Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time

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Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#1 » by trex_8063 » Wed Aug 31, 2016 2:43 am

This is piggy-backing on the work outlined in this post:

viewtopic.php?f=64&t=1474454

Was curious to see who would populate the list of greatest ever scaled playoff PER’s and WS/48’s, so those are listed below.

I used the same standard deviations derived from the regular season numbers, as I felt that would be more accurately representative of the actual amount of talent parity or disparity in the league within a given year (just due to larger sample size and presence of complete player pool). So I just applied those standard deviations to the playoff numbers.

Small sample of games in many instances has produced some spurious results (especially with WS/48, which I think takes a little longer to gel).

Anyway, here’s what it yielded (EDIT: have placed an * by all values the result of 7 games or fewer (i.e. generally just a single series))…..

EDIT2: Have updated to include ABA player seasons (highlighted in blue-violet within lists).

Top 100(ish) scaled playoff PER’s of all-time
Spoiler:
1. ‘77 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 37.32
*2. ‘88 Hakeem Olajuwon - 36.85
3. ‘09 Lebron James - 34.34
4. '76 Julius Erving - 34.16
5. ‘70 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 33.73
6. ‘74 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 33.39
*7. ‘78 George Gervin - 31.54
8. ‘91 Michael Jordan - 31.52
9. ‘54 George Mikan - 31.50
10. ‘98 Shaquille O’Neal - 31.39
11. ‘02 Tim Duncan - 31.19
12. ‘93 Michael Jordan - 30.99
13. ‘90 Michael Jordan - 30.89
14. ‘64 Wilt Chamberlain - 30.76
15. ‘80 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 30.56
16. '18 Lebron James - 30.45
17. ‘84 Bernard King - 30.35
18. '17 Kawhi Leonard - 30.22
19. ‘14 Lebron James - 30.20
20. ‘89 Michael Jordan - 30.02
*21. ‘97 Anfernee Hardaway - 29.90
22. ‘08 Chris Paul - 29.81
*23. ‘11 Chris Paul - 29.76
24. ‘03 Shaquille O’Neal - 29.63
t25. ‘12 Lebron James - 29.57
t25. ‘06 Tim Duncan - 29.57
27. ‘00 Shaquille O’Neal - 29.41
28. ‘16 Lebron James - 29.29
29. ‘07 Amar’e Stoudemire - 29.28
*30. ‘74 Bob Lanier - 29.14
t31. ‘79 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 29.12
t31. '75 George McGinnis - 29.12
*33. ‘81 Marques Johnson - 29.09
34. ‘78 Marques Johnson - 29.00
35. ‘97 Shaquille O’Neal - 28.99
36. '17 Lebron James - 28.92
*37. ‘10 Dwyane Wade - 28.88
*38. ‘05 Yao Ming - 28.80
*39. ‘99 Grant Hill - 28.76
40. ‘84 Larry Bird - 28.75
41. ‘58 Cliff Hagan - 28.66
*42. ‘74 Elvin Hayes - 28.65
43. ‘87 Hakeem Olajuwon - 28.64
44. ‘96 David Robinson - 28.62
45. ‘62 Wilt Chamberlain - 28.49
*46. ‘99 Charles Barkley - 28.46
47. ‘69 Jerry West - 28.44
48. ‘98 Michael Jordan - 28.38
49. ‘99 Shaquille O’Neal - 28.32
50. ‘52 George Mikan - 28.24
*t51. ‘52 Dolph Schayes - 28.22
t51. '68 Connie Hawkins - 28.22
53. ‘01 Shaquille O’Neal - 28.18
54. ‘92 Michael Jordan - 28.14
55. ‘76 Bob Lanier - 28.12
56. ‘83 Moses Malone - 28.09
*57. ‘59 Cliff Hagan - 28.07
58. ‘10 Lebron James - 28.05
59. ‘61 Elgin Baylor - 28.04
*60. ‘84 Alex English - 28.01
*61. ‘13 Chris Paul - 28.00
62. ‘54 Dolph Schayes - 27.98
63. ‘16 Kawhi Leonard - 27.95
64. ‘67 Wilt Chamberlain - 27.94
65. ‘83 Johnny Moore - 27.91
*66. ‘84 Dan Issel - 27.86
67. ‘02 Shaquille O’Neal - 27.79
*t68. ‘10 Dirk Nowitzki - 27.78
t68. ‘79 George Gervin - 27.78
70. '19 Nikola Jokic - 27.74
*71. ‘06 Michael Redd - 27.69
72. ‘97 Hakeem Olajuwon - 27.66
73. ‘65 Wilt Chamberlain - 27.61
74. ‘03 Tim Duncan - 27.57
t75. ‘68 Jerry West - 27.44
t75. '74 Julius Erving - 27.44
77. ‘93 Hakeem Olajuwon - 27.42
78. ‘94 Charles Barkley - 27.39
*79. ‘09 Tony Parker - 27.38
*t80. ‘15 Anthony Davis - 27.34
*t80. ‘66 Wilt Chamberlain - 27.34
*t82. ‘05 Paul Pierce - 27.30
*t82. '70 Rick Barry - 27.30
t84. ‘94 Hakeem Olajuwon - 27.24
t84. ‘60 Wilt Chamberlain - 27.24
*86. ‘04 Dirk Nowitzki - 27.23
87. ‘88 Michael Jordan - 27.17
88. ‘97 Michael Jordan - 27.09
*89. ‘05 Tracy McGrady - 27.06
*90. ‘96 Charles Barkley - 27.02
91. ‘96 Shaquille O’Neal - 26.99
*92. ‘80 Moses Malone - 26.94
*93. ‘16 Paul George - 26.89
94. ‘84 Adrian Dantley - 26.85
95. ‘56 George Yardley - 26.74
*96. ‘75 Bob McAdoo - 26.71
97. ‘86 Spud Webb - 26.69
t98. ‘86 Magic Johnson - 26.56
t98. ‘56 Larry Foust - 26.56
100. ‘78 Steve Mix - 26.55
101. ‘86 Hakeem Olajuwon - 26.54
102. '70 Spencer Haywood - 26.49
103. ‘91 Charles Barkley - 26.48
104. ‘95 Kevin Johnson - 26.47
*105. ‘01 Tracy McGrady - 26.40
106. ‘62 Elgin Baylor - 26.38
107. ‘60 Elgin Baylor - 26.37
108. ‘87 Magic Johnson - 26.33
109. ‘16 Russell Westbrook - 26.32
t110. ‘53 George Mikan - 26.31
t110. '71 Zelmo Beaty - 26.31
t110. ‘96 Michael Jordan - 26.31
*t113. ‘03 Tracy McGrady - 26.28
t113. '69 Jimmy Jones - 26.28



Top 100(ish) scaled playoff WS/48’s
Spoiler:
*1. ‘88 Hakeem Olajuwon - .3906
t2. ‘77 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - .3816
t2. ‘09 Lebron James - .3816
4. ‘78 Steve Mix - .3755
5. ‘54 George Mikan - .3448
6. ‘59 Frank Ramsey - .3442
7. ‘74 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - .3410
8. ‘70 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - .3408
*9. ‘05 Paul Pierce - .3366
10. ‘78 Marques Johnson - .3353
11. ‘91 Michael Jordan - .3305
12. ‘58 Cliff Hagan - .3224
13. '76 Julius Erving - .3185
*14. ‘59 Cliff Hagan - .3177
15. ‘82 Kevin McHale - .3126
t16. ‘69 Jerry West - .3124
t16. ‘86 Magic Johnson - .3124
*18. ‘10 Dirk Nowitzki - .3107
19. ‘80 Cedric Maxwell - .3094
20. ‘86 Larry Bird - .3083
21. '68 Connie Hawkins - .3075
*22. ‘04 Dirk Nowitzki - .3070
23. ‘80 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - .3060
24. ‘03 Tim Duncan - .3053
25. ‘65 Bill Russell - .3041
26. ‘57 Frank Ramsey - .3037
27. '17 Kawhi Leonard - .3033
28. ‘64 Wilt Chamberlain - .3009
29. ‘93 Michael Jordan - .3002
t30. ‘08 Chris Paul - .2979
t30. ‘68 Jerry West - .2979
32. ‘83 Moses Malone - .2962
*33. ‘81 Marques Johnson - .2958
34. ‘96 Michael Jordan - .2956
35. ‘13 Chris Andersen - .2939
36. ‘83 Johnny Moore - .2914
*37. ‘78 George Gervin - .2911
38. ‘84 Larry Bird - .2896
39. ‘07 Amar’e Stoudemire - .2894
40. ‘05 Manu Ginobili - .2883
41. ‘84 Bernard King - .2877
*42. ‘95 Shawn Kemp - .2876
43. ‘90 Michael Jordan - .2871
t44. ‘01 Shaquille O’Neal - .2857
t44. ‘01 Kobe Bryant - .2857
46. ‘67 Wilt Chamberlain - .2844
t47. ‘69 Don Nelson - .2840
t47. ‘56 Paul Arizin - .2840
*49. ‘84 Alex English - .2836
50. ‘87 Magic Johnson - .2824
51. ‘12 Lebron James - .2813
52. '74 Julius Erving - .2811
53. ‘06 Dirk Nowitzki - .2810
*54. ‘93 Chris Morris - .2808
*55. ‘98 Steve Smith - .2806
*56. ‘01 Kevin Garnett - .2800
*57. ‘16 Paul George - .2788
58. ‘82 Magic Johnson - .2780
59. ‘89 Michael Jordan - .2768
60. ‘98 Michael Jordan - .2765
61. ‘79 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - .2761
62. ‘71 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - .2747
*63. ‘11 Chris Paul - .2742
64. ‘84 Mike Gminski - .2740
65. ‘69 Willis Reed - .2739
*66. ‘93 Derrick Coleman - .2735
67. ‘14 Lebron James - .2731
68. ‘05 Jeff Foster - .2720
t69. ‘95 Kevin Johnson - .2714
t69. '17 Kevin Durant - .2714
71. ‘87 Antoine Carr - .2713
72. ‘64 Sam Jones - .2712
73. ‘60 Elgin Baylor - .2704
74. ‘16 Hassan Whiteside - .2702
75. ‘16 Lebron James - .2694
*76. ‘74 Elvin Hayes - .2693
77. ‘11 Dwight Howard - .2692
78. ‘02 Jamaal Magloire - .2690
*79. ‘94 Detlef Schrempf - .2689
80. ‘06 Tim Duncan - .2687
81. ‘87 Hakeem Olajuwon - .2674
82. ‘79 George Gervin - .2671
83. ‘16 Kawhi Leonard - .2668
84. ‘86 Hakeem Olajuwon - .2666
85. '17 Lebron James - .2661
86. ‘02 Tim Duncan - .2659
87. ‘56 George Yardley - .2640
88. '17 Stephen Curry - .2631
89. ‘61 Bill Sharman - .2626
*90. ‘74 Bob Lanier - .2623
91. ‘56 Larry Foust - .2622
*92. ‘59 Clyde Lovellette - .2611
93. ‘86 Spud Webb - .2601
94. ‘03 Shaquille O’Neal - .2599
95. ‘79 Gus Williams - .2596
*96. ‘52 Dolph Schayes - .2595
97. ‘54 Dolph Schayes - .2590
98. ‘56 Bob Houbregs - .2585
99. ‘10 Lebron James - .2563
*100. ‘13 Chris Paul - .2555
101. ‘99 Marcus Camby - .2553
t102. ‘62 Wilt Chamberlain - .2552
*t102. ‘78 Tom Owens - .2552
t104. ‘60 Bill Russell - .2547
t104. ‘06 Dwyane Wade - .2547
106. ‘76 Bob Lanier - .2545
107. ‘10 Marcin Gortat - .2537
108. ‘11 Ray Allen - .2534
109. '71 Dan Issel - .2532
110. ‘02 Shaquille O’Neal - .2531
111. ‘62 Bill Russell - .2528
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#2 » by 2klegend » Wed Aug 31, 2016 3:13 am

It's important to know how many games they played that get them those number. That's why I'm generally more impress with Lebron '09 than Hakeem '88. Lebron did it for 21 games. Hakeem only 4. Larger game sample will normalize those stat. For most players, that enough games to win an NBA championship. Lebron may have the most incomplete GOAT season. The most complete GOAT season belong to '91 Jordan. Had Lebron won a championship in '09, then it wouldn't be debatable anymore.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#3 » by Quotatious » Wed Aug 31, 2016 3:15 am

2klegend wrote:That's why I'm generally more impress with Lebron '09 than Hakeem '88. Lebron did it for 21 games. Hakeem only 4.

LeBron played 14 games in 2009 playoffs. He played 21 this year (2016).
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#4 » by 2klegend » Wed Aug 31, 2016 3:26 am

Quotatious wrote:
2klegend wrote:That's why I'm generally more impress with Lebron '09 than Hakeem '88. Lebron did it for 21 games. Hakeem only 4.

LeBron played 14 games in 2009 playoffs. He played 21 this year (2016).

My bad. Then those numbers seem skew a bit. Though, still very impressive to put up those stat for 14 games.

I'm consider redoing my peak project which based on playoff game play coefficient rather than round play. This will help normalize every players. Though it may hurt the older player.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#5 » by trex_8063 » Thu Sep 1, 2016 12:52 am

2klegend wrote:It's important to know how many games they played that get them those number.



Sure, and I'd mentioned in OP that the small sample sizes can create some wonky results in some instances. fwiw, I just edited OP to put an "*" by any value that came from a sample that's 7 games or less (i.e. one series).
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#6 » by trex_8063 » Sun Jan 8, 2017 5:58 pm

Bumping because I've updated to include ABA player seasons. Of note are '76 Erving and '68 Connie Hawkins (both monsters in playoffs in respective years). McGinnis ('75) makes his first appearance in these lists, as dose Issel ('71), and Jimmy Jones ('69). '71 Zelmo Beaty once again showing up, too.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#7 » by 70sFan » Sun Jan 8, 2017 6:05 pm

Wow, Hagan was a real beast back then.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#8 » by trex_8063 » Thu May 23, 2019 4:42 pm

Bump. Upon request I have updated this [since '16] to include playoff runs from '17, '18, and ONLY those '19 runs that are fully completed.

Four playoff runs in the last nearly-three seasons made the cut for playoff Scaled PER:
'18 Lebron James (16th all-time)
'17 Kawhi Leonard (18th)
'17 Lebron James (36th)
'19 Nikola Jokic (70th)
**Kawhi, Giannis, and KD all have a fair chance of squeaking on to the list for their '19 runs, depending upon how they finish out the playoffs.

Four playoff runs from last <3 seasons have made the cut for playoff Scaled WS/48:
'17 Kawhi Leonard (27th)
'17 Kevin Durant (tied for 69th)
'17 Lebron James (85th)
'17 Stephen Curry (88th)
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#9 » by An Unbiased Fan » Thu May 23, 2019 5:53 pm

PER is already scaled to era, so not sure this is the right approach. Weaker seasons get overrate,d hence why the 70's is all over the Top 10.

More than that.....SRS of opponent's faced would be critical.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#10 » by trex_8063 » Thu May 23, 2019 6:26 pm

An Unbiased Fan wrote:PER is already scaled to era, so not sure this is the right approach. Weaker seasons get overrate,d hence why the 70's is all over the Top 10.


I'd refer you to post #14 of this thread (and read some speculations in OP of that one, too, if you haven't; fwiw, I'm starting to think my 3rd postulation [regarding playing time] might be the most relevant; EDIT: recent edit to 2nd postulation possibly very relevant too).
This study is not to suggest you shouldn't still factor in era-strength considerations; it's addressing the relative parity/disparity seen in certain years, nothing more.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#11 » by penbeast0 » Fri May 24, 2019 12:52 am

70sFan wrote:Wow, Hagan was a real beast back then.


And look at Frank Ramsey in the WS/48 list! Not even a starter (though he was usually 5th in minutes over nominal starter Jim Lotscutoff). What a magnificent playoff performer, which the Celtics needed as Bob Cousy's shooting during this era fell off the table in the playoffs a lot.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#12 » by Odinn21 » Fri May 24, 2019 3:22 am

An Unbiased Fan wrote:PER is already scaled to era, so not sure this is the right approach. Weaker seasons get overrate,d hence why the 70's is all over the Top 10.

More than that.....SRS of opponent's faced would be critical.

No. PER isn't scaled to era. At least not the ratings.

PER uses iterative methords to achieve 15.0 average across the league but only for that season. The idea behind the stat is, the average is always 15.0. But they don't disclose what would be the averages of player with 15.0000 PER.
Imagine a player with 15.0000 PER in 2017-18, and he had the exact statline for 2018-19 season and his PER in the season won't be 15.0 any more.
We don't know a single thing about the average 15.0 PER player from statistical pov. I know it can sound ridicilous but NBA 2K games are the only PER calculator I know. If you simulate a season with all-time teams in there, you'll see none of the players would break 24.0 PER even though their EFF and GmSc numbers would look good. ( https://i.imgur.com/LZVVFHS.jpg )

That was about PER only. Your point isn't valid IMO. Larry Bird led the league in PER with 25.6 in '85-86 season. The next season Jordan led the league with 29.8. What, the league became that weak over a season?..
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#13 » by RCM88x » Fri May 24, 2019 5:28 am

Win shares are a weird stat.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#14 » by iggymcfrack » Fri May 24, 2019 5:47 pm

“Scaled PER” has to be my least favorite stat ever. PER is already a league adjusted stat! If there weren’t a lot of stars in the 70s and you didn’t have to be much better than average to lead the league, that doesn’t mean the stars who did play in that weak era should get extra credit.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#15 » by trex_8063 » Fri May 24, 2019 11:25 pm

iggymcfrack wrote:“Scaled PER” has to be my least favorite stat ever. PER is already a league adjusted stat! If there weren’t a lot of stars in the 70s and you didn’t have to be much better than average to lead the league, that doesn’t mean the stars who did play in that weak era should get extra credit.


To each his own, but seriously: if we note that whereas we routinely have multiple players with PER's >29 (if not >30) in recent years, and yet see an entire "era" in which no one [or at least: no one outside of Kareem] manages a PER >25 (sometimes not even 24).......red flags should be popping up in your mind.

If past eras are so much weaker in terms of average competition (an opinion you've frequently championed), and there were truly few real "stars", BOTH of those factors would lower the effective quality of the mean, and if anything should make it easier for the rare uniquely talented individual to distance himself from that mean.

imo, there are factors unidentified contributing to greater/lesser parity in some eras compared to others. If you haven't, I'd read the hypotheses #2 and #3 in this thread; the recent edit I just put in #2 can hardly be denied as a potential factor, imo.

This isn't aimed at giving "extra credit", but rather giving some accounting to factors which are clearly [imo] at play wrt parity. NOTE [as has been indicated in multiple responses to others]: this metric does NOT give any particular accounting to strength of era said "Scaled PER's/WS48's" were achieved in (i.e. a Scaled PER of 31.00 obtained in '69 is NOT necessarily superior to a Scaled PER of 28.00 obtained in '19).
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#16 » by feyki » Mon Jan 4, 2021 8:26 pm

Excellent thread, work. I just want to note that Russell had %38 of his team win shares in the 1962 Playoffs. Only 00 Shaq,03 Duncan,50 Mikan,67 Wilt and 65 Russel have over of %35 TmWS's.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#17 » by penbeast0 » Mon Jan 4, 2021 9:29 pm

Also fun to see Steve Mix in the top 10 for WS/48, without an * even. More one of those small sample size things than an indication of his true abilities but he was a player I really liked back in the day.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#18 » by trex_8063 » Mon Jan 4, 2021 9:34 pm

feyki wrote:Excellent thread, work. I just want to note that Russell had %38 of his team win shares in the 1962 Playoffs. Only 00 Shaq,03 Duncan,50 Mikan,67 Wilt and 65 Russel have over of %35 TmWS's.


Yeah, '62 Russell just barely made the cut-off in scaled ps WS/48 (#111 on the list above), but did so while averaging 48 mpg.....pretty beastly.
'65 Russell is 25th on the list (and while averaging nearly 47 mpg).

'50 Mikan unfortunately we cannot say as WS/48 didn't exist yet (because minutes were not yet tracked). Safe bet that he'd be up there if they had been.

Haven't updated for '20, fwiw.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#19 » by penbeast0 » Mon Jan 4, 2021 9:35 pm

feyki wrote:Excellent thread, work. I just want to note that Russell had %38 of his team win shares in the 1962 Playoffs. Only 00 Shaq,03 Duncan,50 Mikan,67 Wilt and 65 Russel have over of %35 TmWS's.


Another, equally interesting, thread if you want to post it. Minutes are again going to be a big part of this. Wilt is running 47 mpg, Russell 46, Shaq and Duncan around 43, Mikan likely similar.
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Re: Greatest Playoff Scaled PER and WS/48 Player Seasons all-time 

Post#20 » by feyki » Wed Jan 6, 2021 8:17 am

penbeast0 wrote:
feyki wrote:Excellent thread, work. I just want to note that Russell had %38 of his team win shares in the 1962 Playoffs. Only 00 Shaq,03 Duncan,50 Mikan,67 Wilt and 65 Russel have over of %35 TmWS's.


Another, equally interesting, thread if you want to post it. Minutes are again going to be a big part of this. Wilt is running 47 mpg, Russell 46, Shaq and Duncan around 43, Mikan likely similar.


I had created a thread in a Turkish Bball forum five years ago. I was calling it as ring shares, how much load ATG's take on their championship runs. There are top 10 championship runs:
Spoiler:
1-1962 Bill Russell, 1965 Bill Russell - %38
3-1950 George Mikan,2000 Shaquille O'Neal,2003 Tim Duncan - %35
6-1967 Wilt Chamberlain %34
7-1960 Bill Russell,1963 Bill Russell,1984 Larry Bird,1954 George Mikan %33
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“The idea is not to block every shot. The idea is to make your opponent believe that you might block every shot.”

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