Poll: Your all-time greatest players
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
If RAPM is used in this discussion, shouldn't it be 28 year RAPM? If "not", why not? Why 3-5 year?
Jokic 4th here, for those covered fully or adequately:
https://nbarapm.com/datasets/LifetimeRAPM
Jokic #1 on career BPM and by more than 10%.
Still being active can both help and hurt. Evaluate just "to date" or can project if you want, for this opinion poll.
Jokic 4th here, for those covered fully or adequately:
https://nbarapm.com/datasets/LifetimeRAPM
Jokic #1 on career BPM and by more than 10%.
Still being active can both help and hurt. Evaluate just "to date" or can project if you want, for this opinion poll.
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
I brought up mid-term because that is what BPM is based off.
A couple reasons why I personally don't use super long RAPM samples:
-The matchup matrix gets more and more sparse, leading to less mathematical certainty (and folks rarely include certainty levels)
-Plenty of players have played at significantly different levels through their careers, I don't find trying to funnel them down to 1 number particularly useful or truthful (this applies to non-APM stats as well). Eg - post injury Kobe wasn't any good, but to the best of my knowledge those seasons don't lower his career championship odds (in the style of Ben Taylor's CORP)
-Long term APMs seem to introduce dubious concepts like 'age curves' and further black box the process
A couple reasons why I personally don't use super long RAPM samples:
-The matchup matrix gets more and more sparse, leading to less mathematical certainty (and folks rarely include certainty levels)
-Plenty of players have played at significantly different levels through their careers, I don't find trying to funnel them down to 1 number particularly useful or truthful (this applies to non-APM stats as well). Eg - post injury Kobe wasn't any good, but to the best of my knowledge those seasons don't lower his career championship odds (in the style of Ben Taylor's CORP)
-Long term APMs seem to introduce dubious concepts like 'age curves' and further black box the process
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
A player may increase his VORP by playing more minutes (or more seasons), but rarely or perhaps never increase his BPM this way.
I see b-r.com has biggest VORP seasons combining RS+PO:
https://www.basketball-reference.com/le ... son_c.html
However you may define 'elite' level over x seasons, here's a count at some arbitrary levels:
Same deal with Win Shares, RS+PO:
ABA seasons are also counted.
The old-timers qualify in spite of shorter schedules and shorter postseasons.
I see b-r.com has biggest VORP seasons combining RS+PO:
https://www.basketball-reference.com/le ... son_c.html
However you may define 'elite' level over x seasons, here's a count at some arbitrary levels:
Code: Select all
top 5 13+
4 - Jordan
1 - LeBron
top 10 12+
6 - Jordan
2 - LeBron
1 - Erving, Jokic
top 25 10.8+
9 - Jordan
6 - LeBron
2 - Jokic
1 - Erving, Robinson, Garnett, Shaq,
- - Durant, Paul, Curry, Duncan,
- - Kareem
top 50 9.89+
11 - LeBron
9 - Jordan
4 - Bird
3 - Jokic
2 - Kareem, Erving, Durant, Curry, Magic,
- - Robinson, Paul
1 - Garnett, Shaq, Duncan, Dirk, McGrady,
- - Wade, Doncic, Olajuwon, Harden
top 100 8.43+
14 - LeBron
10 - Jordan
5 - Jokic, Bird, Kareem, Harden
4 - Magic, Erving, Stockton, Robinson
3 - Garnett, Durant, Malone, Wade, Paul
2 - Duncan, Curry, Shaq, Westbrook, Kobe,
- - Olajuwon, Giannis, Dirk, Barkley
1 - McGrady, Carter, Doncic, Kawhi,
- - McGinnis, Drexler
top 250 (2 or more) 6.51+
15 - LeBron
11 - Jordan
10 - Magic, Malone, Stockton
8 - Bird, Garnett, Durant, Robinson, Paul
7 - Jokic, Kareem, Erving, Kobe
6 - Duncan, Shaq, Pippen, Harden, Giannis,
- - Dirk, Drexler
5 - Curry, Barkley
4 - McGrady, Kawhi, Wade, Olajuwon, Payton
3 - Doncic, Westbrook, Payton, Billups, Davis
2 - Carter, Porter, Marion, Shai, Ginobili
- - George, Ewing, Embiid, Butler, Kidd,
Code: Select all
Top 5 25.5+
3 - Wilt
2 - Kareem
Top 10 24.8+
3 - Wilt
2 - Kareem, Jordan, Mikan
1 - LeBron
Top 25 22.87+
6 - Jordan
4 - Wilt, Kareem
3 - Mikan
2 - LeBron
1 - Duncan, Shaq, Oscar, Dirk, Gilmore
Top 50 19.77+
9 - Jordan
6 - Wilt
5 - LeBron, Kareem
3 - Mikan
2 - Duncan, Jokic, Garnett, Durant,
- - Robinson, Gilmore
1 - Curry, Shaq, Oscar, Bird, Garnett, Erving,
- - West, Dirk, Hawkins, Paul, Russell, Groza
Top 100 18.09+
9 - Wilt, Jordan
8 - LeBron
6 - Kareem
4 - Magic, Bird
3 - Oscar, Malone, West, Mikan, Robinson, Paul,
- - Russell, Gilmore
2 - Duncan, Curry, Shaq, Jokic, Garnett, Durant,
- - Erving, Olajuwon, Dirk, Barkley, Groza
1 - P Gasol, Johnston, Garnett, Fulks,
- - Jimmy Jones, Harden, Wade, Dwight, Issel,
- - Hawkins, Billups, McAdoo, Feerick
Top 250 14.94+
12 - LeBron
11 - Wilt
10 - Jordan, Malone
9 - Kareem
8 - Erving, Magic, Stockton
7 - Durant, Russell
6 - Shaq, Oscar, Kobe, Mikan, Robinson,
- - West, Dirk
5 - Bird, Harden, Paul, Jokic,
- - Barkley, Garnett
4 - Frazier, Duncan, Johnston,
- - Billups, Pettit, Gilmore
3 - Curry, Pippen, P Gasol, Moses, Wade, Dwight
2 - Reed, Gobert, Barry, Pierce, Kawhi, Olajuwon,
- - Baylor, Macauley, McAdoo, Davis, Groza
The old-timers qualify in spite of shorter schedules and shorter postseasons.
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
Fair enough eminence. Appreciate the reply.
Lots of potential considerations to this assignment.
Such a tiny vote. 16 got 3+ votes. 12 got 5+.
Unless you really want to fight about top 5, there is a pretty high amount of similarity.
I have no real interest in fighting about a top 5 or a top 10 over a top 16 or 20.
Lots of potential considerations to this assignment.
Such a tiny vote. 16 got 3+ votes. 12 got 5+.
Unless you really want to fight about top 5, there is a pretty high amount of similarity.
I have no real interest in fighting about a top 5 or a top 10 over a top 16 or 20.
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
Did you notice that thru age 29 he's well behind Jordan's BPM and barely ahead of LeBron?
Trailing even more (and probably Kareem) in VORP thru this age. Totally swamped in postseason VORP.
Here it is again:
Code: Select all
age 20-29 regular seasons postseasons
goat? min BPM VORP min BPM VORP <O>
Jokic 23062 10.3 71.4 3038 10.8 9.8 1
Jordan 25842 10.9 84.0 4645 12.1 16.5 3
LeBron 30154 10.1 91.6 6717 10.0 20.4 2
Kareem 26349 9.2* 74.3* 3023 8.7* 7.8* 1
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
I didn't break it down by age. Not really invested.
Difference levels to discussion. Is he #1 is different than does he belong in top 10 or is he closer to 20.
Difference levels to discussion. Is he #1 is different than does he belong in top 10 or is he closer to 20.
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
I second all of these comments. My favorite version of RAPM is three or at most four year duration, with a decent non-box score prior to get it started in the right general vicinity.eminence wrote: ↑Thu Mar 06, 2025 10:42 pm I brought up mid-term because that is what BPM is based off.
A couple reasons why I personally don't use super long RAPM samples:
-The matchup matrix gets more and more sparse, leading to less mathematical certainty (and folks rarely include certainty levels)
-Plenty of players have played at significantly different levels through their careers, I don't find trying to funnel them down to 1 number particularly useful or truthful (this applies to non-APM stats as well). Eg - post injury Kobe wasn't any good, but to the best of my knowledge those seasons don't lower his career championship odds (in the style of Ben Taylor's CORP)
-Long term APMs seem to introduce dubious concepts like 'age curves' and further black box the process
The long-term rapms must include aging or they won't work at all, and if they include aging it by definition must be an assumed average aging curve for everyone... And if someone has an unusual real aging curve it can throw off a bunch of player's values.
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Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
I wouldn’t call aging curves dubious but I do agree that in this type of context where we only care about really a small minority of results assuming the exact same one for everyone may not be ideal. For purely explanetory reasons getting individual aging curves based on their varied box score production changes throughout the seasons could be interesting, might be somewhat impractical though but still
Within the context of this kind of thing, perhaps having a separate set of priors for the players you wanna evaluate and the players around them make sense though, one group with a more non box score PI type prior and the other a more traditional box score one
Within the context of this kind of thing, perhaps having a separate set of priors for the players you wanna evaluate and the players around them make sense though, one group with a more non box score PI type prior and the other a more traditional box score one
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
Aging curves are not dubious in and of themselves, in terms of their use as a general tool. But as we know each person has a very unique year to year variation curve that will also be impacted by injuries and other causes.
But that will mess with long-term RAPM. For instance, if a player is elite at a very young or very old age, that will tend to cause that same player's peak years to be overestimated in the model and thus depressing their teammates. Similarly, if an elite player is injured one year, the model will assume that player is still elite and other players will get demerited for that bad season.
But that will mess with long-term RAPM. For instance, if a player is elite at a very young or very old age, that will tend to cause that same player's peak years to be overestimated in the model and thus depressing their teammates. Similarly, if an elite player is injured one year, the model will assume that player is still elite and other players will get demerited for that bad season.
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
So, a few points in reply to various comments...
First, it is refreshing for the creator of a statistic to be most concerned about its relevance and efficacy, and I look forward to the implications of the next round of BPM "de-Russell Westbrookification".
This having been said, I still am scratching my head as to how Daniel has KAJ ranked aboveJokic. Barring Jokic being ineligible for GOAT consideration, owing to the fact that only the supposed first half of his career has occurred to date or one imposes serious weight on post-season success (more on that below) if you go line by line, at a comparable stage of their careers, looking at every stat that explains player efficiency, with the exception of block percentage, Jokic dominates.
The point being that for KAJ to show up as superior in BPM terms post-whatever revision is made to the statistic's formulation, it would appear that the reweighting of block percentage will have to dominate the effect of all others (total shooting, offensive rebounding, defensive rebounding, assists, steals, and turnovers). Furthermore, this reformulation would need to need to eliminate what is now a 4.7 point differential in peak BPM.
As for Kareem's record being incomplete owing to unavailable statistics from his early career possibly overturning this concluion, I simply don't see how that dog hunts. If you look at the statistical record, his aging curve well identified; what is missing is the beginning of his career. But there is simply nothing in the record of the stats that are available in his early years to suggest that there might be a missing second peak, never mind one that might show a 4.7 points greater BPM rating than the one actually observed.
Moving on to the relevance of post-season success in GOAT debates, I simply do not understand the weight that so many folks here assign to this factor. A very nuanced argument can be made for some relevance (though this would be really difficult to objectively estimate). But to inject a pure measure of team success in what is a team sport as assert that as being relevant to the appraisal of the individual, is really kinda weird.
If we stick with BPM as the metric, Jokic has had just one year with a strong second player alongside him: Jamal Murray last year at 4.1. In the championship year, his best BPM running mate was Aaron Gordon at 2.1. I am hoping that this isn't a point that needs emphasis in this forum, but it is unlikely for a team to win a championships when the second best player clocks in with a 2.1 BPM rating. Perhaps that was a singular event in NBA history? At least I am sure that Kareem's championship teams never faced such a shortcoming in the "supporting cast" (even for the three rings when he was part of it).
P.S. PFs are a part of the BPM framework, and I hadn't mentioned these above. No matter, as it turns out, but if you compare Jokic' five peak years (what are on going) to the six best Kareem BPM seasons, the average PFs per 100 possessions differs by only 0.01 (in Kareem's favor).
First, it is refreshing for the creator of a statistic to be most concerned about its relevance and efficacy, and I look forward to the implications of the next round of BPM "de-Russell Westbrookification".
This having been said, I still am scratching my head as to how Daniel has KAJ ranked aboveJokic. Barring Jokic being ineligible for GOAT consideration, owing to the fact that only the supposed first half of his career has occurred to date or one imposes serious weight on post-season success (more on that below) if you go line by line, at a comparable stage of their careers, looking at every stat that explains player efficiency, with the exception of block percentage, Jokic dominates.
The point being that for KAJ to show up as superior in BPM terms post-whatever revision is made to the statistic's formulation, it would appear that the reweighting of block percentage will have to dominate the effect of all others (total shooting, offensive rebounding, defensive rebounding, assists, steals, and turnovers). Furthermore, this reformulation would need to need to eliminate what is now a 4.7 point differential in peak BPM.
As for Kareem's record being incomplete owing to unavailable statistics from his early career possibly overturning this concluion, I simply don't see how that dog hunts. If you look at the statistical record, his aging curve well identified; what is missing is the beginning of his career. But there is simply nothing in the record of the stats that are available in his early years to suggest that there might be a missing second peak, never mind one that might show a 4.7 points greater BPM rating than the one actually observed.
Moving on to the relevance of post-season success in GOAT debates, I simply do not understand the weight that so many folks here assign to this factor. A very nuanced argument can be made for some relevance (though this would be really difficult to objectively estimate). But to inject a pure measure of team success in what is a team sport as assert that as being relevant to the appraisal of the individual, is really kinda weird.
If we stick with BPM as the metric, Jokic has had just one year with a strong second player alongside him: Jamal Murray last year at 4.1. In the championship year, his best BPM running mate was Aaron Gordon at 2.1. I am hoping that this isn't a point that needs emphasis in this forum, but it is unlikely for a team to win a championships when the second best player clocks in with a 2.1 BPM rating. Perhaps that was a singular event in NBA history? At least I am sure that Kareem's championship teams never faced such a shortcoming in the "supporting cast" (even for the three rings when he was part of it).
P.S. PFs are a part of the BPM framework, and I hadn't mentioned these above. No matter, as it turns out, but if you compare Jokic' five peak years (what are on going) to the six best Kareem BPM seasons, the average PFs per 100 possessions differs by only 0.01 (in Kareem's favor).
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
Well, Kareem had 3 years (before BPM) of .320-.340 WS/48 and did that over 42.4 min./G. Jokic has been .296-.313 now in his 5th year.looking at every stat that explains player efficiency, with the exception of block percentage, Jokic dominates.
Kareem's 3 super seasons would be equivalent to BPM of ~12.2 - 13.2, while Jokic is having a 4th consecutive year at 13+, going 34.5 mpg.
So Kareem, in a possibly slower era, averaged about 6 minutes of rest to Joker's 14 min.
During ages 22-29, both have scored 34 points per 48 minutes. Jokic has shot .641 TS% to Kareem's .579.
And Jokic (Den) opponents have hit .568 TS% while Mil/LA opponents shot .478 in this interval. Kareem took more shots and hit .101 better than his opposition, and Jokic has created that differential in just one season (2023.)
Kareem outrebounded his avg opponent by 17.6 to 9.6, per 48 min. A ratio of 1.82
Joker has exactly doubled his avg counterpart, 16.6 to 8.3 per48
Jokic has had the luxury of more than twice as many rest minutes. This year he's playing the most of his career, 36.4 mpg. Kareem went to age 34 before he reduced to that level.
So the differences (thru age 29) are mostly Joker's incredible passing vs Kareem's defense; and the value of being on the floor an extra 25-30% .
When Jokic has doubled his current totals, we have a fair career comparison.
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
Mike, color me more than a wee bit skeptical that Kareem's three years of WS/48 you mentioned would translate to a BPM of 12.2 to 13.2. How did you establish such equivalence?
If one cared, one could put in informed "upper bound" hypothetical values for the missing variables in the BPM formula. I'm not interested in going through the whole exercise, but just eyeballing this, your suggested range doesn't seem remotely plausible.
And there are a couple of other reasons to be skeptical about an earlier much higher peak to Kareem's career. Has there ever in the history of the NBA been a player, a center in particular, with such an odd BPM aging curve? I can't think of one and having poked around a bit, couldn't find one.
Second, let's consider the implications of your conjectured Kareem's crazy-good, early-career BPM stats. Like with WS, there is an approximate adding-up constraint for BPM, where the possession-weighted, contributions of individuals sum up approximately to the team's net points per 100 possessions (ORtg - DRtg). Given the minutes (possessions) KAJ played, if you stipulate that his BPM was in the 12 to 13 range, you are implicitly making a very negative appraisal of Oscar Robertson et al. Now, you may be comfortable with that, but maybe not?
If one cared, one could put in informed "upper bound" hypothetical values for the missing variables in the BPM formula. I'm not interested in going through the whole exercise, but just eyeballing this, your suggested range doesn't seem remotely plausible.
And there are a couple of other reasons to be skeptical about an earlier much higher peak to Kareem's career. Has there ever in the history of the NBA been a player, a center in particular, with such an odd BPM aging curve? I can't think of one and having poked around a bit, couldn't find one.
Second, let's consider the implications of your conjectured Kareem's crazy-good, early-career BPM stats. Like with WS, there is an approximate adding-up constraint for BPM, where the possession-weighted, contributions of individuals sum up approximately to the team's net points per 100 possessions (ORtg - DRtg). Given the minutes (possessions) KAJ played, if you stipulate that his BPM was in the 12 to 13 range, you are implicitly making a very negative appraisal of Oscar Robertson et al. Now, you may be comfortable with that, but maybe not?
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
On the level of teams the '71-'73 Bucks were (relative to their competition, and especially '71/'72) a +12 or higher BPM doesn't necessitate a particularly low assessment for Oscar and crew.
See the '16 Warriors with Steph at +11.9 and Dray at +5.5.
Was Kareem really at his best those years, ehh, I'm not sure - I do prefer his defensive activity level those seasons and so do tend to go with '71/'72 as his best 2 season stretch, but that wouldn't show up much in a BPM. Given other measures I strongly suspect they'd be his best seasons by BPM as well. I'll agree on Mike's ranges being a tad high but not by much, I'd guess at least +11 and +12 seems fully possible for nearest full point estimates.
See the '16 Warriors with Steph at +11.9 and Dray at +5.5.
Was Kareem really at his best those years, ehh, I'm not sure - I do prefer his defensive activity level those seasons and so do tend to go with '71/'72 as his best 2 season stretch, but that wouldn't show up much in a BPM. Given other measures I strongly suspect they'd be his best seasons by BPM as well. I'll agree on Mike's ranges being a tad high but not by much, I'd guess at least +11 and +12 seems fully possible for nearest full point estimates.
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
As mentioned, Jokic has consistently been in the .300-.310 WS/48 range and with higher BPM than what I estimate for Kareem with .320-.340 WS/48. So I don't get the skepticism.
BPM loves Jokic and his assists; Kareem's post-1973 BPM and WS/48 equivalencies are quite in line with the general population. Most deviation is due to team success, which is a big part of WS. So I cannot concur that 12-13 BPM in his peak "doesn't seem remotely plausible" or even "a tad high ".
Wilt Chamberlain also peaked early on, roughly at the same age as Kareem. Both later adjusted to the wear and tear of excessive minutes at a young age. There are plenty of players who did not adjust so well and did not level off, much less return to close to their age 23-26 form: Reed, McAdoo, Haywood, Hawkins, Lanier, McGinnis just from the '70s. Kemp, Coleman, ... honestly the list feels endless.
"...implicitly making a very negative appraisal of Oscar Robertson et al. Now, you may be comfortable with that, but maybe not?"
The Bucks' PER and WS/48 are there at b-r.com; that's what we've got, and Kareem was The Man, any way you cut it.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/te ... l_advanced
BPM loves Jokic and his assists; Kareem's post-1973 BPM and WS/48 equivalencies are quite in line with the general population. Most deviation is due to team success, which is a big part of WS. So I cannot concur that 12-13 BPM in his peak "doesn't seem remotely plausible" or even "a tad high ".
Wilt Chamberlain also peaked early on, roughly at the same age as Kareem. Both later adjusted to the wear and tear of excessive minutes at a young age. There are plenty of players who did not adjust so well and did not level off, much less return to close to their age 23-26 form: Reed, McAdoo, Haywood, Hawkins, Lanier, McGinnis just from the '70s. Kemp, Coleman, ... honestly the list feels endless.
"...implicitly making a very negative appraisal of Oscar Robertson et al. Now, you may be comfortable with that, but maybe not?"
The Bucks' PER and WS/48 are there at b-r.com; that's what we've got, and Kareem was The Man, any way you cut it.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/te ... l_advanced
Re: Poll: Your all-time greatest players
One big relevancy is that on a good team, production is shared more, so boxscore stats are a bit muted, vs being the star player on a bad team. Winning means you get into playoffs and possibly past the 1st round or even to the Finals.... to the relevance of post-season success in GOAT debates, I simply do not understand the weight that so many folks here assign to this factor...
If a player by luck finds himself in a dynasty or 2 (Robt. Horry) he may get more than his due share of playoff games/minutes. But if he excels in these 'big games', he's even more likely to advance and rack up the WS and VORPs.
Suppose we reduce the value of total postseason minutes/WS/VORP while maintaining the importance of per-minute Excellence.
Since Win Shares goes back to 1952, lets use that as a first pass, to be inclusive of the oldtimers. Lets just take the square root of WS and multiply by the WS/48, for regular seasons and for playoffs; and just add them together.
Here's the alternative top 50 in such a scheme.
Code: Select all
xx Win Shares: RS WS/48 RSx PO WS/48 POx
5.46 LeBron James 270 .221 3.64 59 .238 1.82
5.27 Michael Jordan 214 .251 3.66 40 .255 1.61
5.02 Wilt Chamberlain 247 .248 3.90 31 .200 1.12
4.93 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 273 .228 3.78 36 .193 1.15
4.20 Chris Paul 214 .228 3.34 21 .187 .86
4.20 Tim Duncan 206 .209 3.00 38 .194 1.19
4.18 David Robinson 179 .250 3.34 18 .199 .83
3.99 Magic Johnson 156 .225 2.81 33 .208 1.19
3.85 Nikola Jokić 126 .259 2.91 15 .241 .94
3.83 Shaquille O'Neal 182 .208 2.81 31 .184 1.03
xx Win Shares: RS WS/48 RSx PO WS/48 POx
3.81 Karl Malone 235 .205 3.14 23 .140 .67
3.77 Jerry West 163 .213 2.72 27 .203 1.05
3.75 John Stockton 208 .209 3.01 21 .160 .74
3.73 Charles Barkley 177 .216 2.88 20 .193 .85
3.68 Dirk Nowitzki 206 .193 2.77 23 .188 .91
3.67 Kevin Durant 175 .205 2.71 27 .185 .96
3.64 George Mikan 109 .249 2.60 17 .254 1.05
3.54 James Harden 172 .209 2.74 22 .172 .80
3.50 Oscar Robertson 189 .207 2.85 14 .178 .66
3.50 Julius Erving 181 .192 2.59 27 .176 .91
xx Win Shares: RS WS/48 RSx PO WS/48 POx
3.40 Bill Russell 164 .193 2.46 28 .178 .94
3.32 Larry Bird 146 .203 2.45 25 .173 .86
3.29 Artis Gilmore 190 .193 2.66 13 .174 .63
3.22 Stephen Curry 141 .197 2.34 22 .190 .88
3.19 Kawhi Leonard 100 .211 2.11 23 .224 1.07
3.15 Hakeem Olajuwon 163 .177 2.25 23 .189 .90
3.13 Kevin Garnett 191 .182 2.52 16 .149 .60
3.12 Reggie Miller 174 .176 2.32 20 .180 .80
3.08 Kobe Bryant 173 .171 2.24 28 .157 .83
3.05 Anthony Davis 119 .212 2.31 11 .226 .74
xx Win Shares: RS WS/48 RSx PO WS/48 POx
3.03 Bob Pettit 136 .213 2.48 12 .159 .54
3.01 Moses Malone 179 .174 2.33 15 .176 .68
3.00 Dolph Schayes 142 .192 2.29 14 .189 .71
2.99 Jimmy Butler 121 .205 2.25 17 .179 .74
2.92 Dan Issel 158 .181 2.28 16 .161 .64
2.84 Giannis A 118 .203 2.21 11 .189 .63
2.83 Rudy Gobert 113 .218 2.32 8 .174 .50
2.77 Chauncey Billups 121 .176 1.93 21 .186 .84
2.71 Manu Ginóbili 106 .190 1.96 21 .164 .75
2.71 Kevin McHale 113 .180 1.92 21 .174 .79
xx Win Shares: RS WS/48 RSx PO WS/48 POx
2.70 Adrian Dantley 134 .189 2.19 9 .172 .51
2.67 Dwight Howard 142 .172 2.05 14 .167 .62
2.65 Walt Frazier 114 .176 1.88 16 .193 .77
2.63 Pau Gasol 144 .169 2.02 16 .154 .61
2.56 Neil Johnston 92 .241 2.31 2 .159 .24
2.54 Clyde Drexler 136 .173 2.02 16 .134 .53
2.50 Dwyane Wade 121 .162 1.78 22 .155 .72
2.43 Paul Pierce 150 .157 1.92 16 .126 .51
2.42 Ray Allen 145 .150 1.81 18 .143 .61
2.41 Bob Lanier 117 .175 1.89 9 .176 .52
Chris Paul with the same RegSea WS as Jordan!
If an NBA-avg player can expect to have 1/10 of his minutes in postseasons, that's a 9:1 ratio of RS to PO.
Taking the square root of each, that becomes a 3:1 ratio in this summation.
Reggie over Kobe. Ginobili over Wade. I'm not a big fan of WinShares.