Magic vs Lebron in offense

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Magic vs Lebron (offense only)

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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#21 » by homecourtloss » Fri Sep 26, 2025 7:58 pm

Top10alltime wrote:
homecourtloss wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:Lebron is also a better off-ball player than Magic, as a better play-finisher than Magic, he has some good years being in C&S, and he is a great screener in everyway. He is a good connective passer, as well. His most important trait (slashing), is all-time, and he is a good lob-threat, putting Lebron comfortably above Magic off the ball (whom I am not moved off the ball, it's not like Lebron is elite off the ball).

There are some things like mismatch hunting that Lebron is the GOAT at, soft traits I'd give to Lebron as well.!


It's interesting that the bolded or scoring volume advantage that matter in other discussions all of a sudden won't matter in this particular discussion to some posters.

Also, the weak competiton with a bunch of negative SRS, even -2 and -5 SRS teams faced in the playoffs won’t be brought up even though in other discussions how one fares against an arbitrary +5 SRS opponent (no rDRtgs taken into account, just being 5+ SRS) matters a great deal…


Underlined: That's because most posters use data, unlike posters like myself, who still does use data, but relies on the eye-test for who is better.

The scoring volume advantage almost always matter in discussions, unless you hate a player that much.

Bolded: what are you talking about? Is this relevant to the discussion, Magic or Lebron offensively?


Top10alltime wrote:
homecourtloss wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:Lebron is also a better off-ball player than Magic, as a better play-finisher than Magic, he has some good years being in C&S, and he is a great screener in everyway. He is a good connective passer, as well. His most important trait (slashing), is all-time, and he is a good lob-threat, putting Lebron comfortably above Magic off the ball (whom I am not moved off the ball, it's not like Lebron is elite off the ball).

There are some things like mismatch hunting that Lebron is the GOAT at, soft traits I'd give to Lebron as well.!


It's interesting that the bolded or scoring volume advantage that matter in other discussions all of a sudden won't matter in this particular discussion to some posters.

Also, the weak competiton with a bunch of negative SRS, even -2 and -5 SRS teams faced in the playoffs won’t be brought up even though in other discussions how one fares against an arbitrary +5 SRS opponent (no rDRtgs taken into account, just being 5+ SRS) matters a great deal…


Bolded: what are you talking about? Is this relevant to the discussion, Magic or Lebron offensively?


I was referring to other discussions when person posters valued and insisted on looking at how players perform offensively against certain SRS opponents, not rDRtgs. interesting though that is not brought up here probably because Magic Johnson played against some really weak teams and especially weak defenses.

homecourtloss wrote:I was looking at the relative offensive rating (rORtg) in playoff series between six players we often discuss here on the PC board and the rORtgs spearheaded by each.

In the charts below, you can see how these players did against specific defenses. LeBron is brown circles, the red circles are Jordan, the purple is Magic, the yellow is Curry, the green are Nash, and the blue is Jokic.

Image
Image


Magic only played against five -4 or better defenses(three of these occurred between 1980 and 1982), and ten at -3 or better. His average defense faced was -1 rDRtg with 17 series played against a + rDRtg. From 1985-1991, it was -.73 and in the tithe years between 1985 and 1988, it was just -.1 rDRtg.

He played nine teams with a +6 or higher SRS, and only 4 above +7. He played 11 teams with an SRS < +1 and 7 teams with a negative SRS.
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.

lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#22 » by homecourtloss » Fri Sep 26, 2025 7:59 pm

Djoker wrote:On my latest list of top 10 offensive players ever, I had Magic #3 and Lebron #4 in the same tier.

I went with Magic by a hair because I think his teams have proven to be a bit more resilient against top teams (5+ SRS cutoffs and higher) compared to Lebron's teams. Both guys have relative limitations from being too ball dominant and running through weak conferences to pad their offensive numbers but Magic's offenses fared better in the Finals and in a handful of other tough series compared to Lebron's. Magic has two series with a negative rORtg ON Court (1981 HOU, 1983 PHI) and 1986 HOU could potentially join the list after I'm done tracking it. Lebron, on the other hand, has thirteen such series! Lebron's playoff offenses have reached tremendous highs but also had some bad lows. Magic had Kareem and you can certainly use that as an argument against him given Kareem's own offensive stature (probable top 10 all-time offensive player?) but Lebron had significant tactical advantages with spacing and his two best postseason runs benefited from very got 3pt shooting. In addition, Magic showed tremendous offensive lift even as Kareem really declined and outright retired.

In terms of skillset alone, I'd probably favour Lebron slightly. His gap in scoring (5-7 points/75) is huge and Magic's edge in playmaking even though it's hefty doesn't overcome it in a vacuum for me. So depending on how the question is phrased (i.e. individual skill only) I may go with Lebron. But in a team context, it becomes close and I probably lean towards Magic slightly.


The teams above +5 SRS that Magic played and LeBron played are quite different but i think you know that. Also, no mention of the absurdlyweak defensive teams that magic faced? Also the best SRS teams magic faced werent the defensive teams james faced.
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.

lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#23 » by Cavsfansince84 » Fri Sep 26, 2025 8:04 pm

I think LeBron in the 09, 17 and 18 years was better than Magic on a rs+ps basisZ(compared to Magic's 3 best years). I think Magic over the course of his prime was better on that end though when looking at both rs+ps.
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#24 » by lessthanjake » Fri Sep 26, 2025 10:18 pm

Amusingly given the subtle jabs seemingly directed at me (and probably a couple others) for purportedly ignoring these issues, I’ve actually written extensively on these forums about how Magic’s Western Conference playoff opponents were often quite weak and the Lakers’ offense didn’t always do overly well against the good playoff opponents they did face. See the following three lengthy posts from me on that, for example:

https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=107791080#p107791080

https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=107833467#p107833467

https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=107834211#p107834211

So yeah, as usual, snide comments were made without doing any homework. Sadly typical of a particular poster, who seems unable to put a lid on his own frustration.

On the substance of this issue, I’d note that we have more recently gotten a lot more on-court ORTG data for Magic in the playoffs. And, from what I’ve seen, there was often a huge gap in the on-court and off-court ORTGs (which necessarily means his on-court ORTGs are often better than we’d expect from the overall team number). I haven’t actually delved into those numbers specifically to see how they look in the series’s against mediocre opponents compared to good ones (it’s something I’d definitely be interested in a more deep dive into though!). But I’ll say that this playoff on-off data as well as the regular season impact data we’ve gotten for Magic has actually materially moved my assessment of Magic’s offense recently.
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: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#25 » by Djoker » Sat Sep 27, 2025 3:09 am

homecourtloss wrote:
Djoker wrote:On my latest list of top 10 offensive players ever, I had Magic #3 and Lebron #4 in the same tier.

I went with Magic by a hair because I think his teams have proven to be a bit more resilient against top teams (5+ SRS cutoffs and higher) compared to Lebron's teams. Both guys have relative limitations from being too ball dominant and running through weak conferences to pad their offensive numbers but Magic's offenses fared better in the Finals and in a handful of other tough series compared to Lebron's. Magic has two series with a negative rORtg ON Court (1981 HOU, 1983 PHI) and 1986 HOU could potentially join the list after I'm done tracking it. Lebron, on the other hand, has thirteen such series! Lebron's playoff offenses have reached tremendous highs but also had some bad lows. Magic had Kareem and you can certainly use that as an argument against him given Kareem's own offensive stature (probable top 10 all-time offensive player?) but Lebron had significant tactical advantages with spacing and his two best postseason runs benefited from very got 3pt shooting. In addition, Magic showed tremendous offensive lift even as Kareem really declined and outright retired.

In terms of skillset alone, I'd probably favour Lebron slightly. His gap in scoring (5-7 points/75) is huge and Magic's edge in playmaking even though it's hefty doesn't overcome it in a vacuum for me. So depending on how the question is phrased (i.e. individual skill only) I may go with Lebron. But in a team context, it becomes close and I probably lean towards Magic slightly.


The teams above +5 SRS that Magic played and LeBron played are quite different but i think you know that. Also, no mention of the absurdlyweak defensive teams that magic faced? Also the best SRS teams magic faced werent the defensive teams james faced.


My point wasn't who's better against better defenses but against better teams in general.

Regarding opposing defenses, yes, Magic's were much weaker on a relative basis but that was also an era with fewer teams so there was less variance from top to bottom of the league compared to the more modern league. Magic faced three #1 defenses and his teams did very well against each of them: +5.9 rORtg vs. 1980 Sixers, +8.0 rORtg vs. 1988 Jazz, and +11.6 rORtg vs. 1990 Rockets.

There was one poster (forget his name) who found the best defenses in league history using Z-score. That's probably more informative than relative DRtg when we are talking about leagues of different sizes. There just weren't almost any -5 defenses in the 1980's. But that doesn't mean the best defensive teams of that era weren't really good though.
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#26 » by lessthanjake » Sat Sep 27, 2025 5:09 am

FWIW, using Djoker’s spreadsheet, here’s Magic’s on-court rORTG in the playoff series that have been fully tracked (with the opponent rDRTG and SRS in parentheses):

1980 vs. SEA (4.24 SRS; -4.1 rDRTG): +7.5
1980 vs. PHI (4.04 SRS; -4.3 rDRTG): +6.3
1981 vs. HOU (-0.20 SRS; +1.2 rDRTG): -4.0
1982 vs. PHX (3.05 SRS; -4.5 rDRTG): +19.9
1982 vs. SAS (1.79 SRS; +0.7 rDRTG): +7.2
1982 vs. PHI (5.74 SRS; -3.0 rDRTG): +5.7
1983 vs. POR (1.88 SRS; -0.8 rDRTG): +11.1
1983 vs. SAS (3.10 SRS; +1.9 rDRTG): +8.5
1983 vs. PHI (7.53 SRS; -3.8 rDRTG): -3.3
1985 vs. POR (2.80 SRS; -0.7 rDRTG): +9.9
1985 vs. DEN (2.05 SRS; +0.5 rDRTG): +17.1
1985 vs. BOS (6.47 SRS; -1.6 rDRTG): +7.6
1991 vs. CHI (8.57 SRS; -2.7 rDRTG): +3.0

It’s far from full data and is mostly from Magic’s earlier years, where I’d say he was in his prime but not at his best and the team was more Kareem’s team. The data does generally look better in the few series we have that weren’t from his early years, but it’s not a lot of data points, so it’s pretty inconclusive IMO. Overall, the data looks pretty good—with a minutes-weighted average of +7.4. For reference, I’ve calculated LeBron’s career playoff rORTG from 2006-2020, and it was +6.7. Of course, we could probably say Magic had better offensive teammates on average than LeBron did during that span, but this data is also skewed towards Magic’s lesser years.

Magic also did actually average like a +11 on-court rORTG in the playoff series against the three best defenses that they faced in the series that have been tracked. So I wouldn’t really say this data suggests Magic fell off offensively against better defenses (though that +11 is driven in large part by that one +19.9 series). That said, there was the bad offensive showing for them in the 1983 Finals against the 4th best defense that they faced in this data. Magic was not very good in that series, so this is unsurprising IMO. If we instead look at what happened against the best teams by SRS, it’s a bit less charitable for Magic, though a lot of work is being done by that 1983 Finals.
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: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#27 » by Top10alltime » Sat Sep 27, 2025 12:15 pm

kcktiny wrote:
Anyways, this is just a quick analysis of why Lebron > Magic offensively, in my opinion. What do you think? Who do you think is a better offensive player? Please give good reasoning to your answers


From 1979-80 to 1990-91 (12 seasons) the Lakers were the top offensive team in the league at 110.5 pts/100poss scored. No one else was even close (Boston was 2nd best at 109.6 pts/100poss scored, Lakers almost a full point better over a dozen years).

Those 12 years Magic Johnson among all Lakers players:

- scored the most points (17239)
- passed for the most assists (9921) in the league, no other Laker had more than 3666, and the Lakers lead the league in highest 2pt FG% (52.6%)
- attempted - by far - the most FTAs (5649), no other Laker had more than 3846
- made - by far - the most FTs (4788), no other Laker had more than 2859
- grabbed the 2nd most offensive rebounds (1561), most by a PG in the league, and the Laker with the most had 1563

And to show you Magic wasn't just riding the coattails of Kareem, the first season he outscored Jabbar was 1986-87. The 5 seasons from 1986-87 to 1990-91 the Lakers were still the best offensive team in the league (111.8 pts/100poss allowed), and Magic:

- lead the Lakers in scoring (8343 pts)
- lead them in assists (4719), no other Laker had more than 1366, and the Lakers had the 2nd highest 2pt FG% in the league (51.6%)
- lead them in FTAs (2893), no other Laker had more than 1692
- lead them in FTM (2551), no other Laker had more than 1296
- grabbed the 4th most offensive rebounds (554) on the team

Magic > Lebron offensively - these good enough reasons for you?

Show us where Lebron James' teams were the best offensively in the league over a 5 year span let alone a 12 year span, with Lebron leading the team in both scoring and passing.


No thanks, I'd rather argue with posters who argue in good faith like HCL, LTJ, and others, than a person who has 0 arguments in good faith, and uses total stats and team offensive strength without adjusting it to per game, and no context on team strength offensively.

Thank you.
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#28 » by homecourtloss » Sat Sep 27, 2025 3:38 pm

Top10alltime wrote:.


Djoker wrote:On my latest list of top 10 offensive players ever, I had Magic #3 and Lebron #4 in the same tier.

I went with Magic by a hair because I think his teams have proven to be a bit more resilient against top teams (5+ SRS cutoffs and higher) compared to Lebron's teams


Hard disagree. First of all, 5+ SRS cutoff doesn’t compare apples to apples because one player’s 5+ SRS opponents are simply much better and especially doesn’t make sense when talking about offense When these opponents have much better defenses. This doesn’t even touch in how GSW wasn’t anything close to a -.9 rDRtg in the playoffs, the “real” version of them.

LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 8.2
LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average rDRtg: -4.6

In these series: +6.5 rORtg, +3.8 rTS
+6.7 rORtg vs. 7+ SRS +2.7 rTS

That’s holding up better than “well" even with the skew in context with one player playing with no offensive talent and many series versus another player who played with Kareem who was highly effective through 1987.

Magic’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 6.8
Magics’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: -2.6

LeBron’s rORtg vs. -5 rDRtg defenses (Magic never faced one): +9.5
LeBron’s rTS vs. -5 rDRtg defenses: +5.8
To put this in perspective, someone like Jokic’s career rORtg is +4.9 in the playoffs and his rTS is +4.7.

Image
Image

If you look at the defenses faced, one player played incredibly good defenses and held up well against them (+7.5 rORTg, +5.8 rTS, even more impressive reFG%,etc.) even when considering the skew in contexts, i.e., Magic played with Kareem while James in most of his worst series was young playing with no offensive talent, e.g., 2006 DET, 2007 SAS, 2008 BOS. Then you had 2015 injuries vs. GSW, etc.

LeBron
Image
Magic
Image

I haven’t calculated the rTS of Magic in these series (I’m sure it’s really good) but again, much lower volume than what LeBron was at.
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.

lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#29 » by Top10alltime » Sat Sep 27, 2025 4:47 pm

homecourtloss wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:.


Djoker wrote:On my latest list of top 10 offensive players ever, I had Magic #3 and Lebron #4 in the same tier.

I went with Magic by a hair because I think his teams have proven to be a bit more resilient against top teams (5+ SRS cutoffs and higher) compared to Lebron's teams


Hard disagree. First of all, 5+ SRS cutoff doesn’t compare apples to apples because one player’s 5+ SRS opponents are simply much better and especially doesn’t make sense when talking about offense When these opponents have much better defenses. This doesn’t even touch in how GSW wasn’t anything close to a -.9 rDRtg in the playoffs, the “real” version of them.

LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 8.2
LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average rDRtg: -4.6

In these series: +6.5 rORtg, +3.8 rTS
+6.7 rORtg vs. 7+ SRS +2.7 rTS

That’s holding up better than “well" even with the skew in context with one player playing with no offensive talent and many series versus another player who played with Kareem who was highly effective through 1987.

Magic’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 6.8
Magics’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 2.6

LeBron’s rORtg vs. -5 rDRtg defenses (Magic never faced one): +9.5
LeBron’s rTS vs. -5 rDRtg defenses: +5.8
To put this in perspective, someone like Jokic’s career rORtg is +4.9 in the playoffs and his rTS is +4.7.

Image
Image

If you look at the defenses faced, one player played incredibly good defenses and held up well against them (+7.5 rORTg, +5.8 rTS, even more impressive reFG%,etc.) even when considering the skew in contexts, i.e., Magic played with Kareem while James in most of his worst series was young playing with no offensive talent, e.g., 2006 DET, 2007 SAS, 2008 BOS. Then you had 2015 injuries vs. GSW, etc.

LeBron
Image
Magic
Image

I haven’t calculated the rTS of Magic in these series (I’m sure it’s really good) but again, much lower volume than what LeBron was at.


Excuse me, respectfully, what did you mention me for? Thanks, and Christ bless.
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#30 » by Djoker » Sat Sep 27, 2025 4:49 pm

homecourtloss wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:.


Djoker wrote:On my latest list of top 10 offensive players ever, I had Magic #3 and Lebron #4 in the same tier.

I went with Magic by a hair because I think his teams have proven to be a bit more resilient against top teams (5+ SRS cutoffs and higher) compared to Lebron's teams


Hard disagree. First of all, 5+ SRS cutoff doesn’t compare apples to apples because one player’s 5+ SRS opponents are simply much better and especially doesn’t make sense when talking about offense When these opponents have much better defenses. This doesn’t even touch in how GSW wasn’t anything close to a -.9 rDRtg in the playoffs, the “real” version of them.

LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 8.2
LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average rDRtg: -4.6

In these series: +6.5 rORtg, +3.8 rTS
+6.7 rORtg vs. 7+ SRS +2.7 rTS

That’s holding up better than “well" even with the skew in context with one player playing with no offensive talent and many series versus another player who played with Kareem who was highly effective through 1987.

Magic’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 6.8
Magics’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 2.6

LeBron’s rORtg vs. -5 rDRtg defenses (Magic never faced one): +9.5
LeBron’s rTS vs. -5 rDRtg defenses: +5.8
To put this in perspective, someone like Jokic’s career rORtg is +4.9 in the playoffs and his rTS is +4.7.

Image
Image

If you look at the defenses faced, one player played incredibly good defenses and held up well against them (+7.5 rORTg, +5.8 rTS, even more impressive reFG%,etc.) even when considering the skew in contexts, i.e., Magic played with Kareem while James in most of his worst series was young playing with no offensive talent, e.g., 2006 DET, 2007 SAS, 2008 BOS. Then you had 2015 injuries vs. GSW, etc.

LeBron
Image
Magic
Image

I haven’t calculated the rTS of Magic in these series (I’m sure it’s really good) but again, much lower volume than what LeBron was at.


I haven't tracked all of Magic's series yet so we simply don't have all the on-court numbers to compare.

But Magic does win in terms of team performance. And more importantly, his consistency is much better. We know Lebron has 13 series in which he has a negative rORtg when ON court. Magic has at most 3 of them (1981 HOU, 1983 PHI, possibly 1986 HOU). And when we look at playoff performances, it's the frequency of low end performances that can be more important than the averages. A +20 rORtg showing as opposed to a +10 rORtg has little meaning but a +2 rORtg instead of a -1 rORtg can often make the difference between winning and losing a series.

And if we look at 5+ SRS opponents, Magic comes out on top. 2 negative rORtg in 11 series for Magic vs. 7 negative rORtg in 16 series for Lebron. And in terms of on court rORtg, Lebron is still negative in all 6 of those (exception: +0.3 vs. 2015 Warriors) and Magic is still negative in 1 of them (exception: +3.0 vs. 1991 Bulls). While I haven't tracked all the series for Magic, he's extremely unlikely to be an on-court negative in any of the others considering his team overall is +3.6 or better.

Again, consistency is even more important than averages because underperforming offenses often lead to series losses. Magic had fewer underperformances and it's a contributing factor to why Lebron is 5-11 in series against 5+ SRS opponents while Magic is 6-5.

Lebron James - Team rORtg Against 5+ SRS Teams:

2006 Pistons 6.24 SRS: -4.6
2007 Spurs 8.35 SRS: -3.2
2008 Celtics 9.30 SRS: +2.2
2009 Magic 6.48 SRS: +7.9
2011 Bulls 6.53 SRS: +1.9
2012 Thunder 6.44 SRS: +10.5
2013 Spurs 6.67 SRS: +6.0
2014 Spurs 8.00 SRS: +1.3
2015 Warriors 10.01 SRS: -3.2
2016 Warriors 10.38 SRS: +4.7
2017 Warriors 11.35 SRS: +10.4
2018 Raptors 7.29 SRS: +20.5
2018 Warriors 5.79 SRS: -0.2
2021 Suns 5.67 SRS: -7.2
2024 Nuggets 5.23 SRS: -1.3
2025 Timberwolves 5.15 SRS: -1.6

Average vs. 5+ SRS Teams (16 Series): +2.8

Magic Johnson - Team rORtg against 5+ SRS Teams:

1982 Sixers 5.72 SRS: +4.6
1983 Sixers 7.53 SRS: -1.2
1984 Celtics 6.42 SRS: +7.6
1985 Celtics 6.47 SRS: +6.0
1987 Celtics 6.57 SRS: +11.6
1988 Pistons 5.46 SRS: +3.6
1989 Suns 6.84 SRS: +7.9
1989 Pistons 6.24 SRS: +6.4
1990 Suns 7.09 SRS: +5.7
1991 Blazers 8.47 SRS: +7.6
1991 Bulls 8.57 SRS: -0.7

Average vs. 5+ SRS Teams (11 Series): +5.4
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#31 » by homecourtloss » Sat Sep 27, 2025 4:58 pm

Djoker wrote:
homecourtloss wrote:
Top10alltime wrote:.


Djoker wrote:On my latest list of top 10 offensive players ever, I had Magic #3 and Lebron #4 in the same tier.

I went with Magic by a hair because I think his teams have proven to be a bit more resilient against top teams (5+ SRS cutoffs and higher) compared to Lebron's teams


Hard disagree. First of all, 5+ SRS cutoff doesn’t compare apples to apples because one player’s 5+ SRS opponents are simply much better and especially doesn’t make sense when talking about offense When these opponents have much better defenses. This doesn’t even touch in how GSW wasn’t anything close to a -.9 rDRtg in the playoffs, the “real” version of them.

LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 8.2
LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average rDRtg: -4.6

In these series: +6.5 rORtg, +3.8 rTS
+6.7 rORtg vs. 7+ SRS +2.7 rTS

That’s holding up better than “well" even with the skew in context with one player playing with no offensive talent and many series versus another player who played with Kareem who was highly effective through 1987.

Magic’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 6.8
Magics’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 2.6

LeBron’s rORtg vs. -5 rDRtg defenses (Magic never faced one): +9.5
LeBron’s rTS vs. -5 rDRtg defenses: +5.8
To put this in perspective, someone like Jokic’s career rORtg is +4.9 in the playoffs and his rTS is +4.7.

Image
Image

If you look at the defenses faced, one player played incredibly good defenses and held up well against them (+7.5 rORTg, +5.8 rTS, even more impressive reFG%,etc.) even when considering the skew in contexts, i.e., Magic played with Kareem while James in most of his worst series was young playing with no offensive talent, e.g., 2006 DET, 2007 SAS, 2008 BOS. Then you had 2015 injuries vs. GSW, etc.

LeBron
Image
Magic
Image

I haven’t calculated the rTS of Magic in these series (I’m sure it’s really good) but again, much lower volume than what LeBron was at.


I haven't tracked all of Magic's series yet so we simply don't have all the on-court numbers to compare.

But Magic does win in terms of team performance. And more importantly, his consistency is much better. We know Lebron has 13 series in which he has a negative rORtg when ON court. Magic has at most 3 of them (1981 HOU, 1983 PHI, possibly 1986 HOU). And when we look at playoff performances, it's the frequency of low end performances that can be more important than the averages. A +20 rORtg showing as opposed to a +10 rORtg has little meaning but a +2 rORtg instead of a -1 rORtg can often make the difference between winning and losing a series.

And if we look at 5+ SRS opponents, Magic comes out on top. 2 negative rORtg in 11 series for Magic vs. 7 negative rORtg in 16 series for Lebron. And in terms of on court rORtg, Lebron is still negative in all 6 of those (exception: +0.3 vs. 2015 Warriors) and Magic is still negative in 1 of them (exception: +3.0 vs. 1991 Bulls). While I haven't tracked all the series for Magic, he's extremely unlikely to be an on-court negative in any of the others considering his team overall is +3.6 or better.

Again, consistency is even more important than averages because underperforming offenses often lead to series losses. Magic had fewer underperformances and it's a contributing factor to why Lebron is 5-11 in series against 5+ SRS opponents while Magic is 6-5.

Lebron James - Team rORtg Against 5+ SRS Teams:

2006 Pistons 6.24 SRS: -4.6
2007 Spurs 8.35 SRS: -3.2
2008 Celtics 9.30 SRS: +2.2
2009 Magic 6.48 SRS: +7.9
2011 Bulls 6.53 SRS: +1.9
2012 Thunder 6.44 SRS: +10.5
2013 Spurs 6.67 SRS: +6.0
2014 Spurs 8.00 SRS: +1.3
2015 Warriors 10.01 SRS: -3.2
2016 Warriors 10.38 SRS: +4.7
2017 Warriors 11.35 SRS: +10.4
2018 Raptors 7.29 SRS: +20.5
2018 Warriors 5.79 SRS: -0.2
2021 Suns 5.67 SRS: -7.2
2024 Nuggets 5.23 SRS: -1.3
2025 Timberwolves 5.15 SRS: -1.6

Average vs. 5+ SRS Teams (16 Series): +2.8

Magic Johnson - Team rORtg against 5+ SRS Teams:

1982 Sixers 5.72 SRS: +4.6
1983 Sixers 7.53 SRS: -1.2
1984 Celtics 6.42 SRS: +7.6
1985 Celtics 6.47 SRS: +6.0
1987 Celtics 6.57 SRS: +11.6
1988 Pistons 5.46 SRS: +3.6
1989 Suns 6.84 SRS: +7.9
1989 Pistons 6.24 SRS: +6.4
1990 Suns 7.09 SRS: +5.7
1991 Blazers 8.47 SRS: +7.6
1991 Bulls 8.57 SRS: -0.7

Average vs. 5+ SRS Teams (11 Series): +5.4



i'm pretty sure you know why these two lists are not very comparable given context (one has Kareem the other...), given age (you have multiple series when LeBron was very young, and when he was very old with his teams, being very young, having zero offensive talent ), given teammates, given injuries,given the defenses of these teams (do you have an address at all of that the teams that are +5 SRS that LeBron plays against had much much better defenses), given full series played.

LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 8.2
LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average rDRtg: -4.6

In these series: +6.5 rORtg, +3.8 rTS
+6.7 rORtg vs. 7+ SRS +2.7 rTS

Magic’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 6.8
Magics’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 2.6

LeBron’s rORtg vs. -5 rDRtg defenses (Magic never faced one): +9.5
LeBron’s rTS vs. -5 rDRtg defenses: +5.8
To put this in perspective, someone like Jokic’s career rORtg is +4.9 in the playoffs and his rTS is +4.7.
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.

lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#32 » by lessthanjake » Sat Sep 27, 2025 5:17 pm

Djoker wrote:
I haven't tracked all of Magic's series yet so we simply don't have all the on-court numbers to compare.

But Magic does win in terms of team performance. And more importantly, his consistency is much better. We know Lebron has 13 series in which he has a negative rORtg when ON court. Magic has at most 3 of them (1981 HOU, 1983 PHI, possibly 1986 HOU). And when we look at playoff performances, it's the frequency of low end performances that can be more important than the averages. A +20 rORtg showing as opposed to a +10 rORtg has little meaning but a +2 rORtg instead of a -1 rORtg can often make the difference between winning and losing a series.

And if we look at 5+ SRS opponents, Magic comes out on top. 2 negative rORtg in 11 series for Magic vs. 7 negative rORtg in 16 series for Lebron. And in terms of on court rORtg, Lebron is still negative in all 6 of those (exception: +0.3 vs. 2015 Warriors) and Magic is still negative in 1 of them (exception: +3.0 vs. 1991 Bulls). While I haven't tracked all the series for Magic, he's extremely unlikely to be an on-court negative in any of the others considering his team overall is +3.6 or better.

Again, consistency is even more important than averages because underperforming offenses often lead to series losses. Magic had fewer underperformances and it's a contributing factor to why Lebron is 5-11 in series against 5+ SRS opponents while Magic is 6-5.

Lebron James - Team rORtg Against 5+ SRS Teams:

2006 Pistons 6.24 SRS: -4.6
2007 Spurs 8.35 SRS: -3.2
2008 Celtics 9.30 SRS: +2.2
2009 Magic 6.48 SRS: +7.9
2011 Bulls 6.53 SRS: +1.9
2012 Thunder 6.44 SRS: +10.5
2013 Spurs 6.67 SRS: +6.0
2014 Spurs 8.00 SRS: +1.3
2015 Warriors 10.01 SRS: -3.2
2016 Warriors 10.38 SRS: +4.7
2017 Warriors 11.35 SRS: +10.4
2018 Raptors 7.29 SRS: +20.5
2018 Warriors 5.79 SRS: -0.2
2021 Suns 5.67 SRS: -7.2
2024 Nuggets 5.23 SRS: -1.3
2025 Timberwolves 5.15 SRS: -1.6

Average vs. 5+ SRS Teams (16 Series): +2.8

Magic Johnson - Team rORtg against 5+ SRS Teams:

1982 Sixers 5.72 SRS: +4.6
1983 Sixers 7.53 SRS: -1.2
1984 Celtics 6.42 SRS: +7.6
1985 Celtics 6.47 SRS: +6.0
1987 Celtics 6.57 SRS: +11.6
1988 Pistons 5.46 SRS: +3.6
1989 Suns 6.84 SRS: +7.9
1989 Pistons 6.24 SRS: +6.4
1990 Suns 7.09 SRS: +5.7
1991 Blazers 8.47 SRS: +7.6
1991 Bulls 8.57 SRS: -0.7

Average vs. 5+ SRS Teams (11 Series): +5.4


This is good info and I think you’re absolutely right that consistency is most important.

I think the response you’ll get to this will involve at least the following:

1. The negative values for LeBron are clustered early and late in his career. I do have some sympathy for the idea that it’s a bit unfair to him to put much weight on what happened in years where he was really old (particularly 2024 and 2025, but arguably 2021 as well). I will say that I have less sympathy for the oft-stated position that we shouldn’t care about what happened in the playoffs for LeBron prior to 2009, because I strongly think his prime started before that (not to mention that, as applied here, we are looking at data for Magic when he was even younger). That said, I think someone could look at this data and find their way to excluding essentially all the negative data points, by saying that in the heart of his prime there’s only two negative numbers, and one was with an injury-ravaged team and the other was just with a relatively weak team against an opponent that had coasted in the regular season (which puts downwards pressure on rORTG against them). I’m sure that’s how homecourtloss would interpret it. To me, the truth is probably somewhere in the middle.

2. I’m also sure that homecourtloss would say that the 5+ SRS teams that LeBron and Magic played aren’t alike—with the idea being that LeBron’s 5+ SRS teams were better. I think it’s a bit of a dubious premise, because you’ve got a lot of really strong teams in that list against Magic (Bird’s Celtics, Jordan’s Bulls, the Bad Boys Pistons, 1983 Sixers, etc.). But if we accept the premise for argument’s purposes, I’m not entirely sure how important a point it is, because the numbers we are talking about are relative numbers—i.e. they’re already accounting for how good the opposing teams were in the regular season. I do subscribe to the view that relative ratings often overstate how good a playoff performance was against a mediocre team, because I think mediocre teams just don’t always get opposing teams’ best effort in the regular season so their regular season numbers overstate how good they are come playoff time with everyone actually giving full effort. In theory, that same kind of logic might apply at the higher end—where we might think that something like a 6 SRS team doesn’t get the same opponent effort in the regular season as an 8 SRS team, or something like that. But it doesn’t feel nearly as intuitive to me, and I just have a hard time buying a point that would require me to basically think teams like the 1980s Celtics, Sixers, and Pistons were having their regular season SRS juiced by opponents not taking them all that seriously in the regular season.

EDIT: HLC posted while I was typing this up, so the fact that these points would be the response is of course not speculation.
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: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#33 » by Djoker » Sat Sep 27, 2025 5:18 pm

homecourtloss wrote:
Djoker wrote:
homecourtloss wrote:


Hard disagree. First of all, 5+ SRS cutoff doesn’t compare apples to apples because one player’s 5+ SRS opponents are simply much better and especially doesn’t make sense when talking about offense When these opponents have much better defenses. This doesn’t even touch in how GSW wasn’t anything close to a -.9 rDRtg in the playoffs, the “real” version of them.

LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 8.2
LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average rDRtg: -4.6

In these series: +6.5 rORtg, +3.8 rTS
+6.7 rORtg vs. 7+ SRS +2.7 rTS

That’s holding up better than “well" even with the skew in context with one player playing with no offensive talent and many series versus another player who played with Kareem who was highly effective through 1987.

Magic’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 6.8
Magics’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 2.6

LeBron’s rORtg vs. -5 rDRtg defenses (Magic never faced one): +9.5
LeBron’s rTS vs. -5 rDRtg defenses: +5.8
To put this in perspective, someone like Jokic’s career rORtg is +4.9 in the playoffs and his rTS is +4.7.

Image
Image

If you look at the defenses faced, one player played incredibly good defenses and held up well against them (+7.5 rORTg, +5.8 rTS, even more impressive reFG%,etc.) even when considering the skew in contexts, i.e., Magic played with Kareem while James in most of his worst series was young playing with no offensive talent, e.g., 2006 DET, 2007 SAS, 2008 BOS. Then you had 2015 injuries vs. GSW, etc.

LeBron
Image
Magic
Image

I haven’t calculated the rTS of Magic in these series (I’m sure it’s really good) but again, much lower volume than what LeBron was at.


I haven't tracked all of Magic's series yet so we simply don't have all the on-court numbers to compare.

But Magic does win in terms of team performance. And more importantly, his consistency is much better. We know Lebron has 13 series in which he has a negative rORtg when ON court. Magic has at most 3 of them (1981 HOU, 1983 PHI, possibly 1986 HOU). And when we look at playoff performances, it's the frequency of low end performances that can be more important than the averages. A +20 rORtg showing as opposed to a +10 rORtg has little meaning but a +2 rORtg instead of a -1 rORtg can often make the difference between winning and losing a series.

And if we look at 5+ SRS opponents, Magic comes out on top. 2 negative rORtg in 11 series for Magic vs. 7 negative rORtg in 16 series for Lebron. And in terms of on court rORtg, Lebron is still negative in all 6 of those (exception: +0.3 vs. 2015 Warriors) and Magic is still negative in 1 of them (exception: +3.0 vs. 1991 Bulls). While I haven't tracked all the series for Magic, he's extremely unlikely to be an on-court negative in any of the others considering his team overall is +3.6 or better.

Again, consistency is even more important than averages because underperforming offenses often lead to series losses. Magic had fewer underperformances and it's a contributing factor to why Lebron is 5-11 in series against 5+ SRS opponents while Magic is 6-5.

Lebron James - Team rORtg Against 5+ SRS Teams:

2006 Pistons 6.24 SRS: -4.6
2007 Spurs 8.35 SRS: -3.2
2008 Celtics 9.30 SRS: +2.2
2009 Magic 6.48 SRS: +7.9
2011 Bulls 6.53 SRS: +1.9
2012 Thunder 6.44 SRS: +10.5
2013 Spurs 6.67 SRS: +6.0
2014 Spurs 8.00 SRS: +1.3
2015 Warriors 10.01 SRS: -3.2
2016 Warriors 10.38 SRS: +4.7
2017 Warriors 11.35 SRS: +10.4
2018 Raptors 7.29 SRS: +20.5
2018 Warriors 5.79 SRS: -0.2
2021 Suns 5.67 SRS: -7.2
2024 Nuggets 5.23 SRS: -1.3
2025 Timberwolves 5.15 SRS: -1.6

Average vs. 5+ SRS Teams (16 Series): +2.8

Magic Johnson - Team rORtg against 5+ SRS Teams:

1982 Sixers 5.72 SRS: +4.6
1983 Sixers 7.53 SRS: -1.2
1984 Celtics 6.42 SRS: +7.6
1985 Celtics 6.47 SRS: +6.0
1987 Celtics 6.57 SRS: +11.6
1988 Pistons 5.46 SRS: +3.6
1989 Suns 6.84 SRS: +7.9
1989 Pistons 6.24 SRS: +6.4
1990 Suns 7.09 SRS: +5.7
1991 Blazers 8.47 SRS: +7.6
1991 Bulls 8.57 SRS: -0.7

Average vs. 5+ SRS Teams (11 Series): +5.4



i'm pretty sure you know why these two lists are not very comparable given context (one has Kareem the other...), given age (you have multiple series when LeBron was very young, and when he was very old with his teams, being very young, having zero offensive talent ), given teammates, given injuries,given the defenses of these teams (do you have an address at all of that the teams that are +5 SRS that LeBron plays against had much much better defenses), given full series played.

LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 8.2
LeBron’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average rDRtg: -4.6

In these series: +6.5 rORtg, +3.8 rTS
+6.7 rORtg vs. 7+ SRS +2.7 rTS

Magic’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 6.8
Magics’s 5+ SRS opponents’ weighted average SRS: 2.6

LeBron’s rORtg vs. -5 rDRtg defenses (Magic never faced one): +9.5
LeBron’s rTS vs. -5 rDRtg defenses: +5.8
To put this in perspective, someone like Jokic’s career rORtg is +4.9 in the playoffs and his rTS is +4.7.


There is also plenty of context that helps Magic. He's also very young from 1981-1983 when both of his confirmed negative rORtg's happened, about as young as Lebron from 2006-2008. And while Magic had Kareem and that's fair to bring up, Kareem started declining rather severely by 1987 and was pretty much a non-factor from 1988 onwards and yet the Showtime offense kept on putting up historic numbers. Injuries also bit Magic at times. In the 1983 playoffs, Worthy was DNP with injuries and Nixon and McAdoo were hurt in the Finals.

Lebron also benefited especially in the latter half of his career from spacing. It's not a coincidence that Lebron's best offenses came in 2016 and 2017. Those relative numbers were buoyed by some incredible 3pt shooting luck too.

Yes Lebron did face more great teams though I'd be careful claiming that the Warriors were way better than teams like the 1983 Sixers, 1980's Celtics and 1991 Bulls. And besides my argument isn't that Magic's offenses are more resilient because of the higher averages against 5+ SRS teams. My argument is that Magic's offenses are more resilient because of fewer low-end performances i.e. negative rORtg series that lead to series losses.
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#34 » by kcktiny » Sat Sep 27, 2025 7:33 pm

No thanks, I'd rather argue with posters who argue in good faith


If you are going to post a topic but then get unraveled when someone comes to the opposite conclusion you do then don't post topics. Just because someone doesn't agree with you does not mean they are not arguing in good faith.

than a person who has 0 arguments in good faith


If it upsets you that someone does not agree with you then don't post topics requiring peoples' opinions.

Did you or did you not post this:

this is just a quick analysis of why Lebron > Magic offensively, in my opinion. What do you think? Who do you think is a better offensive player? Please give good reasoning to your answer


Again, if it upsets you that some disagree with you, don't post topics.

and uses total stats and team offensive strength without adjusting it to per game


If you only wanted to allow a certain type of statistic in a rebuttal, you should have stated so.

and no context on team strength offensively


I posted "From 1979-80 to 1990-91 (12 seasons) the Lakers were the top offensive team in the league at 110.5 pts/100poss scored. No one else was even close".

What other context does that need? Over a dozen seasons the Lakers were the best team offensively. What are you missing?

Why does that bother you? If you think Lebron's teams were better offensively then state so and show whatever statistics you want.

Or is it just the fact that in your mind someone showed you that you were wrong that bothers you?
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#35 » by f4p » Sat Sep 27, 2025 7:55 pm

DraymondGold wrote:I might lean Magic as well, but definitely see the argument for both, and it’s quite close. From an adding-up-skills perspective, I think things might favor LeBron. But basketball’s more complex than “oh the playmaking’s a wash or slightly favors X, while the scoring gap’s hugely in favor of Y, so it has to be Y”. .


I might take LeBron in this argument but I do agree we sometimes get into an "adding up skills" thing with LeBron where it feels like he should be a +20 player and the results obviously don't suggest such a thing (even if he might be the GOAT). The Lakers offenses were so amazing, even post Kareem, that the answer is probably magic on offense only.
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#36 » by DraymondGold » Sat Sep 27, 2025 8:19 pm

The Master wrote:
DraymondGold wrote:But just to clarify, when I say Magic's skills are more synergistic, I mean both that they're more synergistic with teammates and more synergistic with each other.
-For the former, yes that does depend on the exact teammates, but it's also possible to do a skillset based analysis. There are trends in how different skills mesh with different types of teammates. This kind of skillset / chemistry analysis is really noisy, and people can disagree pretty heavily on this sort of stuff, so it's far from perfect, but it is part of the picture. It's absolutely true that Magic had substantially more offensive talent than 1st Cavs LeBron. I'm not too interested in getting into a scalability/LeBron discussion here (it's been overdone in the past), but suffice it to say, I think someone like Magic who monopolizes playmaking (with the greatest playmaking ever and some of the greatest offensive IQ ever) but shares scoring load (with better era relative spacing) fits a little better next to high-quality scorers and finishers (like Kareem, Worthy, Wade, Kyrie, Love, AD) than a guy like (younger?) Lebron who wants to monopolize both the playmaking (with all-time playmaking and offensive IQ, but not quite as good as Magic's) and monopolize more of the scoring too (with less spacing). So I like the synergy of Magic's skills with his teammates, based on the teammates yes, but also based on the skills and play styles themselves.

Now this comparison might be less fair when we get to older LeBron. As I insinuated in my first post, I'm open to discussions that as he got older the gap shrunk or even flipped in favor of LeBron. Late Miami LeBron and 2nd Cavs LeBron had improved passing, IQ, command of pace, and yes spacing/shooting/scoring counters, which I think helped these scalability issues. But unlike Magic, these evolutions came at a time when LeBron was older and the he had to (chose to?) coast in the regular season.

First of all, thank you for your feedback.
Cheers! :)
Re: Magic

1. Is it really the case that playmaking monopolization + 1A/1B scoring volume guarantees better synergy? Or maybe - Magic played in an era where he could monopolize the offense in the best way fitting his skillset (dominant playmaker, non-dominant scorer) in fast paced offense, but that wouldn't be necessarily the case in the early 2010s era where talent pool was pretty much centered on perimeter and he would've been in position to actually share playmaking duties in several scenarios. Not saying that he wouldn't fit in, but let's say it was less probable to find Kyries and Wades in 1987. And again, I'm not disputing the overall premise (Magic potentially on par with LeBron offensively), but some arguments here mentioned I find as very much context-dependent (mainly, 'Magic generated better offenses' and 'he had better synergy as an anchor offensively'), and it's hard to compare two players from completely different eras without unpacking this context.
Yeah, there definitely could be changes in era rules and styles at play. The offensive and defensive styles differ pretty drastically across the two eras. People differ with how they treat the time machine thought experiment, but if you do consider it and not just an era-relative approach, that could definitely change things. I do still like Magic’s chemistry with Worthy, which does give some sense for how Magic would fit with a scoring perimeter/Wing, though obviously Worthy’s a different player from Wade or Kyrie. Philosophically, I tend to lean against your-turn my-turn styles of offense in favor of offenses where both players help each other, and it did feels like the offenses with LeBron/Wade/Kyrie turned to that a little more than Magic/Worthy (although there were plenty of wrinkles and ways LeBron/Wade/Kyrie also helped each other). As you said, specific contexts and eras may play a role here. For example, illegal defense rules or worse league average spacing may have helped alleviate spacing issues for pairing Magic with a scoring-centric wing in an era-relative sense, in ways LeBron didn’t benefit from when paired with Wade. I usually focus on era relative, though others may differ.
Re: LeBron

2. Did he really monopolize the ball that much, or just modern basketball demands from 'mutual synergy' perspective both great on- and off-ball skills, both in terms of playmaking and shooting, and this is something Wade (shooting) and Bosh (playmaking) really couldn't provide. The result was that even the very bright mind of Spoelstra couldn't come out with anything better than the Heatless era and their offense. Lakers 2020 had really flawed spacing - and yet they had +5 offense in the playoffs that year with below average shooting, and Cavs 16-17 had +9 offenses in the playoffs as well. Why? The difference is both AD and Kyrie were both great as off-ball scorers for their respective positions. Even with Mo Williams and Delonte West - they shared playmaking/ballhandling duties and there was, with limited talent of both, synergy just based on their shooting capabilities. So did really LeBron monopolize the offense that much considering that he was certainly capable of being +10 APG type of player, and yet the first time he reached that mark was for the Lakers who played typical ballhandler-big man type of offense in the twilight of his prime years? I doubt it.

Also, obviously LeBron in the latter part of his career was indeed a smarter and more versatile player, but I don't think this is really an explanation of why (offensively) the results of Heat and 1st LeBron tenure's Cavs offenses were sub-optimal (or not elite besides 12/13 season, let's say).


A lot I agree with here. Modern offenses definitely put demands on a player's on and off-ball versatility, and the Heat were at the point where they were ahead of their time to some extent by 2012 (e.g. going small ball with Bosh at the 5 and LeBron at the 4), but still struggling with slightly outdated fit and a lack of shooting depth early on. By the time we get to Kyrie and AD, I agree we get better offensive results in part because of the costar’s better off-ball activity (AD in particular), shooting/spacing (Kyrie in particular, and playoff AD era-relative), and improvements from LeBron in both areas

Re: did LeBron really monopolize the offenses,
I think he did, yes. I don’t think assists per game are quite the right measure. Do they suggest LeBron wasn’t selfish offensively? Sure, and I definitely wouldn’t say he was. But in terms of how much the offense ran through LeBron and relied on him to carry the scoring and playmaking, I would say it was historically high. We expect stars to have massive loads. But LeBron had 6 seasons in the 100th percentile in offensive load, and 16 seasons in the 99+ percentile. Magic had three in the 99th percentile. 1988 is in the 95th percentile, and 1985-86 are even lower.

Some of this is from era differences. The hyper-heliocentric style where we concentrate such a high scoring and playmaking load in one player only developed in recent times, driven by rule and style changes. The easier handling rules allows for (and encourages) a higher dribbling load of your best ball handler. The spacing is a necessity for a drive and kick style, and conversely the drive and kick style requires modern spacing. It’s possible Magic in a later era would play more heliocentric. And as you’ve said, these heliocentric offenses at their best (which I would argue was under LeBron) were quite effective in recent years. So don’t get me wrong - this is primarily nitpicking among the very best guys ever playing on some of the best offenses ever. But if we’re nitpicking, yeah, I do think LeBron monopolized the offense more than Magic, and that led to times of great fit (eg AD) but also times of slightly worse offensive fit (eg Wade).

Re: offensive fit with Wade (defense aside — the defenses were great) and improved team offenses as LeBron got older...
I agree that some of the fit issues offensively came from a lack of off-ball activity, and lack of shooting from LeBron's teammates, particularly early on. One might put some of the blame on Wade (and I do to some extent). But I think the nitpicking could go both ways. LeBron struggled in these synergistic areas -- e.g. shooting and off-ball activity -- early on. He got better in these areas to try to improve his synergy, as has been well documented, and as he’s discussed himself. So from a skillset point perspective, these issues become less of an issue by the time we get to 2013. But by the time we get to the historic offenses in the 2nd Cavs stint and full improvements in these synergistic skills, we get to the coasting era. So I think Magic developed his synergistic skills when he was a bit younger than LBJ. Maybe 2013 LeBron with the 2nd Cavs roster could have maintained the historic team offenses throughout the regular season? Hard to project with confidence, but could be.

I definitely agree the 2016-2017 playoff offenses were historic, and the 2020 Lakers' playoff offenses were impressively good despite sub-optimal shooting at a few positions (although I think form a spacing perspective, having such a great shooter in AD at the big position helped make up for a lot). But again, one concern with the 2nd Cavs offenses is that they are only historic in the playoffs. Of course we could attribute all the playoff rise to LeBron not coasting, and if so that of course makes him look better. But if some of that is attributed to shooting luck (and there have been studies suggesting those playoff teams did benefit from shooting luck), that takes off a little shine from the ceiling raising team performance of LeBron.... again this is nitpicking only in comparison to another offensive GOAT candidate like Magic. As above, it's possible a younger LeBron ~2013 had the ability to maintain such historic offenses over more of the season, and if you think so, the argument for LBJ sensibly gets stronger.

3. Re: coasting in the regular season - yeah, obviously it was related to him conserving energy for the playoffs, what was more than understandable considering his career volume in the playoffs already at that time. But my point rather was:

a) 2015-18 regular seasons were still MVP candidate worthy, and LeBron was 30-33 at that time, so I don't think this is an argument in favor of Magic of all people for well known reasons that he did it,
b) coasting LeBron in optimal offensive conditions was able to generate +4/+5 rORTG offenses in the regular season (and +9 rORTG offenses in the playoffs with his 'regular' self) - so I don't think that it is fair reaching assumption that peak LeBron would've been capable of generating much better offenses than he did in this 08-14 era, considering that he was at +8.7 OBPM if you exclude 2011 season, if he was at that time playing under 'optimal' offensive circumstances.

The point that I can agree with - but again, I think this is pretty much related to the growth of the game on both sides of the floor rather than Magic being 'inherently' better synergy-wise - is that LeBron in 2010s was probably more demanding in terms of specific fit than Magic was in the 80s. But isn't related to the fact that talent pool, defenses and the way offense is played - are all much better, and Magic would've also demanded a specific roster construction, especially if he had spent majority of his prime in lower pace era like LeBron did, in the 00s or 10s? I believe so.

But again - these are my 2 cents to this discussion without disputing the overall assumption that this comparison is indeed really close. I'd probably prefer prime LeBron, as he was really an underrated off-ball scorer in this 12-18 era, but like I said several times, I'm not disputing the basic assumption of them being on the same tier offensively.

I think I addressed my perspective on some of points a-b and the time-machine discussion above. But just to reiterate...

2015-18 were definitely MVP worth, and LeBron was quite impressive, despite some coasting! And indeed the offenses were pretty solid, despite the coasting. To my eye, the coasting was more on the defensive end than the offensive end (although it got to be on both ends by 2018). And the historic playoff performances again depend on how 'real' you consider them relative to matchup-specific benefits or shooting luck. If they're real, of course LBJ looks better. If they're slightly luck boosted in the playoffs, or rely on a combination of his coasting in the regular season to have the motor and some of the skill developments that he genuinely did improve on since peak Miami, then that takes some shine off. If one thinks the Cavs playoff offenses were more real and less-luck boosted, or that LeBron had developed the synergistic skills by mid-Miami when he still had regular season effort, that of course raises him back up.

No strong disagreements on my end from the points you raised. Moreso just stating my uncertainty and the way I slightly lean. I think your take is totally reasonable though!
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#37 » by lessthanjake » Sat Sep 27, 2025 8:48 pm

f4p wrote:
DraymondGold wrote:I might lean Magic as well, but definitely see the argument for both, and it’s quite close. From an adding-up-skills perspective, I think things might favor LeBron. But basketball’s more complex than “oh the playmaking’s a wash or slightly favors X, while the scoring gap’s hugely in favor of Y, so it has to be Y”. .


I might take LeBron in this argument but I do agree we sometimes get into an "adding up skills" thing with LeBron where it feels like he should be a +20 player and the results obviously don't suggest such a thing (even if he might be the GOAT). The Lakers offenses were so amazing, even post Kareem, that the answer is probably magic on offense only.


Yeah, I’m generally not a huge fan of the “adding up skills” approach to anyone. It usually involves people (1) acting like two players are roughly the same in a skill that they’re not actually roughly the same in; (2) acting like different skills are equally important when they actually aren’t; (3) acting like skills are utilized with equal frequency when they aren’t; and (4) ignoring that sometimes a weakness can take way more importance than an “adding up skills” approach would suggest because it gives the opposing defense a way to mitigate everything else. There’s probably other problems too—those are just off the top of my head.

I think a key thing with LeBron’s offense is that people doing the “adding up skills” thing kind of act like he can do his drive-and-kick stuff all the time. In reality, that is extremely tiring (particularly for someone as big as LeBron, but it’s also just true for virtually anyone). It’s not possible to do it all the time. Which means that a player who drives to the hoop a lot and has a big offensive load must often settle for jump shots to preserve their energy. And LeBron’s jump shot wasn’t very good. It was streaky, so it actually could be really good on occasion. And when it was, I don’t think there really was any counter to him at all. This is what happened in the 2009 playoffs, for instance. But in general the jump shot wasn’t very good, so you weren’t getting very good offense on the inevitable occasions when he needed to settle for a jump shot. The adding-up-skills approach kind of glosses over this and acts like he was always doing the super effective things he could do while driving. If he could do that every time down court, he would’ve been a way better offensive player than he was (like, probably easily the best offensive player ever). The adding-up-skills approach keys in on that, which I think is a big part of why that approach makes it “feel[] like he should be a +20 player and the results obviously don't suggest such a thing.” As your comment suggests, reality is different than that though.

As it relates to Magic, one of the things that moves me here is that intuitively I just feel like Magic could get to his consistently-defense-breaking stuff more frequently than LeBron. He could just dribble the ball up the court and go straight into backing his man down into the post and draw a double team whenever he wanted (and then from there obviously he was a GOAT-level passer, so this was super effective). It’s actually fairly unique IMO. Post play doesn’t require the immense bursts of energy that driving to the hoop does, so you can do it more consistently. However, for pretty much any other post player, they still can’t break the defense at will in the post, because they actually need to be fed the ball, and defenses have a lot of options to make that difficult. So those guys often have to settle for touches from worse positions, which ends up being functionally very similar to a drive-and-kick guy settling for an outside jumper to preserve energy. In both cases, you just can’t get to the super-effective thing every time—just for different reasons. With Magic, the combination of GOAT-level ball protection and being such a natural mismatch for defenders upends these limitations and allowed him to kind of just do his defense-breaking stuff whenever he wanted. This is a bit of an oversimplification, of course. Even with post play, there’s a limit to a player’s energy, so he probably couldn’t have literally done this every single time down court. And, of course, the Lakers called other players’ number plenty. But what Magic was able to do feels closer to “I can get this whenever I want” than LeBron’s best stuff was (and same goes for virtually every other player besides LeBron).
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: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#38 » by Top10alltime » Mon Sep 29, 2025 12:11 am

Djoker wrote:
homecourtloss wrote:
Djoker wrote:On my latest list of top 10 offensive players ever, I had Magic #3 and Lebron #4 in the same tier.

I went with Magic by a hair because I think his teams have proven to be a bit more resilient against top teams (5+ SRS cutoffs and higher) compared to Lebron's teams. Both guys have relative limitations from being too ball dominant and running through weak conferences to pad their offensive numbers but Magic's offenses fared better in the Finals and in a handful of other tough series compared to Lebron's. Magic has two series with a negative rORtg ON Court (1981 HOU, 1983 PHI) and 1986 HOU could potentially join the list after I'm done tracking it. Lebron, on the other hand, has thirteen such series! Lebron's playoff offenses have reached tremendous highs but also had some bad lows. Magic had Kareem and you can certainly use that as an argument against him given Kareem's own offensive stature (probable top 10 all-time offensive player?) but Lebron had significant tactical advantages with spacing and his two best postseason runs benefited from very got 3pt shooting. In addition, Magic showed tremendous offensive lift even as Kareem really declined and outright retired.

In terms of skillset alone, I'd probably favour Lebron slightly. His gap in scoring (5-7 points/75) is huge and Magic's edge in playmaking even though it's hefty doesn't overcome it in a vacuum for me. So depending on how the question is phrased (i.e. individual skill only) I may go with Lebron. But in a team context, it becomes close and I probably lean towards Magic slightly.


The teams above +5 SRS that Magic played and LeBron played are quite different but i think you know that. Also, no mention of the absurdlyweak defensive teams that magic faced? Also the best SRS teams magic faced werent the defensive teams james faced.


My point wasn't who's better against better defenses but against better teams in general.

Regarding opposing defenses, yes, Magic's were much weaker on a relative basis but that was also an era with fewer teams so there was less variance from top to bottom of the league compared to the more modern league. Magic faced three #1 defenses and his teams did very well against each of them: +5.9 rORtg vs. 1980 Sixers, +8.0 rORtg vs. 1988 Jazz, and +11.6 rORtg vs. 1990 Rockets.

There was one poster (forget his name) who found the best defenses in league history using Z-score. That's probably more informative than relative DRtg when we are talking about leagues of different sizes. There just weren't almost any -5 defenses in the 1980's. But that doesn't mean the best defensive teams of that era weren't really good though.


Look, I like you as a poster and all, but this isn't the way to go. If we are measuring offense (which we are, I am the OP of the thread so I should know), we should measure it against the defenses strength. You can measure it against top 5 defenses of that era, if you don't like rDRTG. I'm pretty sure, this will still favour Lebron, I haven't checked yet though.

Lebron, even in a team context (I love Magic, especially as a person he's a great guy, but he still had stacked offensive situations) is a better offensive player. He wasn't more scalable than Magic, but I'd still favour him offensively.
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Re: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#39 » by lessthanjake » Mon Sep 29, 2025 1:04 am

Top10alltime wrote:
Djoker wrote:
homecourtloss wrote:
The teams above +5 SRS that Magic played and LeBron played are quite different but i think you know that. Also, no mention of the absurdlyweak defensive teams that magic faced? Also the best SRS teams magic faced werent the defensive teams james faced.


My point wasn't who's better against better defenses but against better teams in general.

Regarding opposing defenses, yes, Magic's were much weaker on a relative basis but that was also an era with fewer teams so there was less variance from top to bottom of the league compared to the more modern league. Magic faced three #1 defenses and his teams did very well against each of them: +5.9 rORtg vs. 1980 Sixers, +8.0 rORtg vs. 1988 Jazz, and +11.6 rORtg vs. 1990 Rockets.

There was one poster (forget his name) who found the best defenses in league history using Z-score. That's probably more informative than relative DRtg when we are talking about leagues of different sizes. There just weren't almost any -5 defenses in the 1980's. But that doesn't mean the best defensive teams of that era weren't really good though.


Look, I like you as a poster and all, but this isn't the way to go. If we are measuring offense (which we are, I am the OP of the thread so I should know), we should measure it against the defenses strength. You can measure it against top 5 defenses of that era, if you don't like rDRTG. I'm pretty sure, this will still favour Lebron, I haven't checked yet though.

Lebron, even in a team context (I love Magic, especially as a person he's a great guy, but he still had stacked offensive situations) is a better offensive player. He wasn't more scalable than Magic, but I'd still favour him offensively.


This is a more general point, but I’m definitely of the view that we should care more about what happens offensively against good teams than about what happens offensively against good defenses.

For one thing, the playoff series’s that have by far the most leverage and most importance are the ones against good teams, not the ones against good defenses that have offenses that are so bad that they’re still not good teams. They’re also definitionally the ones where it’s more important to have a high relative rating, because you need a higher relative rating to beat a team with a high net rating.

Secondly, I am of the view that good teams tend to be genuinely more resilient in the playoffs than mediocre teams. Good teams tend to get opponents’ best effort in the regular season, while mediocre teams don’t always get that. Which basically juices up those mediocre teams’ regular season ORTG and DRTG. For this reason, I think a lot of good teams actually have better defenses come playoff time than mediocre teams that have a better regular season DRTG. Mediocre teams with really good regular season DRTGs are often just playoff paper tigers.

Also, just to be clear, everyone is talking about numbers that are “measured . . . against the defenses strength.” That’s what rORTGs are. It’s how well a team does offensively compared to the opponent’s regular-season DRTG. The question being discussed is simply what playoff series we should key in on as being the ones that matter the most when looking at rORTGs.
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: Magic vs Lebron in offense 

Post#40 » by trelos6 » Mon Sep 29, 2025 3:04 am

Magic has the most OPOY shares of any player in history.

Also, looking at Magic's team rOrtg

4.2
2.3
3.3
5.8
3.1
6.2
6.1
7.3
5
6
5.9
4.2
3.7

Magic was the best at driving an elite offense (at least until Steve Nash).

Lebron team rOrtg starting in 2006

1.6
-0.9
-1.5
4.1
3.6
4.5
2
6.5
4.3
5.5
4.5
4.8
4.3

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