RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#101 » by Tesla » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:29 pm

kayess wrote:
Tesla wrote:Some quick thoughts on KG this high.

I dont want to offend anyones opinion here, but I just dont see it, its borderline absurd. This is not a peak ranking (which even then I disagree with, but sure I can see a legit argument for) As a ranking of greatest of all time, at this high where there is a handful of resumes, his argument revolves around his +/- and value over replacement on ridiculous bad teams... so the arguement I suppose is if he had a great team around him we can infer from those numbers that he would have Tim Duncan-like sucess? OK maybe, but Tim Duncan ACTUALLY happened. Its insane to me to give that much credit on a career level to someone over others that actually lived it, did it, proved it, got the results and did it inn extraordinary fashion.
I get it, its unfortunate that he played a majority of his prime with some garbage teams... but that is what we are calling one of the handful greatest of all time careers? I use Duncan just because its a contemporary that he is clearly inferior to in terms of a GOAT ranking, but even if we look at their careers at 31 years old and onward (when KG got a great team), Duncan still outshines and does so clearly. /end rant.


I get where you are coming from, and this was a big hurdle for me initially as well: it seems like we are crediting KG for what he COULD HAVE done, over what others ACTUALLY ACCOMPLISHED.

But then I realized two things:
- Team success is a function of not only the star player's impact/abilities, but also: his teammates', his coach's, the system/environment that they function in, the league-wide environment, etc.
- His impact on the court, how much better he made teams - these are things that actually happened. Things that he DID.

These have the following implications:
(1) This means that there are many, many potential reasons for a team not succeeding: bad teammates, bad coach, bad system... But even if you are already great, there might somebody still be greater. Most of these things are beyond the control of any single individual - therefore, why should we credit OR punish an individual for team success? Unless of course, we are able to look at team success, and somehow isolate how much impact an individual has on it...
(2) ...which of course, we are able to do (albeit, not perfectly). We know that the best predictor of success on the basketball court is margin of victory (MOV) - how much you outscore your opponents by. We also know that RAPM tries to isolate an individual's impact on his team's MOV, i.e., which player's presence on the court correlates most highly with his team's performance? By how much is he driving this?
(3) We can't stop there, though. Because it just means he is able to have an impact in that specific context. And we already know that this context (teammates, coach, environment, etc.) is difficult to control for an individual. So then we must ask ourselves: can he replicate this impact across different situations? This is where analyzing an individual's skill-set, and trying to make a best guess of (a) why he is successful, how he makes his teams successful, and (b) can he carry this across to different teams, comes in.
(4) Taking all previous 3 points together, it's easy to see that if an individual has great impact over his career, across different contexts... it's a real, tangible thing. The only thing he has control over, of the factors that affect a team's success.

So, to summarize: this isn't crediting KG for "could have been" results - it's realizing that for an individual, the results that are most indicative of ability aren't rings, it's on-court impact. And KG's influence, his impact on winning was as big as nearly anyone else's in history (Duncan is in the same boat), but Duncan won more simply because he was on better teams (their league context/environment is obviously identical).


It still is what could have been results. I have no problem with someone giving him credit for having some of the best impact numbers in history; however, he still did the majority of it on bad teams (not his fault). Likewise, it isnt any players faults that they played with greater teams, and we were able to see them make great impact over and over deep into the playoffs. I cant discredit that. To me it is more about not giving enough credit to what others have done. I simply cannot fathom giving so much credit to a career over only one aspect when others have him clearly edged in so many areas (that may not be part of a players control) yet they did happen. We are looking at greatest of all time, and I suppose it may vary on your criteria, but how can so many accomplisments be pushed aside for someone who has accomplished a fraction of those things yet his only advantage is on some impact stats largely done on very poor teams. You could argue he was as high of an impact player as anyone for maybe 6-7 years: 02 to 09? What about those that have done it for over 10 years? He is with Dirk, Malone, West, etc more than hes with any kind of mount rushmore and that is a compliment to him.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#102 » by kayess » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:29 pm

Jaivl wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:
Jaivl wrote:It isn't, he has a +5.49 that year (by Engelmann's PI RAPM).


Can you provide link?

I thought this was J.E.'s data (it shows +7.3 RAPM for Lebron that year).

Yeah, you're right, it's not PI RAPM, it's multi-year NPI RAPM (https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/folders/0B_AdaCB40YpgdU00TUYtYk42dXM).

I recall Engelmann saying that it was about the same, though.

EDIT: Multiyear RAPM with lower weight to older seasons (those who requested PI RAPM should use this instead)


Oh man those Nowitzki numbers for '11 and '13 are weird... It's like the values should be interchanged or something.

Back OT: What does everyone think of Hakeem at this stage? The pre '93 years write-up by fatal9 is great, does anyone have anything else on Hakeem for this period? On/Off if it's available, WOWY figures (although, as Dr. Positivity has noted, there are some flaws with using this)?
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#103 » by RCM88x » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:33 pm

Vote: Lebron James

Some great argument's have been posted already, but this one by micahclay really hits home when it comes to player impact. Which I believe to be the most crucial aspect in rating players, however is something I am not versed enough to give data on such a level at this point. This mostly explains why I will be placing him above Russell.

Spoiler:
micahclay wrote:I want to post a few +/- stats, as well as a few others comparing the modern players in contention, just for the sake of reference/discussion. All RAPM in this post is from Doc's scaled sheets, and only goes to 2012 (note: is there any way to update the scaled/sd sheets with numbers from 2013-2017? Has it been done?)

RAPM peak:
Lebron - 13.74
O'Neal - 12.82
Garnett - 12.65
Dirk - 11.50
Duncan - 11.39

RAPM 5-Sum:
Garnett - 54.33
Lebron - 52.33
O'Neal - 51.74
Duncan - 46.27
Dirk - 45.63

Cumulative RAPM Sum:
Garnett - 120.96
Duncan - 106.34
Dirk - 82.28
O'Neal - 80.38
Lebron - 71.78

Prime WOWY:
Garnett - 5.7
Lebron - 5.7
O'Neal - 5.5
Duncan - 4.1
Russell - 3.8
Nowitzki - 1.8
Chamberlain - 1.2

Prime WOWYR:
Lebron - 8.5
Dirk - 7.1
O'Neal - 6.7
Russell - 6.4
Garnett - 6.2
Chamberlain - 6.0
Duncan - 5.7

Career WOWYR:
Lebron - 7.4
Russell - 6.2
Chamberlain - 6.1
O'Neal - 5.2
Dirk - 5.1
Duncan - 4.7
Garnett - 4.4

Career Estimated Impact (expected titles) through 2014:
Duncan - 3.6
Lebron - 3.5
O'Neal - 3.4
Chamberlain - 3.2
Russell - 2.5
Garnett - 2.3
Dirk - 2.2

Peak EI:
Lebron - 8.9
O'Neal - 7.8
Chamberlain - 6.7
Garnett - 6.6
Duncan - 6.2
Dirk - 5.4
Russell - 4.9


These kinda run the gamut of stat types - box score based, +/-, and with/without.

Any thoughts?


Not to mention Lebron is:

#1 in RS VOPR
#1 in RS OBPM
#1 in RS BPM
#6 in RS WS/48
#7 in RS total WS
#2 in MVP Shares

His playoffs aren't shabby either:

#1 in PS total WS (by a massive margin)
3 of the top 5 seasons in PS total WS
#1 in PS BPM
#3 in PS OBPM
#1 in PS VORP (again by a massive margin)
4 of the top 5 seasons in PS VORP

Two complaints against Lebron which result in me not placing him higher:
1. 2011 Finals, probably the only time he was truly favored in a Finals series, and played at a very low level and hurt his team at times. Yet it might literally be the only "bad" series that he's ever had in his career.
2. Currently an active player, and therefor his "career averages" are a bit inflated as he is still in his prime.

However, he does have the 2nd best Peak in my opinion weather its 2009, or 2013, both of those seasons rate higher for me than any season for players not named Michael Jordan. Not to mention what will probably end up being the greatest prime stretch for any NBA player (2008-2017 and beyond?), he'll certainly have a great argument to be placed above Kareem in 2020 if he doesn't already, and will probably retire as an easy choice for #2.

2nd Vote: Bill Russell
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#104 » by kayess » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:35 pm

Tesla wrote:
It still is what could have been results. I have no problem with someone giving him credit for having some of the best impact numbers in history; however, he still did the majority of it on bad teams (not his fault). Likewise, it isnt any players faults that they played with greater teams, and we were able to see them make great impact over and over deep into the playoffs. I cant discredit that. To me it is more about not giving enough credit to what others have done. I simply cannot fathom giving so much credit to a career over only one aspect when others have him clearly edged in so many areas (that may not be part of a players control) yet they did happen. We are looking at greatest of all time, and I suppose it may vary on your criteria, but how can so many accomplisments be pushed aside for someone who has accomplished a fraction of those things yet his only advantage is on some impact stats largely done on very poor teams. You could argue he was as high of an impact player as anyone for maybe 6-7 years: 02 to 09? What about those that have done it for over 10 years? He is with Dirk, Malone, West, etc more than hes with any kind of mount rushmore and that is a compliment to him.


You are right - we shouldn't punish players for playing with good teams, that's why we are giving them the same credit - looking at what they did to influence the result, rather than the results themselves.

I get why this does seem like it's short changing players who are KG's equal impact wise, but have had far more team success. I just believe individuals should be judged based on how well they did at the things they could control, but if your criteria for greatness includes actual winning, that is your prerogative.

Last thing, on the number of high-impact years. But his impact stats weren't only seen on bad teams - they were seen on good teams as well. He was also a high impact player in 08, 09 (when not injured), '10, '12... During the late years of his prime. He was an impact player for 10+ years, easily, even if we don't look at pre '02/post'12.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#105 » by Joao Saraiva » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:36 pm

RCM88x wrote:Vote: Lebron James

Some great argument's have been posted already, but this one by micahclay really hits home when it comes to player impact. Which I believe to be the most crucial aspect in rating players, however is something I am not versed enough to give data on such a level at this point. This mostly explains why I will be placing him above Russell.

Spoiler:
micahclay wrote:I want to post a few +/- stats, as well as a few others comparing the modern players in contention, just for the sake of reference/discussion. All RAPM in this post is from Doc's scaled sheets, and only goes to 2012 (note: is there any way to update the scaled/sd sheets with numbers from 2013-2017? Has it been done?)

RAPM peak:
Lebron - 13.74
O'Neal - 12.82
Garnett - 12.65
Dirk - 11.50
Duncan - 11.39

RAPM 5-Sum:
Garnett - 54.33
Lebron - 52.33
O'Neal - 51.74
Duncan - 46.27
Dirk - 45.63

Cumulative RAPM Sum:
Garnett - 120.96
Duncan - 106.34
Dirk - 82.28
O'Neal - 80.38
Lebron - 71.78

Prime WOWY:
Garnett - 5.7
Lebron - 5.7
O'Neal - 5.5
Duncan - 4.1
Russell - 3.8
Nowitzki - 1.8
Chamberlain - 1.2

Prime WOWYR:
Lebron - 8.5
Dirk - 7.1
O'Neal - 6.7
Russell - 6.4
Garnett - 6.2
Chamberlain - 6.0
Duncan - 5.7

Career WOWYR:
Lebron - 7.4
Russell - 6.2
Chamberlain - 6.1
O'Neal - 5.2
Dirk - 5.1
Duncan - 4.7
Garnett - 4.4

Career Estimated Impact (expected titles) through 2014:
Duncan - 3.6
Lebron - 3.5
O'Neal - 3.4
Chamberlain - 3.2
Russell - 2.5
Garnett - 2.3
Dirk - 2.2

Peak EI:
Lebron - 8.9
O'Neal - 7.8
Chamberlain - 6.7
Garnett - 6.6
Duncan - 6.2
Dirk - 5.4
Russell - 4.9


These kinda run the gamut of stat types - box score based, +/-, and with/without.

Any thoughts?


Not to mention Lebron is:

#1 in RS VOPR
#1 in RS OBPM
#1 in RS BPM
#6 in RS WS/48
#7 in RS total WS
#2 in MVP Shares

His playoffs aren't shabby either:

#1 in PS total WS (by a massive margin)
3 of the top 5 seasons in PS total WS
#1 in PS BPM
#3 in PS OBPM
#1 in PS VORP (again by a massive margin)
4 of the top 5 seasons in PS VORP

Two complaints against Lebron which result in me not placing him higher:
1. 2011 Finals, probably the only time he was truly favored in a Finals series, and played at a very low level and hurt his team at times. Yet it might literally be the only "bad" series that he's ever had in his career.
2. Currently an active player, and therefor his "career averages" are a bit inflated as he is still in his prime.

However, he does have the 2nd best Peak in my opinion weather its 2009, or 2013, both of those seasons rate higher for me than any season for players not named Michael Jordan. Not to mention what will probably end up being the greatest prime stretch for any NBA player (2009-2017 and beyond?), he'll certainly have a great argument to be placed above Kareem in 2020 if he doesn't already, and will probably retire as an easy choice for #2.

2nd Vote: Bill Russell


Well about the 11 finals I guess after so much consistency trough his career in both RS and PS it shouldn't mean that much.

About his career averages... I use a formula to calculate year value. Of course averages will go down, but no one can deny his prime is already among the best and that it is very extended. At this point his prime is already bigger than MJ's full seasons with the Bulls (12 LBJ years - 06 to 17 against 11 from MJ).

Btw I'm not much of a career averages guy. I don't think it hurts guys who played longer like KAJ or Duncan, or that hang arround for a bit more like MJ (2 Wizards years) or Hakeem (Toronto).
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#106 » by RCM88x » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:41 pm

Joao Saraiva wrote:
RCM88x wrote:Vote: Lebron James

Some great argument's have been posted already, but this one by micahclay really hits home when it comes to player impact. Which I believe to be the most crucial aspect in rating players, however is something I am not versed enough to give data on such a level at this point. This mostly explains why I will be placing him above Russell.

Spoiler:
micahclay wrote:I want to post a few +/- stats, as well as a few others comparing the modern players in contention, just for the sake of reference/discussion. All RAPM in this post is from Doc's scaled sheets, and only goes to 2012 (note: is there any way to update the scaled/sd sheets with numbers from 2013-2017? Has it been done?)

RAPM peak:
Lebron - 13.74
O'Neal - 12.82
Garnett - 12.65
Dirk - 11.50
Duncan - 11.39

RAPM 5-Sum:
Garnett - 54.33
Lebron - 52.33
O'Neal - 51.74
Duncan - 46.27
Dirk - 45.63

Cumulative RAPM Sum:
Garnett - 120.96
Duncan - 106.34
Dirk - 82.28
O'Neal - 80.38
Lebron - 71.78

Prime WOWY:
Garnett - 5.7
Lebron - 5.7
O'Neal - 5.5
Duncan - 4.1
Russell - 3.8
Nowitzki - 1.8
Chamberlain - 1.2

Prime WOWYR:
Lebron - 8.5
Dirk - 7.1
O'Neal - 6.7
Russell - 6.4
Garnett - 6.2
Chamberlain - 6.0
Duncan - 5.7

Career WOWYR:
Lebron - 7.4
Russell - 6.2
Chamberlain - 6.1
O'Neal - 5.2
Dirk - 5.1
Duncan - 4.7
Garnett - 4.4

Career Estimated Impact (expected titles) through 2014:
Duncan - 3.6
Lebron - 3.5
O'Neal - 3.4
Chamberlain - 3.2
Russell - 2.5
Garnett - 2.3
Dirk - 2.2

Peak EI:
Lebron - 8.9
O'Neal - 7.8
Chamberlain - 6.7
Garnett - 6.6
Duncan - 6.2
Dirk - 5.4
Russell - 4.9


These kinda run the gamut of stat types - box score based, +/-, and with/without.

Any thoughts?


Not to mention Lebron is:

#1 in RS VOPR
#1 in RS OBPM
#1 in RS BPM
#6 in RS WS/48
#7 in RS total WS
#2 in MVP Shares

His playoffs aren't shabby either:

#1 in PS total WS (by a massive margin)
3 of the top 5 seasons in PS total WS
#1 in PS BPM
#3 in PS OBPM
#1 in PS VORP (again by a massive margin)
4 of the top 5 seasons in PS VORP

Two complaints against Lebron which result in me not placing him higher:
1. 2011 Finals, probably the only time he was truly favored in a Finals series, and played at a very low level and hurt his team at times. Yet it might literally be the only "bad" series that he's ever had in his career.
2. Currently an active player, and therefor his "career averages" are a bit inflated as he is still in his prime.

However, he does have the 2nd best Peak in my opinion weather its 2009, or 2013, both of those seasons rate higher for me than any season for players not named Michael Jordan. Not to mention what will probably end up being the greatest prime stretch for any NBA player (2009-2017 and beyond?), he'll certainly have a great argument to be placed above Kareem in 2020 if he doesn't already, and will probably retire as an easy choice for #2.

2nd Vote: Bill Russell


Well about the 11 finals I guess after so much consistency trough his career in both RS and PS it shouldn't mean that much.

About his career averages... I use a formula to calculate year value. Of course averages will go down, but no one can deny his prime is already among the best and that it is very extended. At this point his prime is already bigger than MJ's full seasons with the Bulls (12 LBJ years - 06 to 17 against 11 from MJ).

Btw I'm not much of a career averages guy. I don't think it hurts guys who played longer like KAJ or Duncan, or that hang arround for a bit more like MJ (2 Wizards years) or Hakeem (Toronto).


My problem with the 2011 Finals is that he legitimately hurt his team, and only playing at a slightly higher level would have won them the series. Each of those games were for the taking had he not been completely out of it on both sides.

But yes, I agree career averages shouldn't penalize a guy who played past their prime such as Kareem. In those cases I care more about prime averages and total value added during those seasons. Basically, I don't believe guys should be penalized for bad seasons after their prime ends, to me that would put way to much value in a guy like Jordan who has great career averages but retired multiple times and as a result never entered a real decline outside of the two Washington seasons.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#107 » by Dr Positivity » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:50 pm

Xherdan 23 wrote:
Jaivl wrote:
Spoiler:
Kareem at #2 is terrible! I'm leaving the project!!


A different take on LeBron vs Russell:
[spoiler]Why LeBron over Russell:
It's not only the fact that at this point he has more longevity, or that his game is more between portable between different contexts/eras.

I think LeBron has superior impact, each on their own era.

"LeBron has never lead a team as good as xxxxx"
This year's Cavs topped as one the best offenses of all time in the playoffs. Remember how good they looked when LeBron sit? Yeah, not very much. That team had a -5 relative ORtg without LeBron on court (on the RS). And on the Playoffs... We've seen it! Like a week ago. Those stretches of bad play when LeBron was out. A FINALS GAME lost because LeBron had to rest for 2 minutes. And some people have the nerve of calling this a superteam.

LeBron offensive plus/minus +19.9
Irving/Love offensive plus/minus +2.1/+1.5 (and those are the second and third best players!)

His total +/- in the postseason tops +30, +17 on the regular season. That's on an offensive ATG team, +12 SRS on the playoffs. That's higher quality than any of Russell's teams. And when that load isn't supported on LeBron's shoulders, it falls to the ground, badly. The same happened in the last years of the Heat, by the way.

Russell took a team that without him was around a -2 defensively (1957) and took them to -4... and even to -10 GOAT defenses. That's massive: a team built mostly on his shoulders (I'm not gonna enter the narrative of "Russell was surrounded by HOF's!!" because I don't buy it: most of those are HOF's because of Russell). But... that's not enough when you compete against something that just made more with less.
LeBron "doesn't work well with other stars":
[spoiler]If you have LeBron and Wade in the same team (similar roles), you play through LeBron (the better player) and Wade has to adapt to another role. Just like if you had Russell and Ben Wallace in the same team... yeah, Wallace better start learning to shoot 3s or something, because he is not gonna play center.

Love isn't worse than before: Love has changed his role. In fact he is better with LeBron, he just shoots less:

Code: Select all

                     min   TSA   PTS   TSA/36   PTS/36   PPS

Love   with LeBron   6402   2811   3209   15.81   18.04   1.142
Love      w/o LeBron   1726   968   1026   20.19   21.40   1.060


Boxscore numbers don't make you a better player.


Vote: LeBron James[/spoiler]

And since I have him in my top 5 anyway and I don't mind being "that guy":[/spoiler]
Second vote: Kevin Garnett

The case for Kevin Garnett over Bill Russell:
Spoiler:
-Around 15 years of proven superstar impact (Russell: 12 years) + additional years as a solid piece.

-Proven impact on both ends, on different roles:
*Played as a 4 and as a 5, maybe even the 3 at some point.
*Played as a jack-off-all-trades on offense, horizontal defender (mid-decade Wolves), with worse-O-better-D quasi LeBron levels of impact (average around +7, peaked as +10 -higher than Bron-). <- outside of LeBron, probably the better scrub-carrier of all time
*Played as a defensive anchor and secondary/tertiary scorer (Celtics) on a contender, with Mutombo/Russell-esque levels of impact, considering era (+0 off +6 def) - and arguably outside his prime!
*At close to 40-years old, still a valuable contributor off the bench on defensive duties with a reduced offensive role.

-Has the physical qualities and IQ to quasi-replicate the impact of Russell in his era (similar mobility, greater length but worse verticality, top-tier defensive instincts, nightmare on switches) while Russell doesn't have the additional tools KG has (better finishing, mid-range proficiency, better offensive orchestrator).

-Doesn't have the GOAT-tier leadership of Bill, but it's one of the ones that are closer.

The case for Tim Duncan over Bill Russell:
Spoiler:
tomorrow if I have time


Since you're the first vote for KG (unless I missed someone) I'd like to ask you this:
How can he get a pass for missing the playoffs three years in a row?
Basketball is where a single player has the most impact even with a sub-par team.

His supporting cast wasn't the best so I'm not expecting championship runs but it also wasn't as awful as people make it out to be.
In these same 3 years Kobe only missed the playoffs once in the same WC while playing with Smush Parker, Kwame Brown and Chris Mihm.

Dirk took his team to the playoffs 3 times, one of these years they made the finals.
Was his supporting cast THAT much better? It's not like Josh Howard and Marquis Daniels are on a different level to Wally Szczerbiak, Ricky Davis or Latrel Spreewell.

Were KG's teammates worse than DRob's in the '90s?

Is there another top 20 (even top 30) player that missed the playoffs 3 years in a row in their prime?

Basketball is a team game and KG did some great things in his career but this is something that shouldn't be ignored in top 10 discussion and there's no way he can be top 3 all time IMO.


Garnett's supporting cast was horrible in my opinion. It's not just about how the players look on paper but what their skillset is. The whole supporting cast is guys who take midrange shots and don't play defense, which is how you make non impact or negative impact +/- wise. Flip's coaching style was always like midrange shots are the best shots, even before everyone realized they weren't cool he was still taking hte most.

On paper it may not seem like the 2003 Spurs for example are way more stacked than the early 2000s Wolves, but they are. It's because the former has players who play defense, shoot 3s, get to the rim, etc. They had players more valuable than their boxscore stats, the Wolves less. The Wolves also typically had a bench full of total scrubs.

Like would you blame KG if he had this type of supporting cast and they only were a 50 W team and 1st round knockout?

D'Angelo Russell / Cameron Payne
Nick Young / Randy Foye
Jeff Green / Marcus Thornton
Kevin Garnett / Derrick Williams
Alex Len / Jahlil Okafor

You have multiple 15ppg threats in D'Angelo and Green there... but who cares. This team is full of crap who doesn't make an impact on winning. And then even when the team plays really well with KG in the game despite those flawed starters, the bench gives up 10 points in 2 minutes when he sits

Then in 06 and 07 it's probably more like:

Trey Burke / Isaiah Canaan
Alan Anderson / James Young
Shabazz Muhammad / Doug McDermott
Kevin Garnett (help) / Quincy Acy
Lavoy Allen / Kevin Seraphin
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#108 » by Arman_tanzarian » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:55 pm

My vote is LeBron. Not sure if my vote counts or what the going process is.

I would have voted him 2nd.

But 3/4 is between Bron/Russ. It's tough but the sustained dominance and multiple elite seasons is too much to pass up.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#109 » by Jaivl » Sat Jun 24, 2017 5:58 pm

kayess wrote:Back OT: What does everyone think of Hakeem at this stage? The pre '93 years write-up by fatal9 is great, does anyone have anything else on Hakeem for this period? On/Off if it's available, WOWY figures (although, as Dr. Positivity has noted, there are some flaws with using this)?

Some WOWY:
Spoiler:
ElGee's:
86+87 (18 games): +7.8 SRS
91+92 (38 games): +3.8 SRS

Mine (only multiple game stretches):
1986 (12 games): +2.71 SRS
1991 (25 games): +0.81 SRS
1992 (12 games): +11.68 SRS


Some more additional stuff, fwiw:
Spoiler:
1998 Hakeem:
RAPM: +3.11
WOWY: +0.9 (28 games)

1997 Hakeem:
RAPM: +3.37 (non-prior informed!!)
WOWY: +3.3 (Drexler also missed those games)
Drexler's RAPM: +3.77
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#110 » by Goudelock » Sat Jun 24, 2017 6:06 pm

LeBron James gets my vote.

I tend to value peak over everything else, and I haven't seen any player who has been as dominant as 2013 LeBron was. He could play any role on the floor at an elite level aside from MAYBE rim protection. Is there any player in history that you could say that about? Not only that, but I also put some stock into how a player was perceived during their career. Well, ever since 2010, LeBron James has more or less been considered the #1 player in the league. Yeah, that's 7 (going on 8) years as being the unquestioned #1 player in the league.
I consider that a huge indicator of his dominance, especially in an era where the media is notorious on tearing down players to make way for the hot new thing.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#111 » by Hornet Mania » Sat Jun 24, 2017 6:08 pm

Official vote: Tim Duncan
2nd vote: Shaquille O'Neal

A lot of strong contenders for the next few spots. Duncan gets my vote because of his incredible longevity, two-way impact (particularly on defense where it is hard to give proper credit via stats) and intangibles that directly led to success. An all-time great defensive big for roughly two decades who in his prime could also be used as the backbone of a capable offense (and, as 03 proved, a championship team), the wins speak for themselves.

The NBA evolved quite a bit over his career yet Tim Duncan continued to have an elite impact in whatever role he was put into, some of that is probably Pop, but the majority credit belongs to Duncan. He started his career winning a title with David Robinson in a Twin Towers setup during a grinding defensive era, dethroned the Shaq/Kobe juggernaut (the real Finals that year) with middling support by historical standards for an eventual champ, welcomed Lebron to what would be the first of many Finals with a sound thumping, and then years later when Lebron was on a new (and far better) team Duncan was still an integral part of the roster for a truly epic 2013 series and 2014's decimation of the Heat that showed Lebron it was time to go. Duncan was timeless, just a great player who contributed to wining year in and year out while setting a great example for teammates and never shrinking from the challenge. As he got older he didn't seem to be as essential (he was far more responsible for beating Lebron's Cavs in 07 than he was for beating Lebron's Heat in 14 for example), but even as his role shifted he was in an absolute elite percentile at whatever he was doing for the duration he was doing it. Duncan was just great, and as he got older he played less minutes but was hardly any less great in them, his fundamental ability was really incredible to watch for purists but also contributed to him not really being appreciated by casual fans until he was nearly retired. I have heard many different fans claim he made greatness boring, which is one of the most interesting compliments I've ever heard even though most of those folks intended it as an insult. If you can bore people with your success, well, you're pretty damn successful.

All that said...man, it was hard to not put Shaq over Duncan. Shaq's peak was, imo, the best ever aside from MJ and I'm not even sure the GOAT was honestly better than a locked-in Shaq. After seeing him against Duncan at the peak of their respective power it's no contest, Shaq was hands-down better. The problem for Shaq was his extracurricular flaws. He could make teams great just by his presence and one star wing, but then he'd feud with them when the spotlight inevitably had to be shared. For a guy who brought titles (or at least conference titles) to every team he played for in his prime he somehow managed to leave under acrimonious circumstances consistently. Regular season conditioning was often poor, and from a leadership perspective Shaq was not going to galvanize a listless group. He was just The Most Dominant Ever. Get him the ball with solid post position and it's practically over. His sheer size and power forced team to tilt themselves against the juggernaut, but it was never enough when he was fully motivated and healthy. Shaq, by all rights, should be the GOAT. If he had Jordan, or Lebron, or (gasp) Kobe's work ethic I have no doubt he would be. The reason he isn't is all between his ears. Now...that sounds rough. But I'd still very seriously consider Shaq with the 1st pick in an all-time draft knowing all the potential problems, because at his best there is arguably no one better.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#112 » by Texas Chuck » Sat Jun 24, 2017 6:09 pm

Outside wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:Question to any/all:

Does Lebron, in your opinion, bear any of the blame for the fact that his team (even a presumably "good" cast) falls off a cliff any time he's not on the court? And if so, why?

I mean some of those old casts in Cleveland 1.0 it's obvious: those were just crummy casts.

But in Cleveland 2.0, where he has K.Love and Kyrie, and reasonable depth (though lacking in interior presence, especially defensively), they still seem to utterly drown without him.
Is it somehow [even partially, perhaps?] his fault? Or is this squarely on the the supporting cast? I mean, these are grown men, they're professionals (and almost exclusively veterans, too), should they be considered responsible for themselves?

Thoughts on this?

Sorry for derailing the thread. The LeBron discussion detracts from the main point of the thread, which is debating who should be number 3 on the list. Lesson learned on my part.


I hope no one considers it a derailment. I have weighed in on the same topic and never once thought I was taking away from the thread. Lebron is a candidate worthy of debate itt(would have been at 1 as well imo) so addressing a question of that nature feels like what this project should be about.

The more input you give on whatever topic you feel inclined to post about only improves this whole thing.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#113 » by janmagn » Sat Jun 24, 2017 6:16 pm

Vote: LeBron James

LeBron has everything you are looking at a ATG player: led a poor team to Finals, won multiple championships, Finals appearances, MVPs, FMVPs, skill, IQ, athleticism. Pure dominance. Beat a ATG team in the Finals.

2nd vote: Hakeem Olajuwon

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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#114 » by Tesla » Sat Jun 24, 2017 6:17 pm

kayess wrote:
Tesla wrote:
It still is what could have been results. I have no problem with someone giving him credit for having some of the best impact numbers in history; however, he still did the majority of it on bad teams (not his fault). Likewise, it isnt any players faults that they played with greater teams, and we were able to see them make great impact over and over deep into the playoffs. I cant discredit that. To me it is more about not giving enough credit to what others have done. I simply cannot fathom giving so much credit to a career over only one aspect when others have him clearly edged in so many areas (that may not be part of a players control) yet they did happen. We are looking at greatest of all time, and I suppose it may vary on your criteria, but how can so many accomplisments be pushed aside for someone who has accomplished a fraction of those things yet his only advantage is on some impact stats largely done on very poor teams. You could argue he was as high of an impact player as anyone for maybe 6-7 years: 02 to 09? What about those that have done it for over 10 years? He is with Dirk, Malone, West, etc more than hes with any kind of mount rushmore and that is a compliment to him.


You are right - we shouldn't punish players for playing with good teams, that's why we are giving them the same credit - looking at what they did to influence the result, rather than the results themselves.

I get why this does seem like it's short changing players who are KG's equal impact wise, but have had far more team success. I just believe individuals should be judged based on how well they did at the things they could control, but if your criteria for greatness includes actual winning, that is your prerogative.

Last thing, on the number of high-impact years. But his impact stats weren't only seen on bad teams - they were seen on good teams as well. He was also a high impact player in 08, 09 (when not injured), '10, '12... During the late years of his prime. He was an impact player for 10+ years, easily, even if we don't look at pre '02/post'12.



How well did he do in the playoffs, when he got there? Pretty well, but was his impact by the numbers more on a Kobe Bryant level or more on a Tim Duncan level?
I think KG is a great great player, It just that no matter how its spun, he simply did not do enough to be considered this high, considering who he would be voted in above.

Also his Boston years (except 08) are still high impact in the general star sense, but not in a general all time great level - for instance Lebron for the last 10 years... KG has 6-7 years at that level IMO.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#115 » by Winsome Gerbil » Sat Jun 24, 2017 6:30 pm

So, I said in the first two threads that my top four GOATs are MJ, LeBron, Kareem and Wilt. That makes my 2 selections for #3/#4 here pretty obvious:

3) Lebron
4) Wilt

So why Lebron at #2?: Sustained Greatness

As I mentioned last thread what has moved LeBron up in my Top 4 grouping is his continuing to pour on prime level season after prime level season amid a complete domination of a pathetic Eastern Conference. In 2004-05, at age 20, he was 6th in the NBA in MVP voting. By age 21, he was 2nd. A dozen years later and he will still probably be what? Third? Fourth? In the past 13 seasons he's had exactly one season where he had a PER below 25 (he had a 24.5 in 2006-07).

In his last three years, his 12th, 13th, and 14th, LeBron has continued to pour it on. Compare what Lebron is still doing in seasons 12/13/14 with what other greats in high Top 10 contention were doing:

LeBron
12th: 25.3pts 6.0reb 7.4ast 1.6stl 0.7blk 25.9PER .199 WS/48 10.4WS
13th: 25.3pts 7.4reb 6.8ast 1.4stl 0.6blk 27.5PER .242 WS/48 13.6WS
14th: 26.4pts 8.6reb 8.7ast 1.2stl 0.6blk 27.0PER .221 WS/48 12.9WS

Wilt
12th: 20.7pts 18.2reb 4.3ast -.-stl -.-blk 20.3PER .167 WS/48 12.6WS
13th: 14.8pts 19.2reb 4.0ast -.-stl -.-blk 18.5PER .219 WS/48 15.8WS
14th: 13.2pts 18.6reb 4.5ast -.-stl -.-blk 19.1PER .247 WS/48 18.2WS

Russell
12th: 12.5pts 18.6reb 4.6ast -.-stl -.-blk 17.0PER .133 WS/48 8.2WS
13th: 9.9pts 19.3reb 4.9ast -.-stl -.-blk 15.2PER .159 WS/48 10.9WS
14th: RETIRED

Magic
12th: 19.4pts 7.0reb 12.5ast 1.3stl 0.2blk 25.1PER .251 WS/48 15.4WS
13th: 14.6pts 5.7reb 6.9ast 0.8stl 0.4blk 21.1PER .181 WS/48 3.6WS
14th: RETIRED

Bird
12th: 19.4pts 8.5reb 7.2ast 1.8stl 1.0blk 19.7PER .140 WS/48 6.6WS
13th: 20.2pts 9.6reb 6.8ast 0.8stl 0.7blk 21.0PER .159 WS/48 5.5WS
14th: RETIRED

Shaq
12th: 21.5pts 11.5reb 2.9ast 0.5stl 2.5blk 24.4PER .192 WS/48 9.9WS
13th: 22.9pts 10.4reb 2.7ast 0.5stl 2.3blk 27.0PER .211 WS/48 11.0WS
14th: 20.0pts 9.2reb 1.9ast 0.4stl 1.8blk 24.4PER .164 WS/48 6.2WS

Duncan
12th: 19.3pts 10.7reb 3.5ast 0.5stl 1.7blk 24.4PER .191 WS/48 10.1WS
13th: 17.9pts 10.1reb 3.2ast 0.6stl 1.5blk 24.7PER .215 WS/48 10.9WS
14th: 13.4pts 8.9reb 2.7ast 1.9stl 1.6blk 21.9PER .171 WS/48 7.7WS


What you see is a picture of guys in decline, guys retiring even. And here is LeBron, still powering the East's Finals representative for seven straight years now. Still playing at an absolutely elite level and engaging one of he all time great teams in annual duels in the Finals. He simply has been great, as in elite MVP-level great, for longer than almost anybody in history.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#116 » by kayess » Sat Jun 24, 2017 6:42 pm

Tesla wrote:
kayess wrote:
Tesla wrote:
It still is what could have been results. I have no problem with someone giving him credit for having some of the best impact numbers in history; however, he still did the majority of it on bad teams (not his fault). Likewise, it isnt any players faults that they played with greater teams, and we were able to see them make great impact over and over deep into the playoffs. I cant discredit that. To me it is more about not giving enough credit to what others have done. I simply cannot fathom giving so much credit to a career over only one aspect when others have him clearly edged in so many areas (that may not be part of a players control) yet they did happen. We are looking at greatest of all time, and I suppose it may vary on your criteria, but how can so many accomplisments be pushed aside for someone who has accomplished a fraction of those things yet his only advantage is on some impact stats largely done on very poor teams. You could argue he was as high of an impact player as anyone for maybe 6-7 years: 02 to 09? What about those that have done it for over 10 years? He is with Dirk, Malone, West, etc more than hes with any kind of mount rushmore and that is a compliment to him.


You are right - we shouldn't punish players for playing with good teams, that's why we are giving them the same credit - looking at what they did to influence the result, rather than the results themselves.

I get why this does seem like it's short changing players who are KG's equal impact wise, but have had far more team success. I just believe individuals should be judged based on how well they did at the things they could control, but if your criteria for greatness includes actual winning, that is your prerogative.

Last thing, on the number of high-impact years. But his impact stats weren't only seen on bad teams - they were seen on good teams as well. He was also a high impact player in 08, 09 (when not injured), '10, '12... During the late years of his prime. He was an impact player for 10+ years, easily, even if we don't look at pre '02/post'12.



How well did he do in the playoffs, when he got there? Pretty well, but was his impact by the numbers more on a Kobe Bryant level or more on a Tim Duncan level?
I think KG is a great great player, It just that no matter how its spun, he simply did not do enough to be considered this high, considering who he would be voted in above.

Also his Boston years (except 08) are still high impact in the general star sense, but not in a general all time great level - for instance Lebron for the last 10 years... KG has 6-7 years at that level IMO.


I'll let someone weigh in on the exact numbers - but his impact held up well in the playoffs, yes. Not sure about the distinction between Kobe and Duncan - Duncan's probably had better showings in the playoffs, but if the floor of your comparison is Kobe Bryant... I mean, that's not exactly bad company.

You can look at the RAPM thread to see where he was in those years: in '08, he was still playing a ton of minutes and had a (slightly higher) RAPM than even LeBron IIRC - after that, he's mostly playing ~60% of Bron's minutes with ~80% of the impact (take note: this was during LeBron's GOATish peak run), so not at the same load, but per minute, still close to all-time impact.

We'll agree to disagree here - again, as I think "do enough" equates to "what he did on the court to influence his team's winning chances", but I've enjoyed this discussion as you're clearly making an effort to consider the opposite of what you hold true now (by questioning whatever new arguments I'm putting forth, instead of simply just standing firm in your original arguments).
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#117 » by Tesla » Sat Jun 24, 2017 6:53 pm

kayess wrote:
Tesla wrote:
kayess wrote:
You are right - we shouldn't punish players for playing with good teams, that's why we are giving them the same credit - looking at what they did to influence the result, rather than the results themselves.

I get why this does seem like it's short changing players who are KG's equal impact wise, but have had far more team success. I just believe individuals should be judged based on how well they did at the things they could control, but if your criteria for greatness includes actual winning, that is your prerogative.

Last thing, on the number of high-impact years. But his impact stats weren't only seen on bad teams - they were seen on good teams as well. He was also a high impact player in 08, 09 (when not injured), '10, '12... During the late years of his prime. He was an impact player for 10+ years, easily, even if we don't look at pre '02/post'12.



How well did he do in the playoffs, when he got there? Pretty well, but was his impact by the numbers more on a Kobe Bryant level or more on a Tim Duncan level?
I think KG is a great great player, It just that no matter how its spun, he simply did not do enough to be considered this high, considering who he would be voted in above.

Also his Boston years (except 08) are still high impact in the general star sense, but not in a general all time great level - for instance Lebron for the last 10 years... KG has 6-7 years at that level IMO.


I'll let someone weigh in on the exact numbers - but his impact held up well in the playoffs, yes. Not sure about the distinction between Kobe and Duncan - Duncan's probably had better showings in the playoffs, but if the floor of your comparison is Kobe Bryant... I mean, that's not exactly bad company.

You can look at the RAPM thread to see where he was in those years: in '08, he was still playing a ton of minutes and had a (slightly higher) RAPM than even LeBron IIRC - after that, he's mostly playing ~60% of Bron's minutes with ~80% of the impact (take note: this was during LeBron's GOATish peak run), so not at the same load, but per minute, still close to all-time impact.

We'll agree to disagree here - again, as I think "do enough" equates to "what he did on the court to influence his team's winning chances", but I've enjoyed this discussion as you're clearly making an effort to consider the opposite of what you hold true now (by questioning whatever new arguments I'm putting forth, instead of simply just standing firm in your original arguments).



By 08 I meant that it is the only year of those Boston years that I consider to be very elite (in comparison to Top 10 All time prime level). He was excellent that year.

And yes, Kobe is elite company... just not top 5 ATG company.

Cheers, enjoyed the discussion as well :D
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#118 » by trex_8063 » Sat Jun 24, 2017 7:01 pm

PockyCandy wrote:LeBron James gets my vote.

I tend to value peak over everything else, and I haven't seen any player who has been as dominant as 2013 LeBron was. He could play any role on the floor at an elite level aside from MAYBE rim protection. Is there any player in history that you could say that about? Not only that, but I also put some stock into how a player was perceived during their career. Well, ever since 2010, LeBron James has more or less been considered the #1 player in the league. Yeah, that's 7 (going on 8) years as being the unquestioned #1 player in the league.
I consider that a huge indicator of his dominance, especially in an era where the media is notorious on tearing down players to make way for the hot new thing.


2nd ballot?
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#119 » by trex_8063 » Sat Jun 24, 2017 7:07 pm

Arman_tanzarian wrote:My vote is LeBron. Not sure if my vote counts or what the going process is.


Please review the protocol/sign-up thread to be familiar with the guidelines and expectations. If you're still interested in participating, state your interest in that thread (or PM me), and I'll add you to the panel (can have a counted vote beginning in the next thread).
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #3 

Post#120 » by Outside » Sat Jun 24, 2017 7:10 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:
Outside wrote:
trex_8063 wrote:Question to any/all:

Does Lebron, in your opinion, bear any of the blame for the fact that his team (even a presumably "good" cast) falls off a cliff any time he's not on the court? And if so, why?

I mean some of those old casts in Cleveland 1.0 it's obvious: those were just crummy casts.

But in Cleveland 2.0, where he has K.Love and Kyrie, and reasonable depth (though lacking in interior presence, especially defensively), they still seem to utterly drown without him.
Is it somehow [even partially, perhaps?] his fault? Or is this squarely on the the supporting cast? I mean, these are grown men, they're professionals (and almost exclusively veterans, too), should they be considered responsible for themselves?

Thoughts on this?

Sorry for derailing the thread. The LeBron discussion detracts from the main point of the thread, which is debating who should be number 3 on the list. Lesson learned on my part.


I hope no one considers it a derailment. I have weighed in on the same topic and never once thought I was taking away from the thread. Lebron is a candidate worthy of debate itt(would have been at 1 as well imo) so addressing a question of that nature feels like what this project should be about.

The more input you give on whatever topic you feel inclined to post about only improves this whole thing.

Well, it derailed me from my choices, which are Russell and Wilt. I'd much rather be discussing them. Or ideas that are interesting to me, like similarities between Wilt and LeBron in that both were individually dominant and have GOAT-level statistical cases but didn't achieve the ultimate success in titles that relative contemporaries (Russell, Duncan/Kobe) did, and how that affects their position on the ATL.

The quality differences between players at the very top of the ATL seems so ridiculously small (which is why I've previously put players in tiers, not absolute rankings) that the actual ranking position comes down to what each person knows about the players in that top group, what in particular they value, whether they discount a player because of era, and whether there are any "black marks" that count against them (like Magic/Westhead situation).

For Russell, I feel like he gets discounted because of unfamiliarity and the era he played in. For Wilt, it's almost like his stats work against him, as if they're so absurd that they can't be real. Having seen them play and knowing how great they are, I just want to make the case for them to those who are really familiar with them.
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