homecourtloss wrote:falcolombardi wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
Very interesting! With all obvious "it's a team game" caveats, impressive feats by the guys with big numbers here.
Figure it makes sense to consider this in terms of ratios too so for example:
LeBron played in 54 series, and his team had >8 rORtg 22 times. 40.7%
Jordan played in 37 series, and his team had >8 rOrtg 18 times. 48.6%
Magic played in 40 series, and his team had >8 rOrtg 16 times. 40.0%
Nash played in 23 series, and his team had >8 rOrtg 11 times. 47.8%
Curry played in 28 series, and his team had >8 rOrtg 11 times. 39.3%
Jokic played in 14 series, and his team had >8 rOrtg 3 times. 21.4%
Obviously the last of these looks very different than the others.
I do think it would be interesting to see how other stack up with Jokic only through Jokic's current age. Obviously with someone like Magic his stats are largely going to look the same, but I'd expect some of the others come down to earth at least a bit.
Somethingh else to consider is the sampling not being equal in distribution of series through their careers.
Like how pre prime lebron from 2006-2008 played in 9 playoff series but similar age pre prime 85-87 jordan played in only 3 playoff series.
Wizards jordan played no playoffs series but post 35 years old lebron has (and played well, but not as well as if hr was younger)
Is the thingh with averages being like that famous example of "average means that if you have 2 houses and i am homeless, we both have 1 house on average"
Good point. For example, from 2009 through 2018, LeBron played in 37 playoff series, a number which would nearly comprise the entirety of all playoff series played for almost all players here. In these 37 series:
59% were 8+ rORtg
48.6% were 10+ rORtg
18.9% were 12+ rORtg
10.8% were 18+ rORtg <—This is a crazy number
Yep