permaximum wrote:og15 wrote:permaximum wrote:The amount of ignorance in this thread is beyond belief. Now I know why I don't really watch NBA games anymore.
Someone says Philly won Game 1 of the finals because Kobe was stopped defensively by other players. Kobe couldn't do anything offensively because he spent all of his energy trying to defend Iverson and he still couldn't. After that, he wasn't the primary defender of Iverson in the series.
Someone points out some stupid TS%, WS arguments without the context of USAGE%, team TS% and MPG which is comical.
If you want to play poor man's stat game Iverson's career averages are better than Isaiah's 2017. Iverson was doing 55/8 in a 90 point game in playoffs compared to Isaiah's best 53/4 in a 130 point game. Iverson's playoff career average is 30 ppg. 2nd best of all time.
There's only 0.03 TS% difference between Kobe and Iverson although Kobe's prime fell into no-handcheck era unlike AI and Iverson's stats are better than Kobe's. What I'm saying is you're comparing Isaiah to 2nd or 3rd best SG of all time. You guys are nuts.
Reading comprehension is very important. I said that Iverson didn't singlehandedly win the game because their defense on Kobe was very important in winning that game. Iverson carried their offense, but if Kobe wasn't shut down they would have still lost the game despite his performance. Your argument is that Kobe got so tired from guarding Iverson that he had a 33.4 TS% and 6 TOV. Kobe had 3 turnovers and was 1/4 FG in the first quarter. So your argument is that he was already tired from guarding Iverson to start the game so it caused him to have 3 early turnovers and to get blocked by Tyrone Hill on one of his attempts?
The worst way to have discussion is to get emotional about it, there's nothing to be emotional about. Each and everyone of us understands that even when a player carries a team in one aspect there can be other significant factors that lead to the team winning. That's why we have players who drop an efficient 50+ points in a game, regular season, post-season, whatever, and still lose.
If you go into the if game, you'll open a can of worms so drop it.
How many of those turnovers came from AI or AI's help and how many times Kobe had to run back? You can get tired in a minute if you sprint from one end to another. You need to get this fact first.
Better yet, I suggest you watch some games instead of checking stats. Because you're not analysing even those properly and you lack data to make comparisons to Isaiah.
There's a reason Iverson was selected MVP and All-NBA 7 times. Because those people had watched the games. Trust me they did know how to check FG% which was even worse than TS% for Iverson.
Why would we need to play an if game? It happened lol, there's no if, we saw it in the next 4 games. Why do you think Philly lost the next 4 games despite Iverson scoring 35+ in three of them? Well it might be that despite having his lowest scoring and worse shooting series of the post-season, Kobe was still much better than Game 1.
We all have access to a television and media, lol. Most people discussing here watched the game. I watched it live and have watched it again at other times.
All I responded to was what you said. If you think a player was already so tired in the first quarter because of guarding another player that they played extremely poorly then I don't know what to tell you.
The Sixers as a team contained him. His two lowest scoring game of the playoffs were in that series. 3 of his 4 lowest TS% in the post-season were in that series. These included the remaining games where Fisher and Lue guarded Iverson, and Kobe wasn't being tired out by the frustration of chasing AI.
Yes, it was a waste of his energy having him chase AI around screens and trying to deny him the ball to no avail. So it was smart moving him off of him, but you're really underselling his ability as a player and really not showing a good understanding of the game in its entirety.