Texas Chuck wrote:I know but imagine an argument that says 20-21 Curry is a candidate for a top 3 NBA season of all-time but Kelly Oubre was apparently so bad as to be able to derail that season for the Warriors.
Yet we can't even mention that Spida and Conley and Mitchell and Bojan were defensive sieves. Or at least its then told to us that despite the numbers telling us Gobert is great because he can't win with terrible teammates he's not that great.
But Curry had to play with Kelly Oubre so he gets a pass? It's like the old KG days where we were supposed to pretend every single year he played with Ricky Davis when that was but a blip on KG's radar.
Okay, let's put the whole awards conversation to the side for a second.
You understand the specific concern about the Kerr's read & react schemes requiring the right capacity for decision making, right? I mean, people running motion offenses - including Phil Jackson - have been criticized for effectively being finicky about their player ingredients for a long time, and even as I defend the vision for what they want to achieve, I've never denied how badly those things can go.
If all you have is one or two guys on your roster who you have faith in to make decisions on the court, you absolutely should not play this way, and in a league where player tenure is so short due to free agency, there's real concern about ever implementing something like this because you may lose the players as soon as (or before) they ever hit their stride together.
And hence why Kerr got criticized for sticking with this approach last year when he had players who really didn't seem up to the challenge, and why it was argued that the organization effectively got lucky that Wiseman & Oubre got hurt last year.
And so THAT is why it made sense to talk about Curry getting unusually hampered by problematic teammates beyond simply "a weak supporting cast". A weak cast is supposed to be weak on talent, not actually unable to do the supporting job.
I don't particularly mind if you acknowledge all that and still didn't see Curry as a Top 5 MVP/POY guy last year, but it's frustrating when you talk like there's some massive inconsistency here while insisting in treating a distinct situation as if it must be the same as everything else.
Bottom line is that the way the Warriors struggled to over a big chunk of the year last year was a real reason to argue for abandoning Kerr's whole philosophy, and even as we know exist at a time where Kerr's philosophy seems pretty dang validated, the low lows we witnessed last year are something all teams are going to be thinking about when they consider copycatting the champion read & react scheme.