts: 572
And1: 157
Joined: Jan 04, 2025
   

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#70 » by Top10alltime » Fri Apr 4, 2025 7:01 pm

OhayoKD wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:Hey guys I have finished tracking the 91 finals game 2 for jordan it was not as good as I thought. Check it out:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Z6j-mQ44u6XqNRSypiJj6wevc2de8Mz8WuKjZzykhl4/edit?usp=drivesdk

Final tally -
15x creation
18 DTOs
7 EDTOs
11x doubled


9 PPD
1 EPPD
6 IPPD

7 PP
2 EPP
5 IPP


Going to convert this to per-possession so it can be used combatively

As we don't have the # of possessions I'm going to multiply MJ minutes played/48 and multiply that by the pace (84) for an estimate which gets us about 63.

This means per-possession Jordan had around .28 DTOS and .11 EDTOS.

Defensively this would give Jordan, per-possession, around 0.143 PPDs, 0.01 EPPDs, 0.02 IPPDs, .11 PPs, 0.03 EPPs and .08 IPPs.

Just going by the numbers this is probably the second worst game tracked using this system following 1989 game 5 (also mj) though it's worth noting for this tracker all 5 games tracked (2 kareem, 1 kobe) by top10 had the players end up with more ineffective primary possessions (perimeter and paint) than effective, granted Jordan's ratio is worse(much worse than either Kareem game) and it's on much lower usage than Kareem. I suspect we're on the same page with how we look at usage but top10 is probably harsher in terms of effective vs ineffective than I am. FWIW, this game was also tracked by Djoker, albeit in less detail, though they portrayed it in a significantly more positive light:
Djoker wrote:Plus-Minus:
Jordan ON 37:05 : +25
Jordan OFF 10:55: -4

Defensive Grade: B (good)

Jordan spent half of the first quarter on Magic. He committed one non-shooting foul and drew one charge on the Magic man. Then Pippen spent much of the rest of the game on Magic. Jordan spend a few minutes on Magic in the 3rd quarter and committed a shooting foul leading to two free throws. MJ registered a nice block on Worthy, a steal on Teagle and drew a charge on Divac. All in all he was very active as a help defender compared to Game 1 even though he spent most of this game off of Magic.

With MJ as primary defender:

Magic 2 points (0/0, 2/2)

With Pippen as primary defender:

Magic 12 points (4/13, 4/4)

Magic had a far worse game here not just because Pippen was on him. Magic actually shook Pippen quite a few times but Pip didn't foul and the Bulls rotated better at the rim.

Too early for definitive conclusions but this is the third game Djoker has tracked for Jordan where their tracking potrayed Jordan alot more positively than other people's tracking/vetting with the third game of 1993 getting a much lower view (defensively) from Me, Redmoon, and Capfan33 and 1991 game 5 (defensively) getting a much lower view from me.

Djoker, rightly or wrongly, seems to have a more optimistic lens when watching the same footage.

This also marks the 6th game where edtos were tracked possession by possession rather than just per assist with 2 coming from the 2007 finals (Lebron),1 from the 1991 finals (MJ), 1 coming from the 74 Finals (Kareem), and1 from the 77 WCF (Also Kareem)

Here were the outputs from the 4 games I've done averages for (1 done by tsherkin, two by me)

2007 Game 1:

During the first 40 possessions of game 1 of this finals, Lebron averaged, per possession:
.425 EDTOs

2007 Game 4:
.44 edtos per possession

1991 Game 5:
During the first 40 possessions of game 5 vs the Lakers in 91, MJ averaged, per possession,
.225 EDTOs


Wierdly, despite Jordan averaging more assists here, his edtos more than halved from .225 to .11. Similarlly wierd, despite a big assist disparity in game 1 and 4 Lebron's edto average is pretty much the same. Would be interesting to see over more games if the relationship between EDTOS and assists keeps looking to have weak correlation.

The tracking here also does corroborate Lebronny's tracking from earlier in this thread that Jordan's assists suggesting Jordan's assists overstated his creation.

I'll calculate the averages for the two kareem games as well and add them here though even without mathing it out I can say he looks the worst by this so far.


Possessions played offensively: 58
Defensively: 37

Now can you recalculate?
Djoker
Starter
Posts: 2,339
And1: 2,066
Joined: Sep 12, 2015
 

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#71 » by Djoker » Fri Apr 4, 2025 8:11 pm

I find it hard to believe that Jordan had just 2 effective paint protections (EPP) in Game 2 when he drew 2 charges and had 1 block. That's 3 right there!
Add me on Twitter/X - Djoker @Danko8c. I post a lot of stats.
OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,934
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#72 » by OhayoKD » Fri Apr 4, 2025 8:57 pm

Top10alltime wrote:
Possessions played offensively: 58
Defensively: 37

Now can you recalculate?

Think this is off.
Djoker wrote:I find it hard to believe that Jordan had just 2 effective paint protections (EPP) in Game 2 when he drew 2 charges and had 1 block. That's 3 right there!

Jordan was very clearly not the primary deterrent on that block, never mind the whole possession. If you're counting that as anything more than secondary paint-protection i'm not shocked you think Jordan was a notable paint-protector
Top10alltime
Senior
Posts: 572
And1: 157
Joined: Jan 04, 2025
   

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#73 » by Top10alltime » Fri Apr 4, 2025 9:00 pm

Djoker wrote:I find it hard to believe that Jordan had just 2 effective paint protections in Game 2 when he drew 2 charges and had 1 block. That's 3 right there!


This block jordan not primary paint protector.
Djoker
Starter
Posts: 2,339
And1: 2,066
Joined: Sep 12, 2015
 

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#74 » by Djoker » Fri Apr 4, 2025 9:35 pm

Oh ok. Well then primary paint protection is a useless metric to track for perimeter players no? How often will a SG be a primary paint protector... Not very often! I think all paint protections should be tracked although to be fair as I've pointed out many times, I think your method of tracking is quite subjective and not consistently reproducible. A few days after tracking 10 possessions (by that time you definitely forgot the plays!), go back and track the same 10 possessions but don't look at your initial tallies and then compare. I might track Game 2 and have 8 effective and 3 ineffective paint protections. Which one of us is right?

The defensive tactics of that era are also very different than those today. Leaving a guy open for a 3pt shot was OKAY back then. I wouldn't call MJ leaving Magic wide open for a 3pt shot bad defense. Team defensive tactics also vary a lot. The Bulls used MJ as a wrecking ball to try to blow up plays aggressively double teaming, playing the passing lanes for steals, going for blocks as a help defender etc. with others to cover for him. With varying personnel and tactics, his style of defense could be more or less effective. The error bars are quite wide so to speak.

Anyways I am in the school of thought where I just prefer to track high reproducible metrics like:
- defensive FG% (preferably done by shooting zone)
- charges drawn
- shooting fouls committed
- frustration fouls committed
- intentional fouls committed
- goaltending violations
- illegal defense violations
- technical fouls

These can all supplement the box score and anyone tracking the games will come up with the same or very similar tallies. Over large samples, I think all these on top of +/- do a decent job of tracking the defensive side of the floor.
Add me on Twitter/X - Djoker @Danko8c. I post a lot of stats.
OhayoKD
Head Coach
Posts: 6,042
And1: 3,934
Joined: Jun 22, 2022

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#75 » by OhayoKD » Fri Apr 4, 2025 10:22 pm

Djoker wrote:Oh ok. Well then primary paint protection is a useless metric to track for perimeter players no?

Odd take considering the Bulls most prolific PP accumulators are "perimiter" defenders...

Perhaps what you meant to say were guard defenders and I figure I shouldn't have to explain to you the folly of *only tracking things players or a type of player are good at.
 
I think your method of tracking is quite subjective and not consistently reproducible. A few days after tracking 10 possessions (by that time you definitely forgot the plays!), go back and track the same 10 possessions but don't look at your initial tallies and then compare.

Here's a better test: what if two completely different people who are ideologically opposed on the player in question look at the same set of possessions?

(1993, game 3, rated "a" by Djoker)

Redmoon:
FWIW, here is an adjusted tally for Jordan if I count everything you highlighted as something that you think should have been credited (1 PP, 1 EPPD, 1 EPP) but wasn't.

Taking all these at face value Jordan goes from 2 to 3 EPPD boosting his per-possession average from .5 EPPD, to .75, goes from 5 PP to 6 giving boosting his PP-per-possession rate from .125 to .15., and goes from 0 EPP, to 1 EPP giving him a per-possession rate of 0.025

Ohayo:
During Jordan’s first 40 possessions, I gave him, 5 possessions as a primary or co-primary rim-protector of which he was deemed effective in 0 and ineffective in 1. Jordan also was given 11 possessions as a primary or co–primary perimeter defender, of which he was deemed effective in 2 and ineffective in 1. Additionally, MJ was given 3 Irrational Avoidances. This means per Possession, MJ averaged, 0.125 PPs, 0.00 EPPs, 0.025 IPPs, 0.275 PPDs, 0.05 EPPDs, 0.025 IPPDs, and 0.05 IAs.


Seems like it's more reproducible than you think.

I might track Game 2 and have 8 effective and 3 ineffective paint protections. Which one of us is right?

Considering no one who has tracked Jordan for this has managed to find a game he averaged even half of those...it'd probably be you, and you probably wouldn't be doing this in good-faith lol

The error bars are quite wide so to speak.

Are they?

Anyways I am in the school of thought where I just prefer to track high reproducible metrics like:
- defensive FG% (preferably done by shooting zone)
- charges drawn
- shooting fouls committed
- frustration fouls committed
- intentional fouls committed
- goaltending violations
- illegal defense violations
- technical fouls

So basically, you're in favor of excluding the majority of what happens during a possession and the majority of possessions that occur...

Seems like a dubious trade-off to me.
LukaTheGOAT
Analyst
Posts: 3,275
And1: 2,992
Joined: Dec 25, 2019
 

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#76 » by LukaTheGOAT » Sat Apr 5, 2025 7:20 pm

You've got to have some serious hate in your heart to be swinging anyone other than MJ as POY in 1991, but WOKE ones have known this from the Discord.
metta-tonne
Ballboy
Posts: 26
And1: 18
Joined: Feb 04, 2025
     

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#77 » by metta-tonne » Mon Apr 7, 2025 1:45 pm

OhayoKD wrote:Would you look at that. Sore-winners. Delightful
lessthanjake wrote:
AEnigma wrote:As a voter who had Jordan ahead, and also as a project runner who would have been a bit concerned if Jordan had lost this vote, I think it would be more productive if instead of analysing post counts, there were a committed effort to address the arguments made by those who did not vote Jordan. Regardless of my disagreement, I appreciate that most of those who did not vote for Jordan took the time to explain why. It would be nice if people bothered by their votes would take the time to address them in turn, rather than defaulting to meta-commentary which makes no actual attempt to refute the stances expressed.

Discussion is the primary purpose of these projects. If this project were comprised of voters just posting some emptily reasoned ballots which perfectly mirrored your own, would that be more valuable than a spirited back-and-forth which occasionally produced unexpected deviations?


If we’re being honest, there’s not a lot to the reasoning of most of the Magic votes here. Some pretty bare-bones explanations for a lot of them that can’t really be meaningfully engaged with,

If I'm being honest, I think you're conflating "can't really be meaningfully engaged with" with..."can't be meaningfully engaged with the level of effort I am willing or able to put forward":
Spoiler:
There is something that stops me from broadening the sample to something that would start to be meaningful, and it is that I have limited time in my life and am not able or willing to spend the massive amount of time that would take. The fact that virtually no one has done that sort of thing (with you being a potential exception?) is definitely indicative of this being the predominant stance on that, even amongst people interested enough in basketball to frequent the PC board.

Even when you are able/willing to put the time and effort required to poison the well regarding evidence you are, by your own admission, unwilling/unable to actually show is deliberately biased:
Spoiler:
I think this is a bit naive, because it is obvious that some of the tracking was done to prop up certain players (LeBron, Hakeem, and Magic), while some of it was done to tear down other players (Jordan and Bird). If you told me what poster was doing the tracking and what players they did, I could’ve absolutely told you what the general results of the tracking would be for each player before ever seeing it. It’s a subjective exercise being done by someone with a very strong ideological agenda.

Your "consistent theme" was barely mentioned. What was however commented on, consistently, was the idea that Jordan's creation is oversold by his assists. As was Magic's best teammates being injured during and before the finals.

That the Lakers in 92 looked more like an average team than an outright bad one (28-26 and -1.6 with Worthy) would not of course refute the idea that Jordan with 50+ win help and healthy postseason support was significantly advantaged. Nor would a whopping .4 regular season on/off advantage that turned into a +24 disadvantage in the series three different voters decided swung Magic vs Jordan from a toss-up to a Jordan win.

There was a wide variety of generally consistent argumentation that went towards Magic over Jordan. You ignored most of it because you were unwilling to engage with the tape. Ironic when you proceed to say the following:
It also seems wrong just by being aware of who these players were and having watched them.

Here I recall an age-old adage: He who must say they have an eyetest does not have one.

You are (poorly) meta-analyzing because you have almost nothing of substance to offer. This is what "barebones" looks like:
Spoiler:
One_and_Done wrote:1. Jordan
2. Magic
3. D.Rob
4. Barkley
5. K.Malone

Another relatively easy vote. Jordan was still the best player in the league, with Magic in 2nd place.


This also happens to be the poster offering the most meta-analysis. I'm seeing a correlation here.

Personally, if a player I wanted to win won despite nearly monopolizing the laziest and least coherent votes over nearly a decade worth of ballots, I'd be conflicted between disappointment and/or relief that lack of effort went unpunished.

What I would not do is try and pretend these sorts of votes were the lazy ones:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=115701565#p115701565

10 posts. And yet their vote offered more opportunity for "meaningful engagement" than all the complaints on this page combined. Perhaps post-count should stop being used as a proxy for post-quality. It's the old guard that's faltered. The new have shined.


Ferulci wrote:This. "Funny" is the word. While I really appreciate the whole project and posters who take time to explain their reasoning, it is "funny" to see that Peak Michael Jordan (whose consensus is a Top 3 peak ever at worst, and who won Peak Project just 2 years ago viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2203339 ), barely beats post-peak Magic. It is "funny" to see arguments that where used to bring down Jordan in 1988 or 1989 are the same that are used to bring up Magic this year.
It really puts into perspective some of 1988 and 1989 season votes.

I can't wait to see the discussions for 1993. It will be "funny"


Mind elaborating? What arguments were used against to "bring down" Jordan in 88/89 that were used to bring up Magic this thread. I suspect an attempt at answering this will turn out "funny", but I wouldn't mind being surprised.


He definitely had a bad time defending Magic but he's Magic so. Not a rim protector but he offered more than most guards. People think of him as a lockdown man guy but he was really a help dude and j think he did enough to be pretty good
Djoker
Starter
Posts: 2,339
And1: 2,066
Joined: Sep 12, 2015
 

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#78 » by Djoker » Mon Apr 7, 2025 5:15 pm

OhayoKD wrote:..


Your post is missing the point.

Top10alltime makes a distinction between primary paint protection and paint protection in general. Thus it seems he's not giving Jordan credit for providing paint protection (like the block I mentioned) on possessions where he isn't the primary paint protector. And on another note, I'd like to know how he defines a primary paint protector to begin with.

What you also don't seem to realize is that defense is team based, both personnel and tactics-wise. What is deemed an effective or ineffective play is thus highly subjective and depends on which lens you're looking at it i.e. from a vantage point of an average team vs. the particular team a player is playing on. There is also a range of effectiveness. Plays can be extremely effective, very effective, somewhat effective etc. I'm not going to bother to keep trying to explain it to you why I don't think your tracking methodology is good, quite frankly.

I prefer tracking hard objective data which while it may not be super granular, is both reproducible and easy to interpret.
Add me on Twitter/X - Djoker @Danko8c. I post a lot of stats.
Top10alltime
Senior
Posts: 572
And1: 157
Joined: Jan 04, 2025
   

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#79 » by Top10alltime » Tue Apr 8, 2025 12:38 am

Djoker wrote:Top10alltime makes a distinction between primary paint protection and paint protection in general. Thus it seems he's not giving Jordan credit for providing paint protection (like the block I mentioned) on possessions where he isn't the primary paint protector. And on another note, I'd like to know how he defines a primary paint protector to begin with.


There are secondary paint protections, lol...
For primary paint protectors, it's literally in the name. The primary paint protector.

Anyways, I just tracked what was supposed to be one of Jordan's best playoff games. That block was not primary paint protection, as I said. :nonono:
User avatar
OldSchoolNoBull
General Manager
Posts: 9,107
And1: 4,506
Joined: Jun 27, 2003
Location: Ohio
 

Re: Retro Player of the Year 1990-91 UPDATE — Michael Jordan 

Post#80 » by OldSchoolNoBull » Tue Apr 8, 2025 1:58 am

I really don't know what we're trying to do here.

This is a game where he scored 33 points on 18 shots - 83.3% FG, 83.5% TS; where he dished 13 assists and had only 4 turnovers(a greater than 3:1 assist-to-turnover ratio); and where he grabbed 7 boards in addition to all of that; and did it all in just 36 minutes while leading his team to a 21 point win.

And we're sitting here picking it apart trying to diminish it by any means possible.

Like, what else do you want him to do?

Return to Player Comparisons