OhayoKD wrote:mysticOscar wrote:This is laughable some of the way stats are used on this league to spin a narrative. Great example is using a 3peat year as a baseline SRS to compare a drop off.
Anyone with common sense knows that a team going for 3peat normally goes through a process of saving it for the playoffs.
I suppose this doesn't apply to teams going for a 4-peat
LukaTheGOAT wrote:falcolombardi wrote:I was implicitly comparing jordan to all timer peers, but my mistake if i didnt clarify that
And yes, 94 bulls are among the smaller drop offs among top~10 all timers leaving a team/missing a season on their prime
You did...
What? I was pointing out a fact that some all time greats caused bigger down falls with their absence one season (70 celtics, 89 celtics, 92 lakers, 2015 heat) than others (94 bulls, 76 bucks as you point out, 66 warriors)
Multiple times...
This is not me being picky, this is me saying that in the measure that was being talked about (full season wowy where a star leaves or is hurt) other top 10 ever players caused bigger drop offs than jordan in 93
You did say "superstar" initially but you specified top ten-all time several times after so...
falcolombardi wrote:LukaTheGOAT wrote:That's like saying, Lebron, Duncan, and David Robinson have a higher 3-year PS AuPM than Steph, and therefore AuPM suggests that Steph isn't that impactful all-time.
...in context "that impactful" means an outlier among top 10-all-timers
1. Using a bigger sample, is always more ideal for regularization and it is the period where of their first 3-peat. Some would argue championship teams take their foot off the gas pedal after winning a championship, etc. I noted the sample was from 91-93, so no foul play on my part btw. Also during the first 3 peat, Pippen was not at his peak, so we would expect his improvement in 94 and 95 to make up decent ground, especially for someone like you who believes Pippen was a weak MVP level guy at his peak on the level of say a Patrick Ewing.
But none of the data Falco cited uses "regularization"(which we don't really have the means to pull off with jordan, 2.2 game/season samples aside). Additionally, you are not "increasing the sample" much as the proportion of data points to the length of time you're trying to assess remains the same. It's not really worth the trade-off of making your data less accurate.
Pippen's 1991 playoff performance is arguably his best(using the box stuff you like it ranks 1st in ws/48, 2nd in PER, and 4th in BPM), arguably being his most impressive showing as a defender and a playmaker in addition to being his second best showing as a scorer(behind 94). The Bulls improvement between 1990 and 1991 in the regular season was mainly driven by defense, a part of the game where holistic evidence (and various people's film-tracking) suggests Jordan dropped off between 88 and 91(despite improvement in box-heavy metrics, on/off, squared's rapm, and aupm decline indicating the defense drop outweighed offensive improvement). Mapping 94 onto 91 rather than the similar (large)sample of games that directly preceded it really doesn't make much sense. But even if you were to do so, the drop off there still isn't an outlier for top 10 all-timers as falco originally claimed.
This is in contrast to someone like Kareem who from 72-74 had a Backpicks BPM of 7.0 in the RS and FELL to a 6.3 in the PS during this timespan. Or his WS/48 going from .304 in the RS to a .209 in the PS....., which is a catastrophic drop. You could just as easily interpret Milwaukee's SRS from 72-74 overrating their true team quality under the same guise.
Yet if we use 71-73 Kareem's ws/48(feel free to post his bpm) he looks like an even
bigger playoff elevator than Jordan

. Considering the 71 and 72 bucks were of the same-calibre as the 91 Bulls at full strength, them getting even better in the playoffs(paired with Kareem likely not having as much as help as Jordan did in 1991) gives Kareem a solid case as a better player. On top of that, ws/48 is a metric we would
expect Jordan to do better as
A. All of the stats for players from Kareem's time or earlier are not recorded
B. Jordan is a shooting guard with relatively limited defensive influence, Kareem is a big man whose teams were 4 points defensively with him on the floor.
As has been argued(and as you've perennially ignored despite frequently quoting these arguments), box-heavy stuff is probably the least useful data for this type of comparison:
OhayoKD wrote:f4p wrote:
seems very hard to believe. dudes like PJ tucker and shane battier with pitiful box numbers but big impact are being less well evaluated than extreme defensive guys like hakeem and duncan who still do very well by box numbers (because they just do so much stuff that it can't be ignored)?
Why would you compare hakeem with pj tucker? The idea is that players who are racking up steals and blocks are going to be treated by box-metrics like dpoy-level defensive contributors, which is why your jordan's, kobe's and curry's look much better relative to other all-time greats when you focus on the box and less so when you focus on how the team defense correlates with their presence. One of the things bigger defensive players do is generate opportunities for smaller to rack up steals and blocks in the first place(
https://www.reddit.com/r/nbadiscussion/comments/ktyynk/oc_the_secular_lebron_james_the_case_for_the_king/):
We talk about gravity on offense, but what about defensive gravity? As I said before, Ben touches on the concept when he notes that Walton affected more possessions than Kareem despite Kareem getting alot more blocks, but this reaches a whole new level with players like Larry Bird or 6'6 shooting guard MJ, players who spent their defensve primes playng with one or multiple comparable-better rim deterrents.
This is what most jordan blocks look like:https://youtu.be/fFPi95UEpog?t=55 Jordan gets the block, but is he even the key to this possession? The difficult part of this, holding ewing still, isn't being done by Jordan. Jordan is making this play off his teamamte's, gravity defensively. If you rewatch the section where ben is fawning over Jordan's rim protection...
https://youtu.be/p5aNUS762wM?t=1212...you might notice that aside for --two-- clips, all these plays have jordan making plays on a defender whose preoccupied worrying about a larger guy at the rim.
Lets compare this to the following non-blocks:https://youtu.be/T-c1NradPN4?t=147Lebron's presence here blows up a potential dunk/layup, a shot even more dangerous than a curry three. Lebron isn't awarded a block here, but this play is more valuable than the majority of plays you'll see in a jordan defensive highlight reel.
https://youtu.be/T-c1NradPN4?t=17Lebron here basically prevents a open layup/dunk. These kinds of plays are both extremely valuable and require a combination of strength and size Jordan doesn't have.
https://youtu.be/T-c1NradPN4?t=176Here, Lebron isn't rewarded a block and even looks a bit silly, but his presence is what draws draymond's attention and allows for delly to get the block.
https://youtu.be/3oAAcEQ8t84?t=1529Lebron ends up getting a block later on the possessions, but the key of this possession is here, where Lebron's presence makes dwight opt for a post up, preventing what is the most dangerous play in basketball, an all time interior threat coming in at the rim. Per r/blockedbybam, Lebron blocked, diverted, or deterred a dwight inside atempt 18 times over the ECF..
https://youtu.be/MyWFllfRqaU?t=256.Grant gets the block, and pippen is made to look silly, but it's pippen who sets the play up for grant. Much like a shooter will feed of a slasher's interior gravity, grant makes this play off pippen's defense.
https://youtu.be/C7uxePXXfU8?t=63While the possession doesn't end up going chicago's way, what Pippen is doing here, essentially pre-emptively nuetralizing the threat of an Ewing drive is about as valuabe as a play you will get defensively. It doesn't show up in the scoresheet.
There is no granular statistic for the above that gets factored into PER, BPM, or RAPTOR(no plus minus data pre-1997). There is no granular statistic(at least one incorporated in these metrics) for when a player gets blown by and gives up a lay-up because they reached for a steal(recall Jordan was in the
17th percentile for defensive errors). When Rudy Gobert is able to prevent potential layups 3 times in one possession, if he isn't getting a hand to the ball, he isn't getting his credit. Plus-Minus can capture this(aritifical caps aside), WOWY can capture this(relevant when we're talking about outliers). Metrics which capture all this are going to tell you more about a player's defensive value(and whatever other non-scoring factors we consider like...off-ball creation) than box-stuff. Thus...
I think the big thing to consider here, is that the specific metrics you are choosing here[bpm/per/ws/48/gamescore(which is really just PER not adjusted for possessions)], consistently rate primary paint protectors low relative to their raw impact signals, or less offense-skewed data. Steph Curry and Jordan look as good as anyone in say PER(at least in the regular season), but Lebron and Duncan score higher in RAPM, on/off, and AUPM, and then when we go to raw impact, Hakeem, Russell, and Kareem all look as good or better. [b]Considering that Jordan has the least discernable defensive imapct of anyone we've talked about in this thread, relying heavily on box-stuff and dismissing everything else seems questionable.
PER sees someone leading the league in steals and assumes they're the best defender in the league, plus-minus sees that there's not that much correlation between what that someone is doing, and what his team is doing, and adjusts accordingly.
is this espn's rpm or a different rpm? the one that says steph is the best player every year (well, except when it's kyle lowry)?
Same one I think:
EPM and RPM, which were the only metrics that used RAPM directly with a Bayesian prior, consistently performed the best among all metrics, with EPM taking the lead overall.
RAPTOR scores 3rd as it is has new film-tracking that makes it able to spot stuff more accurately(still "clearly behind" epm and epm due to less direct RAPM)
BUT it has no plus-minus(or tracking) data pre-1997(and even 1997/1998 are largely informed by the box-heavy prior of all the previous years) so it is effectively in the same boat as PER/ws48 when talking about players of jordan's era(including jordan):
The older metrics WS and PER had the highest prediction error, with PER struggling mightily (although not as bad when given an after-market team adjustment at the suggestion of Steve Ilardi, which I’ve labeled “aPER”; the adjustment formula was provided by Nathan Walker who adapted BPM's formula).
Ditto with
roster continuity where theoretically, your preferred metrics should be making up some ground?
As can be seen in the table above, EPM was the most predictive of team ratings after controlling for roster continuity (coefficient: 3.76); it was nearly half as dependent on rosters staying together than the second most predictive metric (continuity coefficient: 0.23). RPM was the clear second-place metric having gained separation over RAPTOR after controlling for roster continuity.
The older metric WS48 surprised a bit while PER struggled again.[suprised means being second to last instead of last]
RAW RAPM stayed ahead of the box-stuff in both continuity and predictivity despite being hella noisy for when you're trying to account for a full-ass nba roster. And direct RAPM beat out indirect rapm usage with beat out no-rapm usage. Even when the goal is to reduce noise, not properly assessing defense will hold ya back.
Regardless though, when we actually look at their best years, in spite of a lack of recorded data nuking Kareem's rs scores, Kareem outright beats Jordan's 91-93 ws/48 in the playoffs. IOW, you cited a metric which should favor Jordan and, when enough of Kareem's stats are recorded, it
favors Kareem. Feel free to post Kareem's best individual BPM years if you're interested in an honest comparison. Also feel free to actually address the thorough explanations offered for
why the box-score is less useful here(keep in mind that for Jordan and Kareem, players who peaked before 1997, any of these box-heavy metrics you are using are virtually variations of the least predictive(and flexible) metrics available to us).
The Milwaukee Bucks also lost Oscar Robertson after 1974, which is part of the reason why they did not make the PS in 75
They didn't make the PS in 75 because Kareem missed 18 games with an injury, and in those 18 games, the Bucks played at a
15-win-pace. With Kareem they played like a 45 win team(By record). If you go with srs, they played like the pre-jordan Bulls without Jabbar and the 88-90 Bulls with him. Either way, Kareem looks better. He also looks better in their late-prime years 70's broke down, their rookie year, and, given the absence of a big scheme induced srs boost(1990) and their 72 performance
without Oscar, I'd argue it
also looks like Kareem needed less help to lead a GOAT-level team.
why I like WOWYR is that it a more objective measure
WOWYR is not "more objective", it is
theoretically less noisy
if a player was to miss as many games in a season as the corresponding WOWY sample that it is being weighed against. The problem is players rarely miss that amount of time so not only does it suffer in terms of accuracy(artificial caps), it's also
vastly noisier. This has actually been explained, at length, in several posts you have directly quoted. But like the box-stuff, it remains perpetually ignored. I suspect the reason you actually like it, is that it confirms your priors, also known as, confirmation bias.
4.The same is true of when he joins LAL in 76. They go from a SRS of -3.94 to an SRS of being barely positive at 0.17. Once again, the shift isn't necessarily more impressive than you see with Jordan. In the first full-season back with the Bulls, and the rust off in ’96, MJ led Chicago to two of the 10-best offensive seasons ever, including the fourth-best of all time in 1997. The Bulls had an SRS of 11.8 in 1996, which is drastically better than the 2.87 posted in 94 without Jordan, and 4.31 in 95 where he only played 17 RS games.
5. The Bulls went from a Team SRS in 93 of 6.19 to a Team SRS in 94 of 2.87. So the Team's SRS fell by over 2x...For a championship team to fall off by that much without 1 player, and Pippen beginning his peak in 94, is quite literally absurd. It is not a "small drop-off for a superstar," no matter how you slice it.
Again the claim was "all-timers" (and you've had multiple posts clarifying this.) And no, Kareem looks better here too:
70sFan wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
I think it's very important to be careful to call anything "going nowhere":
1. Lakers finished with the best RS record in 1977, Jordan neve did that before 1991.
2. Lakers finished with +2.95 SRS in 1979, which is better than Bulls in any year in 1987-90 period outside of 1988. It happened in the smaller, more balanced league as well.
3. Lakers lost to two future champions in the playoffs during 1977-79 period. The other time, they lost to future finalists in a 3 games series. That's the same level of playoff success as 1987-89 Bulls.
If you want to say that they did nothing during that period, then I'm afraid you should say the same for Jordan's whole career before 1990.
About WOWY - Jordan's biggest samples don't show him as the better one than Kareem (from Ben's database):
1986 Jordan: +2.0 SRS change, 1.2 WOWY score
1995 Jordan +2.7 SRS change, 1.9 WOWY score
1975 Kareem: +7.1 SRS change, +3.6 WOWY score
I'm afraid Ben's database has an error with 1978 sample, as it shows as clear negative for Kareem, despite all the calculations I made and his own words in Kareem profile:
At the beginning of the ’78 season, Kareem cold-cocked Bucks center Kent Benson and missed substantial time with another broken hand. However, it’s hard to infer much from the injury since LA fired off two trades around that period.10 With Jabbar — and ignoring all the other lineup activity — the Lakers played like a 53-win team (4.1 SRS) in ’78. With a similar roster in ’79 (minus Charlie Scott), LA ticked along at a 50-win clip when healthy (3.1 SRS). Below, I’ve plotted the ’78 team’s performance in 21 games without Kareem, in which the Lakers played at a 36-win pace (-1.7 SRS) after a major offensive drop-off.
Which shows a +5.8 SRS change again. The biggest samples we have show Kareem having a clear advantage. We can also look at the more nuanced samples, when a player even joins or leaves his team:
1984 Bulls without MJ: -4.7 SRS, 27 wins
1985 Bulls with MJ: -0.5 SRS, 38 wins
Change: +4.2 SRS and +11 wins
1993 Bulls with MJ: +6.2 SRS, 57 wins
1994 Bulls without MJ: +2.9 SRS, 55 wins
Change: +3.3 SRS, +2 wins
1995 Bulls without MJ: +3.8 SRS, 52 wins pace
1996 Bulls with MJ: +11.8 SRS, 72 wins
Change: +8 SRS, 20 wins
I wouldn't include 1998-1999, because the whole team changed, including a coach.
1969 Bucks without Kareem: -5.1 SRS, 27 wins
1970 Bucks with Kareem: +4.3 SRS, 56 wins
Change: +9.4 SRS, 29 wins
1975 Bucks with Kareem: +2.6 SRS, 49 wins pace
1976 Bucks without Kareem: -1.6 SRS, 38 wins
Change: +4.2 SRS, 11 wins
1975 Lakers without Kareem: -3.9 SRS, 30 wins
1976 Lakers with Kareem: +0.2 SRS, 40 wins
Change: +4.1 SRS, 10 wins
The difference is that Kareem left Bucks in a trade, which means that Lakers gave a lot of value to Bucks. Jordan samples are clean, as Jordan didn't go to the Bulls in exchange.
I don't know, I don't see the case for MJ > Kareem in terms of WOWY.
[/quote]
RE: Easier to score
1. Ja Morant has dramatically worse
efficiency compared to a top tier interior threat like Giannis. Volume needs to be contextualized with efficiency
2. It doesn't matter if it's easier to score in an absolute sense. What matters is how jordan's scoring compares to everyone else he's playing with.
3. I specfically claimed the raptors were better than the pistons in an absolute sense, not a relative one.
Era-Relative goodness vs Absolute goodness is a distinction that has been explained a bunch as well....in posts you've quoted...and ignored.
RE: Below average offense
Okay? As I said, and you ignored(again), distribution doesn't really matter here. If the team gets 30 wins worse without you, I'm not sure why the team being slanted towards defense or offense there is what we should focus on. Curry and MJ have similar holistic results in the regular season throughout their prime when they work with similar(holistically) casts. Winning is what matters here, not disparities in o-rating.
If you're just going to ignore what people write, discussion isn't going to be very productive.[/quote]
1. I mean I quite clearly offered an interpretation in my posts that suggests, Kareem based on WOWY, is worse. Not just the objective one-number regressions, but also analysis of how they did win they joined new teams. You don't have to agree, but I did offer an explanation.
2. It was mentioned Jordan would not have as much interior scoring value as before. I used Ja Morant as an example. MJ never had Giannis level interior scoring gravity, so no need to bring Giannis up. My point is that there is nothing suggesting MJ would have lesser value.
3. I clearly explained why the Raptors and Knicks example isn't 1 to 1, and why you can't just look at things saying the defense is better in absolute sense, without acknowledging offenses are better in an absolute sense, hence why league average true-shooting is higher. I'm not rehasing that point again. That point went over your head. If you're just going to ignore what people write, discussion isn't going to be very productive
4. "Okay? As I said, and you ignored(again), distribution doesn't really matter here. If the team gets 30 wins worse without you, I'm not sure why the team being slanted towards defense or offense there is what we should focus on. Curry and MJ have similar holistic results in the regular season throughout their prime when they work with similar(holistically) casts. Winning is what matters here, not disparities in o-rating."-Makes no sense, because that wasn't an argument I was making.
5. Why are we talking about 71-73 Kareem? Falco is the one who brought up 72-74 Kareem, and hence I simply shared the results.
6. Jordan clearly outpaces Kareem from 91-93 in playoff production than 72-74 Kareem.
7. I already mentioned the Kareem missing games in 75, but I doubt you really read my posts thoroughly, thanks for the confirmation.
8. I was talking to Falco (you butted in), and he quite clearly used the word "superstars." Don't make it out to seem as if I am wrong for misinterpreting what he said, when he said "superstars."
9. It is YOUR opinion MJ dropped off between 88 and 91. The board's greatest peaks discussion voted 91 as Jordan's peak. You point to Pippen's PS metrics in 91, but don't point to MJ's....I wonder why? Maybe because the 91 PS ranks unanimously as Jordan's best and would give more life to the argument that 91 is his peak?