RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Here is Wilt's rank among players with 1500+ MP in FGA/36 minutes once he started focusing less on volume.
67: 59th out of 65
68: 63rd out 83
69: 81 out of 91 (Russell was ranked last)
70: injured
71: 81 out of 108 (Kareem 3rd)
72: 102 out of 104 (Kareem 4th)
73: 101 out of 101 (last place)
Is it shocking that he had sky high efficiency when his usage rate compared favorably to Tyson Chandler or Ben Wallace?
67: 59th out of 65
68: 63rd out 83
69: 81 out of 91 (Russell was ranked last)
70: injured
71: 81 out of 108 (Kareem 3rd)
72: 102 out of 104 (Kareem 4th)
73: 101 out of 101 (last place)
Is it shocking that he had sky high efficiency when his usage rate compared favorably to Tyson Chandler or Ben Wallace?
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
Purch wrote:And that's only speaking about the games I've uploaded. I've literally sat through hours upon hours of Garnett post seasons performances, which is the reason why I'm comfortable saying that he hasn't impressed me enough to say that he has a top 10 impact on the game.
Even the 4 of his best scoring games I uploaded (I might actually add some more later this summer from my collection) left me disappointed in his ability to change the flow of the game. I remember he'd be in the 4th quater of the game, whiles a team is going on a big run, and rather than take the ball to the hole, he'd keep on forcing mid range shots even when it wasn't falling even when he was being played 1 on 1. Or he'd get pushed out of position when his team needed to stop a run, and settle for a bad fade away. What I remember being impressed by most by him, whiles breaking down his footage, was always his ability to defend players off the dribble and on the perimeter. But specifically in both the Laker series from 03 and from 04 I found myself underwhelmed by his Rim protection .
Purch wrote: I think what makes Kobe unique is that different parts of his game peaked at different times. Early in his career his defense was elite but the effort on that end of the floor fell off toward the end of the three peat. Then his athletic/scoring peak was from 05-07 in my eyes. Whiles his passing, post game and three point peak came from 08-10 if I'm remembering correctly. Sometimes it almost seems like different players.
I'm hoping that this becomes the start of a good conversation, because there's a lot here to work with that I applaud and other that I'd like to rebut. A couple of notes before I get started:
1) In the process of this response I may speak of general trends of thought on Kobe and Garnett that perhaps you don't ascribe to. If I do, then consider that part of my post as not specifically for you.
2) Warning! This post will use RAPM as evidence
Let's start with that latter. As I've pointed out, RAPM isn't a standalone measure of "goodness". On the other hand, it is the best measure we currently have to tie a team's performance to a certain player that doesn't involve using the box score. The box score has its uses as well, but I'm one that likes to keep them as separate measures. But I digress. This is also the best measure that we have for gauging a player's defensive impact, since so much of defense isn't covered in the box scores.
Thus, if someone says Kobe Bryant was an "elite" defender early in his career, I would expect there to be some sign of it in the RAPM studies. I'm not saying that he needed to measure out as well as the ATG bigs in order to impress me, but there have been LOTS of good defensive wings whose impact shows up clearly in the RAPM data. Shane Battier, Ron Artest, Luol Deng, Eddie Jones, Doug Christie, Bruce Bowen, Andre Iguodala and Manu Ginobili are all wings that show up among the top-52 players in Doc MJ's normalized data set. Each of them had very clear defensive impact from the wing, on the order of + 3.2 - +4.3 on that scale in their 5-year defensive peaks.
Kobe measured out at 292nd on the defensive list, with a 5-year peak defensive impact of less than 1 point.
Why would Kobe's defensive RAPM scores be so much smaller than expected, even in his early years? Is it a case of the RAPM approach missing it? That's possible, but it seems unlikely that the stat would unfairly single out Kobe and not the other good wing defenders that I mentioned. So, what might be another cause?
Well, speaking from my own observations, Kobe has definite strengths and weaknesses as a defender. One of his major strengths is his ability to play on-ball, 1-on-1 defense when he is motivated to. His size/athletic ability/competitiveness streak allows him to really bulldog any perimeter player that has the ball and challenges him. On the other hand, throughout his career (not just later) he has the tendency to conserve energy on defense so that he could use that energy for offense. He is not noted for consistently fighting through screens, nor is he known for making excellent defensive and help rotations. If anything, Kobe's off-ball defense has been noted as an area where he ball-watches more than putting in maximum team effort.
So, how do I interpret the defensive RAPM results in the face of my Kobe scouting report? I interpret it that Kobe's defensive approach is not one that produces measurable impact in his team's defensive efforts. But what the approach DOES do is really pop on screen. People won't remember the missed rotation or the screen that he don't fight through, but they WILL remember his mano-a-mano duel with MVP Iverson. They WILL remember when he blocked LeBron's shot in an All Star game.
To me, Kobe's defense is a good example for why sometimes stats like RAPM can do a better job of evaluating impact than our eye-test. For one thing, we don't always give proper weight to the individual acts on the court that are the most important. And for another, we all just miss a lot of the action.
The irony here, and what sparked this (increasingly wordy) response to your two posts, is that Garnett tends to be the exact opposite of Kobe in this respect. Many observers watch Garnett play, and come away unimpressed. It's funny that you referenced KG's 33-point game game 5 against the Pistons in the 2008 playoffs, because I had what (to me) was a crazy exchange with a Celtics fan on a different message board about that game in real time. True story, this was the gist of the exchange:
Celtics fan: Man, KG had pretty numbers but he really didn't give us much on offense.
Me: Wait, he led all scorers with 33 points.
Celtics fan: Yeah, but they were low impact points. He wasn't there down the stretch.
Me: Hold on, he led all scorers with 10 points in the 4th quarter!
Celtics fan: Yeah, but those came early. He didn't really do anything in crunch time.
Me: He hit the game-sealing free throws with 2 seconds left! Are you sure we watched the same game?
Focus: Like Kobe's defense, Garnett also has strengths and weaknesses on offense. You point out that he isn't always aggressive as you would like. That you would like to see him drive or post more instead of settling for jumpers. And those are fair (and oft levied) criticisms. On the flip side, Garnett has offensive strengths as well. He is one of the better mid-range shooters the position has ever seen. He is both an excellent and a willing passer. He is very good at drawing defensive attention and making the pass (or the pass-that-leads-to-the-pass) that gets a teammate an open shot. He's an enthusiastic (and sometimes illegal) pick setter. He knows where his teammates should be, and if they aren't there he communicates it to them.
And if we complete the mirror analysis to what we did with Kobe's defense, Garnett's offense DOES measure out as elite using offensive RAPM studies. He is 12th overall on DocMJ's normalized offensive RAPM rankings in terms of 5-year peak, and in the top-5 among big men with a 5-year peak of +5.4 on offense. Shaq (+7.6) and Dirk (+7.0) are the only two bigs with a convincingly higher mark than KG's on offense.
Just like Kobe's defense, one possible reason for the RAPM mark to be counter-intuitive is that for some reason the stat just likes Garnett in particular. Again, this is exceedingly unlikely. Perhaps it is too reliant on the regular season, as Ardee and Ryoga allege...but as I pointed out before, I'm almost positive that the postseason is weighted heavier in RAPM studies than the regular season, and also KG's on/off +/- scores appear to be BETTER in the postseason than they are in the regular season. So I don't see any indication that KG's postseasons would hurt his RAPM marks. So, then, I interpret the combination of evidence to suggest that KG tends to have a much larger positive impact than most observers seem to realize because again, his strengths aren't as easily observed as his perceived weaknesses and the ratio of his strengths vs his weaknesses isn't properly weighted.
Summary: In the examples of Kobe's defense and KG's offense, it appears to me that Kobe's defense has a tendency to LOOK like it should be more impactful than it is. On the other hand, it seems to me that KG's offense has a tendency to not appear to be as strong as it is. Not coincidentally, Kobe's defensive strength is his 1-on-1 on-ball defensive approach, and KG's perceived weakness on offense is his 1-on-1 scoring. It reminds me of a quote from Bill Russell that I've seen posted here before:
I used to break it down. There are 48 minutes in a game. It takes a second -- a second-and-a-half, maybe two seconds -- for a three point shot. And if you add up all the shots taken in a game -- free throws don't count because the clock stops -- but if you take all the seconds added up shooting and rebounding it comes to about three minutes. Now out of a 48-minute game three minutes are concerned with shooting and rebounding. What is going on the other 45 minutes?
I think the common tendency in the eye test is to focus more on the 3 minutes than the other 45, especially the 1-on-1 parts. And don't get me wrong, what happens in that 3 minutes is extremely important, and having the ability to go mano a mano on either offense or defense is a wonderful talent that certainly helps. But the game is so, so much more than just 1-on-1 skills, and I don't think our mindsets have caught up with that/made the appropriate weighting when evaluating 1-on-1 skills compared to the total package.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
DQuinn1575 wrote:MacGill wrote:Plain and simple, if you're going to vote in Wilt, then I don't see anything which was presented to separate him from Shaq. I see a documented Shaq career where some consider him a dumba$$, a Kobe feud where he acted childish at times, and staying past his time, which he had every right to do. But his prime and first 14 years are on par with the best ever, regardless of vacancy and weight. If it slowed Shaq down, it slowed Wilt down. Only difference was Shaq was never put into a Wilt type role or did he ever get the touches or pace that Wilt played at.
Good post.
I think for me it comes down Wilt being a better rebounder and passer than Shaq.-Especially rebounding. Offensively they are fairly even.
Defensively the Wilt I saw play in the 70s was better than Shaq, but Wilt didn't always play at that level. So, I'm willing to call defense pretty close.
The biggest difference between them is really rebounding, and Wilt has a definite advantage. We can argue scoring, defense, passing, teamwork, etc. all day and not come up with an answer we both agree with.
Thank you.
I have no problem acknowledging Wilt being the better rebounder as I am on record of that on this site. But it's how much better in comparison. Reg, also posted articles of Wilt's teammates ensuring that he had the touches for his 50ppg season, his 100 point game etc. Obviously, all things aren't equal here. First, when you're getting your touches you always work both ends. Not saying it is a fair point but a true one. Secondly, even Wilt himself stated that the 80's players (in comparison) were much more athletic than in his day and the game was so much more positional then. Bigs played the middle, rebounds were left for Wilt. But the pace was so high that even guards had inflated high rebounds numbers. I think offensively though Shaq is a fair bit above Wilt and that should be where you spend time analyzing. Early Wilt could run the break like Shaq did but later Wilt had poor fundamentals by eye test on his video footage. A terrible arch and release on his fade away and the form on his fingeroll was less then desirable. I don't care that he could fade and Shaq couldn't because Shaq didn't need to.
How can you possibly say that you would take Wilt over Shaq to anchor a team today? (not literally you btw) And if you need to answer with well modern this and that…then you need to rethink his offense. Jerry West had a sick stroke in his day (still does) and great form at the line. Wilt….as great as the numbers were, didn't have the same fundamentals and while others will say the coulda woulda shoulda's with him, it is all speculation to what the limited footage all shows us if we're being honest in compared to Shaq.

Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
MisterHibachi wrote:rico381 wrote:Spoiler:
My vote for #4 is LeBron James.
Well said. No one has responded to my question of 'why Magic/Bird over LeBron?'. I hope there is an answer in the next thread and LeBron gets stronger consideration. But, assuming Wilt gets voted in here, Shaq's momentum seems pretty strong so hopefully the sixth slot for number 6.
For me it comes down to one thing: How many rings could you get with Lebron leading your team. Now his prime is great but prior to 08 you definitely aren't winning a ring with Lebron. In 08 he wouldn't win going off his playoff performance. In 09 that's year one he could win. 2010 he seemingly gave up on his team

Basically I highly value postseason performance and Lebron is lacking compared to the others on my radar.
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GC Pantalones wrote:For me it comes down to one thing: How many rings could you get with Lebron leading your team. Now his prime is great but prior to 08 you definitely aren't winning a ring with Lebron. In 08 he wouldn't win going off his playoff performance. In 09 that's year one he could win. 2010 he seemingly gave up on his teamCan't give you that year as great as the regular season was. 2011... we already know the answer. And then there's the last 3 years. Basically Lebron as great as his numbers were is very Wilt-like. In 2011 he proved everyone saying he couldn't win right. It's hard for me to look at his Cleveland career and say he could get those teams to a win if they were adequate because he got on a great team and made them lose. If they had Battier instead of Lebron in that series Wade would've got the W.
Basically I highly value postseason performance and Lebron is lacking compared to the others on my radar.
I can't tell if this was a serious response. I will address few of the points:
The 'He quit' narrative for the 2010 series is so overblown and has taken a life of its own, thanks to the media. He had a bad game 5 and had problems with turnovers but other than that had a fine series overall. What that series did more than anything else is exposed Cleveland's lack of a reliable second scoring option when Doc/Celts focused their entire defense towards LeBron.
He couldn't win the right way in 2011? What? They did just fine in the playoffs and then struggled against the Mavs. That's a 6 game sample size. LeBron does deserve blame and criticism for that series but the Mavs also played him perfectly. Let's give them credit. LeBron also willingly deferred to a fault to Wade and his own weaknesses got exposed which prompted him to work more on his game.
As for Miami winning with Battier, I am not even going to bother addressing that.
JordansBulls wrote:The Warriors are basically a good college team until they meet a team with bigs in the NBA.
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drza wrote:Purch wrote:Let's start with that latter. As I've pointed out, RAPM isn't a standalone measure of "goodness". On the other hand, it is the best measure we currently have to tie a team's performance to a certain player that doesn't involve using the box score. The box score has its uses as well, but I'm one that likes to keep them as separate measures. But I digress. This is also the best measure that we have for gauging a player's defensive impact, since so much of defense isn't covered in the box scores.
Thus, if someone says Kobe Bryant was an "elite" defender early in his career, I would expect there to be some sign of it in the RAPM studies. I'm not saying that he needed to measure out as well as the ATG bigs in order to impress me, but there have been LOTS of good defensive wings whose impact shows up clearly in the RAPM data. Shane Battier, Ron Artest, Luol Deng, Eddie Jones, Doug Christie, Bruce Bowen, Andre Iguodala and Manu Ginobili are all wings that show up among the top-52 players in Doc MJ's normalized data set. Each of them had very clear defensive impact from the wing, on the order of + 3.2 - +4.3 on that scale in their 5-year defensive peaks.
No offence, but RAPM is based on rotation trends, and doesn't show impact. The defensive wings you named are all specialist who don't play heavy minutes and are part of defensive-mind lineups. I don't get the reasoning of taking 7-8 mins that a star is on the bench, and comparing it to the 36-37 he's on court as if the situations are equal. Guys like Kobe/Wade are listed as equal to Derek Fisher for godsake.

Ask yourself, was Rashard a more impactful defender than Dwight in 2009? Because Lewis was 2.6, and Dwight (DPOY, weak defensive cast, #1 DRtg for Orl) was only 2. Someone is gonna have to explain why RAPM is legit, because time and time again we see bizarre yearly results. BTW, Odom was 3.9 on defense.....so um, how would Orlando have done with him anchoring the defense?
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
PaulieWal wrote:GC Pantalones wrote:For me it comes down to one thing: How many rings could you get with Lebron leading your team. Now his prime is great but prior to 08 you definitely aren't winning a ring with Lebron. In 08 he wouldn't win going off his playoff performance. In 09 that's year one he could win. 2010 he seemingly gave up on his teamCan't give you that year as great as the regular season was. 2011... we already know the answer. And then there's the last 3 years. Basically Lebron as great as his numbers were is very Wilt-like. In 2011 he proved everyone saying he couldn't win right. It's hard for me to look at his Cleveland career and say he could get those teams to a win if they were adequate because he got on a great team and made them lose. If they had Battier instead of Lebron in that series Wade would've got the W.
Basically I highly value postseason performance and Lebron is lacking compared to the others on my radar.
I can't tell if this was a serious response. I will address few of the points:
The 'He quit' narrative for the 2010 series is so overblown and has taken a life of its own, thanks to the media. He had a bad game 5 and had problems with turnovers but other than that had a fine series overall. What that series did more than anything else is exposed Cleveland's lack of a reliable second scoring option when Doc/Celts focused their entire defense towards LeBron.
DO you remember the series? He didn't just play bad he stopped shooting the ball. In games 1, 2, and 3 Lebron attacked. In games 1 and 3 he was effective, in game 2 not so much but I would never say anything bad about how he played if he played like game 2 in games 4, 5, and 6. Game 5 wasn't a blowout until the third quarter and Lebron was nowhere to be found. In game 6 he made 1 easy dunk after the 3 threes he hit in the start of the fourth and I'm pretty sure it's the only shot he attempted in the last 9 minutes of the 4th quarter of a close elimination game. At the time I chalked it up to that injury they said he had (on his off hand elbow) but it was fishy to say the least. And you can say he lacked a reliable second scoring option but I'm sure Shaq was saying the same thing in game 5 and Mo WIlliams and his 20 at half in game 6 say otherwise. Lebron's support was not that bad that series especially considering the defense they played on Boston. I don't really see a major difference between that team and Duncan's support in 02-03. Either way overall Lebron didn't play good. He had 2 great games (wins) and 4 horrid games (all losses).
He couldn't win the right way in 2011? What? They did just fine in the playoffs and then struggled against the Mavs. That's a 6 game sample size. LeBron does deserve blame and criticism for that series but the Mavs also played him perfectly. Let's give them credit. LeBron also willingly deferred to a fault to Wade and his own weaknesses got exposed which prompted him to work more on his game.
As for Miami winning with Battier, I am not even going to bother addressing that.
The Mavs played him perfectly? You mean stopping the drive? You mean having Jason Kidd check him? Come on man. Dallas didn't play Lebron any different from how they played Wade (he spent more time with Marion but that's it) and Wade still showed up while Lebron didn't. Anyone who doesn't see Lebron as a massive net negative in that series needs to rewatch those games and watch Lebron (if you could find him). At least Battier would make the open shot and play defense.
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Here are the numbers when Shaq and KG went head to head in 2003 and 2004. KG had HCA in both series but was outplayed by Shaq. This is peak KG in his 2 best seasons vs out of peak Shaq.
(Numbers per 40 minutes):
KG: 25-14-5, 3 TOV, 1 blk, .529 TS%, 23.6 PER, 103 O rating, 0.130 WS/48
Shaq: 24-15-3, 2 TOV, 3 blk, .551 TS%, 27.0 PER, 114 O rating, 0.227 WS/48
(Numbers per 40 minutes):
KG: 25-14-5, 3 TOV, 1 blk, .529 TS%, 23.6 PER, 103 O rating, 0.130 WS/48
Shaq: 24-15-3, 2 TOV, 3 blk, .551 TS%, 27.0 PER, 114 O rating, 0.227 WS/48
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An Unbiased Fan wrote:drza wrote:Purch wrote:Let's start with that latter. As I've pointed out, RAPM isn't a standalone measure of "goodness". On the other hand, it is the best measure we currently have to tie a team's performance to a certain player that doesn't involve using the box score. The box score has its uses as well, but I'm one that likes to keep them as separate measures. But I digress. This is also the best measure that we have for gauging a player's defensive impact, since so much of defense isn't covered in the box scores.
Thus, if someone says Kobe Bryant was an "elite" defender early in his career, I would expect there to be some sign of it in the RAPM studies. I'm not saying that he needed to measure out as well as the ATG bigs in order to impress me, but there have been LOTS of good defensive wings whose impact shows up clearly in the RAPM data. Shane Battier, Ron Artest, Luol Deng, Eddie Jones, Doug Christie, Bruce Bowen, Andre Iguodala and Manu Ginobili are all wings that show up among the top-52 players in Doc MJ's normalized data set. Each of them had very clear defensive impact from the wing, on the order of + 3.2 - +4.3 on that scale in their 5-year defensive peaks.
No offence, but RAPM is based on rotation trends, and doesn't show impact. The defensive wings you named are all specialist who don't play heavy minutes and are part of defensive-mind lineups. I don't get the reasoning of taking 7-8 mins that a star is on the bench, and comparing it to the 36-37 he's on court as if the situations are equal. Guys like Kobe/Wade are listed as equal to Derek Fisher for godsake.![]()
Ask yourself, was Rashard a more impactful defender than Dwight in 2009? Because Lewis was 2.6, and Dwight (DPOY, weak defensive cast, #1 DRtg for Orl) was only 2. Someone is gonna have to explain why RAPM is legit, because time and time again we see bizarre yearly results. BTW, Odom was 3.9 on defense.....so um, how would Orlando have done with him anchoring the defense?
1) It doesn't treat them as equal. RAPM finds coefficients for everybody simultaneously to minimize L2 norm, so your lineup and your opponents' lineup are both taken into account.

2) Why are you comparing Kobe/Wade to Fisher? RAPM tells you how well guys played in their respective roles. No reason to. Compare a role player to a star guard.
Now that's the difference between first and last place.
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GC Pantalones wrote:The Mavs played him perfectly? You mean stopping the drive? You mean having Jason Kidd check him? Come on man. Dallas didn't play Lebron any different from how they played Wade (he spent more time with Marion but that's it) and Wade still showed up while Lebron didn't. Anyone who doesn't see Lebron as a massive net negative in that series needs to rewatch those games and watch Lebron (if you could find him). At least Battier would make the open shot and play defense.
Yes, they played him perfectly. They made him a passer. His jumper which was on against Chicago and Boston (specifically his 3 point shot) deserted him against Dallas. Dallas had several zone match-ups to contain LeBron (listen to Cuban talk about this himself). LeBron's lack of a post game gets overstated but he was not comfortable there at all and could not take advantage when the Mavs put Kidd or Barea on him (for a couple of possessions)

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MacGill wrote:Wilt….as great as the numbers were, didn't have the same fundamentals and while others will say the coulda woulda shoulda's with him, it is all speculation to what the limited footage all shows us if we're being honest in compared to Shaq.
If I judged by fundamentals then these 2 lousy free throw shooters would not be in my Top 100.
I'm not judging by style points, or how they would fit in today's game. Nor am I trying to judge how LeBron would have done in the 60s.
There are a lot og guys in my Top 100 who wouldn't pass the fundamentals test- besides Wilt and Shaq I would add
Walt Frazier and Artis Gilmore right off the top of my head.
Shaq was pretty raw when he started, but improved his footwork and fundamentals while in the league.
Wilt's fundamentals were never great, but he was a decent ball-handler and passer.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
ardee wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:My pre list had him at #5.
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Did you put your list up on the thread?
No but since you ask and it seems relevant to the current discussion here was my too 10:
1 Russell
2 Jordan
3 Kareem
4 Garnett
5 Shaq
6 Duncan
7 Hakeem
8 LeBron
9 Magic
10 Bird
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
colts18 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:In relation to some of the other candidates and my KG vote:
Shaq - completely get people voting for him. My pre list had him at #5. Peak wise input him ahead of KG but I marvel at how close RAPM data has them and Shaq had loads of intangible negatives while KG is if anything the opposite.
And yeah I'm mentioning RAPM again but understand I wouldn't be where I am with KG if I saw things as so clear cut otherwise. Shaq is clearly better on offense while KG has it in defense and is also a superstar on offense. I question the ability of humans in general to tally up a holistic assessment with confidence when it means evaluating such different roles.
Do you think that KG has any playoff runs stronger than Shaq's 95, 98, 00, 01, and 02 playoff runs? If you go by PER, Shaq has 9 playoff runs higher than KG's best playoff run.
How many playoff runs do you think Shaq has better than KG's best run (2004)? How many of Shaq's playoff runs do you think is better than KG's 2nd best playoff run (2008)?
What you're basically saying is that you see a sustained prime from Shaq at a level above KG and that should be enough to give him the nod. Makes total sense I don't object at all.
There is however the factor of Shaq's toxic way of being to consider and that had real consequences to him actually helping his teams in his career. I don't consider that factor to be minor.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
Clyde Frazier wrote:Since the majority of your criteria seems to revolve around winning, how do you judge players who simply weren't fortunate enough to play with as much talent as others? Do you look at it from a relative standpoint of, "ok this player did (or didn't do) all they could to help their team succeed given the cards they were dealt"? Winning ultimately matters, but I think context can by applied in many cases where players fall short.
The criteria revolves around helping your team win. The object of the game is to help your team win. When a player is drafted, he's drafted so that he can help that team win. When a player is signed, he's signed so that he can help that team win. When a player is scouted, he's scouted because the scouts hope to find in him a player who can help their team win. That's the bottom line. Player's aren't being paid millions of dollars a year for nothing.
It's funny that you say this though, because after some thought, I actually refined and added to my criteria last night. This may not be final, as there may be something else I might have overlooked, but, for now, here are my revisions:
Spoiler:
My criteria is subject to change as I think more or if I see something that I hadn't taken into account, but that's as it stands now.
I remember your posts from the RPOY project, you consistently brought it. Please continue to do so, sir. This board needs guys like you to counteract ... worthless posters
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
An Unbiased Fan wrote:ardee wrote:On the LeBron talk:
I can get it if he starts getting votes after this thread. I personally see him as being a step below Jordan, Russell, Wilt and Kareem, but with everyone else he's right there. What he lacks in career longevity he makes up for in peak longevity: an odd term, but the meaning is that he has so many seasons that are all insanely dominant and are arguably just as good as each other to be considered for his peak.
09, 10, 12, 13, 14: how many players left on the board have five seasons at that level? Wilt, yes. Bird, maybe? Duncan, Shaq, Hakeem, Kobe, Magic: none of them have this kind of extended peak.
I'd say 87-91 Magic, 06-10 Kobe, 84-88 Bird, 95/00-03 Shaq all can claim that. But still, its very impressive.Doctor MJ wrote:Hakeem - is the guy I always wonder if I should rank higher. Completely get why he's so compelling. But if not for the play during his title runs is anyone even talking about him now? I worry with him that perception of him before that turning point might have been right.
People have already made great points in Hakeem but I look forward to more. In particular if someone could up my confidence in his regular offensive game. As some know I'm not actually a big fan of having your big volume score unless he's Shaq. Maybe people can make good points about Hakeem's day in day out offensive impact and why it's more than the numbers suggest.
In regards to Hakeem vs KG, wouldn't you say Hakeem's offensive impact was on par with KG(way better in the playoffs), and his defensive impact was greater? For example, Hakeem anchored 8 teams that had a Top 5 DRtg. KG didn't anchor a single Top 5 defense until he went to Boston in 2008.
Impactwise, how did Prime KG miss the playoffs 3 years in a row. The 2005 Wolves were #15 in DRtg, the 2006 Wolves were #10, and the 2007 Wolves were a dismal #21. Offensively, the 2005 Wolves were #6 ORtg(very good)...but then Spreewell left to feed his family, along with Cassell, and the Wolves were #28 in ORtg. In 2007, the Wolves were #25 in ORtg.
KG is another guy who's box scores don't translate very well to team impact for me. Outside of RAPM, can practical results from KG's impact been shown to be better than Hakeem impact?
I think Hakeem's peak offense surpasses KGs but it's not clear to me that such was the
Case consistently in his prime.
I consider KGs most noteworthy defensive attribute to be a GOAT level defensive floor general and I've yet to see anything to indicate I should see Hakeem on that level. I might yet but I would never assume such a thing.
to the statements about Garnett not always being able I lead teams to contention, well, I suppose that I consider it a
Central thesis that that is a limitation of players in general.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
PaulieWal wrote:GC Pantalones wrote:The Mavs played him perfectly? You mean stopping the drive? You mean having Jason Kidd check him? Come on man. Dallas didn't play Lebron any different from how they played Wade (he spent more time with Marion but that's it) and Wade still showed up while Lebron didn't. Anyone who doesn't see Lebron as a massive net negative in that series needs to rewatch those games and watch Lebron (if you could find him). At least Battier would make the open shot and play defense.
Yes, they played him perfectly. They made him a passer. His jumper which was on against Chicago and Boston (specifically his 3 point shot) deserted him against Dallas. Dallas had several zone match-ups to contain LeBron (listen to Cuban talk about this himself). LeBron's lack of a post game gets overstated but he was not comfortable there at all and could not take advantage when the Mavs put Kidd or Barea on him (for a couple of possessions). Plus, Spo played right into Carlisle's hands by putting LeBron on Terry and tiring him out. Engage in hyperbole all you want but LeBron still averaged 18/7/7 in that series and Battier isn't going to make Miami win no matter how well he played.
Per 36 Lebron averaged 14.7/5.9/5.6/. He had a 23 USG rate. He wasn't forced to be a passer he just didn't touch the ball.
Lebron shot 9/28 from deep against Dallas (32%). He was a 33% shooter in the regular season (basically his shot wasn't off it was regular). In +/- Wade was -6 and Bosh was -7. Lebron was -36 (next closest was Joel Anthony at -20). His median was -5.5 while Bosh was +0.5 and Wade was +1.0. By all metrics Lebron was a below average player that series (my bad not all. He had a 16 PER).
Lebron was a -36 overall in a series lost by 16 points meaning they were +20 when he wasn't on the floor (in 4.4 mpg).
Statistically if we can agree that 2011 Battier was above average (I think he was) the argument can be made that Dallas would've lost in 5 or 6 the way Wade was playing (and I believe Wade would've done it).
Now Dallas played great defense but they hardly did anything new. We all knew and know (because it still worked for San Antonio 2 years later until Lebron remembered who he was) you just need to pack the paint against Lebron. Dallas took it a step further and guarded him like others used to do Dirk (instead of wasting a great defender on him use a small guard because he can't post them up). If anything this is confirming there were fatal flaws in his game that could completely render him useless. Not really helping Lebron to be on that Shaq/Duncan/Hakeem/Magic level is it?
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
fpliii wrote:1) It doesn't treat them as equal. RAPM finds coefficients for everybody simultaneously to minimize L2 norm, so your lineup and your opponents' lineup are both taken into account.
2) Why are you comparing Kobe/Wade to Fisher? RAPM tells you how well guys played in their respective roles. No reason to. Compare a role player to a star guard.
1) But the context is different from the mins a guy like Kobe spends on court vs off court. We're talking about maybe a 5-6 min 2nd & 4th quarter strecth where its bench vs bench, in comparison to 36 mins of Kobe on court vs starters. Nevermind the lineup fluctuations whcih only deepens the endless noise. RAPM's problem has always been its very premise.
2) OK, What about Vlade Divac being rated a better defender than Dwight? Was 09 Odom a better defender than 09 Lebron like RAPM suggests? Was 2009 Billups a big negative on defense, and 09 Fisher a big plus?
When RAPM first came about, its backers openly said it shouldn't be used in comparisons. But over the years thats exactly what's happened. Even more, the use of RAPM seems inconsistent & haphazard, which only makes it more questionable. Duncan for instance has better RAPM numbers than KG, yet....I see RAPM as a the major reasoning for KG at #4. For me there's a disconnect, especially when most of the list don't have RAPM numbers to compare. What if we had RAPM stats on MJ and his trend was the same as Kobe/Wade? Would that make him less of a player?
Every other stat has direct correlations we can quantify. RAPM has never show correlation to actual impact.
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
drza wrote:Purch wrote:And that's only speaking about the games I've uploaded. I've literally sat through hours upon hours of Garnett post seasons performances, which is the reason why I'm comfortable saying that he hasn't impressed me enough to say that he has a top 10 impact on the game.
Even the 4 of his best scoring games I uploaded (I might actually add some more later this summer from my collection) left me disappointed in his ability to change the flow of the game. I remember he'd be in the 4th quater of the game, whiles a team is going on a big run, and rather than take the ball to the hole, he'd keep on forcing mid range shots even when it wasn't falling even when he was being played 1 on 1. Or he'd get pushed out of position when his team needed to stop a run, and settle for a bad fade away. What I remember being impressed by most by him, whiles breaking down his footage, was always his ability to defend players off the dribble and on the perimeter. But specifically in both the Laker series from 03 and from 04 I found myself underwhelmed by his Rim protection .Purch wrote: I think what makes Kobe unique is that different parts of his game peaked at different times. Early in his career his defense was elite but the effort on that end of the floor fell off toward the end of the three peat. Then his athletic/scoring peak was from 05-07 in my eyes. Whiles his passing, post game and three point peak came from 08-10 if I'm remembering correctly. Sometimes it almost seems like different players.
I'm hoping that this becomes the start of a good conversation, because there's a lot here to work with that I applaud and other that I'd like to rebut. A couple of notes before I get started:
1) In the process of this response I may speak of general trends of thought on Kobe and Garnett that perhaps you don't ascribe to. If I do, then consider that part of my post as not specifically for you.
2) Warning! This post will use RAPM as evidence
Let's start with that latter. As I've pointed out, RAPM isn't a standalone measure of "goodness". On the other hand, it is the best measure we currently have to tie a team's performance to a certain player that doesn't involve using the box score. The box score has its uses as well, but I'm one that likes to keep them as separate measures. But I digress. This is also the best measure that we have for gauging a player's defensive impact, since so much of defense isn't covered in the box scores.
Thus, if someone says Kobe Bryant was an "elite" defender early in his career, I would expect there to be some sign of it in the RAPM studies. I'm not saying that he needed to measure out as well as the ATG bigs in order to impress me, but there have been LOTS of good defensive wings whose impact shows up clearly in the RAPM data. Shane Battier, Ron Artest, Luol Deng, Eddie Jones, Doug Christie, Bruce Bowen, Andre Iguodala and Manu Ginobili are all wings that show up among the top-52 players in Doc MJ's normalized data set. Each of them had very clear defensive impact from the wing, on the order of + 3.2 - +4.3 on that scale in their 5-year defensive peaks.
Kobe measured out at 292nd on the defensive list, with a 5-year peak defensive impact of less than 1 point.
Why would Kobe's defensive RAPM scores be so much smaller than expected, even in his early years? Is it a case of the RAPM approach missing it? That's possible, but it seems unlikely that the stat would unfairly single out Kobe and not the other good wing defenders that I mentioned. So, what might be another cause?
Well, speaking from my own observations, Kobe has definite strengths and weaknesses as a defender. One of his major strengths is his ability to play on-ball, 1-on-1 defense when he is motivated to. His size/athletic ability/competitiveness streak allows him to really bulldog any perimeter player that has the ball and challenges him. On the other hand, throughout his career (not just later) he has the tendency to conserve energy on defense so that he could use that energy for offense. He is not noted for consistently fighting through screens, nor is he known for making excellent defensive and help rotations. If anything, Kobe's off-ball defense has been noted as an area where he ball-watches more than putting in maximum team effort.
So, how do I interpret the defensive RAPM results in the face of my Kobe scouting report? I interpret it that Kobe's defensive approach is not one that produces measurable impact in his team's defensive efforts. But what the approach DOES do is really pop on screen. People won't remember the missed rotation or the screen that he don't fight through, but they WILL remember his mano-a-mano duel with MVP Iverson. They WILL remember when he blocked LeBron's shot in an All Star game.
To me, Kobe's defense is a good example for why sometimes stats like RAPM can do a better job of evaluating impact than our eye-test. For one thing, we don't always give proper weight to the individual acts on the court that are the most important. And for another, we all just miss a lot of the action.
The irony here, and what sparked this (increasingly wordy) response to your two posts, is that Garnett tends to be the exact opposite of Kobe in this respect. Many observers watch Garnett play, and come away unimpressed. It's funny that you referenced KG's 33-point game game 5 against the Pistons in the 2008 playoffs, because I had what (to me) was a crazy exchange with a Celtics fan on a different message board about that game in real time. True story, this was the gist of the exchange:
Celtics fan: Man, KG had pretty numbers but he really didn't give us much on offense.
Me: Wait, he led all scorers with 33 points.
Celtics fan: Yeah, but they were low impact points. He wasn't there down the stretch.
Me: Hold on, he led all scorers with 10 points in the 4th quarter!
Celtics fan: Yeah, but those came early. He didn't really do anything in crunch time.
Me: He hit the game-sealing free throws with 2 seconds left! Are you sure we watched the same game?
Focus: Like Kobe's defense, Garnett also has strengths and weaknesses on offense. You point out that he isn't always aggressive as you would like. That you would like to see him drive or post more instead of settling for jumpers. And those are fair (and oft levied) criticisms. On the flip side, Garnett has offensive strengths as well. He is one of the better mid-range shooters the position has ever seen. He is both an excellent and a willing passer. He is very good at drawing defensive attention and making the pass (or the pass-that-leads-to-the-pass) that gets a teammate an open shot. He's an enthusiastic (and sometimes illegal) pick setter. He knows where his teammates should be, and if they aren't there he communicates it to them.
And if we complete the mirror analysis to what we did with Kobe's defense, Garnett's offense DOES measure out as elite using offensive RAPM studies. He is 12th overall on DocMJ's normalized offensive RAPM rankings in terms of 5-year peak, and in the top-5 among big men with a 5-year peak of +5.4 on offense. Shaq (+7.6) and Dirk (+7.0) are the only two bigs with a convincingly higher mark than KG's on offense.
Just like Kobe's defense, one possible reason for the RAPM mark to be counter-intuitive is that for some reason the stat just likes Garnett in particular. Again, this is exceedingly unlikely. Perhaps it is too reliant on the regular season, as Ardee and Ryoga allege...but as I pointed out before, I'm almost positive that the postseason is weighted heavier in RAPM studies than the regular season, and also KG's on/off +/- scores appear to be BETTER in the postseason than they are in the regular season. So I don't see any indication that KG's postseasons would hurt his RAPM marks. So, then, I interpret the combination of evidence to suggest that KG tends to have a much larger positive impact than most observers seem to realize because again, his strengths aren't as easily observed as his perceived weaknesses and the ratio of his strengths vs his weaknesses isn't properly weighted.
Summary: In the examples of Kobe's defense and KG's offense, it appears to me that Kobe's defense has a tendency to LOOK like it should be more impactful than it is. On the other hand, it seems to me that KG's offense has a tendency to not appear to be as strong as it is. Not coincidentally, Kobe's defensive strength is his 1-on-1 on-ball defensive approach, and KG's perceived weakness on offense is his 1-on-1 scoring. It reminds me of a quote from Bill Russell that I've seen posted here before:I used to break it down. There are 48 minutes in a game. It takes a second -- a second-and-a-half, maybe two seconds -- for a three point shot. And if you add up all the shots taken in a game -- free throws don't count because the clock stops -- but if you take all the seconds added up shooting and rebounding it comes to about three minutes. Now out of a 48-minute game three minutes are concerned with shooting and rebounding. What is going on the other 45 minutes?
I think the common tendency in the eye test is to focus more on the 3 minutes than the other 45, especially the 1-on-1 parts. And don't get me wrong, what happens in that 3 minutes is extremely important, and having the ability to go mano a mano on either offense or defense is a wonderful talent that certainly helps. But the game is so, so much more than just 1-on-1 skills, and I don't think our mindsets have caught up with that/made the appropriate weighting when evaluating 1-on-1 skills compared to the total package.
Personally, I've never used Per or +\- stats because I feel it's impossible to isolate a players impact in the course of 48 minutes in a 5 on 5 game. The only advanced stat I've found useful for individual evaluation is True shooting %. I have yet to find stats that effectivly account for: "
Strength of screens a big will set (Becomes important when evaluating the impact a player has on their team, because bigs who set stronger screens allow their playmakers to create space to operate)
Their passing ability out of double teams
Abilty to make the right play even with the shot clock running down
Their ability to alter the defensive gameplay of a team
Their Abilty to move to the right spot on the court both offensively and defensively
Their Abilty to fight for position and not be pushed around Inside
Their Abilty to make quick and smart plays with the ball
Their ability to create space
And there's so many more things that I feel gets left out when you try to package a players overall impact on the game into something like a +\- stat
Now in reference to the eye test, I think you're putting all watching of game footage on equal footing. Personally I have two youtube channels with a lot of nba games, and I own a large amount of game footage. What separates simply watching a game, from going through footage for the evaluation of one player is the process. When I went through the KG footage I used for the videos, it wasn't simply about the end result on a possesion, or even the Imidiate cause of a good or bad possesion. When I examine game footage It's about what a player has done on a possesion that positively, neutrally or negatively impacted a particular possesion.
Back in the day I would literally take a piece of paper, focus in on a particular player and write how they effected each possesion .
So it would look like this
Offense Possesion #1- Garnett deflects tip ball to teammate , jogs up the court, catches the ball in the high post, passesthe ball to Cassell -whiles coming up to set the screen- rolls to the basket hard, draws in the defense enough
to give Cassell the room for an open jumpshot
Defensive possesion #1- Garnett stays attached to Webbers body in the post, Garnett drawn into pick and roll defensive situation at the top of the key , whiles guarding Chris Webber. Garnett goes over the screen and makes the correct switch on to Bibby. Bibby calls for an isolation-As a result Kg takes a defensive stance and uses his long arms to try and prevent penetration, Bibby tries to attack the rim but Garnett cuts him off,Bibby then takes a step back three that Garnett comes back out to contest.
When you break down their activity on a possesion by possesion basis you start to really understand the little things that make up a players DNA.
When you tell me that +\- indicates that Garnett is an elite offensive player (in regards to the players he's being compared to) It gives me even less incentive to take the stat as seriously as a lot of the other posters. Here's how I think of Kg's offense
-Elite passer/playmaker of any area on the floor
-Great/smart screen setter
-Excellent mid range shooter (catch and shoot, contested, off the dribble)
-Doesn't play in the low post enough to maximize post abilities
-pushed out of the post to easily
-Is perfectly willing to settle for contested long mid range shots
-Not impressed by his offensive rounding ability
-Extremly impressed by his point guard abilities
-Impressed by his Abilty to create space using off the ball movement
-Not impressed by how easily it seems for playoff defenses to disrupt his scoring rhythm
- Hes not the kind of player to provide a scoring boost consistently when his team is down in the playoffs
There's Probally more.. But when I've observed these things it makes me think that KG was elite offensively when compared to the league as a whole.. But when it comes to the players he's compared to in the top 15 he comes up short with his impact on that end of the floor.
The reason I value Kobe's 1 on 1 defense so highly, is because I consider the early 2000's the peak of isolation basketball. During the early 2000's due to the combination of zone rules and Handchecking, you had this defensive environment that made it so difficult to score, that you had all these 1 on 1 scorers making a name for themselves. So it's not that I consider 1 on 1 defense more valuable than help defense... I simply feel that 1 on 1 defense was more valuable In the early part of the decade before these complex team defenses were developed, and it was in this era that Kobe peaked defensively. But make no mistake about it, Kobe's quick hands, great foot speed, great anticipation and his intensity made him a great defender before that era ended with the rule changes.

Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
An Unbiased Fan wrote:1) But the context is different from the mins a guy like Kobe spends on court vs off court. We're talking about maybe a 5-6 min 2nd & 4th quarter strecth where its bench vs bench, in comparison to 36 mins of Kobe on court vs starters. Nevermind the lineup fluctuations whcih only deepens the endless noise. RAPM's problem has always been its very premise.
What good offensive players was prime Kobe shutting/slowing down in the playoffs?
Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
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Re: RealGM Top 100 List #4
GC Pantalones wrote:snip....
I already said he had a horrible Finals, no one is arguing that. I was specifically talking about his 3 point shot deserting him against Dallas when he was shooting 44% against Boston and 39% against the Bulls from 3. Against the Dallas as they zoned him up he did not have outside shooting to bail him out. Wade already had a great Finals and he shared the floor with Dallas paying a lot of attention to LeBron. If there is no LeBron, Wade gets a lot more defensive attention and that may or may not translate into Wade playing even better. Replacing LeBron with Battier doesn't bring Miami close to a title. That's quite laughable.
The most important thing for me is that he improved his game (post game and specifically shooting) and used those to win rings in 12/13. His 3 point shooting has improved gradually and has been consistently 36%+ over the last 3 years.
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