Strepbacter wrote:GeorgeMarcus wrote:Strepbacter wrote:
Winning percentage? Seriously? Yeah, that's going to happen when you're playing on a team that's so stacked they can go 9-3 in the post-season without Steph Curry since 2015. When Curry plays less then 20 minutes (or doesn't play at all) they are still 11-3 in the post-season. Taking into account opponent faced and to put it into perspective, in the 14 games in the post-season where Curry doesn't play (or plays less than 20 minutes), the average SRS faced was 1.58 (account for games played against each foe) and the average MOV for all games was 13.2 points. This puts their SRS roughly at 14.78 through the 13 games without Curry. 10-3 with a +9.8 MOV (as of 5-5-2019).
Less points? Did you miss the part where I said was talking about prime?
01-10 Kobe: 28.5 PPG and 36.0 Points 100 possessions
14-19 Curry: 26.9 PPG and 35.6 Points Per 100 possessions
Curry has better SCORING efficiency. But you people don't understand is that scoring efficiency isn't overall efficiency. Turnovers matter. And Prime Kobe (10.8%) had a significantly lower turnover rate than Prime Curry (13.8%) in the post-season.
From 14-19 Curry has a 116 individual offensive rating against teams with a average DRTG of 107 (+9)
From 01-10 Kobe had a 110 individual offensive rating against teams with a average DRTG of 102 (+9)
All this nonsense about Curry's "far" better efficiency is a MYTH when it comes to the post-season. Their overall efficiency is essentially EVEN after you adjust for comp/environment.
Maybe someday you people will realize that scoring efficiency isn't overall efficiency
As for the rest of your post...
1) We don't have DRPM for Bryant
2) We don't have post-season RAPM for prime Bryant. We DO know that's Curry's post-season RAPM's marks are noticeably worse than they are in the regular season. For example, in the 14-19 post-season RAPM, Curry is all the way down at #8:https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQdG8Zv84zqKEzETDjd8KPsClcw9bPETX9v_x_KEAxjv9NrFaWikOoiSaciy1jbMiygg2D-V8DUQn0O/pubhtml?gid=721454147&single=true
Two of his teammates are ahead of him.
3) Steals are worthless as a measure of defense.
Seriously, name me one Curry series that's even close to the best defensive series of Bryant's prime (09 Finals, 08 Finals, 01 Finals, 09 WCSF, etc) Oh, wait. You can't.
All your nonsense about Bryant's "inflated" rep but you can't even get your numbers straight.
Kobe is top ten all-time. Deal with it.
A lot wrong with this post.
- Curry has the highest average playoff RAPM of any player in the span you referenced.
- Playoff RAPM IS available for Kobe- not sure why you believe it's not.
- Efficiency is a term generally used to describe scoring efficiency. If you want to expand beyond that, you might as well expand to offensive impact as a whole.
- You talk about comparing across eras, and yet you compare their DRtg? Can't tell if you don't understand or are being purposely disingenuous. Kobe's average DRAPM is worse than Curry's. "Steals are overrated" is what's overrated. It doesn't always indicate defensive ability, but playing the passing lanes is much more conducive to defensive impact than on-ball perimeter defense. I'd love to see you argue that point with data of your choosing.
I'm sorry I seemed to have touched on a soft spot for you but I don't have any emotional attachment to my opinion.
-Yeah, no. He's #8 in playoff RAPM from 15-19
-Please link me to playoff RAPM for prime Kobe
-Because most don't understand that scoring efficiency isn't efficiency. I've already explained this. Prime Kobe and Prime Curry have extremely comparable overall efficiency. That's a fact.
-I'm comparing the DRTG's of the teams they played. Use relative DRTG if you want. The fact remains that Bryant played far better defensive comp. From 01-10 the average team he played ranked #5 in DRTG.
-Again, try getting your facts straight.
My facts are straight. Clearly you are using a different RAPM dataset. https://basketball-analytics.gitlab.io/rapm-data/
Scoring efficiency is efficiency. You are just trying to draw the line in a place that positively reflects Kobe. With your logic we may as well expand to "basketball efficiency" to include all elements of the game.
"I'm comparing the DRTG's of the teams they played for. Use relative DRTG if you want." That's a neat trick you did... trying to deflect from the fact that you referenced a non-relative stat after criticizing me for using non-relative scoring efficiency.




















