Doctor MJ wrote:DQuinn1575 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:And I have to leave with one last thing:
Remember that West had a more successful team career than Oscar did in general. That doesn't say West > Oscar, but it does mean we need to be careful about penalizing West for lack of success. West had more team success, and thus from an impact success we would expect Oscar to have to make up the difference in impact.
That's not necessarily a super high bar to rise above depending on how you see things, but my point is that it's a different bar one built with the perspective there's something negative about West's team success that should hold him back next to Oscar.
Simple average SRS - 14 years - West 3.18, Oscar 2.91 - with Oscar playing 108 games more than West. And West had Baylor for most of that, and Wilt for more years than Oscar had Kareem. Really hard to say West had more team success than Oscar.
You're literally doing what I warned people not to do.
By your chosen metric, West had more team success 3.18 to 2.91. The end.
Now obviously I'm not holding you to that as if it's really your end-all be-all, but when we talk about how much team success a player had, we don't then factor in who the guys teammates were. That factors into the player evaluation certainly, but the team success is the success of the team the player happens to be on. Either it means that or it means nothing at all.
Okay, Oscar played in 627 regular season wins in his career, West 595 , let's use that measure instead, as it also incorporates the fact that West missed many more games than Oscar.




























