RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 - 1990-91 Michael Jordan

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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#161 » by capfan33 » Wed Jun 22, 2022 12:19 am

colts18 wrote:
Squared2020 wrote:
DraymondGold wrote:Hi LukaTheGoat! It looks like you quoted me above and bolded my first sentence, but I don't see any text. Did you mean to? If you're concerned about the stat CORP +/- stat, I don't mean for it to be the be-all-end-all, just a starting point to ballpark an answer to the hypothetical proposed (what if MJ dropped to Kobe's defensive level).




That's sick! I didn't realize you were on RealGM. Thanks so much for the update! :D I've really enjoyed looking at your RAPM stats.




Thanks, I appreciate it! Everything is being completely built from video. I have stints with possessions and points scored. So we can get better estimates for time played, get partial RAPM counts, and accurate plus-minus for every player in every logged game.

I was pointed towards these forums from Ben Taylor a while back. He pointed me towards 70sfan, whose Patreon I have been supporting since almost day one.

I can't reply to private messages for some reason though.


Awesome Work Squared2020.

The 1991 data looks very promising. I hope you are able to complete that whole season or at least as many games as possible. If you have a patreon, I would support it if meant you could get full seasons of RAPM data uploaded and maybe even include shot charts.


2nd this, would be very interested in RAPM for earlier seasons.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#162 » by JordansBulls » Wed Jun 22, 2022 3:48 am

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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#163 » by Sark » Wed Jun 22, 2022 5:15 am

falcolombardi wrote:
JordansBulls wrote:1. 1991 MJ - All around great season, all nba first team and defense, led in scoring beat the 2x defending champion, beat the guy who finished 2nd in MVP voting on an all time great team for a franchise that never won before and drafted him and was the only allstar on the squad.

2. 1971 Kareem - 2nd year in the league won league mvp, finals mvp for a franchise that never won before and drafted him.

3. 1994 Hakeem - MVP, DPOY the same year, won title for franchise that never won before and that drafted him and didn't switch teams to win.


sorry but what the f**k?

scottie pippen was a star, the "only star on his team" argument applies to 94 hakeem, not to 91 jordan

jordan is great enough there is no need to make up this stuff to prop him up lol, jordan doesnt need pippen diminished to be argued as the goat



Pippen was in fact not an All Star in 1991. He made it 1990 as an injury replacement, and didn't make it again until 1992.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#164 » by ceoofkobefans » Wed Jun 22, 2022 8:20 am

I believe I am late to the party here but I will still post this for the discourse


1. 1991 Michael Jordan

I believe MJ vs LeBron is relatively close but I like to give MJ the edge because I think him being unarguably the GOAT scorer (imo) outweighs LeBron’s Combo of scoring and playmaking given that MJ is also an all time playmaker and I think him being significantly better off the ball also goes into that but LeBron being better on D does give him an argument to me

2. 2013 LeBron James

I believe there’s a clear top 2. I think LeBron (even in 2013) clears Shaq on O due to being a significantly better playmaker and still being a better scorer. Being a 78% Rim shooter and a 40% 3pt shooter (even if he’s being left open a decent bit of the time to prevent him from finishing) is just really hard to beat as a scorer from a rim oriented player which is why I think he’s a better scorer. Defensively I also like LeBron over Shaq. Shaq even in 00 with the added motor was still kind of a lazy defender and still didn’t like coming out of the paint on D. There wasn’t a 3 in the paint on D in 2000 so he was allowed to paint camp more and even tho he was an elite rim protector his lack of much else on D really holds him back.

3. 2000 Shaquille O’Neal

Top 6 scoring peak to me. Probably a top 10 playmaking big peak (haven’t made a list but I’d imagine having the goat gravity and off ball movement from a big is enough to get him there) being extremely portable and a strong defender makes him hard to stop. He’s shooting almost 80% at the rim (if not in the 80s) in a league where the average rim FG% isn’t even in the 60s while constantly being doubled and tripled. Just an insane offensive peak
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#165 » by Colbinii » Wed Jun 22, 2022 12:03 pm

ceoofkobefans wrote:I believe I am late to the party here but I will still post this for the discourse


1. 1991 Michael Jordan

I believe MJ vs LeBron is relatively close but I like to give MJ the edge because I think him being unarguably the GOAT scorer (imo) outweighs LeBron’s Combo of scoring and playmaking given that MJ is also an all time playmaker and I think him being significantly better off the ball also goes into that but LeBron being better on D does give him an argument to me

2. 2013 LeBron James

I believe there’s a clear top 2. I think LeBron (even in 2013) clears Shaq on O due to being a significantly better playmaker and still being a better scorer. Being a 78% Rim shooter and a 40% 3pt shooter (even if he’s being left open a decent bit of the time to prevent him from finishing) is just really hard to beat as a scorer from a rim oriented player which is why I think he’s a better scorer. Defensively I also like LeBron over Shaq. Shaq even in 00 with the added motor was still kind of a lazy defender and still didn’t like coming out of the paint on D. There wasn’t a 3 in the paint on D in 2000 so he was allowed to paint camp more and even tho he was an elite rim protector his lack of much else on D really holds him back.

3. 2000 Shaquille O’Neal

Top 6 scoring peak to me. Probably a top 10 playmaking big peak (haven’t made a list but I’d imagine having the goat gravity and off ball movement from a big is enough to get him there) being extremely portable and a strong defender makes him hard to stop. He’s shooting almost 80% at the rim (if not in the 80s) in a league where the average rim FG% isn’t even in the 60s while constantly being doubled and tripled. Just an insane offensive peak


Be sure to vote in #2 thread!
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#166 » by ceoofkobefans » Wed Jun 22, 2022 12:35 pm

I did. I listed my 2-4 guys right after this!
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#167 » by LA Bird » Wed Jun 22, 2022 1:13 pm

For transparency, here are the full results for round 1.

Winner: 91 Jordan

There were 29 voters in this round: Stan, Max123, falcolombardi, Lou Fan, capfan33, Dutchball97, MyUniBroDavis, Proxy, SickMother, Gregoire, Eddy_JukeZ, 90sAllDecade, E-Balla, ceiling raiser, trelos6, homecourtloss, JordansBulls, Blazers-1977, ardee, 2klegend, Djoker, Dr Positivity, Colbinii, DraymondGold, cupcakesnake, 70sFan, letskissbro, mdonnelly1989, Doctor MJ

A total of 26 seasons received at least 1 vote: 00 O'Neal, 01 O'Neal, 03 Duncan, 09 James, 10 James, 12 James, 13 James, 14 James, 16 Curry, 16 James, 17 Curry, 17 James, 18 James, 64 Russell, 67 Chamberlain, 71 Abdul-Jabbar, 72 Abdul-Jabbar, 74 Abdul-Jabbar, 77 Abdul-Jabbar, 89 Jordan, 90 Jordan, 91 Jordan, 92 Jordan, 93 Jordan, 93 Olajuwon, 94 Olajuwon

Top 5 seasons
91 Jordan: 1.000 (25-0)
13 James: 0.960 (24-1), loses to 91 Jordan
00 O'Neal: 0.920 (23-2), loses to 13 James, 91 Jordan
09 James: 0.880 (22-3), loses to 00 O'Neal, 13 James, 91 Jordan
16 James: 0.840 (21-4), loses to 00 O'Neal, 09 James, 13 James, 91 Jordan

H2H record
91 Jordan vs 13 James: 22-6
91 Jordan vs 00 O'Neal: 27-1
91 Jordan vs 09 James: 23-5
91 Jordan vs 16 James: 22-6
13 James vs 00 O'Neal: 12-10
13 James vs 09 James: 11-5
13 James vs 16 James: 14-3
00 O'Neal vs 09 James: 12-9
00 O'Neal vs 16 James: 14-8
09 James vs 16 James: 8-6
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#168 » by homecourtloss » Wed Jun 22, 2022 1:30 pm

LA Bird wrote:For transparency, here are the full results for round 1.

Winner: 91 Jordan

There were 29 voters in this round: Stan, Max123, falcolombardi, Lou Fan, capfan33, Dutchball97, MyUniBroDavis, Proxy, SickMother, Gregoire, Eddy_JukeZ, 90sAllDecade, E-Balla, ceiling raiser, trelos6, homecourtloss, JordansBulls, Blazers-1977, ardee, 2klegend, Djoker, Dr Positivity, Colbinii, DraymondGold, cupcakesnake, 70sFan, letskissbro, mdonnelly1989, Doctor MJ

A total of 26 seasons received at least 1 vote: 00 O'Neal, 01 O'Neal, 03 Duncan, 09 James, 10 James, 12 James, 13 James, 14 James, 16 Curry, 16 James, 17 Curry, 17 James, 18 James ,64 Russell, 67 Chamberlain, 71 Abdul-Jabbar, 72 Abdul-Jabbar, 74 Abdul-Jabbar, 77 Abdul-Jabbar, 89 Jordan, 90 Jordan, 91 Jordan, 92 Jordan, 93 Jordan, 93 Olajuwon, 94 Olajuwon


It’s absolutely wild that 8 different James’s seasons were listed with 5 or 6 of them as a possible #1. On one hand, it seems more impressive that there could be a 9-10 year gap between hypothetical peaks as 10 years in basketball saw massive changes in the sport than with one peak. On other hand, not everything coming together perfectly in one season hurts in rankings such as these.
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.

lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#169 » by Djoker » Wed Jun 22, 2022 3:32 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Djoker wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Awards for defense are largely meaningless, first team selections and all that. Smart wasn’t even the best defender on his team for example

Defensive valuations do have a large margin of error, and the available evidence we do have is limited.

This evidence points to him either being a great perimeter defender, based on the 91 rapm data, which for the bulls tracks about a bit less than half the season, or a negative defender if you consider the season he left and got replaced with unspectacular defenders taking the bulk of the remaining minutes the bulls got better on that end.

Otoh, we do have a good amount of evidence that lebrons defense as a whole through the 2016 season reached pretty near best defender in the nba levels, and seemingly did so completely in the playoffs

Since the argument is about playoff lebron, we have a situation where you could construct a reasonable argument playoff lebron was a best defender in the league type defender, in a world dray didn’t exist

I don’t understand why it’s baffling to rate Jordan’s defense on the top end of where the objective evidence rates him? If we argue about DPOY and all defensive teams we should bring Kobe’s peak up to top 10 as well.

It’s fair to say, of the objective evidence we have that rates Jordan from a -1 to a +1 on defense, the evidence for -1 can be explained, and the evidence for +1 isn’t fully definitive.

To follow up with, people said he was good in D so therefore he’s actually a +3 does not follow at all, if anything that’s far more baffling

Realistically the fact that their defense improved without Jordan despite pippen missing 10 games can’t be explained by “they tried harder”

If the opposite happened, their offensive performance remained mostly unchanged with Jordan’s departure, it would have been extremely damning to Jordan’s offensive impact.

I’m willing to say, okay they played on a chip on their shoulder so that explains why their defense didn’t get worse without Jordan. On the other hand, the fact that it got better, while not damning to the point of me saying “well Jordan is a negative defender” is pretty obviously a strong statement against Jordan is as good as a lebron in a 2016 playoff run that arguably had top tier defensice impact

To say, the best evidence we have in evaluating defense is limited evidence that suggests he was very good but unspectacular defensively, therefore he must have been absolutely incredible because people said he was great on defense is a far greater leap in logic than taking the evidence and only taking the data that calls him an elite defender while believing that the evidence that shows him as an arguable negative can be explained away but still is an important piece of evidence hat suggests he wasn’t close to a top tier of defensive impact that you are suggesting

Again, imagine if the bulls got better offensively without Jordan? Them trying harder would certainly not be a very viable explanation

In any case there’s a huge jump between we don’t have a lot of data on him and I think the data low on him can be explained away to an extent, to he was a best defender in the league type of player

Edit: squared2020 updated the rapm data, mjs defense has gone down from an elite perimeter defender to a decent one with a now 57/82 game sample, so I think it’s fair to say it’s fairly decent evidence now

Even more so now I have trouble believing MJ was reallly particularly close to playoff bron defensively, because the original point of we don’t have data suggesting he wasn’t a top tier defensive guy seems to be no longer valid, now we have a few data points saying so

(The standard dev has gone down a bit, but MJs defense has dropped from +1.5 to +0.6)

Is the combination of the fact that npi rapm seemingly has him as a more of a good defensive wing than an elite one, and the data of the team without him for a whole year paints him as a bad one enough to dispel that he was an elite defensive wing?

Probably not, I do think he was still an elite defender, but we are now in a situation where we do have more data on Jordan than others of that era in terms of their defensive impact, the combination of him dipping out without the roster changing too much + NPI RAPM data, and it isn’t particularly impressive


Ok a couple of points I want to raise or re-raise here:

1. First of all regarding the 1993 and 1994 Bulls... Defense is largely based on effort. Therefore trying to equate the Bulls getting better on defense with a hypothetical scenario in which they get better on offense is ridiculous. Simply by taking regular season games more seriously, a team can put up much better defensive numbers. Not the case on offense where losing a player of Jordan's caliber cannot be replaced.

2. And then of course there is a major fallacy in using 1993 Jordan to discredit 1991 Jordan's defense. It would be like me using 2018 Lebron's lack of defense to discredit his 2016 defense. How would you feel about that?

3. From Square2020's RAPM data, it includes 57 of the Bulls games in which they went 37-20. In the remaining 25 games their record is a shopping 24-1. It's safe to say that Jordan's RAPM for the entire season is a lot higher. Is it +8? +9? We don't know but the Bulls approximate margin of victory is +12.2 in the 24-1 stretch so Jordan's RAPM probably jumps a lot from what is a third of the season absolutely hammering opponents.

4. So we are just going to ignore defensive awards, opinions of contemporaries etc. when evaluating defense. Surely there was a conspiracy to give Jordan those awards. Everyone watching him at the time had no clue what they were seeing. Peeps on forums 30 years later know a lot better having seen a fraction of the games. I mean that's got to be it. :roll:

5. You mentioned in an earlier post that 2016 Lebron is a prime Pippen/Kawhi level defender. Ok. Jordan and Pippen played in the same era on the same team. Where is the evidence that Pippen is a whole tier better than Jordan defensively? Because that evidence would then show that Lebron >> Jordan.

Defensive RAPM

https://basketball-analytics.gitlab.io/rapm-data/

1996-1997 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.0
Pippen: +1.0
Rodman: +1.2

1997 Playoffs
Jordan: +1.8
Pippen: +1.1
Rodman: +0.9

1997-1998 Regular Season
Jordan: +0.6
Pippen: -0.7
Rodman: -0.5

1998 Playoffs:
Jordan: +0.6
Pippen: +0.1
Rodman: +0.7

Defensive RPM

[url] http://www.espn.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/year/1997/sort/DRPM
[/url]
1996-1997 Regular Season
Jordan: +2.47
Pippen: +0.90
Rodman: N/A

1997-1998 Regular Season
Jordan: +2.15
Pippen: N/A
Rodman: +0.86

Defensive PIPM

[url] https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1c-vFm9T5aVltZ8btJX-5s_OSk2OYgcuzEYtN3XFruY0/edit#gid=90945325
[/url]

1987-1988 Regular Season
Jordan: +2.2
Pippen: +0.9
Grant: +0.6

1988-1989 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.4
Pippen: +1.1
Grant: +0.4

1989-1990 Regular Season
Jordan: +0.5
Pippen: +1.4
Grant: +0.2

1990-1991 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.7
Pippen: +2.1
Grant: +0.5

1991-1992 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.4
Pippen: +1.6
Grant: +1.8

1992-1993 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.1
Pippen: +1.1
Grant: +0.9

1995-1996 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.3
Pippen: +1.7
Rodman: +1.4

1996-1997 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.5
Pippen: +1.3
Rodman: +1.8

1997-1998 Regular Season
Jordan: +0.0
Pippen: +0.9
Rodman: +1.1

Absolutely no evidence that Pippen is a tier ahead of Jordan defensively...

6. I never discounted the possibility that peak Lebron was a bit more impactful on defense than peak Jordan. That's a reasonable take. But a whole tier better is hard to accept. And again, the only thing that I can agree with your previous post is that there is no evidence to make this kind of claim.


1) while it’s true much of defense is based on effort, at the same time if Jordan was a comparable defender to 2016 playoff bron, who by most evidence appears DPOY level, it’s hard to believe that effort alone could make up for it

2) if you find evidence for Jordan specifically not trying in 1993 on defense then that’s fair, but I think that saying at the very least 1993 Jordan wasn’t very impactful in defense is 1991. I’m not saying this is automatically meaning he wasn’t good on defense, but I am saying that this was a prime year

3) I agree his overall RAPM probably looks far more impressive, but if you’re talking about the February to March stretch most of the difference was seen offensively iirc, so most of his improvement is likely gonna be offensive.

4) if we were ignoring that, the take would be that since the evidence seems to point that Jordan wasn’t a very impactful defender then he’s not an impactful defender, which isn’t what I’m saying.

5) hmm? I don’t recall saying pippen or Kawhi specifically, I think playoff bron was a step above while RS bron was a step below.

PIPM for pre 1997 doesn’t really make much sense, because it used luck adjusted RAPM as a measurement iirc, which we don’t have, so I don’t really know what that dataset is but it’s more likely a box score estimate of what it could be rather than anything else. RPM too.

The gitlab data is pretty bad, I think if you ask ceilingraiser or eminence they’d explain that better

Accross the court has numbers for 1997 and 1998 rapm, where they seen rather close in 1997 with MJ having a lead and pippen having a bit more of one in 1998. More importantly lebron is a tier ahead of those seasons based on data.

Whilst it would be reasonable to say Jordan was older and not as good on defense (although elgee I recall disagrees based on his tracking), that doesn’t equal Jordan is close to lebron on defense (keep in mind brons defensive peak came at 31, and then 35)

6) I feel there’s reasonable evidence lebron was a DPOY caliber player in the playoffs and as a whole had a defensive season as impactful as you’d expect from the best bigs of a year. I don’t see a reason to say Jordan was at that level.

It’s like saying we don’t have evidence Jordan was bull Russell but he might have been.

Here’s what I will say.

On the 1993 vs 1994 data. This does at the very least prove 1993 Jordan wasn’t as impactful defensively as you suggest. I agree defense is more about effort than offense is, but losing an ATG perimeter defender isn’t gonna typically improve your defense if you try harder, that’s a lot. More than that, he appeared in the defensive first team that year, so if we go by the route of believing contemporaries than him having a 2018 lebron season where everyone knew he wasn’t trying in that end isn’t valid. Their playoff defense didn’t stand out much either it seems, off of a cursory look

Had those teams lost lebron, and they were relatively cruising in the regular season, they would clearly be a bottom tier team defensively, I don’t think that’s very debatable. We’ve seen what happens when lebron went from his RS cruising on defense to cruising even more and becoming more of a neutral on defense even.

Implying that trying harder would be enough to mitigate Jordan’s impact basically supports my point, as lebrons that year impact couldn’t be mitigated by the team putting in 110%


I also think the argument here doesn’t make sense. I don’t have any reason to have X player at level X, I have lebron at this level, the onus is on you to prove that Jordan was at that level, since I’ve already made my post on bron. Showing that’s that shows pippen wasn’t all that as well isn’t going to prove that point, which is what that data suggest rather than Jordan being close to bron

As a whole we’ve assumeed something along the lines that lebron was a +1.5-2 on defense while Jordan was a +1.25-1.75.

I’ve made an argument that he’s more of a +3, +4 on defense, if you disagree with that sure, make an argument for that, but boosting up Jordan because I boosted bron on defense doesn’t make sense

As for the data you posted, let me give a rundown

The gitlab data is just known to be wonky as hell, you could ask others for more details but there’s a reason no one really ever posts RAPM from there.

Pre 1997 PIPM data isn’t really

While to me RPM is essentially worthless, it is a bit more interesting since at the very least it isn’t a completely different measurement like PIPM or invalid like gitlab, but you would need the standard deviations to compare accross seasons. The 2016 dataset looks as if it has a decently lower standard deviation than the 1997 one off a cursory glance, so a cross season comparison would favor bron a bit more than it already does. Rpm includes playoffs despite the game count btw, as far as I know.

So we have three datasets. What was brons pipm? That would be interesting, but I don’t think people that didn’t access the Google doc before he probated have access. I know his playoff PIPM led the league iirc

The RPM one seems to favor bron at a glance, esp considering the range and just distribution of values implies a different standard deviation, with the two caveats that we don’t have one for peak Jordan, and RPM changed its formula and privated it and it’s no longer really used here since that happened.

No where did I say there is definitive evidence Jordan wasn’t that impactful, if you believe he was that’s fine, there is limited evidence that suggests otherwise that is I think fair to mention

To say however that it’s ludicrous to claim lebron being a tier higher defensively, when my original thing was saying lebron was a tier higher defensively where he is normally rated on that end for this season, implies that because lebron was underrated Jordan must have been as well

Where do we stop? If someone that’s lebron with Kevin Garnett’s defense comes along so we say that person isn’t better than Jordan on defense either?

Here’s the crux of my issue.

I can agree that the evidence for defense pre 1997 is generally quite limited. While the evidence we do have for the 91-93 suggests he’s decent rather than elite, there are caveats that one applies to the 1993 season, the other data set isn’t complete yet

I don’t think that equals throwing them away, but it’s enough for me personally to say that 91 Jordan was probably an elite perimeter defensive season

However, the idea that, because I’m high on lebrons 2016 defense I must also be high on Jordan’s makes no sense which is the implication here. So far the argument doesn’t seem to be “why bron wasn’t that impactful” but more so “Bron shouldn’t have been more impactful than Jordan” as if there needs to be a certain distance between them.

If you want to make the claim that they’re roughly equal, I think either start by explaining why Jordan should rank that high outside of contemporary opinion, or why lebron shouldn’t rank where I rank him despite my post.

As it stands the same arguments could be made for Marcus smart being a better defender now than peak lebron which obviously isn’t true


1) Effort in my opinion can make a huge difference. 1.6 points in rDRtg isn't actually that big of a difference.

2) 1993 Jordan was definitely worse on D than 1991 Jordan. In fact I think Ben Taylor ranks that as MJ's worse defensive season on the Bulls after 1987.

3) Like other posters the cut off between ORAPM and DRAPM is problematic. His ORPM could be a lower and DRAPM higher. I would love to see the full season data because his RAPM could easily jump to +8 or even +9. But regardless RAPM is one measurement and not even the end-all-be-all or close to it.

4) He was a great defender, not just an impactful one.

5) Yea the data isn't good. Ok.. But then again that comes back to us not having much data which makes putting one All-Defensive selection a tier above the other very questionable.

No evidence I've ever seen shows Pippen as being a tier ahead of Jordan and you said Lebron was Pippen's tier so by deductive reasoning he must be Jordan's tier as well.

6) I see a reason for Jordan being DPOY level. Voters actually gave him a DPOY in 1988!

Putting Garnett in the same sentence defensively as either Lebron or Jordan is funny. Of course if Lebron was a Garnett-level defender he'd be a lot better but he is nowhere close to a Garnett level defender. That should be obvious.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#170 » by MyUniBroDavis » Wed Jun 22, 2022 10:06 pm

Djoker wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Djoker wrote:
Ok a couple of points I want to raise or re-raise here:

1. First of all regarding the 1993 and 1994 Bulls... Defense is largely based on effort. Therefore trying to equate the Bulls getting better on defense with a hypothetical scenario in which they get better on offense is ridiculous. Simply by taking regular season games more seriously, a team can put up much better defensive numbers. Not the case on offense where losing a player of Jordan's caliber cannot be replaced.

2. And then of course there is a major fallacy in using 1993 Jordan to discredit 1991 Jordan's defense. It would be like me using 2018 Lebron's lack of defense to discredit his 2016 defense. How would you feel about that?

3. From Square2020's RAPM data, it includes 57 of the Bulls games in which they went 37-20. In the remaining 25 games their record is a shopping 24-1. It's safe to say that Jordan's RAPM for the entire season is a lot higher. Is it +8? +9? We don't know but the Bulls approximate margin of victory is +12.2 in the 24-1 stretch so Jordan's RAPM probably jumps a lot from what is a third of the season absolutely hammering opponents.

4. So we are just going to ignore defensive awards, opinions of contemporaries etc. when evaluating defense. Surely there was a conspiracy to give Jordan those awards. Everyone watching him at the time had no clue what they were seeing. Peeps on forums 30 years later know a lot better having seen a fraction of the games. I mean that's got to be it. :roll:

5. You mentioned in an earlier post that 2016 Lebron is a prime Pippen/Kawhi level defender. Ok. Jordan and Pippen played in the same era on the same team. Where is the evidence that Pippen is a whole tier better than Jordan defensively? Because that evidence would then show that Lebron >> Jordan.

Defensive RAPM

https://basketball-analytics.gitlab.io/rapm-data/

1996-1997 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.0
Pippen: +1.0
Rodman: +1.2

1997 Playoffs
Jordan: +1.8
Pippen: +1.1
Rodman: +0.9

1997-1998 Regular Season
Jordan: +0.6
Pippen: -0.7
Rodman: -0.5

1998 Playoffs:
Jordan: +0.6
Pippen: +0.1
Rodman: +0.7

Defensive RPM

[url] http://www.espn.com/nba/statistics/rpm/_/year/1997/sort/DRPM
[/url]
1996-1997 Regular Season
Jordan: +2.47
Pippen: +0.90
Rodman: N/A

1997-1998 Regular Season
Jordan: +2.15
Pippen: N/A
Rodman: +0.86

Defensive PIPM

[url] https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1c-vFm9T5aVltZ8btJX-5s_OSk2OYgcuzEYtN3XFruY0/edit#gid=90945325
[/url]

1987-1988 Regular Season
Jordan: +2.2
Pippen: +0.9
Grant: +0.6

1988-1989 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.4
Pippen: +1.1
Grant: +0.4

1989-1990 Regular Season
Jordan: +0.5
Pippen: +1.4
Grant: +0.2

1990-1991 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.7
Pippen: +2.1
Grant: +0.5

1991-1992 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.4
Pippen: +1.6
Grant: +1.8

1992-1993 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.1
Pippen: +1.1
Grant: +0.9

1995-1996 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.3
Pippen: +1.7
Rodman: +1.4

1996-1997 Regular Season
Jordan: +1.5
Pippen: +1.3
Rodman: +1.8

1997-1998 Regular Season
Jordan: +0.0
Pippen: +0.9
Rodman: +1.1

Absolutely no evidence that Pippen is a tier ahead of Jordan defensively...

6. I never discounted the possibility that peak Lebron was a bit more impactful on defense than peak Jordan. That's a reasonable take. But a whole tier better is hard to accept. And again, the only thing that I can agree with your previous post is that there is no evidence to make this kind of claim.


1) while it’s true much of defense is based on effort, at the same time if Jordan was a comparable defender to 2016 playoff bron, who by most evidence appears DPOY level, it’s hard to believe that effort alone could make up for it

2) if you find evidence for Jordan specifically not trying in 1993 on defense then that’s fair, but I think that saying at the very least 1993 Jordan wasn’t very impactful in defense is 1991. I’m not saying this is automatically meaning he wasn’t good on defense, but I am saying that this was a prime year

3) I agree his overall RAPM probably looks far more impressive, but if you’re talking about the February to March stretch most of the difference was seen offensively iirc, so most of his improvement is likely gonna be offensive.

4) if we were ignoring that, the take would be that since the evidence seems to point that Jordan wasn’t a very impactful defender then he’s not an impactful defender, which isn’t what I’m saying.

5) hmm? I don’t recall saying pippen or Kawhi specifically, I think playoff bron was a step above while RS bron was a step below.

PIPM for pre 1997 doesn’t really make much sense, because it used luck adjusted RAPM as a measurement iirc, which we don’t have, so I don’t really know what that dataset is but it’s more likely a box score estimate of what it could be rather than anything else. RPM too.

The gitlab data is pretty bad, I think if you ask ceilingraiser or eminence they’d explain that better

Accross the court has numbers for 1997 and 1998 rapm, where they seen rather close in 1997 with MJ having a lead and pippen having a bit more of one in 1998. More importantly lebron is a tier ahead of those seasons based on data.

Whilst it would be reasonable to say Jordan was older and not as good on defense (although elgee I recall disagrees based on his tracking), that doesn’t equal Jordan is close to lebron on defense (keep in mind brons defensive peak came at 31, and then 35)

6) I feel there’s reasonable evidence lebron was a DPOY caliber player in the playoffs and as a whole had a defensive season as impactful as you’d expect from the best bigs of a year. I don’t see a reason to say Jordan was at that level.

It’s like saying we don’t have evidence Jordan was bull Russell but he might have been.

Here’s what I will say.

On the 1993 vs 1994 data. This does at the very least prove 1993 Jordan wasn’t as impactful defensively as you suggest. I agree defense is more about effort than offense is, but losing an ATG perimeter defender isn’t gonna typically improve your defense if you try harder, that’s a lot. More than that, he appeared in the defensive first team that year, so if we go by the route of believing contemporaries than him having a 2018 lebron season where everyone knew he wasn’t trying in that end isn’t valid. Their playoff defense didn’t stand out much either it seems, off of a cursory look

Had those teams lost lebron, and they were relatively cruising in the regular season, they would clearly be a bottom tier team defensively, I don’t think that’s very debatable. We’ve seen what happens when lebron went from his RS cruising on defense to cruising even more and becoming more of a neutral on defense even.

Implying that trying harder would be enough to mitigate Jordan’s impact basically supports my point, as lebrons that year impact couldn’t be mitigated by the team putting in 110%


I also think the argument here doesn’t make sense. I don’t have any reason to have X player at level X, I have lebron at this level, the onus is on you to prove that Jordan was at that level, since I’ve already made my post on bron. Showing that’s that shows pippen wasn’t all that as well isn’t going to prove that point, which is what that data suggest rather than Jordan being close to bron

As a whole we’ve assumeed something along the lines that lebron was a +1.5-2 on defense while Jordan was a +1.25-1.75.

I’ve made an argument that he’s more of a +3, +4 on defense, if you disagree with that sure, make an argument for that, but boosting up Jordan because I boosted bron on defense doesn’t make sense

As for the data you posted, let me give a rundown

The gitlab data is just known to be wonky as hell, you could ask others for more details but there’s a reason no one really ever posts RAPM from there.

Pre 1997 PIPM data isn’t really

While to me RPM is essentially worthless, it is a bit more interesting since at the very least it isn’t a completely different measurement like PIPM or invalid like gitlab, but you would need the standard deviations to compare accross seasons. The 2016 dataset looks as if it has a decently lower standard deviation than the 1997 one off a cursory glance, so a cross season comparison would favor bron a bit more than it already does. Rpm includes playoffs despite the game count btw, as far as I know.

So we have three datasets. What was brons pipm? That would be interesting, but I don’t think people that didn’t access the Google doc before he probated have access. I know his playoff PIPM led the league iirc

The RPM one seems to favor bron at a glance, esp considering the range and just distribution of values implies a different standard deviation, with the two caveats that we don’t have one for peak Jordan, and RPM changed its formula and privated it and it’s no longer really used here since that happened.

No where did I say there is definitive evidence Jordan wasn’t that impactful, if you believe he was that’s fine, there is limited evidence that suggests otherwise that is I think fair to mention

To say however that it’s ludicrous to claim lebron being a tier higher defensively, when my original thing was saying lebron was a tier higher defensively where he is normally rated on that end for this season, implies that because lebron was underrated Jordan must have been as well

Where do we stop? If someone that’s lebron with Kevin Garnett’s defense comes along so we say that person isn’t better than Jordan on defense either?

Here’s the crux of my issue.

I can agree that the evidence for defense pre 1997 is generally quite limited. While the evidence we do have for the 91-93 suggests he’s decent rather than elite, there are caveats that one applies to the 1993 season, the other data set isn’t complete yet

I don’t think that equals throwing them away, but it’s enough for me personally to say that 91 Jordan was probably an elite perimeter defensive season

However, the idea that, because I’m high on lebrons 2016 defense I must also be high on Jordan’s makes no sense which is the implication here. So far the argument doesn’t seem to be “why bron wasn’t that impactful” but more so “Bron shouldn’t have been more impactful than Jordan” as if there needs to be a certain distance between them.

If you want to make the claim that they’re roughly equal, I think either start by explaining why Jordan should rank that high outside of contemporary opinion, or why lebron shouldn’t rank where I rank him despite my post.

As it stands the same arguments could be made for Marcus smart being a better defender now than peak lebron which obviously isn’t true


1) Effort in my opinion can make a huge difference. 1.6 points in rDRtg isn't actually that big of a difference.

2) 1993 Jordan was definitely worse on D than 1991 Jordan. In fact I think Ben Taylor ranks that as MJ's worse defensive season on the Bulls after 1987.

3) Like other posters the cut off between ORAPM and DRAPM is problematic. His ORPM could be a lower and DRAPM higher. I would love to see the full season data because his RAPM could easily jump to +8 or even +9. But regardless RAPM is one measurement and not even the end-all-be-all or close to it.

4) He was a great defender, not just an impactful one.

5) Yea the data isn't good. Ok.. But then again that comes back to us not having much data which makes putting one All-Defensive selection a tier above the other very questionable.

No evidence I've ever seen shows Pippen as being a tier ahead of Jordan and you said Lebron was Pippen's tier so by deductive reasoning he must be Jordan's tier as well.

6) I see a reason for Jordan being DPOY level. Voters actually gave him a DPOY in 1988!

Putting Garnett in the same sentence defensively as either Lebron or Jordan is funny. Of course if Lebron was a Garnett-level defender he'd be a lot better but he is nowhere close to a Garnett level defender. That should be obvious.


1. It can make a difference, I don’t think a -1.7 jump is in the category of explainable by effort if they lost an ATG perimeter defender and didn’t add much back. A jump either way by that same amount puts them either 2nd in the league or league average

2. Hmm, I do see that his evaluation on that season is lower but it doesn’t seem to be lower by much although I don’t have his patreon stuff, I’d be curious to see his rankings per season, since we do have full data on later seasons for him where he ranks decently well, esp for his age, but he also notes that he doesn’t think there’s a large gap between his 91-93 defense and 96-98 defense, smarter D in 96-98 making up for less athleticism

3. Only Doc mentioned that right? He said something about it being based on whose around him which would still imply that the impact portion of it is correct vs ability, and he didn’t find my take unreasonable although he was higher on MJs defense than me

4. You know what I mean lol, I never said he wasn’t a great defender

5. My assumption on pippen is that he was the best perimeter defender of the 90s mostly just based off what I’ve heard since I’ve never deep dived into it, if that data shows he and MJ were around the same level and that level is lower than I perceived pippen to be at that just lowers pippen value rather than raising MJs.

All defensive selections as an argument would be the same as saying bron isn’t a tier ahead of Kobe defensively

I mean again I think DPOY awards are kind of BS, I don’t have smart as a top 2 defender on this own team, I dont have 2013 bron as that good of a defender either so I think that’s pretty consistent. Awards are decided by broadcasters and sportswriters, and ones today with access to data still suck at evaluating players

6. It’s a hypothetical isn’t it? I didn’t say bron was there.
But another way to look at it is, what evidence is there to say Jordan isn’t there? I’ve made my case on peak lebron having a sort of outlier year for himself in his 2016 run esp in the playoffs, what evidence is there 1991 Jordan is as good defensively as lebron in what I see as an outlier year on that end?

My viewpoint on lebrons impact is that, 99% of DPOY won by perimeter players are complete BS, I think bron probably in the playoffs played at a level of a legitimate DPOY level rather than just for his position. I think I’ve made a reasonable case for that

Essentially, if a typical prime lebron season>typical prime MJ season defensively, I think 2016 brons defense stood above and beyond his other defensive years, reaching a level he never reached before or since in his prime in the playoffs

Even if I were to concede MJs defense being better than I evaluate it to be, you’d have to convince me that it’s substantially better than the prime lebron seasons (when he focused on D, so Miami and 09 and 10 bron) on that end, because that’s how I view 2016 brons defense and made an argument for it.

My perception is that in the playoffs bron was the second best defender in the NBA regardless of position, behind playoff draymond whose pretty consistently been one of the most impactful playoff defenders ever. I don’t think prime Jordan or miami lebron reached those levels.

So since we seem to be in agreement on defensively Jordan being not too far off of Miami bron, you’d have to convince me either

My opinion of 2016 bron is wrong, or that Jordan is >> Miami bron defensively

A reevaluation of jordan by showing he’s not a tier behind Scottie doesn’t work if the data you shown demonstrates pippen going down a tier rather than jordan going up
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#171 » by Cavsfansince84 » Wed Jun 22, 2022 10:19 pm

Sark wrote:

Pippen was in fact not an All Star in 1991. He made it 1990 as an injury replacement, and didn't make it again until 1992.


While that may be true I think its widely seen that Pippen had fully emerged as a star player by 91 and was probably at least a top 15 player in the league which is above all star level. All star voting is a notoriously bad way to judge players by.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#172 » by Sark » Wed Jun 22, 2022 11:12 pm

Cavsfansince84 wrote:
Sark wrote:

Pippen was in fact not an All Star in 1991. He made it 1990 as an injury replacement, and didn't make it again until 1992.


While that may be true I think its widely seen that Pippen had fully emerged as a star player by 91 and was probably at least a top 15 player in the league which is above all star level. All star voting is a notoriously bad way to judge players by.



Not necessarily. He was coming off his melt down against Detroit the year before, with the migraine game. He was seen as mentally weak and scared of Detroit. It was similar to the Ben Simmons situation.

Either way, this is irrelevant because the other person specifically said ALL STAR.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#173 » by Cavsfansince84 » Wed Jun 22, 2022 11:25 pm

Sark wrote:
Not necessarily. He was coming off his melt down against Detroit the year before, with the migraine game. He was seen as mentally weak and scared of Detroit. It was similar to the Ben Simmons situation.

Either way, this is irrelevant because the other person specifically said ALL STAR.


The migraine game has almost nothing to do with how good he actually was in 91 though. I mean I get it affects how he was perceived and regarding him beinng an all star. I'm just saying for this board in particular it seems pretty wild to see people resorting to all star arguments to determine how much help a player had in a particular year. More so for a guy like Pippen who we all know was at least a top 20 player in 1991 and may have been the best wing defender in the entire league that year.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#174 » by Djoker » Wed Jun 22, 2022 11:32 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Djoker wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
1) while it’s true much of defense is based on effort, at the same time if Jordan was a comparable defender to 2016 playoff bron, who by most evidence appears DPOY level, it’s hard to believe that effort alone could make up for it

2) if you find evidence for Jordan specifically not trying in 1993 on defense then that’s fair, but I think that saying at the very least 1993 Jordan wasn’t very impactful in defense is 1991. I’m not saying this is automatically meaning he wasn’t good on defense, but I am saying that this was a prime year

3) I agree his overall RAPM probably looks far more impressive, but if you’re talking about the February to March stretch most of the difference was seen offensively iirc, so most of his improvement is likely gonna be offensive.

4) if we were ignoring that, the take would be that since the evidence seems to point that Jordan wasn’t a very impactful defender then he’s not an impactful defender, which isn’t what I’m saying.

5) hmm? I don’t recall saying pippen or Kawhi specifically, I think playoff bron was a step above while RS bron was a step below.

PIPM for pre 1997 doesn’t really make much sense, because it used luck adjusted RAPM as a measurement iirc, which we don’t have, so I don’t really know what that dataset is but it’s more likely a box score estimate of what it could be rather than anything else. RPM too.

The gitlab data is pretty bad, I think if you ask ceilingraiser or eminence they’d explain that better

Accross the court has numbers for 1997 and 1998 rapm, where they seen rather close in 1997 with MJ having a lead and pippen having a bit more of one in 1998. More importantly lebron is a tier ahead of those seasons based on data.

Whilst it would be reasonable to say Jordan was older and not as good on defense (although elgee I recall disagrees based on his tracking), that doesn’t equal Jordan is close to lebron on defense (keep in mind brons defensive peak came at 31, and then 35)

6) I feel there’s reasonable evidence lebron was a DPOY caliber player in the playoffs and as a whole had a defensive season as impactful as you’d expect from the best bigs of a year. I don’t see a reason to say Jordan was at that level.

It’s like saying we don’t have evidence Jordan was bull Russell but he might have been.

Here’s what I will say.

On the 1993 vs 1994 data. This does at the very least prove 1993 Jordan wasn’t as impactful defensively as you suggest. I agree defense is more about effort than offense is, but losing an ATG perimeter defender isn’t gonna typically improve your defense if you try harder, that’s a lot. More than that, he appeared in the defensive first team that year, so if we go by the route of believing contemporaries than him having a 2018 lebron season where everyone knew he wasn’t trying in that end isn’t valid. Their playoff defense didn’t stand out much either it seems, off of a cursory look

Had those teams lost lebron, and they were relatively cruising in the regular season, they would clearly be a bottom tier team defensively, I don’t think that’s very debatable. We’ve seen what happens when lebron went from his RS cruising on defense to cruising even more and becoming more of a neutral on defense even.

Implying that trying harder would be enough to mitigate Jordan’s impact basically supports my point, as lebrons that year impact couldn’t be mitigated by the team putting in 110%


I also think the argument here doesn’t make sense. I don’t have any reason to have X player at level X, I have lebron at this level, the onus is on you to prove that Jordan was at that level, since I’ve already made my post on bron. Showing that’s that shows pippen wasn’t all that as well isn’t going to prove that point, which is what that data suggest rather than Jordan being close to bron

As a whole we’ve assumeed something along the lines that lebron was a +1.5-2 on defense while Jordan was a +1.25-1.75.

I’ve made an argument that he’s more of a +3, +4 on defense, if you disagree with that sure, make an argument for that, but boosting up Jordan because I boosted bron on defense doesn’t make sense

As for the data you posted, let me give a rundown

The gitlab data is just known to be wonky as hell, you could ask others for more details but there’s a reason no one really ever posts RAPM from there.

Pre 1997 PIPM data isn’t really

While to me RPM is essentially worthless, it is a bit more interesting since at the very least it isn’t a completely different measurement like PIPM or invalid like gitlab, but you would need the standard deviations to compare accross seasons. The 2016 dataset looks as if it has a decently lower standard deviation than the 1997 one off a cursory glance, so a cross season comparison would favor bron a bit more than it already does. Rpm includes playoffs despite the game count btw, as far as I know.

So we have three datasets. What was brons pipm? That would be interesting, but I don’t think people that didn’t access the Google doc before he probated have access. I know his playoff PIPM led the league iirc

The RPM one seems to favor bron at a glance, esp considering the range and just distribution of values implies a different standard deviation, with the two caveats that we don’t have one for peak Jordan, and RPM changed its formula and privated it and it’s no longer really used here since that happened.

No where did I say there is definitive evidence Jordan wasn’t that impactful, if you believe he was that’s fine, there is limited evidence that suggests otherwise that is I think fair to mention

To say however that it’s ludicrous to claim lebron being a tier higher defensively, when my original thing was saying lebron was a tier higher defensively where he is normally rated on that end for this season, implies that because lebron was underrated Jordan must have been as well

Where do we stop? If someone that’s lebron with Kevin Garnett’s defense comes along so we say that person isn’t better than Jordan on defense either?

Here’s the crux of my issue.

I can agree that the evidence for defense pre 1997 is generally quite limited. While the evidence we do have for the 91-93 suggests he’s decent rather than elite, there are caveats that one applies to the 1993 season, the other data set isn’t complete yet

I don’t think that equals throwing them away, but it’s enough for me personally to say that 91 Jordan was probably an elite perimeter defensive season

However, the idea that, because I’m high on lebrons 2016 defense I must also be high on Jordan’s makes no sense which is the implication here. So far the argument doesn’t seem to be “why bron wasn’t that impactful” but more so “Bron shouldn’t have been more impactful than Jordan” as if there needs to be a certain distance between them.

If you want to make the claim that they’re roughly equal, I think either start by explaining why Jordan should rank that high outside of contemporary opinion, or why lebron shouldn’t rank where I rank him despite my post.

As it stands the same arguments could be made for Marcus smart being a better defender now than peak lebron which obviously isn’t true


1) Effort in my opinion can make a huge difference. 1.6 points in rDRtg isn't actually that big of a difference.

2) 1993 Jordan was definitely worse on D than 1991 Jordan. In fact I think Ben Taylor ranks that as MJ's worse defensive season on the Bulls after 1987.

3) Like other posters the cut off between ORAPM and DRAPM is problematic. His ORPM could be a lower and DRAPM higher. I would love to see the full season data because his RAPM could easily jump to +8 or even +9. But regardless RAPM is one measurement and not even the end-all-be-all or close to it.

4) He was a great defender, not just an impactful one.

5) Yea the data isn't good. Ok.. But then again that comes back to us not having much data which makes putting one All-Defensive selection a tier above the other very questionable.

No evidence I've ever seen shows Pippen as being a tier ahead of Jordan and you said Lebron was Pippen's tier so by deductive reasoning he must be Jordan's tier as well.

6) I see a reason for Jordan being DPOY level. Voters actually gave him a DPOY in 1988!

Putting Garnett in the same sentence defensively as either Lebron or Jordan is funny. Of course if Lebron was a Garnett-level defender he'd be a lot better but he is nowhere close to a Garnett level defender. That should be obvious.


1. It can make a difference, I don’t think a -1.7 jump is in the category of explainable by effort if they lost an ATG perimeter defender and didn’t add much back. A jump either way by that same amount puts them either 2nd in the league or league average

2. Hmm, I do see that his evaluation on that season is lower but it doesn’t seem to be lower by much although I don’t have his patreon stuff, I’d be curious to see his rankings per season, since we do have full data on later seasons for him where he ranks decently well, esp for his age, but he also notes that he doesn’t think there’s a large gap between his 91-93 defense and 96-98 defense, smarter D in 96-98 making up for less athleticism

3. Only Doc mentioned that right? He said something about it being based on whose around him which would still imply that the impact portion of it is correct vs ability, and he didn’t find my take unreasonable although he was higher on MJs defense than me

4. You know what I mean lol, I never said he wasn’t a great defender

5. My assumption on pippen is that he was the best perimeter defender of the 90s mostly just based off what I’ve heard since I’ve never deep dived into it, if that data shows he and MJ were around the same level and that level is lower than I perceived pippen to be at that just lowers pippen value rather than raising MJs.

All defensive selections as an argument would be the same as saying bron isn’t a tier ahead of Kobe defensively

I mean again I think DPOY awards are kind of BS, I don’t have smart as a top 2 defender on this own team, I dont have 2013 bron as that good of a defender either so I think that’s pretty consistent. Awards are decided by broadcasters and sportswriters, and ones today with access to data still suck at evaluating players

6. It’s a hypothetical isn’t it? I didn’t say bron was there.
But another way to look at it is, what evidence is there to say Jordan isn’t there? I’ve made my case on peak lebron having a sort of outlier year for himself in his 2016 run esp in the playoffs, what evidence is there 1991 Jordan is as good defensively as lebron in what I see as an outlier year on that end?

My viewpoint on lebrons impact is that, 99% of DPOY won by perimeter players are complete BS, I think bron probably in the playoffs played at a level of a legitimate DPOY level rather than just for his position. I think I’ve made a reasonable case for that

Essentially, if a typical prime lebron season>typical prime MJ season defensively, I think 2016 brons defense stood above and beyond his other defensive years, reaching a level he never reached before or since in his prime in the playoffs

Even if I were to concede MJs defense being better than I evaluate it to be, you’d have to convince me that it’s substantially better than the prime lebron seasons (when he focused on D, so Miami and 09 and 10 bron) on that end, because that’s how I view 2016 brons defense and made an argument for it.

My perception is that in the playoffs bron was the second best defender in the NBA regardless of position, behind playoff draymond whose pretty consistently been one of the most impactful playoff defenders ever. I don’t think prime Jordan or miami lebron reached those levels.

So since we seem to be in agreement on defensively Jordan being not too far off of Miami bron, you’d have to convince me either

My opinion of 2016 bron is wrong, or that Jordan is >> Miami bron defensively

A reevaluation of jordan by showing he’s not a tier behind Scottie doesn’t work if the data you shown demonstrates pippen going down a tier rather than jordan going up


Ok well now that you put it like that, I think you're overrating 2016 Lebron defensively. There is no way that 2016 Lebron is a tier better than 2013 Lebron defensively. In fact I'm not convinced he's better at all. You and several others said the 2016 Cavs had little offensive talent. There was Tristan Thompson, Iman Shumpert, Matthew Delavedova, Richard Jefferson.. and even guys like Kyrie and Love brought it on defense at times. Love made that huge play on Curry in Game 7... I know that isn't any kind of objective proof but the onus would be on you to prove that 2016 Lebron > 2013 Lebron defensively not on me to disprove it.
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#175 » by homecourtloss » Thu Jun 23, 2022 1:25 am

Djoker wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Djoker wrote:
1) Effort in my opinion can make a huge difference. 1.6 points in rDRtg isn't actually that big of a difference.

2) 1993 Jordan was definitely worse on D than 1991 Jordan. In fact I think Ben Taylor ranks that as MJ's worse defensive season on the Bulls after 1987.

3) Like other posters the cut off between ORAPM and DRAPM is problematic. His ORPM could be a lower and DRAPM higher. I would love to see the full season data because his RAPM could easily jump to +8 or even +9. But regardless RAPM is one measurement and not even the end-all-be-all or close to it.

4) He was a great defender, not just an impactful one.

5) Yea the data isn't good. Ok.. But then again that comes back to us not having much data which makes putting one All-Defensive selection a tier above the other very questionable.

No evidence I've ever seen shows Pippen as being a tier ahead of Jordan and you said Lebron was Pippen's tier so by deductive reasoning he must be Jordan's tier as well.

6) I see a reason for Jordan being DPOY level. Voters actually gave him a DPOY in 1988!

Putting Garnett in the same sentence defensively as either Lebron or Jordan is funny. Of course if Lebron was a Garnett-level defender he'd be a lot better but he is nowhere close to a Garnett level defender. That should be obvious.


1. It can make a difference, I don’t think a -1.7 jump is in the category of explainable by effort if they lost an ATG perimeter defender and didn’t add much back. A jump either way by that same amount puts them either 2nd in the league or league average

2. Hmm, I do see that his evaluation on that season is lower but it doesn’t seem to be lower by much although I don’t have his patreon stuff, I’d be curious to see his rankings per season, since we do have full data on later seasons for him where he ranks decently well, esp for his age, but he also notes that he doesn’t think there’s a large gap between his 91-93 defense and 96-98 defense, smarter D in 96-98 making up for less athleticism

3. Only Doc mentioned that right? He said something about it being based on whose around him which would still imply that the impact portion of it is correct vs ability, and he didn’t find my take unreasonable although he was higher on MJs defense than me

4. You know what I mean lol, I never said he wasn’t a great defender

5. My assumption on pippen is that he was the best perimeter defender of the 90s mostly just based off what I’ve heard since I’ve never deep dived into it, if that data shows he and MJ were around the same level and that level is lower than I perceived pippen to be at that just lowers pippen value rather than raising MJs.

All defensive selections as an argument would be the same as saying bron isn’t a tier ahead of Kobe defensively

I mean again I think DPOY awards are kind of BS, I don’t have smart as a top 2 defender on this own team, I dont have 2013 bron as that good of a defender either so I think that’s pretty consistent. Awards are decided by broadcasters and sportswriters, and ones today with access to data still suck at evaluating players

6. It’s a hypothetical isn’t it? I didn’t say bron was there.
But another way to look at it is, what evidence is there to say Jordan isn’t there? I’ve made my case on peak lebron having a sort of outlier year for himself in his 2016 run esp in the playoffs, what evidence is there 1991 Jordan is as good defensively as lebron in what I see as an outlier year on that end?

My viewpoint on lebrons impact is that, 99% of DPOY won by perimeter players are complete BS, I think bron probably in the playoffs played at a level of a legitimate DPOY level rather than just for his position. I think I’ve made a reasonable case for that

Essentially, if a typical prime lebron season>typical prime MJ season defensively, I think 2016 brons defense stood above and beyond his other defensive years, reaching a level he never reached before or since in his prime in the playoffs

Even if I were to concede MJs defense being better than I evaluate it to be, you’d have to convince me that it’s substantially better than the prime lebron seasons (when he focused on D, so Miami and 09 and 10 bron) on that end, because that’s how I view 2016 brons defense and made an argument for it.

My perception is that in the playoffs bron was the second best defender in the NBA regardless of position, behind playoff draymond whose pretty consistently been one of the most impactful playoff defenders ever. I don’t think prime Jordan or miami lebron reached those levels.

So since we seem to be in agreement on defensively Jordan being not too far off of Miami bron, you’d have to convince me either

My opinion of 2016 bron is wrong, or that Jordan is >> Miami bron defensively

A reevaluation of jordan by showing he’s not a tier behind Scottie doesn’t work if the data you shown demonstrates pippen going down a tier rather than jordan going up


Ok well now that you put it like that, I think you're overrating 2016 Lebron defensively. There is no way that 2016 Lebron is a tier better than 2013 Lebron defensively. In fact I'm not convinced he's better at all. You and several others said the 2016 Cavs had little offensive talent. There was Tristan Thompson, Iman Shumpert, Matthew Delavedova, Richard Jefferson.. and even guys like Kyrie and Love brought it on defense at times. Love made that huge play on Curry in Game 7... I know that isn't any kind of objective proof but the onus would be on you to prove that 2016 Lebron > 2013 Lebron defensively not on me to disprove it.


It goes against logic because 30+ year old wing players who are primary offense creators are never defensive hubs/anchors, and it seems logical that a younger Bron in 2013 should be better but every single metric we have, i.e., impact metrics, synergy data, etc., point to 2016 being a tier ahead defensively, and maybe more in the playoffs.
lessthanjake wrote:Kyrie was extremely impactful without LeBron, and basically had zero impact whatsoever if LeBron was on the court.

lessthanjake wrote: By playing in a way that prevents Kyrie from getting much impact, LeBron ensures that controlling for Kyrie has limited effect…
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#176 » by falcolombardi » Thu Jun 23, 2022 1:41 am

Djoker wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Djoker wrote:
1) Effort in my opinion can make a huge difference. 1.6 points in rDRtg isn't actually that big of a difference.

2) 1993 Jordan was definitely worse on D than 1991 Jordan. In fact I think Ben Taylor ranks that as MJ's worse defensive season on the Bulls after 1987.

3) Like other posters the cut off between ORAPM and DRAPM is problematic. His ORPM could be a lower and DRAPM higher. I would love to see the full season data because his RAPM could easily jump to +8 or even +9. But regardless RAPM is one measurement and not even the end-all-be-all or close to it.

4) He was a great defender, not just an impactful one.

5) Yea the data isn't good. Ok.. But then again that comes back to us not having much data which makes putting one All-Defensive selection a tier above the other very questionable.

No evidence I've ever seen shows Pippen as being a tier ahead of Jordan and you said Lebron was Pippen's tier so by deductive reasoning he must be Jordan's tier as well.

6) I see a reason for Jordan being DPOY level. Voters actually gave him a DPOY in 1988!

Putting Garnett in the same sentence defensively as either Lebron or Jordan is funny. Of course if Lebron was a Garnett-level defender he'd be a lot better but he is nowhere close to a Garnett level defender. That should be obvious.


1. It can make a difference, I don’t think a -1.7 jump is in the category of explainable by effort if they lost an ATG perimeter defender and didn’t add much back. A jump either way by that same amount puts them either 2nd in the league or league average

2. Hmm, I do see that his evaluation on that season is lower but it doesn’t seem to be lower by much although I don’t have his patreon stuff, I’d be curious to see his rankings per season, since we do have full data on later seasons for him where he ranks decently well, esp for his age, but he also notes that he doesn’t think there’s a large gap between his 91-93 defense and 96-98 defense, smarter D in 96-98 making up for less athleticism

3. Only Doc mentioned that right? He said something about it being based on whose around him which would still imply that the impact portion of it is correct vs ability, and he didn’t find my take unreasonable although he was higher on MJs defense than me

4. You know what I mean lol, I never said he wasn’t a great defender

5. My assumption on pippen is that he was the best perimeter defender of the 90s mostly just based off what I’ve heard since I’ve never deep dived into it, if that data shows he and MJ were around the same level and that level is lower than I perceived pippen to be at that just lowers pippen value rather than raising MJs.

All defensive selections as an argument would be the same as saying bron isn’t a tier ahead of Kobe defensively

I mean again I think DPOY awards are kind of BS, I don’t have smart as a top 2 defender on this own team, I dont have 2013 bron as that good of a defender either so I think that’s pretty consistent. Awards are decided by broadcasters and sportswriters, and ones today with access to data still suck at evaluating players

6. It’s a hypothetical isn’t it? I didn’t say bron was there.
But another way to look at it is, what evidence is there to say Jordan isn’t there? I’ve made my case on peak lebron having a sort of outlier year for himself in his 2016 run esp in the playoffs, what evidence is there 1991 Jordan is as good defensively as lebron in what I see as an outlier year on that end?

My viewpoint on lebrons impact is that, 99% of DPOY won by perimeter players are complete BS, I think bron probably in the playoffs played at a level of a legitimate DPOY level rather than just for his position. I think I’ve made a reasonable case for that

Essentially, if a typical prime lebron season>typical prime MJ season defensively, I think 2016 brons defense stood above and beyond his other defensive years, reaching a level he never reached before or since in his prime in the playoffs

Even if I were to concede MJs defense being better than I evaluate it to be, you’d have to convince me that it’s substantially better than the prime lebron seasons (when he focused on D, so Miami and 09 and 10 bron) on that end, because that’s how I view 2016 brons defense and made an argument for it.

My perception is that in the playoffs bron was the second best defender in the NBA regardless of position, behind playoff draymond whose pretty consistently been one of the most impactful playoff defenders ever. I don’t think prime Jordan or miami lebron reached those levels.

So since we seem to be in agreement on defensively Jordan being not too far off of Miami bron, you’d have to convince me either

My opinion of 2016 bron is wrong, or that Jordan is >> Miami bron defensively

A reevaluation of jordan by showing he’s not a tier behind Scottie doesn’t work if the data you shown demonstrates pippen going down a tier rather than jordan going up


Ok well now that you put it like that, I think you're overrating 2016 Lebron defensively. There is no way that 2016 Lebron is a tier better than 2013 Lebron defensively. In fact I'm not convinced he's better at all. You and several others said the 2016 Cavs had little offensive talent. There was Tristan Thompson, Iman Shumpert, Matthew Delavedova, Richard Jefferson.. and even guys like Kyrie and Love brought it on defense at times. Love made that huge play on Curry in Game 7... I know that isn't any kind of objective proof but the onus would be on you to prove that 2016 Lebron > 2013 Lebron defensively not on me to disprove it.


But, he already did his argument backed by a ton of data for lebron 16 defense over 2013 lebron defense

Of course he doesnt have unquestionable proof, that just doesnt exist for defense in basketball but he already made his argument and backed it up

It is up to you then to say why you disagree with his reasoning
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#177 » by MyUniBroDavis » Thu Jun 23, 2022 1:47 am

Djoker wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Djoker wrote:
1) Effort in my opinion can make a huge difference. 1.6 points in rDRtg isn't actually that big of a difference.

2) 1993 Jordan was definitely worse on D than 1991 Jordan. In fact I think Ben Taylor ranks that as MJ's worse defensive season on the Bulls after 1987.

3) Like other posters the cut off between ORAPM and DRAPM is problematic. His ORPM could be a lower and DRAPM higher. I would love to see the full season data because his RAPM could easily jump to +8 or even +9. But regardless RAPM is one measurement and not even the end-all-be-all or close to it.

4) He was a great defender, not just an impactful one.

5) Yea the data isn't good. Ok.. But then again that comes back to us not having much data which makes putting one All-Defensive selection a tier above the other very questionable.

No evidence I've ever seen shows Pippen as being a tier ahead of Jordan and you said Lebron was Pippen's tier so by deductive reasoning he must be Jordan's tier as well.

6) I see a reason for Jordan being DPOY level. Voters actually gave him a DPOY in 1988!

Putting Garnett in the same sentence defensively as either Lebron or Jordan is funny. Of course if Lebron was a Garnett-level defender he'd be a lot better but he is nowhere close to a Garnett level defender. That should be obvious.


1. It can make a difference, I don’t think a -1.7 jump is in the category of explainable by effort if they lost an ATG perimeter defender and didn’t add much back. A jump either way by that same amount puts them either 2nd in the league or league average

2. Hmm, I do see that his evaluation on that season is lower but it doesn’t seem to be lower by much although I don’t have his patreon stuff, I’d be curious to see his rankings per season, since we do have full data on later seasons for him where he ranks decently well, esp for his age, but he also notes that he doesn’t think there’s a large gap between his 91-93 defense and 96-98 defense, smarter D in 96-98 making up for less athleticism

3. Only Doc mentioned that right? He said something about it being based on whose around him which would still imply that the impact portion of it is correct vs ability, and he didn’t find my take unreasonable although he was higher on MJs defense than me

4. You know what I mean lol, I never said he wasn’t a great defender

5. My assumption on pippen is that he was the best perimeter defender of the 90s mostly just based off what I’ve heard since I’ve never deep dived into it, if that data shows he and MJ were around the same level and that level is lower than I perceived pippen to be at that just lowers pippen value rather than raising MJs.

All defensive selections as an argument would be the same as saying bron isn’t a tier ahead of Kobe defensively

I mean again I think DPOY awards are kind of BS, I don’t have smart as a top 2 defender on this own team, I dont have 2013 bron as that good of a defender either so I think that’s pretty consistent. Awards are decided by broadcasters and sportswriters, and ones today with access to data still suck at evaluating players

6. It’s a hypothetical isn’t it? I didn’t say bron was there.
But another way to look at it is, what evidence is there to say Jordan isn’t there? I’ve made my case on peak lebron having a sort of outlier year for himself in his 2016 run esp in the playoffs, what evidence is there 1991 Jordan is as good defensively as lebron in what I see as an outlier year on that end?

My viewpoint on lebrons impact is that, 99% of DPOY won by perimeter players are complete BS, I think bron probably in the playoffs played at a level of a legitimate DPOY level rather than just for his position. I think I’ve made a reasonable case for that

Essentially, if a typical prime lebron season>typical prime MJ season defensively, I think 2016 brons defense stood above and beyond his other defensive years, reaching a level he never reached before or since in his prime in the playoffs

Even if I were to concede MJs defense being better than I evaluate it to be, you’d have to convince me that it’s substantially better than the prime lebron seasons (when he focused on D, so Miami and 09 and 10 bron) on that end, because that’s how I view 2016 brons defense and made an argument for it.

My perception is that in the playoffs bron was the second best defender in the NBA regardless of position, behind playoff draymond whose pretty consistently been one of the most impactful playoff defenders ever. I don’t think prime Jordan or miami lebron reached those levels.

So since we seem to be in agreement on defensively Jordan being not too far off of Miami bron, you’d have to convince me either

My opinion of 2016 bron is wrong, or that Jordan is >> Miami bron defensively

A reevaluation of jordan by showing he’s not a tier behind Scottie doesn’t work if the data you shown demonstrates pippen going down a tier rather than jordan going up


Ok well now that you put it like that, I think you're overrating 2016 Lebron defensively. There is no way that 2016 Lebron is a tier better than 2013 Lebron defensively. In fact I'm not convinced he's better at all. You and several others said the 2016 Cavs had little offensive talent. There was Tristan Thompson, Iman Shumpert, Matthew Delavedova, Richard Jefferson.. and even guys like Kyrie and Love brought it on defense at times. Love made that huge play on Curry in Game 7... I know that isn't any kind of objective proof but the onus would be on you to prove that 2016 Lebron > 2013 Lebron defensively not on me to disprove it.


Bro why have you been engaging me this long on his defense if you didn’t see my post on his defense lol
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#178 » by Djoker » Thu Jun 23, 2022 3:02 pm

MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Djoker wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
1. It can make a difference, I don’t think a -1.7 jump is in the category of explainable by effort if they lost an ATG perimeter defender and didn’t add much back. A jump either way by that same amount puts them either 2nd in the league or league average

2. Hmm, I do see that his evaluation on that season is lower but it doesn’t seem to be lower by much although I don’t have his patreon stuff, I’d be curious to see his rankings per season, since we do have full data on later seasons for him where he ranks decently well, esp for his age, but he also notes that he doesn’t think there’s a large gap between his 91-93 defense and 96-98 defense, smarter D in 96-98 making up for less athleticism

3. Only Doc mentioned that right? He said something about it being based on whose around him which would still imply that the impact portion of it is correct vs ability, and he didn’t find my take unreasonable although he was higher on MJs defense than me

4. You know what I mean lol, I never said he wasn’t a great defender

5. My assumption on pippen is that he was the best perimeter defender of the 90s mostly just based off what I’ve heard since I’ve never deep dived into it, if that data shows he and MJ were around the same level and that level is lower than I perceived pippen to be at that just lowers pippen value rather than raising MJs.

All defensive selections as an argument would be the same as saying bron isn’t a tier ahead of Kobe defensively

I mean again I think DPOY awards are kind of BS, I don’t have smart as a top 2 defender on this own team, I dont have 2013 bron as that good of a defender either so I think that’s pretty consistent. Awards are decided by broadcasters and sportswriters, and ones today with access to data still suck at evaluating players

6. It’s a hypothetical isn’t it? I didn’t say bron was there.
But another way to look at it is, what evidence is there to say Jordan isn’t there? I’ve made my case on peak lebron having a sort of outlier year for himself in his 2016 run esp in the playoffs, what evidence is there 1991 Jordan is as good defensively as lebron in what I see as an outlier year on that end?

My viewpoint on lebrons impact is that, 99% of DPOY won by perimeter players are complete BS, I think bron probably in the playoffs played at a level of a legitimate DPOY level rather than just for his position. I think I’ve made a reasonable case for that

Essentially, if a typical prime lebron season>typical prime MJ season defensively, I think 2016 brons defense stood above and beyond his other defensive years, reaching a level he never reached before or since in his prime in the playoffs

Even if I were to concede MJs defense being better than I evaluate it to be, you’d have to convince me that it’s substantially better than the prime lebron seasons (when he focused on D, so Miami and 09 and 10 bron) on that end, because that’s how I view 2016 brons defense and made an argument for it.

My perception is that in the playoffs bron was the second best defender in the NBA regardless of position, behind playoff draymond whose pretty consistently been one of the most impactful playoff defenders ever. I don’t think prime Jordan or miami lebron reached those levels.

So since we seem to be in agreement on defensively Jordan being not too far off of Miami bron, you’d have to convince me either

My opinion of 2016 bron is wrong, or that Jordan is >> Miami bron defensively

A reevaluation of jordan by showing he’s not a tier behind Scottie doesn’t work if the data you shown demonstrates pippen going down a tier rather than jordan going up


Ok well now that you put it like that, I think you're overrating 2016 Lebron defensively. There is no way that 2016 Lebron is a tier better than 2013 Lebron defensively. In fact I'm not convinced he's better at all. You and several others said the 2016 Cavs had little offensive talent. There was Tristan Thompson, Iman Shumpert, Matthew Delavedova, Richard Jefferson.. and even guys like Kyrie and Love brought it on defense at times. Love made that huge play on Curry in Game 7... I know that isn't any kind of objective proof but the onus would be on you to prove that 2016 Lebron > 2013 Lebron defensively not on me to disprove it.


Bro why have you been engaging me this long on his defense if you didn’t see my post on his defense lol


Of course I saw your post. I want to respond in detail but there is too much to break down.

1) For one, you are relying on player tracking that you quoted from another poster but we don't have player tracking in 2012-13.
It started in 2013-14 amazingly enough. Anyways we can't compare.

2) His regular season defense being DPOY worthy is highly doubtful. He didn't get selected to the 1st Team All-Defense because of "Draymond and Kawhi being crazy" by your words ok. Why not 2nd team? Why did Butler and George get the nod over Lebron?

The Cavs that year were nothing special defensively. They were 10th in DRtg at 104.5 (-1.9). In the postseason they actually got worse with 106.0 DRtg (-0.7) and 7th out of 16 teams. They were just a "good" defensive team. It's difficult to say they were anything more than that.

3) Regarding coasting in the regular season being ok. Coasting is a luxury that players in a lot of situations cannot afford. Kyrie was probably the 2nd best player in the 2016 playoffs and probably flat out the 2nd best player in the Eastern Conference after Lebron. Then he had another all-star in Kevin Love who was a top 5/7 player in the East when healthy as well. The talent on the 2016 Cavaliers was several levels above the talent on other East teams. And of course that allowed him to coast in the regular season knowing that they don't need HCA to beat their opponents. It's ok to cruise but it's disingenuous to excuse cruising in the regular season and not mention the favorable circumstances that allowed it in the first place.

And you're quick to dismiss Lebron's poor box score numbers in the first two rounds of the playoffs saying "He didn't need to go harder". The same is true for MJ where the 1991 Bulls pasted their East competition but we rarely hear people say "Oh MJ would have put up even better numbers and did better on defense if he needed to...". Come to think of, the 1991 Bulls playoff dominance is probably the reason why MJ put up 2-3 fewer points/75 in 1991 compared to surrounding years.

4) I also think a lot of your assessment of Lebron's Finals defense which is really the crux of your argument is largely based on conjecture. Yes chasedown blocks are valuable because they erase two points but a great defense shouldn't be in a situation to make chasedown blocks. A lot of these plays occurred on the break where either the Cavs (sometimes Lebron) turned the ball over and/or they didn't get back in transition. A player that prevents transition opportunities at the rim does better than one who makes chasedown blocks because those plays are hard to pull off and relatively rare. And you make it sound like Lebron was blocking 10 shots in each game. His blocks in Game 7 affected 3 out of 83 shots that the Warriors attempted which is 3.6%. That alone is far from enough to call that performance legendary from a defensive standpoint. Which I'm not saying you did or relied just on blocks but you spent way too much time discussing his blocks as if they matter that much.

By the way I'm not saying he didn't have a great defensive series. He absolutely did and I say that based on the eye test but one of the greatest defensive performances ever or DPOY+++ as you say. I'm not buying that. Lebron is a perimeter player and the rim protection, deterrence etc. that he provides simply pales in comparison to elite big defender. DPOY+++ performances as you call them can be attributed to Duncan, Garnett, Hakeem, Draymond maybe. But not Lebron...

By the way I do applaud the effort! :clap:
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#179 » by Colbinii » Thu Jun 23, 2022 4:07 pm

1) LeBron James (2016)
B) LeBron James (2017)
C) LeBron James (2013)
D) LeBron James (2012)

2) Tim Duncan (2003)
3) Wilt Chamberlain (1967)


#1 LeBron James
Spoiler:
I have LeBron James at #1 as I believe he reached a level in the post-season no other player has reached. He was impacting more possessions (Offense and Defense combined) in games no other player in NBA history could have impacted and did so for multiple games per series.

This is my quote from Odinn's Top 12 seasons of Player X and Y thread, which I still standby to this day.

The first tier are the 4 seasons where these players had the combination of physical imprint combined with a clear understanding of the system and could bring their games to levels, when needed, that no other perimeter players in NBA history have achieved. I value Lebron's offensive heliocentrism here and his team defense more in a vacuum than Jordan's scoring and turnover economy with his risk-defined style on the defensive end.


Focusing more on Jordan and LeBron versus the rest of the perimeter players, I am not seriously considering another perimeter player until #10, which shows just how incredible Jordan and LeBron were as two-way players, high volume scorers and offensive savant's in offensive systems they understood inside-and-out.

Jumping into some statistics maybe not covered in the 10-series novel posted earlier in this thread (which I haven't read in-full yet)...

LeBron James vs Detroit: 4 Games, 22.8/9.0/6.8, 1.8 steals, 21.1 3P%, 3.3 TO

Essentially a mediocre to below average prime LeBron series by the box-score, but the most important part of every player at this stage in the Top Peaks (and really all 40 of the top peaks) is how much impact a player has beyond the box-score. Kyrie Irving, for example, had a spectacularly efficient series: 27.5 Points, 6.5 TOV%, 58.5 TS%. The point emphasis and focus though should be this: The Cavaliers played at a net +16.8 Points/100 with James on the court and +3.0 Points/100 with Kyrie on the court. The Cavaliers offense exceeded 120 Ortg with James on the court, a level reserved for the GOAT offensive players.

LeBron James vs Atlanta: 24.3/8.5/7.8, 3.0 steals, 4.25 TO, 57.3 TS%

Box-Score looks a bit better, but let's back up. Atlanta is a 101.4 Defense Rating (2nd in NBA) and 3.49 SRS team. This team is significantly better than either opponent Jordan faced in round 1 or 2 in 1991. The Hawks are coming off a series played in 2016 holding their opponents to a 94.5 Ortg. That's incredible, and the team was Boston who was respectable (2.83 SRS, 8th in NBA, 10th rated Offense and 4th Rated Defense).

Now, look at what LeBron and the Cavaliers did to dismantle this defense--the 2nd best in the league and one looking like an all-time great defense through the regular season and 1st round of the playoffs...The Cavaliers played at a net +19,1 Points/100 with James on the court and +18.4 Points/100 with Kyrie on the court and +23.3 with Kevin Love. If anyone think LeBron is difficult to play with or diminishing his teammates efficiency...
LeBron James On-Court Ortg: 122.2
Kevin Love On-Court Ortg: 123.7
Kyrie Irving On-Court Ortg: 124.6

These numbers are against a 101.4 Rated Defense, that's producing an offense over +20 points per 100 better than what this defense gave up in the regular season and nearly +30 points per 100 better than what they gave up against the 10th best offense in round 1 over 6 games.

Next-up, LeBronto--the team that wins the championship in its first year after LeBron leaves the conference.

LeBron James vs Toronto: 26.0/8.5/6.7, 2.0 steals, 66.5 TS%

There is the ultra-efficient LeBron scoring series but perhaps not even the best part of the series from LeBron. While he posted an all-time great scoring series, and led the Cavaliers to a 121.3 Ortg when on the court resulting in a +19.2 Net Rating per 100 when on the court, it was his defense against the 5th best offense which leaves me the most impressed. The Cavaliers best defenders by on-court rating were point-of-attack defenders (We saw this in 2020 with Caruso as well where LeBron and a POA defender were all-time great levels defensively) and this is something when combined with LeBron James makes his defense unfair. LeBron is so cerebral and intelligent defensively, having someone be able to disrupt and force the offense into making a decision on your clock is playing right into the hands of a defense and IQ Savant like James. This skill is also something which made Jordan so amazing at getting steals and being disruptive when his Point-of-attack point guards like Armstrong and Harper where running around hounding the ball.

NBA Finals--It has been talked about extensively. Best Finals ever and best 3-game stretch in NBA History and not just because LeBron was hot shooting.


#2 Tim Duncan
I voted him #1 in the last peaks project. Simply able to appreciate Jordan and LeBron as defenders a bit more as well as their volume/resiliency as scorers carrying more weight for me than it has in the past. I like Duncan the best as a two-way guy out of all the big-men which makes him #3 overall [and #2 for my remaining peaks].

Most of this is copy-paste from the previous peaks project and this first part is simply me explaining how 2002 and 2003 were similar and the differences between the two seasons.

This season starts as a follow-up to what many believe as Tim Duncan’s “real peak”, circa 2002. Duncan came off a productive regular season in 2002 and a great playoff run which resulted in an unfortunate [for non-Laker fans] end in only the Western Conference Semi-Finals where Duncan showed why he was worthy of the MVP trophy by outplaying the dynamic duo of Shaq and Kobe. While Duncan and the Spurs lost in 5 games to the eventual NBA-Champions, the ever-silent Tim Duncan put on a showcase while missing his career-long running mate David Robinson to injuries while his second option Tony Parker experienced major growing pains as a 19-year old Rookie. Duncan showcased an ability in 2002 to carry an offensive load many doubted while still being the best defender in the league.

2003 Featured a new strategy for Popovich, Duncan and the rest of the San Antonio Spurs. After David Robinson’s body ended 2002 on the pavement the Spurs decided to rest Robinson during the season [78 GP in 2002, 64 in 2003] while actively grooming Tony Parker and featuring him more offensively as he buds into an NBA-level Point Guard. Knowing the aforementioned changes, the Spurs decided to “run it back” with a similar roster while bolstering the bench with the addition of Steve Kerr to add much needed spacing and a veteran presence; an aspect Antonio Daniels failed to deliver on in 2002. Ultimately this deal doesn’t show up in the box-score as Kerr was a DNP for a majority of the playoffs [averaging a mere 4.6 MPG in 10 games] while young players like Tony Parker (20), Manu Ginobili (25) and Stephen Jackson (24) took on larger roles on both ends of the court.

Spoiler:
Statistical Comparison

RS Per Game: 23.3 Points, 12.9 TRB, 3.2 ORB, 3.9 AST, 0.7 STL, 2.9 BLK, 3.1 TOV
PS Per Game: 24.7 Points, 15.4 TRB, 4.0 ORB, 5.3 AST, 0.6 STL, 3.3 BLK, 3.2 TOV
RS Per 100: 31.6 Points, 17.5 TRB, 4.3 ORB, 5.3 AST, 1.4 STL, 4.0 BLK, 4.2 TOV
PS Per 100: 30.6 Points, 19.1 TRB, 5.0 ORB, 6.6 AST, 0.8 STL, 4.1 BLK, 3.9 TOV
RS Individual Ortg/Drtg: 112/94; +18
PS Individual Ortg/Drtg: 116/92; +24
RS Advanced: 26.9 PER, 56.4 TS% [+4.5 Rel League Avg], 45.5% FTR, 19.5 AST%, 12.9 TOV%, 28.0 USG%, 16.5 WS [.248 WS/48], 7.4 BPM, 7.6 VORP
PS Advanced: 28.4 PER, 57.7 TS% [+5.8 Rel League Avg], 56.3% FTR, 25.5 AST%, 12.9 TOV%, 26.4 USG%, 5.9 WS [.279 WS/48], 11.6 BPM, 3.5 VORP
RS On/Off (Offense then Defense): 107.9/97.5 +9.7; 98.1/103.2 -5.1; Net: +9.1 On Court, +14.8 On/Off
PS On/Off (Sample too Small): 105.3/90.0 +15.3; 96.2/104.0 -7.8; Net: +9.1 On Court, +23.1 On/Off

When doing a side-by-side comparison it is quite evident [and clear] that Duncan performed even greater in the post-season than he did during his MVP-level Regular Season. This alone should be a tell-tale sign that Duncan performed at his highest level against the highest level of competition. Duncan’s ability to be an elite playmaker from the post in combination with his elite rim protection has never been duplicated since the merger. Only 4 other times has a player averaged 5+ Assists and 3+ Blocks in a series: 1977 Walton and 2002 Tim Duncan and then two other times in 3 game series from Chris Webber and Bob Lanier. Duncan’s gigantic scoring advantage over Walton [24.7 PPG on +5.8 TS% vs 18.2 PPG on +1.6 TS%] makes Duncan’s run one of the most statistically unique Playoff Runs in NBA History.

Looking back at the 2003 season as a whole the league was in a slow, grindy and defensive era. With League Average Offensive Rating at 103.6, True Shooting Percentage at 51.9% and Pace at 91 Possessions/Game the game was at it’s apex for defense [Post-Merger] while yet to adapt to the space provided by the 3-point line. This resulted in the post being cluttered offensively and big men to have a great impact on the defensive end.

The Spurs figured out how to capitalize on the Slow and defensive minded era; Tim Duncan. Tim Duncan was utilized in a way to generate 3 point shots and specifically the corner 3. The Spurs led the league in Percentage of Corner 3’s taken with 40% of their 3 point shots being corner 3’s. This was in large part due to the driving ability of a young Tony Parker [still 20 years old] and the gravity which Duncan encompassed offensively. The second most important part of the Spurs offense was the ability to generate lay-ups; again generated by the ability of Duncan’s passing from the high-post, low-block and free-throw area.

The Spurs offense in the post-season, with the catalyst Tim Duncan, was able to play the type of game [Spurs Ball] in all of the series they played in. The Pace in their 4 series were 90.8, 90.4, 92.6 and 87.8 [FWIW the Spurs Pace for the season was exactly 90.0, the average of the 4 series being 90.4]. This was in large part because of Tim Duncan’s ability to control the game as a PF/C; a rarity in the history of the NBA.

When the Spurs were unable to play at the exact pace they wanted they were able to adapt and outplay their opponents at what they did best; specifically the Nets and Mavericks. As you may know, the 2003 Mavericks and 2003 Nets were each the best in the league at one aspect of the game. The Mavericks were the best offense in the NBA while the Nets were the best Defense in the NBA. Ultimately both teams were dismantled by the Spurs by their own game.

Mavericks: 110.7 Ortg played at their pace [92.5 RS, 92.4 PS] and outscored by 30 points over the 6 game series. The Mavericks were held to a 104.0 Offense [-6.7] while the Spurs nearly matched Dallas’ season Offensive Rating in 109.4.

Nets: 98.1 Drtg played at the Spurs pace [91.6 RS, 87.8 PS] which took away the ability to run with Jason Kidd, one of the most dynamic playmakers in the open-court in NBA History. The Nets were unable to stop the Spurs as the Spurs eclipsed the 98.1 Drtg the Nets had in the regular season [Spurs put up 100.0 Ortg] but the slower pace affected the Nets greatly, posting a mere 93.3 Ortg in the lopsided; 6 game series.

NBA Finals Deep-Dive:

While the Spurs and Nets faced off in the 2003 Finals the biggest match-ups were Parker/Kidd and Collins/Duncan. The Nets were going to win if Collins could help keep Duncan in check [Collins is an all-time great post-defender] or if Kidd could run up-and-down the floor. While I highlighted earlier in my post about the Spurs [and Duncan’s] ability to slow down the Nets by eliminating transition opportunities, one often major aspect to the series was Collins inability to stay out of foul trouble while guarding Tim Duncan [and Kenyon Martin].

Kenyon Martin fell into Foul Trouble in Games 1, 2, 4, 5 while Collins fouled out in Game 3 and was routinely in foul trouble throughout the series. This was, in large part, due to Duncan’s post-presence [averaging 9 FTA/G and a 49.5% FTR].

FWIW, Jason Collins was absolutely dominant in the post-season as a defender. In his 529 minutes on the court the Nets posted a 92.2 Defensive Rating [Absurd] but in his 446 minutes on the bench the Nets were a measly 106.1 [A difference of 13.1 Points per 100]. I understand it is a small sample size, but the fact remains that Jason Collins was a key part for a Nets victory in 2003 and Duncan single handedly took him out of the game [as well as Kenyon Martin].

Individual Offensive/Defensive Ratings: I know many people love these, I have been more interested in these statistics lately [in part because of E-Balla calling me out on not understanding them fully] and re-analyzing them with-in the statistical landscape and scope. They often line-up with my personal eye-test [though I do wear glasses] and they happen to capture a good part of the game.

Duncans in the 2003 NBA Finals: 109 Ortg/83 Drtg [Net + 26]
Jordan 1991: 125/102 [Net +23]
James 2012: 117/109 [Net +8]
Shaq 01: 115/101 [Net +14]

Scoring: Duncan was able to score 27.5% of his teams points in the post-season.
Jordan 1991: 30.8%
LeBron 2012: 28.0%
Shaq 01: 32.8%


#3 Wilt Chamberlain
I will go into this further in the next thread(s) but I think this is the year he put it all together, dialed back some of the volume scoring and had his largest impact on the game of basketball. Interesting to think he could have had the highest peak from 1967-1991.
MyUniBroDavis
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Re: RealGM Greatest Peaks Project (2022): #1 

Post#180 » by MyUniBroDavis » Thu Jun 23, 2022 9:24 pm

Djoker wrote:
MyUniBroDavis wrote:
Djoker wrote:
Ok well now that you put it like that, I think you're overrating 2016 Lebron defensively. There is no way that 2016 Lebron is a tier better than 2013 Lebron defensively. In fact I'm not convinced he's better at all. You and several others said the 2016 Cavs had little offensive talent. There was Tristan Thompson, Iman Shumpert, Matthew Delavedova, Richard Jefferson.. and even guys like Kyrie and Love brought it on defense at times. Love made that huge play on Curry in Game 7... I know that isn't any kind of objective proof but the onus would be on you to prove that 2016 Lebron > 2013 Lebron defensively not on me to disprove it.


Bro why have you been engaging me this long on his defense if you didn’t see my post on his defense lol


Of course I saw your post. I want to respond in detail but there is too much to break down.

1) For one, you are relying on player tracking that you quoted from another poster but we don't have player tracking in 2012-13.
It started in 2013-14 amazingly enough. Anyways we can't compare.

2) His regular season defense being DPOY worthy is highly doubtful. He didn't get selected to the 1st Team All-Defense because of "Draymond and Kawhi being crazy" by your words ok. Why not 2nd team? Why did Butler and George get the nod over Lebron?

The Cavs that year were nothing special defensively. They were 10th in DRtg at 104.5 (-1.9). In the postseason they actually got worse with 106.0 DRtg (-0.7) and 7th out of 16 teams. They were just a "good" defensive team. It's difficult to say they were anything more than that.

3) Regarding coasting in the regular season being ok. Coasting is a luxury that players in a lot of situations cannot afford. Kyrie was probably the 2nd best player in the 2016 playoffs and probably flat out the 2nd best player in the Eastern Conference after Lebron. Then he had another all-star in Kevin Love who was a top 5/7 player in the East when healthy as well. The talent on the 2016 Cavaliers was several levels above the talent on other East teams. And of course that allowed him to coast in the regular season knowing that they don't need HCA to beat their opponents. It's ok to cruise but it's disingenuous to excuse cruising in the regular season and not mention the favorable circumstances that allowed it in the first place.

And you're quick to dismiss Lebron's poor box score numbers in the first two rounds of the playoffs saying "He didn't need to go harder". The same is true for MJ where the 1991 Bulls pasted their East competition but we rarely hear people say "Oh MJ would have put up even better numbers and did better on defense if he needed to...". Come to think of, the 1991 Bulls playoff dominance is probably the reason why MJ put up 2-3 fewer points/75 in 1991 compared to surrounding years.

4) I also think a lot of your assessment of Lebron's Finals defense which is really the crux of your argument is largely based on conjecture. Yes chasedown blocks are valuable because they erase two points but a great defense shouldn't be in a situation to make chasedown blocks. A lot of these plays occurred on the break where either the Cavs (sometimes Lebron) turned the ball over and/or they didn't get back in transition. A player that prevents transition opportunities at the rim does better than one who makes chasedown blocks because those plays are hard to pull off and relatively rare. And you make it sound like Lebron was blocking 10 shots in each game. His blocks in Game 7 affected 3 out of 83 shots that the Warriors attempted which is 3.6%. That alone is far from enough to call that performance legendary from a defensive standpoint. Which I'm not saying you did or relied just on blocks but you spent way too much time discussing his blocks as if they matter that much.

By the way I'm not saying he didn't have a great defensive series. He absolutely did and I say that based on the eye test but one of the greatest defensive performances ever or DPOY+++ as you say. I'm not buying that. Lebron is a perimeter player and the rim protection, deterrence etc. that he provides simply pales in comparison to elite big defender. DPOY+++ performances as you call them can be attributed to Duncan, Garnett, Hakeem, Draymond maybe. But not Lebron...

By the way I do applaud the effort! :clap:


1. So it is valid to say player tracking wasn’t available for the 2013 season, but his 2016 player tracking data, especially in the playoffs are essentially absurd. The caveat is tracking data has known flaws but we can say his tracking data comes out as elite in 3/4 series, it’s still elite vs the raptors but volume goes down. It would be INCREDIBLY suprising if lebrons 2013 data looked anywhere near as impressive.

We have the post all star break 2014 lebron data, after he turnt it up on defense a bit, which seems good but not as good as 2016 brons regular season, never mind the playoffs

One way to look at it is that his tracking data in the playoffs looks extremely similar to giannis’s 2020 regular season data, in both volume and impact.

It’s hard to understate how good giannis’s defensive year was that regular season, especially in this era where defensive impact is limited. For example, by shotcharts rapm I think relative to his peers it comes out as best since 2010, if we take into account that the top guys have less separation between them nowadays it becomes even more impressive. (2010 is the start of the data on that site). It was an all time great defensive season on par with historic defenders peaks, lebrons tracking data comes out ahead of that (and Giannis is absolutely elite in that regard, you wouldn’t interpret it as worse than you’d expect) so it’s reasonable to say it’s probably ahead of 2013 brons I think, or at least it’s consistent with what I’ve said about his playoff defense

I like Synergy data a lot but with how it’s sampled it’s only really valuable for the regular season, in my opinion although it has value in the playoffs too in context, I do have for 2013 lebron and 2013 lebron comes out as a great defender while 2016 lebron comes out as a way beyond him.

2. I’ve said I don’t care about DPOY and all defensive teams because they are largely narrative based, 2020 lebron is by far his best defensive regular season for example

As for the cavs defense in general, as a whole they performed at an elite level with lebron on the court, and reverted to an nba worst level without him. The only exception would be the raptors series, but the caveat here is that it isn’t that they performed badly with lebron on the court, they performed at an absolutely elite level with him on the court but the raptors just couldn’t score on them with bron off the court, the majority of these minutes of course being in garbage time. It’s hard for me to believe that’s anything more than noise

There are issues with comparing player on court data to team data like this, but lebron can only control what happens when he’s on the court, and we can say that the roster performed at a top 10 level defensively with him on the court in the first two rounds, and then at a league best level over the last two against the better offenses they faced (keeping in mind offensive competition)

3. Hmm, I don’t agree with your take on the cavs teams, as I’ve said they played like a 20-30 win team with lebron off the court. Kyrie went crazy offensively in the playoffs but he’s a horrible defender, he definately wasn’t the second best player in the playoffs even if he was up there offensively.

Him cruising is still bringing a 20-30 win team to a 57 win teammates

I don’t think anyone’s really denying Jordan’s offensive dominance either

4. All teams give up transition opportunities, the ways to stop those would be to either prevent them, as you said, or a chasedown.

I think your point on the cavs giving up too much in transition rather than denying it at all would be valid if they gave up a lot of transition opportunities, but in the RS, 14 shots a game on in early shotclock (or transition) of 22-18 time period, vs the cavs they got 8 of these a game.

So we can say that the cavs were generally great at getting back on defense and bron was great at situations where they did give up transition opportunities

Again, the way to look at it is, how many of these opportunities would other players have stopped, opportunity cost an all of that.

It’s not that he got so many blocks even though it was a lot for a perimeter player, it was the relative value of these blocks and steals.

Again, simplified, 3 blocks 1 on 1 in the post as a late shotclock option is probably the same value as 1 chasedown block

Don’t have much time so had to be brief

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