RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
I have the Logo as not only the most impactful individual player remaining with his offense, defense, shooting and as a post season performer.
The real debate is after him imo, and it comes down to Dirk, Admiral, Chuck, Moses, Dr. J. Admiral is the center version of KG, Dirk has the go to scoring, Dr. J with his peak years in the ABA but was most impressive.
Vote: Jerry West
Alternate: Dirk Nowitzki
The real debate is after him imo, and it comes down to Dirk, Admiral, Chuck, Moses, Dr. J. Admiral is the center version of KG, Dirk has the go to scoring, Dr. J with his peak years in the ABA but was most impressive.
Vote: Jerry West
Alternate: Dirk Nowitzki
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
JoeMalburg wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Fundamentals21 wrote: I think if Karl Malone got somewhat of a pass, you can give something to Robinson.
Speaking as someone considerably more impressed with Robinson than Malone, I don't think you should assume that those who will vote for Robinson gave Malone a pass.
One of the hardest things to weigh in a project like this. Our eyes and our instincts tell us guys like Robinson and even Barkley in my case, are superior players to Karl Malone, but when you put Malone's career on paper you see how significant it is, how utterly unrivaled it is by guys like Admiral and Chuck, KG, Dirk, Pettit etc. And begrudgingly you almost have to give the Mailman the nod, or at least be willing to accept it if he gets it.
I think this years list is the best one Real GM has done so far.
Here's how mine compares
1) Jordan
2) Russell
3) Jabbar
4) James
5) Magic
6) Wilt
7) Duncan
8) Bird
9) Shaq
10) Mikan
11) Kobe
12) Hakeem
13) Doctor J
14) Oscar
15) West
16) Moses
17) Pettit
18) Mailman
19) KG
20) Barkley
21) Dirk
22) Durant
23) Baylor
24) Robinson
25) Barry
Malone certainly accumulated big, big stats. I think they inflate perception of his impact though.
Also, just so you know it's coming:
I think Baylor is really, really overrated.
Getting ready for the RealGM 100 on the PC Board
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
Some of the net on/off/- data for players under consideration (or that just got in)
For those that weren't around when this came out before, the 76ers statistician started keeping +/- data on the 76ers in the 70s, and for the whole league starting in 1994. fpliii discovered this, reached out to the guy, and he sent him that data a couple of years back. That led to a flurry of activity, with guys like Lorak and coltsfan18 (among others) taking the raw data and making on/off (and even some rudimentary RAPM-type estimates) based on it. A lot of the guys that are currently under consideration (or that recently got in) had peak/prime years in that time range, so I'll post some here.
With on/off +/- data, I look for a few things:
1) The magnitude of the overall net number
2) Whether that value led the team or not
3) If leading the team, the difference between them and the 2nd place guys
I've found that leading a team in on/off +/-, with a big number, and a big difference between 1st and 2nd, is what translates most faithfully to huge RAPM numbers.
If a guy has a big number, but has teammate(s) with similar scores, it could mean that the unit (or player combo) is strong and not necessarily that the individual player is carrying things.
If a guy isn't leading the team, it's even less likely that he's carrying the team on a solo mission. So, without further ado:
Robinson
1994:+19.9 (1st in NBA; 2nd on team = +10.3)
1995:+19.8 (1st in NBA; 2nd on team = +12)
1996:+16.6 (1st in NBA; 2nd on team = +9.2)
1999 PLAYOFFS: +36.7 (2nd on team +10.6)
2001 PLAYOFFS: +24.9, 2nd on team (Duncan 1st, +38.8)
Olajuwon
1994: +14.5 (2nd on team = +4.8)
1995: +11.9 (2nd on team = +6.1)
1996: +10.3 (2nd on team = 9.9)
1997 PLAYOFFS: +7.8, 2nd on team (Drexler 1st, +17.9)
Karl Malone:
1994:+17.6 (2nd on team = 7.3)
1995:+9.6 (2nd on team = 7.9)
1996:+13.5, 2nd on team (Stockton 1st at +14.5)
1997: +16.1, 2nd on team (Hornacek 1st at 17.6)
1997 PLAYOFFS: +20.3 (2nd on team +16.5)
1998: +13.2, 2nd on team (Stockton 1st, 13.4)
1998 PLAYOFFS: +5.4, 2nd on team (Hornacek +6.3)
1999: 13.3 (tied for 1st on team w Hornacek)
Charles Barkley:
1985: +1.9
1986: +10.6
1987: +7.9
1988: +2.7, 6th on team (1st on team +7.9)
1989: +11 (2nd on team = +6.5)
1990: +8.3 (2nd on team = +7.6)
1991: +8.8 (2nd on team = +5.3)
1992: +6.0 (2nd on team +5.9)
1994: +6.8, 2nd on team (1st KJ, +7.5)
1995: +6.8, 2nd on team (1st +8.4)
1996: +7.8, 2nd on team (1st KJ, +7.9)
Julius Erving:
1977: +6.0
1978: +0.6
1979: -0.1
1980: +3.0
1981: -6.7
1982: +10.0
1983: +10.3
1984: +4.4
1985: -3.2
1986: +4.6
1987: -3.8
Moses Malone:
1983: +15.6 (1st on team)
1984: +3.3
1985: +21.7 (Mo Cheeks at 14.1, Bobby Jones +10.4)
1986: +7.2 (Mo Cheeks led team at +20.3)
Some thoughts:
Robinson looks the most impressive, with league-leading scores and big differences between he and 2nd on team. Robinson also had a heck of a postseason +/- run for the 1999 championship team.
Olajuwon was right there with him, with slightly lower magnitudes in 94 and 95 but similar gaps between he and 2nd on team. In 96 he led the team, but the margin was closer. By 1997, when NBA.com has +/- data, Drexler had the better postseason score.
Karl Malone had an outstanding score in 94 with huge separation. After that, his magnitude was really good but there was little/no separation between he and either Stockton or Hornacek most years. He had a nice playoff +/- run in 97, but again not huge separation.
Moses was really impressive in 2 of his 4 Philly seasons (including 1983), leading the team in both years with seemingly solid separation. In the other two years, not so much. But his scores in the odd years were more impressive than anything I would have expected for him, based on his style of play.
For Barkley, we don't have his 1993 MVP year. But his other scores were just solid, a clear step behind Malone and way behind Robinson and Olajuwon. He led the 76ers, but with only a moderate score and usually without much separation, from 1989 - 1992. In Phoenix, his scores were moderate and slightly behind teammates (usually KJ).
As for Dr. J...this was the most stunningly negative outcome of the data to me. I don't believe that he was ever a team leader in this particular stat, from 1977 - 1987. He had two moderately solid years in 82 and 83, but at least in 83 he was clearly behind Moses. And he had some years where he came up out-right negative (which, I should note, does NOT mean that he was a negative impact player...often, it means that another teammate/unit is much more successful and thus leads to negative results for a player...but still).
Just some +/- numbers from the pre-databall era (or at least not stuff found on basketball-reference), for some players under consideration.
Vote: David Robinson
2nd: Jerry West
For those that weren't around when this came out before, the 76ers statistician started keeping +/- data on the 76ers in the 70s, and for the whole league starting in 1994. fpliii discovered this, reached out to the guy, and he sent him that data a couple of years back. That led to a flurry of activity, with guys like Lorak and coltsfan18 (among others) taking the raw data and making on/off (and even some rudimentary RAPM-type estimates) based on it. A lot of the guys that are currently under consideration (or that recently got in) had peak/prime years in that time range, so I'll post some here.
With on/off +/- data, I look for a few things:
1) The magnitude of the overall net number
2) Whether that value led the team or not
3) If leading the team, the difference between them and the 2nd place guys
I've found that leading a team in on/off +/-, with a big number, and a big difference between 1st and 2nd, is what translates most faithfully to huge RAPM numbers.
If a guy has a big number, but has teammate(s) with similar scores, it could mean that the unit (or player combo) is strong and not necessarily that the individual player is carrying things.
If a guy isn't leading the team, it's even less likely that he's carrying the team on a solo mission. So, without further ado:
Robinson
1994:+19.9 (1st in NBA; 2nd on team = +10.3)
1995:+19.8 (1st in NBA; 2nd on team = +12)
1996:+16.6 (1st in NBA; 2nd on team = +9.2)
1999 PLAYOFFS: +36.7 (2nd on team +10.6)
2001 PLAYOFFS: +24.9, 2nd on team (Duncan 1st, +38.8)
Olajuwon
1994: +14.5 (2nd on team = +4.8)
1995: +11.9 (2nd on team = +6.1)
1996: +10.3 (2nd on team = 9.9)
1997 PLAYOFFS: +7.8, 2nd on team (Drexler 1st, +17.9)
Karl Malone:
1994:+17.6 (2nd on team = 7.3)
1995:+9.6 (2nd on team = 7.9)
1996:+13.5, 2nd on team (Stockton 1st at +14.5)
1997: +16.1, 2nd on team (Hornacek 1st at 17.6)
1997 PLAYOFFS: +20.3 (2nd on team +16.5)
1998: +13.2, 2nd on team (Stockton 1st, 13.4)
1998 PLAYOFFS: +5.4, 2nd on team (Hornacek +6.3)
1999: 13.3 (tied for 1st on team w Hornacek)
Charles Barkley:
1985: +1.9
1986: +10.6
1987: +7.9
1988: +2.7, 6th on team (1st on team +7.9)
1989: +11 (2nd on team = +6.5)
1990: +8.3 (2nd on team = +7.6)
1991: +8.8 (2nd on team = +5.3)
1992: +6.0 (2nd on team +5.9)
1994: +6.8, 2nd on team (1st KJ, +7.5)
1995: +6.8, 2nd on team (1st +8.4)
1996: +7.8, 2nd on team (1st KJ, +7.9)
Julius Erving:
1977: +6.0
1978: +0.6
1979: -0.1
1980: +3.0
1981: -6.7
1982: +10.0
1983: +10.3
1984: +4.4
1985: -3.2
1986: +4.6
1987: -3.8
Moses Malone:
1983: +15.6 (1st on team)
1984: +3.3
1985: +21.7 (Mo Cheeks at 14.1, Bobby Jones +10.4)
1986: +7.2 (Mo Cheeks led team at +20.3)
Some thoughts:
Robinson looks the most impressive, with league-leading scores and big differences between he and 2nd on team. Robinson also had a heck of a postseason +/- run for the 1999 championship team.
Olajuwon was right there with him, with slightly lower magnitudes in 94 and 95 but similar gaps between he and 2nd on team. In 96 he led the team, but the margin was closer. By 1997, when NBA.com has +/- data, Drexler had the better postseason score.
Karl Malone had an outstanding score in 94 with huge separation. After that, his magnitude was really good but there was little/no separation between he and either Stockton or Hornacek most years. He had a nice playoff +/- run in 97, but again not huge separation.
Moses was really impressive in 2 of his 4 Philly seasons (including 1983), leading the team in both years with seemingly solid separation. In the other two years, not so much. But his scores in the odd years were more impressive than anything I would have expected for him, based on his style of play.
For Barkley, we don't have his 1993 MVP year. But his other scores were just solid, a clear step behind Malone and way behind Robinson and Olajuwon. He led the 76ers, but with only a moderate score and usually without much separation, from 1989 - 1992. In Phoenix, his scores were moderate and slightly behind teammates (usually KJ).
As for Dr. J...this was the most stunningly negative outcome of the data to me. I don't believe that he was ever a team leader in this particular stat, from 1977 - 1987. He had two moderately solid years in 82 and 83, but at least in 83 he was clearly behind Moses. And he had some years where he came up out-right negative (which, I should note, does NOT mean that he was a negative impact player...often, it means that another teammate/unit is much more successful and thus leads to negative results for a player...but still).
Just some +/- numbers from the pre-databall era (or at least not stuff found on basketball-reference), for some players under consideration.
Vote: David Robinson
2nd: Jerry West
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
Senior wrote:To be honest, Karl Malone shouldn't have gotten that pass to begin with. No one really responded to his playoff drops compared to Dirk or West.
Anyway, even though I generally believe D-Rob's offensive metrics to drastically overrate his actual offensive ability (borne out in the playoffs) and I've been low on players whose offense can't stand up in the playoffs, I could actually take him over Malone because of all the other stuff he brings to the table. It's kind of like KG - his scoring tails off, more so than Malone in fact, but D-Rob also provides far superior defense as a legitimate defensive anchor.
The thing is, someone (trex?) posted that the Spurs defenses underperformed a little bit in the playoffs, and even in 1995 they from -2.9 to +0.9 vs Houston - they were -5.3 over the entire playoffs because they destroyed the Lakers and Nuggets. I've brought this up before, but is it possible that D-Rob's defense falls off along with his offense? I could definitely be talked into thinking that.
Yeah, my thoughts on Dirk/West are similar. I don't see anyone left that is as resilient in the playoffs as either. It's why I haven't really bothered with posting a case for D-Rob.
Defense - I tried searching for this in old realGM posts but couldn't find. Can someone repost Robinson's playoff defense drop off? If it's still around somewhere. Frankly if the Spurs defense did get worse, I am not certain how much of that really is on Robinson. There appears to be no real weakness in his defensive game that enables a collapse to happen? He's got the movement speed, his paint defense is better than anything I've seen, has high IQ and incredible reaction timing for that kind of size. It'd be more than anything on external factors or fatigue issues based on bad Spurs offense in the playoffs - Robinson was sometimes the only real scoring option they had.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
drza wrote:Some of the net on/off/- data for players under consideration (or that just got in)
...
Vote: David Robinson
2nd: Jerry West
I'm curious -- for someone like yourself who relies heavily on these metrics that aren't available for players in earlier eras, how do you evaluate a player like West?
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
Outside wrote:drza wrote:Some of the net on/off/- data for players under consideration (or that just got in)
...
Vote: David Robinson
2nd: Jerry West
I'm curious -- for someone like yourself who relies heavily on these metrics that aren't available for players in earlier eras, how do you evaluate a player like West?
These metrics are meant to help us, to the best of our ability, estimate how much impact a player is having on their team's fortunes. Where +/- doesn't exist, I look at everything else. I appreciate the WOWY work that ElGee has done, and I've made use of it in this project, like in my Shaq vs Wilt post http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/163011568256/impact-comp-of-the-giants-wilt-vs-shaq or my Kareem vs Duncan post http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162535870741/kareem-vs-duncan-peak-impact-and-functional.
Sometimes we don't have even any consistent WOWY runs for players. In instances like that I try other methods to put some type of quantification to the other information that I can gather. Like, for instance, when I looked at team offensive/defensive ratings for the Celtics (Russell) and the Bucks/Lakers (Kareem) in the years before the superstar bigs, to after they came, and with confounds like other players (e.g. Oscar and Magic, on Kareem's offenses) like I did in the Russell vs Kareem post http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162660433401/abdul-jabbar-vs-russell-observations-and-rough.
So, I've been pretty consistent in trying to quantify impact in the best way that I can for players across eras. I don't look at it like I have to do a direct comp of RAPM score vs RAPM score to be able to evaluate. If player A has +/- data, it helps me to have more confidence in the level of their impact. But, failing that, I can still do the best I can to get an idea of the level of impact a player is having. And, since this is an approach that yields itself to noise, I have to be satisfied with that and broaden my comparisons. For example, in the Peaks project, I pointed out that late-70s Walton maximized the WOWY scale while mid-2000s Garnett maximized the RAPM scale...it's not a direct comp, but generally speaking I'd say that puts their relative impacts on a comparable level.
For West specifically, as I mentioned last thread, his WOWY scores are a) very strong and b) due to his injuries, he has a lot of WOWY runs that are extended...which helps build confidence that the estimated impacts are reasonably robust. So, this makes another example where a past player (West) came close to maximizing the WOWY impact scale while a more modern player (Robinson) came close to maximizing the +/- scale. In rough terms, I take that to mean that they had impacts of at least comparable degree. I incorporate that into the other aspects of my analysis, and go from there.
The pure number of RAPM or on/off +/- or WOWY or whatever is never the important factor...the ability to quantify (to at least a reasonable extent) the caliber of a player's impact, and to be able to put that in perspective with context and other information, is much more vital to my evaluation process.
Creator of the Hoops Lab: tinyurl.com/mpo2brj
Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
Contributor to TYTSports: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTbFEVCpx9shKEsZl7FcRHzpGO1dPoimk
Follow on Twitter: @ProfessorDrz
Contributor to NylonCalculusDOTcom
Contributor to TYTSports: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTbFEVCpx9shKEsZl7FcRHzpGO1dPoimk
Follow on Twitter: @ProfessorDrz
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
drza wrote:Outside wrote:drza wrote:Some of the net on/off/- data for players under consideration (or that just got in)
...
Vote: David Robinson
2nd: Jerry West
I'm curious -- for someone like yourself who relies heavily on these metrics that aren't available for players in earlier eras, how do you evaluate a player like West?
These metrics are meant to help us, to the best of our ability, estimate how much impact a player is having on their team's fortunes. Where +/- doesn't exist, I look at everything else. I appreciate the WOWY work that ElGee has done, and I've made use of it in this project, like in my Shaq vs Wilt post http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/163011568256/impact-comp-of-the-giants-wilt-vs-shaq or my Kareem vs Duncan post http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162535870741/kareem-vs-duncan-peak-impact-and-functional.
Sometimes we don't have even any consistent WOWY runs for players. In instances like that I try other methods to put some type of quantification to the other information that I can gather. Like, for instance, when I looked at team offensive/defensive ratings for the Celtics (Russell) and the Bucks/Lakers (Kareem) in the years before the superstar bigs, to after they came, and with confounds like other players (e.g. Oscar and Magic, on Kareem's offenses) like I did in the Russell vs Kareem post http://hoopslab.rotowire.com/post/162660433401/abdul-jabbar-vs-russell-observations-and-rough.
So, I've been pretty consistent in trying to quantify impact in the best way that I can for players across eras. I don't look at it like I have to do a direct comp of RAPM score vs RAPM score to be able to evaluate. If player A has +/- data, it helps me to have more confidence in the level of their impact. But, failing that, I can still do the best I can to get an idea of the level of impact a player is having. And, since this is an approach that yields itself to noise, I have to be satisfied with that and broaden my comparisons. For example, in the Peaks project, I pointed out that late-70s Walton maximized the WOWY scale while mid-2000s Garnett maximized the RAPM scale...it's not a direct comp, but generally speaking I'd say that puts their relative impacts on a comparable level.
For West specifically, as I mentioned last thread, his WOWY scores are a) very strong and b) due to his injuries, he has a lot of WOWY runs that are extended...which helps build confidence that the estimated impacts are reasonably robust. So, this makes another example where a past player (West) came close to maximizing the WOWY impact scale while a more modern player (Robinson) came close to maximizing the +/- scale. In rough terms, I take that to mean that they had impacts of at least comparable degree. I incorporate that into the other aspects of my analysis, and go from there.
The pure number of RAPM or on/off +/- or WOWY or whatever is never the important factor...the ability to quantify (to at least a reasonable extent) the caliber of a player's impact, and to be able to put that in perspective with context and other information, is much more vital to my evaluation process.
So would it be fair to say that you do your best to create or estimate equivalent data for players from earlier eras?
If so, I guess that's an opposite approach to the one I take, where I rely more on basic stats and observation to develop a subjective analysis (what could be called informed opinion) and then use additional stats like RAPM to confirm or adjust my thinking. But where you use RAPM, WOWY, a lot of other stats to create your baseline, I use basic stats and the eye test to create my baseline.
While you voted KG, Dirk, and David Robinson higher than me, which is to be expected since they do well in the metrics that you use, and I have guys like Bird and Magic higher on my list, but we're generally voting for the same guys, give or take a slot or two. I was skeptical at the start that people who relied on advanced stats would give a fair shake to players from early eras, but you've certainly done that.
The amount of work you put in to your posts is impressive, but to me, that's only the tip of the iceberg. Digging a little deeper, it's apparent that you don't rely solely on the stats but use them as the basis for thoughtful, extensive analysis, which I particularly like. I've also seen that with each new thread, you often begin your process over again and may make different selections. I don't begrudge those who set up a formula and use the results to create their ranking -- creating a basketball version of a unified field theory formula is an admirable goal -- but the time required for your process is a whole 'nother deal. I'm confident enough in my reasonably informed subjective assessments, but I'm basically spitballing compared to what you're doing. I'm not in a position to use the same process you do, but that doesn't mean I can't appreciate your artful blend of data and analysis. It's been an education.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
1st vote - Jerry West
Great shooter and floor spacer, way ahead of his time. Good slasher and defender.
Was also a tremendous playoff performer. In several of his losses he played really well, so I've got nothing against him for winning only one finals series and losing several of them.
Really consistent.
Very efficient - lead the league twice in ts% without 3P shots - that's something great for a guy who shot as much from the perimeter as he did. And he did it while putting up great volume.
He has 11 RS of great production and playing almost all the games (well missing 10 takes some value from it but it's not something that would bother me).
He also has 10 post seasons where he did play very well.
2nd vote - Dirk Nowtizki
Great shooter and floor spacer, way ahead of his time. Good slasher and defender.
Was also a tremendous playoff performer. In several of his losses he played really well, so I've got nothing against him for winning only one finals series and losing several of them.
Really consistent.
Very efficient - lead the league twice in ts% without 3P shots - that's something great for a guy who shot as much from the perimeter as he did. And he did it while putting up great volume.
He has 11 RS of great production and playing almost all the games (well missing 10 takes some value from it but it's not something that would bother me).
He also has 10 post seasons where he did play very well.
2nd vote - Dirk Nowtizki
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
drza wrote:Some of the net on/off/- data for players under consideration (or that just got in)
.......
Vote: David Robinson
2nd: Jerry West
With impact and impact data being such massive considerations in your criteria, I'm sort of surprised Dirk isn't your alternate pick or at least one of the guys you're considering (not listed in above post, anyway). Beyond Shaq, Lebron, KG, and Duncan, he's pretty much been the biggest impact player of the last 20-some years (as measured by RAPM, anyway).
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
trex_8063 wrote:drza wrote:Some of the net on/off/- data for players under consideration (or that just got in)
.......
Vote: David Robinson
2nd: Jerry West
With impact and impact data being such massive considerations in your criteria, I'm sort of surprised Dirk isn't your alternate pick or at least one of the guys you're considering (not listed in above post, anyway). Beyond Shaq, Lebron, KG, and Duncan, he's pretty much been the biggest impact player of the last 20-some years (as measured by RAPM, anyway).
He is. I didn't want to just copy-paste my vote considerations from last thread so as not to get stale, so I posted the +/- info instead. But, since the guys I voted for didn't get in last thread, I could copy-paste and you'd see Dirk was there. In fact...
drza wrote:My main methods of evaluation thus far have been impact-oriented, trying to identify which (among the sea of great NBA players) have done the most to help their teams succeed. Evaluating this is more difficult once we get before the databall era, but with the +/- data from the 76ers statistician that fpliii gathered and the WOWY work that ElGee has spearheaded we've got more tools on that front than we have for any previous project.
Of the players left on the board, it seems to me that West, Robinson and Dirk have the best impact cases left. Dr. J, Malone and Malone also have strong cases in general, but there are more questions there. I'll get into them more in future threads (any that don't go in here), and they have the chance to move up my list. But coming in late without much time, for this thread I'll focus most on West, Robinson and Dirk.Spoiler:
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
- cpower
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
If Malone has voted in already, why can't we have a case for Stockton who was generally a better PS performer than Malone who actually led the team in WS/48, on/off, offensive efficiency..etc? It seems like Stockton gets penalized for Malone's underwhelming performances which does not make sense to me.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
- theonlyclutch
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
cpower wrote:If Malone has voted in already, why can't we have a case for Stockton who was generally a better PS performer than Malone who actually led the team in WS/48, on/off, offensive efficiency..etc? It seems like Stockton gets penalized for Malone's underwhelming performances which does not make sense to me.
If there's an argument for him being in the top 15, I would like a very solid reason for why 2 top 15 players in their statistical primes (88-95), with plenty of roster continuity and good coaching, were head of teams which aren't appreciably better than this year's Utah Jazz...
theonlyclutch's AT FGA-limited team - The Malevolent Eight
PG: 2008 Chauncey Billups/ 2013 Kyle Lowry
SG: 2005 Manu Ginobili/2012 James Harden
SF: 1982 Julius Erving
PF: 2013 Matt Bonner/ 2010 Amir Johnson
C: 1977 Kareem Abdul Jabaar
PG: 2008 Chauncey Billups/ 2013 Kyle Lowry
SG: 2005 Manu Ginobili/2012 James Harden
SF: 1982 Julius Erving
PF: 2013 Matt Bonner/ 2010 Amir Johnson
C: 1977 Kareem Abdul Jabaar
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
Outside wrote:.
So I'd mentioned I was looking into the correlation of OREB% to ORtg (obvious relevance wrt Moses), as well as OREB% to DRtg. Am quoting Outside here, as during a discussion with him about Dirk [and his low OREB%] I'd theorized that a strategy of crashing the offensive glass is knowingly giving something up defensively (by way of reduced transition defense). The findings so far have been interesting.
I looked at rOREB% and rORTG/rDRTG for each and every team for the years '74-'85 (that's 256 data points over 12 seasons, covering most of Moses' prime/career), as well as each team for the years '04-'07 and '11-'12 (that's 179 data points over 6 seasons of Dirk's prime). That's as far as I've got so far; will try to go further, but there is other stuff I want to move on to, so I'm going to share what I've got so far. Anyway, I made plot-point graphs (with a trend line) of those data sets, and calculated the Correlation Coefficients for each set.
Of interest, the league avg OREB% of Dirk's career (at least the years I've investigated) run ~5% lower than that of the '74-'85 sample (~27.5% vs ~32.5%), and obviously there have been a lot of other game trend shifts. And the correlations seen between the two eras are very very different.
For the '74-'85 sample, there definitely appears to be a fair correlation between increasing rOREB% and increasing rORtg. The correlation coefficient is 0.3729.
I can explain correlation coefficients to the best of my limited ability if anyone needs (I've only somewhat recently had it explained to me and have begun using it in a few of my studies). But suffice to say this indicates there's likely a significant correlation. Not super-high, but it wouldn't be reasonable to expect a really high correlation coefficient (say 0.6-0.7 or higher) because we, after all, are ignoring all of the other offensive factors that influence offensive efficiency (namely: eFG%, FTr, and TOV%). tbh, 0.3729 was perhaps slightly higher than I was expecting.
The other interesting thing in this '74-'85 sample is that there appeared to be basically zero correlation between an increasing rOREB% and an increasing (worsening) rDRtg; the trend line is almost exactly flat along the x-axis. The correlation coefficient was 0.0093.
Obviously, there are a number of confounding factors not included in this study, so this is not "proof" that a strategy of banging the offensive glass didn't hurt transition defense; but for whatever it's worth, there was no correlation between the two for that sample of years.
With the 6-year sample from Dirk's prime, the correlations are VASTLY different. It would seem that during Dirk's career (based on these six years, at least) there is almost negligible correlation between OREB% and ORtg. The correlation coefficient was just 0.0879 (which is likely not statistically significant, even in light of confounding factors previously alluded to).
But interestingly, there DID appear to be correlation between a rising rOREB% and a rising (worsening) rDRTG in this set of years. The CC there is 0.2021, which is not high, but is high enough to suggest that there probably is a relationship between the two (and is likely why there has been a shift away from offensive rebounding to focus on getting back on D).
Dunno if this sort of exonerates Dirk wrt criticisms of his low OREB% or not; I leave that to each of you to ponder. But it was an interesting finding.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
- THKNKG
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
I've been convinced/convinced myself that the value of DRob/West trumps the longevity of Dirk.
Vote: David Robinson
Alt: Jerry West
HM: Dirk
Vote: David Robinson
Alt: Jerry West
HM: Dirk
All-Time Fantasy Draft Team (90 FGA)
PG: Maurice Cheeks / Giannis
SG: Reggie Miller / Jordan
SF: Michael Jordan / Bruce Bowen
PF: Giannis / Marvin Williams
C: Artis Gilmore / Chris Anderson
PG: Maurice Cheeks / Giannis
SG: Reggie Miller / Jordan
SF: Michael Jordan / Bruce Bowen
PF: Giannis / Marvin Williams
C: Artis Gilmore / Chris Anderson
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
Posting some of my arguments from last thread:
Also note I addressed some of the OREB concerns in my above post itt.
1st Vote: Dirk Nowitzki
2nd Vote: Julius Erving (though could be swayed to David Robinson)
Just by way of throwing a little reasoning for Dr. J.....
By those formulations I'd mentioned that measure total career value over approx replacement level player as measured by PER and WS/48 (playoff minutes weighted 3.25x heavier than rs): Erving ranked 9th all-time by the formula using raw PER and WS/48, 8th all-time by the one using scaled PER and WS/48 values (from my SD studies). However, some of that might be inflated from his ABA years, depending on how you feel about the strength of the ABA. I do have some year-by-year strength of era ratings of my own devising, which I applied to these studies. Doing so dropped Erving to 16th if using the raw PER and WS/48, only down to 9th with the scaled PER and WS/48.
trex_8063 wrote:Spoiler:
Also note I addressed some of the OREB concerns in my above post itt.
1st Vote: Dirk Nowitzki
2nd Vote: Julius Erving (though could be swayed to David Robinson)
Just by way of throwing a little reasoning for Dr. J.....
By those formulations I'd mentioned that measure total career value over approx replacement level player as measured by PER and WS/48 (playoff minutes weighted 3.25x heavier than rs): Erving ranked 9th all-time by the formula using raw PER and WS/48, 8th all-time by the one using scaled PER and WS/48 values (from my SD studies). However, some of that might be inflated from his ABA years, depending on how you feel about the strength of the ABA. I do have some year-by-year strength of era ratings of my own devising, which I applied to these studies. Doing so dropped Erving to 16th if using the raw PER and WS/48, only down to 9th with the scaled PER and WS/48.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
cpower wrote:If Malone has voted in already, why can't we have a case for Stockton who was generally a better PS performer than Malone who actually led the team in WS/48, on/off, offensive efficiency..etc? It seems like Stockton gets penalized for Malone's underwhelming performances which does not make sense to me.
Eh?
I do find Stockton interesting. His own era, however, never considered him to be this high. A whole bunch of MVP finishes outside top 10 and never cracked Top 5 MVP finish. Based on that pattern you'd have easily 10 others ahead of him.
Elgee doesn't appear to be high on him - if he posted more numbers on Stock that'd be awesome. Here's one gem -
More
viewtopic.php?f=344&t=1343246#start_here
What's interesting to me is how he comes at the top defensively in late career metrics - he even kills rising Nash from 01-03 by a significant margin. Anyway, I think this is a guy you discuss at #25 and not #15. Just not at the level he's being discussed.
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
- wojoaderge
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
Not much more to say about George Mikan other than he's my first vote once again. To repeat, no one left on the board was as dominating in his particular time or served as the go-to guy on as championship teams as he did.
Now for my alternate. Moses - I just have no idea why he's so underrated. He's easily more dominating, more overpowering, and more impossible to stop than any of 5s or 4s remaining. 3 MVPs. He led a 65-17 team to the championship as its best player and led a sub-.500 team to the NBA Finals (only the 2nd one to date). If you want to talk longevity, he had at least 16 straight good to awesome seasons. So, I don't know the problem is here.
1-George Mikan
2-Moses Malone
"Coach, why don't you just relax? We're not good enough to beat the Lakers. We've had a great year, why don't you just relax and cool down?"
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
penbeast0 wrote:.
wojoaderge wrote:.
When I get home, I'll dig up my materials that pertain to the popularity of basketball from the mid-50's thru mid-70's (as well as the limited amount I have on integration), as I think that bears direct relevance to the size of player pool (and thus quality/competitiveness of the league). imo, very relevant stuff wrt Mikan. Will try to get it posted this thread or next.
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
cpower wrote:If Malone has voted in already, why can't we have a case for Stockton who was generally a better PS performer than Malone who actually led the team in WS/48, on/off, offensive efficiency..etc? It seems like Stockton gets penalized for Malone's underwhelming performances which does not make sense to me.
This is a reasonable question but as someone who thinks Malone was voted in too early in part because of Stockton, it chafes to see Stockton potentially lifted up based on the prior mistake.
Ftr, Stocktons case has grown for me over the years. I've had him behind Nash for a long time, but I'm hoping I reconsider this objectively.
The reality is that basically no one had such consistently impactful longevity like Stockton.
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
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Re: RealGM 2017 Top 100 List: #15
Thru post #59:
Jerry West - 5 (andrewww, Doctor MJ, Joao Saraiva, Outside, RCM88x)
Julius Erving - 4 (Winsome Gerbil, scabbarista, Pablo Novi, Dr Positivity)
David Robinson - 3 (drza, micahclay, Narigo)
George Mikan - 2 (penbeast0, wojoaderge)
Moses Malone - 1 (JordansBulls)
Dirk Nowitzki - 1 (trex_8063)
Thread will be open for at least 2-3 hours longer. So be heard before then, or forever (or at least until next thread) hold your peace.
Jerry West - 5 (andrewww, Doctor MJ, Joao Saraiva, Outside, RCM88x)
Julius Erving - 4 (Winsome Gerbil, scabbarista, Pablo Novi, Dr Positivity)
David Robinson - 3 (drza, micahclay, Narigo)
George Mikan - 2 (penbeast0, wojoaderge)
Moses Malone - 1 (JordansBulls)
Dirk Nowitzki - 1 (trex_8063)
Thread will be open for at least 2-3 hours longer. So be heard before then, or forever (or at least until next thread) hold your peace.
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"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire