I think I have Duncan over Shaq because, outside of those Laker title years, Shaq was often disappointing and lazy on defense. I don't put too much stock into character issues, but Duncan's gotta get some credit here. He's such a nice franchise piece. I'm not going to completely dismiss Shaq's annual 15 games missed either. That still affects seeding.
Let's compare LeBron with, say, Shaq. 08 through 14 LeBron versus 96 through 02 Shaq (edit: oops I selected the wrong years.) Like LeBron, some of those early seasons were disappointing for the end result. Shaq destroyed people in '98 when he played, but missed too many games and flamed out in the playoffs. Before Phil Jackson, Shaq did not have a great reputation compared to other all-time greats. And in retrospect, those Cleveland Mike Brown teams ... how is it possible to win 60+ games with them? They didn't win the title, but they didn't look like a contender either. Then LeBron proves him later on by winning with a past his prime Wade, who's a terrible fit for LeBron (except in the open court.) He adapts his game, becomes one of the best post players, and becomes a proficient at the catch and shoot (he was second in % after Korver for players with at least 1.5 attempts a game, according to SportVU.) Complain about '11 all you want, but Shaq wasn't at his best in '97, '99, and '02 ... and the regular season in '01 on defense and he missed games and got pick and rolled to death in '98. So it depends on how you factor in Shaq's post '02 career and what those extra seasons do for you.
Just for fun, using the Favorite Toy method of Bill James/Hollinger, LeBron's projected career totals are: 36,079 points, 9645 rebounds, and 8954 assists. That's insane. He hasn't had a major injury, and those projected totals are actually pretty conservative. He's a big, skilled player who could be a full-time PF when he slows down. A PF who's still quick, most likely, with great range and passing.... That's still deadly. No one else is close to 30k/10k/10k. Oscar's the closest at 26,710/7804/9887. There are only 12 players in the 20k/5k/5k club, actually, and it's a fun group of Hall of Famers. (Try guessing all 12, and as a bonus there's a 13th guy who sorta counts.)
I know we have to wait until his career plays out, but with Jordan/Russell/Wilt/Kareem gone, there's no one who matches his crazy consistent peak. And he's played high minutes for a decade now.
There are lots of people who have complained about RAPM. If you think it's a poor metric, then prove it. Nitpicking certain players, especially with NPI RAPM, won't prove anything. I can cite PER's love of Cousins, how Carmelo led the league in PPG, Dantley's absurd efficiency, how Chris Andersen led (or nearly led) the playoffs in WS/48 last year, etc. RAPM is tested extensively, and it does very well. When it's blended with a statistical box score metric, it's a pretty amazing predictor. I used RAPM a bit when predicting 2013 team win totals, and my predictions beat nearly every NBA prognosticator and Vegas line. It's not insignificant. It's getting at something important and real.
By the way, Win Shares are being cited a lot here, but they're pretty awful when it comes to defense:
Ryan Anderson's decline on defense
Season Drtg Drtg percentile Team rating Team ranking
Code: Select all
2011 101 94.4 101.8 3
2012 105 51.1 104.1 12
2013 112 7.0 110.3 28Excuse the formatting, but Anderson's defense appears to slip from elite (94th percentile) to awful (7th.) What happened to his defense? Well, he went from sharing minutes on a team with Howard at his best on the Magic to New Orleans in 2013. There are lots of other examples. Asik had two straight years of being at the 99th percentile, then dropped to 80th in Houston even though he played well and competed on defense. In 2013, Blair had the 7th best defensive rating. Why did SAS drop him if he was the 7th best defender in the league?
So yeah sure, complain about defensive RAPM because Kobe's +/- isn't good enough....
Win Shares looks more stable because it's partly tied to a team's defensive rating. But when you look at teams with a lot of personnel change, or project three years into the future, Win Shares does not do a great job at predicting wins or performance.
So my questions are these:
-Why is Magic ranked under Duncan? Just longevity? What about their best, say, 8 seasons? How do they compare?
-Shaq at his best was extraordinary. How does that factor in?
-How do you rate LeBron 09 through 14? For me, it's enough that he's a contender right now. I imagine people think peak Duncan isn't far from 2013 LeBron? (The only guys who I think were peers with LeBron in that respect that I witnessed where Jordan and Shaq.)
Also, what years of the NBA are we considering? Does it start in '47? '49? '56? I didn't find a clear answer about the shot clock era.















