f4p wrote:i'm continuing this from the last thread since these guys are still on the ballot.
Doctor MJ wrote:f4p wrote:
Shouldn't stuff like this force people to be higher on #19 peak harden? He's basically tied with Steph and duncan while being the only non-KG guy who wasn't on a dynasty, which you say above tends to make it tough to look good in these measures, like we see with Manu and green.
Well, I can only speak for myself, and for myself I'm not coming in with any assumption of where Harden should be.
But I would also note that you just singled out the measure I posted where Harden looks best - so there are other perspectives that look worse - and we are talking about a career measure here rather than a peak/prime measure. We should remember Harden's best Playoff RAPM span almost certainly has a significant OKC component, and while I'm not looking to knock his time in OKC at all - I thought he was severely underrated - this likely means that around the time of his MVP he probably wouldn't rank quite as high as this study suggests.
On this note, I'm going to take data from a source I'm really cautious about using because a) playoff RAPM is fraught with issues, b) single post-season RAPM data all the more so, and c) I don't know anything about who the source actually is, but it's what we have and it's relevant here:
Single-season RS & PS RAPM studies on GithubSo for Harden, in the playoffs, this is where this source rates Harden, fwiw:
OKC
'09-10: +0.3665 (50th & below Durant, Westbrook)
'10-11: +1.9783 (6th & above them)
'11-12: +2.7003 (3rd & above them)
Houston
'12-13: -.5004 (negative)
'13-14: -.0815 (negative)
'14-15: +0.2547 (67th)
'15-16: -1.4063 (negative)
'16-17: +0.6537 (37th)
'17-18: +1.6445 (8th)
'18-19: +1.1475 (26th)
That's as far as their studies go, and we should note that the Cheema study goes two more years which could have helped some. In neither case is it factoring in the last 4 years.
i mean someone like steph has most of his best on/off numbers (can't speak to this github RAPM stuff) from non-title years. also, aren't the numbers you posted the kind of thing that should lower our confidence in these numbers? so james harden was best in his 2nd and 3rd year in the league as a 21 and 22 year old (i'll just get ahead of anyone saying we can't use this to rank players even though we do all the time)? he was maybe a positive in an mvp caliber 2015 season with very nice box score numbers and a very good playoffs until game 5 against the warriors? the 2019 rockets somehow got carried to a dominant first round and neck and neck series with the steph/KD warriors with the 26th best player who wasn't really that impactful? harden wasn't even a positive player 2014 or 2016 and the 2017 rockets would have been just fine without the guys who accounted for the 2nd most points in history? but 2012 james harden would have wrecked shop? feels like it's way to "value you in your role" oriented to mean basically anything.
edit: 2013 and 2014 being negative also just seems really weird. harden's box score numbers fell off hard but his on/off those years was +30 and +16. given that the other numbers largely follow harden's raw on/off, kind of hard to imagine how +30 and +16 can flip to a negative.
Re: Steph has most his best on-off numbers from non-title years. Same concern applies to every player certainly, and relates to why on top of being cautious about using PS +/-, and specifically cautious about using career PS RAPM in a peak conversation.
Re: Should lower our confidence in these numbers? I'm not sure what "these numbers" entails, but we should always have less confidence in small sample size numbers, and this is a bigger concern with +/- than traditional box score.
Re: So Harden was best in his 2nd & 3rd years according to this data. Wouldn't say best, but potentially more impactful playing the way he did in OKC with those teammates against contending competition than he was later years with his ultra-high primacy game.
Re: "until Game 5". Not sure what precisely you're speaking to there, but I'm certainly cautious about saying he was X until this one game based on +/- data, and just generally my broader point is that we need to be careful about this data in small sample size, so I'm not looking to try to give explanations for noise.
Re: "but 2012 Harden would have wrecked, feels like value in your role oriented to mean basically anything". I'm not sure what to say here. Harden played a very different role in OKC than in Houston, and thus it's possible he was more impactful in the OKC role than the Houston role.
If you're confused about Harden playing a different role in OKC than Houston, we can certainly talk about it.
f4p wrote:So I'll probably always talk more about RS RAPM data than PS RAPM data even as I acknowledge that legacy is determined primarily from the post-season. And this definitely leaves room for the possibility of a player being much less or much more effective in the playoffs relative to rivals than RS RAPM would indicate, and once again drives us back to the final step of analysis not being following stats but explaining how we come to differ in assessment from them.
so then we're at the point of the playoffs being given enormous weight for a player's legacy, moreso than any other sport, but then primarily using a measure that can't be trusted for the playoffs. i know you acknowledged it's an issue, but it seems to be a really big issue.
I wouldn't call it a small issue, and at the same time, I'd say this family of stats has quite a lot to do with why NBA basketball is so much more effective now than it was 20 years ago, because the issue with using box score production without pairing some form of WOWY type analysis are much, much worse. (I'll also say, the timeline for the WNBA is delayed further, and some of the award choices made in the 2010s WNBA feel like they were made by NBA journalists from decades further back.)
I would emphasize that I don't only use +/- data in my analysis, and would never recommend anyone do that for any measure. So why do I emphasize it to start discussion?
1. It represents a valid statistical measure - while box score production is invalid in the technical meaning of the word in that it biases assessment away from scoreboard impact - that with sufficient sample will approximate actual impact, hence when we do have bigger samples, it's a logical place to start.
It's not that I expect any +/- measure to be the "right answer", but I think it's an important step to try to understand how a player's +/- data in large sample came to be, and have a basketball sense for why deviation from the measure in your assessment makes sense.
2. It's always been harder to come by, and less consumed, than traditional stats. Everyone who can find realgm.com also knows how to find all the box score stats, but play-by-play stats organized in a way that's readable, not as much.
f4p wrote:Here's where I'll also say that I'm quite cautious about trying to normalize for fit when doing player evaluation. I want to note the degree of synergy between the teammates, and I do recognize that some of that is out of the player's hands, but I also want to credit players for actively seeking to learn to fit around the teammates they have, and doing that historically well as has happened with Curry & Green is something I see as a major positive.
so i think this is where i tend to disagree most with you, and this is a general PC board thing also but i know you didn't want a general conversation. i think y'all tend to credit people in great situations as having created those situations as opposed to a sports career involving a ton of luck in how things work out. whereas i view the magic/duncan/curry types as basically being born rich and then getting credit for being good with money. you view things like fitting well with your teammates as something actively created by being a smart basketball player or, what is really implied, by just being a good person who likes to fit in to help his teammates, as opposed to largely a completely random process created by a small sample size thing like a sports career where your franchise only has so many chances to fit players around you and if they knock it out of the park like golden state well, great for you, and if they don't, like KG in minnesota, then oh well.
like it's not like anyone can look at draymond and steph curry's games and skillsets and somehow conclude that steph just actively built himself to fit into that (or that draymond did either), unless we're arguing that steph really wanted to keep playing like mark jackson wanted and just acquiesced to steve kerr's model because he just realized it was better for the team. they just have remarkably well-fitting skills, as does klay with them. pippen fits great next to jordan. kareem fits well with magic. lebron doesn't fit great next to wade because they are identical. it's okay to just say people have inherent skills and sometimes they don't line up with the limited number of people a team can acquire for them as teammates. now, someone like lebron, who has fit in like 10 different situations, gives us more confidence that he can fit in a lot of situation. but a lot of the situations i mentioned above are basically career-long situations which don't really tell us anything about the players outside of that one situation.
So, I thought I was following until you got to KG in Minny, because this board being high on KG is maybe its greatest stereotype, and that seems to run 180 counter to the "credit people in great situations as having created those situations".
I do think that the conversation around fit is quite important, and it's understandable to disagree on how to consider fit in any given context. I'm on record being against trying to normalize for fit in an MVP context, but I'm not drying such a clear cut line in this project. In a nutshell, while impact is fit-dependent, in theory goodness isn't.
I will say that proving that you can fit in with other talents is a big deal to me.
I'll also say that I don't think Steph ever benefitted from Kerr's offensive scheme nearly as much as people think. He demonstrated prior to Kerr he was capable of being more of an on-ball point guard and being an MVP candidate level player, and then he demonstrated with Kerr that he could play off-ball rover and be an MVP candidate level player. Utterly remarkable that he was able to switch from one to the other. If one of Dame or Giannis could have done that in Milwaukee, everything would have gone different there.
By contrast, while Curry didn't need Green to be an offensive superstar on-ball, he does need a great passer like Green to have comparable offensive impact while playing off-ball... but this is true of everyone. Everyone on the court who doesn't have the ball needs the guy with the ball to be good at passing, and if he isn't and he dominates the ball, they won't be at their best.
And I'd say this is why Klay was the primary intended beneficiary of Kerr's scheme, not Steph. It was frustration with Jackson's inability to develop Klay that was the basketball part of why Jackson had to go (the other part was Jackson's insecure narcissism). Of course you can argue that Steph was less valuable as an offensive player pre-Kerr precisely because as point guard he couldn't get everything out of Klay, and I wouldn't really argue against that though I would emphasize a) we already had all the box score & +/- indicators that Steph was amazing, and b) Klay was never actually THAT good - the type of player Klay was, is basically something every team should have and that's great, but the Splash Brothers branding really gives a false impression of how much of an outlier Klay was compared to Steph.
Meanwhile on Dray, he really is THAT good imho and him being unlocked had everything to do with the Warriors not simply emerging as a contender, but emerging as a dynasty. The Warriors deserved some credit for drafting Green of course, but Kerr's scheme wasn't implemented with the idea Green specifically is one of the smartest players in NBA history, and while the scheme was going to lead to smart players flourishing over others just by definition, it was quite fortunate for all others involved that Green emerged as the outlier talent he is.
But as I say all of that, it's not like Green has offensive RAPM numbers that make him look like a superstar or challenge Curry. Mostly what we're talking about in terms of his impact is his defensive IQ, and while Curry is lucky to have such a defender by his side, and having such a defender was a critical part of the dynasty, none of it changes the fact that Curry's an extreme offensive outlier.
Re: LeBron & Wade didn't fit well. So, here's where I'll emphasize that from an MVP perspective I find the idea of normalizing for fit absurd. When a player specifically chooses to play next to a guy he doesn't synergize that well next to, he makes his own bed.
It's more complicated when we're talking about a guy who just ends up on incompetent franchise without any choice on the matter, but when you choose, and you don't choose as wisely as you could have, it's on you from a value-achievement perspective.
From a goodness perspective though, it ideally shouldn't matter, it's just that time spent playing with a noticeably poor fit raises questions about your lack of versatility - either due to talent issues, or stubbornness issues.
f4p wrote:
This is what I mean by kids gloves. Yes, LeBron is amazing and maybe had his best series ever, or maybe anybody's best series ever. But the warriors lost because steph was real bad. Full stop. The scoring champion averaged 22 ppg and had more turnovers than assists for the series and went 6/19 in a nail biter game 7 against a team with no elite perimeter defenders that regularly had 35 year old richard jefferson and kevin love playing forward minutes.
It doesn't get talked about like 2011 LeBron, but it's arguably even more of a thrown away title. Like the Heat needed to win 2 more games, the warriors just needed to score more than 0 points in the final 5 minutes of the series.
So, let me acknowledge that the mere fact that it was LeBron's team that Steph's team lost to doesn't mean Steph should be above criticism in non-LeBron debates.
But let me also point out that you're zeroing in on what you perceive as Steph's greatest failure to evaluate him as a player, and this is something that I try to avoid, just as I try to avoid getting overly infatuated with runs that seem "perfect" as if the player's lack of perfection in any other years is about that player getting a tier worse.
So in the '15-16 Finals, Steph has worse numbers than in the '14-15 Finals. Does that mean he generally got worse at basketball from one year to the next? I think all would say "No", and would also note that Curry clearly improved from '14-15 to '15-16 looking at the entirety of the season. So what does it mean that Curry was worse in the '15-16 series?
i'm not trying to evaluate steph based on the 2016 finals. and again, nothing i'm saying isn't that he's been an awesome player. just that he's more "next tier" than "1st tier". if we're going off of "team results based on team talent" and box production (great but nothing first tier) and playoff resiliency (lower tier). i suspect where we would most disagree is the warriors overall talent, but i see a team that was #1 in defense in 2015, #2 in 2017, #1 in the playoffs (when they actually tried), and #1 in 2022. with a klay or klay and KD around to help with the offense.
if i was evaluating on the 2016 finals, he would obviously be much, much lower (or not in this project). i'm arguing this board is doing the opposite with 2017. if we went by the box, steph's 2017 playoff numbers are probably as far away from his second best season than just about any top 20 all time player. by raw on/off, it's 8 points higher than any finals run (2019) and over 10 points higher than any other. and people are essentially taking this outlier on/off (which i'm assuming translates into the RAPM mostly) as evidence that somehow the amazing 2017 warriors (and yes, they were amazing, maybe the best ever) were a steph curry creation when we have plenty of data that A) draymond is massively impactful during this entire warriors run and is probably taking up a susbtantial part of the warriors +11 net rating and B) that the warriors playoff net rating spiked after adding KD and dropped right after he got injured, down to even a negative net rating in the 2019 finals so it seems likely that KD (who led the 2018 team in on/off) is probably a susbstantial part of the overall story, as you would expect from a team with a prime MVP and peak DPOY "supporting" cast.
so if we somehow have a noisy on/off that spikes for 2017 steph in a way it doesn't for any other year, it would feel like people are overly indexing to it when the surrounding data doesn't tell the same story and especially the surrounding data in the 2 nearest years in 2016 and 2018. nor do the warriors amazing team results, matched overall by the 1996 bulls (a team with 3 stars but two of them fairly old with 33 year old jordan and 35 year old rodman), and in the playoffs by the 1991 bulls (a team with only 2 peak stars) and the 2001 lakers (a team with only 2 peak stars), necessarily seem to indicate that with so much overall talent on the warriors that they must have had a guy with an outsized peak above your more standard 2006 wade, 2001 shaq, or really even 2008/2009 kobe type team.
Re: not trying to judge him by 2016 finals. Okay, noted.
Re: "team results based on team talent". I mean, the Warriors had the single best regular season in NBA history in '15-16 with Steph with a supporting cast that absolutely no one thought was an outlier until they started having dynastic success, so anyone saying they should have done more given their talent is largely just saying they shouldn't have lost any playoff series, which I would say isn't a standard that other players are being held to.
Then Durant comes in '16-17, and the team is literally the best team in the history of the NBA based on how good they looked in the playoffs, so what more should they have done?
After that the seasons aren't such clear outliers, but we're still talking about
a) winning the '17-18 chip
b) nearly winning the '18-19 chip despite crippling injuries
c) winning a title in '21-22 despite losing KD and having Wiggins as the part of their Big 3 with Steph & Dray
I'm just real skeptical people thought they should do better than this.
In my experience, people have generally been low on the Warriors. Not predicting them to emerge as a contender in '14-15, not predicting them to take another leap forward in '15-16, and then burying them in 2020 dead convinced that Steph was cooked and taking the opportunity to emphasize that '14-15 was a fluke anyway, and that KD was the real top-tier talent despite him really never matching the impact indicators of Curry before, during, or after his time in GS.
Re: "noisy on/off that spikes for 2017 steph in a way it doesn't for any other year". I mean, Steph has a playoff on-off of >+10 in 6 of his 10 playoff runs, so I'd reject the idea that 2017 represents something completely uncharacteristic of his other seasons by that measure.
Re: Jordan Bulls match Steph Warriors. There's truth in that certainly. Those Bulls wouldn't have a prayer today without completely re-shaping the strategy, but they were super-dominant in their era, and I have no serious concern about Jordan or Pippen being able to adapt to today game pretty well.