Sometimes:
- 1) Player A > Player B, Player B > Player C, and Player C > Player A
2) Neither Player X > Player Y nor Player Y > Player X holds
Moderators: trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ
fpliii wrote:Dr Spaceman wrote:I have quite a few, but the ones I took by far the most flak for this season:
1. Kawhi is a top 6 player in the league right now and has league MVP-potential
2. Draymond Green is better than any PF not named Davis and ranks probably in the top 10 league-wide
3. Subjective evaluations (the eye test) are far more important and useful than any stat we've ever used. The problem is that most just aren't good at it for a variety of reasons, most of the time because they see what they want to see or simply don't know what to look for.
I'm in the same boat for the most part (maybe top 7 for KL since I think KD will be heathy again this year).
Point (3) is huge for me. I think a lot on this board, the "eye test" is unfortunately claimed as the evidence fueling one's biases. But for the most part, if someone is asked why his/her eye test tells something, and is asked to elaborate in detail, the argument will fall apart. So I think it's chiefly used as a cop-out.
If posters on the other hand can identify specifically what they are looking for from watching tape, and can actually break down (qualitatively and/or quantitatively) what they see and do/don't like from a player, I agree that's more valuable than any data we have or probably will have in the near future.
fpliii wrote:If posters on the other hand can identify specifically what they are looking for from watching tape, and can actually break down (qualitatively and/or quantitatively) what they see and do/don't like from a player, I agree that's more valuable than any data we have or probably will have in the near future.
mysticOscar wrote:I'm not really a stats person...but when i do i generally subtract a bit of weight in using the TS% of current perimeter players when comparing from previous era's. It favors todays perimeter players too much in comparison to yesteryears (more FT taken, easier driving lanes, greater 3pt shots)
Quotatious wrote:Oh, and one more - I'd take Billups over Isiah. Comparable team success, clearly better advanced numbers, more portable.
sp6r=underrated wrote:- Playoffs are generally overvalued.
- 1995 Rockets are the worse title team since 1980 and had massive structural flaws. There playoff run to me is no different than that massive Hawks winning streak: a bunch of guys playing over their heads for a month and a half.
- 2009 and 2010 Magic were legitimate title contenders and are underappreciated because of Howard's behavior the last few years along with people reading too much into the 2010 ECF.
- The two best Spurs title teams (05 and 14) were as good or better than the best Showtime title team.
- Hakeem is closer to being out of the top 10 than a legitimate GOAT level player.
- Playoff on/off is of negligible value.
Quotatious wrote:KG over Kobe and Kobe/Dirk about equal (Bryant getting only a slight edge), is a pretty unpopular opinion, I guess. Maybe not so much on the PC board, but outside of it, most people would think I'm insane if I told them that
Peak Wade/Dr. J over peak Bird/Magic (that's an idea I'm toying with right now) would be another.
Also, Oscar was IMO probably just as good as Magic and Bird, he just wasn't nearly as lucky as they were in terms of team situation, and doesn't have nearly as much team success, but individually, I think he's about as good as they were (I currently have them 9th, 10th and 11th on my all-time list).
Dr. J over Magic/Bird IMO makes sense, too (because of his great longevity, and arguably higher peak - I certainly don't dismiss the ABA or think that it was a "joke" league, like some people do, and I think his finals performance against Denver in the '76 finals was on par with the first three-peat MJ and three-peat Shaq, it was absolutely GOAT level).
I would strongly consider putting Gilmore over Ewing, too (better longevity, more consistent playoff performer).
Oh, and as far as Jordan's peak - if I had to choose a year other than '91, I'd probably go with '88 or '89 (because of insane boxscore and motor, two-way play). Granted, me and you have a different approach to analyzing basketball, I tend to take boxscore into account pretty heavily. 1990 would be ahead of '92 for me, as well. I'd probably go with '93 over '92, as well.
That's similar to '09 vs '12/'13 LeBron.
acrossthecourt wrote:One of my most unpopular opinions was that Draymond > Klay and that Wes Matthews = Klay, but given what happened in the playoffs and to Portland that's not completely crazy anymore.
acrossthecourt wrote:One of my most unpopular opinions was that Draymond > Klay and that Wes Matthews = Klay, but given what happened in the playoffs and to Portland that's not completely crazy anymore.
Ballerhogger wrote:RS play has taken a hit through out the years , Take curry for example he played his 3rd lowest minutes in season in his whole career at 2613. Thats 233 minutes less than the year before. Yet this did not affect his MVP chances. He only avg 32.3 MP this past season. Overall RS will look less impressive unless the NBA changes the amount of games played.
Owly wrote:Dr Olajuwon wrote:Quotatious wrote:I agree. Common sense tells me that if a player has 1000-1200 regular season games played, and only about 100-200 playoff games, the former is a much better sample (not only because it's 10 times bigger, but also because it's more much more evenly-matched, in terms of competition).
Hmm...
There is something to the Playoffs though, just like there is something to the regular season games, compared to practice.
For instance, Howard is able to hit 1252 free throws out of 1532 during practice, 82%.Spoiler:
This % plummets in real games. Obviously, there is something mental here. There is something in RS that doesn't allow him to hit free throws as well as he does during practice.
My point is, yes, the more games the better sample size, I agree with that, but Playoff games are not the same as RS games. There is more pressure.
I wouldn't change my mind on a players basketball ability if he plays worse in PO's compared to RS, but I would question his mental toughness who makes him play worse (could be that and/or could be that he plays against tougher teams compared to RS, there is that possibility as wel, as you pointed it out).
Firstly this assumes playoffs is to RS as RS is to practice. Which it isn't.
Free throws in particular are a dubious example. Free throws in practice are take within a consistent routine with immediate feedback. People have made thousands of free throws in a row. They do not do so in game situations as such players (a) are not in a routine, (b) are likely more fatigued and (c) have probably just been fouled. Further free throws are an aspect of the game uniquely vulnerable to psychological influence (due to the individual nature and the amount of time available).
Whether or not Dwight's practice FT% was legit, the two relationships are not analogous.
I'm with Q; RS is a way, way larger sample. If I saw evidence that playoff performance variations, on the whole were more than you'd expect by luck (accounting for the change in circumstance), I might be more persuaded. My other problem is some of the people who are into playoff performance, are so, selectively and/or unsystematically.mtron929 wrote:Another example to illustrate the discrepancies in regular season play and playoff play is as follows. Let's say that there is a player, R, who plays at a level 98 (on a scale of 1 to 100) against bad teams, 90 against good teams, and 84 against great teams. Another player, P, plays at a level of 91 against bad teams, 91 against good teams, and 89 against great teams. On average, it is conceivable that player R has better overall stats. However, I would always take player P over R because in the real season (aka the playoffs), you are only going up against good/great teams.
The assumption here seems to be that players perform differently against different calibre teams (and that differing team calibre is either the primary or only difference between RS and playoffs) if this were true records versus "good" (playoff or >.500) teams would be more indicative of playoff success and from what I recall they aren't.Purch wrote:[Vine][YouTube][/YouTube][/Vine]Quotatious wrote:I agree. Common sense tells me that if a player has 1000-1200 regular season games played, and only about 100-200 playoff games, the former is a much better sample (not only because it's 10 times bigger, but also because it's more much more evenly-matched, in terms of competition).
Completely disagree. In the grand scheme of things regular seasons match ups are relatively irrelevant. Coaches have readily admitted to saving plays and defenses for when it matters in the post season. It doesn't matter if David Robinsn can outplay Hakeem in the regular season ..., if Hakeem out plays him in a 7 game series that has coaches game planning different defenses to limit them over the course of every game.. Has them increasing their minutes.. Has their role players being limited by tougher defenses... Then that's what's most relevant. The only thing the regular season is really significant for is determine seeding. And even then regardless of you seedlings, it's up to you to elevate your play despite facing tougher defenses, and evolving defenses over the course of the series.
When ranking players regular season performance barley factors in for me. When you ask me how I view a player the first thing I think about is how they perform in the post season.
Role players limited by tougher defenses? Isn't it typically the reverse, coaches will plan to stop the key man (or men) and dare/force role players to beat them. And if so doesn't that make the typically renowned playoff dropoffs from unipolar offenses (Robinson, K Malone, Chamberlain) more explicable via context and, if one does seek to look into the playoffs heavily, make the playoff dropoffs of say a Robert Parish (and other tertiary options) more pertinent.mysticOscar wrote:Purch wrote:[Vine][YouTube][/YouTube][/Vine]
Completely disagree. In the grand scheme of things regular seasons match ups are relatively irrelevant. Coaches have readily admitted to saving plays and defenses for when it matters in the post season. It doesn't matter if David Robinsn can outplay Hakeem in the regular season ..., if Hakeem out plays him in a 7 game series that has coaches game planning different defenses to limit them over the course of every game.. Has them increasing their minutes.. Has their role players being limited by tougher defenses... Then that's what's most relevant. The only thing the regular season is really significant for is determine seeding. And even then regardless of you seedlings, it's up to you to elevate your play despite facing tougher defenses, and evolving defenses over the course of the series.
When ranking players regular season performance barley factors in for me. When you ask me how I view a player the first thing I think about is how they perform in the post season.
I agree. RS, you have players and teams that coast...teams that experiment with line ups, strategies...you have a lot of player trades, coaching staff changes, some teams tanking etc..
PO teams are generally already settled on there line up, conditioned to play at there maximum with more rest and more at stake. PO is when the real season starts...so not sure why not put more value in it?
Because there's much less data, because there's vast discrepancies in quality of competion faced (iirc 80s Lakers were routinely facing a route of roughly league -RS- average quality opponents, whereas the East then, or the West now likely means running a gauntlet of plausible champions -- right now Cleveland are considered the favourites to win the title, not because they are the best team but because the teams with the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th and 8th best odds all play in the same conference so only one can get to the final) because an 82 game season doesn't leave teams or players well rested and because (due to small samples and the role of luck) playoffs are (as I recall) a poor indicator of future performance in future RS and PS, whereas RS is better (at team and individual levels) and this is because playoff performance is less reliably indicative of (team or player) quality which in turn is because of aforementioned small samples, disparity in quality of competition, matchups etc. The reason American sports have playoffs (apart from travel distances making equal schedules a massive pain) is the anyone can win, keep you watching to the end, which is fine but you can't pretend it doesn't significantly increase the role of luck.mtron929 wrote:With the way the playoff system is structured, it becomes important to excel against the same opponent. I suspect that certain superstars could do this better than others. Thus, a superstar who can sustain excellence against common opponents for 6-7 games in a row becomes much more valuable than a superstar who gets figured out more readily as the number of encounters increase.
Obviously, this is not something that can be easily measured but no doubt, it's important.
This much is true. The question is then whether players do do so better than others, and whether (and to what degree) it is a matter of luck and various contextual factors (luck, coaching, quality of opponents, quality of teammates, matchups etc); or whether (and to what degree) it is intrinsic to the player. I do chafe somewhat at the use of superstars though because I think players roughly 3-8 become important in the playoffs (and are typically less subject to the planning stars might face, though over their careers they might have smaller playoffs samples).
Owly wrote:Dr Olajuwon wrote:Quotatious wrote:I agree. Common sense tells me that if a player has 1000-1200 regular season games played, and only about 100-200 playoff games, the former is a much better sample (not only because it's 10 times bigger, but also because it's more much more evenly-matched, in terms of competition).
Hmm...
There is something to the Playoffs though, just like there is something to the regular season games, compared to practice.
For instance, Howard is able to hit 1252 free throws out of 1532 during practice, 82%.Spoiler:
This % plummets in real games. Obviously, there is something mental here. There is something in RS that doesn't allow him to hit free throws as well as he does during practice.
My point is, yes, the more games the better sample size, I agree with that, but Playoff games are not the same as RS games. There is more pressure.
I wouldn't change my mind on a players basketball ability if he plays worse in PO's compared to RS, but I would question his mental toughness who makes him play worse (could be that and/or could be that he plays against tougher teams compared to RS, there is that possibility as wel, as you pointed it out).
Firstly this assumes playoffs is to RS as RS is to practice. Which it isn't.
Free throws in particular are a dubious example. Free throws in practice are take within a consistent routine with immediate feedback. People have made thousands of free throws in a row. They do not do so in game situations as such players (a) are not in a routine, (b) are likely more fatigued and (c) have probably just been fouled. Further free throws are an aspect of the game uniquely vulnerable to psychological influence (due to the individual nature and the amount of time available).
Whether or not Dwight's practice FT% was legit, the two relationships are not analogous.
I'm with Q; RS is a way, way larger sample. If I saw evidence that playoff performance variations, on the whole were more than you'd expect by luck (accounting for the change in circumstance), I might be more persuaded. My other problem is some of the people who are into playoff performance, are so, selectively and/or unsystematically.mtron929 wrote:Another example to illustrate the discrepancies in regular season play and playoff play is as follows. Let's say that there is a player, R, who plays at a level 98 (on a scale of 1 to 100) against bad teams, 90 against good teams, and 84 against great teams. Another player, P, plays at a level of 91 against bad teams, 91 against good teams, and 89 against great teams. On average, it is conceivable that player R has better overall stats. However, I would always take player P over R because in the real season (aka the playoffs), you are only going up against good/great teams.
The assumption here seems to be that players perform differently against different calibre teams (and that differing team calibre is either the primary or only difference between RS and playoffs) if this were true records versus "good" (playoff or >.500) teams would be more indicative of playoff success and from what I recall they aren't.Purch wrote:[Vine][YouTube][/YouTube][/Vine]Quotatious wrote:I agree. Common sense tells me that if a player has 1000-1200 regular season games played, and only about 100-200 playoff games, the former is a much better sample (not only because it's 10 times bigger, but also because it's more much more evenly-matched, in terms of competition).
Completely disagree. In the grand scheme of things regular seasons match ups are relatively irrelevant. Coaches have readily admitted to saving plays and defenses for when it matters in the post season. It doesn't matter if David Robinsn can outplay Hakeem in the regular season ..., if Hakeem out plays him in a 7 game series that has coaches game planning different defenses to limit them over the course of every game.. Has them increasing their minutes.. Has their role players being limited by tougher defenses... Then that's what's most relevant. The only thing the regular season is really significant for is determine seeding. And even then regardless of you seedlings, it's up to you to elevate your play despite facing tougher defenses, and evolving defenses over the course of the series.
When ranking players regular season performance barley factors in for me. When you ask me how I view a player the first thing I think about is how they perform in the post season.
Role players limited by tougher defenses? Isn't it typically the reverse, coaches will plan to stop the key man (or men) and dare/force role players to beat them. And if so doesn't that make the typically renowned playoff dropoffs from unipolar offenses (Robinson, K Malone, Chamberlain) more explicable via context and, if one does seek to look into the playoffs heavily, make the playoff dropoffs of say a Robert Parish (and other tertiary options) more pertinent.mysticOscar wrote:Purch wrote:[Vine][YouTube][/YouTube][/Vine]
Completely disagree. In the grand scheme of things regular seasons match ups are relatively irrelevant. Coaches have readily admitted to saving plays and defenses for when it matters in the post season. It doesn't matter if David Robinsn can outplay Hakeem in the regular season ..., if Hakeem out plays him in a 7 game series that has coaches game planning different defenses to limit them over the course of every game.. Has them increasing their minutes.. Has their role players being limited by tougher defenses... Then that's what's most relevant. The only thing the regular season is really significant for is determine seeding. And even then regardless of you seedlings, it's up to you to elevate your play despite facing tougher defenses, and evolving defenses over the course of the series.
When ranking players regular season performance barley factors in for me. When you ask me how I view a player the first thing I think about is how they perform in the post season.
I agree. RS, you have players and teams that coast...teams that experiment with line ups, strategies...you have a lot of player trades, coaching staff changes, some teams tanking etc..
PO teams are generally already settled on there line up, conditioned to play at there maximum with more rest and more at stake. PO is when the real season starts...so not sure why not put more value in it?
Because there's much less data, because there's vast discrepancies in quality of competion faced (iirc 80s Lakers were routinely facing a route of roughly league -RS- average quality opponents, whereas the East then, or the West now likely means running a gauntlet of plausible champions -- right now Cleveland are considered the favourites to win the title, not because they are the best team but because the teams with the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th and 8th best odds all play in the same conference so only one can get to the final) because an 82 game season doesn't leave teams or players well rested and because (due to small samples and the role of luck) playoffs are (as I recall) a poor indicator of future performance in future RS and PS, whereas RS is better (at team and individual levels) and this is because playoff performance is less reliably indicative of (team or player) quality which in turn is because of aforementioned small samples, disparity in quality of competition, matchups etc. The reason American sports have playoffs (apart from travel distances making equal schedules a massive pain) is the anyone can win, keep you watching to the end, which is fine but you can't pretend it doesn't significantly increase the role of luck.mtron929 wrote:With the way the playoff system is structured, it becomes important to excel against the same opponent. I suspect that certain superstars could do this better than others. Thus, a superstar who can sustain excellence against common opponents for 6-7 games in a row becomes much more valuable than a superstar who gets figured out more readily as the number of encounters increase.
Obviously, this is not something that can be easily measured but no doubt, it's important.
This much is true. The question is then whether players do do so better than others, and whether (and to what degree) it is a matter of luck and various contextual factors (luck, coaching, quality of opponents, quality of teammates, matchups etc); or whether (and to what degree) it is intrinsic to the player. I do chafe somewhat at the use of superstars though because I think players roughly 3-8 become important in the playoffs (and are typically less subject to the planning stars might face, though over their careers they might have smaller playoffs samples).
Right he had better year BUT his mvp season by minutes is lower than typical mvp winners due to his stacked roster and how the game has changed during the regular season. Your seeing more and more star players resting in the RSClyde Frazier wrote:Ballerhogger wrote:RS play has taken a hit through out the years , Take curry for example he played his 3rd lowest minutes in season in his whole career at 2613. Thats 233 minutes less than the year before. Yet this did not affect his MVP chances. He only avg 32.3 MP this past season. Overall RS will look less impressive unless the NBA changes the amount of games played.
Except curry had a better season in 14-15 than 13-14 by plenty of metrics: TS%, eFG%, ORTG, WS, WS/48, OBPM and VORP
This all came at about the same usage, too.
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
mtlraps wrote:- Dwyane Wade is a borderline top 10 player and the 2nd best SG of all time.
Quotatious wrote:sp6r=underrated wrote:- Playoffs are generally overvalued.
I agree. Common sense tells me that if a player has 1000-1200 regular season games played, and only about 100-200 playoff games, the former is a much better sample (not only because it's 10 times bigger, but also because it's more much more evenly-matched, in terms of competition).