Crow, have you by chance checked the correlation for the 2009-10, for the data minus rookie contracts?
On a, perhaps, somewhat related point, what seems rather odd to me about the 2009-10 data compared to 2014-15 is that pertaining to +2 players.
2009-10 sees 26 such players with salaries about $8 million and above and 11 below, for 37 in all.
2014-15 by contrast sees 31 above $8 million and 33 below, a total (unless I've miscounted) of 64.
So, what we see is not only that there are gobs more very good players last year, but they are "unexpectedly" underpaid.
So, my first question pertains to the RAPM estimates used. Jeremias' RPM shows 74 +2 and higher last year, and unfortunately the
http://stats-for-the-nba.appspot.com/ is no longer so we cannot access the more or less (?) comparable xRAPM for 2009-10. This said, I do not recall any large anomaly in the number of very good NBA players across years. If anything, my memory was one of enduring stability in the distribution.
The second question (returning to my request of Crow) is: were these grossly underpaid players last year mostly under rookie contracts, thereby explaining the deterioration of the correlation over the last five years?