Texas Chuck wrote:I don't have an issue with a pro-Kobe post. I agree that Kobe often gets an unfair rap on this board and I'm all for someone making a reasoned defense of Kobe. It's clear from the posts of Doc and drza that some of his work in this regard has merit which is great. But sadly imo at least it loses much of its punch with the way he manipulates the data. I won't get into specifics as others have touched on that in some detail already. He did address the two guys who complemented his work, but has ignored other critics who were very polite and respectful in pointing out some issues with his work. That's not how someone behaves who is interested in honest debate. He had an agenda(fine) and clearly only wanted to hear praise for both his methodology and his conclusions.
You have got to be ******** kidding me. I have literally responded to everyone here that has raised points except for the people who asked me to write more stuff on Chuck/Hakeem , brought up Russ/Wilt as the more potentially contentious elements of the overall argument, and parapooers, who as far as I can tell didn't make a point (the "approach" he seems to think is better than my valuation is effectively what I did for the first impact study...have no idea why I am being linked to a BPM plot over a worse window but K -- also that data literally cannot be real because there is no complete play-by-play data before 2001 so I'm not sure how the window extends to 2000...). That is it. Magically somehow 3 of the 11 people on my ignore list have responded to this thread (I'm sure that's just a huge coincidence), so if THOSE are the "posts" you were referring to...lol. But because I remembered you being a far better poster than you've shown here I actually read their posts and, of course, no. The fact that you think they raised "good arguments" underscores limitations in your understanding far more than it does anything else. Literally everything they said either misses the point, is addressed in the post, speaks to something ALREADY QUALIFIED WITH NO ACTUAL WAY OF EMPIRICALLY KNOWING, or is just...there was literally 1 thing Frosty posted that might seem like it's a good point so will address here.
I mean you ask "why is this here" when you have 2 STICKIED THREADS with Kobe at 13 All-Time and 23rd Peak, A PC Board thread with "respectable posters" echoing Mr. Pelton's obviously super awesome "argument," but are continuing to ask why this thread was posted here? Seriously? Please stop leveraging blue letters to troll my thread. Thanks.
Interesting...Ummm wait a sec.. the original data for Kobe was 2008-2011 and you were crusing along with that data...then bam suddenly we add in 2 post seasons where Kobe exited in the first round playing against Phoenix (not known for their defense) in both years and remove his 2011 PS which isn't a very good season for him. hmmmmm
The point of the entire thing is to get as clean a comparison in terms of their extended primes as possible. Including the 2006/2007 Lakres (bottom-feeder supporting casts) in a comparison based primarily on Wins Accrued and Team SRS only works if the support is comparable. So I literally HAD to include a season of post-prime Kobe just to get even 4 "contender seasons as leader" for a comp (because nobody will credit Kobe for 2000-2004...again anybody who actually read the post will have all of this information). But aligning their box scores using 06-10 is the best window to put up against 84-88 Bird. The argument that I "shifted" the window to include 2011 Kobe only hurts Bird's case...using just the 08-10 Lakers makes Kobe's "contender data" look better, not worse.
Bird's Rookie Season +30 wins season doesn't mean anything without context...is the assertion that '80 Bird = GOAT? What is the assertion here? Kobe won 45 games in a much tougher conference with nobody nearly as good as Cedric Maxwell and 2 non-NBA players in the starting 5. None of this means anything by itself.
ElGee wrote:(Yes, I read disclaimer) Unless I missed something, this is one of those instances where you've done something fairly arbitrary that's actually a large factor in your outcome (top-30 rankings). I'm not sure where you came up with the scoring system (or 2.2x multiplier relative to expected titles) but they are sometimes noticeably different than what I've calculated for top seasons. For me, if I input these with normal portability I get something closer to:
9.3 = 1.09 (0.34 diff)
7.5 = 0.72 (0.43)
6.3 = 0.52 (0.48)
5.3 = 0.39 (0.41)
4.3 = 0.28 (0.27)
3.5 = 0.21 (0.09)
So guys in the "MVP" tier (or +/- one tier) get the largest "boost" based on the estimations your working with. You give Kobe 7-MVP seasons and 2 top-5's. That will slowly add up. More importantly, you've got some very crude buckets that you're forcing players to fall into, when there's a tremendous amount of nuance that can also add up over time. This leads to strange jumps -- for instance, you're positing that in 1987, Jordan improves 3 points per game (!) and gets 0.18 extra titles in 88. (For comparison, I think he improved a point and added 0.07 extra titles -- an enormous 2.6x difference for you. Bird in 83 to 84 does a similar thing.) These are crude jumps on the steepest part of the curve.
Kobe has 9/14 seasons in those tiers
Bird has 9/10 seasons in those tiers
Magic has 11/11 seasons in those tiers
Lebron has 11/12 seasons in those tiers
Jordan has 5/11 seasons in those tiers
Duncan has 12/17 seasons in those tiers
Shaq has 9/15 seasons in those tiers
Who is this supposed to be slanted towards again? And the point of the valuations was not supposed to be tied to anything statistical short of extended prime-based analysis because then you start the cherry-picking game where worse versions of players are on higher tiers than worse versions of said player because of circumstance...not anything to do with their skillset, motor, or understanding of the game. Obviously penalize situations like 04 Kobe or 11 Lebron or D-Rob/Karls PS meltdowns but short of that I was trying not to get bogged down in that stuff just for that part. Obviously I was expecting too much. If I were doing this the way you're purporting either Bird/Magic lose all of their ATG seasons except for MAYBE 86/87 (at NO OTHER POINT do they demonstrate ANYTHING that can qualify as separation from Prime Kobe) and/or 08/09 Kobe and 09/10 Wade (and 2010 LBJ) would all be bumped up a tier.
So many people missing the point though I'm just going to remove the valuations and scores. Should have done this more in lawyer mode.
Read the 4th impact study dude. Should take...5-10 minutes tops. While I've got you though, can you link me to your 2012-2014 Pop Post?I only have 8 players ahead of Kobe for all-time offensive peak. So one of the biggest sticking points for me with him are on defense, not offense. Going through your valuations, you likely rate Bryant higher than I do in every season but it's hard for me to see a pattern where this is really offense-based. I imagine most of this is from defense and the crude bucketing of value (since you never cite his peak as ATG but do so with almost all peak players I have ahead of him, save for Robinson, Russell and Dr. J.). You might like his 01 and 06 seasons a touch more than me offensively, but otherwise it's difficult to infer real tangible differences in the yearly valuations.* You do credit him for 2013 when he was injured (?) -- I don't entirely get the logic there and thus I don't count that as value-added either. Either that, or you think he had a GOAT-level offensive peak and then you should just start a separate thread.
The issue with the quoted text above is the time period. If you play a time-machine game, then it kind of makes sense to limit a defender like Russell based on available data. However, before the 3-point shot, when spacing and rules were entirely different, it's not only possible for Russell (and, IMO, Thurmond and Wilt) to exceed the impact of today's bigs but the faint statistical signal suggests this was the case. Remember, those guys could only play by the rules of their time, and Russell dominated by those rules.
Not playing any time machine game. All I care about is best at playing basketball. MJ, Kobe, and Lebron would HAPPILY trade the existence of a 3pt line for the ridiculous FTR boost they gain from going backwards, not to mention being guarded by the perimeter defenders of old. They only get more dominant. If "In era" is your primary thing, fine, show me the list with Mikan in top 10 and Pettit in Top 15 and then we can agree to disagree. I'm probably more confident about the Russell stuff than anything written about Kobe here...the amount of data regarding GOAT D vs. GOAT O is staggering. Unless of course Russ is literally 30% more impactful on a per-possession basis than peak Duncan/KG/D-Rob/Hakeem/Ben on that end.
PCProductions wrote:When you were going through the whole "Lebron has terrible portability" argument and using Bosh/Love as your only test cases (I didn't see a link your Lift spreadsheet) I noticed you conveniently left out Kyrie's massive efficiency gain and Wade massive efficiency loss from 2014 -> 2015.
1. Wade's massive decline between 2013-2015 really has nothing to do with anything Lebron was doing/not doing. I stressed the utilization of in-prime data only for primarily that reason.
2. I repeatedly refer to 13/14 Lebron as highly portable. So referring to his impact in 2014 on wade is redundant. Any mentions are strictly 2004-2012/2015-2016 LBJ. We've really never seen anything like this in history where a guy's skillset is that far apart from the rest of his career in 2 seasons.
3. Kyrie Irving is literally on the sheet. A better argument would be that Lebron's boost on Kyrie is a bit blunted by Irving's injuries/rust this year, but I'm pretty sure I made a note of this on the sheet. If I didn't, I should have, wasn't really trying to slight anything towards or away from Bron there. Even if Kyrie wasn't on the sheet (which again, he is) I state more than once that Kyrie is the player archetype Lebron "synchs up" with best.
Methinks I'm mostly done here for now. Nobody seems to have much relevant basketball/math/logic stuff to say to get any real movement on stuff. Still would love to hear more about what makes me wrong on Wilt.
















