Re: MJ's Stats in Each Playoff Series Against Top 5 Ranked Defenses
[QUOTE=3ball][B][I]Nice try bud.. League-wide pace today is 93.8... The Bulls pace was equivalent:
[/B][/I]
1985: 99.4..... 6% higher
1986: 99.7..... 6%
1987: 95.8..... 2%
1988: 95.5..... 2%
1989: 97.0..... 4%
1990: 96.7..... 4%
1991: 95.6..... 2%
1992: 94.4..... 1%
1993: [B]92.5[/B]... (1%) lower
1995: [B]92.0[/B]... (2%)
1996: [B]91.1[/B]... (3%)
1997: [B]90.0[/B]... (4%)
1998: [B]89.0[/B]... (5%)
6% difference in 1985 and 1986, and then after that, it's the same as today, and actually a SLOWER pace from 1993-1998.
As you can see, Jordan showed he can 3-peat with a faster OR slower pace than today's game.[/QUOTE]
I was purely talking about stats, not about MJ winning all his championships after his peak in a weak 90s era.
Re: MJ's Stats in Each Playoff Series Against Top 5 Ranked Defenses
What is the OP supposed to prove? Here are his FG %'s in the listed series:
44%, 51%, 56%, 49%, 52%, 46%, 47%, 54%, 55%, 53%, 48%, 40%, 44%, 42%, 45%, 39%, 47%. Good, especially given the opposition, but not numbers that show him as immune to the limits of being human against elite defenses.
[QUOTE]League-wide pace today is 93.8... The Bulls pace was equivalent:[/QUOTE]
And league-wide scoring? You know what those numbers will show. :oldlol:
1985: 111.
1986: 110.
1987: 110.
1988: 108.
1989: 109.
1990: 107.
1991: 106.
1992: 105.
1993: 105.
1995: 101.
1996: 100.
1997: 97.
1998: 96.
Scoring has ranged from 96-101 in the past decade--after slipping to as low as 93 in the 2004 season. So any of the figures listed for 1985-1993 have to be adjusted to reflect the substantially higher scoring during those years.