LukaTheGOAT wrote:Djoker wrote:homecourtloss wrote:1. '09 LeBron — the impact numbers in both RS and PS and the carry job of a that cast to 66 wins and an 8+ SRS are unrivaled. I think this is the peak season even though for concentrated amounts of time, I believe 2016-2017 LeBron is a better player
2. ‘91 Jordan- Contention for GOAT season. Everything just came together between athleticism, playmaking, smoothness of that turnaround fade, everything
3. ‘12 LeBron — high motor impact throughout RS and PS and incredibly robust overall game
4. ‘13 LeBron — same as ‘12, 27 game win streak, playoffs impact metrics not as good, but much of that has to do with playing with an injured Wade who wasn’t very good in the playoffs.
5. 16 LeBron — Regular season not as good but highest possible level vs. 73 win team. Unbelievably low FTr even though shot more at the rim than in any other season. More calls there and season moves up.
6. 90 Jordan —Just under his best season
7. ‘89 Jordan - Close to 1990 Jordan
8. ‘17 LeBron — offensive mastery of game in playoffs, and only literally the GOAT team could stop him from winning a title. I think this is his offensive peak but regular season not as good. Cannot see a team losing a title unless it’s a juggernaut of juggernaut team in the Finals and even then, he was +6 on court through 4 games
9. ‘88 Jordan — not as polished as later versions
10. ‘10 LeBron — Don’t feel right placing him this far down since metrics close to 2009 metrics but playoffs not as sublime but did have injury. There’s a very good argument this is a top 3 season for James, but there are so many great seasons between these two.
11. ‘20 LeBron — highly underrated season. He led an unconventional team playing against the prevailing success tactics of the era to a title. When paired with a player playing really well (i.e., AD), Lebron showed how dominant his team can be. That Lakers team had four 30+ point leads innthe 4th quarter of playoff games, six games up 27+ in the fourth...
12. ‘92 Jordan — close to ‘93 Jordan
You insinuated that my list is biased and one-sided but then you proceeded to give four of the top five spots to Lebron.![]()
I justified my list with per 75 numbers in which peak Jordan from 1988-1993 basically crushes any non-2009 Lebron. Years like 2012, 2013 and 2016 are nowhere near peak Jordan offensively. That's just the truth. 2009 is the only one that is up there and 2018 comes close but the latter is anywhere between mediocre and terrible on defense plus Lebron's regular season was clearly a step below GOAT level in 2018. And regular season play still counts for something even for me and I emphasize playoffs. Anyways...
Per 75 Playoff Numbers:
1988 Jordan: 32.9/6.4/4.3 on +6.0 rTS with 3.0 to (10 games)
1989 Jordan: 32.6/6.5/7.1 on +6.5 rTS with 3.8 to (17 games)
1990 Jordan: 33.8/6.6/6.3 on +5.5 rTS with 3.2 to (16 games)
1991 Jordan: 31.4/6.4/8.4 on +6.6 rTS with 2.8 to (17 games)
1992 Jordan: 33.4/6.0/5.6 on +4.0 rTS with 3.5 to (22 games)
1993 Jordan: 34.6/6.7/5.9 on +1.7 rTS with 2.3 to (19 games)
2012 Lebron: 29.0/9.3/5.4 on +4.9 rTS with 3.4 to (23 games)
2013 Lebron: 25.6/8.3/6.5 on +5.0 rTS with 3.0 to (23 games)
2016 Lebron: 26.7/9.7/7.7 on +4.4 rTS with 3.6 to (21 games)
On average about 5 more points per 75, comparable efficiency, comparable creation and lower turnovers. That's easily a tier ahead offensively for Jordan over Lebron.
You'd have to value 2012/2013/2016 Lebron at elite big men level defensively (someone actually said this; I'm sorry but it's funny) to put him over 1989 and 1990 Jordan. I value peak Lebron as slightly better defensively but on the same tier. However even if Lebron was a tier above he'd still be behind Jordan overall because perimeter players don't impact the game defensively nearly as much as they do offensively. Based on Ben Taylor's modelling IIRC, peak Lebron's defense is 1 points/100 better than peak Jordan's defense. That's literally nothing compared to Jordan's huge edges in the four offensive categories driven by his scoring.
I have one question for everyone in general? What is this historical PIPM data based on? We don't have play-by-play/plus minus prior to 1997 so this is all boxscore based? Because I've seen people use it as substitute for RAPM which I think isn't right. The way I see it we simply don't have plus-minus data for Jordan's peak years and it is what it is.
Looking at the box-score to estimate impact is not great and even then, box-score numbers say Lebron's PS offense is better
Top 10 Offensive PS per RAPTOR between MJ and Lebron (More Than 1 Series)
1. 09 Lebron
(GAP)
2. 91 MJ
3. 17 Lebron
4. 18 Lebron
5. 93 Jordan
6. 90 Jordan
7. 12 LBJ
8. 89 MJ
9. 13 LBJ
10. 10 LBJ
Top 10 Offensive PS per Backpicks BPM between MJ and Lebron.
1. 09 Lebron
(GAP)
2. 91 MJ
3. 18 LBJ
4./5. 17 LBJ/93 MJ
6. 90 MJ
7. 14 LBJ
8. 89 MJ
9. 92 MJ
10. 10 LBJ
Lebron lead better single year, three year, and 8 year PS offenses than Jordan. And when you consider that Lebron lead offenses are better and he adds more value with the ball in his hands, the fact that his Miami years are still up here are pretty incredible and more than gives him an argument for being a better offensive player than Jordan.
I don't know where you're getting these numbers. Can you post a link?
Ben Taylor in his peaks finale video had Jordan ahead in Backpicks BPM, AuPM, and PIPM compared to both Cleveland and Miami Lebron.
Either way it's hard to precisely define peak MJ's impact because we don't have plus-minus data prior to 1997. However based on the RAPM data on 1997 Jordan we can infer that peak MJ circa 1991 was probably an absolute monster in impact stats. 1997 Jordan has a RS RAPM of +5.21 which would be the second highest of Lebron's career behind +5.77 in 2009. Jordan's 1997 PS RAPM is +2.69 which would be Lebron's 4th best after 2017, 2012 and 2016. Mind you 1997 was Jordan's 8th best season by my estimation so the fact that's it's that high among Lebron's seasons is telling. Jordan's 1998 PS RAPM would be tied for 5th by the way so it's also very strong despite a weak regular season.
Link to RAPM data is below.
https://basketball-analytics.gitlab.io/rapm-data/