G35 wrote:It seems like we are discussing two different things and not reading what is actually being written.
You asked what effect Lebron has on a game that isn't being played...if this is important to you, you should explain your reasoning. In the context of discussing Steve Nash, I don't think Lebron has any effect. If you want to get into the minutiae everyone and everything has an effect on this world. You just can't see it.
So from what I gather when Nash creates a better shot for a shooter, it really has no effect because he is independent. Then you can predict Amare's stats because of the effect Nash had on what type of shots/looks he received.
So what are you saying? Is there an effect or isn't there? Could you predict say Kwame Brown's stats in place of Amare from 2005-2008 because you can do it for Amare? You can take this "independence" effect and accurately predict how a single player will perform?.....
From what I see here this is a really simple idea that's gotten more and more complicated over the past few posts:
You tend to judge players based on their final team results.
ElGee, as others before, pointed out this is a team game and hence there's stuff beyond the player's control.
After back & forths ElGee started going in a more abstract, academic direction to the get to the logical crux of the matter outside of basketball, to which you respond treating the questions with probably more depth than was intended because he was trying to simplify things not complicate them.
In the end what he's saying is that to justify the player = team results perspective you have to attribute every factor that went into that final result to the player in question, and then he's giving you deliberately absurd examples that you cannot possibly disagree with. Such as: When you watch SAS-OKC, you're not sitting there thinking that LeBron should be judged based on what happened in that series. And yet that result very clearly has the possibility of swaying the end results of the NBA season which will affect your opinion on LeBron. This means LeBron is only part of the story of the NBA champion, and the NBA championship is only part of the story of LeBron this year, which means you have to deal with the other parts, aka context.
I'll add in another example that I've given before:
While it makes sense to judge a player in part based on whether he made or missed one clutch shot in the NBA finals, it doesn't make sense to judge him based on whether someone else hit a shot.
So, when Ray Allen hits that key shot last year, that should have had ZERO direct impact on you opinion on LeBron. And if Allen missing that shot (which would have meant the Heat lost the finals) makes you see LeBron's standing differently, this means you're essentially allowing pure chance to determine your opinions on a player, which you should see as a problem.