VanWest82 wrote:Ben Taylor thinks MJ has a serial gambling problem. Drew Hanlen just thinks he as active hands.
I'm a little confused. There are two kinds of steals.
1. A steal where you give up no position, and merely deflect/intercept the ball with your hands.
2. A steal where you give up some position to put yourself in better position to get at the ball.
Type 1 steals have zero cost. Type 2 steals have a risk attached; their value is (the value of the steal * the chance that the gamble pays off) minus (the cost of being caught way out of position * the chance that the gamble doesn't pay off).
Look at the famous steal from Karl Malone in the Finals. The successful steal pretty much ended the game; it was awesome. But had he failed, his man would have been wide open and it would have been very bad. Ben as much as says that Jordan was very effective at this, just that he gambled a lot.
Which of these is your position?:
1. Jordan *never* got out of position going for a steal;
2. Jordan got out of position going for a steal so rarely it isn't worth noticing;
3. Getting out of position going for steals simply doesn't matter;
4. Jordan absolutely got out of position going for steals at times - you just think that Ben made the argument in bad faith.
1 through 3 are fairly unsupportable arguments.
4 is understandable . . . within reason. One of Ben's heuristic biases is that he preemptively defends against perceived attacks to his position. This makes his Jordan content more negative in tone than in content, because he fully expects to be attacked any time he says anything other than "Jordan was the best at everything" (apparently with some justification).
He's said many times that: 1) He thinks that Jordan probably had the highest peak ever, 2) that Jordan was the best playoff scorer ever and 3) that Jordan was a seriously underrated shot creator for his teammates.
But he doesn't think that Jordan ever had the same defensive value as a Robinson or Olajuwon (which makes his DPoY pretty suspect). And given that there exists a reasonable number of people who would take that statement somewhat personally, he preemptively tries to show Jordan's flaws as a defender. It's not because he thinks that Jordan was a bad defender (he wasn't), just that he wants to make clear that Jordan wasn't some sort of magic uber-defender; he was simply a really, really good wing defender, one of the best in his era, but it's a far cry from that to saying that he had defensive value comparable to the top defensive bigs that existed in his time.
So if that approach leads you to feeling like the video is some kind of hatchet job . . . I can understand that. Just please appreciate that pretty much everything he said is factually sound. And his conclusions are all pretty reasonable.