Shaqdaddy11
MVP
No, it's you need to look in the mirror, we can all see what is really there.

Hahaha, it's like talking to Sloth from the Goonies (google it kid, you're probably too young to have seen it)
No, it's you need to look in the mirror, we can all see what is really there.
But man, getting to the Finals 4 out of 5 years(winning 3 straight), having to go through the prime Kings, Blazers, Spurs, and T-Wolves is hard to top
Kid, like I said you don't shit about me, stop embarrassing yourself.
But that's my point.
LeBron had to go through some hard teams too. It doesn't matter if it's in the conference finals or the finals.
LeBron never got swept in the playoffs unlike Jordan.
This is so overstated. In the time frame mentioned, since the last time the Cavs supposedly faced a "good team" in the East.... they've beaten five 50-win EC teams and a 60-win EC team. Just because those teams weren't ultimately able to seriously threaten the Cavs doesn't mean they are suddenly not good teams.
Also.... Laker fans might want to think about Magic & Kareem before they start complaining about opponent difficulty:
2nd Round - average playoff opponent
Jordan: 51.9 wins
LeBron: 51.18 wins
Magic: 43.12 wins
Kareem: 42.71 wins
Conf Finals - average playoff opponent
Jordan: 58.5 wins
LeBron: 55.44 wins
Magic: 51.1 wins
Kareem: 52 wins
Finals - average playoff opponent
Jordan: 61.17 wins
LeBron: 61.91 wins
Magic: 60.44 wins
Kareem: 58.1 wins
Overall
Jordan: 53.54 wins
LeBron: 51.02 wins
Magic: 48.6 wins
Kareem: 48.55 wins
Take that for data
Expansion teams=easy wins.This is so overstated. In the time frame mentioned, since the last time the Cavs supposedly faced a "good team" in the East.... they've beaten five 50-win EC teams and a 60-win EC team. Just because those teams weren't ultimately able to seriously threaten the Cavs doesn't mean they are suddenly not good teams.
Also.... Laker fans might want to think about Magic & Kareem before they start complaining about opponent difficulty:
2nd Round - average playoff opponent
Jordan: 51.9 wins
LeBron: 51.18 wins
Magic: 43.12 wins
Kareem: 42.71 wins
Conf Finals - average playoff opponent
Jordan: 58.5 wins
LeBron: 55.44 wins
Magic: 51.1 wins
Kareem: 52 wins
Finals - average playoff opponent
Jordan: 61.17 wins
LeBron: 61.91 wins
Magic: 60.44 wins
Kareem: 58.1 wins
Overall
Jordan: 53.54 wins
LeBron: 51.02 wins
Magic: 48.6 wins
Kareem: 48.55 wins
Take that for data
LeBron never got swept in the playoffs unlike Jordan.
But even you must admit, Lebron is not at Jordans level ... Had Jordan not gone to baseball he probably wins 8 straight titles in a row with Chicago... Plus Mike never let the Bulls lose in the finals, hell he never even had a team take them 7 ...
Yeah, Jordan is the GOAT. I've never argued otherwise. I do think LeBron has a chance to make it a legitmiate debate, depending on what happens in the remainder of his career. We'll see.
Jordan did play in Game 7s. Never in the Finals though which is probably what you meant.
Sorry, no can do.Take that for data
yah you dont know what you are talking about.Sorry, no can do.
Statistically speaking, your data is wonky at best. There were only 17 teams when KAJ won his first NBA title and only 23 when he won his next five, pretty similar for Magic too with only 23 teams in the league when these two retired, and Jordan saw the expansion going from 23 teams to 29 by the time he retired.
Now because of guys like KAJ, Magic, Bird and Jordan, the league was able expand to 30 teams. This was an expansion fueled by popularity, and not by an expansion of talent. This left the NBA with a pretty shallow talent pool creating multiple bottom feeders. Besides that, these 17-23 teams back in the day, still played 82 games, so they faced more games against one another. That sort of parity made it common to see half the playoff field with season record of ~.500.
These facts lower the figures in the data you collected for KAJ the most, in large for Magic, and in part for Jordan yet raises the figures in the data you collected for LeBron by comparison.
There is far less parity in today's NBA league wide, compared to the 70's/80's so comparing raw data like you have is pretty much worthless, since you did not use a data matrix which at least attempts to quantify these type of variables.
Even if you only did it on title winning years for the players you've listed, your list would likely look completely different, which really speaks to the intent of this thread.
Hey, nice try though.
Sorry, no can do.
Statistically speaking, your data is wonky at best. There were only 17 teams when KAJ won his first NBA title and only 23 when he won his next five, pretty similar for Magic too with only 23 teams in the league when these two retired, and Jordan saw the expansion going from 23 teams to 29 by the time he retired.
Now because of guys like KAJ, Magic, Bird and Jordan, the league was able expand to 30 teams. This was an expansion fueled by popularity, and not by an expansion of talent. This left the NBA with a pretty shallow talent pool creating multiple bottom feeders. Besides that, these 17-23 teams back in the day, still played 82 games, so they faced more games against one another. That sort of parity made it common to see half the playoff field with season record of ~.500.
These facts lower the figures in the data you collected for KAJ the most, in large for Magic, and in part for Jordan yet raises the figures in the data you collected for LeBron by comparison.
There is far less parity in today's NBA league wide, compared to the 70's/80's so comparing raw data like you have is pretty much worthless, since you did not use a data matrix which at least attempts to quantify these type of variables.
Even if you only did it on title winning years for the players you've listed, your list would likely look completely different, which really speaks to the intent of this thread.
Hey, nice try though.
Nice work gordon, and it appears you do understand in part. I'm not really sure what exactly the SRS and ELO data is except what you've stated but that you've added data that uses a data matrix, is a move in the right direction, compared the raw data you posted before. The parity issue I brought up is a huge part and I guess what I'm getting at is it is almost impossible to compare players of different eras for a multitude of reasons.I'm not sure I'm understanding what you're trying to get at? Is your contention that .500 teams were better teams in the past than .500 teams are now?
If that's the case, you might be interested in the seeing the same data with SRS and ELO included. These metrics evaluate a team strength regardless of their win record and competition.
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yah you dont know what you are talking about.
there has never been more talent in the NBA than right now.
The influx of foreign players and the college infrastructure, scouting, and coaching bring more talent to the NBA than anytime in history and its not even close.
20 years ago how many foreign players were in the NBA? Today- how many players are there?
20-30 years ago the college game didnt have nearly as many good teams, nearly as many good coaches, nearly as much money in a variety of programs. Today- if you can play- they will find you, coach you up- and get you to the NBA. Even 2nd, 3rd, 4th tier college teams pay coaches hundreds of thousands if not million of dollars- have huge staffs, etc.
Its not even close--- there has never been as much talent in the NBA as right now.
yah exactly.
The 2017 NBA playoffs say hello. If there is "so much talent" why are 2 teams undefeated so far?