RealGM Top 100 List -- 2011

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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#181 » by JordansBulls » Thu Jul 28, 2011 4:01 pm

DocHoops wrote:General question about the project and the site

What is with all the fake stats. Made up numbers like adjusted Plus Minus, PER, Win Shares, efg...bfd etc.

You guys seem to be putting more stock into what some nerds came up with on a calculator than what actually happens on the basketball court.

I put zero stock into any of those numbers because they are meaningless. In basketball you CAN NOT quantify about 85% (also a made up number) of what happens. You can't measure anything that leads to every measurable element of the game.

When I first got here I was very impressed with the level of intelligence and critical thinking, now while still conceding that this is a very smart group, I'm mostly just disappointed with the lack of basketball knowledge. This is a group that has disregarded the history of the game and the purity of competition in favor of measuring players by metrics that didn't exist when most of them played and still don't give us any better understanding of the visual game from a statistical plane now.

I would like someone to explain to me just what has happened here...and why so many cling to these ghostly numbers.


Same thing is in baseball. Also if you are comparing across eras you need numbers to show how the players compare. Can you compare Barry Bonds with Babe Ruth with just using how many mvp's they have and what there batting average is? Or do you need more stuff like slugging %, WAR, etc?

Only sport you can compare just literal stuff is probably tennis since it is essentially a one on one sport.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#182 » by Baller 24 » Thu Jul 28, 2011 4:09 pm

DocHoops wrote:General question about the project and the site

What is with all the fake stats. Made up numbers like adjusted Plus Minus, PER, Win Shares, efg...bfd etc.

You guys seem to be putting more stock into what some nerds came up with on a calculator than what actually happens on the basketball court.

I put zero stock into any of those numbers because they are meaningless. In basketball you CAN NOT quantify about 85% (also a made up number) of what happens. You can't measure anything that leads to every measurable element of the game.

When I first got here I was very impressed with the level of intelligence and critical thinking, now while still conceding that this is a very smart group, I'm mostly just disappointed with the lack of basketball knowledge. This is a group that has disregarded the history of the game and the purity of competition in favor of measuring players by metrics that didn't exist when most of them played and still don't give us any better understanding of the visual game from a statistical plane now.

I would like someone to explain to me just what has happened here...and why so many cling to these ghostly numbers.


Every stat has its flaws. If you've read or would happen to read through the thread, you'll see that a majority of the posters actually have seen these players play. Weather it's old footage, or literally living it and being there. But sometimes you've got to do some digging go in-depth on their impact, their big moments, reasons why they succeeded or failed as a player. Note that from the given information, there is very little weigh on team success, which is good, especially when you're comparing individuals players.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#183 » by semi-sentient » Thu Jul 28, 2011 4:35 pm

There's nothing wrong with using some of these stats (you almost have to due to a lack of footage in some cases), but it's pretty clear that several posters rely exclusively on their calculators while refusing to really break down what's actually happening on the court. What disappoints me (and Doc I'm sure) is that when posters are asked to break down a players strengths and weaknesses they sometimes come back with advanced stats or disappear from the discussion entirely. Never mind that many times vital information such as opponent strength, intangibles, roles, etc. are being completely ignored. What I personally love to see is a good mix of both, but not many posters have that level of knowledge or are willing to put in the work. I'm certainly not suggesting that I do, but I can't learn anything about a player if all I'm seeing is APM or PER or WS. That tells me next to nothing.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#184 » by lorak » Thu Jul 28, 2011 4:48 pm

DocHoops wrote:General question about the project and the site

What is with all the fake stats. Made up numbers like adjusted Plus Minus, PER, Win Shares, efg...bfd etc.

You guys seem to be putting more stock into what some nerds came up with on a calculator than what actually happens on the basketball court.


All these stats show what actually happens on the court. And they do it better than any person could do by his own eyes.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#185 » by Baller 24 » Thu Jul 28, 2011 4:50 pm

Not all the time though, each and every stat clearly has it's flaws no matter what way you look at it.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#186 » by lorak » Thu Jul 28, 2011 4:56 pm

Yes, and that's why we have to look at as many data as possible. And if different stats tell more or less the same story then conclusion is pretty sound.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#187 » by Laimbeer » Thu Jul 28, 2011 5:06 pm

DocHoops wrote:General question about the project and the site

What is with all the fake stats. Made up numbers like adjusted Plus Minus, PER, Win Shares, efg...bfd etc.

You guys seem to be putting more stock into what some nerds came up with on a calculator than what actually happens on the basketball court.

I put zero stock into any of those numbers because they are meaningless. In basketball you CAN NOT quantify about 85% (also a made up number) of what happens. You can't measure anything that leads to every measurable element of the game.

When I first got here I was very impressed with the level of intelligence and critical thinking, now while still conceding that this is a very smart group, I'm mostly just disappointed with the lack of basketball knowledge. This is a group that has disregarded the history of the game and the purity of competition in favor of measuring players by metrics that didn't exist when most of them played and still don't give us any better understanding of the visual game from a statistical plane now.

I would like someone to explain to me just what has happened here...and why so many cling to these ghostly numbers.


Holy crap I thought *I* was down on stats. :lol:

But your point is a good one. The site is very much driven by statistics.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#188 » by Laimbeer » Thu Jul 28, 2011 5:07 pm

Baller 24 wrote:
Laimbeer wrote:
rrravenred wrote:I'm looking forward with a strange type of anticipatory dread to Isiah's nomination, as Laimbeer and I have seemingly endless debates on how much Isiah's individual contributions contributed to the Pistons mid-late 80s success. ;)


Ha! Scrolling back through the thread and saw this. You're one of my favorite posters here and of course I'd love to have the debate, but I don't think it's happening given the landscape of the Top 100 list.

My arguement maintaines Isiah is a second tier all-time point, with Cousy and maybe Frazier, behind Oscar and Magic. That lands him low twenties, anyway. There's no traction here for that kind of ranking. He's seen as part of a Stockton-Nash-Kidd-Payton cluster.

It's probably primarily because the site is very stat driven, and a little because he simply isn't very well liked, and I can't say without reason.


Personally, I feel Isiah's behind Fraizer, on par with Nash, Kidd, & Payton. Ahead of Stockton. Where I'll have Isiah is tough, but if we're considering all PGs right now, all I know is that Nash is next for me.


He's one of those players with a wide range of opinion, no doubt.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#189 » by Dr Positivity » Thu Jul 28, 2011 5:20 pm

I feel like the voting/discussion hasn't had the synergy of the RPOY project. If that makes sense.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#190 » by Laimbeer » Thu Jul 28, 2011 5:23 pm

Dr Mufasa wrote:I feel like the voting/discussion hasn't had the synergy of the RPOY project. If that makes sense.


There's a herd instinct, IMO. A couple of players get jawboned extensively or suggested early in the thread and suddenly become front runners for the vote or nomination.
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5) It's only __ years
6) He's a good mentor/locker room guy
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#191 » by JordansBulls » Thu Jul 28, 2011 5:26 pm

Dr Mufasa wrote:I feel like the voting/discussion hasn't had the synergy of the RPOY project. If that makes sense.

It's much easier to compare everyone on a year by year basis then different era and 30 years apart and entire career.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#192 » by ronnymac2 » Thu Jul 28, 2011 5:56 pm

I thought RPOY was a little better, too. This project isn't done though, so let's see what happens.


Laimbeer- I might try to argue for Isiah soon. I think he's underrated on this board (not underrated like YOU think he's underrated, but underrated nonetheless). I might try to put up a post like I did for Rick Barry.

This despite the fact that he essentially destroyed the Knicks for the '00s. Haha
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#193 » by Laimbeer » Thu Jul 28, 2011 6:18 pm

ronnymac2 wrote:
Laimbeer- I might try to argue for Isiah soon. I think he's underrated on this board (not underrated like YOU think he's underrated, but underrated nonetheless). I might try to put up a post like I did for Rick Barry.

This despite the fact that he essentially destroyed the Knicks for the '00s. Haha


Ha!

If I brought him up too much, it would look homerish (heck it *would* be homerish) but we're in the range now where he's a legit discussion by many folk's standards.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#194 » by Laimbeer » Thu Jul 28, 2011 6:31 pm

JordansBulls wrote:
Dr Mufasa wrote:I feel like the voting/discussion hasn't had the synergy of the RPOY project. If that makes sense.

It's much easier to compare everyone on a year by year basis then different era and 30 years apart and entire career.


I think there tends to be more emotion and "going to bat" for particular players early in the process. That may give way to more collaberation (sp) as we move to later spots on the list.
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3) It's only __% of the cap
4) The cap is going up
5) It's only __ years
6) He's a good mentor/locker room guy
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#195 » by DocHoops » Thu Jul 28, 2011 7:39 pm

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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#196 » by DocHoops » Thu Jul 28, 2011 7:43 pm

DavidStern wrote:Yes, and that's why we have to look at as many data as possible. And if different stats tell more or less the same story then conclusion is pretty sound.


This is what scares me. You believe that without any evidence it's true.

In the world of math numbers only work if they can accurately and consistently predict or explain an outcome.

All advanced stats do in basketball is further complicate the discussion. No one can project what team is going to win a single game, let alone a championship with stats. There is a human element to basketball which is greatly beyond our ability to quantify. The sooner you except that, the sooner you can get to the real point of rating and evaluating players. To observe and enjoy the history and better understand and appreciate the present.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#197 » by Dr Positivity » Thu Jul 28, 2011 7:44 pm

By the way, you do know we accept new members if we know who you are, right? Penbeast will let you in if you want to start voting from this point on...
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#198 » by drza » Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:09 pm

Laimbeer wrote:@dzra

Bill Russell - I won't let the stat geeks off the hook that easily on Russ/Wilt. From your post, it sounds like you constructed a line of logic to make the statistics support Russell. He had good stats on D, and the Celts relied on their D, etc. It seems you retroactively built the statistics case in a way that would support the conclusion Russell was better.

When taken at face value, virtually any traditional or advanced stat favors Wilt. But Russell is largely considered the better, or at least greater in a winning sense, player. The numbers don't capture it.


I'm not sure if you skimmed my last post and thus didn't get my gist, or if I just didn't do a good job writing it. But whatever happened, you just did exactly what I spent a book-like post explaining was incorrect. You say that "advanced stats" or "the numbers" would say that Wilt was better than Russell, but that's not true. The more accurate statement is that the "BOX SCORE advanced stats" or "the BOX SCORE numbers" say that Wilt was better than Russell. But the entire point of my previous post was that the +/- stats aren't just another example of a box score stat like PER...instead, the +/- stats are the evolution of stats that would try to capture impact. And those so-called "impact stats" DO show Russell's value with respect to Wilt, even without any prior knowledge of who won the championships.

During the RPoY project, several posters combed through all of the available information from that time period and demonstrated quantitatively that the Celtics' defense was by-FAR the most dominant unit (offense or defense) from any team in that era, and that this defensive dominance could be traced directly to Russell's presence. Meanwhile, when Wilt changed to or from several teams, even in his prime, their overall records and scoring margins didn't change that much. In essence, these two methods are cave-man versions of the +/- info that is available on current players. So you see, THESE numbers DO capture Russell's bigger impact with respect to Wilt in a way that is completely outside of the box scores AND is completely outside of who won the rings. It's an entirely separate branch of analysis, and my point that you seemed to miss before is that the first step in understanding +/- stats is recognizing that it IS its own unique way of analyzing and not just a branch of something we've seen before.

Laimbeer wrote:Oscar Robertson - The advanced stats show his offensive impact was great. Whoever argued against that? The rap on Oscar was he didn't translate his stats and talent into a more winning tradition, and he really didn't have the personality and mindset to do so. Did he have an Allen Iverson or Michael Jordan type of mindset and influence on his team?

Kevin Garnett - Again, not sure your point proves much. The naysayers said his traditional stats were belied by his lack of team success. So advanced stats echo his excellence in traditional stats. That doesn't change the arguement of the naysayers.


Now that (hopefully) I got that point across, these are two more examples of what I'm talking about. The advanced BOX SCORE stats show Oscar's play was great, but the old rap was that he didn't translate his stats and talent into winning. But what impressed me upon further examination was that the cave-man IMPACT stats DO indicate that Oscar translated his stats and talent towards a dominant team effect. The reason his team didn't win, then, were issues more beyond his control (teammates, system, front office, etc.) than because of a failure in him. I couldn't say that definitively based only on his box scores, or his PER, or whatever. But further analysis into his impact was enough to convince me.

And with Garnett, it's really the same story. The naysayers say his traditional BOX SCORE stats were belied by lack of team success. But the now more developed impact stats (the +/- family) indicate that, like Oscar, he individually was contributing hugely to team success and the rest of his team just wasn't strong enough. Again, this is an entirely different result than you could gather just by looking at his PER or Win Shares.

Laimbeer wrote:The advanced stats aren't a holy grail of ultimate truth.

Stats are a tool. But not all of a player's value can be captured in numbers, no matter how they're crunched.


Everything that you say here is true. On the other hand, the way you use this truth makes it false. Because while no set of stats are perfect or capture everything, the current body of available stats and analysis capture a LOT more than they ever have before. And if you ignore that, you cut yourself off from a lot of the story, for really no good reason.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#199 » by Gongxi » Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:21 pm

DocHoops wrote:
DavidStern wrote:Yes, and that's why we have to look at as many data as possible. And if different stats tell more or less the same story then conclusion is pretty sound.


This is what scares me. You believe that without any evidence it's true.

In the world of math numbers only work if they can accurately and consistently predict or explain an outcome.

All advanced stats do in basketball is further complicate the discussion. No one can project what team is going to win a single game, let alone a championship with stats. There is a human element to basketball which is greatly beyond our ability to quantify. The sooner you except that, the sooner you can get to the real point of rating and evaluating players. To observe and enjoy the history and better understand and appreciate the present.


Do you know what a cognitive bias is?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List 

Post#200 » by ThaRegul8r » Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:22 pm

JerkyWay wrote:ElGee - why do you have Kareem apart from MJ and BR? KAJs resume is almost the same as Jordan's. I know this "he was second option to Magic" argument but he won numerous MVPs before Magic's arrival. Era differences doesn't matter as 90s were similarly bad as 70s, maybe only a little better. Kareem also led worse team than MJ for that period of time. He's right there.


Here's a post from a conversation I and several other posters had on another site seven years ago:

Date: 5/23/2004 3:56 PM Pacific Standard Time
From: AlpJones3
MsgId: <20040523185639.15258.00038667@mbs-r04.aol.com>

ActiveVerb wrote:
[[I agree with that. In my opinion you can make a case for 5 guys as number 1:

Kareem
Wilt
Russell
Jordan
Magic

After that it's hard for me to see anyone making a strong case for anyone as the single best player of all time.

I think most people would say either Jordan or one of the big three. Jordan has a couple of advantages there -- he played most recently and played a different position, so the three centers split some votes.
Personally I think the only two players that you can make a case for as greatest ever are Russell and Jordan. To me its those two anf then Jabbar,Wilt,Magic,and Bird in any order. I think these 6 players are by themselves ahead of anyone else. Mt problem with naming Jabbar the greatest is he failed to win some titles that i thought he should have won if he was the greatest ever. I didn't see Jabbar win any titles that I thought Russell or Jordan couldn't have won if surrounded equal talent as Jabbar was. Thats the same reason that I wouldn't rank Wilt,Magic,or Bird as high as Russell or Jordan. I saw Wilt,Magic,Bird,and Jabbar fail at times wher I thought if they were realy the greatest they should have won the titles or at least done better. Russell and Jordan in my opinion won the title everytime they were surrounded by enough talent that someone considered the greatest ever should win a title. Jabbar was surrouned by a very good Bucks team in 73 and failed to even make it past the Warriors. In 81 surrounded by a great Laker team he lost to the Rockets. In 83 surrounded by a great Laker team he was swept by the 76ers. I couldn't see this happening to Russell or Jordan.
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