My vote: Lebron James.imo, Lebron’s peak is top 5 ever. Though I’d rate it marginally behind Shaq’s peak, what adds to the impressiveness of Lebron’s peak is that people can’t even agree on when his was (see this recent thread as proof:
viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1330624). Some people think is was ‘13, some people think it was ‘12, and yet others think his best year was ‘09.
Why does that make it more impressive? Because it means he had THREE separate years where he was playing at approximately similar (again: top 5 all-time) peak level. Compare that to Shaq or KG, for examples, for whom there is literally no debate at all as to where their respective peaks were, because they both have a pretty apparent and steep taper on either side of it.
Take a look at the AVERAGE of those three seasons for Lebron:
PER 31.4……
AVERAGE over three seasons! The only players for whom you can find a combination of any three seasons that average to a PER of 31.4 or higher are Michael Jordan and Wilt Chamberlain. Period. In fact, Jordan and Chamberlain are the only other players who have even had a SINGLE season as high as 31.4.
And frankly, ‘10 Lebron isn’t far behind those seasons-->PER of 31.1, giving him a 31.3 PER over four non-consecutive seasons. The only other player with a 4-season combo of >/= 31.3 PER is Michael Jordan.
His combined
playoff PER for ‘09, ‘12, ‘13--->31.1. The ONLY other player in NBA history who has a playoff PER of 31.1 or higher over any three (potentially non-consecutive) seasons is Michael Jordan. Shaq is the only other guy who even has a three-season combo playoff PER >30, fwiw.
Now obviously PER loves Lebron’s efficiency (because it favors efficient scoring). But even prior to the hyper-elite shooting efficiency of the last couple seasons, his production was on a super-elite level, just by way of sheer volume. Let's use a simplistic method that ignores shooting efficiency: just per 100 stats, pts+reb+ast+stl+blk-to`s……
Lebron's best season by this method is '09: 61.8.
Comparing a few other top tier stars by this method…..
*Shaquille O'Neal's best ('00) is just shy at 61.4
*Kevin Garnett's best ('04) is 60.5.
*Michael Jordan's best ('93) is 60.2 (he also had three seasons----`87, `90 and `91---at 60.1 each).
*Karl Malone's best ('97) is 59.7.
*Dwyane Wade's best ('09) is 59.2.
*Hakeem Olajuwon's ('93) is 58.6.
*Tim Duncan's best ('05, surprisingly; though should be noted this was the first year he began playing somewhat reduced minutes) is 57.5.
*Tracy McGrady's best ('03) is 57.5
*Kobe Bryant's best ('06) is 57.1
*Kevin Durant's best ('14) is 56.7.
*Kareem's best (pre-1973 data unavailable) is perhaps '77 at 59.6 (NOT counting TO`s, though, which were not yet recorded).
*Charles Barkley's best ('91) is 55.2
*Larry Bird's best ('85) is 54.5.
*Magic's best ('87) is 53.1.
In short, Lebron’s best season by this method (which ignores the efficiency that inflates his PER) is THE BEST SEASON ON RECORD for which we have per 100 data. Though if we wanted to also take a look at efficiency…….
Lebron in this ‘09 season ALSO had a higher TS% than ‘00 Shaq, ‘04 Kevin Garnett, ‘87 and ‘93 Jordan, ‘09 Dwyane Wade, ‘93 Hakeem Olajuwon, ‘05 Tim Duncan, '03 Tracy McGrady, ‘06 Kobe Bryant, and ‘85 Larry Bird.
Given his extraordinarily high (and
broad) peak, two-way impact, consistency and durability thus far…...I’d rate his prime equal
or better vs. anyone (except perhaps Jordan).
Aside from the unusually large number of “peak-level” seasons, his durability helps make up for any lesser longevity in a prime-vs.-prime comparison with some other players he’s in contention with for this spot (a disadvantage which exists only because his prime is still in progress).
Take a comparison with Shaq, for instance:
If we were to call Shaq’s prime ‘94 thru ‘05 (12 seasons).....Shaq played 801 rs games in that span.
If we’re that liberal about Shaq’s prime, I think we’d fairly have to call Lebron’s prime ‘05 thru present: 10 seasons, but 763 rs games. So in games played, Lebron’s prime is basically just half of a season behind Shaq already.
Once he's played his career out (such that longevity no longer counts against him), I think his ATL ceiling is indeed very very VERY high.
Because Shaq had several more non-prime---but still effective---seasons gives him a significant longevity argument over Lebron, which made #6 a difficult decision for me. But with Shaq out of the way......
Against guys like Magic or Bird, longevity is essentially a non-argument already: he's played 842 rs games (despite 16 missed in a player hold-out). Magic played 906, and Bird 897…….so he's less than one full season away from over-taking them both.
And RAPM data will only tend to inflate his status even further.
shutupandjam's Off/Def combined RAPM (and league rank) for Lebron from '06-'13:
'06--->4.7 (7th)
'07--->7.3 (2nd)
'08--->6.2 (5th)
'09--->8.1 (1st)
'10--->9.6 (1st)
'11--->7.0 (3rd)
'12--->7.8 (2nd)
'13--->8.0 (1st)
From espn.com
'14--->9.19 (1st)
stats-for-the-nba.appspot.com data (which admittedly I'm a bit skeptical of, as I think it's partially boxscore based, and often seems to favor defensive bigs [shot-blockers], but anyway....just for an additional source):
'06--->6.3 (9th)
'07--->7.4 (3rd)
'08--->8.2 (2nd)
'09--->11.3 (1st [handily])
'10--->11.9 (1st [handily])
'11--->8.1 (2nd)
'12--->9.5 (1st)
'13--->10.1 (1st)
'14--->7.9 (1st)
We don't have RAPM data on Magic, obviously. Assuming his defensive +/- is 0 or neutral (which is probably fair), he'd annually have to have an offensive impact of approx +7-9.5 (by shutupandjam's data) or +8-12 (by stats-for-the-nba....) to even compete with Lebron's overall impact each year.
For reference, the HIGHEST offensive +/- Steve Nash EVER achieved was 7.9 according to shutupandjam, and 8.6 according to stats-for-the-nba.appspot.
Also:
acrossthecourt wrote:
LeBron's got four seasons that rank among the best over, '14 isn't far behind, '11 is underrated, and he has a handful of high quality seasons before '09. He's got enough longevity now to match up against Magic and Bird.
Totally.....
RS:
26.7/7.5/7.0 on .594 TS%
116 ORtg, 102 DRtg
27.3 PER, .244 WS/48 on 38.8 mpg; leads league in both OWS and total WS, is either 2nd or 3rd in league in RAPM (depending on source), although should be noted he played more possessions than the person(s) ranked ahead of him, due to his high mpg.
In playoffs:
23.7/8.4/5.9/1.7/1.2 on .563 TS% and only 3.1 topg
113 ORtg, 102 DRtg
PER 23.7, .198 WS/48 on a whopping 43.9 mpg; leads league in playoff DWS and total playoff WS.......
.......and people talk as though he was hot dog s*** that year. I mean
how good are you? that fans and media can crucify you for this? that these kinds of numbers can be called an "off year"?
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire