LukaTheGOAT wrote:Djoker wrote:LukaTheGOAT wrote:
There is a vast difference between them in their overall playmaking value from that creation. No one is denying that MJ created a lot, just that he didn't find the highest value passes like Lebron and therefore there is a vast difference in how their PlayVal measures come out. As I said before, Lebron is #1 all-time in 3 yr PS PlayVal.
And if you are saying we don't know why 91 MJ is better than Lebron or vice-versa, then there is no need to argue with me. The whole point of my messages was to dispute the idea that Lebron doesn't have seasons worthy of being comparable to peak Jordan in certain facets etc., because considering the the statistics we have, it suggests he was better. You don't have to believe anything, but I am not going to sit around and let people make baseless claims that just aren't true.
Furthermore, BT said in his sampling, that there was no discernable difference between Jordan's scoring with and without Pippen on the floor in a recent patreon article. Furthermore, MJ has had roles where he was a primary ball-handler like 88 and 89 and statistically these years are still behind peak Lebron. Continuing on, on-ball passing like Lebron's pops more with the ball in your hands and is especially a strength of Lebron's game unlike Jordan who is a good, but non-historic passer. The offensive metrics suggest 2009 Lebron and 2010 Lebron on offense were generally more valuable than his Miami versions, yet people have come on this thread and suggested Lebron was more well-rounded in Miami. Well to me this screams that maybe he had the ball taken out of his hands and could exert less value on offense. I am just providing alternative explanations for this drop statistically.
P.S. we do have RAPM Estimates for all of the 90s by former workers of ESPN and while it is not exactly RAPM it has sound methodology(quarter to quarter breakdown from the boxscore instead of pure game level plus-minus) but considering people here believe heavily in the relevance of the box-score, the values shouldn't be too far-fetched for their tastes...
Jordan looks like no outlier during his peak years while Lebron during his peak years leads his contemporaries by multiple standard deviations.
Yes Lebron found and executed more difficult passes. I never deny this. But Jordan created so much pressure with his scoring attracting double and triple teams that his teammates were often times open and he didn't need a fancy pass.
I'm saying we don't have RAPM for peak Jordan. Without play-by-play you can't have plus-minus. Estimates are just that... estimates. I remember PHILA years ago actually broke down a bunch of peak Jordan games from 1990-1992 over a 100 games IIRC and got some incredible impact numbers. Not saying that data is reliable but it's a start.
You discounted multiyear PIPM, BPM, RAPM, RPM, WAR that I posted. All those numbers either show peak Jordan clearly ahead of Lebron or 1997 Jordan (in case of RAPM and RPM) being competitive with peak Lebron. There is the occasional stat that supports Lebron but the majority support Jordan. And that along with better box stats is why most people have peak Jordan over peak Lebron. It's actually you who is in the minority here not me.
Huh, you must not have read anything I wrote correctly, because I didn't mention anything about you being in the minority or your numbers being wrong? All I said that Lebron's best seasons didn't happen back to back and I already proved how multiple runs that beat Jordan in PIPM and RAPTOR. We are talking single-year peaks here, so doesn't it make sense to split up the PS runs in single year stretches? That's all I did, so I don't get your qualms. Unless you just glossed over the mountains of numbers that outright said multiple Lebron seasons are comparable to MJ, then I don't where you are getting "the rare statistic." That just simply isn't the case.
Also fancy passes doesn't make you a better playmaker, Lebron's a better playmaker because he hit more high-leverage passes that lead to higher expected value on his teammates shots. And as I said in the earlier post and as I will say again, I know Jordan put pressure on the defense, he just didn't pick defenses apart with his passing like Lebron and therefore that creates a value difference between. Ben Taylor goes over this in his youtube videos. Heck Ben Taylor even put it in his writeup of MJ- "In over 1,100 offensive possessions tracked, MJ hit over 2 “good” passes per 100 with a passing profile slightly behind Dwyane Wade’s and Kobe Bryant’s." He basically says that MJ is in the Wade and Bryant tier as a passer, which is good but clearly below Lebron.
For instance since you seem to find some kind of value in Ben Taylor's stats since you use them:
Lebron had a 3yr PS ScoreVal Peak of 2.3 and 3yr PS PlayVal Peak of 2.5. Jordan's 3 year peaks in this are 2.7 and 1.9 respectively. Based off these numbers it would suggest there is a bigger difference between their playmaking than there is between their scoring, hence suggesting there is a meaningful difference between them as playmakers if you consider there to be meaningful differences between them as scorers. Am I not justified in pointing this out considering someone said Lebron has no argument to be in Jordan's tier as an offensive player? It isn't about cherrypicking, it is about being accepting of other opinions which you seem to have an issue with.
Also don't know why you being so confrontational over a discussion when all I did was provide the very same stats that suggest Lebron's peak seasons were better. Is the point of this not discuss? And once again, what is the point of arguing with me, when all I did was provide evidence that individual Lebron seasons can match up with those of Jordan? Notice I haven't cast a vote, and I have only been responding to posts. I didn't say anything about having MJ over LBJ, all I pushed back against was the idea that there is no evidence for Lebron being in the same tier as Jordan. I don't think you really are understanding what I am saying, because you are arguing against several points I have not made.
I understand what you mean. You repeated a couple of the same points you said earlier. I understand and agree that Lebron picks out a higher percentage of high leverage passes given the opportunity. My argument is that Jordan creates more of these opportunities so although he completes a fewer percentage, he is very comparable to Lebron in terms of total playmaking output. This is evident in their assist totals being comparable.
There is ample evidence that Lebron is not in the same tier offensively as Jordan. Even Ben Taylor agrees. His CORP valuations on offense have peak Jordan well ahead of peak Lebron. In a recent podcast when putting all the players in history into offensive tiers he put Magic, Jordan and Curry in the first tier then Bird, Lebron and Shaq were in the second tier.