_SRV_ wrote:Dirk played out of his mind half the playoffs (more than half actually).
The difference in PER between Dirk and Wade in '06 is smaller than between LeBron and Dirk in 11, but in both cases there was statistical superiority, there is also another very important stat which is win shares, and the difference is more apparent there.
Dirk played 73 games, LeBron 79, 6 games less than LeBron, same difference between Dirk (81)and Wade (75)in 2006, that throws your argument out of the window.
Really, there is no conssistency in your picks other than your opinion of who played better, and based on that you really have no leg to stand on against the Dirk pick.
Win shares suck. Wade in 2006 played better than Dirk in 2011 in the playoffs, and Dirk in 2006 wasn't as far ahead of Wade as LeBron was Dirk in 2011. It's pretty clear.
IF Dirk was as far ahead of Wade as LeBron was Dirk in 2006, and
IF Dirk in 2011 played as well as Wade did in 2006, you'd have a leg to stand on, but they didn't, so you don't. It's really just that simple. I mean, you don't even understand the games played point, so I'm not sure if you even know what you're talking about.
You want this to be about 2006 Wade vs 2011 Dirk, but unfortunately for your argument, we're not comparing them. We're comparing 2006 Wade to 2006 Dirk, and 2011 Dirk to 2011 LeBron. Do you know that? Do you know what's being compared?
mysticbb wrote:Gongxi wrote:Well, I count the playoffs twice as heavily as the regular season. Still, a close year all around.
Ok, then:
Nowitzki: 27.6 PER, 0.270 WS/48
Wade: 27.3 PER, 0.239 WS/48
Bryant: 26.7 PER, 0.202 WS/48
James: 26.8 PER, 0.206 WS/48
Looks to me as Nowitzki wins in 2006, when we value playoffs twice as much as regular season, but you had Bryant, Wade and James ahead of Nowitzki.
Sure, I guess if we were just using PER. Do you think PER has a margin of error within 0.3?
Gongxi wrote:Ah, when Dirk is better, he's just better. When LeBron is better, there are rational justifications for it.
There are rational justifications for Nowitzki being better at that stuff than James, we can even see that in the result of the teams when they play with and without said players. I provided the data for that already.
James: 25.9 PER, 0.227 WS/48
Nowitzki: 24.1 PER, 0.212 WS/48
James is clearly better in PER; but Nowitzki makes it MUCH MORE closer in WS/48.
So, can I take it that you are basing this just off of boxscore stats? Or do you take impact evaluation via +/- numbers into account?
Nah, don't like +/-. I do like defense, though. So you had explanations for why when LeBron was better at something, it didn't really matter, or wasn't as big of a deal as one wouldd think. Are there the same type of stipulations for when Dirk is better at something? I'm curious. Or why would you include only those caveats for when LeBron appeared to be better? Any reason?
Maybe you need some of those to actual fix your communication problems?
Is English your first language?
Gongxi wrote:, why would there be such a huge divergence in their PERs? What is the justification- that ultimately explains away and favors Dirk- for that, I wonder.
So, it is solely based upon PER? Nothing else matters? In that case I ask why Bryant was ahead of Nowitzki in 2007 too? Based on your "playoffs twice as much value":
Did I say that? Or did I ask why the difference would be
so large if- as you're telling us- Dirk actually outplayed LeBron in the regular season. I just wanted your analysis of it. Can you tell us? Small differences among like-impacting players are to be expected, but...so large. Why is that? Can you tell us?
Nowitzki: 26.6 PER, 0.256 WS/48
Bryant: 25.9 PER, 0.190 WS/48
Hmm. That's not quite as large as we saw this year? Or was it?
Well, again you came up with not a good enough explanation to make your voting look consistent. Thus SRV is still correct.
Well, again you're wrong. But thank you, Dirk's lawyer. Are you German? I wonder if you have a little bias creeping in. Nah.