Eagle4 wrote:MyUniBroDavis wrote:Eagle4 wrote:That's nice. I count regular season AND playoffs. Not just playoffs lol.
Okay and that’s
ur opinion, saying you can’t stand it when someone has a different criteria kinda weird lol
That's nice. I count regular season AND playoffs. Not just playoffs lol. That '13 season was when the Heat has 2nd longest winning streak ever, he and Wade's numbers were phenomenal during that stretch. In the playoffs he was dominant en route to a title.
So let's see, dominant regular season, 2nd in DPOY, MVP, Finals MVP in '13
Vs
Coasting most of '17/'18 regular season to post gaudy offensive stats in the playoffs that didn't lead to a ring.
Easy choice for me.
Nothing weird about it, people state their grievances daily. Like saying how can people like strawberry over vanilla. You can still be aware some will prefer strawberry but due to your strong preference, it's puzzling. Everyone on this world does it or has that sentiment about SOMETHING whether its food, politics, religion, female preference etc. Not that serious, if it struck a nerve then convince me with concrete analysis, if not then leave it.
Combined since you edited your post
Saying you disagree with it is fine but not being able to stand it and comparing it to politics is a bit odd lol.
Well if I’m making a my POV why my criteria is mostly based off of playoffs for players who have realistic championship aspirations and deep runs
2017 is probably the easier argument even though I have 2018 higher personally
You can make a reasonable case for 2013 lebron not being a top 5 playoff run for him
2009, 2012, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020 all are pretty reasonable arguments. 09/12/16/17 are all pretty straightforward. 2018 and 2020 are all more controversial, 2020 as a pick in general because of it truly being a 1A 1B situation, and 2018 in the sense that you’re either really high on it or really low on it with no inbetween.
A really crude argument would be
So to argue that 2013 lebron is a more valuable player towards winning a championship than these lebrons, you have to argue either that the difference is marginal enough than having a higher seed is more important than that difference.
It’s pretty hard to discern how important home court advantage is for a team in the playoffs vs how often teams win because they are better teams.
We could take home court advantage and apply it to game 7s
Off a cursory look, taking the amount of game 7s of total series and home court playoff advantage, it’s about a 16% increase in expected wins give or take
When comparing it from a more practical perspective, and to try to separate quality as much as we can let’s do 4th vs 5th seeds since 2000 (I eyeballed it).
26-20 in favor of the 4th seed vs the 5th seed, with the obvious caveat that the 4th seed would be expected to be marginally better, so under this that 16% works out give or take
What does this practically mean? Well it’s a 41 win team vs a 47-48 win team give or take. From a quick gander at a few past seasons, for teams with a similar schedule it’s a difference of about 2-2.5 points in terms of margin of victory.
So a real lazy look would be to say HCA in a 7 game series is the equivalent of a 2 point advantage.
Now is 2017 playoff lebron worth 2 more points than 2013 playoff lebron? I don’t think that’s a particularly hard debate.
So to argue that, based on what has actually happened, 2013 lebron contributes more winning a title than other versions of lebron, you have to argue that his playoff performance overall wasn’t worth a 2 point discount per game kind of
Arguing that it’s a situation thing and he had more spacing is fair, but then 2012 lebron appears, and the same issue arises without that being a valid reason.
2012, 2016, and 2017 bron are all comfortably ahead for me, 2018 lebron for me too but there are more question marks with that although it’s actually his peak for me.
I tend to find more importance in performances in competitive or important series, vs earlier ones where the result isn’t in doubt. At the very least I don’t really care about the first round at all unless it’s competitive. To rephrase that, if a series is close or the opponent is a threat, since 2017 bron just rolled everyone that wasn’t the Warriors over
In terms of pure level of performance 2016 lebron has him beat in that regard, since he annihilated the raptors and the Warriors series considering his absurd defense might’ve been his best series ever.
2017 lebron has absurd consistency. He had 1 legitimately bad game the entire playoffs.
2018 the load was absurd.
2012 has his iconic performance against the Celtics and a less talked about dominant series against the pacers
2013 bron was great vs the pacers and okay vs the Spurs.
On a basis of what happened, I think all these other lebrons are worth more towards winning a title, which is the measuring stick here for title aspiring players
Also your example is dumb as hell, if someone said “darn I can’t stand when i hear that people like gamer girls” it would be mad weird