I still think you're leaving yourself open to a lot of misinterpretation. You never set out to tell us what those letters really mean. Are they the overall impact of a player? If so, what does "impact" actually mean to you? (Of course it means impact on getting wins, but everyone has an opinion of what parts of the game really have the largest impact on wins). I didn't exactly need to know who you think are superstars. I should have been able to identify them myself when you explained your methodology for identifying which players are worthy of superstardom. Instead, you gave me your answers with an assumption that your answers present your methodology and assumptions. They don't.
See what I mean when I asked for specifics?
When I set out to define what these tags actually mean, it always has to have something to do with "impact on wins". It should always be the end goal of whatever discussion anyone has on basketball (for the most part). Now, in order to define what impact on wins is, I think there needs to be an understanding of what constitutes winning -- there's offense and defense (DUH). Some might say that the importance of each one to winning is about equal. I disagree, I think defense is a more for important piece than offense. This will be the first discussion point for ALL of us regarding superstardom really (since someone like Love, who is more offensively gifted than defensively, is being branded as a superstar).
The methodology of identifying which players have the most impact on offense and defense is, at this point, far and wide.
Some would say "take X out of this team and let's see how that team performs". KD's team performs 6 points worse when he's off the court. The problem with this, of course, is that it neither accounts for teammates (in reality, OKC sans KD in the lineup is still a +2, which equates to about a .560 winning team) or opponents. Regularized APMs will help with this.
Some would depend on production - things like PER, WS, WP, *insert all-in-one metric here*. Superstars therefore are those who cross a particular border. 25+ PER, .200+ WS etc... (this is of course assuming there's enough sample size).
Some would take both cases to a macro-level. How well does Player X help a team shoot better? rebound better? prevent turnovers better? (or in totality, make his teammates and subsequently his team, play better).
In reality, I think (as with most cases) the answer lies somewhere in between + a tinge of eye test (again, there are a ton of discussion points to be had in the process I am detailing).
RAPM filtered by possession (at least 7000) and total xRAPM (+4) (
source)
And here's a
link of players this season who fit this criteria: PER of 25+, WS/48 of .200+, MPG of 30+, qualifies for MPG leaderboard.
You compare both lists and it basically comes down to 4 players: LeBron, KD, CP3 and KLove.
TLDR:
Player |
o-RAPM |
d-RAPM |
PER |
WS/48 |
James |
+8.7 |
-0.8 |
29.3 |
.264 |
Durant |
+5.5 |
-0.1 |
29.8 |
.295 |
Paul |
+6.2 |
+1.2 |
25.9 |
.270 |
Love |
+5.1 |
+1.3 |
26.9 |
.245 |
Eye test wise, I can see why those four are the best. James is about as obvious as it gets -- unstoppable on offense (especially if you put shooters around him), wreaks havoc on defense (might have slouched around in the season. Past xRAPM show strong d-RAPM).
KD is a different type of unstoppable to James. Equally potent, different tactic. Defensively, when locked in, he's as impactful as LBJ (although not as interchangeable).
The last two, Paul and Love, have some flaws. Paul's offensive work isn't as brilliant as it once was. Length bothers him and he has a tendency to over-pass. Defensively, he's hovered between overrated and underrated. He's more than a swipe demon. He's a smart team defender and a calculating gambler.
Love is near unstoppable on offense. Shooting, offensive rebounding, post work, et al. His defense is at best average (which bumps him down a notch. His +1.3 is a surprise, even to me). But I think his offensive impact is near equivalent to KD's and LBJs.
So to end, there are only two undisputed "superstars" in the league -- KD and LBJ. There are two other players that are debatable but certainly worthy of the title -- Paul and Love. There are maybe countless others worthy of the title (AD is one. xRAPM is currently at +1.9).