trex_8063 wrote:RSCD3_ wrote:1. Paul
2. Howard
Considering Karl Malone, Anthony Davis and Alonzo Mourning for big men.
Somewhat agree with Quotatious regarding Malone v. Davis. Davis has remarkable looking advanced metrics, but there's a bit of a disconnect between those measures and his impact indicators (is #1 in the league in PER, but is only 22nd in RAPM in '15, for example).Additionally, it's worth noting that PER (due to its formula specs) shines very brightly on extreme low turnover rates. This could be why Davis has the #1 PER (by a fairly decent margin), yet is only 6th in BPM, for instance.
I do think the comparison is close (Davis is coming up fairly shortly for me, at least). Ultimately, I think '15 Davis is probably somewhere in between peak Mailman and '06 Brand.
Mourning is harder for me to gauge, and I tend not to be as high on him as some are. I rate him behind Malone for sure; I possibly rate him marginally behind Davis as well, though I could be convinced otherwise based on defensive impact studies (need to look into it more).
While I've stated that low turnover rates may inflate Davis' status via things like PER, still......turnovers are a bad thing. And Mourning is fairly turnover prone. fwiw, his defensive aggressiveness and impact also came at the expense of quite a few personal fouls, too. These are the primary factors that make me apprehensive about putting him ahead of Davis.
RSCD3_ wrote:Steve Nash, James Harden, Vince Carter and Reggie Miller are the guards/wings on my radar at the moment.
Without a doubt I'd put Nash and Harden at the head of this quad of guards. Who between those two is open for debate to me (I lean toward Nash presently, but it's close).
where did you get his rapm numbers? I mean, his PI rapm will be much lower than it should be because I think his rapm from 2014 was far from good (somewhat like durants rapm case).
and when I saw a dropbox version (you said that it was questionable though, so im not sure how much weight i should put into it)
he came out somewhere in the top ten in npi rapm I believe. his prior rapm the year prior was something like 0.7, and this year it was 3.7 ish, so would that make his "actual" rapm closer to 5 ish?
in the npi sample engelmen put out, these were the results
Stephen Curry,4.39,2.18,6.57
Draymond Green,2.28,3.77,6.04
LeBron James,3.83,1.96,5.78
Kyle Korver,3.54,1.54,5.08
Kawhi Leonard,1.95,2.95,4.9
Anthony Davis,2.8,2.02,4.82
James Harden,5.25,-0.45,4.8
Khris Middleton,1.0,3.54,4.55
Chris Paul,3.88,0.62,4.51
now, once again, you said it was questionable, but he didnt seem to say anything about it in the thread.
personally, wouldnt this rank him at around 3rd overall in the league, based on role? I mean, kawhi has always been their defensive stopper, korver and draymond are more "super duper role players" if that makes sense. thats not me trying to degrade them, but I dont know any other way to put it lol. I mean, generally, the years before this look good enough, and if anything, i believe that the only adjustment was putting more weight into the latter half of the 2000-2015 (though this is just based of memory), which obviously wouldnt matter for davis.
im not quite sure how rapm is calculated, but if its lineup adjusted, then wouldnt his rapm drop down considerably because of the "run" the pelicans had with davis out, against bottom feeder teams mostly? (i might be wrong about bottom feeder teams, but I recall that they lost to the one good team they faced in that span, and they lost to the knicks and I think the 6ers without davis as well)
also, to me at least, since im not sure how rapm works, since I believe its lineup adjusted, wouldnt the players on the roster still somewhat effect how the team works? (as for why I dont know how rapm works, I literally dont understand every description where they say what it is lol)
as for how he did in the playoffs, while im skeptical that his 31-11 series was anywhere near as good as the numbers suggest, the pelicans were pretty exceptional against the warriors offensively, its just that they were poor defensively, though I dont think one could blame davis for that, as he was solid defensively in my opinion, in the playoffs. (his rim protection especially was very, very good)
and while I wont elaborate on it now, since davis doesent really have an arguement yet (ill probably try to root for him over howard though) I recall that quotatious mentioned it before in regards to ewing, is bad coaching an excuse? because when it comes to the pelicans, or more so how davis is utilized, while I absolutely love monty as a person, davis was underutilized, and the main reason why the pelicans were bad defensively was because of monty's defensive systems, since even asik had the worst on-off in a while (his defensive on-off rating was worse than last year, when he was "subbing" for dwight). (granted, with davis and asik both on the floor, the pelicans had the 2nd best defensive rating in the league I think)
personally, while I completely realize that he doesent have a strong case over malone, I believe he is closer to malone than he is to brand.
on a sidenote, I have even less of an idea of how this is calculated, but I think davis lead the leage in DRE, which either stands for Daily rapm estimate or daily rpm estimate, ive seen both ways.
Edit: engellmen also did a 14-15 rapm with equal weights to both years
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ju637ylhtsrjt4q/RAPM_1415_equal_weights.txt?dl=0LeBron James,5.65,1.79,7.44
Stephen Curry,5.87,1.51,7.38
Chris Paul,4.27,2.8,7.08
Draymond Green,1.72,4.33,6.05
Kawhi Leonard,1.97,4.0,5.98
James Harden,6.27,-0.32,5.95
Ricky Rubio,3.14,2.57,5.71
Manu Ginobili,3.43,2.14,5.57
Kevin Durant,4.04,1.16,5.21
Danny Green,2.02,3.12,5.14
Marcin Gortat,1.45,3.5,4.96
Anthony Davis,2.78,2.14,4.92
despite equal weights to 2014 and 2015, where in 2014 davis was horrible rapm wise, he still ranks 12th in the league, with 3 or 4 players above him, "not counting" if that makes sense (such as ginobli)