View Full Version : if you took NBA players 5 best seasons and summed them up these are the top 100 PER'S
Hoopz2332
10-15-2013, 03:17 PM
from reddit
"choosing how many seasons to sum is, in my opinion, a question of taste. in my opinion a players best five seasons should be summed, as i believe a players performance in their prime should dictate their historic appraisal. but, based on that criteria, I have no argument against summing 4 seasons or six seasons."
1 MichaelJordan* 21.256693048876343
2 ShaquilleONeal 19.855250429955525
3 LeBronJames 19.853975766881472
4 KareemAbdul-Jabbar* 19.849221559831573
5 DavidRobinson* 19.418163285034947
6 WiltChamberlain* 17.32942160576947
7 KarlMalone* 16.7160289759015
8 CharlesBarkley* 16.26271604510299
9 DwyaneWade 16.02198973195949
10 LarryBird* 15.483879676134547
11 HakeemOlajuwon* 15.173951583596024
12 ChrisPaul 15.112162591505337
13 KevinGarnett 15.108094774052446
14 TimDuncan 14.806691460027146
15 MagicJohnson* 14.64854136909225
16 OscarRobertson* 14.13639916089917
17 MosesMalone* 14.132907800490681
18 DirkNowitzki 13.653215727672931
19 AdrianDantley* 13.55284788912712
20 TracyMcGrady 13.475448083096879
21 JuliusErving* 13.413001496014068
22 BobLanier* 13.314049965933165
23 BobMcAdoo* 13.06867992727454
24 JerryWest* 12.934142189263092
25 KobeBryant 12.916674250218456
26 BobPettit* 12.78165052298652
27 KevinDurant 12.662642807585595
28 GeorgeGervin* 12.413261132550256
29 DominiqueWilkins* 12.126365118947469
30 DwightHoward 12.030013745100595
31 AmareStoudemire 11.945128565461706
32 ElginBaylor* 11.507519647690502
33 AlonzoMourning 11.440108122920968
34 PatrickEwing* 11.352028530328944
35 NeilJohnston* 11.174990768049096
36 ClydeDrexler* 11.14346528930202
37 JohnStockton* 11.13766281157042
38 JohnDrew 11.08816546520929
39 GrantHill 10.986641871286944
40 YaoMing 10.896996017898516
41 RobertParish* 10.839143562335842
42 ChrisWebber 10.779177432578972
43 RickBarry* 10.72669210828432
44 EltonBrand 10.693396947185791
45 DolphSchayes* 10.566975496934585
46 ArtisGilmore* 10.546267339801421
47 AlexEnglish* 10.498618360471356
48 AllenIverson 10.443718567148602
49 ShawnKemp 10.382622888636769
50 ChrisBosh 10.181036194342036
51 GaryPayton* 10.132237361626212
52 PauGasol 9.994339334971878
53 DanIssel* 9.985804739291716
54 ManuGinobili 9.984448798778121
55 MarquesJohnson 9.927134353156513
56 KevinJohnson 9.903125603541097
57 PaulWestphal 9.768248607363281
58 VinceCarter 9.765034508629933
59 ScottiePippen* 9.63312124023729
60 KevinMcHale* 9.49857756876185
61 MarkPrice 9.496051946295353
62 MarkAguirre 9.439253930054834
63 BernardKing* 9.324635174209902
64 CarmeloAnthony 9.321243452447446
65 SteveNash 9.233079634921232
66 PaulPierce 9.207142763064493
67 GeorgeMikan* 9.025311123200497
68 WaltBellamy* 8.998753610358841
69 ArvydasSabonis* 8.869966823586486
70 TinyArchibald* 8.837348048434869
71 SamCassell 8.737489455618555
72 TonyParker 8.68906863616759
73 HarryGallatin* 8.664858607390526
74 TerrellBrandon 8.654715169885051
75 AlJefferson 8.651188135382686
76 RayAllen 8.577428099386264
77 LarryNance 8.442725770975372
78 LarryFoust 8.410836758507013
79 WaltFrazier* 8.2986875676037
80 TerryCummings 8.274959425754442
81 WalterDavis 8.263855086070869
82 ChaunceyBillups 8.188828359677055
83 ClydeLovellette* 8.177612586827138
84 CarlosBoozer 8.152189735247553
85 AlvanAdams 8.145623897896211
86 StephonMarbury 8.13145478048007
87 ChrisMullin* 8.102358000046468
88 WorldB.Free 8.02025738715031
89 KikiVandeweghe 8.009074708522155
90 ShawnMarion 7.980015804730707
91 GusWilliams 7.906694961120149
92 BillWalton* 7.8650925930542375
93 SidneyMoncrief 7.861749099455144
94 BillyCunningham* 7.763101868007474
95 ZachRandolph 7.757355900793918
96 PaulArizin* 7.751601374996309
97 WillisReed* 7.6808287462705875
98 IsiahThomas* 7.674743999148302
99 JerryLucas* 7.609353955930379
100 CedricCeballos 7.511666264795396
MP.Trey
10-15-2013, 03:29 PM
This stat doesn't even make Bill Russell a top 100 player!? Damn
how the hell isnt Wilt no1... his top 5 seasons are something like 40pts/28 rebs
Dr. Ice
10-15-2013, 03:31 PM
Let's see how the kobe addicts get out of this one
NumberSix
10-15-2013, 03:34 PM
Let's see how the kobe addicts get out of this one
InB4 "lol. PER doesn't count. Its a made up stat. The only thing that matters is TS%".
:roll:
SHAQisGOAT
10-15-2013, 03:37 PM
Can't compare PER across eras, just dumb and it can't be done, some people don't even know how PER works. Compare a certain player's PER in a certain season against his peers in that certain season, at least.
Steals and blocks were only recorded since 1974, and PER assumes that players who played at a higher pace would get much worse at a lower one, even, and especially, when not considerable, which is wrong. Like Kareem couldn't grab 13 or more rebounds at his best nowadays, like he couldn't take 18 shots per game for his career, like Oscar or Bird couldn't shoot 21 times per game nowadays, also like he Larry couldn't grab 10 rebounds when Marion with the same TRB% grabs 9.1 playing less minutes alongside worse rebounders...... and so on.
Top 10 players in PER all-time, 7 of them were active in the past 10 seasons or so. CP3's highest PER is above Kareem's, Kobe's and Durant's above Magic's and Bird's, Dirk's over Hakeem's......
It's like looking at the top 10 players in RPG, all-time and claiming they are all the best rebounders, dismissing the fact that 9 of them played in the 60s at a much higher pace enabling them more opportunities for rebounds.
Doranku
10-15-2013, 03:38 PM
It's very interesting how PER rewards career chokers/losers such as LeBron, Robinson, Malone, Barkley, Chris Paul, etc.
fpliii
10-15-2013, 03:40 PM
PER can only be calculated from 77-78 to the present. Prior to that season, not all of turnovers, offensive rebounds, blocked shots, steals were recorded. PERs prior to that season are estimates, which do a disservice to players who were outliers in one or more of those stats (or a service to players who only recorded high turnovers, and none of the other three).
Hoopz2332
10-15-2013, 03:40 PM
Let's see how the kobe addicts get out of this one
:oldlol:
NumberSix
10-15-2013, 03:41 PM
It's very interesting how PER rewards career chokers/losers such as LeBron, Robinson, Malone, Barkley, Chris Paul, etc.
And its interesting how team awards reward career chokers/coattail-riders like Kobe.
Psileas
10-15-2013, 03:42 PM
Can't compare PER across eras, just dumb and it can't be done, some people don't even know how PER works. Compare a certain player's PER in a certain season against his peers in that certain season, at least.
Steals and blocks were only recorded since 1974, and PER assumes that players who played at a higher pace would get much worse at a lower one, even, and especially, when not considerable, which is wrong. Like Kareem couldn't grab 13 or more rebounds at his best nowadays, like he couldn't take 18 shots per game for his career, like Oscar or Bird couldn't shoot 21 times per game nowadays, also like he Larry couldn't grab 10 rebounds when Marion with the same TRB% grabs 9.1 playing less minutes alongside worse rebounders...... and so on.
Top 10 players in PER all-time, 7 of them were active in the past 10 seasons or so. CP3's highest PER is above Kareem's, Kobe's and Durant's above Magic's and Bird's, Dirk's over Hakeem's......
It's like looking at the top 10 players in RPG, all-time and claiming they are all the best rebounders, dismissing the fact that 9 of them played in the 60s at a much higher pace enabling them more opportunities for rebounds.
+1
ΒΤW, what the heck are these figures in the o.p supposed to represent? Definitely not PER.
Doranku
10-15-2013, 03:46 PM
And its interesting how team awards reward career chokers/coattail-riders like Kobe.
Yes, chokers are rewarded with championships. Flawless logic. :roll:
NumberSix
10-15-2013, 03:52 PM
Yes, chokers are rewarded with championships. Flawless logic. :roll:
Well, you did just say LeBron and Robinson are chokers. Do they not have championships? :confusedshrug:
Doranku
10-15-2013, 03:55 PM
Well, you did just say LeBron and Robinson are chokers. Do they not have championships? :confusedshrug:
Yes. Robinson won while playing in Duncan's shadow. LeBron wins while playing on the most stacked team in NBA history relative to competition. It ain't often when every other playoff team has a significant injury and you play only 1 50 win team en route to a title.
But hey, earned not given. :bowdown:
Odinn
10-15-2013, 04:00 PM
Yes. Robinson won while playing in Duncan's shadow. LeBron wins while playing on the most stacked team in NBA history relative to competition. It ain't often when every other playoff team has a significant injury and you play only 1 50 win team en route to a title.
But hey, earned not given. :bowdown:
So you are saying the competition that the Lakers had in 2009 NBA Playoffs was tougher than LeBron's competition in title seasons? And 2001? And 2002?
LikeABosh
10-15-2013, 04:03 PM
What am I looking at? I don't understand this:confusedshrug:
how the hell isnt Wilt no1... his top 5 seasons are something like 40pts/28 rebs
Unfortunately/Thankfully PER considers possessions per minute.... per 100 possessions Wilt/Oscar's productions actually dont look more impressive compared to like Jordan/Lebron/Shaq per 100 poss... which also means that if Jordan/Lebron/Shaq played in the 60s their numbers would look even greater than Wilt/Oscar... 60s NBA averaged like up to around 140 poss. per game, their pace was the highest in NBA history thats for sure, today its only 90 poss. per game.... averaging 40 pts/28 reb today means averaging like 70 pts/40 reb in the 60s....
The higher/slower pace is because of better/worse competition/talent/evolution, it is something.... i will let you be the judge....
PS: Nice name! :cheers:
TheMarkMadsen
10-15-2013, 04:20 PM
Thanks but I didn't need to see a list to confirm that David Robinson & Dwayne Wade were better than Wilt, Duncan, Bird and Magic.
:lol
Where's Neil Johnston? Aka top 10 per of all time Neil Johnston?
DMAVS41
10-15-2013, 04:20 PM
Pretty sure that isn't PER...
Pretty sure that isn't PER...
This looks fishy, wouldnt mind seeing the source to these conclusions....
Mass Debator
10-15-2013, 04:36 PM
Yeah, pretty sure this isn't PER or else it looks way off in calculations.
aj1987
10-15-2013, 04:43 PM
Unfortunately/Thankfully PER considers possessions per minute.... per 100 possessions Wilt/Oscar's productions actually dont look more impressive compared to like Jordan/Lebron/Shaq per 100 poss... which also means that if Jordan/Lebron/Shaq played in the 60s their numbers would look even greater than Wilt/Oscar... 60s NBA averaged like up to around 140 poss. per game, their pace was the highest in NBA history thats for sure, today its only 90 poss. per game.... averaging 40 pts/28 reb today means averaging like 70 pts/40 reb in the 60s....
The higher/slower pace is because of better/worse competition/talent/evolution, it is something.... i will let you be the judge....
PS: Nice name! :cheers:
Where the heck did you get the 140 possessions from? I thought that it was ~120-125.
Hoopz2332
10-15-2013, 04:44 PM
This looks fishy, wouldnt mind seeing the source to these conclusions....
http://dd.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/1ob56u/new_way_to_interpret_per/
HomieWeMajor
10-15-2013, 04:48 PM
Can't compare PER across eras, just dumb and it can't be done, some people don't even know how PER works. Compare a certain player's PER in a certain season against his peers in that certain season, at least.
Steals and blocks were only recorded since 1974, and PER assumes that players who played at a higher pace would get much worse at a lower one, even, and especially, when not considerable, which is wrong. Like Kareem couldn't grab 13 or more rebounds at his best nowadays, like he couldn't take 18 shots per game for his career, like Oscar or Bird couldn't shoot 21 times per game nowadays, also like he Larry couldn't grab 10 rebounds when Marion with the same TRB% grabs 9.1 playing less minutes alongside worse rebounders...... and so on.
Top 10 players in PER all-time, 7 of them were active in the past 10 seasons or so. CP3's highest PER is above Kareem's, Kobe's and Durant's above Magic's and Bird's, Dirk's over Hakeem's......
It's like looking at the top 10 players in RPG, all-time and claiming they are all the best rebounders, dismissing the fact that 9 of them played in the 60s at a much higher pace enabling them more opportunities for rebounds.
The thread ended here
LikeABosh
10-15-2013, 04:53 PM
Where are these numbers coming from?
fpliii
10-15-2013, 06:22 PM
Unfortunately/Thankfully PER considers possessions per minute.... per 100 possessions Wilt/Oscar's productions actually dont look more impressive compared to like Jordan/Lebron/Shaq per 100 poss... which also means that if Jordan/Lebron/Shaq played in the 60s their numbers would look even greater than Wilt/Oscar... 60s NBA averaged like up to around 140 poss. per game, their pace was the highest in NBA history thats for sure, today its only 90 poss. per game.... averaging 40 pts/28 reb today means averaging like 70 pts/40 reb in the 60s....
The higher/slower pace is because of better/worse competition/talent/evolution, it is something.... i will let you be the judge....
PS: Nice name! :cheers:
Serious question pauk: From where did you get the 140 possessions a game estimate? I've seen you cite it numerous times, but you've never provided calculations or a source. There have been three attempts at estimating pace in the basketball statistics community:
ElGee (6 >= 130, highest 135.9): https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0At9OxyY2Zhw6dE5jQnJyOG50ODNCZ0hpZFZpaGhnRW c&type=view&gid=0&f=true&sortcolid=18&sortasc=false&rowsperpage=25
basketball-reference.com (5 >= 130, highest 133.3): https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0At9OxyY2Zhw6dE5jQnJyOG50ODNCZ0hpZFZpaGhnRW c&type=view&gid=1&f=true&sortcolid=18&sortasc=false&rowsperpage=25
Dean Oliver (3>= 130, highest 132.9): https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/lv?key=0At9OxyY2Zhw6dE5jQnJyOG50ODNCZ0hpZFZpaGhnRW c&type=view&gid=2&f=true&sortcolid=18&sortasc=false&rowsperpage=25
Now I don't care about Wilt, but I've seen you casually throw this 140 number around enough that I had to intervene. If you have calculations/a valid source then please provide it, otherwise stop spreading misinformation, and edit that post to say 130 from now on (I say from now on because I've seen that exact post from you more than a half dozen times). Not everybody will put the work in to investigate, and might take that post as fact.
You literally keep ignoring my posts, why is that? Am I on your ignore list, or does acknowledging me just not suit your agenda?
STOP SPREADING MISINFORMATION
:facepalm
EDIT: The vast majority of teams were in the 110s or 120s in the 60s. End of discussion. You're not convincing anybody. I know you're a smart guy pauk, so stop the charade.
aj1987
10-15-2013, 06:25 PM
You literally keep ignoring my posts, why is that? Am I on your ignore list, or does acknowledging me just not suit your agenda?
STOP SPREADING MISINFORMATION
:facepalm
I thought that they played at ~120-125?
Anyways, it doesn't matter. I don't get why players get penalized for playing at a higher pace or playing more minutes. Doesn't make sense at all. If anything, they are more durable for playing 45+ minutes, which makes them better.
fpliii
10-15-2013, 06:30 PM
I thought that they played at ~120-125?
Anyways, it doesn't matter. I don't get my players get penalized for playing at a higher pace or playing more minutes. Doesn't make sense at all. If anything, they more durable for playing 45+ minutes, which makes them better.
I don't care if he wants to penalize them. He can do so as much as he wants. I have a problem with lying/spreading misinformation when he know for fact that he's incorrect.
He's been corrected countless times, yet returns with the same bullshit number (140, 150, 160 even sometimes) a couple of weeks later. It's incredibly lame, but I won't let him get away with spreading lies. Again, he can penalize all he wants, but he isn't allowed to pull this garbage without being called out on it.
Hoopz2332
10-16-2013, 05:41 AM
Where are these numbers coming from?
The link is above
kshutts1
10-16-2013, 08:20 AM
Someone else mentioned Bill Russell not being included. Wow.
The numbers, towards the bottom of the list, look way too low to be PER numbers.
And Larry Foust? Who? If a top 100 is "created" and there's someone I don't know on the list, then it's probably a bad list. Not that I know every player ever, but I've done my bit of historical research/reading, and I'm quite confident that I'd at least recognize names of the greats... unless they played in the very infancy of the NBA. .... Which Foust apparently did. At least those were his best years.
Can't compare PER across eras, just dumb and it can't be done, some people don't even know how PER works. Compare a certain player's PER in a certain season against his peers in that certain season, at least.
Steals and blocks were only recorded since 1974, and PER assumes that players who played at a higher pace would get much worse at a lower one, even, and especially, when not considerable, which is wrong. Like Kareem couldn't grab 13 or more rebounds at his best nowadays, like he couldn't take 18 shots per game for his career, like Oscar or Bird couldn't shoot 21 times per game nowadays, also like he Larry couldn't grab 10 rebounds when Marion with the same TRB% grabs 9.1 playing less minutes alongside worse rebounders...... and so on.
Top 10 players in PER all-time, 7 of them were active in the past 10 seasons or so. CP3's highest PER is above Kareem's, Kobe's and Durant's above Magic's and Bird's, Dirk's over Hakeem's......
It's like looking at the top 10 players in RPG, all-time and claiming they are all the best rebounders, dismissing the fact that 9 of them played in the 60s at a much higher pace enabling them more opportunities for rebounds.
A perfectly reasonable point.
But the link makes clear it isn't comparing PER it's comparing z-scores (that is standard deviations above, or below, the mean). So whilst modern players may have the widest range of players by PER (many of the 30+ PER seasons are post 2000, Shaq in 99-00 and 7 more since, out of 17 in total, and also 40 of the 100 worst PER campaigns) z-scores neutralises this.
Now it may be that people choose to believe that a certain era is stronger or weaker but the use of z-scores (which is why the numbers look unfamiliar) should neutralise era issues and show the degree of dominance of a player.
kshutts1
10-16-2013, 08:24 AM
A perfectly reasonable point.
But the link makes clear it isn't comparing PER it's comparing z-scores (that is standard deviations above, or below, the mean). So whilst modern players may have the widest range of players by PER (many of the 30+ PER seasons are post 2000, Shaq in 99-00 and 7 more since, out of 17 in total, and also 40 of the 100 worst PER campaigns) z-scores neutralises this.
Now it may be that people choose to believe that a certain era is stronger or weaker but the use of z-scores (which is why the numbers look unfamiliar) should neutralise era issues and show the degree of dominance of a player.
This just in. I should fully read/understand things before I post.
Thanks for clearing that up.
Hoopz2332
10-16-2013, 08:51 AM
A perfectly reasonable point.
But the link makes clear it isn't comparing PER it's comparing z-scores (that is standard deviations above, or below, the mean). So whilst modern players may have the widest range of players by PER (many of the 30+ PER seasons are post 2000, Shaq in 99-00 and 7 more since, out of 17 in total, and also 40 of the 100 worst PER campaigns) z-scores neutralises this.
Now it may be that people choose to believe that a certain era is stronger or weaker but the use of z-scores (which is why the numbers look unfamiliar) should neutralise era issues and show the degree of dominance of a player.
great post
Hoopz2332
10-16-2013, 05:24 PM
^^Up
Hoopz2332
10-19-2013, 05:24 AM
^^Up
:D
Doranku
10-19-2013, 09:19 AM
great post
Shut up idiot, you don't even know what he just said.
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