Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation

Moderators: Clyde Frazier, Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal

sansterre
Bench Warmer
Posts: 1,312
And1: 1,835
Joined: Oct 22, 2020

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#341 » by sansterre » Sun Sep 26, 2021 9:07 am

migya wrote:6. Jordan never played on superteams, Lebron did. A superteams is one with multiple superstars or at least one or two superstars and one or two other allstars. Miami had three superstars, Cleveland had three or two and Love an allstar. 2015 and 2016 Warriors had developing superstar Curry without the current large numbers in 2015 and allstar Klay and 2016 allstar Draymond, not a superteam.

I'm sorry, if you're saying that the '96 Bulls, the '15 Warriors and the '16 Warriors weren't super teams but the Heat and Cavs were?

You're pretty much just saying that SuperTeam = LeBron team post-2010.
"If you wish to see the truth, hold no opinions."

"Trust one who seeks the truth. Doubt one who claims to have found the truth."
migya
General Manager
Posts: 8,196
And1: 1,511
Joined: Aug 13, 2005

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#342 » by migya » Sun Sep 26, 2021 9:16 am

sansterre wrote:
migya wrote:6. Jordan never played on superteams, Lebron did. A superteams is one with multiple superstars or at least one or two superstars and one or two other allstars. Miami had three superstars, Cleveland had three or two and Love an allstar. 2015 and 2016 Warriors had developing superstar Curry without the current large numbers in 2015 and allstar Klay and 2016 allstar Draymond, not a superteam.

I'm sorry, if you're saying that the '96 Bulls, the '15 Warriors and the '16 Warriors weren't super teams but the Heat and Cavs were?

You're pretty much just saying that SuperTeam = LeBron team post-2010.



Neither of those were superteams, yes. Feel free to explain how they were.
Owly
Lead Assistant
Posts: 5,739
And1: 3,199
Joined: Mar 12, 2010

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#343 » by Owly » Sun Sep 26, 2021 9:17 am

Djoker wrote:2) Jordan has better basic stats. His massive 5 ppg edge and fewer turnovers beat Lebron's slight edge in assists and a bigger edge in defensive rebounds. 33/6/6 > 28/9/7.

3) Jordan has better advanced stats for their careers including PER, WS/48 and BPM. Not by a lot but still better.

4) DPOY + more top 5 finishes + 9 All-D 1st Teams vs no DPOY + fewer top 5 finishes + 5 All-D 1st Teams. We also know Lebron had several terrible defensive series including the 2014, 2017 and 2018 Finals off the top of my head.

5) How about we use the official definition of crunch time? It gives a large sample size too than just game-winning shots. I can agree it's ludicrous to judge players on 15-20 shots they made over their entire career to decide anything.

Crunch time is defined by NBA.com as the last 5 minutes of a close game where the score difference is within 5 points.

Here are the playoff numbers. I posted both the official Jordan stats (from NBA.com and only 97 and 98 playoffs) as well as the unofficial stats (compiled by PHILA for his entire playoff career). Needless to say even 97 and 98 Jordan was markedly superior in the clutch to Lebron.

Totals:
Lebron: 467 points, 118 rebounds, 87 assists, 20 steals, 20 blocks on 138/339 FG 36/102 3P 155/205 FT with 51 turnovers in 527 minutes
Jordan: 130 points, 16 rebounds, 12 assists, 6 steals, 4 blocks on 42/89 FG 2/10 3P 45/57 FT with 11 turnovers in 108 minutes (97 and 98 only)
Jordan: 519 points, 66 rebounds, 41 assists, 33 steals, 12 blocks on 166/319 FG 6/24 3P 181/218 FT with 28 turnovers in 408 minutes

Per 48:
Lebron: 42.5 pts, 10.7 reb, 7.9 ass, 1.8 stl, 1.8 blk on 40.7 %FG/35.3 %3P/76.0 %FT with 4.6 tov; 54.5 %TS
Jordan: 57.8 pts, 7.1 reb, 5.3 ass, 2.7 stl, 1.8 blk on 47.2 %FG/20.0 %3P/78.9 %FT with 4.9 tov; 57.0 %TS (97 and 98 only)
Jordan: 61.1 pts, 7.8 reb, 4.8 ass, 3.9 stl, 1.4 blk on 52.0 %FG/25.0 %3P/83.0 %FT with 3.3 tov; 62.5 %TS

We don't have Jordan's Per 48 numbers just in the Finals but we have Lebron's and they are pretty bad.

Lebron: 36.4 pts, 11.6 reb, 5.6 ass, 1.7 stl, 1.3 blk on 30.7 %FG/25.9 %3P/88.9 %FT with 3.9 tov; 46.8 %TS

7) Lebron's 2006 ECSF, 2007 Finals, 2008 ECSF, 2010 ECSF, 2011 Finals and 2021 R1 would be the worst series of Jordan's career. Lebron's 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2015 and 2021 postseasons would be the worst postseasons of Jordan's career. Lebron lost three series as the favorite and Jordan never did. Lebron lost numerous times with very talented teams and Jordan never lost when he had one (healthy) all-star alongside him. Yes there are circumstances. Yes Lebron lost two finals to superteams in 2017 and 2018 that he gets a pass for and 2015 due to injury but he also lost three other finals. Either his final appearances mean much less because he played in weak conferences or he should have won more than four titles. You can't go two ways about it.

8) Lebron has way more glaring weaknesses in his game, the most notable being his lack of outside shooting. For his career, Lebron is below league average in midrange shooting, below average free throw shooting and yes even below average in three point shooting even though he's improved it. Lebron also has a relatively weak off-ball game.

Okay so mostly see above.

I'll do it bite-size here but see my initial post and perhaps a prior response another poster on this theme.

2) Raw stats don't account for pace. Slash lines miss lots of data and per next point this actively punishes LeBron's (or indeed any player conceptually's) longevity.

3) Punishing LeBron for longevity here. I'd throw it out as a hypothetical but, as I posted in the last page or so LeBron matched or bested MJ career (RS) Reference composite metrics over a same (slightly longer) period and near enough matched (slightly behind) his Bulls era metrics over a same (slightly shorter) spell. He then has a very 16000+ minutes advantage (before pro-rating both lockout seasons). Unless you geniunely believe these minutes to be harmful, career average is poor tool for this job.

4) Accolades are an indirect proxy for play and sometimes reputational or purely basic stat counting (and would have us believe Camby above Duncan [DPoY], Kobe and later career Payton were consistently elite defenders and Michael Williams was a good defender). I don't know how you are measuring these "terrible defensive series" or whether this criteria has been applied consistently. It could have been, but I have no way of knowing.

5) "It gives a large sample size too than just game-winning shots. I can agree it's ludicrous to judge players on 15-20 shots they made over their entire career to decide anything." Okay but you cut it down to both playoffs and late in close games so even in the largest sample we're looking at 500 minutes. Without a minutes total on LeBron's final minutes the value is ... I'll say limited [personally less than that - and personally I don't see the finals as inherently more valuable though I could see it might be more "clutch"]. Mixed data sources is ... whilst I always appreciate people sharing good data sources ... is a further issue. Personally I'm a bit wary on the virtue of "clutch" being prized above other non-garbage time minutes.

7) "Either his final appearances mean much less because he played in weak conferences or he should have won more than four titles. You can't go two ways about it." Oh I'll never cite finals appearances as a measure of LeBron or any other player (perhaps mention it in passing though even then I don't think I would, but it's certainly not a player measure).
See prior post on questioning the value of isolating specific worst series.
Hard disagree that LeBron's '10 (28.6 PER, .242 WS/48, 11.5 BPM, and fwiw +23.2 on-off [super noisy]) and '13 playoff runs (28.1 PER, .260 WS/48, 10.4 BPM, and fwiw +0.2 on-off [super noisy]) are worse than '95 MJ (24.8, .150, 8.0). I think above all else (and granting room for difference in methodology in comparing different playoffs of different lengths in different contexts) this seems less differing perspectives and more ... I can't see how you would get to that.
"Lebron lost three series as the favorite" dislike this measure massively. It sees the individual as better if they underperform in the RS even if they perform the same in the playoffs (leaving aside the assumption that teammates will play consistently to expectations).
"Lebron lost numerous times with very talented teams and Jordan never lost when he had one (healthy) all-star alongside him." LeBron's teams had often had guys theoretically capable of being 1st options (but still teams tended to door poorly with him off the floor) I don't know that they are better 2nd and 3rd pieces than Pippen and Grant (and to a lesser degree Rodman). I suspect, otoh, he also had less depth (likes of Joel Anthony, Mozgov, Dellavedova), less defense (oft overlooked in "talent") and less stability (partly his own doing, but Cleveland (1st time) couldn't provide a good, young, stable core as Chicago did). But my big question here is do you have Pippen injured in '95. Or are you a "'95 didn't happen" guy? Because if so that "black mark" stuff seems ... even more tricky to square.

8) As before I'd strongly argue net matters more than what your weakest point is. As before it will depend what counts (hitting teammates?) but purely on court ... talking outside shooting ... MJ career from the full distance 3 point line (RS)
343 of 1189 for .288477712. ('98 and Wizards have 234 attempts of which 1 is considered a heave, so not looking at first glance like heaves a heavy factor). Lower era norms of course and a smaller part of the game back then (as I say it will depend what counts as an area).

As I tried to convey in the initial posts, this is not "all these are necessarily wrong", but as also in that post, granting say 4 and 5 (or 8) as Jordan advantages wouldn't necessarily create a coherent case for him overall.
migya
General Manager
Posts: 8,196
And1: 1,511
Joined: Aug 13, 2005

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#344 » by migya » Sun Sep 26, 2021 9:27 am

sansterre wrote:
Djoker wrote:2) Jordan has better basic stats. His massive 5 ppg edge and fewer turnovers beat Lebron's slight edge in assists and a bigger edge in defensive rebounds. 33/6/6 > 28/9/7.

So Jordan scored 17% more points per game (on lower efficiency), while LeBron averaged 41% more rebounds and 26% more assists? That doesn't sound crazy-lopsided. If all you really mean to say is that PPG > all then I'd definitely agree that Jordan was the better volume scorer.
[quote]

Karl Malone averaged 25pts, 51.6fg%, 74.2ft%, 10.1reb, 3.6ast, 1.4stl, 0.8blk, 3.1tos, over 1476 games.

Lebron averaged 27pts, 50.4fg%, 73.3ft%, 7.4reb, 7.4ast, 1.6stl, 0.7blk, 3.5tos, over 1310 game.

Both are the same height and weight. Different position mind you, as I elaborated on that factor in comparison of Jordan and Lebron. So Malone is considerably better rebounder, less assists, basically equal in steals and blocks, slightly better ft%, better fg%, less turnovers. Lebron just beats him in assists......

More games played and more years too.
sansterre
Bench Warmer
Posts: 1,312
And1: 1,835
Joined: Oct 22, 2020

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#345 » by sansterre » Sun Sep 26, 2021 9:45 am

migya wrote:
sansterre wrote:
migya wrote:6. Jordan never played on superteams, Lebron did. A superteams is one with multiple superstars or at least one or two superstars and one or two other allstars. Miami had three superstars, Cleveland had three or two and Love an allstar. 2015 and 2016 Warriors had developing superstar Curry without the current large numbers in 2015 and allstar Klay and 2016 allstar Draymond, not a superteam.

I'm sorry, if you're saying that the '96 Bulls, the '15 Warriors and the '16 Warriors weren't super teams but the Heat and Cavs were?

You're pretty much just saying that SuperTeam = LeBron team post-2010.


Neither of those were superteams, yes. Feel free to explain how they were.

What is a superteam? It's kind of a made-up word.

But the way you're using it, superstar seems to mean "player that was the leading scorer on their team and averaged at least 20ppg". So a no-defense shoot-first point guard like Kyrie can be a "superstar" but a player that generates equal or greater value without scoring can't. Note that Ben Wallace, Dikembe Mutombo and Rudy Gobert can't be superstars (to you) because their value doesn't come from scoring.

So first off, I think your definition of "superstar" is pretty suspect. Scottie Pippen was *obviously* better than Irving, Bosh, Wade (besides 2011) and Love (though Love gets weird to compare). And that's just on offense; add in Pippen's defensive value and he's a quantum leap ahead of those guys (possible exception of Wade in 2011).

But he can't be a superstar because he played on the same team as Jordan (of course, he was a serious MVP candidate when Jordan retired, but let's ignore that).

So now Superstar implicitly means a second thing: the player has to have played on a separate team from the main star. If Kyrie had come up next to LeBron then Kyrie wouldn't be a superstar, because LeBron is obviously the better scorer (and way, way better player overall). If Pippen had been playing on a different team and been a #3 MVP candidate (as he was in '94), him joining Jordan would *absolutely* qualify as a Superstar addition.

Basically, you seem to be only caring about scoring, and only caring about adding scoring that comes from off of your own team. Pippen + Kukoc are reasonably comparable to Wade + Bosh offensively and Irving + Love, but since Pippen and Kukoc were on Jordan's team (even if Jordan wasn't) that doesn't count. And you're outright ignoring monsters like Rodman and Draymond because they don't score.

Basically, I think your "Superteam" definition has very little to do with what makes teams actually good.
"If you wish to see the truth, hold no opinions."

"Trust one who seeks the truth. Doubt one who claims to have found the truth."
sansterre
Bench Warmer
Posts: 1,312
And1: 1,835
Joined: Oct 22, 2020

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#346 » by sansterre » Sun Sep 26, 2021 9:47 am

migya wrote:
sansterre wrote:
Djoker wrote:2) Jordan has better basic stats. His massive 5 ppg edge and fewer turnovers beat Lebron's slight edge in assists and a bigger edge in defensive rebounds. 33/6/6 > 28/9/7.

So Jordan scored 17% more points per game (on lower efficiency), while LeBron averaged 41% more rebounds and 26% more assists? That doesn't sound crazy-lopsided. If all you really mean to say is that PPG > all then I'd definitely agree that Jordan was the better volume scorer.


Karl Malone averaged 25pts, 51.6fg%, 74.2ft%, 10.1reb, 3.6ast, 1.4stl, 0.8blk, 3.1tos, over 1476 games.

Lebron averaged 27pts, 50.4fg%, 73.3ft%, 7.4reb, 7.4ast, 1.6stl, 0.7blk, 3.5tos, over 1310 game.

Both are the same height and weight. Different position mind you, as I elaborated on that factor in comparison of Jordan and Lebron. So Malone is considerably better rebounder, less assists, basically equal in steals and blocks, slightly better ft%, better fg%, less turnovers. Lebron just beats him in assists......

More games played and more years too.

You're comparing regular season numbers. The original comparison (I believe) is with playoff numbers. In the playoffs LeBron smokes Malone. By a lot.
"If you wish to see the truth, hold no opinions."

"Trust one who seeks the truth. Doubt one who claims to have found the truth."
Homer38
RealGM
Posts: 12,179
And1: 13,712
Joined: Dec 04, 2013

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#347 » by Homer38 » Sun Sep 26, 2021 11:27 am

For the superteam things....

Read on Twitter
Stalwart
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,839
And1: 959
Joined: Jun 06, 2021

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#348 » by Stalwart » Sun Sep 26, 2021 12:52 pm

sansterre wrote:What is a superteam? It's kind of a made-up word.

But the way you're using it, superstar seems to mean "player that was the leading scorer on their team and averaged at least 20ppg". So a no-defense shoot-first point guard like Kyrie can be a "superstar" but a player that generates equal or greater value without scoring can't. Note that Ben Wallace, Dikembe Mutombo and Rudy Gobert can't be superstars (to you) because their value doesn't come from scoring.


"Superteams" refer to a abnormal collection of top end talent. I think what is generally considered a superteam is 3 or more established superstars/all stars joining forces in or around their primes. Examples include 11 Heat, 15 Cavs, 21 Lakers, 20 Nets, 08 Boston. Or it can also refer to teams who add a top shelf superstar onto an already championship level team. Examples include 83 76ers, 82 Lakers 17 Warriors. Although its always more egregious when the players collude behind the scenes rather than management putting a superteam together.

I don't consider teammates who develop into superstars/all stars together to be superteams. Example: Jordan and Scottie Pippen. Its true that Pippen developed into a superstar but he did it under the guidance and leadership of Jordan. So its not like Jordan just looked around the league for the best players to go hook up with. He put in time, sacrifice, and leadership to help develop his teammates. Another example is the 15/16 Warriors. Again, this is another example of guys developing next to and underneath a great player. We don't know if Klay & Dray are legit superstars or if they have simply benefited from playing next to Steph Curry. And if its the latter then Steph gets credit for making his teammates better rather than discredited for having a strong team.

The 96 Bulls are tricky because was Rodman really a superstar? Was Jordan really joining forces with a superstar in Pippen or simply reconnecting with the sidekick he spent years helping to develop?

I do acknowledge and agree with your point about the strength of a team being more than just their top end talent and offensive skills.

So first off, I think your definition of "superstar" is pretty suspect. Scottie Pippen was *obviously* better than Irving, Bosh, Wade (besides 2011) and Love (though Love gets weird to compare). And that's just on offense; add in Pippen's defensive value and he's a quantum leap ahead of those guys (possible exception of Wade in 2011).


I think 2011/12 Wade and Kyrie are pretty clearly better than Pippen. Pippen never had a NBA finals like Wade had in 2011 and Kyrie had in 2016. I would say Love and Bosh are comparable to Pippen. Don't forget Bosh put up 24/10 and Love put up 26/14, respectively, the season prior to joining Lebron. I would also say 13/14 DWade was comparable to Pippen's later years with the Bulls.

So now Superstar implicitly means a second thing: the player has to have played on a separate team from the main star. If Kyrie had come up next to LeBron then Kyrie wouldn't be a superstar, because LeBron is obviously the better scorer (and way, way better player overall). If Pippen had been playing on a different team and been a #3 MVP candidate (as he was in '94), him joining Jordan would *absolutely* qualify as a Superstar addition.


I think its pretty tough to establish your own superstar status while playing next to an all time great superstar. You kind of do need to prove that by yourself. Not always but often times. I would say Pippen established himself in 94 as a legit, stand alone, lower end, superstar. Kyrie did the same thing in 2018. Love & Bosh established themselves as legit all stars during their time in Toronto and Minnesota. And obviously AD & Westbrook are established superstars.

Kukoc and Horace never established themselves as a legitimate all stars and definitely not superstars.

Basically, you seem to be only caring about scoring, and only caring about adding scoring that comes from off of your own team. Pippen + Kukoc are reasonably comparable to Wade + Bosh offensively and Irving + Love, but since Pippen and Kukoc were on Jordan's team (even if Jordan wasn't) that doesn't count. And you're outright ignoring monsters like Rodman and Draymond because they don't score.

Basically, I think your "Superteam" definition has very little to do with what makes teams actually good.


Comparing Pippen&Kukoc to prime Wade&Bosh is one heck of a stretch lol.
sansterre
Bench Warmer
Posts: 1,312
And1: 1,835
Joined: Oct 22, 2020

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#349 » by sansterre » Sun Sep 26, 2021 2:13 pm

Stalwart wrote:"Superteams" refer to a abnormal collection of top end talent. I think what is generally considered a superteam is 3 or more established superstars/all stars joining forces in or around their primes. Examples include 11 Heat, 15 Cavs, 21 Lakers, 20 Nets, 08 Boston. Or it can also refer to teams who add a top shelf superstar onto an already championship level team. Examples include 83 76ers, 82 Lakers 17 Warriors. Although its always more egregious when the players collude behind the scenes rather than management putting a superteam together.

I don't consider teammates who develop into superstars/all stars together to be superteams. Example: Jordan and Scottie Pippen. Its true that Pippen developed into a superstar but he did it under the guidance and leadership of Jordan. So its not like Jordan just looked around the league for the best players to go hook up with. He put in time, sacrifice, and leadership to help develop his teammates. Another example is the 15/16 Warriors. Again, this is another example of guys developing next to and underneath a great player. We don't know if Klay & Dray are legit superstars or if they have simply benefited from playing next to Steph Curry. And if its the latter then Steph gets credit for making his teammates better rather than discredited for having a strong team.

This is not an unreasonable definition. But it does create two problems:

1) It skews toward scorers. Imagine Dikembe Mutombo and Carmelo Anthony are both coming from 35-40 win teams. Which would be considered "Top end talent"? Probably Carmelo; his 30ppg heroics on a bad team stick out all the more, while nobody really cares too much about great defenders on mediocre teams (historically). Let us imagine that LeBron can add one of them. Adding Carmelo would definitely lead to accusations of "Adding a Superstar", "Making a SuperTeam" and all of that. Adding Mutombo would more likely be seen as merely shoring up the defense with a strong defender. But, if the poll on the forum can be believed, Mutombo would actually be the more addition, and he certainly would scale better next to an ATG high-volume scorer.

So I'm not necessarily disagreeing with your "Top end talent" assertion, but do you see how in the above scenario the player with the better "Top end talent / superteam" assessment could easily be the worse addition?

One thing that I think really distinguishes LeBron's "top" teammates from Jordan's is that LeBron's teammates were largely better scorers. There's a reason that the '96-98 juggernaut Bulls dominated with defense, because the roster was mostly Jordan, Pippen and defensive specialists (and Kukoc). If "Top end talent" is mostly scoring, LeBron's teams probably had more. But there's more to the game than scoring, and Jordan's teammates were best at defense and rebounding. Which doesn't make them worse by a long shot.

2) As far as the "added" vs "developed". I can understand that position. But it does basically mean that you're punishing players (from the Superteam angle) for being on a team without homegrown talent. If the '04-10 Cavs had lots of drafted talent around LeBron and they'd won a few rings, they wouldn't have been a Superteam, by your definition. But, of course, they did a fairly terrible job surrounding LeBron with talent and that didn't happen. So instead of waiting for good players to come to him, he went to them. Which now makes his collection of teammates a "Superteam", even if the same collection of players had occurred organically on his team, they wouldn't have. So the whole thing plays a bit like punishing LeBron for having had worse GMs than Jordan.

I guess I'm not quite there. If "Superteam" means "a really good team made from the pieces of many teams" then yes, LeBron definitely had Superteams and Jordan didn't. But how helpful is that in determining how much support a star had? I mean, the Spurs had Duncan, Ginobili and Parker in the mid-late aughts; that was a collection of high-end talent that was as good as a lot of historical Top 3s, but it was all developed internally. From '12 to '14 the Spurs had those three (older) plus Kawhi. Definitely not a "Superteam" by your definition, but clearly an ATG supporting cast.

If we're defining Superteam in the way you have above (which is fine) it seems like more of an aesthetic quibble than an actual evaluation of the support the star of the team had. If you don't *like* the way LeBron's teams were assembled that's totally fine.
The 96 Bulls are tricky because was Rodman really a superstar? Was Jordan really joining forces with a superstar in Pippen or simply reconnecting with the sidekick he spent years helping to develop?

Completely fair question. Rodman on a bad team was fairly useless. But on a very good or better team he was clearly extremely valuable. But if you need to be able to score to be a "Superstar" he definitely wasn't. And as for Pippen, we're back at what "Superteam" means. If it means "Collection of high-end (scoring) talent from other teams" then Pippen shouldn't count, even if he did play without Jordan for almost 2 years. But if it means "Collection of really good players" then Pippen absolutely counts, as we've seen that without Jordan, Pippen was considered a Top 5 player in the league. And Jordan + a Top 5 player in the league is pretty insane, I'm sure you'll admit.
I do acknowledge and agree with your point about the strength of a team being more than just their top end talent and offensive skills.
Thanks!
I think 2011/12 Wade and Kyrie are pretty clearly better than Pippen. Pippen never had a NBA finals like Wade had in 2011 and Kyrie had in 2016. I would say Love and Bosh are comparable to Pippen. Don't forget Bosh put up 24/10 and Love put up 26/14, respectively, the season prior to joining Lebron. I would also say 13/14 DWade was comparable to Pippen's later years with the Bulls.

What's that!? Time for an anonymous comparison! Don't mind if I do!

Here are five players, anonymous. We're only going to look at offense (because we all know that Pippen was way, way more valuable on defense than any of those four.

Regular Season (I'll use '94-97 for Pippen, '11-14 for Wade, '09-12 for Bosh, '13-16 for Love and '14-17 for Kyrie):

Player A: 25.9% Usage, +3.2% rTS, 7.8% OReb, 10.4% AST, 10.4% TO, +2.6 OBPM
Player B: 28.5% Usage, +1.9% rTS, 2.4% OReb, 28.3% AST, 11.4% TO, +4.1 OBPM
Player C: 25.1% Usage, +2.3% rTS, 7.7% OReb, 14.8% AST, 10.5% TO, +4.7 OBPM
Player D: 25.6% Usage, +1.5% rTS, 6.6% OReb, 24.2% AST, 13.7% TO, +4.5 OBPM
Player E: 31.0% Usage, +3.1% rTS, 4.8% OReb, 26.7% AST, 13.3% TO, +4.4 OBPM

Which of these five is the better offensive player? It's not especially clear, save that Player A seems to be on the bottom of the heap. What about in the playoffs?

Player A: 22.2% Usage, +2.0% rTS, 8.1% OReb, 4.7% AST, 10.3% TO, +2.0 OBPM
Player B: 28.8% Usage, +3.0% rTS, 2.4% OReb, 23.1% AST, 9.7% TO, +4.7 OBPM
Player C: 22.7% Usage, +0.6% rTS, 6.6% OReb, 11.5% AST, 9.3% TO, +3.3 OBPM
Player D: 24.7% Usage, -2.5% rTS, 7.2% OReb, 22.0% AST, 13.2% TO, +4.2 OBPM
Player E: 28.4% Usage, +0.3% rTS, 5.1% OReb, 22.8% AST, 13.1% TO, +3.7 OBPM

Who's the best of this group? If OBPM can be believed, Player B in the playoffs. But the point is that Pippen (Player D) didn't really stand out as a weak spot in this group. And if Pippen is loosely comparable to the rest on offense, he's clearly better on defense. Pippen has never had a *scoring* Finals that was particularly dominant, but I'm not convinced that he needs it. Compare Kyrie and Pippen. In *every* element of the game Pippen ranges from comparable (passing) to wildly superior (rebounding and defense). For Kyrie to be better than Pippen, he'd have to be light-years better as a scorer. And he isn't, at least, not by enough.

I'm not trying to tell you that Pippen is a better scorer than the other players. But I think it's a pretty easy argument that he was more valuable than any of them overall (except for Wade in 2011).
I think its pretty tough to establish your own superstar status while playing next to an all time great superstar. You kind of do need to prove that by yourself. Not always but often times. I would say Pippen established himself in 94 as a legit, stand alone, lower end, superstar. Kyrie did the same thing in 2018. Love & Bosh established themselves as legit all stars during their time in Toronto and Minnesota. And obviously AD & Westbrook are established superstars.

Kukoc and Horace never established themselves as a legitimate all stars and definitely not superstars.

This may all be true, but it again comes back to the problem of the "Superteam" distinction being 50% an evaluation of teammate quality and 50% an assessment of *how* the star got those teammates. And I don't know that the second half is necessary at all for understanding teammate support, though I certainly understand it on aesthetic grounds.
Comparing Pippen&Kukoc to prime Wade&Bosh is one heck of a stretch lol.

Pippen from '94-97, Kukoc from '94-97, Bosh from '09-12 and Wade from '11-14:

Regular Season:

Pippen + Kukoc: +7.8 OBPM
Wade + Bosh: +7.0 OBPM

Playoffs:

Pippen + Kukoc: +7.1 OBPM
Wade + Bosh: +5.7 OBPM

Even if we ignored Heat Bosh, and only did '07-10 Bosh, the totals would still be:

+7.8 vs +8.0 and
+7.1 vs +5.7

It's not that crazy of a stretch.
"If you wish to see the truth, hold no opinions."

"Trust one who seeks the truth. Doubt one who claims to have found the truth."
migya
General Manager
Posts: 8,196
And1: 1,511
Joined: Aug 13, 2005

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#350 » by migya » Sun Sep 26, 2021 2:22 pm

Stalwart wrote:
sansterre wrote:What is a superteam? It's kind of a made-up word.

But the way you're using it, superstar seems to mean "player that was the leading scorer on their team and averaged at least 20ppg". So a no-defense shoot-first point guard like Kyrie can be a "superstar" but a player that generates equal or greater value without scoring can't. Note that Ben Wallace, Dikembe Mutombo and Rudy Gobert can't be superstars (to you) because their value doesn't come from scoring.


"Superteams" refer to a abnormal collection of top end talent. I think what is generally considered a superteam is 3 or more established superstars/all stars joining forces in or around their primes. Examples include 11 Heat, 15 Cavs, 21 Lakers, 20 Nets, 08 Boston. Or it can also refer to teams who add a top shelf superstar onto an already championship level team. Examples include 83 76ers, 82 Lakers 17 Warriors. Although its always more egregious when the players collude behind the scenes rather than management putting a superteam together.

I don't consider teammates who develop into superstars/all stars together to be superteams. Example: Jordan and Scottie Pippen. Its true that Pippen developed into a superstar but he did it under the guidance and leadership of Jordan. So its not like Jordan just looked around the league for the best players to go hook up with. He put in time, sacrifice, and leadership to help develop his teammates. Another example is the 15/16 Warriors. Again, this is another example of guys developing next to and underneath a great player. We don't know if Klay & Dray are legit superstars or if they have simply benefited from playing next to Steph Curry. And if its the latter then Steph gets credit for making his teammates better rather than discredited for having a strong team.

The 96 Bulls are tricky because was Rodman really a superstar? Was Jordan really joining forces with a superstar in Pippen or simply reconnecting with the sidekick he spent years helping to develop?

I do acknowledge and agree with your point about the strength of a team being more than just their top end talent and offensive skills.

I agree with much of what you've said but to respond to san's first statement; I don't consider just very good scorers as superstars. Kyrie hasn't always been superstar level and in his prime years. He's effect offensively can be significant but I think he's the "more fancy than substance and effectiveness" out of most of the best scoring guards currently in the nba, in which there are many. He hasn't played without another star since before Lebron was with him and he didn't do well, though his teams weren't good either, like Love's Minnesota teams. I think the likes of Mutombo and Gobert have superstar effect because of their defense and they certainly make their teams much better. I don't see Rodman in their level as his defense was based on getting away with wrongful acts, which he got away with, and also very smart skills defensively, but with no rim protection he wasn't as great as history holds him, in my opinion.

Those mentioned teams, including the 21 Nets, are superteams and for the reasons given. Lebron has been on most of them in recent history, which is not a good look and certainly a negative in his GOAT case.

Klay and Draymond have superstar like effect but they both play heavily off Curry. On their own they probably don't make much happen winning wise on a pretty good team. As complements to a star that do.

The 96-98 Bulls, to me., are well built teams with fitting pieces, but not superteams, though I understand why some may consider them as such, because they had three renowned players from previous championship teams, Jordan, Pippen and Rodman. Rodman had star effect with alot of talent around him, like in Detroit. To note that San Antonio was no better with him than in previous years in Robinson's career. 94 Pippen was a superstar and did great carrying somewhat that team and being the one that looked like got the most out of that roster. 95 tells a slightly different tale. They won quite a bit less, even getting Jordan back late, who was not at his usual level but was better than what they had at his position. Horace was effective but that effective? Kukoc was also better. Can't really knock Pippen, he was the only allstar for them that season and the only good scorer besides Jordan who played the last month. Pippen though, according to most advanced numbers, was no better than 91 and 92.

Stalwart wrote:
So first off, I think your definition of "superstar" is pretty suspect. Scottie Pippen was *obviously* better than Irving, Bosh, Wade (besides 2011) and Love (though Love gets weird to compare). And that's just on offense; add in Pippen's defensive value and he's a quantum leap ahead of those guys (possible exception of Wade in 2011).


I think 2011/12 Wade and Kyrie are pretty clearly better than Pippen. Pippen never had a NBA finals like Wade had in 2011 and Kyrie had in 2016. I would say Love and Bosh are comparable to Pippen. Don't forget Bosh put up 24/10 and Love put up 26/14, respectively, the season prior to joining Lebron. I would also say 13/14 DWade was comparable to Pippen's later years with the Bulls.

I don't think Kyrie compares to Pippen because the defense is worlds apart but the way he played in the 2016 finals was most likely above any finals performance Pippen had. Wade was slightly above Pippen in 2011 and 12 yes and was better than Lebron considerably in 2011, something Pippen was never close to in comparison to Jordan. I don't think Love is quite at Pippen's level and the defense assures that but as the usual third star his effectiveness was at times significant. Bosh was at Pippen's level but was the third star not the second. Pippen's second threepeat years were above Wade's 2013 and 14, he had lost that important speed factor.

Stalwart wrote:
So now Superstar implicitly means a second thing: the player has to have played on a separate team from the main star. If Kyrie had come up next to LeBron then Kyrie wouldn't be a superstar, because LeBron is obviously the better scorer (and way, way better player overall). If Pippen had been playing on a different team and been a #3 MVP candidate (as he was in '94), him joining Jordan would *absolutely* qualify as a Superstar addition.


I think its pretty tough to establish your own superstar status while playing next to an all time great superstar. You kind of do need to prove that by yourself. Not always but often times. I would say Pippen established himself in 94 as a legit, stand alone, lower end, superstar. Kyrie did the same thing in 2018. Love & Bosh established themselves as legit all stars during their time in Toronto and Minnesota. And obviously AD & Westbrook are established superstars.

Kukoc and Horace never established themselves as a legitimate all stars and definitely not superstars.

Pippen was a superstar in 92. Agreed with Kyrie and Love, which gives two legit stars next to Lebron, only one next to Jordan, Pippen. This coming season, Lebron had a ridiculous team, could maybe rival the Durant Warriors.

Stalwart wrote:
Basically, you seem to be only caring about scoring, and only caring about adding scoring that comes from off of your own team. Pippen + Kukoc are reasonably comparable to Wade + Bosh offensively and Irving + Love, but since Pippen and Kukoc were on Jordan's team (even if Jordan wasn't) that doesn't count. And you're outright ignoring monsters like Rodman and Draymond because they don't score.

Basically, I think your "Superteam" definition has very little to do with what makes teams actually good.


Comparing Pippen&Kukoc to prime Wade&Bosh is one heck of a stretch lol.


Compared to Love and Kyrie also. Stretch.
sansterre
Bench Warmer
Posts: 1,312
And1: 1,835
Joined: Oct 22, 2020

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#351 » by sansterre » Sun Sep 26, 2021 2:33 pm

migya wrote:The 96-98 Bulls, to me., are well built teams with fitting pieces, but not superteams.

And I feel like implicit in this statement is the source of much of our disagreement, or miscommunication.

In terms of top-end scoring talent, LeBron's teams are clearly better than Jordan's teams.

But putting a lot of top-end scoring talent can lead to diminishing returns: note that Bosh and Love both seemed to regress offensively when paired with LeBron and a strong #2.

In contrast, the Bulls were "well-built teams with fitting pieces". I couldn't agree more.

I think both of us agree that LeBron's teams had more talent (scoring), but that Jordan's teams were built better.

I read the above and think "Jordan got more support" and you seem to read the above and think "LeBron needed other scorers to win".

Of course, I'd argue that, by that reasoning, Jordan needed great defenders/rebounders to win (because he sure as heck had them more than LeBron) but that's quibbling.

I'm glad that I understand your arguments a little better.
"If you wish to see the truth, hold no opinions."

"Trust one who seeks the truth. Doubt one who claims to have found the truth."
migya
General Manager
Posts: 8,196
And1: 1,511
Joined: Aug 13, 2005

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#352 » by migya » Sun Sep 26, 2021 3:48 pm

sansterre wrote:
migya wrote:The 96-98 Bulls, to me., are well built teams with fitting pieces, but not superteams.

And I feel like implicit in this statement is the source of much of our disagreement, or miscommunication.

In terms of top-end scoring talent, LeBron's teams are clearly better than Jordan's teams.

But putting a lot of top-end scoring talent can lead to diminishing returns: note that Bosh and Love both seemed to regress offensively when paired with LeBron and a strong #2.

In contrast, the Bulls were "well-built teams with fitting pieces". I couldn't agree more.

I think both of us agree that LeBron's teams had more talent (scoring), but that Jordan's teams were built better.

I read the above and think "Jordan got more support" and you seem to read the above and think "LeBron needed other scorers to win".

Of course, I'd argue that, by that reasoning, Jordan needed great defenders/rebounders to win (because he sure as heck had them more than LeBron) but that's quibbling.

I'm glad that I understand your arguments a little better.



You certainly make sense and are more clear than me here.

Jordan's teams had three great defenders; him, Pippen and Rodman. Harper was never known as a defender but did well in those three championship years and Longley wasn't shabby either. Most of the rest were average at best defensively. Lebron had JR Smith who was pretty good at least, Shumpert was good.

What I interpret from all this is that the 90s were alot more defensively geared and better than the 2010s. Nowadays shooting and scoring is the sought after thing.
Djoker
Starter
Posts: 2,331
And1: 2,058
Joined: Sep 12, 2015
 

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#353 » by Djoker » Sun Sep 26, 2021 5:40 pm

sansterre wrote:So Jordan scored 17% more points per game (on lower efficiency), while LeBron averaged 41% more rebounds and 26% more assists? That doesn't sound crazy-lopsided. If all you really mean to say is that PPG > all then I'd definitely agree that Jordan was the better volume scorer.


What I'm saying is that a 4.7 ppg advantage on same relative efficiency beats a 1.5 apg advantage (with 0.6 topg more) plus an advantage of 3 defensive rpg. It very clearly does.

Counterpoint:

LeBron: 4.4 3PA/G, 34.5% made
Jordan: 1.7 3PA/G, 32.7% made

And Jordan played some of his career with a shorter three point line.

I'll happily concede that Jordan was a better midrange shooter (since he was one of the best volume midrange shooters ever, if not the best), but it's pretty obvious that LeBron was the better three point shooter and therefor (by some definitions) a better "outside shooter".


They are both 1.3% below league average as 3pt shooters for their careers. Difference is that the shot was very rarely used in Jordan's era so mentioning it as a weakness of his is dubious. Not to mention Jordan generally took them more later in his career (1990 onwards) when he shot them at a higher percentage.
Cavsfansince84
RealGM
Posts: 15,258
And1: 11,640
Joined: Jun 13, 2017
   

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#354 » by Cavsfansince84 » Sun Sep 26, 2021 6:10 pm

migya wrote:

You certainly make sense and are more clear than me here.

Jordan's teams had three great defenders; him, Pippen and Rodman. Harper was never known as a defender but did well in those three championship years and Longley wasn't shabby either. Most of the rest were average at best defensively. Lebron had JR Smith who was pretty good at least, Shumpert was good.

What I interpret from all this is that the 90s were alot more defensively geared and better than the 2010s. Nowadays shooting and scoring is the sought after thing.


Harper was a very good defender in those years I would say. He completely bought into their system and remade himself from an athletic volume scorer into a ball handler/defensive specialist. He had all the tools to be a strong defender.
Djoker
Starter
Posts: 2,331
And1: 2,058
Joined: Sep 12, 2015
 

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#355 » by Djoker » Sun Sep 26, 2021 6:16 pm

Owly wrote:Okay so mostly see above.

I'll do it bite-size here but see my initial post and perhaps a prior response another poster on this theme.

2) Raw stats don't account for pace. Slash lines miss lots of data and per next point this actively punishes LeBron's (or indeed any player conceptually's) longevity.

3) Punishing LeBron for longevity here. I'd throw it out as a hypothetical but, as I posted in the last page or so LeBron matched or bested MJ career (RS) Reference composite metrics over a same (slightly longer) period and near enough matched (slightly behind) his Bulls era metrics over a same (slightly shorter) spell. He then has a very 16000+ minutes advantage (before pro-rating both lockout seasons). Unless you geniunely believe these minutes to be harmful, career average is poor tool for this job.

4) Accolades are an indirect proxy for play and sometimes reputational or purely basic stat counting (and would have us believe Camby above Duncan [DPoY], Kobe and later career Payton were consistently elite defenders and Michael Williams was a good defender). I don't know how you are measuring these "terrible defensive series" or whether this criteria has been applied consistently. It could have been, but I have no way of knowing.

5) "It gives a large sample size too than just game-winning shots. I can agree it's ludicrous to judge players on 15-20 shots they made over their entire career to decide anything." Okay but you cut it down to both playoffs and late in close games so even in the largest sample we're looking at 500 minutes. Without a minutes total on LeBron's final minutes the value is ... I'll say limited [personally less than that - and personally I don't see the finals as inherently more valuable though I could see it might be more "clutch"]. Mixed data sources is ... whilst I always appreciate people sharing good data sources ... is a further issue. Personally I'm a bit wary on the virtue of "clutch" being prized above other non-garbage time minutes.

7) "Either his final appearances mean much less because he played in weak conferences or he should have won more than four titles. You can't go two ways about it." Oh I'll never cite finals appearances as a measure of LeBron or any other player (perhaps mention it in passing though even then I don't think I would, but it's certainly not a player measure).
See prior post on questioning the value of isolating specific worst series.
Hard disagree that LeBron's '10 (28.6 PER, .242 WS/48, 11.5 BPM, and fwiw +23.2 on-off [super noisy]) and '13 playoff runs (28.1 PER, .260 WS/48, 10.4 BPM, and fwiw +0.2 on-off [super noisy]) are worse than '95 MJ (24.8, .150, 8.0). I think above all else (and granting room for difference in methodology in comparing different playoffs of different lengths in different contexts) this seems less differing perspectives and more ... I can't see how you would get to that.
"Lebron lost three series as the favorite" dislike this measure massively. It sees the individual as better if they underperform in the RS even if they perform the same in the playoffs (leaving aside the assumption that teammates will play consistently to expectations).
"Lebron lost numerous times with very talented teams and Jordan never lost when he had one (healthy) all-star alongside him." LeBron's teams had often had guys theoretically capable of being 1st options (but still teams tended to door poorly with him off the floor) I don't know that they are better 2nd and 3rd pieces than Pippen and Grant (and to a lesser degree Rodman). I suspect, otoh, he also had less depth (likes of Joel Anthony, Mozgov, Dellavedova), less defense (oft overlooked in "talent") and less stability (partly his own doing, but Cleveland (1st time) couldn't provide a good, young, stable core as Chicago did). But my big question here is do you have Pippen injured in '95. Or are you a "'95 didn't happen" guy? Because if so that "black mark" stuff seems ... even more tricky to square.

8) As before I'd strongly argue net matters more than what your weakest point is. As before it will depend what counts (hitting teammates?) but purely on court ... talking outside shooting ... MJ career from the full distance 3 point line (RS)
343 of 1189 for .288477712. ('98 and Wizards have 234 attempts of which 1 is considered a heave, so not looking at first glance like heaves a heavy factor). Lower era norms of course and a smaller part of the game back then (as I say it will depend what counts as an area).

As I tried to convey in the initial posts, this is not "all these are necessarily wrong", but as also in that post, granting say 4 and 5 (or 8) as Jordan advantages wouldn't necessarily create a coherent case for him overall.


2) and 3) The common theme of your response is "punishing Lebron for longevity". No one is doing that. In fact one can argue that Lebron benefits a bit because several of his worst seasons (2004, 2005, 2019, 2021) he either missed the playoffs or lost in the first round. In addition he's only started to decline and if he plays 3-5 more seasons his career averages will decline significantly. The problem with Lebron fans (not you...) is that they tout Lebron's longevity but then pretend that pre-2012 failures never happened, nor 2019, nor 2021...

I urge you to compare their 5 best years, 8 best years, 10 best years... Jordan comes out ahead even more than in a career comparison. I'm not saying Lebron's longevity doesn't matter but longevity is a means to accomplishing more. What good is Lebron's longevity if he still won less than Jordan did in a shorter period of time?

And if we're really talking about longevity let's discuss 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2019 and 2021 and not just pretend that those nine seasons never happened. After all, they comprise half of Lebron's eighteen year career. A whole half of his career where his level of play was nowhere near that of a GOAT candidate...

4) They are an indirect proxy but do we have reason to believe the accolades are not representative of their defensive impact? Obviously not every selection ever made was great but generally they are good. A few obvious exceptions don't discredit the awards. It's like saying the MVP doesn't matter because Wes Unseld and Derrick Rose won them. The vast majority of awards in NBA history were legit!

5) Look at the regular season data for a much bigger sample. Jordan still dominates Lebron in crunch-time.

7) Jordan lost with a healthy Pippen in 1995 but that's after coming back near the end of the season. That's not much a black mark especially when Jordan had a bad Game 1 and then a great series afterwards. It's hard to argue Jordan was the reason the Bulls didn't win that series. It wasn't his finest moment but how many Lebron series were worse?

2006 ECSF
2007 Finals
2008 ECSF
2010 ECSF
2011 Finals
2021 R1

Those six aren't really debatable either IMHO. So Lebron had six series worse than Jordan's worst.
User avatar
Texas Chuck
Senior Mod - NBA TnT Forum
Senior Mod - NBA TnT Forum
Posts: 92,752
And1: 99,286
Joined: May 19, 2012
Location: Purgatory
   

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#356 » by Texas Chuck » Sun Sep 26, 2021 7:21 pm

Djoker wrote:And if we're really talking about longevity let's discuss 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2019 and 2021 and not just pretend that those nine seasons never happened. After all, they comprise half of Lebron's eighteen year career. A whole half of his career where his level of play was nowhere near that of a GOAT candidate...



This is why people have to keep stressing longevity.

You are taking very good seasons and trying to call them negatives for Lebron.

Sorry but that's laughable. Many of those seasons he's the best player in the entire league for crying out loud.
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
Cavsfansince84
RealGM
Posts: 15,258
And1: 11,640
Joined: Jun 13, 2017
   

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#357 » by Cavsfansince84 » Sun Sep 26, 2021 7:44 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:
Djoker wrote:And if we're really talking about longevity let's discuss 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2019 and 2021 and not just pretend that those nine seasons never happened. After all, they comprise half of Lebron's eighteen year career. A whole half of his career where his level of play was nowhere near that of a GOAT candidate...



This is why people have to keep stressing longevity.

You are taking very good seasons and trying to call them negatives for Lebron.

Sorry but that's laughable. Many of those seasons he's the best player in the entire league for crying out loud.


Ya I mean in 19 & 21 you have the injury issues but in the other 7 seasons he won 1 mvp and finished top 5 in mvp voting another 4 times. While making it two finals and losing to the Celtics in 7 games in 08 and putting up 45 pts in game 7. Is what MJ did in 87 or 88 or even 89 somehow better then that? It's not to where you can just completely write off those seasons by LeBron like they don't matter. Some people put MJ on too high of a pedestal.
Djoker
Starter
Posts: 2,331
And1: 2,058
Joined: Sep 12, 2015
 

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#358 » by Djoker » Sun Sep 26, 2021 10:51 pm

Texas Chuck wrote:
Djoker wrote:And if we're really talking about longevity let's discuss 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2019 and 2021 and not just pretend that those nine seasons never happened. After all, they comprise half of Lebron's eighteen year career. A whole half of his career where his level of play was nowhere near that of a GOAT candidate...



This is why people have to keep stressing longevity.

You are taking very good seasons and trying to call them negatives for Lebron.

Sorry but that's laughable. Many of those seasons he's the best player in the entire league for crying out loud.


Did you read what I wrote? I said in those 9 seasons, Lebron was nowhere near GOAT level and he really wasn't.

As for best player in the league...

In 2004? No...
In 2005? No...
In 2006? No...
In 2007? No...
In 2008? No...
In 2010? Maybe... although Kobe and Wade had definite cases over him.
In 2011? Yes... but after his 2011 Finals there were more comparisons to Karl Malone than Jordan.
In 2019? No...
In 2021? No...

Cavsfansince84 wrote:Ya I mean in 19 & 21 you have the injury issues but in the other 7 seasons he won 1 mvp and finished top 5 in mvp voting another 4 times. While making it two finals and losing to the Celtics in 7 games in 08 and putting up 45 pts in game 7. Is what MJ did in 87 or 88 or even 89 somehow better then that? It's not to where you can just completely write off those seasons by LeBron like they don't matter. Some people put MJ on too high of a pedestal.


See what I wrote to Texas Chuck above.

Lebron made two finals in 2007 and 2011 but put up horrific performance in both. In 2008 he had a nice Game 7 but what about the rest of the series? Surely the whole series isn't one game...

87, 88 and 89 Jordan was absolutely better than any of those versions of Lebron. Just look at the numbers and it will be apparent. Jordan's worst series was 27.4/8.8/4.6 on +1.1 rTS with 3.6 topg while playing good defense against the Bad Boy Pistons in 88. That was his WORST in that stretch...

Lebron's worst? How about 2006 ECSF: 26.6/8.6/6.0 on -2.0 rTS with 4.4 topg? How about 2007 Finals: 22.0/7.0/6.8 on -11.3 rTS with 5.8 topg? Or how about 2008 ECSF: 26.7/6.4/7.6 on -6.0 rTS with 5.3 topg? How about 2011 Finals: 17.8/7.0/6.8 on 0.0 rTS with 4.0 topg? How about 2021 R1: 23.3/7.2/8.0 on -0.8 rTS and 4.2 topg? Or how about actually putting up a decent statline but quitting in the 2010 ECSF? No Jordan series was ever this level of bad. It just wasn't.
Cavsfansince84
RealGM
Posts: 15,258
And1: 11,640
Joined: Jun 13, 2017
   

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#359 » by Cavsfansince84 » Sun Sep 26, 2021 11:08 pm

Djoker wrote:
See what I wrote to Texas Chuck above.

Lebron made two finals in 2007 and 2011 but put up horrific performance in both. In 2008 he had a nice Game 7 but what about the rest of the series? Surely the whole series isn't one game...

87, 88 and 89 Jordan was absolutely better than any of those versions of Lebron. Just look at the numbers and it will be apparent. Jordan's worst series was 27.4/8.8/4.6 on +1.1 rTS with 3.6 topg while playing good defense against the Bad Boy Pistons in 88. That was his WORST in that stretch...



In 07 he had a terrible series but I don't think it really mattered. So you can hold it against him but even if he plays a lot better the Spurs would have won in 5. They pretty much just toyed with the Cavs in that series. In 08 that was a series going against an atg defense at an 83 pace and he took them to 7 games. That in itself counts for a lot. It was basically no different than when MJ was going against the bad boy Pistons and losing in 6 or 7 in 89/90. The fact that that he put up 45 and came close to winning that game 7 in Boston isn't some knock on his legacy. It was better than Kobe did in the finals which many people consider to be his peak year.
sansterre
Bench Warmer
Posts: 1,312
And1: 1,835
Joined: Oct 22, 2020

Re: Jordan v Lebron - A civilised conversation 

Post#360 » by sansterre » Sun Sep 26, 2021 11:11 pm

Djoker wrote:

Thought experiment:

Let us imagine that Jordan jumped into the NBA two years earlier. In these two years he played at a low All-Star level before taking a step up in '85. In one of these two years he carries his team into a lopsided matchup and he has a bad series against a great defense. Let us also imagine that he stayed on after '98 and had another three seasons, two in the Top 5 range and one as an All-Star before he retires. He had several playoff series in those three years, some great, some good and some disappointing (because he's getting on in years at this point).

Compare Jordan's real career to the one in my hypothetical.

Which has a better case for GOAT?

Are his extra seasons providing extra value for his career, or are they sullying an otherwise unblemished prime?

There isn't a right or wrong answer, it's like a GOATshach inkblot.
"If you wish to see the truth, hold no opinions."

"Trust one who seeks the truth. Doubt one who claims to have found the truth."

Return to Player Comparisons