2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread

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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#841 » by Eskobar13 » Wed Jun 12, 2019 9:12 am

nolang1 wrote:
Eskobar13 wrote:I've soured a lot on Leonard the past couple weeks, looking at games and even just the highlights (those extended ones that's basically all scoring) with "different eyes" - I'm also of the opinion he's not the best or most important defender on this team. This would change if he was defending Curry all game or, if Durant was playing and he was always on him, but that's not the case.

That said, just like Timmy I still have him number 1 right now. I thought this was Giannis to lose and I guess he did lose it. Curry could have monster last 2 games and lead his team to a title and I still don't think it would be enough to overtake both Leonard and Giannis - RS difference is just too big IMO. It's not final, but I think my top-10 won't really change.

1 - Leonard
2 - Giannis
3 - Harden
4 - Curry
5 - Jokic
6 - Durant (was on his way to 3 before his injury)
7 - Dray
8 - George
9 - Embiid (bumped down a lot in the POs)
10 - Lillard

Curry can overtake Harden but honestly he seemed close to dead and I think the Raptors will finish this in game 6. Team seems too mentally strong and is just overwhelmingly better right now.


Ps: Lebron has probably 10 years where he'd get it if this was the competition. Maybe more.


How could Embiid have been bumped down a lot in the playoffs? His per 36 numbers were insane in round 1 (more than a point per minute), and the Sixers were decisively better than the Raptors in the minutes he was on the court in round 2. In all likelihood he is the best player on the team that played the champs the closest, and you'd have to be focusing on Ben Simmons' potential much more than his current ability if you think the Sixers' supporting cast is as good as what the Raptors, Bucks, or Warriors have.


Who said bumping down Embiid had anything to do with his performances? :)

I probably don't rate the Nets series as high as you do the defenses he was facing and I also don't fully trust his impact against the Raptors, but him being overtaken by Dray, Durant and Jokic (I had them at the same level before) has much more to do with the play of those guys than the play of Embiid.

That said, I must correct the order above because Embiid should be 8, not George.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#842 » by Jaivl » Wed Jun 12, 2019 9:35 am

Eskobar13 wrote:
nolang1 wrote:
Eskobar13 wrote:I've soured a lot on Leonard the past couple weeks, looking at games and even just the highlights (those extended ones that's basically all scoring) with "different eyes" - I'm also of the opinion he's not the best or most important defender on this team. This would change if he was defending Curry all game or, if Durant was playing and he was always on him, but that's not the case.

That said, just like Timmy I still have him number 1 right now. I thought this was Giannis to lose and I guess he did lose it. Curry could have monster last 2 games and lead his team to a title and I still don't think it would be enough to overtake both Leonard and Giannis - RS difference is just too big IMO. It's not final, but I think my top-10 won't really change.

1 - Leonard
2 - Giannis
3 - Harden
4 - Curry
5 - Jokic
6 - Durant (was on his way to 3 before his injury)
7 - Dray
8 - George
9 - Embiid (bumped down a lot in the POs)
10 - Lillard

Curry can overtake Harden but honestly he seemed close to dead and I think the Raptors will finish this in game 6. Team seems too mentally strong and is just overwhelmingly better right now.


Ps: Lebron has probably 10 years where he'd get it if this was the competition. Maybe more.


How could Embiid have been bumped down a lot in the playoffs? His per 36 numbers were insane in round 1 (more than a point per minute), and the Sixers were decisively better than the Raptors in the minutes he was on the court in round 2. In all likelihood he is the best player on the team that played the champs the closest, and you'd have to be focusing on Ben Simmons' potential much more than his current ability if you think the Sixers' supporting cast is as good as what the Raptors, Bucks, or Warriors have.


Who said bumping down Embiid had anything to do with his performances? :)

I probably don't rate the Nets series as high as you do the defenses he was facing and I also don't fully trust his impact against the Raptors, but him being overtaken by Dray, Durant and Jokic (I had them at the same level before) has much more to do with the play of those guys than the play of Embiid.

That said, I must correct the order above because Embiid should be 8, not George.

How could Durant overtake Embiid? He was injured, you know.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#843 » by Eskobar13 » Wed Jun 12, 2019 9:40 am

Jaivl wrote:
Eskobar13 wrote:
nolang1 wrote:
How could Embiid have been bumped down a lot in the playoffs? His per 36 numbers were insane in round 1 (more than a point per minute), and the Sixers were decisively better than the Raptors in the minutes he was on the court in round 2. In all likelihood he is the best player on the team that played the champs the closest, and you'd have to be focusing on Ben Simmons' potential much more than his current ability if you think the Sixers' supporting cast is as good as what the Raptors, Bucks, or Warriors have.


Who said bumping down Embiid had anything to do with his performances? :)

I probably don't rate the Nets series as high as you do the defenses he was facing and I also don't fully trust his impact against the Raptors, but him being overtaken by Dray, Durant and Jokic (I had them at the same level before) has much more to do with the play of those guys than the play of Embiid.

That said, I must correct the order above because Embiid should be 8, not George.

How could Durant overtake Embiid? He was injured, you know.


Durant played one more game and 108 more minutes and whole lot better than Embiid during the playoffs. Am I really that off here? :-?
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#844 » by Jaivl » Wed Jun 12, 2019 10:14 am

Eskobar13 wrote:
Jaivl wrote:
Eskobar13 wrote:
Who said bumping down Embiid had anything to do with his performances? :)

I probably don't rate the Nets series as high as you do the defenses he was facing and I also don't fully trust his impact against the Raptors, but him being overtaken by Dray, Durant and Jokic (I had them at the same level before) has much more to do with the play of those guys than the play of Embiid.

That said, I must correct the order above because Embiid should be 8, not George.

How could Durant overtake Embiid? He was injured, you know.


Durant played one more game and 108 more minutes and whole lot better than Embiid during the playoffs. Am I really that off here? :-?

Embiid was "healthy" (or at least the Embiid version of that) for the whole playoffs, and he did not play more minutes because his team played very poorly when he sat.

Durant was injured for all the WCF and the Finals, and with a lesser team there would have not reached the Finals to begin with. He played more games and minutes and still it's clearly worse value.

I certainly prefer a player with a minutes restriction that can play every game over a player that can't play at all on the two most important series.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#845 » by Eskobar13 » Wed Jun 12, 2019 10:40 am

Jaivl wrote:
Eskobar13 wrote:
Jaivl wrote:How could Durant overtake Embiid? He was injured, you know.


Durant played one more game and 108 more minutes and whole lot better than Embiid during the playoffs. Am I really that off here? :-?

Embiid was "healthy" (or at least the Embiid version of that) for the whole playoffs, and he did not play more minutes because his team played very poorly when he sat.

Durant was injured for all the WCF and the Finals, and with a lesser team there would have not reached the Finals to begin with. He played more games and minutes and still it's clearly worse value.

I certainly prefer a player with a minutes restriction that can play every game over a player that can't play at all on the two most important series.


Well sure Embiid's team playing poorly was a big reason why he didn't get to play more, but it's also a reason why is impact looks so big IMO. I also don't think Durant's team would've managed to get out of the Houston series if not for his presence. So I value Durant higher for the playoffs than Embiid.

Maybe my reasoning is flawed though. I'm a big Joel fan and I just don't think he had a great playoff run this year.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#846 » by Doctor MJ » Wed Jun 12, 2019 2:19 pm

Dr Spaceman wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
eminence wrote:
How do you feel about Harden's candidacy?


Well, I have a tough time putting Harden ahead of Curry at this point. Maybe I will with the right arguments, but the essence of it for me:

I just think Curry's better than Harden. I think Curry was better in that beta role behind Durant's alpha than Harden would be, and I think Curry's a better alpha than Harden too.

I understand that if you believe Curry's beta role is less impressive than Harden's alpha and you weight that part of the year as an advantage over Curry you probably end up with Harden still ahead, but I don't really think such distinctions are all that meaningful when the reason for the primacy difference was about personal sacrifice for the good of the team.

If I voted right this moment it'd be:

1. Giannis
2. Kawhi
3. Curry
4. Harden
5. somebody (I'll think more about that if people want to have that conversation)


I remain unconvinced of this. Houston last year had some jaw-dropping offensive results. Harden/Paul lineups were about equal to the best we’ve ever seen from GSW with or without Durant (125 ORTG) and those lineups with Gordon were well into the stratosphere (130 with Capela at C, 135 with Tucker at C). Realistically if you put 2018 Paul on the 2019 Rockets squad I think they coast to a title and that 2018 team has a legit argument for best non-title winning team ever. If Paul doesn’t get hurt I think we view these guys very different,y.

Also worth noting Houston has never paid the luxury tax in the D’Antoni era while GSW has the most expensive roster in NBA history. We’re basically seeing the mid-00’s Suns crashing into the Spurs every year all over again. That Houston is one of the very best teams with Harden as an alpha while spending pennies compared to every other elite team is a rather big feather in his cap. Harden is able to bootstrap a team of 0s offensively to a +7 offense with a ceiling much, ugh higher with some actual talent alongside him.


I respect your opinon in general and don't think this one is crazy either.

First thing: When you say you "remain" unconvinced, this implies that you never thought Curry was better, and I doubt that. As of '15-16, pretty sure everyone on the planet thought Curry was better. So what you're really saying is that some combination of things since Durant arrived had allowed Harden to move past Curry in your mind.

It hasn't for me, and that's despite the fact that I had no issue at all rating Harden ahead of Curry last year for POY. I don't think Curry when he's in beta or semi-beta mode is doing something as special as Harden, and thus when that's all Curry does, I give Harden the nod. But what I've seen in the playoffs just leaves me feeling like broadly speaking, Curry's higher ceiling remains in effect.

A key thing for me is that I think there are issues with running the Houston offense through Harden like they do. I think it renders others passive, and I think that Harden tends to rely on tactics that refs actively try to combat harder in the playoffs. Curry on the other hand galvanizes others, has shown continued flexibility on & off ball, and still burns more nuclear at his best than anyone else in the game. I also think Curry is one of the best leaders in the game, and I don't think this about Harden.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#847 » by Peregrine01 » Wed Jun 12, 2019 4:09 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
Dr Spaceman wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Well, I have a tough time putting Harden ahead of Curry at this point. Maybe I will with the right arguments, but the essence of it for me:

I just think Curry's better than Harden. I think Curry was better in that beta role behind Durant's alpha than Harden would be, and I think Curry's a better alpha than Harden too.

I understand that if you believe Curry's beta role is less impressive than Harden's alpha and you weight that part of the year as an advantage over Curry you probably end up with Harden still ahead, but I don't really think such distinctions are all that meaningful when the reason for the primacy difference was about personal sacrifice for the good of the team.

If I voted right this moment it'd be:

1. Giannis
2. Kawhi
3. Curry
4. Harden
5. somebody (I'll think more about that if people want to have that conversation)


I remain unconvinced of this. Houston last year had some jaw-dropping offensive results. Harden/Paul lineups were about equal to the best we’ve ever seen from GSW with or without Durant (125 ORTG) and those lineups with Gordon were well into the stratosphere (130 with Capela at C, 135 with Tucker at C). Realistically if you put 2018 Paul on the 2019 Rockets squad I think they coast to a title and that 2018 team has a legit argument for best non-title winning team ever. If Paul doesn’t get hurt I think we view these guys very different,y.

Also worth noting Houston has never paid the luxury tax in the D’Antoni era while GSW has the most expensive roster in NBA history. We’re basically seeing the mid-00’s Suns crashing into the Spurs every year all over again. That Houston is one of the very best teams with Harden as an alpha while spending pennies compared to every other elite team is a rather big feather in his cap. Harden is able to bootstrap a team of 0s offensively to a +7 offense with a ceiling much, ugh higher with some actual talent alongside him.


I respect your opinon in general and don't think this one is crazy either.

First thing: When you say you "remain" unconvinced, this implies that you never thought Curry was better, and I doubt that. As of '15-16, pretty sure everyone on the planet thought Curry was better. So what you're really saying is that some combination of things since Durant arrived had allowed Harden to move past Curry in your mind.

It hasn't for me, and that's despite the fact that I had no issue at all rating Harden ahead of Curry last year for POY. I don't think Curry when he's in beta or semi-beta mode is doing something as special as Harden, and thus when that's all Curry does, I give Harden the nod. But what I've seen in the playoffs just leaves me feeling like broadly speaking, Curry's higher ceiling remains in effect.

A key thing for me is that I think there are issues with running the Houston offense through Harden like they do. I think it renders others passive, and I think that Harden tends to rely on tactics that refs actively try to combat harder in the playoffs. Curry on the other hand galvanizes others, has shown continued flexibility on & off ball, and still burns more nuclear at his best than anyone else in the game. I also think Curry is one of the best leaders in the game, and I don't think this about Harden.


I agree with this. I just don’t find that Harden’s play style on these Rockets to be conducive to winning a championship. Maybe the Rockets’ org deserves blame as well.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#848 » by Colbinii » Wed Jun 12, 2019 9:37 pm

Peregrine01 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Dr Spaceman wrote:
I remain unconvinced of this. Houston last year had some jaw-dropping offensive results. Harden/Paul lineups were about equal to the best we’ve ever seen from GSW with or without Durant (125 ORTG) and those lineups with Gordon were well into the stratosphere (130 with Capela at C, 135 with Tucker at C). Realistically if you put 2018 Paul on the 2019 Rockets squad I think they coast to a title and that 2018 team has a legit argument for best non-title winning team ever. If Paul doesn’t get hurt I think we view these guys very different,y.

Also worth noting Houston has never paid the luxury tax in the D’Antoni era while GSW has the most expensive roster in NBA history. We’re basically seeing the mid-00’s Suns crashing into the Spurs every year all over again. That Houston is one of the very best teams with Harden as an alpha while spending pennies compared to every other elite team is a rather big feather in his cap. Harden is able to bootstrap a team of 0s offensively to a +7 offense with a ceiling much, ugh higher with some actual talent alongside him.


I respect your opinon in general and don't think this one is crazy either.

First thing: When you say you "remain" unconvinced, this implies that you never thought Curry was better, and I doubt that. As of '15-16, pretty sure everyone on the planet thought Curry was better. So what you're really saying is that some combination of things since Durant arrived had allowed Harden to move past Curry in your mind.

It hasn't for me, and that's despite the fact that I had no issue at all rating Harden ahead of Curry last year for POY. I don't think Curry when he's in beta or semi-beta mode is doing something as special as Harden, and thus when that's all Curry does, I give Harden the nod. But what I've seen in the playoffs just leaves me feeling like broadly speaking, Curry's higher ceiling remains in effect.

A key thing for me is that I think there are issues with running the Houston offense through Harden like they do. I think it renders others passive, and I think that Harden tends to rely on tactics that refs actively try to combat harder in the playoffs. Curry on the other hand galvanizes others, has shown continued flexibility on & off ball, and still burns more nuclear at his best than anyone else in the game. I also think Curry is one of the best leaders in the game, and I don't think this about Harden.


I agree with this. I just don’t find that Harden’s play style on these Rockets to be conducive to winning a championship. Maybe the Rockets’ org deserves blame as well.


How should he play?

The roster is constructed around his strengths and more importantly this style of play.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#849 » by Krodis » Wed Jun 12, 2019 11:08 pm

Doctor MJ wrote:
Dr Spaceman wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Well, I have a tough time putting Harden ahead of Curry at this point. Maybe I will with the right arguments, but the essence of it for me:

I just think Curry's better than Harden. I think Curry was better in that beta role behind Durant's alpha than Harden would be, and I think Curry's a better alpha than Harden too.

I understand that if you believe Curry's beta role is less impressive than Harden's alpha and you weight that part of the year as an advantage over Curry you probably end up with Harden still ahead, but I don't really think such distinctions are all that meaningful when the reason for the primacy difference was about personal sacrifice for the good of the team.

If I voted right this moment it'd be:

1. Giannis
2. Kawhi
3. Curry
4. Harden
5. somebody (I'll think more about that if people want to have that conversation)


I remain unconvinced of this. Houston last year had some jaw-dropping offensive results. Harden/Paul lineups were about equal to the best we’ve ever seen from GSW with or without Durant (125 ORTG) and those lineups with Gordon were well into the stratosphere (130 with Capela at C, 135 with Tucker at C). Realistically if you put 2018 Paul on the 2019 Rockets squad I think they coast to a title and that 2018 team has a legit argument for best non-title winning team ever. If Paul doesn’t get hurt I think we view these guys very different,y.

Also worth noting Houston has never paid the luxury tax in the D’Antoni era while GSW has the most expensive roster in NBA history. We’re basically seeing the mid-00’s Suns crashing into the Spurs every year all over again. That Houston is one of the very best teams with Harden as an alpha while spending pennies compared to every other elite team is a rather big feather in his cap. Harden is able to bootstrap a team of 0s offensively to a +7 offense with a ceiling much, ugh higher with some actual talent alongside him.


I respect your opinon in general and don't think this one is crazy either.

First thing: When you say you "remain" unconvinced, this implies that you never thought Curry was better, and I doubt that. As of '15-16, pretty sure everyone on the planet thought Curry was better. So what you're really saying is that some combination of things since Durant arrived had allowed Harden to move past Curry in your mind.

It hasn't for me, and that's despite the fact that I had no issue at all rating Harden ahead of Curry last year for POY. I don't think Curry when he's in beta or semi-beta mode is doing something as special as Harden, and thus when that's all Curry does, I give Harden the nod. But what I've seen in the playoffs just leaves me feeling like broadly speaking, Curry's higher ceiling remains in effect.

A key thing for me is that I think there are issues with running the Houston offense through Harden like they do. I think it renders others passive, and I think that Harden tends to rely on tactics that refs actively try to combat harder in the playoffs. Curry on the other hand galvanizes others, has shown continued flexibility on & off ball, and still burns more nuclear at his best than anyone else in the game. I also think Curry is one of the best leaders in the game, and I don't think this about Harden.
The Rockets offense has been incredible the last three years though, and it's not like he has an amazing offensive supporting cast. I'd say that generally is more important than the sort of nebulous idea that Harden is having some negative impact on the way the players around him play.

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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#850 » by Peregrine01 » Thu Jun 13, 2019 12:36 am

Colbinii wrote:
Peregrine01 wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
I respect your opinon in general and don't think this one is crazy either.

First thing: When you say you "remain" unconvinced, this implies that you never thought Curry was better, and I doubt that. As of '15-16, pretty sure everyone on the planet thought Curry was better. So what you're really saying is that some combination of things since Durant arrived had allowed Harden to move past Curry in your mind.

It hasn't for me, and that's despite the fact that I had no issue at all rating Harden ahead of Curry last year for POY. I don't think Curry when he's in beta or semi-beta mode is doing something as special as Harden, and thus when that's all Curry does, I give Harden the nod. But what I've seen in the playoffs just leaves me feeling like broadly speaking, Curry's higher ceiling remains in effect.

A key thing for me is that I think there are issues with running the Houston offense through Harden like they do. I think it renders others passive, and I think that Harden tends to rely on tactics that refs actively try to combat harder in the playoffs. Curry on the other hand galvanizes others, has shown continued flexibility on & off ball, and still burns more nuclear at his best than anyone else in the game. I also think Curry is one of the best leaders in the game, and I don't think this about Harden.


I agree with this. I just don’t find that Harden’s play style on these Rockets to be conducive to winning a championship. Maybe the Rockets’ org deserves blame as well.


How should he play?

The roster is constructed around his strengths and more importantly this style of play.


Good point and the Rockets front office deserves some of the blame for constructing the roster the way it has. I would say though that Harden's complete passivity when CP3 had the ball down the stretch of games 5 and 6 does suggest that he is at fault as well. Maybe it's habit but over the last few seasons he has become steadily less and less involved when he doesn't have the ball, which doesn't help maximize synergy with Hou's second best player.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#851 » by Krodis » Thu Jun 13, 2019 1:10 am

The idea that anything about the Rockets last few seasons requires blame to be divvied out is about the most clear-cut example of winning bias I can think of. It's not like the roster is some sort of super team. It's a pretty ordinary supporting cast for a star. They weren't even in the luxury tax this past year. Half the rotation consisted of scrap heap pickups. They got Tucker for 8 million/year. It's like this team overachieved so thoroughly that people forgot that they were overachieving to begin with.


EDIT: James Harden has as many 60 point triple doubles as his teammates have had all-star appearances during his entire tenure as a Rocket (1).
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#852 » by Dr Spaceman » Thu Jun 13, 2019 10:43 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
Dr Spaceman wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:
Well, I have a tough time putting Harden ahead of Curry at this point. Maybe I will with the right arguments, but the essence of it for me:

I just think Curry's better than Harden. I think Curry was better in that beta role behind Durant's alpha than Harden would be, and I think Curry's a better alpha than Harden too.

I understand that if you believe Curry's beta role is less impressive than Harden's alpha and you weight that part of the year as an advantage over Curry you probably end up with Harden still ahead, but I don't really think such distinctions are all that meaningful when the reason for the primacy difference was about personal sacrifice for the good of the team.

If I voted right this moment it'd be:

1. Giannis
2. Kawhi
3. Curry
4. Harden
5. somebody (I'll think more about that if people want to have that conversation)


I remain unconvinced of this. Houston last year had some jaw-dropping offensive results. Harden/Paul lineups were about equal to the best we’ve ever seen from GSW with or without Durant (125 ORTG) and those lineups with Gordon were well into the stratosphere (130 with Capela at C, 135 with Tucker at C). Realistically if you put 2018 Paul on the 2019 Rockets squad I think they coast to a title and that 2018 team has a legit argument for best non-title winning team ever. If Paul doesn’t get hurt I think we view these guys very different,y.

Also worth noting Houston has never paid the luxury tax in the D’Antoni era while GSW has the most expensive roster in NBA history. We’re basically seeing the mid-00’s Suns crashing into the Spurs every year all over again. That Houston is one of the very best teams with Harden as an alpha while spending pennies compared to every other elite team is a rather big feather in his cap. Harden is able to bootstrap a team of 0s offensively to a +7 offense with a ceiling much, ugh higher with some actual talent alongside him.


I respect your opinon in general and don't think this one is crazy either.

First thing: When you say you "remain" unconvinced, this implies that you never thought Curry was better, and I doubt that. As of '15-16, pretty sure everyone on the planet thought Curry was better. So what you're really saying is that some combination of things since Durant arrived had allowed Harden to move past Curry in your mind.

It hasn't for me, and that's despite the fact that I had no issue at all rating Harden ahead of Curry last year for POY. I don't think Curry when he's in beta or semi-beta mode is doing something as special as Harden, and thus when that's all Curry does, I give Harden the nod. But what I've seen in the playoffs just leaves me feeling like broadly speaking, Curry's higher ceiling remains in effect.

A key thing for me is that I think there are issues with running the Houston offense through Harden like they do. I think it renders others passive, and I think that Harden tends to rely on tactics that refs actively try to combat harder in the playoffs. Curry on the other hand galvanizes others, has shown continued flexibility on & off ball, and still burns more nuclear at his best than anyone else in the game. I also think Curry is one of the best leaders in the game, and I don't think this about Harden.


Thanks for the kind words Doc, and I absolutely respect your take here as well. Just a couple things:

- I did rate Curry higher (much higher) after that 16 season. The difference to me is that Harden has improved leaps and bounds each of the last three years while Curry has largely stagnated. Harden’s year over year improvements, from improving his passing to pushing his step back behind the arc to developing a killer floater to pushing his iso game to beyond normal human limits to bulking up to the size of a linebacker is something we’ve basically only seen from LeBron in recent memory. Curry just hasn’t had the same trajectory, and in fact he’s never recaptured his 2016 magic, which leads to...
-Harden is the guy with the reputation for playoff failures, while Curry is the one I see actually consistently get schemed out of his game. Harden seems to mostly fail because of fatigue or conditioning issues while Curry really struggles against teams with mobile big men and aggressive point of attack defenders that heavily utilize switching. Granted, that’s very few teams, but that teams that can do that also happen to be the teams that go deep in the playoffs. I don’t think a team can scheme against Harden the way we’ve seen Houston themselves, OKC, Cleveland make Curry hesitate and go passive.
-to whit, Harden’s low scoring game this postseason is 22, and his high is 41. Curry’s low is 12, his high is 47. So while his ability to “go nuclear” is certainly superior to Harden’s, his ability to go Chernobyl is also much higher. Harden is simply the more consistent player; matter of fact he’s one of the most consistent scorers we’ve ever seen. Curry was bad against LAC and was bad for 75% of the Houston series as well. Harden’s team can’t even afford him to have a bad quarter, let alone a single game. Houston’s offense managed a pathetic .95 ppp against Utah with him sitting and it was barely better against Golden State, for an overall offensive rating of 114 with Harden and 101 without. Harden was also #2 in offensive playoff RAPM after only LeBron in the spreadsheet posted here earlier.
-Curry is Born on third base in a lot of ways. His team has Draymond and Durant who can do the heavy lifting which means Ucrry can bide his time and play lacksadaisical and then turn on his “nuclear” self when the time is right. But that nuclear style requires energy, and that’s maybe why we don’t see Harden do it. The Rockets rely on hIm to initiate every possession, he can’t just take quarters off and then explode like Curry does. He needs to score 8 points every quarter or his team will fail, while Curry can score 0 in one half and then 25 in the other.
-If the 2019 playoffs have convinced you Curry’s still “got it”, and thus he’s still better than Harden, id ask you to take a long look at the quality of competition and the schemes they run. Curry demolished Portland in a truly embarrassing way. But you know who else did that? New Orleans, and I don’t think anyone is calling them something GOAT-level. And NOP faced Portland with Nurkic healthy. He’s played well against Toronto, but his team has managed 108 points per 100 while the Raptors held all teams to 107 in the regular season. And this is despite Toronto choosing sub-optimal strategies like keeping Gasol out there and refusing to switch because the threat of Curry individually going off doesn’t seem that scary to them. Against a similar caliber of defense in Utah, Harden’s Rockets managed 1.1 points per possession (+5 compared to regular season) and this is with perhaps the most aggressive defensive scheme we’ve ever seen attempted against a star player.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#853 » by Basileus777 » Fri Jun 14, 2019 3:43 am

Toronto won the title and Kawhi is likely finals MVP. And yet I came away from this series thinking less of Kawhi. The Raptors are a 2004 Pistonsesque team that won with dominant team defense and depth against a team that was a shadow of its dynastic past. Kawhi's value comes mostly from offense and the Raptors offense just isn't that special. The Raptors played a completely outmanned Warriors team and despite that Kawhi just rarely shined.

And Draymond's offensive limitations really stood out in this series. He's just useless as a scorer to the point where teams can play box and ones on Curry even when he is on the floor. I don't see a strong argument for Green even being a top 10 player this season. Rudy Gobert probably had a better year than Green when you factor in regular season and I doubt we'll see a strong POTY push for Gobert.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#854 » by Statlanta » Fri Jun 14, 2019 3:49 am

Kawhi, Harden and Curry got locked up by gimmick zone defenses.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#855 » by E-Balla » Fri Jun 14, 2019 4:05 am

Kawhi gotta be #1.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#856 » by cpower » Fri Jun 14, 2019 4:07 am

Kawhi does nothing to prove he deserved #1. You can't win POTY for only showing up 2 PS series. I will go with Giannis.

If Kawhi wins POTY then this is the weakest one in 20 years.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#857 » by Basileus777 » Fri Jun 14, 2019 4:10 am

My list is probably something like this:

Giannis
Curry
Harden
Kawhi
Jokic
Embiid
George
Durant
LeBron
Lillard

Call me crazy, but put Harden on the Raptors instead of Kahwi and they are a better team with a significantly higher offensive ceiling. He's a better isolation scorer than Kawhi and way beyond him as a passer.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#858 » by ShotCreator » Fri Jun 14, 2019 4:15 am

Curry and Harden are by far the best offensive players in the world. Curry’s probably the best overall player in the world right now honestly.


No way in hell do I take Giannis over him in any situation.

Kawhi was elite in the playoffs but even he said he wouldn’t have been able to play in the postseason if not for coasting and load management.

He took it easy on a pretty loaded team.

His overall season is definitely worse than Harden, Curry, Jokic, and possibly Giannis.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#859 » by eminence » Fri Jun 14, 2019 4:15 am

Yeah, it's a strange one, the Raps closed it, but I came away fairly unimpressed with Kawhi over the last few games.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#860 » by Dupp » Fri Jun 14, 2019 4:19 am

FVV finishes number 1 for me this season

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