LukaTheGOAT wrote:Don't see the usual Jordan detractors anywhere to be found. Wonder what the game are thinking when they see this thread.
Don't worry they're planning their coordinated counter attack
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LukaTheGOAT wrote:Don't see the usual Jordan detractors anywhere to be found. Wonder what the game are thinking when they see this thread.

LookToShoot wrote:Melo is the only player that makes the Rockets watchable for the basketball purists. Otherwise it would just be three point shots and pick n roll.
Well let's take 1991 for instance. Oh sure the BPMs and PERs of the world will tell you MJ was brilliant but according to my carefully crafted eye test 1991 he was clearly getting worse. Once that Jumper's Knee started flaring up in 1990, he just wasn't creating much any more and frankly, his defense had become an outright negative. The box score will tell you he killed Detroit but that was only because of the free throw blitz at the end of game 2. And Barkley shot 10 points better than him in the second round. Ten. Points. I honestly have a mind to rank him above MJ that year.RCM88x wrote:Jordan not being considered a clear Tier 1 offensive GOAT has always been surprising to me. How else would he be in GOAT peak-prime talks if he wasn't? It certainly wouldn't be for his defense (not that he's bad but he's not in the same stratosphere as a KG or Russell).
jjgp111292 wrote:Well let's take 1991 for instance. Oh sure the BPMs and PERs of the world will tell you MJ was brilliant but according to my carefully crafted eye test 1991 he was clearly getting worse. Once that Jumper's Knee started flaring up in 1990, he just wasn't creating much any more and frankly, his defense had become an outright negative. The box score will tell you he killed Detroit but that was only because of the free throw blitz at the end of game 2. And Barkley shot 10 points better than him in the second round. Ten. Points. I honestly have a mind to rank him above MJ that year.RCM88x wrote:Jordan not being considered a clear Tier 1 offensive GOAT has always been surprising to me. How else would he be in GOAT peak-prime talks if he wasn't? It certainly wouldn't be for his defense (not that he's bad but he's not in the same stratosphere as a KG or Russell).
Despite what every single person for the last 30 years has said, this was the year MJ stopped being "MJ", yet the Bulls started being champions. ☝️☝️ Now why is that?
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OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
lessthanjake wrote:Sure! Here’s what I’ve got for Nash’s on-court rORTG by series, using PBPstats data:
2001 vs. UTA: +8.57
2001 vs. SAS: -1.84
2002 vs. MIN: +10.33
2002 vs. SAC: +9.73
2003 vs. POR: +11.41
2003 vs. SAC: +16.69
2003 vs. SAS: +4.65
2004 vs. SAC: -2.53
2005 vs. MEM: +22.40
2005 vs. DAL: +14.71
2005 vs. SAS: +17.16
2006 vs. LAL: +10.68
2006 vs. LAC: +15.05
2006 vs. DAL: +7.98
2007 vs. LAL: +6.72
2007 vs. SAS: +8.57
2008 vs. SAS: +4.09
2010 vs. POR: +14.28
2010 vs. SAS: +13.02
2010 vs. LAL: +17.75
It is perhaps a good point that the Suns actually lost series where they had a +17.75 and +17.16 rORTG with Nash on the court. They definitely were an offensively slanted roster.
But I do think that a lot of that was more about the players being bad defensively rather than being incredible offensively. I don’t really look at the 2005-2010 Suns rosters and feel totally bowled over by the offensive talent. Amare was very good, but it’s not like he’s as good offensively as a guy like Kareem or Wade or plenty of other #2 guys on a team. Marion was very limited offensively (and probably was more of a defensively slanted player actually). On the 2010 team, Jason Richardson was definitely offensively slanted, but more because of bad defense than actually being a great offensive player. And they had various 3&D guys like Raja Bell, James Jones, and Jared Dudley, who were fine pieces whose shooting fit well with Nash but they were definitely not uniquely good offensive players. And then you have Nash himself—who was very bad defensively, which contributes to the offensive slant of the team without actually indicating anything about his supporting cast’s offensive talent. So, I guess my point is that a team can be more offensively slanted than another team without actually having a more offensively talented supporting cast—it just requires being worse on defense. And that’s largely how I see that Suns team, when compared to plenty of other teams that other all-time-great offensive players have had. I think plenty of all-time-greats have actually had more offensively talented rosters than Nash did.
The most persuasive argument to me about those Suns is that, even if their supporting cast’s offensive talent really wasn’t more than the talent on other great players’ teams, the *lineups* they put out were offensively slanted, in the sense of running a lot of small Amare-at-center, Tim-Thomas-at-center, and Channing-Frye-at-center lineups. There’s definitely truth to that, and I think it surely contributed. Indeed, in 2007 and 2008, they played Kurt Thomas (an actual traditional defense-first center) a fair bit in 2007 and then got Shaq in 2008, so they had real centers. And the playoff on-court rORTGs for Nash in those years were definitely more down to earth. While he was injured in the 2006 playoffs, Nash played with Kurt Thomas for 53 regular season games in 2006, and Nash’s rORTG in those games was +4.69. So I think we do have some indication that Nash’s incredible offenses on the Suns may have been a product of not playing a traditional center (though they still look very good overall with a real center). I also think there’s no doubt that Nash had a really offensively talented team on the Mavs when he was playing alongside Dirk. So I can definitely buy deflating Nash’s numbers some in our mind on the basis of this. Which, given what you’ve shown in this thread, might be to Jordan’s benefit when it comes to being offensive GOAT.
_____________
I’ll note that these lineup factors can be applied to other players as well. Steph spent many years with his team playing a traditional center *and* Draymond at the PF position. The lineups tended to veer smaller in the years with Durant (which also were the highest rORTG years for him in the playoffs), but he has a lot of years in which his team played lineups very geared towards defense, in the sense of playing two defense-first big men. Jordan’s second-three-peat Bulls were similar, often playing a traditional center alongside Dennis Rodman (though they did occasionally go small with Kukoc and Rodman at PF and C, and the results were generally incredible). In Jordan’s earlier years, they did this with guys like Corzine and Oakley and then later Grant and Cartwright, though I wouldn’t say having two bruising big men was particularly abnormal back then, and prime Grant at least wasn’t bad offensively (though he was a defense-slanted player, for sure). Overall, in the context of his era, I wouldn’t say lineup factors materially disadvantaged Jordan, but they definitely didn’t operate to his advantage either.
In contrast, LeBron’s teams kind of pioneered running very offense-slanted lineups, after he was unable to pilot consistently great playoff offenses without such lineups. He tended to have pretty traditional lineups in his first stint in Cleveland, and the rORTGs were not very good overall in those years (he averaged something like a +2.5 on-court rORTG in those years). But then he went to Miami. From the beginning, they really experimented with offensively slanted lineups, putting Bosh at center. They only did it some in 2011, and the playoff offenses were not particularly impressive that year. So they leaned into it even more afterwards, putting Bosh virtually exclusively at center. Predictably, the offensive results became better. He then went to Cleveland. In the 2015 playoffs, due to injuries they ended up with a real traditional frontcourt with Mozgov and Tristan Thompson. The offensive results were not great. After that, Love + Thompson was a bit offensively slanted (since Thompson was more of a PF than a C), but not overly so. However, between running Love sometimes at center (and most of the time by 2018), and taking a page out of the Nash Suns book by putting Channing Frye at center, they started running a lot of very offensively slanted lineups. The results, again, were much better offensively. LeBron then goes to Los Angeles. They did play AD at center some with a smaller PF, but there was a good bit of AD at PF with a traditional center (generally Dwight or McGee). And, again, the offensive results were good but not particularly great (he averaged something like a +6 on-court rORTG in those 2020 playoffs).
So yeah, I think if we look at lineup factors, it should tend to make us curve up Jordan and Steph and/or curve down LeBron and Nash, since the latter two benefited a good deal from their teams playing innovative, offensively-slanted lineups and their on-court rORTGs in years where they did not have that tended to be noticeably lower.
Djoker wrote:
Thanks for posting. Also a fantastic breakdown of the lineups that I pretty much find all agreeable as well.
Just want to add that the offensive slant of Nash's team is way more pronounced. For instance, in the 2005 playoffs, the team had a +16.2 rORtg but +5.7 on rDRtg. The latter number is really really bad over a sample size of 3 series because they made the WCF. In 2006, a +8.9 rORtg and +4.2 rDRtg over 3 series. In 2007, a +6.7 rORtg and -3.6 rDRtg over 2 series. Nice for a change. In 2008, a +2.3 rORtg and -1.1 rDRtg in 1 series. In 2009, missed the playoffs with a great offense but horrendous defense. In 2010, a +12.6 rORtg and +2.9 rORtg over 3 series. From 2005-2010, the Suns posted a horrible average of about +2.5 rDRtg over 12 series. Obviously those aren't numbers with just Nash on the court but I imagine they are similar.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.

lessthanjake wrote:1. A significant portion of that slant is a result of Nash himself being incredible offensively and awful defensively. Nash creates a significant slant, independent of his supporting cast.

Shanghai Kid wrote:Wait wait wait, are you suggesting that MJ might be the goat??
We won't have any of that talk around here mister! The player comparison board proved that wasn't the case long ago!
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
tsherkin wrote:Shanghai Kid wrote:Wait wait wait, are you suggesting that MJ might be the goat??
We won't have any of that talk around here mister! The player comparison board proved that wasn't the case long ago!
I know you guys are joking around and such, but at some point, it's pretty clear that MJ's blend of efficiency and low turnovers with decent passing did very good things for his team's O in-era. And then even as his efficiency went down in the later rounds in the second three-peat, his ability not to turn the ball over at high usage was clearly quite valuable in that environment. I mean it always is, but I suspect it was that much more relevant when possession quantity was at such a premium. Paired with an insane offensive rebounder, the Bulls just crushed it with possession control even when MJ's shot wasn't going. That specific strategy wouldn't work quite as well forward twenty years, but it was pretty gloriously effective at the time.

jalengreen wrote:For the sake of it, I would give the obvious counter which would be that the “possession game” is a big reason why the current NBA champions were as good as they are.
Counter to this might be “sure, but OKC’s offense wasn’t as good as the Bulls’, and Shai did not produce Jordan’s statistical offensive impact markers”. And yeah that’s obviously pertinent, though I suppose the question is how much of that to attribute to Shai being inferior at basketball versus a difference in the times.
Djoker wrote:.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
lessthanjake wrote:Djoker wrote:.
I am curious how you got your overall playoff rORTG averages for Jordan over different timespans. I calculated possession-weighted averages for Jordan and got some different numbers.
Just to be clear on my methodology, here’s what I did:
To estimate the number of possessions Jordan played in each series, I looked at your “Legends Playoff Plus Minus” spreadsheet, and divided the Minutes ON by 48 and then multiplied by the series Pace. I then used the on-court rORTG for each series that you reported in your OP, and did a possession-weighted average of them (i.e. I multiplied the rORTG in a series by the estimate of the number of possessions Jordan played in that series, added all those together for each series, and then divided by the total number of possessions across all the series).
Here’s what I got for various timeframes:
Jordan Playoff On-Court rORTG
- Full Career: +8.90
- Full Career minus 1995: +9.16
- 1989-1998: +9.49
- 1989-1998 minus 1995: +9.82
- Title Years Only: +10.28
- 1985-1990: +6.92
Since we’ve discussed these years in particular, I’ll also note that I have the 1991 playoffs at +14.41 overall, and the 1993 playoffs at +14.85 overall.
For reference, I used the same technique for LeBron, Steph, and Nash, except I got the number of possessions they played each series from PBPstats, and calculated their on-court rORTG in those series using PBPstats data for their on-court ORTG and the opponents’ regular-season DRTG. Here’s the numbers I got for them (I did not calculate across all possible timeframes—so this is just what I already have):
LeBron Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2006-2020: +6.41
- 2007-2020: +8.06
- 2009-2018: +8.78
- 2006-2010: +2.50
Steph Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2014-2023: +7.41
Nash Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2001-2013: +10.39
- 2001-2010: +10.65
- 2005-2010: +12.58
____________
It looks to me like your numbers for Jordan are different, though. Are you using a different method to calculate Jordan’s averages? I don’t think I have any data input errors, but of course it’s definitely possible, so I could double-check that again. But figured I’d run by you to see your thoughts.
Djoker wrote:lessthanjake wrote:Djoker wrote:.
I am curious how you got your overall playoff rORTG averages for Jordan over different timespans. I calculated possession-weighted averages for Jordan and got some different numbers.
Just to be clear on my methodology, here’s what I did:
To estimate the number of possessions Jordan played in each series, I looked at your “Legends Playoff Plus Minus” spreadsheet, and divided the Minutes ON by 48 and then multiplied by the series Pace. I then used the on-court rORTG for each series that you reported in your OP, and did a possession-weighted average of them (i.e. I multiplied the rORTG in a series by the estimate of the number of possessions Jordan played in that series, added all those together for each series, and then divided by the total number of possessions across all the series).
Here’s what I got for various timeframes:
Jordan Playoff On-Court rORTG
- Full Career: +8.90
- Full Career minus 1995: +9.16
- 1989-1998: +9.49
- 1989-1998 minus 1995: +9.82
- Title Years Only: +10.28
- 1985-1990: +6.92
Since we’ve discussed these years in particular, I’ll also note that I have the 1991 playoffs at +14.41 overall, and the 1993 playoffs at +14.85 overall.
For reference, I used the same technique for LeBron, Steph, and Nash, except I got the number of possessions they played each series from PBPstats, and calculated their on-court rORTG in those series using PBPstats data for their on-court ORTG and the opponents’ regular-season DRTG. Here’s the numbers I got for them (I did not calculate across all possible timeframes—so this is just what I already have):
LeBron Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2006-2020: +6.41
- 2007-2020: +8.06
- 2009-2018: +8.78
- 2006-2010: +2.50
Steph Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2014-2023: +7.41
Nash Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2001-2013: +10.39
- 2001-2010: +10.65
- 2005-2010: +12.58
____________
It looks to me like your numbers for Jordan are different, though. Are you using a different method to calculate Jordan’s averages? I don’t think I have any data input errors, but of course it’s definitely possible, so I could double-check that again. But figured I’d run by you to see your thoughts.
Why would you do a possession-weighted average when you can calculate directly?
ON Net = Raw ON * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
ON ORtg = ON Team * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
ON DRtg = ON Opp * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
OFF Net = Raw OFF * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
OFF ORtg = OFF Team * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
OFF DRtg = OFF Team * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
So for example, for career ON Net Rtg:
+1057 * 48/7476 * 100/88.7 = +7.7
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
lessthanjake wrote:Djoker wrote:lessthanjake wrote:
I am curious how you got your overall playoff rORTG averages for Jordan over different timespans. I calculated possession-weighted averages for Jordan and got some different numbers.
Just to be clear on my methodology, here’s what I did:
To estimate the number of possessions Jordan played in each series, I looked at your “Legends Playoff Plus Minus” spreadsheet, and divided the Minutes ON by 48 and then multiplied by the series Pace. I then used the on-court rORTG for each series that you reported in your OP, and did a possession-weighted average of them (i.e. I multiplied the rORTG in a series by the estimate of the number of possessions Jordan played in that series, added all those together for each series, and then divided by the total number of possessions across all the series).
Here’s what I got for various timeframes:
Jordan Playoff On-Court rORTG
- Full Career: +8.90
- Full Career minus 1995: +9.16
- 1989-1998: +9.49
- 1989-1998 minus 1995: +9.82
- Title Years Only: +10.28
- 1985-1990: +6.92
Since we’ve discussed these years in particular, I’ll also note that I have the 1991 playoffs at +14.41 overall, and the 1993 playoffs at +14.85 overall.
For reference, I used the same technique for LeBron, Steph, and Nash, except I got the number of possessions they played each series from PBPstats, and calculated their on-court rORTG in those series using PBPstats data for their on-court ORTG and the opponents’ regular-season DRTG. Here’s the numbers I got for them (I did not calculate across all possible timeframes—so this is just what I already have):
LeBron Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2006-2020: +6.41
- 2007-2020: +8.06
- 2009-2018: +8.78
- 2006-2010: +2.50
Steph Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2014-2023: +7.41
Nash Playoff On-Court rORTG
- 2001-2013: +10.39
- 2001-2010: +10.65
- 2005-2010: +12.58
____________
It looks to me like your numbers for Jordan are different, though. Are you using a different method to calculate Jordan’s averages? I don’t think I have any data input errors, but of course it’s definitely possible, so I could double-check that again. But figured I’d run by you to see your thoughts.
Why would you do a possession-weighted average when you can calculate directly?
ON Net = Raw ON * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
ON ORtg = ON Team * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
ON DRtg = ON Opp * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
OFF Net = Raw OFF * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
OFF ORtg = OFF Team * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
OFF DRtg = OFF Team * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
So for example, for career ON Net Rtg:
+1057 * 48/7476 * 100/88.7 = +7.7
Yeah, I’m on the same page on all that. Calculating net rating definitely doesn’t require a possession-weighted average. I’m talking about calculating overall rORTG across multiple series/years, which I think does require doing a weighted average because each series has its own independent rORTG number due to each opponent having a different regular-season DRTG. For instance, let’s say a player has a +10 rORTG in a series he played 200 possession in and a +5 rORTG in a series he played 400 possessions in, and we want to calculate the rORTG over the course of those two series. I think the way to calculate that would be to do 10*(200/600)+5*(400/600).
Djoker wrote:lessthanjake wrote:Djoker wrote:
Why would you do a possession-weighted average when you can calculate directly?
ON Net = Raw ON * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
ON ORtg = ON Team * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
ON DRtg = ON Opp * 48/Minutes ON * 100/Pace
OFF Net = Raw OFF * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
OFF ORtg = OFF Team * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
OFF DRtg = OFF Team * 48/Minutes OFF * 100/Pace
So for example, for career ON Net Rtg:
+1057 * 48/7476 * 100/88.7 = +7.7
Yeah, I’m on the same page on all that. Calculating net rating definitely doesn’t require a possession-weighted average. I’m talking about calculating overall rORTG across multiple series/years, which I think does require doing a weighted average because each series has its own independent rORTG number due to each opponent having a different regular-season DRTG. For instance, let’s say a player has a +10 rORTG in a series he played 200 possession in and a +5 rORTG in a series he played 400 possessions in, and we want to calculate the rORTG over the course of those two series. I think the way to calculate that would be to do 10*(200/600)+5*(400/600).
Oh.. you're right but In that case why not just calculate the ORtg for those two series and then find the rORtg by just subtracting the average DRtg of those two teams.
For instance if I want to get the average rORtg for the 1993 Knicks and 1996 Sonics series.
(596 + 505) * 48/(274 + 252) * 100/((6 * 89.7 + 6 * 83.5)/12) = 116.0 ORtg (note average pace is a weighted average by games)
Average Opp DRtg = (99.7 + 102.1)/2 = 100.9 DRtg
rORtg = 116.0 - 100.9 = +15.1 rORtg
Although I think your method should still get the same result. Maybe minor rounding errors...
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
lessthanjake wrote:
I think what I’m doing is similar but subtly different. There’s a couple differences I have with that method:
1. Pace is not actually number of possessions per game, but rather is number of possessions per 48 minutes. So if a game goes into OT, there will be more possessions than the pace for that game. Therefore, when you multiply the pace by the number of games, you won’t get the right possession number if there were overtimes.
2. Averaging the opponents’ DRTGs doesn’t account for the fact that the player isn’t playing the same number of possessions against each defense. Which can skew the overall number. For instance, let’s say a player plays 400 possessions against a -5 rDRTG team, and 200 possessions against a +5 rDRTG team. Averaging the opponents’ DRTGs would come out to a totally neutral opponent DRTG. But actually the player played two-thirds of his possessions against the good defense. So, merely averaging the opponents’ DRTGs would undersell the average quality of defense faced in those possessions. This is why I think one should do a possession-weighted average. This way, you’re not accidentally skewing the numbers if the player played different numbers of possessions against teams with different-quality defenses.
To take the example of the 1993 Knicks series and the 1996 Sonics series, here’s what I’d do:
We calculate the number of possessions Jordan played in each series separately, by taking the minutes Jordan played, dividing by 48, and multiplying by the pace of the series. For the 1993 Knicks series, that’d be (249/48)*86.3 = 447.68. For the 1996 Sonics series, that’d be (252/48)*83.5 = 438.38. Now we figure out the rORTG for each series separately, by dividing the number of points scored with Jordan ON by the number of possessions and multiplying that by 100, and then subtracting the opposing team’s regular-season DRTG. For the 1993 Knicks series, that’d be 100*(528/447.68)-99.7=18.24. For the 1996 Sonics series, that’d be 100*(505/438.38)-102.1=13.10. Now that we have the rORTG for both series, we take a weighted average of those rORTGs, weighted by the percent of total possessions Jordan faced each team. Since we estimated 447.68 possessions in the Knicks series and 438.38 possessions in the Sonics series, the total possession estimate is 886.06. Therefore, the rORTG across those two series would be 18.24*(447.68/886.06)+13.10*(438.38/886.06)=15.70.
You could also get the same result by calculating the possessions and then taking the total on-court ORTG and subtracting a possession-weighted average of the opponents’ DRTGs. In that case the math would be 100*(528+505)/(886.06)-(99.7*(447.68/886.06)+102.1*(438.38/886.06)=15.70. Those two versions are functionally identical and get to the same result.
Anyways, that 15.70 number I got is similar to your number, since there was no overtime in those series, and the number of possessions in each series is also extremely similar. In some instances, there would be a larger difference between the two methods, because of the existence of OTs and because some series have very different possession numbers from each other along with different quality opposing defenses.
EDIT: I note that your calculations above used the Jordan ON minutes and pace numbers from the 1993 Finals against the Suns but used the 1993 Knicks DRTG. So I believe that particular +15.1 number you got is a result of a data input error. I think your method would still get a *very* slightly lower number than mine though, even with the correct data put in for the 1993 Knicks (it’d be like +15.68 instead of +15.70). This is because the possession number for the Knicks series is very slightly higher and their defense was a little bit better. As noted, though, the output would diverge a lot more if we had OTs and/or series that didn’t have very similar possession numbers.
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FWIW, as per the couple posts I’ve made on this page that listed rORTGs across series/years (one post about rORTGs against good defenses and goods teams, and the other post about rORTGs across specific timeframes), using the above-described method Jordan’s on-court rORTGs come out at a tier above others except Nash (who we’ve discussed lineup issues regarding). I find that data to be very compelling. And I just wanted to note the difference in the numbers we came to, since the numbers I got are actually a bit better for Jordan than the multi-year rORTG averages listed in your OP.
Djoker wrote:lessthanjake wrote:
I think what I’m doing is similar but subtly different. There’s a couple differences I have with that method:
1. Pace is not actually number of possessions per game, but rather is number of possessions per 48 minutes. So if a game goes into OT, there will be more possessions than the pace for that game. Therefore, when you multiply the pace by the number of games, you won’t get the right possession number if there were overtimes.
2. Averaging the opponents’ DRTGs doesn’t account for the fact that the player isn’t playing the same number of possessions against each defense. Which can skew the overall number. For instance, let’s say a player plays 400 possessions against a -5 rDRTG team, and 200 possessions against a +5 rDRTG team. Averaging the opponents’ DRTGs would come out to a totally neutral opponent DRTG. But actually the player played two-thirds of his possessions against the good defense. So, merely averaging the opponents’ DRTGs would undersell the average quality of defense faced in those possessions. This is why I think one should do a possession-weighted average. This way, you’re not accidentally skewing the numbers if the player played different numbers of possessions against teams with different-quality defenses.
To take the example of the 1993 Knicks series and the 1996 Sonics series, here’s what I’d do:
We calculate the number of possessions Jordan played in each series separately, by taking the minutes Jordan played, dividing by 48, and multiplying by the pace of the series. For the 1993 Knicks series, that’d be (249/48)*86.3 = 447.68. For the 1996 Sonics series, that’d be (252/48)*83.5 = 438.38. Now we figure out the rORTG for each series separately, by dividing the number of points scored with Jordan ON by the number of possessions and multiplying that by 100, and then subtracting the opposing team’s regular-season DRTG. For the 1993 Knicks series, that’d be 100*(528/447.68)-99.7=18.24. For the 1996 Sonics series, that’d be 100*(505/438.38)-102.1=13.10. Now that we have the rORTG for both series, we take a weighted average of those rORTGs, weighted by the percent of total possessions Jordan faced each team. Since we estimated 447.68 possessions in the Knicks series and 438.38 possessions in the Sonics series, the total possession estimate is 886.06. Therefore, the rORTG across those two series would be 18.24*(447.68/886.06)+13.10*(438.38/886.06)=15.70.
You could also get the same result by calculating the possessions and then taking the total on-court ORTG and subtracting a possession-weighted average of the opponents’ DRTGs. In that case the math would be 100*(528+505)/(886.06)-(99.7*(447.68/886.06)+102.1*(438.38/886.06)=15.70. Those two versions are functionally identical and get to the same result.
Anyways, that 15.70 number I got is similar to your number, since there was no overtime in those series, and the number of possessions in each series is also extremely similar. In some instances, there would be a larger difference between the two methods, because of the existence of OTs and because some series have very different possession numbers from each other along with different quality opposing defenses.
EDIT: I note that your calculations above used the Jordan ON minutes and pace numbers from the 1993 Finals against the Suns but used the 1993 Knicks DRTG. So I believe that particular +15.1 number you got is a result of a data input error. I think your method would still get a *very* slightly lower number than mine though, even with the correct data put in for the 1993 Knicks (it’d be like +15.68 instead of +15.70). This is because the possession number for the Knicks series is very slightly higher and their defense was a little bit better. As noted, though, the output would diverge a lot more if we had OTs and/or series that didn’t have very similar possession numbers.
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FWIW, as per the couple posts I’ve made on this page that listed rORTGs across series/years (one post about rORTGs against good defenses and goods teams, and the other post about rORTGs across specific timeframes), using the above-described method Jordan’s on-court rORTGs come out at a tier above others except Nash (who we’ve discussed lineup issues regarding). I find that data to be very compelling. And I just wanted to note the difference in the numbers we came to, since the numbers I got are actually a bit better for Jordan than the multi-year rORTG averages listed in your OP.
1. Yes that's correct. OT periods are taken into account with the minutes played but when averaging pace by games played, it can be a small issue.
2. My method is simply average rORtg per series. Yours is average rORtg weighted by possession in those series. Small distinction but nevertheless an important one. Your method is more accurate technically speaking but I'm still unsure what is more informative. Maybe we do actually want just a simple average of all the different series. Because your possession based method gives a single 7-game series almost twice the weight of a 4-game sweep. I'm not sure that's actually a good thing. Maybe each series should be a separate but equivalent entry?
And the results we got are quite different... 1 to 1.3 points difference in rORtg is actually significant. Food for thought.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
lessthanjake wrote:Djoker wrote:lessthanjake wrote:
I think what I’m doing is similar but subtly different. There’s a couple differences I have with that method:
1. Pace is not actually number of possessions per game, but rather is number of possessions per 48 minutes. So if a game goes into OT, there will be more possessions than the pace for that game. Therefore, when you multiply the pace by the number of games, you won’t get the right possession number if there were overtimes.
2. Averaging the opponents’ DRTGs doesn’t account for the fact that the player isn’t playing the same number of possessions against each defense. Which can skew the overall number. For instance, let’s say a player plays 400 possessions against a -5 rDRTG team, and 200 possessions against a +5 rDRTG team. Averaging the opponents’ DRTGs would come out to a totally neutral opponent DRTG. But actually the player played two-thirds of his possessions against the good defense. So, merely averaging the opponents’ DRTGs would undersell the average quality of defense faced in those possessions. This is why I think one should do a possession-weighted average. This way, you’re not accidentally skewing the numbers if the player played different numbers of possessions against teams with different-quality defenses.
To take the example of the 1993 Knicks series and the 1996 Sonics series, here’s what I’d do:
We calculate the number of possessions Jordan played in each series separately, by taking the minutes Jordan played, dividing by 48, and multiplying by the pace of the series. For the 1993 Knicks series, that’d be (249/48)*86.3 = 447.68. For the 1996 Sonics series, that’d be (252/48)*83.5 = 438.38. Now we figure out the rORTG for each series separately, by dividing the number of points scored with Jordan ON by the number of possessions and multiplying that by 100, and then subtracting the opposing team’s regular-season DRTG. For the 1993 Knicks series, that’d be 100*(528/447.68)-99.7=18.24. For the 1996 Sonics series, that’d be 100*(505/438.38)-102.1=13.10. Now that we have the rORTG for both series, we take a weighted average of those rORTGs, weighted by the percent of total possessions Jordan faced each team. Since we estimated 447.68 possessions in the Knicks series and 438.38 possessions in the Sonics series, the total possession estimate is 886.06. Therefore, the rORTG across those two series would be 18.24*(447.68/886.06)+13.10*(438.38/886.06)=15.70.
You could also get the same result by calculating the possessions and then taking the total on-court ORTG and subtracting a possession-weighted average of the opponents’ DRTGs. In that case the math would be 100*(528+505)/(886.06)-(99.7*(447.68/886.06)+102.1*(438.38/886.06)=15.70. Those two versions are functionally identical and get to the same result.
Anyways, that 15.70 number I got is similar to your number, since there was no overtime in those series, and the number of possessions in each series is also extremely similar. In some instances, there would be a larger difference between the two methods, because of the existence of OTs and because some series have very different possession numbers from each other along with different quality opposing defenses.
EDIT: I note that your calculations above used the Jordan ON minutes and pace numbers from the 1993 Finals against the Suns but used the 1993 Knicks DRTG. So I believe that particular +15.1 number you got is a result of a data input error. I think your method would still get a *very* slightly lower number than mine though, even with the correct data put in for the 1993 Knicks (it’d be like +15.68 instead of +15.70). This is because the possession number for the Knicks series is very slightly higher and their defense was a little bit better. As noted, though, the output would diverge a lot more if we had OTs and/or series that didn’t have very similar possession numbers.
_______
FWIW, as per the couple posts I’ve made on this page that listed rORTGs across series/years (one post about rORTGs against good defenses and goods teams, and the other post about rORTGs across specific timeframes), using the above-described method Jordan’s on-court rORTGs come out at a tier above others except Nash (who we’ve discussed lineup issues regarding). I find that data to be very compelling. And I just wanted to note the difference in the numbers we came to, since the numbers I got are actually a bit better for Jordan than the multi-year rORTG averages listed in your OP.
1. Yes that's correct. OT periods are taken into account with the minutes played but when averaging pace by games played, it can be a small issue.
2. My method is simply average rORtg per series. Yours is average rORtg weighted by possession in those series. Small distinction but nevertheless an important one. Your method is more accurate technically speaking but I'm still unsure what is more informative. Maybe we do actually want just a simple average of all the different series. Because your possession based method gives a single 7-game series almost twice the weight of a 4-game sweep. I'm not sure that's actually a good thing. Maybe each series should be a separate but equivalent entry?
And the results we got are quite different... 1 to 1.3 points difference in rORtg is actually significant. Food for thought.
Yeah, I agree that there’s validity to a weighted-average approach and a simple average approach. I tend to think weighted-average is better if trying to assess how well a team played in the aggregate. But arguably each series matters equally, so I can see an argument for weighting each series equally.
That said, I also get a different result with a simple average. For instance, if I take a simple average of Jordan’s rORTG by series, I get +9.71 for Jordan’s career, +10.39 for Jordan for 1989-1998, and +11.16 for just Jordan’s title years.