Heej wrote:https://youtu.be/Qq-ewGMk73A?t=223
The first clip sees Ben giving Curry a creation credit on this fastbreak where it smacks more of poor defense from Garland considering he had Rubio a few steps behind them to pick up Curry on the weakside.
I think you descirbes a different play than what you posted here, am I right?
https://youtu.be/Qq-ewGMk73A?t=307
This next credit is a stretch at best, and straight up disingenuous at worst. This is just straight up basic Warriors split action where JTA just catches Garland (not the most heady defender) napping and slips the screen for an open back cut. To credit Curry with "creating" this play is absolutely wild to me![]()
It is a mistake from Garland, but we have to remember why Garland even considered such type of defense. You don't defend a non-shooter this way, Curry is being defended like that consistently. I agree calling it a full creation is a stretch, but Steph definitely influenced this play.
https://youtu.be/JCks-bQbn1A?t=108
This play is also lazy, Curry whiffs on the screen and Lowry simply commits a fundamental mistake trying to go through on the high side of a backscreen. Plays like this make me wonder if Ben is going out of his way to overthink basketball here when a much simpler explanation suffices.
I agree with you, I don't share Ben's interpretation here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=296&v=JCks-bQbn1A&feature=youtu.be?t=318
Here we see Pascal simply loses his place in the scheme here. Curry was able to penetrate, but no true breakdown was created directly from his action as the Raptors directly recovered on the strong side. Pascal is just drifting on the weakside low block and not sticking to the scheme where he should be back up at the elbow once the action on his side was stifled. Not sure why Curry is being credited here with a shot creation.
Is he being credited with a shot creation here? Maybe I missed it, but I don't hear anything suggesting that.
https://youtu.be/GuP6-puSfRs?t=131
This one is outrageously egregious. Curry doesn't create much of an advantage at all here, he just blows by Love on the switch. And Ben's analysis is completely wrong here which makes me question whether he's so preoccupied with trying to funnel creation assists to Curry that he completely rewrites what actually occurred on the floor. According to him, Curry's PNR pulls the big out of the paint which opens up the wide open layup, when really Draymond is the star of this play. The paint was still occupied by LeBron but Draymond just wrestles him (90s basketball enjoyers in shambles watching this) and boxes him out of the play. Don't see where Curry can be credited with this other than just giving KD the ball and watching Draymond illegally clear the help defender.
I think Ben wanted to show that bigs after switching onto Curry could not help inside, which leaves the paint more open (it's a weak example though, as you described Green did the most work here). Remember that this video is from 2018 (?), when it was still less common thing. Now this is a normal basketball possession, definitely nothing related to Curry.
https://youtu.be/GuP6-puSfRs?t=144
This credit is just as weird, given it was just JR Smith coming over for no reason to double on a FAST BREAK while Curry is already covered by LeBron. This isn't even an example of Curry's gravity in my mind because no one watching this is thinking "damn LeBron needs to get bailed out because Chef Curry is about to fry him in isolation" it's just JR Smith being JR Smith, and why LeBron freaks out on him after lol.
I mean, that's the point here - defenders make basic mistakes against Curry because they have in mind that they have to stop him from shooting. Most baskets are created because of defensive mistakes, that doesn't mean that offensive players doesn't catlyze most of them.
Overall man, it really makes you question Ben's breakdowns in some of these plays; which kinda casts doubt on whether he has suffered from similar biased analysis in regards to creation within other players in this archetype.
Have you considered that maybe he simply has different criteria for "created plays" in general? Why do you assume that it's caused by his personal biases towards one type of archetype? Have you analyzed his breakdowns of different types of playmakers? If not, then why do you assume he has a bias?


. And from how he underrates the fact that Magic Bron and Nash as heliocentric stars produced the best playoff offenses of all time during portability sections. There is a history of problematic behavior here which is what prompted me to consider this thread in the first place.



