RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2)

Moderators: Domejandro, ken6199, bisme37, Dirk, KingDavid, cupcakesnake, bwgood77, zimpy27, infinite11285

Who Is officially the goat!? Only have 10 slots Poll.

Larry Bird
6
1%
Shaquille O'Neal
2
0%
Wilt Chamberlain
17
4%
Michael Jordan
280
59%
Lebron James
112
24%
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
16
3%
Oscar Robertson
1
0%
Hakeem Olajuwon
4
1%
Bill Russell
11
2%
Other Insert Comment
22
5%
 
Total votes: 471

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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1781 » by OhayoKD » Mon May 12, 2025 12:27 am

ball_takes23 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
Rust_Cohle wrote:
Lebron is a better floor raiser but not a better ceiling raiser at all. 2011 knows

If he wasn't a better ceiling raiser you wouldn't be cherrypicking his down-years.

In 2012, he won a playoff series vs a good pacers team without basically any teammate rim-protection with Bosh missing more games in a single playoff run than all of Jordan's co-stars missed throughout his prime combined. They went 8-1 with all three starting despite Wade's skillset overlapping significantly more with Lebron's than any of Jordan's co-stars (ask rip hamilton how that works out). They then faced a better team than anyone Jordan beat and in the one and only series Wade and Bosh were healthy they won 4-1.

In 2013, he beat a better version of the 1990 Pistons with his co-star hobbled and his jumper off.

In 2015, he blewout swept a 60-win team with a bad back with kyrie and love basically not playing before taking a 67-win team to 6.

And then in 2016 he beat a 73-win team with less help than Jordan has ever seriously contended with (I know you like your made-up "advanced stats", but defense is a thing).

Lebron at his best was a much better ceiling raising than Jordan at his best, just like he was a much better floor-raiser. You can keep trying to package "erneh rings" as a sophisticated argument, but Jordan is not Bill Russell (another guy who beat multiple better teams with less help).


Lebron's teams make up 0 of the top 10 net ratings of all time.

Interesting arbitrary standard you got there. 2016 Cavs were a 60-win team with Lebron (from 15-17 actually) in the RS and an all-time postseason team by "net rating" (just like the 2017 cavs) opponent-adjusted or not. 2020 Lakers were a 60-win team that were also all-time in the games that mattered.

If well above-average champions are "floor-raising" and not "ceiling raising" then maybe it's time to admit "ceiling raising" is just you trying to prop up an inferior player over a superior one.





Wade Bosh Love Kyrie AD and Luka in their primes

I didn't know Lebron played with all these guys simultaneously. Man oh man.

Also glad you brought up Kyrie again. Let's see how everyone's favorite flat-earther fares in terms of winning instead of hype



Lebron took Steph and Draymond and Klay to 6 without the aforementioned "prime hall-of-famer" (after sweeping a 60-win team basically without him) and then beat Steph and Draymond and Klay with him, two years after a postseason where he knocked off a better bad-boy Pistons without any of his teammates (due to injury) performing like they belonged in the hall-of-fame.

You want to contend. You take Lebron. You want to win. You take Lebron. You want to win against all-time opposition. You Take Lebron. You want a 70-win team. You still take Lebron because the guy whose much better for scenario 1, 2, and 3 is likely better for scenario 4 too.
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: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1782 » by michaelm » Mon May 12, 2025 12:48 am

OhayoKD wrote:
michaelm wrote:
bledredwine wrote:
What kind of joke is this? He’s one of the best leaders to grace the game and the squads say so.

Just because he was hard and didn’t allow teammates to make defensive mistakes like lebron, and actually played both sides of the court all of the time, leading by example like lebron, doesn’t mean you have to try and bring him down to lebron’s level with these BS tactics.

It’s pathetic, honestly. lol, yes, he punched Kerr and was rude to Luc because he kept missing catches. So what? They won six championships and all have attested that he was a great leader aside from Luke.

You guys are getting beyond desperate. But that makes sense, since Lebron is if he wants to be compared. Just like Kobe and the insane fans back in the day who have since left, too funny.

Punching team-mates is not good leadership obviously, and provoked a rather strong reaction when Draymond Green did it more recently, and rightly so. Even otherwise strong supporters of Green’s can’t defend him in that instance. Such incidents probably happen more often than we know, someone clearly snitched on Green, which is no justification either.

However Jordan clearly drove /was the impetus behind those teams, as the aforementioned Steve Kerr has actually said about the 72 win season. He did lead by example, and took full responsibility. I guess there was less media coverage in those days, but I don’t recall him publicly throwing team-mates under the bus. Whatever he brought as a leader didn’t leave any requirement for better leadership.


Both were amazing individual players, but for me Jordan eventually accepting coaching and a team game plan is what puts him ahead. LeBron perhaps has him covered 4-0 as a heliocentric basketball player, and is the GOAT floor raiser imo. They both have partisan fanbases and had/have strong publicity machines, and I don’t see how those of either allegiance can call those with the opposing view a cult.

Lebron beat your 73-win team with a co-star whose next team got worse without him and could not lead the cavs to a 30-win pace without him in a year said teammate had higher time of possession than he did.

Thinking Lebron isn't a better ceiling raising is as cult-like as thinking he isn't a better floor-raiser I'm afraid.

As is mentioning heliocentrism when the biggest reason Lebron's teams drop-off more more in games and seasons without is defense.

And then unfortunately for you, LeBron and the Cavs faced the real best GSW team, one that is in the conversation of the best all time with the 72 win Jordan Bulls, which absolutely smashed LeBron and the Cavs the next season.
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1783 » by OhayoKD » Mon May 12, 2025 12:55 am

michaelm wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
michaelm wrote:Punching team-mates is not good leadership obviously, and provoked a rather strong reaction when Draymond Green did it more recently, and rightly so. Even otherwise strong supporters of Green’s can’t defend him in that instance. Such incidents probably happen more often than we know, someone clearly snitched on Green, which is no justification either.

However Jordan clearly drove /was the impetus behind those teams, as the aforementioned Steve Kerr has actually said about the 72 win season. He did lead by example, and took full responsibility. I guess there was less media coverage in those days, but I don’t recall him publicly throwing team-mates under the bus. Whatever he brought as a leader didn’t leave any requirement for better leadership.


Both were amazing individual players, but for me Jordan eventually accepting coaching and a team game plan is what puts him ahead. LeBron perhaps has him covered 4-0 as a heliocentric basketball player, and is the GOAT floor raiser imo. They both have partisan fanbases and had/have strong publicity machines, and I don’t see how those of either allegiance can call those with the opposing view a cult.

Lebron beat your 73-win team with a co-star whose next team got worse without him and could not lead the cavs to a 30-win pace without him in a year said teammate had higher time of possession than he did.

Thinking Lebron isn't a better ceiling raising is as cult-like as thinking he isn't a better floor-raiser I'm afraid.

As is mentioning heliocentrism when the biggest reason Lebron's teams drop-off more more in games and seasons without is defense.

And then unfortunately for you, LeBron and the Cavs the real best GSW team, one that is in the conversation of the best all time with the 72 win Jordan Bulls, absolutely smashed LeBron and the Cavs the next season.

"Man Lebron won a title no version of Jordan would have a hope of winning. Why didn't he win an even harder one?"
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: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1784 » by MavsDirk41 » Mon May 12, 2025 12:56 am

OhayoKD wrote:
ball_takes23 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:If he wasn't a better ceiling raiser you wouldn't be cherrypicking his down-years.

In 2012, he won a playoff series vs a good pacers team without basically any teammate rim-protection with Bosh missing more games in a single playoff run than all of Jordan's co-stars missed throughout his prime combined. They went 8-1 with all three starting despite Wade's skillset overlapping significantly more with Lebron's than any of Jordan's co-stars (ask rip hamilton how that works out). They then faced a better team than anyone Jordan beat and in the one and only series Wade and Bosh were healthy they won 4-1.

In 2013, he beat a better version of the 1990 Pistons with his co-star hobbled and his jumper off.

In 2015, he blewout swept a 60-win team with a bad back with kyrie and love basically not playing before taking a 67-win team to 6.

And then in 2016 he beat a 73-win team with less help than Jordan has ever seriously contended with (I know you like your made-up "advanced stats", but defense is a thing).

Lebron at his best was a much better ceiling raising than Jordan at his best, just like he was a much better floor-raiser. You can keep trying to package "erneh rings" as a sophisticated argument, but Jordan is not Bill Russell (another guy who beat multiple better teams with less help).


Lebron's teams make up 0 of the top 10 net ratings of all time.

Interesting arbitrary standard you got there. 2016 Cavs were a 60-win team with Lebron (from 15-17 actually) in the RS and an all-time postseason team by "net rating" (just like the 2017 cavs) opponent-adjusted or not. 2020 Lakers were a 60-win team that were also all-time in the games that mattered.

If well above-average champions are "floor-raising" and not "ceiling raising" then maybe it's time to admit "ceiling raising" is just you trying to prop up an inferior player over a superior one.





Wade Bosh Love Kyrie AD and Luka in their primes

I didn't know Lebron played with all these guys simultaneously. Man oh man.

Also glad you brought up Kyrie again. Let's see how everyone's favorite flat-earther fares in terms of winning instead of hype



Lebron took Steph and Draymond and Klay to 6 without the aforementioned "prime hall-of-famer" (after sweeping a 60-win team basically without him) and then beat Steph and Draymond and Klay with him, two years after a postseason where he knocked off a better bad-boy Pistons without any of his teammates (due to injury) performing like they belonged in the hall-of-fame.

You want to contend. You take Lebron. You want to win. You take Lebron. You want to win against all-time opposition. You Take Lebron. You want a 70-win team. You still take Lebron because the guy whose much better for scenario 1, 2, and 3 is likely better for scenario 4 too.



Jordan was 7-2 against 60 win teams in the playoffs
James is 3-5 against 60 win teams in the playoffs

Jordans Bulls won 60 plus regular season games 4 times and 70 plus wins one season once

James in 22 years has led a team to 60 plus wins 3 times

Jordan never lost a playoff series after having homecourt advantage

James has 3 times in his career

Jordan never played with 2 allstar teammates
Jordan was never outplayed by the opponents best player in a finals
Jordan was never not the best player on his team in a playoff series

I want to win i take Jordan. I want to trade all of my draft picks for player he wants, go through multiple head coaches, and watch him leave when things go bad, i take James.
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1785 » by MavsDirk41 » Mon May 12, 2025 1:02 am

OhayoKD wrote:
michaelm wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron beat your 73-win team with a co-star whose next team got worse without him and could not lead the cavs to a 30-win pace without him in a year said teammate had higher time of possession than he did.

Thinking Lebron isn't a better ceiling raising is as cult-like as thinking he isn't a better floor-raiser I'm afraid.

As is mentioning heliocentrism when the biggest reason Lebron's teams drop-off more more in games and seasons without is defense.

And then unfortunately for you, LeBron and the Cavs the real best GSW team, one that is in the conversation of the best all time with the 72 win Jordan Bulls, absolutely smashed LeBron and the Cavs the next season.

"Man Lebron won a title no version of Jordan would have a hope of winning. Why didn't he win an even harder one?"



You want to talk about 2011?
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1786 » by ball_takes23 » Mon May 12, 2025 1:08 am

OhayoKD wrote:
ball_takes23 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:If he wasn't a better ceiling raiser you wouldn't be cherrypicking his down-years.

In 2012, he won a playoff series vs a good pacers team without basically any teammate rim-protection with Bosh missing more games in a single playoff run than all of Jordan's co-stars missed throughout his prime combined. They went 8-1 with all three starting despite Wade's skillset overlapping significantly more with Lebron's than any of Jordan's co-stars (ask rip hamilton how that works out). They then faced a better team than anyone Jordan beat and in the one and only series Wade and Bosh were healthy they won 4-1.

In 2013, he beat a better version of the 1990 Pistons with his co-star hobbled and his jumper off.

In 2015, he blewout swept a 60-win team with a bad back with kyrie and love basically not playing before taking a 67-win team to 6.

And then in 2016 he beat a 73-win team with less help than Jordan has ever seriously contended with (I know you like your made-up "advanced stats", but defense is a thing).

Lebron at his best was a much better ceiling raising than Jordan at his best, just like he was a much better floor-raiser. You can keep trying to package "erneh rings" as a sophisticated argument, but Jordan is not Bill Russell (another guy who beat multiple better teams with less help).


Lebron's teams make up 0 of the top 10 net ratings of all time.

Interesting arbitrary standard you got there. 2016 Cavs were a 60-win team with Lebron (from 15-17 actually) in the RS and an all-time postseason team by "net rating" (just like the 2017 cavs) opponent-adjusted or not. 2020 Lakers were a 60-win team that were also all-time in the games that mattered.

If well above-average champions are "floor-raising" and not "ceiling raising" then maybe it's time to admit "ceiling raising" is just you trying to prop up an inferior player over a superior one.





Wade Bosh Love Kyrie AD and Luka in their primes

I didn't know Lebron played with all these guys simultaneously. Man oh man.

Also glad you brought up Kyrie again. Let's see how everyone's favorite flat-earther fares in terms of winning instead of hype



Lebron took Steph and Draymond and Klay to 6 without the aforementioned "prime hall-of-famer" (after sweeping a 60-win team basically without him) and then beat Steph and Draymond and Klay with him, two years after a postseason where he knocked off a better bad-boy Pistons without any of his teammates (due to injury) performing like they belonged in the hall-of-fame.

You want to contend. You take Lebron. You want to win. You take Lebron. You want to win against all-time opposition. You Take Lebron. You want a 70-win team. You still take Lebron because the guy whose much better for scenario 1, 2, and 3 is likely better for scenario 4 too.


60 wins while playing on a team with multiple other HOFers in their primes is not an example of ceiling raising. It's the bare minimum that you would expect from any of the top 20 players of all time in the same situation.
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1787 » by OhayoKD » Mon May 12, 2025 1:14 am

MavsDirk41 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
michaelm wrote:And then unfortunately for you, LeBron and the Cavs the real best GSW team, one that is in the conversation of the best all time with the 72 win Jordan Bulls, absolutely smashed LeBron and the Cavs the next season.

"Man Lebron won a title no version of Jordan would have a hope of winning. Why didn't he win an even harder one?"



You want to talk about 2011?

You want to talk about 85, 86, 87, 93, 95, 96, 2002, and 2003?
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: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1788 » by OhayoKD » Mon May 12, 2025 1:19 am

MavsDirk41 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
ball_takes23 wrote:
Lebron's teams make up 0 of the top 10 net ratings of all time.

Interesting arbitrary standard you got there. 2016 Cavs were a 60-win team with Lebron (from 15-17 actually) in the RS and an all-time postseason team by "net rating" (just like the 2017 cavs) opponent-adjusted or not. 2020 Lakers were a 60-win team that were also all-time in the games that mattered.

If well above-average champions are "floor-raising" and not "ceiling raising" then maybe it's time to admit "ceiling raising" is just you trying to prop up an inferior player over a superior one.





Wade Bosh Love Kyrie AD and Luka in their primes

I didn't know Lebron played with all these guys simultaneously. Man oh man.

Also glad you brought up Kyrie again. Let's see how everyone's favorite flat-earther fares in terms of winning instead of hype



Lebron took Steph and Draymond and Klay to 6 without the aforementioned "prime hall-of-famer" (after sweeping a 60-win team basically without him) and then beat Steph and Draymond and Klay with him, two years after a postseason where he knocked off a better bad-boy Pistons without any of his teammates (due to injury) performing like they belonged in the hall-of-fame.

You want to contend. You take Lebron. You want to win. You take Lebron. You want to win against all-time opposition. You Take Lebron. You want a 70-win team. You still take Lebron because the guy whose much better for scenario 1, 2, and 3 is likely better for scenario 4 too.



Jordan was 7-2 against 60 win teams in the playoffs
James is 3-5 against 60 win teams in the playoffs

Jordans Bulls won 60 plus regular season games 4 times and 70 plus wins one season once

James in 22 years has led a team to 60 plus wins 3 times

"Jordan is obviously inferior as an individual player, so let me now equate him with his teams"

Again. This isn't rocket science. It's subtraction:
lebron 09-21
656-263 with lebron 0.714% win rate
37-73 without lebron 0.336% win rate

jordan 88-98
bulls with MJ 490-176 (73.6% win rate)
bulls without MJ 90-64 (58.4% win rate)


Jordan never lost a playoff series after having homecourt advantage

"Jordan cannot carry weak teams to 60-wins, like Lebron did, twice, and this makes him better"


Jordan never played with 2 allstar teammates

Kind of irrelevant when the 1 all-star team wins 55 (58-win pace with their best player) when healthy and then gets better in the playoffs. You do understand media votes aren't as important as wins?

Jordan was never outplayed by the opponents best player in a finals

No he was just outplayed by the opponents best player in the conference finals...and carried by a team that was a threat to 4-peat when he left.


Jordan was never not the best player on his team in a playoff series

I think you meant to say highest scoring. Jordan was not his team's best player during the 93 ECF. Selfishly (and inefficiently) trying to shoot the Bulls out of the series included.

I want to win i take Jordan. I want to trade all of my draft picks for player he wants, go through multiple head coaches, and watch him leave when things go bad, i take James.

Trading draft picks to help otherwise helpless franchises to win champoinships? Bad.

Trading your most talented teammate and crushing the confidence of the lottery pick you selected because he took too many shots? Good.

According to one official, Hughes was explicitly told by Jordan to get him the ball if he wanted to play. When Hughes began passing it to Stackhouse as much as to Jordan, he was soon benched. Point guard Tyronn Lue, the official said, obliged and began finding Jordan every time he played. ''He was scared to death of what would happen to him in his career if he didn't,'' the player said of Lue. ''He was always looking at the bench at Michael.''

Late last fall, Richard Hamilton and Jordan got into an ugly shouting match. The two officials said it began when Hamilton told Jordan he was tired of being a ''Jordannaire,'' the term used for Jordan's role players in Chicago. ''Rip was a young, brash guy who threatened the idea of Michael being the guy here,'' the official said


To be clear, this is how he thought about these things in his prime too:
In general, I tried to give Michael room to figure out how to integrate his personal ambitions with those of the team. “Phil knew that winning the scoring title was important to me,”


A stat-padder through and through.
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: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1789 » by MavsDirk41 » Mon May 12, 2025 2:07 am

OhayoKD wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Interesting arbitrary standard you got there. 2016 Cavs were a 60-win team with Lebron (from 15-17 actually) in the RS and an all-time postseason team by "net rating" (just like the 2017 cavs) opponent-adjusted or not. 2020 Lakers were a 60-win team that were also all-time in the games that mattered.

If well above-average champions are "floor-raising" and not "ceiling raising" then maybe it's time to admit "ceiling raising" is just you trying to prop up an inferior player over a superior one.






I didn't know Lebron played with all these guys simultaneously. Man oh man.

Also glad you brought up Kyrie again. Let's see how everyone's favorite flat-earther fares in terms of winning instead of hype



Lebron took Steph and Draymond and Klay to 6 without the aforementioned "prime hall-of-famer" (after sweeping a 60-win team basically without him) and then beat Steph and Draymond and Klay with him, two years after a postseason where he knocked off a better bad-boy Pistons without any of his teammates (due to injury) performing like they belonged in the hall-of-fame.

You want to contend. You take Lebron. You want to win. You take Lebron. You want to win against all-time opposition. You Take Lebron. You want a 70-win team. You still take Lebron because the guy whose much better for scenario 1, 2, and 3 is likely better for scenario 4 too.



Jordan was 7-2 against 60 win teams in the playoffs
James is 3-5 against 60 win teams in the playoffs

Jordans Bulls won 60 plus regular season games 4 times and 70 plus wins one season once

James in 22 years has led a team to 60 plus wins 3 times

"Jordan is obviously inferior as an individual player, so let me now equate him with his teams"

Again. This isn't rocket science. It's subtraction:
lebron 09-21
656-263 with lebron 0.714% win rate
37-73 without lebron 0.336% win rate

jordan 88-98
bulls with MJ 490-176 (73.6% win rate)
bulls without MJ 90-64 (58.4% win rate)


Jordan never lost a playoff series after having homecourt advantage

"Jordan cannot carry weak teams to 60-wins, like Lebron did, twice, and this makes him better"


Jordan never played with 2 allstar teammates

Kind of irrelevant when the 1 all-star team wins 55 (58-win pace with their best player) when healthy and then gets better in the playoffs. You do understand media votes aren't as important as wins?

Jordan was never outplayed by the opponents best player in a finals

No he was just outplayed by the opponents best player in the conference finals...and carried by a team that was a threat to 4-peat when he left.


Jordan was never not the best player on his team in a playoff series

I think you meant to say highest scoring. Jordan was not his team's best player during the 93 ECF. Selfishly (and inefficiently) trying to shoot the Bulls out of the series included.

I want to win i take Jordan. I want to trade all of my draft picks for player he wants, go through multiple head coaches, and watch him leave when things go bad, i take James.

Trading draft picks to help otherwise helpless franchises to win champoinships? Bad.

Trading your most talented teammate and crushing the confidence of the lottery pick you selected because he took too many shots? Good.

According to one official, Hughes was explicitly told by Jordan to get him the ball if he wanted to play. When Hughes began passing it to Stackhouse as much as to Jordan, he was soon benched. Point guard Tyronn Lue, the official said, obliged and began finding Jordan every time he played. ''He was scared to death of what would happen to him in his career if he didn't,'' the player said of Lue. ''He was always looking at the bench at Michael.''

Late last fall, Richard Hamilton and Jordan got into an ugly shouting match. The two officials said it began when Hamilton told Jordan he was tired of being a ''Jordannaire,'' the term used for Jordan's role players in Chicago. ''Rip was a young, brash guy who threatened the idea of Michael being the guy here,'' the official said


To be clear, this is how he thought about these things in his prime too:
In general, I tried to give Michael room to figure out how to integrate his personal ambitions with those of the team. “Phil knew that winning the scoring title was important to me,”


A stat-padder through and through.



Lol between those years thats 755 games Jordan played with the Bulls. They were 553-202 which is a 73% win rate. Did you know Jordan missed 7 of those games?
Played 82 in 88
Played 81 in 89
Played 82 in 90
Played 82 in 91
Played 80 in 92
Played 78 in 93
Played 82 in 96
Played 82 in 97
Played 82 in 98


Bulls won 73% of their games Jordan played in. The rest of your rant makes me laugh. And funny you call Jordan a stat padder. I have watched Lebron James stat pad with my own two eyes numerous times pal so i guess they are both stat padders lol
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1790 » by MavsDirk41 » Mon May 12, 2025 2:08 am

OhayoKD wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:"Man Lebron won a title no version of Jordan would have a hope of winning. Why didn't he win an even harder one?"



You want to talk about 2011?

You want to talk about 85, 86, 87, 93, 95, 96, 2002, and 2003?



Sure!!
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1791 » by bledredwine » Mon May 12, 2025 2:23 am

OhayoKD wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
Iwasawitness wrote:
Only one creating a fake narrative here is you. Hell, that’s pretty much all you do with your anti-LeBron arguments.

Chicago didn’t land him in free agency, they traded for him. They did it specifically because they needed to replace Horace Grant who they lost in 94.

Rodman was the difference between Chicago becoming a better team than Orlando, that’s 100% true. Being a black hole on offense didn’t stop him from positively impacting the Bulls and turning them into an all time great team. Without him, they don’t go to the finals that year, let alone win 72 games. This is just a fact.


There’s way too much confidence on that assessment, to the point of ridiculousness. Rodman was not actually all that good by the time he was on the Bulls. Sure, he was better than Will Perdue (who they traded to get Rodman), so he was definitely a notable upgrade to the team. But he was not actually a particularly great player. He wasn’t even really the third best player on the second-three-peat Bulls (that was Kukoc).

Notably, Rodman missed a lot of games in 1996 and 1997, and the Bulls defense was still elite in the games he missed, so we know the defense was amazing without him. In fact, the Bulls in the games Rodman missed in the 1996 season actually had a slightly *better* rDRTG than they had in the games he played. And they went 15-3 without him in 1995-96, followed by going 21-6 without him in 1996-97. And they were 2-0 without him in 1997-98. Of course, overall, that indicates he did move the needle some, but it also strongly indicates that those second-three-peat Bulls were a historically great team even without Rodman. Indeed, they won at a 66-win pace in quite a lot of games without Rodman! Furthermore, the Bulls still won the title in 1998, despite the fact that by those playoffs Rodman was very clearly washed, and was pulled from the starting lineup and wouldn’t play meaningful time in the NBA ever again. Similarly, the Bulls won the title in 1997, despite Rodman being an abysmal, clear negative player in the playoffs. Seems pretty obvious that the second-three-peat Bulls were quite a lot better than the Jordan-just-back-from-retirement 1995 Bulls, regardless of Rodman. The main difference-maker was having a non-rusty Jordan.

The cavs and celtics both had a better record without kyrie than with kyrie before and after Lebron beat a 73-win team with him.

"Look how team did without teammate" is one of many losing arguments for Jordan vs Lebron


More ridiculous talk. Kyrie lit up Steph in those finals, outplaying him, was more clutch than lebron and averaged near thirty. And that was no 73 win team as steph had sucked all playoffs (if my memory serves me correctly, he was hobbled) and he was the main catalyst to the 73 wins.

Can you tell me how many times Rodman averaged even ten? Did Pippen average near 30? Also tell me this. How many times did Jordan get outplayed or have someone play at his level in the finals? Because Lebron obviously was outplayed in his first finals, but also in 2011 by Dirk, Wade Terry (choked/lost a ring), Durant twice, and on the same level with Jimmy Butler. Four of his defensive assignments won FMVP as well.

The lengths you’ll go… too funny. But it’s that poor of a discussion that you have to reach for those straws wherever you can.
LeBron has a 17.8% field goal percentage and a 12.5% 3-point percentage in clutch situations, and also made 20 of 116 game winning/tying shots in 4th/OT during his career :wink:
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1792 » by michaelm » Mon May 12, 2025 3:12 am

OhayoKD wrote:
michaelm wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron beat your 73-win team with a co-star whose next team got worse without him and could not lead the cavs to a 30-win pace without him in a year said teammate had higher time of possession than he did.

Thinking Lebron isn't a better ceiling raising is as cult-like as thinking he isn't a better floor-raiser I'm afraid.

As is mentioning heliocentrism when the biggest reason Lebron's teams drop-off more more in games and seasons without is defense.

And then unfortunately for you, LeBron and the Cavs the real best GSW team, one that is in the conversation of the best all time with the 72 win Jordan Bulls, absolutely smashed LeBron and the Cavs the next season.

"Man Lebron won a title no version of Jordan would have a hope of winning. Why didn't he win an even harder one?"

Again unfortunately for you there is a difference between what actually did occur in this reality and whatever you might like to decide hypothetically.
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1793 » by OhayoKD » Mon May 12, 2025 3:14 am

lessthanjake wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
There’s way too much confidence on that assessment, to the point of ridiculousness. Rodman was not actually all that good by the time he was on the Bulls. Sure, he was better than Will Perdue (who they traded to get Rodman), so he was definitely a notable upgrade to the team. But he was not actually a particularly great player. He wasn’t even really the third best player on the second-three-peat Bulls (that was Kukoc).

Notably, Rodman missed a lot of games in 1996 and 1997, and the Bulls defense was still elite in the games he missed, so we know the defense was amazing without him. In fact, the Bulls in the games Rodman missed in the 1996 season actually had a slightly *better* rDRTG than they had in the games he played. And they went 15-3 without him in 1995-96, followed by going 21-6 without him in 1996-97. And they were 2-0 without him in 1997-98. Of course, overall, that indicates he did move the needle some, but it also strongly indicates that those second-three-peat Bulls were a historically great team even without Rodman. Indeed, they won at a 66-win pace in quite a lot of games without Rodman! Furthermore, the Bulls still won the title in 1998, despite the fact that by those playoffs Rodman was very clearly washed, and was pulled from the starting lineup and wouldn’t play meaningful time in the NBA ever again. Similarly, the Bulls won the title in 1997, despite Rodman being an abysmal, clear negative player in the playoffs. Seems pretty obvious that the second-three-peat Bulls were quite a lot better than the Jordan-just-back-from-retirement 1995 Bulls, regardless of Rodman. The main difference-maker was having a non-rusty Jordan.

The cavs and celtics both had a better record without kyrie than with kyrie before and after Lebron beat a 73-win team with him.

"Look how team did without teammate" is one of many losing arguments for Jordan vs Lebron


This is a non-sequitur that has nothing to do with whether Dennis Rodman was the reason that the second-three-peat Bulls were an all-time great team. He was not.

Supported by reasoning and evidence that would suggest the 2010 Cavs were possibly the greatest team ever without Mo-Williams and that the Heatles could have went back to back without Dwyane Wade.

As far as the playoffs are concerned, the Bulls without Rodman lost to a soon to be swept finalist despite

-> being a 53-win srs, 45-win record team without him
-> performing significantly better vs a far more competitive finalist the year before with a rodman-esque player in Jordan's place.

That seems quite a big distance from "all-time great".



In any event, it is worth noting that in 2015-2017, the Cavaliers had a +7.38 net rating in RS games with LeBron+Kyrie and a +4.63 net rating in RS games with LeBron and no Kyrie. And, once Kyrie left, the Cavaliers were only able to muster a 0.59 SRS in 2018, and were easily swept in the Finals.

They were "easily swept in the finals" with Lebron playing with a broken hand for 3 out of 4 games. Pre-hand break they were tied. Fascinating at which points you feel injuries are relevant to consider. Speaking of...
But, of course, the best player on the 2016 Warriors had been injured earlier in the playoffs, and they’d almost lost in the conference finals (and were actually outscored in the series), so the Warriors were pretty obviously not playing at an all-time-great level themselves in those playoffs.

What an interesting way to describe the Golden State Warriors completing a 3-1 comeback against a side that had just thumped the 67-win Spurs with their best player fresh off the injury you're using to dismiss what happened in the finals. Unfortunately though, even with Curry missing a large part of the playoffs and playing horribly (thanks to injury) to start a series against a juggernaut beater, that Warriors team entered the finals with a PSRS of +11. A higher mark than any team Jordan beat in the postseason (during a period of non-expansion).

Furthermore, beating the 2016 Warriors, a team unambiguously better than any team Jordan beat, with far less help than Jordan has ever won with, hurt the Cavs statistically[i]. They posted a PSRS of 11 vs the Warriors. Their PSRS for the whole postseason? +14.55, good enough for [i]8th among all champions in the shot-clock era. They posted a top-15 PSRS the following season. But yes, Steph Curry's MCL is their only claim to being great.

Overall, the 2015-2017 Cavs put up a SRS’s of 4.08, 5.45, and 2.87. They never even won more than 57 regular season games.

Hmm, wonder if there might be a reason for this...

2015 Cavs WITH Lebron
50-19 with, 59-win pace, +7.9 Net
(3-10 without)

2016 Cavs WITH Lebron
56-20 with, 60-win pace, +7.6 Net
(1-3 without)


2017 Cavs WITH Lebron
51-23 with, 56-win pace, +5.4 Net
(0-8 without)

Oh. right.

The only even remotely impressive thing they achieved without Kyrie was walloping the 2018 Raptors in the second round, but hanging your hat on a series against the DeRozan-led Raptors would just obviously be silly.

Yep, it's not like they blew out swept a 60-win team and took a 67-win team to 6. Perhaps not "all-time-great" but certainly much better than "get bounced in the second round by an about-to-be swept finalist"
.
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1794 » by OhayoKD » Mon May 12, 2025 3:23 am

MavsDirk41 wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
MavsDirk41 wrote:

Jordan was 7-2 against 60 win teams in the playoffs
James is 3-5 against 60 win teams in the playoffs

Jordans Bulls won 60 plus regular season games 4 times and 70 plus wins one season once

James in 22 years has led a team to 60 plus wins 3 times

"Jordan is obviously inferior as an individual player, so let me now equate him with his teams"

Again. This isn't rocket science. It's subtraction:
lebron 09-21
656-263 with lebron 0.714% win rate
37-73 without lebron 0.336% win rate

jordan 88-98
bulls with MJ 490-176 (73.6% win rate)
bulls without MJ 90-64 (58.4% win rate)


Jordan never lost a playoff series after having homecourt advantage

"Jordan cannot carry weak teams to 60-wins, like Lebron did, twice, and this makes him better"


Jordan never played with 2 allstar teammates

Kind of irrelevant when the 1 all-star team wins 55 (58-win pace with their best player) when healthy and then gets better in the playoffs. You do understand media votes aren't as important as wins?

Jordan was never outplayed by the opponents best player in a finals

No he was just outplayed by the opponents best player in the conference finals...and carried by a team that was a threat to 4-peat when he left.


Jordan was never not the best player on his team in a playoff series

I think you meant to say highest scoring. Jordan was not his team's best player during the 93 ECF. Selfishly (and inefficiently) trying to shoot the Bulls out of the series included.

I want to win i take Jordan. I want to trade all of my draft picks for player he wants, go through multiple head coaches, and watch him leave when things go bad, i take James.

Trading draft picks to help otherwise helpless franchises to win champoinships? Bad.

Trading your most talented teammate and crushing the confidence of the lottery pick you selected because he took too many shots? Good.

According to one official, Hughes was explicitly told by Jordan to get him the ball if he wanted to play. When Hughes began passing it to Stackhouse as much as to Jordan, he was soon benched. Point guard Tyronn Lue, the official said, obliged and began finding Jordan every time he played. ''He was scared to death of what would happen to him in his career if he didn't,'' the player said of Lue. ''He was always looking at the bench at Michael.''

Late last fall, Richard Hamilton and Jordan got into an ugly shouting match. The two officials said it began when Hamilton told Jordan he was tired of being a ''Jordannaire,'' the term used for Jordan's role players in Chicago. ''Rip was a young, brash guy who threatened the idea of Michael being the guy here,'' the official said


To be clear, this is how he thought about these things in his prime too:
In general, I tried to give Michael room to figure out how to integrate his personal ambitions with those of the team. “Phil knew that winning the scoring title was important to me,”


A stat-padder through and through.



Lol between those years thats 755 games Jordan played with the Bulls. They were 553-202 which is a 73% win rate. Did you know Jordan missed 7 of t

Lebron averaged more games and minutes in his first 15 regular seasons than Jordan did in 13, Try again Dirky,
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1795 » by OhayoKD » Mon May 12, 2025 3:34 am

michaelm wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
michaelm wrote:And then unfortunately for you, LeBron and the Cavs the real best GSW team, one that is in the conversation of the best all time with the 72 win Jordan Bulls, absolutely smashed LeBron and the Cavs the next season.

"Man Lebron won a title no version of Jordan would have a hope of winning. Why didn't he win an even harder one?"

Again unfortunately for you there is a difference between what actually did occur in this reality and whatever you might like to decide hypothetically.

What "actually did happen"

2015 Cavs WITH Lebron
50-19 with, 59-win pace, +7.9 Net
(3-10 without)

2016 Cavs WITH Lebron
56-20 with, 60-win pace, +7.6 Net
(1-3 without)


2017 Cavs WITH Lebron
51-23 with, 56-win pace, +5.4 Net
(0-8 without)

"Whatever you might like to decide hypothetically" is Jordan being a better "ceiling raiser"

You should figure out what words mean before you use them.
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1796 » by lessthanjake » Mon May 12, 2025 4:00 am

OhayoKD wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:The cavs and celtics both had a better record without kyrie than with kyrie before and after Lebron beat a 73-win team with him.

"Look how team did without teammate" is one of many losing arguments for Jordan vs Lebron


This is a non-sequitur that has nothing to do with whether Dennis Rodman was the reason that the second-three-peat Bulls were an all-time great team. He was not.

Supported by reasoning and evidence that would suggest the 2010 Cavs were possibly the greatest team ever without Mo-Williams and that the Heatles could have went back to back without Dwyane Wade.

As far as the playoffs are concerned, the Bulls without Rodman lost to a soon to be swept finalist despite

-> being a 53-win srs, 45-win record team without him
-> performing significantly better vs a far more competitive finalist the year before with a rodman-esque player in Jordan's place.

That seems quite a big distance from "all-time great".


The 1995 Bulls were not the 1996-1998 Bulls. The 1995 Bulls were not an all-time great team, and the second-three-peat Bulls definitely were. One difference between the teams was Rodman, but the fact that Jordan had only been back playing basketball for a couple months in 1995 is obviously a massive difference. The fact that the second-three-peat Bulls played like a 66-win team in a whole lot of games without Rodman strongly suggests that Jordan being back to normal was the primary factor that made them turn into an all-time-great team. As does the fact that Rodman’s RAPM in 1996 and 1997 was nothing special, the fact that the Bulls had a +12 net rating in minutes without Rodman in 1996, and the fact that the Bulls won titles with Rodman being bad in the playoffs and being benched/washed in the playoffs. It’s not just one data point on its own (which is important, since individual data points can be misleading). It’s a whole lot of different data points all pointing in the same direction.

The idea that the 1995 Bulls not being an all-time-great team means Rodman must’ve made the difference is just silly. You can take one look at box score data and be able to see that Jordan was clearly not as good in 1995 as he was in any other year, and it is obvious why. Of course, you’d also be able to tell that if you’d actually watched basketball back then, which of course you did not.

Also, your comparison to the 2010 Cavs without Mo Williams is silly. The 2010 Cavs played a grant total of 13 games without Mo Williams. They had a +8.34 net rating in those games (which really isn’t “possibly the greatest team ever” territory, though their record in those games was 11-2). But, more importantly, 13 games is not a large sample. The second-three-peat Bulls played 47 games without Rodman. What is a convincing argument with one sample size can be complete nonsense with a much smaller sample size, and this is a good example of that.

In any event, it is worth noting that in 2015-2017, the Cavaliers had a +7.38 net rating in RS games with LeBron+Kyrie and a +4.63 net rating in RS games with LeBron and no Kyrie. And, once Kyrie left, the Cavaliers were only able to muster a 0.59 SRS in 2018, and were easily swept in the Finals.

They were "easily swept in the finals" with Lebron playing with a broken hand for 3 out of 4 games. Pre-hand break they were tied. Fascinating at which points you feel injuries are relevant to consider.


What in the world are you talking about? The Cavaliers were swept in the 2018 Finals. Definitionally the series was never “tied.” What a bizarre assertion.

Speaking of...
But, of course, the best player on the 2016 Warriors had been injured earlier in the playoffs, and they’d almost lost in the conference finals (and were actually outscored in the series), so the Warriors were pretty obviously not playing at an all-time-great level themselves in those playoffs.

What an interesting way to describe the Golden State Warriors completing a 3-1 comeback against a side that had just thumped the 67-win Spurs with their best player fresh off the injury you're using to dismiss what happened in the finals. Unfortunately though, even with Curry missing a large part of the playoffs and playing horribly (thanks to injury) to start a series against a juggernaut beater, that Warriors team entered the finals with a PSRS of +11. A higher mark than any team Jordan beat in the postseason (during a period of non-expansion).


PSRS is not particularly useful as a measure of the quality of a team that just had their best player pick up an injury not long before, since the measure is still mostly keyed up on the team’s quality prior to that.

After Curry came back from injury but before the Finals, the Warriors’ SRS in the playoffs was +6.18. Which is, of course, still indicative of a very good team, but not all-time-great level. That’s more accurate to the level that the Warriors were at when the Cavs beat them (and even that might be overstating it a bit, given the Draymond suspension).

Furthermore, beating the 2016 Warriors, a team unambiguously better than any team Jordan beat, with far less help than Jordan has ever won with, hurt the Cavs statistically[i]. They posted a PSRS of 11 vs the Warriors. Their PSRS for the whole postseason? +14.55, good enough for [i]8th among all champions in the shot-clock era. They posted a top-15 PSRS the following season. But yes, Steph Curry's MCL is their only claim to being great.


Yep, congratulations, the 2016 Cavs dominated…checks notes…the Drummond Pistons, the Horford Hawks, and the DeRozan Raptors. Really shows us that they must’ve been an all-time-great team. Lol. Again, only the most committed LeBron partisans are going to buy that easily dispatching those teams makes the Cavs an all-time-great team.

Overall, the 2015-2017 Cavs put up a SRS’s of 4.08, 5.45, and 2.87. They never even won more than 57 regular season games.

Hmm, wonder if there might be a reason for this...

2015 Cavs WITH Lebron
50-19 with, 59-win pace, +7.9 Net
(3-10 without)

2016 Cavs WITH Lebron
56-20 with, 60-win pace, +7.6 Net
(1-3 without)


2017 Cavs WITH Lebron
51-23 with, 56-win pace, +5.4 Net
(0-8 without)

Oh. right.


Lol. You list these numbers like they actually show the Cavs being an all-time-great team with LeBron. They don’t. One need only look at the numbers you posted on their face to see that. But I’ll also just collate those numbers together. In total, from 2015-2017, in games with LeBron, the Cavs won at just below a 59-win pace, with a net rating of +6.93. Sorry, but, while that’s very good, it doesn’t fit the bill of an all-time-great team.

You can deploy excuses for why you think LeBron didn’t have enough help to have an all-time-great team, but that’s a different discussion. The fact is that the Cavs were not an all-time-great team. So there’s just no parallel to be discussed here to the discussion of what made Jordan’s second-three-peat Bulls into an all-time-great team.

The only even remotely impressive thing they achieved without Kyrie was walloping the 2018 Raptors in the second round, but hanging your hat on a series against the DeRozan-led Raptors would just obviously be silly.

Yep, it's not like they blew out swept a 60-win team and took a 67-win team to 6. Perhaps not "all-time-great" but certainly much better than "get bounced in the second round by an about-to-be swept finalist"
.


LOL. Obviously, “took a team to 6 games” is really not indicative of an all-time-great team at all. The fact that you’d even bring that up as a positive point here really says it all about how much you’re desperately reaching. But I’ll just add even more color to this: The Cavs were outscored by 7 points a game in that series after Kyrie got injured. Which means they had a +3 SRS in those games. Obviously miles away from all-time great.

And lol at the idea that sweeping the Horford/Korver/Teague Hawks is indicative of an all-time great team. (And I won’t even mention that only two of those games were actually without Kyrie, and one of those two went to OT). If you can’t understand that teams like that are playoff paper tigers, then I really don’t know what to tell you.
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: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1797 » by OhayoKD » Mon May 12, 2025 5:31 am

lessthanjake wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
This is a non-sequitur that has nothing to do with whether Dennis Rodman was the reason that the second-three-peat Bulls were an all-time great team. He was not.

Supported by reasoning and evidence that would suggest the 2010 Cavs were possibly the greatest team ever without Mo-Williams and that the Heatles could have went back to back without Dwyane Wade.

As far as the playoffs are concerned, the Bulls without Rodman lost to a soon to be swept finalist despite

-> being a 53-win srs, 45-win record team without him
-> performing significantly better vs a far more competitive finalist the year before with a rodman-esque player in Jordan's place.

That seems quite a big distance from "all-time great".


The idea that the 1995 Bulls not being an all-time-great team means Rodman must’ve made the difference is just silly. You can take one look at box score data and be able to see that Jordan was clearly not as good in 1995 as he was in any other year, and it is obvious why. Of course, you’d also be able to tell that if you’d actually watched basketball back then, which of course you did not.

And one look at the box-score data would suggest Lebron was clearly not as good in 2015 as he was in 2016 or 2017. Yet, you had no reservations using Kyrie Irving to explain a much smaller gap in playoff performance despite a 171 game sample pointing to seemingly minimal impact.




They were "easily swept in the finals" with Lebron playing with a broken hand for 3 out of 4 games. Pre-hand break they were tied. Fascinating at which points you feel injuries are relevant to consider.


What in the world are you talking about? The Cavaliers were swept in the 2018 Finals. Definitionally the series was never “tied.” What a bizarre assertion.

I am talking about when Lebron broke his hand following regulation of the first game of the nba finals. A "look at the boxscore" would tell you Lebron was not nearly as good in the ensuing overtime or the next three games, yet here you are ascribing the collapse which subsequently transpired entirely to Kyrie Irving who, over 171 games saw his teams win-rate essentially have no correlation with whether he dressed or didn't.



Speaking of...
But, of course, the best player on the 2016 Warriors had been injured earlier in the playoffs, and they’d almost lost in the conference finals (and were actually outscored in the series), so the Warriors were pretty obviously not playing at an all-time-great level themselves in those playoffs.

What an interesting way to describe the Golden State Warriors completing a 3-1 comeback against a side that had just thumped the 67-win Spurs with their best player fresh off the injury you're using to dismiss what happened in the finals. Unfortunately though, even with Curry missing a large part of the playoffs and playing horribly (thanks to injury) to start a series against a juggernaut beater, that Warriors team entered the finals with a PSRS of +11. A higher mark than any team Jordan beat in the postseason (during a period of non-expansion).


PSRS is not particularly useful as a measure of the quality of a team that just had their best player pick up an injury not long before, since the measure is still mostly keyed up on the team’s quality prior to that.

You seem to be confused. PSRS does not input a team's own regular-season performance. The Warriors produced a rolling rating of +11 entirely off their playoff performances even with all the time Curry missed in the first two rounds and the Cavs bringing down their average in the finals.

Playoff Offensive Rating: +4.20 (62nd), Playoff Defensive Rating: -4.46 (60th)
Playoff SRS: +11.27 (41st), Total SRS Increase through Playoffs: +0.60 (91st)
Average Playoff Opponent Offense: +4.16 (7th), Average Playoff Opponent Defense: -0.10 (91st)


It should go without saying, this average significantly undersells what Cleveland had to overcome.

Furthermore, beating the 2016 Warriors, a team unambiguously better than any team Jordan beat, with far less help than Jordan has ever won with, hurt the Cavs statistically[i]. They posted a PSRS of 11 vs the Warriors. Their PSRS for the whole postseason? +14.55, good enough for [i]8th among all champions in the shot-clock era. They posted a top-15 PSRS the following season. But yes, Steph Curry's MCL is their only claim to being great.


Yep, congratulations, the 2016 Cavs dominated…checks notes…the Drummond Pistons, the Horford Hawks, and the DeRozan Raptors. Really shows us that they must’ve been an all-time-great team. Lol. Again, only the most committed LeBron partisans are going to buy that easily dispatching those teams makes the Cavs an all-time-great team.

SRS adjusts for opponent. If you do not think there is indicative value in dominating average to decent teams, you shouldn't be using SRS in the first place.

The Cavs were dominant to a degree almost no other team has been vs above average and good teams and then backed it up by defeating a historically excellent opponent better than any Jordan has ever beat. The only one acting partisan here is you.
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1798 » by lessthanjake » Mon May 12, 2025 6:50 am

OhayoKD wrote:
lessthanjake wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:Supported by reasoning and evidence that would suggest the 2010 Cavs were possibly the greatest team ever without Mo-Williams and that the Heatles could have went back to back without Dwyane Wade.

As far as the playoffs are concerned, the Bulls without Rodman lost to a soon to be swept finalist despite

-> being a 53-win srs, 45-win record team without him
-> performing significantly better vs a far more competitive finalist the year before with a rodman-esque player in Jordan's place.

That seems quite a big distance from "all-time great".


The idea that the 1995 Bulls not being an all-time-great team means Rodman must’ve made the difference is just silly. You can take one look at box score data and be able to see that Jordan was clearly not as good in 1995 as he was in any other year, and it is obvious why. Of course, you’d also be able to tell that if you’d actually watched basketball back then, which of course you did not.

And one look at the box-score data would suggest Lebron was clearly not as good in 2015 as he was in 2016 or 2017. Yet, you had no reservations using Kyrie Irving to explain a much smaller gap in playoff performance despite a 171 game sample pointing to seemingly minimal impact.


This is vague gibberish. The idea that there’s any parallel between Jordan just coming back from retirement and anything in LeBron’s career is obviously stupid, but I can’t even tell what point you’re trying to make with that parallel, since you write in such a vague way.

They were "easily swept in the finals" with Lebron playing with a broken hand for 3 out of 4 games. Pre-hand break they were tied. Fascinating at which points you feel injuries are relevant to consider.


What in the world are you talking about? The Cavaliers were swept in the 2018 Finals. Definitionally the series was never “tied.” What a bizarre assertion.

I am talking about when Lebron broke his hand following regulation of the first game of the nba finals. A "look at the boxscore" would tell you Lebron was not nearly as good in the ensuing overtime or the next three games, yet here you are ascribing the collapse which subsequently transpired entirely to Kyrie Irving who, over 171 games saw his teams win-rate essentially have no correlation with whether he dressed or didn't.


Lol. This is so weak. First of all, by all accounts I can find, that didn’t happen “following regulation” but rather after the game. So the premise that LeBron broke his hand when “they were tied” is just false. The Cavs were already down in the series when that happened. LeBron also didn’t actually break his hand (it was a bone contusion). And, in any event, even if you weren’t stating false information, one game being tied in regulation certainly doesn’t suggest the Cavs were an all-time-great team. There’s really no argument at all that the 2018 Cavs were an all-time-great team. Which is one of the many pieces of evidence indicating that Kyrie was a necessary component for that team to be what you (but virtually no other humans on the planet) think was an all-time great team.

Speaking of...
What an interesting way to describe the Golden State Warriors completing a 3-1 comeback against a side that had just thumped the 67-win Spurs with their best player fresh off the injury you're using to dismiss what happened in the finals. Unfortunately though, even with Curry missing a large part of the playoffs and playing horribly (thanks to injury) to start a series against a juggernaut beater, that Warriors team entered the finals with a PSRS of +11. A higher mark than any team Jordan beat in the postseason (during a period of non-expansion).


PSRS is not particularly useful as a measure of the quality of a team that just had their best player pick up an injury not long before, since the measure is still mostly keyed up on the team’s quality prior to that.

You seem to be confused. PSRS does not input a team's own regular-season performance. The Warriors produced a rolling rating of +11 entirely off their playoff performances even with all the time Curry missed in the first two rounds and the Cavs bringing down their average in the finals.


To the extent you're referring to Sansterre’s formula, that absolutely inputs teams’ regular-season performance. It just becomes less and less of the equation as a team gets further in the playoffs, with regular season only having about 35% weight by the time a team has played the Finals. It’s all in the lengthy description of the measure. Indeed, as Sansterre describes it, he “start[ed] with the regular season as the baseline, and then after a series is concluded . . . [it] adjusts your SRS accordingly.” Thus, “by the time you’ve played in the Finals, your Overall SRS is about 65% playoffs and 35% regular season.” I’d also note that the weighting of Santerre’s formula is completely arbitrary. Sansterre admits that he “just eyeballed it.”

Anyways, the reality is that, in the 9 playoff games Steph played after he came back from injury before the Finals, the Warriors outscored their opponents by a total of just 4 points (i.e. 0.44 points per game). Two of those games were against a Portland team that had a 0.98 RS SRS, and 7 of those games were against a OKC team that had a 7.09 RS SRS. You have to do some real data backflips to make that look like anything other than the post-Steph-injury Warriors playing like roughly a 6 SRS team. In pointing to “PSRS,” those backflips seem to involve inflating the Thunder’s SRS way beyond their RS SRS based on (1) merely being outscored by 0.5 points a game in a series against the Spurs, who in turn had had their SRS inflated way beyond their RS SRS based on them destroying a Grizzlies team that was missing its two best players; and (2) destroying a Mavs team that had their second and third leading scorers injured. This is just an example of why Santerre’s stuff is very flawed—it does not capture opponent injuries but weighs playoffs a lot, and therefore ends up way overinflating teams that faced injured opponents in the playoffs (or who faced teams that effectively just gave up, like this year's Heat), and that has knock-on effects throughout the entire equation. It’s just not a very good metric, and this kind of situation is exactly why.

If you want to say that the Thunder’s playoff performances prior to the WCF should increase our view of them a bit beyond their RS SRS, then I think that’s fine. Maybe if we adjust for that, we might say the Warriors post-Steph-injury were playing more like a 6.8-7.0 SRS team (that’s roughly what you’d get if you added the playoff games to the SRS mix for the Thunder, with equal weight as RS games). Which still indicates the Warriors were playing like a very good team but not an all-time-great one.

And, in general, this all shouldn’t be very controversial. Players come back early from injuries in the playoffs when they’re not at their best. It’s really to be expected for a team to be playing below their normal level if their best player misses time in the playoffs and then comes back.

Furthermore, beating the 2016 Warriors, a team unambiguously better than any team Jordan beat, with far less help than Jordan has ever won with, hurt the Cavs statistically[i]. They posted a PSRS of 11 vs the Warriors. Their PSRS for the whole postseason? +14.55, good enough for [i]8th among all champions in the shot-clock era. They posted a top-15 PSRS the following season. But yes, Steph Curry's MCL is their only claim to being great.


Yep, congratulations, the 2016 Cavs dominated…checks notes…the Drummond Pistons, the Horford Hawks, and the DeRozan Raptors. Really shows us that they must’ve been an all-time-great team. Lol. Again, only the most committed LeBron partisans are going to buy that easily dispatching those teams makes the Cavs an all-time-great team.

SRS adjusts for opponent. If you do not think there is indicative value in dominating average to decent teams, you shouldn't be using SRS in the first place.

The Cavs were dominant to a degree almost no other team has been vs above average and good teams and then backed it up by defeating a historically excellent opponent better than any Jordan has ever beat. The only one acting partisan here is you.


Yes, SRS adjusts for opponent. What it doesn’t do is adjust for the fact that some types of teams are systematically playoff paper tigers that do significantly worse in the playoffs than in the regular season. And they’re not hard to identify beforehand. Teams that lack any superstar and that have no significant record of playoff success and weren’t considered significant title contenders during the regular season just tend to do particularly badly in the playoffs. There’s plenty of potential explanations for that. I think the best one is that teams just don’t get up for regular season games against those teams the same way they do for games against major superstars and/or significant title contenders. So these teams skate along not taking opponents' best shot in the regular season—effectively inflating their SRS significantly. So when they get to the playoffs, the increase in intensity/difficulty of the playoffs is way steeper for them and they do badly. Beating up on these types of teams in the playoffs really doesn't mean that much, and constructing a "playoff SRS" using those opponents' SRS (or a rORTG or rDRTG or any such playoff-opponent-relative measure) is just going to unduly inflate teams like those Cavs that faced many of those sorts of opponents. Is it totally meaningless that the Cavs beat up on those teams? No. If the Cavs weren't a good team, then they might actually have had more trouble with the parade of paper tigers they faced. But results against those teams really just can't elevate a team to all-time-great status. And that's especially true when the regular season data for the Cavs strongly suggests they weren't an all-time-great team. Maybe if they'd been amazing in the RS and then beat up on paper tigers, we might look at it and think the Cavs were a genuinely great team. But they were not an all-time-great team in the RS, and beating up on paper tigers doesn't move the needle much. And, again, only the most committed LeBron partisans are going to agree with you on this.
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: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1799 » by michaelm » Mon May 12, 2025 9:31 am

OhayoKD wrote:
michaelm wrote:
OhayoKD wrote:"Man Lebron won a title no version of Jordan would have a hope of winning. Why didn't he win an even harder one?"

Again unfortunately for you there is a difference between what actually did occur in this reality and whatever you might like to decide hypothetically.

What "actually did happen"

2015 Cavs WITH Lebron
50-19 with, 59-win pace, +7.9 Net
(3-10 without)

2016 Cavs WITH Lebron
56-20 with, 60-win pace, +7.6 Net
(1-3 without)


2017 Cavs WITH Lebron
51-23 with, 56-win pace, +5.4 Net
(0-8 without)

"Whatever you might like to decide hypothetically" is Jordan being a better "ceiling raiser"

You should figure out what words mean before you use them.

I know what hypothetical means, you apparently do not. The hypothetical statement to which I referred was your claim about teams which LeBron beat, apparently on his own, which you claimed Jordan, again I presume referring to his teams, wouldn’t/couldn’t have beaten, which will forever remain hypothetical pretty much by definition given their careers didn’t overlap.

You apparently perhaps like LeBron himself, and as the above demonstrates, don’t get the team thing either. I did (obviously naively) assume you would know the difference between the concepts of floor and ceiling. Your examples of his teams collapsing without him demonstrate his floor raising ability, and that heliocentric teams don’t work very well in the absence of their sun. None of the best teams of all time were LeBron teams. Those of your ilk are reduced to claiming he beat the best team of all time in 2016, when that team was clearly not even the best GSW team of all time and rather battered including by stupidly chasing the regular season record by the time LeBron and the Cavs had waltzed through an historically weak Eastern conference to reach the 2016 finals. I guess regular season performances and statistics are what you guys hang your hat on however. And if the 2017 GSW team were better/a more difficult challenge as they no doubt were how was it that they were a 67 win rather than a 73 win team ?.
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Re: RGM GOAT Debate Thread (Part 2) 

Post#1800 » by Rapcity_11 » Mon May 12, 2025 1:24 pm

Rust_Cohle wrote:
Rapcity_11 wrote:
JM00n69 wrote:
The guy you're responding to is either a troll or a casual. Kerr took a body punch in practice for something he instigated. He's own words. And Jordan wasn't gambling or playing golf unless it was the off season. From start of pre season until the end he was the first guy in the gym and last to leave. That how he became the GOAT. And that's why he called out the bums that never put any work in once they got to the league. Not many people have that work ethic, Pippen did and so did Rodman the rest were just happy to be there.

He took off two years in his prime after what happened to his dad to make peace with it in his head. Returned and three peated again. Dominating the league once more. His footprint on the NBA and the game of basketball worldwide is unmatched and probably never will be.


Jordan literally went to Atlantic city to gamble in the middle of a playoff series. Amazing player. Mediocre as a leader.


Who cares?! If he did that during a playoff game sure, but if he’s going to Atlantic city and dropping 55 in the finals and winning finals mvp. Beyond moronic to say he’s a bad leader because he goes gambling when he’s not playing or on practice. Nobody is went harder in practice or in the games than MJ.

Same morons who criticize doncic for having a beer after a game. Guess he’s a bad player too


We're talking about leadership, not playing ability.

Luka not staying in shape is indeed poor leadership.

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