Basketball-reference has all the links. I measured single season playoff greatness with a 300 minute cutoff (3-point era).
Then I measured playoff production from ages 24-35 with a 1000 minute cutoff (all eras). CP3 doesn't even qualify, yet you decided to make these odd criticisms.
agentkirb wrote:I'm sorry, because of the time delay between my posts I probably forgot a lot of the context of the debate. I was responding mostly to some chart that had CP3, Amare and Camby listed among the all-time win shares for individual seasons (I think). I believe it was Win Shares per 48 minutes.
I don't know about this 2nd link you are talking about. I went back to your first post in the thread, and the second link in that post leads to a dead link. Whatever was in that link isn't there anymore. But what I was referring to was the all-time rankings for win-shares which had Chris Paul, Amare and Camby high in the all-time rankings. You say they aren't in the second link... if that's true then in a sense you are agreeing with me aren't you? Basically my whole argument is that I don't trust a ranking that has those three guys high in the all-time list. Or a better way to put it would be to say that I trust the statistic, but I have an inner filter for when I see guys like Camby and Amare ranking high among all-time players that automatically goes "ok, they are obviously not all-time greats, but the rest of this is right".
The point is you confused yourself from the very beginning, not just recently. Link 1 measured X, Link 2 measured Y.
I'll give you an example; T-Mac isn't in the GOAT conversation but his peak season is better than some of Jordan's seasons. Criticizing a metric that thinks highly of a young T-Mac, doesn't make sense.
Mike G wrote: A player's efficiency is "overrated"?
Yes, a player's PER can be "overrated" or "underrated".
Mike G wrote: What have "long two-point jumpers" to do with anything?
It seems obvious to me Jordan takes more of these kinds of shots. While this may not hurt his PER, it does hurt his real efficiency.
Jordan chucks his way into 36%, 37%, 38% usage, CP3 does not. Sometimes a high usage strategy will backfire.
The Marcus Camby anomaly was, as I recall, that his 1999 postseason made a list of top playoff performances since 1980-something; not that he was an all-time great.
I didn't really dispute this, I had a problem with other comments.