RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar)

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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#81 » by Bidofo » Mon Oct 19, 2020 11:06 pm

Criteria:
Spoiler:
I'll be making my list based on cumulative value for the entirety of a player's career. Basically looking at each year and thinking by how much would that season improve the championship-winning odds of the average NBA team (though I will be taking into account scalability on better teams as well). This means that even late-career years on low minutes, such as '13/'14 Duncan, add value to a player's career. There's no way I'm going to be able to calculate a specific number a la ElGee (which I find very arbitrary), so I'll be putting individual seasons into tiers, and pretty much gauging who has the most value. My analysis of a player's season is based on statistics + eye test + other good analysis, though I will say the further back in time we go the less I can rely on eye test, so more emphasis will be placed on statistics (accounting for era of course) and what other good posts in this project tell me about the player.

In order to grade an individual season, I look at RS+PS with more emphasis on PS performance. Missed games and underperformance in either matter though.


So the top 2 spots got taken by who I expected. I think it gets harder once we figure out the top 3-4 or so because all these guys are in the same tier and it can be very hard to differentiate them. Right after my top tier of James/Jordan/KAJ (who belong there due to having the best combination of prime+longevity over any other candidates), I'm looking at a tier with Russell/Duncan. I don't think Hakeem understood what it meant to be an offensive centerpiece until later in his career, and by the time he did his defense was falling off. Bird and Magic have longevity questions. Shaq has some durability+defense issues and might be the most likely ATG to become a team cancer. So those guys fall right behind, but not too far. What I think separates Russell+Duncan from them is:
a) these two have imo clearly the most defensive value added through their career.
b) they are outliers in terms of their off-court impact on their teams.
c) a longevity edge on pretty much everyone I named.
d) the fact that there are no questions about the competition they faced, which is some of the toughest of all time.

With that being said, here are how I'd rank their seasons along with KAJ's who is my vote for #3 (so I'm not going to talk much about him).

Tier 1:
1977 KAJ 2003 Duncan
1974 KAJ 2002 Duncan
1980 KAJ

So yeah, I don't think any of Russell's seasons belongs in this tier. Firstly, getting into his offense, I think it is easily the LEAST portable of any other ATG until we get pretty late on the list. His scoring is pedestrian/bad, even relative to his era. His post moves and midrange were nothing of note. I think his passing, after being underrated for some time, might even be overrated. He was certainly a very willing passer, which is of course the first step, but he lacked the offensive capabilities to truly leverage his threat to score into opportunities for his teammates. When I watch footage of him, I see some brilliant passes for sure, but many are with him just standing around and finding an opportune cutter or just hitting guys for jump shots which were taken in the 60s whether they were open or not. Not to mention there are some concerns wrt his turnovers as discussed on the first page by other posters. Now, I don't think players should be judged heavily on how they would perform in eras other than their own, but let's conduct a little thought experiment...if Russell was transported to the modern NBA, or really even going as "far" back as the 90s, what does his offense look like? As a modern example, part of the reason why Jokic is such a successful passer is because he's such a good scorer that all eyes are on him, opening up passing lanes for 3s or cutters. One idea that I've read in these threads is that we can just assume he would figure it out and develop a post game and improve drastically as a shooter (worth noting that he was a 56% FT shooter for his career), but that's not an assumption I am willing to make. This is what makes evaluating Russell's career so hard: it's very difficult to separate him from his era. Conversely, you can look at Wilt and easily imagine him dominating on both ends in today's game. That being said, I value in-era dominance > theoretical time-traveling scenarios. I just think there needs to be some mental calculus in how portable you think his game is/how dependent his impact was on his era. Otherwise, if you just look at his raw defensive value, he would look like the GOAT defender BY FAR, and I wouldn't agree with that.

I don't think the Duncan seasons are controversial. 03 was his peak and one of the greatest seasons of all time, 02 was pretty much right there and I've heard arguments for that being his peak as well. Carry-jobs on offense + monster on defense. (KAJ >) Duncan > Russell

Tier 2:
1971 KAJ 1964 Russell 2001 Duncan
1970 KAJ 1962 Russell 2007 Duncan
1979 KAJ 1965 Russell 2005 Duncan
................1963 Russell 2006 Duncan
................1961 Russell 2004 Duncan
................1966 Russell

All of Russell's healthy prime is in this tier. To me, the seasons are mostly indiscernible, a testament to his consistency. I've deferred to ElGee + the RGM peaks project to formulate my opinion of these years. A historic defensive run.

01 Duncan was just a step below his b2b MVP years considering his worse playoff run. He had a resurgence in 2007 which I think could have been his peak had he played more minutes + had a larger role, but he wisely took a step back on both fronts. 04+05 was the beginning of him showing to the world he didn't need David Robinson to spearhead dominant defenses, I think he performed slightly better in 05. 2006 Duncan was one of my more favorite seasons of his, and his second round performance was legendary so it pushes it ahead of 2004. Russell > Duncan (> KAJ)

Tier 3:
1972 KAJ 1959 Russell 1999 Duncan
1978 KAJ 1967 Russell
1976 KAJ

Pre-prime and old-prime Russell land right here. Generally I like the more athletic version, even though his knowledge of the game had exceeded well beyond his years in 67. It doesn't help that he gets manhandled by (peak) Wilt in the playoffs that year.

99 Duncan had a dominant PS run for a sophomore. This season was worse defensively than later seasons but he was much more efficient in a tougher defensive era + with worse spacing and help.

I moved 76 KAJ from tier 4 to tier 3 since these are all relative and he fits more there. (KAJ >) Russell > Duncan

Tier 4:
1982 KAJ 1957 Russell 2008 Duncan
1983 KAJ 1968 Russell 1998 Duncan
1984 KAJ 1969 Russell 2013 Duncan
1985 KAJ 1958 Russell 2009 Duncan
1986 KAJ......................2010 Duncan
1987 KAJ......................2011 Duncan
....................................2012 Duncan

Rookie Russell and a Russell leaving his prime ends up here. I think there's an argument to be made that by 1968/69 he might not have been the MVP of his team especially in the playoffs/Finals. His 1958 season just barely ends up last because of injury.

I'm not really a fan of Duncan's offense post-2007. He became even less efficient (his TS% was already fairly middling) and that's with taking a backseat in the Spurs offense. I'd say Ginobili+Parker had to take over out of necessity. His defense was still fantastic, he just wasn't the resilient scorer that he once was. However, 2008 and 1998 Duncan are the best seasons here I think. Duncan (> KAJ) > Russell

Tier 5:
2014 Duncan
2015 Duncan


2016 Duncan

The rest of the Big Fundamental's role player career.

I think Duncan's longevity stands out here vs Russell, which I found surprising considering I thought I'd have Russell ahead.

1. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
2. Tim Duncan
3. Bill Russell
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#82 » by Doctor MJ » Mon Oct 19, 2020 11:37 pm

Owly wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
limbo wrote:Do people believe Russell would've won more titles than Kareem if he played in his shoes?


I'm more inclined to say that I don't believe Kareem would have won as many championships on the Celtics as Russell did.

Presumably this means, on average - given, say, 1000 runs through - rather than imagining one certain unavoidable history (or perhaps there's something else, another framing).

That then raises the question do you think Russell would typically feature on 11 (or better) title teams?


Good question. I've thought about this some, but I have to say I don't feel like I have a great way to estimate that.

I prefer to think in terms of how I expect to be able to use the player to cause impact. I'm really quite confident in the ability to build something awesome around Russell's defense in pretty much any context, particularly within the era they played in. I don't think it requires a ridiculously talented set of teammates.

Of course, I could say all that about Kareem too, I'm just saying I feel a bit more confident about creation of impact with Russell than I am with Kareem.

Now you might point out that Russell had the benefit of Red Auerbach as his coach and what if he had some dummy as a coach that refused to let Russell play the way that was instinctive to Russell to play. Sure, and I think you could say that this is more likely to occur for Russell than Kareem. It's more obvious what to do with Kareem than it is with maybe anyone else in history.

I don't like thinking in those terms though. "I rate Russell as lower than I would because a dumb coach wouldn't use him right." Why am I holding that against Russell? I mean it would be one thing if I thought Red was the one really crafting what Russell was skill by skill, tendency by tendency, but my impression has always been that Red's breakthrough was to let Russell be what Russell wanted to be and just do what he could to support that. Credit Red for his instincts and believing in empowering young talent along with some strategy, but I'm going to judge Russell for what he ought to be able to accomplish in a teammate context rather than trying to imagine all the nightmare scenarios of incompetence that could conceivably have occurred.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#83 » by penbeast0 » Tue Oct 20, 2020 12:04 am

Owly wrote:
Dr Positivity wrote: ... as Wilt got players like Greer, Walker and Cunningham. Wilt's Sixers team is every bit the talent that Russell's overpowered Celtics was supposed to have

Walker and Cunningham didn't peak until the 70s and weren't high level contributors until '67 (they won that year and then were crippled by injuries in '68). Even if you credit Russell as the main force in the dreadful supporting cast shooting in '66 it seems a tad mean to tout their talent.
....


How much do you credit/blame Wilt for the "dreadful supporting cast shooting in '66?" You are putting Wilt over Russell for his offense but one of the criticisms of Wilt before 1967 was that the offense was to stand around and wait for Wilt to come up the floor (his ridiculous minutes and heavy offensive load led him to conserve energy and frequently walk up the floor) then throw the ball in to Wilt while everyone else sort of stood around. It wasn't until Wilt became the 5th option (in terms of shots/possession) in 67 that his teams achieved the strong offensive showing that you might expect of a guy who is arguably the greatest individual offensive force in the history of the NBA. Again, you might blame this on the coach but the reality is that it wasn't just the 66 Sixers that had miserable playoff runs, with the Warriors, oustanding players like Paul Arizin and Tom Gola did as well. I'm not saying it is Wilt's fault but I'm asking the question because you generally have strong and well reasoned opinions on questions like this.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#84 » by DQuinn1575 » Tue Oct 20, 2020 12:19 am

penbeast0 wrote:
dontcalltimeout wrote:Found a pretty cool visualization of league quality. It was developed by Kevin Pelton when he was creating his "championships added" metric in 2016. I think it is consistent with most people's intuitions.

https://www.espn.com/nba/insider/story/_/id/14671128/explaining-championships-added-all-nba-rank-kevin-pelton

Adjusting for league quality
The last stop of the process is adjusting for how quality of play has evolved in the NBA over time. When I was ranking the top teams of all time last June, I used an adjustment based on whether players saw more or less playing time from one season to the next after accounting for aging.

That version worked well at the team level as far as dealing with expansion and the merger, but it doesn't seem to reflect the improvement of the league over time. Given the increased size of the player pool the NBA now draws from with the growth of the game internationally, it's hard to believe quality of play is really worse now than in the 1980s.

The solution turned it to be considering minutes played year over year without the aging factor. That results in the following graph of league quality dating back to 1946-47 and relative to 2014-15.



Image

Now growth is apparent throughout the NBA's history, most rapid in the early years before expansion and relatively steady since the merger. (The red line reflects quality of play in the ABA, which started out several decades behind the NBA but nearly caught up by the time of the merger.)


This is a pretty reasonable estimate (meaning I generally agree with it. :wink: )Most surprising thing for me isn't the NBA part of the line but how the ABA line trends upwards sharply from 75 to 76. They did concentrate talent as teams failed and their players were redistributed but that meant poor unit cohesion plus VA was so incredibly all-time awful (who wants to coach the team this week?). I always think of 75 as the ABA's peak.


I don’t think anyone seriously disagrees the league’s quality is improving; the question for me is how much. What is the scale going up? I’m not sure exactly what the base is.

It looks like 1959=1990 and i don’t think anyone would agree to that
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#85 » by Odinn21 » Tue Oct 20, 2020 4:30 am

Bidofo wrote:Tier 1:
1977 KAJ 2003 Duncan
1974 KAJ 2002 Duncan
1980 KAJ

1971 Abdul-Jabbar was definitely tier 1. His regular season production was there. And his postseason numbers can look down a notch but his impact was also there.

Also, it feels like you're quite underrating 1962 and 1964 Russell.

Bidofo wrote:Tier 2:
1971 KAJ 1964 Russell 2001 Duncan
1970 KAJ 1962 Russell 2007 Duncan
1979 KAJ 1965 Russell 2005 Duncan
................1963 Russell 2006 Duncan
................1961 Russell 2004 Duncan
................1966 Russell

What puts 2004-2006 Duncan on there but not 1972 Abdul-Jabbar? It looks inconsistent. All of those Duncan seasons had issues. In all 3, he did suffer from an injury and he didn't put out a complete season like he did in 2007. Abdul-Jabbar had one of the greatest regular season performances in 1972 and even though his performance was not entirely great, he played 2 of the greatest low post defenders ever in a single coverage era. This is more and better than what one can say about 2004 and 2006 Duncan.

Also looks like you forgot about 1981 for Abdul-Jabbar. It's either tier 2 or tier 3 season. I'd say tier 2.

Bidofo wrote:Tier 4:
1982 KAJ 1957 Russell 2008 Duncan
1983 KAJ 1968 Russell 1998 Duncan
1984 KAJ 1969 Russell 2013 Duncan
1985 KAJ 1958 Russell 2009 Duncan
1986 KAJ......................2010 Duncan
1987 KAJ......................2011 Duncan
....................................2012 Duncan

Tier 5:
2014 Duncan
2015 Duncan


2016 Duncan

Assuming those are ranks within tiers, I can't see a single reason to pick 2011 Duncan over any other version than 2016 version. His knees were shot, he didn't have any mobility, his offense wasn't quite there due to mobility issues.
In 2012, when the team was stuck on offense and turned to him for points, he was still a 21/11/2 player on .540 fg (the last 3 games against the Thunder). Similarly in 2015, 21/12/3 player on .647 fg (the last 4 games against the Clippers). 2011 Duncan did not have that.

---

Lastly, I'd like to remind that having 15+ quality seasons in the '00s and the '60s and the '80s were quite different. Apparently Russell lose out against Duncan because he didn't provide that many quality seasons. But the scale should be different for these players because their times were different.
The issue with per75 numbers;
36pts on 27 fga/9 fta in 36 mins, does this mean he'd keep up the efficiency to get 48pts on 36fga/12fta in 48 mins?
The answer; NO. He's human, not a linearly working machine.
Per75 is efficiency rate, not actual production.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#86 » by RoundMoundOfReb » Tue Oct 20, 2020 4:46 am

Anybody catch Ben Taylor (ElGee) talking about this project on his podcast? Pretty cool.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#87 » by drza » Tue Oct 20, 2020 5:56 am

Kareem, impact & is there a ceiling on big man offense?

It looks like Kareem's going in, this thread, so this is my last chance to really address him in this project. But as I've read the posts here, a seed of thought I've been kind of chewing on for years is starting to grow. Like my other posts in this project so far, I'm free-writing this and coming up with a lot of it as I go. So, some of this might have the feel of a white board conversation where I put some things out there not to persuade, necessarily, but to see if anyone else might consider thinking about it from this angle. Other than that...we'll see what comes out.

My Tao of ranking Kareem
Kareem is another extremely interesting case. As I've mentioned a couple of times, now, when I started in on the Retro Player of the Year project about a decade back I was pretty set that Kareem was my GOAT. That was a bit of a controversial stance at the time...on this board he was universally considered part of what they called "The Immortal Six" (Jordan, Kareem, Russell, Wilt, Magic & Bird) but LeBron was still young, Shaq, Duncan, KG and Kobe were still not done with their careers, and Hakeem was still a bit of a dark horse candidate to break into the group. But even if there was a so-called Six, in these parts it was pretty clearly Jordan and everyone else. So for me to have Kareem at the top was kind of bold, in my mind.

Then, the project happened. And we'd gone through decades of history (which mean months of the project) before we got back to the 70s when Kareem was king. I remember thinking that once we got pre-80, so pre Magic and Bird, the project would be pretty dull with Kareem entrenched in the top spot for like a decade with no real competition. If anything, I was looking forward to learning about everyone else. So, imagine my shock when the 1978 and 1977 threads became a real battle between Kareem and Bill Walton. Bill Walton!?! I mean, I grew up watching ball, and in my earliest memories Walton (like later Sam Bowie and Ralph Sampson) was someone my dad talked about in "what if" terms, because they all could have been legendary but were so broken by injuries. I remember when Walton joined those mid-80s Celtics teams (who were, by the way, my LEAST favorite franchise of all-time. My dad was a huge Dr. J and Magic guy, which meant I was a big Dr. J and Magic guy...so the Celtics (and later the Bucks) were the enemies because they always challenged and often beat my guys. But I digress).

Anyway, my first impression of Walton had always been as the 6th man on those Celtics. I knew he'd been a legend back in college...frankly, the conversation among my dad and his friends was that Walton had been overrated, in college especially, because he could take the shine away from what Kareem had done at UCLA right before him. They never talked much about Walton's Trail Blazers teams, that won the title when I was a baby. By the time of the RPoY project I knew about those teams, but I was ready to scoff...SCOFF, I say, at the notion that Walton could have in any way been even on Kareem's level as a pro, let alone his equal. No WAY you could convince me he was superior.

When the 1978 thread began, I was pretty confident. Even knowing that Walton's Blazers won a championship the season before, I was cockily confident that this was just because the Blazers were stacked while Kareem was in a lone wolf situation...similar to the situations I'd argued vociferously about with Kevin Garnett in the years leading up to the project. In fact, I was sure that both Kareem in the 70s and Wilt in the 60s would prove to be akin to the KGs of their particular generation, overshadowed sometimes by overrated guys who happened to play on stacked championship teams that overinflated their value (the same argument I used to make against Duncan, or, in a cross-sport analogy, for Barry Sanders and against Emmitt Smith when the topic of which was the better running back came up).

And the available box score stats seemed to support my inclination. I mean yeah, in 1977 the Trail Blazers won the title, but Karem's stats against Walton were BONKERS. I think someone in one of the threads made the argument that Walton was an all-world defender and passer, but that he wasn't much of a scorer...but that Kareem was an all-world defender and passer and arguably the best scorer of all-time. So, the argument concluded, if Kareem could do everything that Walton could do but in ADDITION was also a GOAT scorer, then how could this even be a competition? Kareem was better, hands down!

But one thing would niggle at me. Someone...maybe ElGee? Maybe someone else? Can't remember...ok, going back through that thread now. Looks like TrueLAFan, in the 1978 thread, is who first brought up the games Kareem missed that year, and how the team was like a .400 team without him, then much better with him even as he played himself back into shape. And that concept of impact became a big discussion point here. We'd had huge arguments on +/- early on, when KG was showing up as the biggest impact player of his generation much to the consternation of many, but once we'd gotten past the early 2000s we hadn't had any more +/- data to work with. Wasn't expecting to get any quantification on impact for the 70s, but Kareem AND Walton having both missed so many games in those two years of shared peak gave us a unique opportunity to try to estimate the impact their presence had on their teams winning and losing.

ElGee made a chart for it, in this post: https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=24579173#p24579173

Kareem had a really big impact...but not even close to as big as Walton's.

1977 & 1978 (early) WOWY for Kareem and Walton, normalized for 82-game pace

With Kareem: 52-30 record, 111.9 PPG, 107.8 Opponents PPG (+4.1 PPG)
W/O Kareem: 31-51 record, 105.6 PPG, 107.2 Opponents PPG (-1.6 PPG)

With Walton: 61-21 record, 112.0 PPG, 102.9 Opp PPG (+9.1 PPG)
W/O Walton: 31-51 record, 103.0 PPG, 106.7 Opp PPG (-3.7 PPG)

So, in those two seasons, Walton's team was worse than but similar to Kareem's when both stars were out, but add both stars back into the mix and Walton's team was SIGNIFICANTLY better than Kareem's.

It didn't add up to me. But I told myself it was some sort of fluke. Other players were hurt at different times on both teams, and impact stats are noisy. Ultimately, I had been SO SURE that Kareem was better that I still voted Kareem over Walton in both years. But a seed was planted, and later the much longer Wilt vs Russell debates helped that seed to grow.

By the end of the RPoY project I had worked my way to a new default setting...that Russell (and for the brief time he was healthy) Walton really were both all-history level impact players. And that Kareem and Wilt were both high impact guys as well, but not AS high as their rivals and that their impact was overstated because of their ability to put major points on the board.

Revolution.

Kareem, Wilt & a ceiling on teams w/ volume-scoring bigs?

Doc MJ often talks about how it's optimal for a team's primary offensive threat to be a perimeter player (just as it's optimal for the defensive anchor to be a big man). However, usually Kareem, Shaq and maybe Hakeem are held up as the exception that proves the rule. Even Wilt, for all his awesome scoring, won his championships in years where he wasn't volume scoring.

In this thread (and on this board), I hear a lot of analysis that evaluates scoring based on volume and efficiency. Kareem (and Wilt) were both able to put up huge scoring volumes on excellent efficiency as well. We talk about skillsets, and how Kareem's complete toolbox of scoring prowess made him 1-of-1 in NBA history. He had the unblockable shot, but more than that he had outstanding touch, great moves, surprising quickness for his absurd length, was a great passer for a center...his offensive skillset was top notch. Before him, Wilt had his own superhuman skillset that led to his own scoring.

I just looked at something. Kareem entered the NBA in the 1969-70 season, the same year that Wilt got hurt and only played 12 games. Seems like a nice breakpoint. But if we consider Wilt from the 1960-1969 seasons and Kareem for the 1970-79 seasons, we're looking at a solid 20-YEAR-BLOCK of some of the most awesome center scoring in NBA history.

Wilt (60-69) and Kareem (70-79) scoring cartoon
49,239 combined points
1,560 games
31.6 PPG
55.8 FG% (not TS%, 55.8 FIELD GOAL percentage)

But over those 20 seasons featuring the most dominant players in the NBA, they combined for a total of 2 championships. One each. For Wilt's chip, he averaged "only" 24.3 PPG, more than 10 PPG beneath his scoring average for that decade. Kareem's scoring in that season was still high (31.7 PPG, higher than his decade-average of 28.6 PPG), but I don't think it's a coincidence that this chip came in his one full season next to an all-time great guard before injuries and age robbed Oscar of a step.

Upthread, I saw someone argue that Bill Russell's Celtics weren't really that dominant, that because they won several close series in their run it over-inflated how good they were. I feel like this trend is the exact other side of the coin...that the argument many make is that it was somehow a coincidence that Kareem and Wilt won chips so rarely during their dominant scoring years. But sometimes, it's tempting to go the Occam's Razor route.

Russell's teams won two championships at University of San Francisco, who had no history of success at that level.
He won Olympic Gold.
His Celtics won 11 championships in 13 seasons, and he was hobbled in one of the 2 losses.

Meanwhile, WIlt and Kareem put up the most awesome, high-efficiency, high-volume scoring seasons from big men that the NBA had ever seen. For a solid TWO DECADES. And "only" managed 2 championships, one at much lower scoring volume and one while playing next to the greatest floor general of the era.

It just seems unlikely, when looked at from that altitude, that it's pure serendipity that Russell's teams just kept getting lucky while the mega-volume scoring bigs just struggled to get to the mountaintop.

And believe me, as someone that paid more attention to Kevin Garnett's career plight than most anyone else, I KNOW it's possible for the best player in the game to be stuck in a no-win situation year after year and not win championships.

But in Garnett's case, every analytic approach to supporting cast evaluation says that the Timberwolves were (way) the worst cast of any of the contenders in the 2000s. Similarly, every analytic that we have said that he was lifting his teams as far as humanly possible, with a higher measured impact than any other player of his generation.

The same can't be said for Wilt and Kareem. They both played on some teams that had reasonable, if not downright strong supporting casts compared to their contemporaries. And, the available analytics approaches for the time (WOWY, looking at team changes for trades, etc) don't support them as having nearly the lift of their contemporaries. Russell, West and Oscar all measured out significantly better in those approaches than Wilt. And as I pointed out above, Kareem's impact came up way short of Walton's at what should have been his peak.

So, it just doesn't seem to me that Wilt and Kareem actually WERE the dominant players of their time to the extent that the boxscores, particularly the scoring volume and efficiency numbers, would suggest. And it brings me back to, maybe they weren't among the exceptions to the rule against running an optimized offense through a volume-scoring big man. Maybe they're part of the rule itself.

A dominant scoring big man can put up some awesome numbers. But maybe it's not a coincidence that Kareem only won with Oscar or Magic playing at high levels. Maybe it's not a coincidence that Shaq didn't win until Kobe and later Wade came of age. Maybe it's not a coincidence that Wilt had to sublimate his scoring to win.

If this were a "rule", per se, perhaps the only true exception was Hakeem's Rockets in the mid-90s. They figured out a way to let him be maximized as a scorer while surrounding him with shooters that could be maximized playing off him. Maybe that really was a rare accomplishment.

Or, maybe it's not that you can't win with a volume-scoring big, but instead that it puts a cap on just how good your team can get. If your center is volume scoring, then your perimeter players either have to be able to dominate without scoring (usually as an all-world floor general that can keep the rest of the unit maximized while maximizing the big guy as well), be dominant enough to play a 2-man scoring unit with the big guy that's strong enough to surround them with 3 role players that don't need the ball, or have a 3-point line that allows the big man to dominate with 4 other efficient (and clutch) shooters capable of maximizing the offense based off him.

And if it's difficult to build a championship-caliber offense around a scoring big, might it be that having a high-volume scoring big (even at high efficiency) might in some ways even be a detriment to building a championship caliber team? Because it might lock the upside at a certain level that is really hard to break through for 99% of the supporting cast options that might be realistic at a given time.

Meanwhile, if your big man is the biggest impact player on the court because of his defense, maybe it's just easier to build a champion around him because if you surround him with any good perimeter players they can maximize their own impact on offense without having to work around the needs of their big-scoring center. Maybe, as counterintuitive as it sounds, Russell's combination of Megatron defense while NOT being an alpha scorer is actually the much more ideal centerpiece for a championship squad than a dominant scoring big that is also good on defense. Food for thought.

Shrugs. I haven't quite completed the support for the thought I was working towards, but I've been writing this off-and-on during every break I've gotten all day. I started in the afternoon...it's now 2 in the morning. I shudder to even press preview and see how long this is. I'm going to stop rambling now. I'm sure I'll get some pushback if anyone even reads this monster, and I'm also sure this conversation will pick back up in future threads once we start talking about players like Wilt.

Vote:
1) Bill Russell
2) Kevin Garnett (haven't spoken about him much yet, but others have started so I guess it's time to get him in my voting mix).
3) Tim Duncan
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#88 » by Blackmill » Tue Oct 20, 2020 8:07 am

Meanwhile, WIlt and Kareem put up the most awesome, high-efficiency, high-volume scoring seasons from big men that the NBA had ever seen. For a solid TWO DECADES. And "only" managed 2 championships, one at much lower scoring volume and one while playing next to the greatest floor general of the era.

It just seems unlikely, when looked at from that altitude, that it's pure serendipity that Russell's teams just kept getting lucky while the mega-volume scoring bigs just struggled to get to the mountaintop.

And believe me, as someone that paid more attention to Kevin Garnett's career plight than most anyone else, I KNOW it's possible for the best player in the game to be stuck in a no-win situation year after year and not win championships.

But in Garnett's case, every analytic approach to supporting cast evaluation says that the Timberwolves were (way) the worst cast of any of the contenders in the 2000s. Similarly, every analytic that we have said that he was lifting his teams as far as humanly possible, with a higher measured impact than any other player of his generation.

The same can't be said for Wilt and Kareem. They both played on some teams that had reasonable, if not downright strong supporting casts compared to their contemporaries. And, the available analytics approaches for the time (WOWY, looking at team changes for trades, etc) don't support them as having nearly the lift of their contemporaries.


Kareem did play on several strong teams in the 70s. But I think 1975-1979 teams that Kareem played on were completely un-winnable.

In 1975 the Bucks played at a ~15 win pace in the 17 games that Kareem missed. It's fair to blame Kareem for missing those games at the start of the season but this was quite clearly an impossible situation to win the championship in.

The 1977 team is the least productive collections of players that I've watched. I do think they were worse than KG's Minnesota teams. The team struggled to advance the ball past half-court on many possessions, did not have a single positive defender outside of Kareem (a few were major negatives), had well below average passing talent, and at best average shooting talent. I think there's a real possibility that every player other than Kareem was a negative on both ends. Add to this an absence of quality set plays in the offense. Rick Barry described Jerry West's offense as having "no semblance of pattern or structure" in the 1977 playoffs. We don't have footage of the 1976 team but it wouldn't have been better than the 1977 team.

In 1978 and 1979 LA had enough talent to, at least in theory, pull off an upset. It would be a clear upset if they won but it wasn't unthinkable. However, that's strictly in terms of talent, and the team still didn't have a positive defender beyond Kareem. There was also a huge amount of redundancy on offense. Who thought Kareem, Wilkes, Nixon, and Dantley would mesh? LA's struggles essentially remained the same. There was no structure to the offense. There was no focus, effort or athleticism on defense. Going back to the +/- data, let's recognize that it's a very small sample. I think it would be hard to argue that a sample of that size is stable. My guess is simulation would show the sample to be highly unstable. But what I want to focus on is why would we expect Kareem to have high impact when

    1. His defensive efforts don't lead to stops because either there's no help-the-helper or no one boxes out when Kareem leaves the restricted area. There's literally dozens of plays like this despite have only a handful of games from the late 70s. LA's defense was non-existent outside of Kareem.

    2. Teams didn't need to challenge Kareem inside as much because the rest of LA was very poor at contesting outside shots.

    3. His offensive efforts had reduced production because there were no counters to being double teamed. There were no sets to get players cutting (remember Barry's comments) and the paint was packed to the point that double teams were often "free".

    4. There's three players on the roster not named Kareem who are happy to take shots and were all skilled offensively. LA was well past the point of diminishing returns after trading for Dantley.

Yes, I think it's accurate to say Kareem had less impact on this specific team than other player's have had on different teams, but there's context. This is pretty close to a worst-case situation for Kareem in terms of winning and impact. And I don't think it's a reasonable rebuttal to say the situation was a result of Kareem's offensive fit being less than ideal. As mentioned there were major problems on defense that which are only fixed by the other player's on the court getting better defensively. There's nothing Kareem can do to make Carter get his hand up. There's nothing he can do to make Jamal Wilkes not quit on the play once he's been picked off. Maybe he could talk to those players and galvanize them, but if Jerry West couldn't, is it fair to expect Kareem to? And on offense it should have been obvious to any one that Dantley was not going fit well.

If we consider that Kareem was a rookie in 1970 and would have needed to beat a very good 8.41 SRS Knicks, and in 1972 a title would have meant beating the 11.65 SRS Lakers, I think Kareem had only 3 chances to win a title in the 70s. He could have won in 1971, 1973, and 1974. He did in 1971. The 1973 season was a stain and there's no sugar coating it. In 1974, the Bucks had injuries to two of their ball-handling players (Allen who missed the whole series and McGlocklin who missed two games) and would lose the series in large part because of turnovers.

The point here is I don't think it follows from Kareem's lack of championships in the 70s that he wasn't as impactful a player as Walton. Also, most industry people I know would look at that +/- data and say it's unworkable if you want a high quality result. I really think that data needs to be completely ignored.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#89 » by Blackmill » Tue Oct 20, 2020 8:09 am

No time for details. I need to catch some sleep.

1. KG (see here viewtopic.php?f=64&t=2009142&p=85801119#p85801119)
2. Kareem (I wrote plenty earlier in this thread, see those posts)
3. ????
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#90 » by 70sFan » Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:34 am

Blackmill wrote:
Meanwhile, WIlt and Kareem put up the most awesome, high-efficiency, high-volume scoring seasons from big men that the NBA had ever seen. For a solid TWO DECADES. And "only" managed 2 championships, one at much lower scoring volume and one while playing next to the greatest floor general of the era.

It just seems unlikely, when looked at from that altitude, that it's pure serendipity that Russell's teams just kept getting lucky while the mega-volume scoring bigs just struggled to get to the mountaintop.

And believe me, as someone that paid more attention to Kevin Garnett's career plight than most anyone else, I KNOW it's possible for the best player in the game to be stuck in a no-win situation year after year and not win championships.

But in Garnett's case, every analytic approach to supporting cast evaluation says that the Timberwolves were (way) the worst cast of any of the contenders in the 2000s. Similarly, every analytic that we have said that he was lifting his teams as far as humanly possible, with a higher measured impact than any other player of his generation.

The same can't be said for Wilt and Kareem. They both played on some teams that had reasonable, if not downright strong supporting casts compared to their contemporaries. And, the available analytics approaches for the time (WOWY, looking at team changes for trades, etc) don't support them as having nearly the lift of their contemporaries.


Kareem did play on several strong teams in the 70s. But I think 1975-1979 teams that Kareem played on were completely un-winnable.

In 1975 the Bucks played at a ~15 win pace in the 17 games that Kareem missed. It's fair to blame Kareem for missing those games at the start of the season but this was quite clearly an impossible situation to win the championship in.

The 1977 team is the least productive collections of players that I've watched. I do think they were worse than KG's Minnesota teams. The team struggled to advance the ball past half-court on many possessions, did not have a single positive defender outside of Kareem (a few were major negatives), had well below average passing talent, and at best average shooting talent. I think there's a real possibility that every player other than Kareem was a negative on both ends. Add to this an absence of quality set plays in the offense. Rick Barry described Jerry West's offense as having "no semblance of pattern or structure" in the 1977 playoffs. We don't have footage of the 1976 team but it wouldn't have been better than the 1977 team.

In 1978 and 1979 LA had enough talent to, at least in theory, pull off an upset. It would be a clear upset if they won but it wasn't unthinkable. However, that's strictly in terms of talent, and the team still didn't have a positive beyond Kareem. There was also a huge amount of redundancy on offense. Who thought Kareem, Wilkes, Nixon, and Dantley would mesh? LA's struggles essentially remained the same. There was no structure to the offense. There was no focus, effort or athleticism on defense. Going back to the +/- data, let's recognize that it's a very small sample. I think it would be to argue that a sample of that size is stable. My guess is simulation would show the sample to be highly unstable. But what I want to focus on is why would we expect Kareem to have high impact when

    1. His defensive efforts don't lead to stops because either there's no help-the-helper or no one boxes out when Kareem leaves the restricted area. There's literally dozens of plays like this despite have only a handful of games from the late 70s. LA's defense was non-existent outside of Kareem.

    2. Teams didn't need to challenge Kareem inside as much because the rest of LA was very poor at contesting outside shots.

    3. His offensive efforts had reduced production because there were no counters to being double teamed. There were no sets to get players cutting (remember Barry's comments) and the paint was packed to the point that double teams were often "free".

    4. There's three players on the roster not named Kareem who are happy to take shots and were all skilled offensively. LA was well past the point of diminishing returns after trading for Dantley.

Yes, I think it's accurate to say Kareem had less impact on this specific team than other player's have had on different teams, but there's context. This is pretty close to a worst-case situation for Kareem in terms of winning and impact. And I don't think it's a reasonable rebuttal to say the situation was a result of Kareem's offensive fit being less than ideal. As mentioned there were major problems on defense that which are only fixed by the other player's on the court getting better defensively. There's nothing Kareem can do to make Carter get his hand up. There's nothing he can do to make Jamal Wilkes not quit on the play once he's been picked off. Maybe he could talk to those players and galvanize them, but if Jerry West couldn't, is it fair to expect Kareem to? And on offense it should have been obvious to any one that Dantley was not going fit well.

If we consider that Kareem was a rookie in 1970 and would have needed to beat a very good 8.41 SRS Knicks, and in 1972 a title would have meant beating the 11.65 SRS Lakers, I think Kareem had only 3 chances to win a title in the 70s. He could have won in 1971, 1973, and 1974. He did in 1971. The 1973 season was a stain and there's no sugar coating it. In 1974, the Bucks had injuries to two of their ball-handling players (Allen who missed the whole series and McGlocklin who missed two games) and would lose the series in large part because of turnovers.

The point here is I don't think it follows from Kareem's lack of championships in the 70s that he wasn't as impactful a player as Walton. Also, most industry people I know would look at that +/- data and say it's unworkable if you want a high quality result. I really think that data needs to be completely ignored.

Yeah, people often underestimate fit and balanced construction of a team. Kareem didn't have bad teammates in 1978-79, but this team as a whole was quite weak and full of exploitable weaknesses. Jamaal Wilkes and Adrian Dantley were both very solid players, but there was no reason to have them both on the court together. Nixon was good PG, but he was bad defender and this team had no perimeter stoppers (old Ludson was also weak).

Now, when we're talking about 1977 team - this team is terrible period. People often cite 2009-10 LeBron casts as a proof of his floor raising (rightfully so), but 1977 Lakers team was far worse than that. They had no playmaking, no defense, no rebounding and mediocre shooting in playoffs. 1976 was even worse and Lakers still should have made the playoffs - they had better record than Milwaukee and Detroit. These two seasons are proofs of Jabbar's ability to carry weak teams on his shoulders, not evidences of his ceilling as an offensive anchor.

The only big concern about Kareem's resume is his 1973 loss against Warriors, but it's only one series in very long career. It's not like James, Duncan, KG or Shaq never had such moments.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#91 » by 70sFan » Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:34 am

Blackmill wrote:No time for details. I need to catch some sleep.

1. KG (ultra mobile big, great passer & outside shooter, smartest help defender I've seen, best screen setter I've watched)
2. Kareem (I wrote plenty earlier in this thread, see those posts)
3. ????

Not over Wes Unseld :noway:
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#92 » by Owly » Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:41 am

penbeast0 wrote:
Owly wrote:
Dr Positivity wrote: ... as Wilt got players like Greer, Walker and Cunningham. Wilt's Sixers team is every bit the talent that Russell's overpowered Celtics was supposed to have

Walker and Cunningham didn't peak until the 70s and weren't high level contributors until '67 (they won that year and then were crippled by injuries in '68). Even if you credit Russell as the main force in the dreadful supporting cast shooting in '66 it seems a tad mean to tout their talent.
....


How much do you credit/blame Wilt for the "dreadful supporting cast shooting in '66?" You are putting Wilt over Russell for his offense but one of the criticisms of Wilt before 1967 was that the offense was to stand around and wait for Wilt to come up the floor (his ridiculous minutes and heavy offensive load led him to conserve energy and frequently walk up the floor) then throw the ball in to Wilt while everyone else sort of stood around. It wasn't until Wilt became the 5th option (in terms of shots/possession) in 67 that his teams achieved the strong offensive showing that you might expect of a guy who is arguably the greatest individual offensive force in the history of the NBA. Again, you might blame this on the coach but the reality is that it wasn't just the 66 Sixers that had miserable playoff runs, with the Warriors, oustanding players like Paul Arizin and Tom Gola did as well. I'm not saying it is Wilt's fault but I'm asking the question because you generally have strong and well reasoned opinions on questions like this.

Honest answer is I don't know.

My gut would be first inclination among causes for a single series would be noise, then depending on circumstances the player themselves in general/defense (but I am very cognizant that a very flawed, one-dimensional offensive plan can be crushed in the playoffs and whilst it typically hurts individual player production/legacies, it can also hurt the team). Russell (and other strong Boston defenders) and Wilt are further confounders. The Celtics' elite defense certainly needs accounting for.

So the answer is I don't know. I haven't seen the games. Honestly it's one series, so it doesn't matter that much to me.

If one wants to posit that Wilt was was throwing out grenades at the end of the clock ... maybe. Though I haven't seen it reported and it's not like everyone was afraid to criticize Wilt (instead he took heat for free throw shooting in the final game, commuting from New York and missing a practice). It's possible ... but speculative. Maybe I'm just not dinging him enough in these series in particular for failing to turn production into global offensive impact, which I'm aware of generally. I think it's that, if they shot okay in the RS (then, after the fact that I think it's perhaps firstly noise) I'm inclined to think that's on them. Maybe the 76ers are plannable (though fga per minute Wilt isn't way ahead of Greer in the playoffs and it's not a team taking away the first and only option which is how such things usually go) ... I guess coaching is a mismatch ... I'd just want to know, see how it was done (before I ding Wilt too much).

Fwiw, Walker credits nerves for Cunningham in his first playoff series (5 of 31 from the field, though 11 of 13 from the line) - he just says he, Hal and Wali combined for around 33%. In reality he's unfair on himself, given his free throw visits.

I'd also note if you flip the 65 and 66 playoff series they about go to form.

I will also note that I'm not (necessarily) putting Wilt over Russell (for the series or overall) both because I don't have a list building process that's robust and, for these two in particular there are big swathes of noise. My general inclination is, I think, Russell over Wilt at present ... but I do think there's some over optimism on Russell sometimes in some places. Here I've tried to give the room for Crediting Russell with the 76ers offensive slump, I think I'd want more evidence that Wilt was causing a problem to the O to really turn on this but I may see things differently in future.

Sorry if a touch rambly, this is off the top of my head, not really properly thought through.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#93 » by Mazter » Tue Oct 20, 2020 2:31 pm

DQuinn1575 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
dontcalltimeout wrote:Found a pretty cool visualization of league quality. It was developed by Kevin Pelton when he was creating his "championships added" metric in 2016. I think it is consistent with most people's intuitions.

https://www.espn.com/nba/insider/story/_/id/14671128/explaining-championships-added-all-nba-rank-kevin-pelton




Image



This is a pretty reasonable estimate (meaning I generally agree with it. :wink: )Most surprising thing for me isn't the NBA part of the line but how the ABA line trends upwards sharply from 75 to 76. They did concentrate talent as teams failed and their players were redistributed but that meant poor unit cohesion plus VA was so incredibly all-time awful (who wants to coach the team this week?). I always think of 75 as the ABA's peak.


I don’t think anyone seriously disagrees the league’s quality is improving; the question for me is how much. What is the scale going up? I’m not sure exactly what the base is.

It looks like 1959=1990 and i don’t think anyone would agree to that

I think the difference between 1960 and 2020 should be much bigger, 1990 should definitely be better than 1960. I think the steep increase from 1950 to 1960 is the problem here. Also the "ABA-drop" shouldn't be there. I can't remember the ABA stealing any big names from the NBA. They were more like a continuation of the NIBL/ABL/MPBL/NABL.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#94 » by Odinn21 » Tue Oct 20, 2020 2:33 pm

I'll be very blunt about few Garnett votes; those make no sense at all. His peak isn't top 5 level. His prime isn't top 5 level. His longevity and overall career value aren't top 5 level. His resume isn't there. All there is glorified +/- numbers. Even as great he was, his playoff play also doesn't stack up against the competition for the top 5. Saying he is one of the top 5 players the league has ever seen is a overcorrection for him being in a bad team for majority of his prime.

Garnett over Abdul-Jabbar and Chamberlain is ridiculous. Garnett is better than Abdul-Jabbar because Abdul-Jabbar has no reliable +/- and wowyr data while Garnett is the king of regular season +/- data? Gotta love that process.
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Per75 is efficiency rate, not actual production.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#95 » by dontcalltimeout » Tue Oct 20, 2020 2:47 pm

DQuinn1575 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:


This is a pretty reasonable estimate (meaning I generally agree with it. :wink: )Most surprising thing for me isn't the NBA part of the line but how the ABA line trends upwards sharply from 75 to 76. They did concentrate talent as teams failed and their players were redistributed but that meant poor unit cohesion plus VA was so incredibly all-time awful (who wants to coach the team this week?). I always think of 75 as the ABA's peak.


I don’t think anyone seriously disagrees the league’s quality is improving; the question for me is how much. What is the scale going up? I’m not sure exactly what the base is.

It looks like 1959=1990 and i don’t think anyone would agree to that


Pelton doesn't give a detailed methodology, but this part that explains how he approached it :

The solution turned it to be considering minutes played year over year without the aging factor. That results in the following graph of league quality dating back to 1946-47 and relative to 2014-15.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#96 » by drza » Tue Oct 20, 2020 2:52 pm

Was looking through my old blog, and turns out I did a bit more stuff on Kareem than I realized, particularly in the last Top-100 project. Here's a link for a Kareem vs Russell post I did in 2017, that I also added pics and stuff to. https://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162660433401/abdul-jabbar-vs-russell-observations-and-rough

In a way it's a perfect follow-up to some of the stuff I wrote in my last post here, because it takes another run at estimating Kareem's impact on team performance vs Russell's, but more tracing team performance over time correlated with key player presence as opposed to the WOWY approach. I've seen some didn't/don't find the 1977/78 Kareem vs Walton stuff compelling. Fair enough. But, call this more food for thought (I'll paste the majority of the verbiage from the above link, below).

Russell vs Kareem, rough impact estimate
As we try to determine the best players in NBA history, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Bill Russell are both obviously near the top of the list. Both are titans of the game, dominant players that defined eras and are inside the inner circle of NBA royalty. But, how do you compare the two, to try to estimate which may have contributed more to their teams’ ability to win?

I’m going to take a crack at impact analysis to at least roughly compare these two legends on some sort of quantitative basis. And again, right off the bat, I’ll stipulate that this is not granular, copious data like what we have access to in the databall era. This won’t be a mathematically rigorous proof. And frankly…I’m hesitant to lean too hard on this type of analysis, because it relies on team unit ratings, and anyone that’s ever read my posts knows that I’m all about isolating an individual’s impact from the team’s impact as much as possible.

But, with that said, it’s the data that we have available. Plus, by looking at trends over long periods of time with the players in different situations, I’m hoping that some interesting tidbits might fall out. And, this analysis isn’t in a vacuum, as I still have the results of the more WOWY-type approach in my mind as well.

1) Bill Russell impact estimates

In this 2020 project I've already mentioned and posted the link showing how the Celtics' defensive dynasty tracked so well with Russell's presence. The defense became great Russell’s rookie season, improved into ridiculous territories during Russell’s peak, stayed great until Russell retired, then fell off a cliff as soon as he left.

I replicated that research using the BB-ref data. I also did the same for the Celtics’ offense. As has been pointed out, the Celtics’ offense during the Russell era was routinely below average, sometimes significantly below. Thus, it seems clear that the Celtics won those 11 championships purely on the strength of their all-time defense. And the defense tracked perfectly with Russell, staying consistently great no matter which teammates came and went. On offense, the ratings barely changed at all when Cousy retired, nor did either rating really change when Hondo joined the squad. Looking at averages of relative offensive and defensive ratings:

Celtics (2 years pre-Russell): ORtg-rel:: +1.7, DRtg-rel: +1.5 (- is good on D)

Celtics (13 years of Russell): ORtg-rel: -1.6, DRtg-rel: -6.9

Celtics (2 years post-Russell): ORtg-rel: -1.0, DRtg-rel: -1

2) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar impact estimates
Kareem entered the league the year that Russell retired, so they were very close to being contemporaries. The year before he arrived, the Bucks were poor offensively (-1.6) and defensively (+2.7). In Kareem’s first year, they became a solid offense (3.1) and improved to a not-terrible defense (-0.9). I’d say that was strong impact for rookie Kareem. A similar but attenuated thing happened when he went to the Lakers, as they went from a similar offense/defense to the pre-Kareem Bucks to a neutral offense (+0.6) and a neutral defense (+0.5, which was an improvement). Kareem obviously had an impact.

But, Russell was able to define a dominant unit, in a clear way, that showed up very clearly in the team unit ratings regardless of the coming and going of his biggest name teammates. Kareem played on some dominant units through the years, but that dominance didn’t track with his presence, as much as it did the presence of two particular teammates…

Bucks (1 year Pre Kareem, no Oscar): ORtg-rel: -1.6, DRtg-rel: +2.7
Bucks (2 years of Kareem, no Oscar): ORtg-rel: +1.7, DRtg-rel: -0.4
Bucks (4 years of Kareem & Oscar): ORTg-rel: 4.2, DRtg-rel: -4.8
Royals (Oscar’s entire career): ORtg-rel: +3.3, defense sucked

Lakers (4 years of Kareem, no Magic): ORtg-rel: 1.8, DRtg-rel: -0.2
Lakers (10 years of Kareem & Magic): ORtg-rel: +4.9, DRtg-rel: -1.0
Lakers (2 years of Magic, no Kareem): ORtg-rel: +5.1, DRtg-rel, -2

Let me unpack this. In 6 years of prime/peak career when he wasn’t playing with Oscar or Magic, Kareem had monster boxscore numbers and multiple MVPs, but his team offenses were only +1.7 or +1.8. The offenses only got elite when the legendary point guards were around. And those offenses with Kareem + point guard played more similar to the offenses of those point guards without Kareem, than they did like Kareem’s offenses without them.

On defense, Kareem had a four-year streak while playing with Oscar on the Bucks where his defenses were really strong. In the two Bucks years without Oscar, and essentially his entire Lakers career, the defenses were meh. I’ve seen it argued that Oscar (who clearly didn’t have anything to do with the defensive results directly) motivated Kareem in those Bucks years in ways that no one else ever did before or after, and that thus this helped explain Kareem’s dominant defensive stretch, if you give any credence at all to that. Perhaps more importantly, by the 1972 - 1976 period, the NBA had more than twice as many teams AND also an ABA, compared to Russell’s hey-day. Things were very watered down in the early 70s NBA. The ABA collapsed early in Kareem’s Lakers career, though. So, another factor in Kareem’s dominant defensive run could be that the league was weak, right when he was most motivated.

Bottom line
This is another attempt at gauging Kareem’s impact stats. Again, vs another All-time great named Bill (this time Russell for careers instead of Walton for 2 seasons).

Russell’s impact translated faithfully and obviously in his team’s dominant defense regardless of teammate turnover, which was clearly the unit that made them dominant as a team in a concentrated league.

Kareem’s historical boxscore dominance didn’t seem to translate to great offenses in 6 prime/peak years. It was only during the years that he had an all-history point guard whose teams minus Kareem had similar caliber offenses, that Kareem’s team offenses looked great. Kareem had one four-year stretch where he led a dominant team defense, but it also came at the most watered down competitive period in NBA history.

Again…nothing here is set in stone. This is not a mathematical proof, and I’m not typing QED. But this is now two different impact approaches, compared against several other all-time great bigs, where Kareem just doesn’t show up as well. Walton and Russell seemed, to the extent that I can examine the evidence, to have significantly larger impacts on their teams’ fortunes than Kareem did. It certainly seemed that Duncan may have, as well.

Someone in the last thread (in 2017) opined whether Kareem’s actual impact may have been more on the level of a Barkley than a Jordan. That he may have been great, but not GOATish as far as how much he was impacting the game. I once made a similar analogy, but to Karl Malone instead of Charles Barkley. And the Malone comp may be more apt, because both had the boxscore accolades and the absurd longevity. But, just like Malone, I wonder if absurd longevity at great-but-not-GOAT level is worth more than a shorter career that routinely hit GOAT level.

I don’t think that it is.

Right now, not only would I vote Russell ahead of Kareem…I’d say that (in no order) Magic, Duncan, LeBron, Garnett, Wilt, Shaq, Bird, and Olajuwon all have a heck of an argument as well. At this moment, I feel that each of those others have spent time on that GOAT level that Walton and Russell seemed to reach but that I’m less and less convinced that Kareem ever did.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#97 » by Owly » Tue Oct 20, 2020 2:56 pm

Mazter wrote:
DQuinn1575 wrote:
penbeast0 wrote:
This is a pretty reasonable estimate (meaning I generally agree with it. :wink: )Most surprising thing for me isn't the NBA part of the line but how the ABA line trends upwards sharply from 75 to 76. They did concentrate talent as teams failed and their players were redistributed but that meant poor unit cohesion plus VA was so incredibly all-time awful (who wants to coach the team this week?). I always think of 75 as the ABA's peak.


I don’t think anyone seriously disagrees the league’s quality is improving; the question for me is how much. What is the scale going up? I’m not sure exactly what the base is.

It looks like 1959=1990 and i don’t think anyone would agree to that

I think the difference between 1960 and 2020 should be much bigger, 1990 should definitely be better than 1960. I think the steep increase from 1950 to 1960 is the problem here. Also the "ABA-drop" shouldn't be there. I can't remember the ABA stealing any big names from the NBA. They were more like a continuation of the NIBL/ABL/MPBL/NABL.

Whilst I'd tend to have qualms about the measures of league quality that I've seen (they tend to make assumptions about the cause of players numbers going up/down versus age-based expectations - that I don't know are justified, though it may just be me not getting it) ...

Besides Barry the ABA at that point wasn't stealing big names in their primes so ...

It's not an ABA dip (at least directly), it's an expansion dip. 9 teams in '66, 10 in '67 (Bulls), 12 in '68 (Supersonics, Rockets), 14 in '69 (Bucks, Suns), 17 in '71 (Braves, Cavaliers, Trailblazers). Though fwiw, that means that some of those ABA players who couldn't stick in the NBA of circa '65 (say a Larry Jones, Red Robbins) might have done so in the NBA (so the ABA as well as causing expansion, made the dilution of the NBA worse).
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#98 » by mailmp » Tue Oct 20, 2020 3:04 pm

Are peak Julius Erving and Artis Gilmore not big names anymore.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#99 » by 70sFan » Tue Oct 20, 2020 3:08 pm

drza wrote:The offenses only got elite when the legendary point guards were around. And those offenses with Kareem + point guard played more similar to the offenses of those point guards without Kareem, than they did like Kareem’s offenses without them.


The problem with that thinking is that you assume 1974 Oscar and 1980 Magic are legendary point guards, but they weren't. Especially Magic, who until 1983/84 wasn't an all-time great floor general. He was very good and versatile offensive player, but he wasn't elite playmaker or scoring threat then. He was more like better version of Ben Simmons, his halfcourt offense was extremely limited.

Oscar was very good floor general, but he lacked athleticism in 1974 which turned him into very slow and passive offensive player. At times he struggled with pressure and his driving game was gone - he relied almost strictly on his midrange shot (except that he wasn't much of a catch and shooter either).

Technically, it's true that Kareem didn't lead all-time great teams without Magic and Oscar, but consider three things:

1. Magic wasn't elite offensive player at least until 1982, arguably later. Oscar wasn't elite offensive player in 1974 either.

2. Kareem played with dreadful rosters in 1975-77 period, then he got a team with some decent names, no coaching, no defense and no structure.

3. These 1978-79 teams were good offensively by the way. Kareem also led excellent offensive team as a rookie in 1970.

Basically, it's like saying that Jordan couldn't lead any good offensive teams without Pippen. Or blaming James for mediocre Cavs offenses before 2009.
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Re: RealGM 2020 Top 100 Project: #3 

Post#100 » by 70sFan » Tue Oct 20, 2020 3:08 pm

mailmp wrote:Are peak Julius Erving and Artis Gilmore not big names anymore.

They didn't play at the beginning of ABA existance.

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