Cavsfansince84 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:So, on the idea that debates that bring up the past are about "ego", I'm going to make a general statement here that's relevant to what some folks have said, just to be clear:
I don't expect anyone to defer to my opinions simply because I've been right in the past, but I do think people need to recognize when they are actually penalizing people for being right when most people were wrong.
I'd have never imagined after 2015 that people would actually be trying to use the 2013 & 2014 assessment of Curry on this board against people, but here we are. You wouldn't get here if people simply looked at the basketball questions from the time when statements were made and reflected based on how accurate or prescient they were. But if what you're doing instead is looking to explain why others come to different conclusions based on psychological bias, then the actual correctness of others gets omitted from the core analysis.
Thus it gets concluded that whatever assessments were done before, there must have been a bias involved that discredits the conclusions. And when it gets pointed out that the conclusions were actually correct, this is dismissed as luck rather than used to reflect on what those people might have been able to see.
This board - and let's be real, we're talking about a small kernel of people who were participating in a project of the time - developed a pro-Curry reputation because it was in a small minority arguing that Curry was far more impressive in 2013 & 2014 than most realized. Had this board instead thought like everyone else, it wouldn't have been perceived as having that bias, and thus would be seen as more objective in its analysis by some of those coming later. The key to being perceived as unbiased then would have been to parrot what everyone else thought at the time, and thus be wrong about what was happening.
This might seem unfair as an assessment to people. Perhaps they want to argue that Curry wasn't actually that good at the time, and it's just a coincidence that he emerged as an MVP in '14-15, and made those who thought they saw something that wasn't previously there think they'd been proven right. We can explicitly debate that if people want, but my core point is this:
It's not about me or anyone else being able to predict the future perfectly - nobody can. It's about recognizing the way we anchor ourselves when we look to evaluate the ideas put forth by others - cognitive dissonance, confirmation bias, all that stuff.
Pointing to someone's "bias" when looking to evaluate their logic is a recipe for getting trapped in a schema of false knowledge and absurd logic - such as actually using the fact that someone was right when we were wrong as evidence that there was something wrong with their process rather than recognizing what should be obvious: That it was our opportunity to learn from our mistakes.
None of this is to claim that I have no ego, but really, I'm not taking issue with people's methods because I feel a need to defend my ego. I'm doing it because I see something really, really problematic that I'm seeing in the process that people are using. These people are plenty smart and in general plenty educated - it's not a problem caused by an obvious downgrade in mental talent. Rather, it's a subtle trap that the human brain is prone to falling into.
And it's happening like crazy on the current social internet in many, many circles.
I think you're right about most of what you say here but something I'd like to see more of from the people who appear to be most pro Steph in these sorts of debates is a willingness to accept or see some of the question marks people raise about him. Whether its the amount of impact Draymond and Klay may have on things like +/- or the times when defenses seem to find a way to lessen his impact. Also there's been times where he'd had a proclivity to get too fancy with the ball and make some silly turnovers. I have no issue with the idea of him being above Kobe or a top 10 player of all time either. I just want as full a picture of possible to be used in these types of debates. Steph does have weaknesses(like most any player).
Right, which was the point of my earlier post. Claiming it is not about “ego” falls flat when rather than engage with criticisms, those criticisms are constantly met with personal scoldings instead.
Here is a good post written in the maligned 2020 dark times:
Bad Gatorade wrote:My (incredibly rough) methodology involves looking at on court offensive ratings in both the regular season and the playoffs (per minute played) for Curry, and then weighting this vs the expectation set by Curry's opponents.
From 2015-2019 -
* Curry played 3442 minutes in the playoffs, and obviously, far more than this in the regular season.
* The On-court ORTG for the Warriors with Curry during the playoffs was 115.86 vs a 107.66 average defence (+8.2).
* In the regular season, this number was 119.99 vs a 108.40 average defence.
* Opposing team defences being only 0.74 PP100 tighter than the regular season expectation is actually quite low.
The obvious major caveat to this methodology is the presence of injuries/lineup changes, but without doing something as drastic as, say, assigning individual regular season player value (e.g. DRAPM) vs playoff minutes in every playoff series, this is probably close to as good as we'll get. And of course, we could nitpick certain things (e.g. Durant not playing the entirety of the 2019 playoffs) but then this ignores things such as Durant also missing regular season time in 2017/2018, and other opposing players missing time vs the Warriors. So, for the sake of simplicity, I'll call this even.
I haven't calculated this on a wider scale yet, but a -3.39 drop seems quite large, and also somewhat jibes with the fact that Curry has one of the larger relative TS% drops on record (from memory, a game-weighted glance took Curry from approximately +10.1 TS% to +7.3 TS% relative to the opponent) and in general, has fewer assists and points/slightly more turnovers.
So, whilst Curry still has tremendous value in the playoffs, he does appear somewhat more human in a playoff context, and the relative team efficiency follows. In fact, the opposing player for the #23 slot (CP3) actually had a 5 year span (2013-2017) underneath this methodology with a relative playoff on court ORTG of +8.73 (i.e. higher than the Warriors), albeit in clearly fewer games.
There have also been criticisms levelled at Curry for not having tremendous on court playoff ORTGs without Durant, and it kind of holds true - in 2015, his playoff ORTGs in each series were +7.9 (against a fairly poor Pelicans defence), -0.4, +3.6, +1.1, in 2016 he had +3.8 and +4.2 in his final two series (i.e. the ones where he played every game), and he had +9.3 (against a league average defence that lost Jusuf Nurkic right before the playoffs) and +3.0. Note that in 2015, the Warriors were also the #2 ranked offence in the league, and #1 in 2016. Outside of 2017, which was a simply stunning playoff run, there is a fairly strong correlation between the relative ORTG with Curry on court in the playoffs and the opponent's relative DRTG - 0.79 across 13 series. In other words, outside of 2017, the Warriors obliterated weaker defensive teams, but looked far more mortal than their regular season expectation against the stronger defensive teams with Curry on the court.
Without actually undertaking such a detailed analysis for every star player we're considering, there definitely appears to be a notable amount of evidence that Curry is clearly more human in the playoffs, and even more so against the toughest defences. And this doesn't mean that he's a playoff scrub at all - he's still fantastic, but it does mean that the individuals that aren't voting Curry in at this point, or second guessing his impact based on the playoffs... just might be onto something. The degree as to which somebody weights the playoffs vs the regular season, or how much they feel that the Curry drop-off is real, is up to them.
This is really just food for thought though, because Curry's playoffs always seem to become a talking point.
Just from memory, other stars have evidence that points to higher playoff resilience - for example, Wade's relative TS% reached +6 in his healthy playoff years from 2005-2011 (i.e. ignoring 2007) after being at +3-3.5% in the regular season, Nash/Magic had stupendous postseason offences, Paul has a clear scoring uptick (IIRC, he's at something like +6 TS% on higher volume from 2008-2017 himself), Kobe's got some great offences and increases his TS% from 2008-2010, etc.
FWIW, I think that #24 is a fine place for Curry, and I think that he could even be higher, or lower, and I wouldn't have any real complaints either way. I think Curry is an amazing player... but the arguments for Curry (grandiose impact, changing the game, team culture) are strong, and the arguments against Curry (durability, worse in playoffs, longevity) have merit too. Do we have to be so dismissive of the other school of thought and plummet into an online pool of rage?
And then a year earlier, when he was more freshly in everyone’s minds, we see an argument that feels very reminiscent of some of the arguments that have been levied against other all-time players with a superstar postseason and plus/minus teammate:
E-Balla wrote:People here will remember I was saying Curry was the GOAT at the end of the regular season in 2016, even though I argued at the time I didn't see any improvements in his game from 2014 to 2015 to 2016 (he added that nasty floater after 2013 but there was no major improvements from 14 to 15). Kerr's ability to install an offense that was perfect for his skillset led to an offensive explosion. So with me not seeing any improvement in his game I personally don't put him up there, but many people do think he improved. In what? IDK, I've heard arguments for things, none that properly take into account the difference in role he's had, but honestly it's irrelevant in my case against him, just the reason I personally put him way under most as opposed to just being against him under some guys.
Now into the actual argument against him, and this is similar to my argument against 2013 LeBron, his postseason performance wasn't top tier. Or even the tier under that. Or even the tier under that.
In 2016 following that amazing regular season we got to see the team without him in 6 games in their first 2 rounds and the team went 4-2. He came back from his injury and looked perfectly healthy averaging 29.3/6.4/6.7 on 61.6 TS% in his 9 games before the Finals. Then in the Finals he was stopped by the same strategy that stopped him in the 2015 Finals and was the 4th best player in the series if I'm being generous (he has no argument over Draymond, Lebron, and Kyrie).
Now I don't think I have to explain why his 2016 Finals performance was ****, that's a given. What I do find more compelling is the argument that Draymond Green is more valuable to the team than Curry. Now I don't think he's better but someone earlier this year (maybe Spaceman?) brought up Draymond being better than Curry and it's kinda been burrowing into my head the more I think about it. Flat out I'm taking Draymond if you ask me which of the two I'd rather have if I'm trying to win 4 7 game series. Looking at postseason RAPM Draymond comes out tied for first with Lebron since 1998:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQdG8Zv84zqKEzETDjd8KPsClcw9bPETX9v_x_KEAxjv9NrFaWikOoiSaciy1jbMiygg2D-V8DUQn0O/pubhtml?gid=112475182&single=true
And Curry's +/- numbers in the postseason outside of 2017 have always tailed Draymond's. Basically we have a guy that has the biggest regular season to postseason numbers drop in league history, played below superstar level in back to back Finals and wasn't the best player on his team in them, and falls behind a great teammate in all +/- metrics in both 2016 and other seasons. To me that signifies how much exactly the team helped him get those numbers in the regular season, how much they helped him get those impact numbers (it's worth mentioning Draymond had better +/- numbers in 2016 in the regular season too), and how his true level of play really wasn't super elite.
…
Curry's never been great at taking PGs off the bounce and he's never been particularly great at the point part of being a point guard with below average vision and passing ability for a starting PG. He's not super athletic and he doesn't have super handles so he's limited in his ability to penetrate so he can't make up for his lack of vision.
Actually looking at the numbers now Curry doubled his isolations in the playoffs (probably because Curry mostly isos on big men and they mismatch hunt more in the playoffs) and was way more efficient on isolations than in the regular season in the 2016 playoffs. His scoring wasn't his biggest issue at all, his ability to play point guard and handle simple traps on the PNR against Cleveland was.
That said looking at the numbers now (I'd like to add I've been saying this since I saw those games live but I've never looked the numbers up) the real drop off in his scoring production came in the pick and roll. Curry in 2016 was the most efficient high volume PNR player in the league averaging 1.11 ppp. In the playoffs he averaged 0.7 ppp with a 28.3 TOV% in the pick and roll. That lends a lot of credence to my argument that what really messed him up was Cleveland having the options to trap him with their bigs and Curry just failing to do things most elite PGs in the league do easily.
…
So when you notice Curry playing way outside of his usual in 2017, the thought should be why. To me when looking at it, and especially when looking for a why it's obvious Curry performs well against teams that are overwhelmed by that offense and his game. Once a team with enough defenders to cover Curry and the rest of the team comes along he struggles similar to how Dirk had his fatal flaw against smaller guys but less exploitable considering the team Steph was on. The Cavs weren't amazing on D but they had Tristan Thompson who can reasonably switch on Curry and allows them to defend all the Warriors at once. The other teams Golden State have played without KD (excluding the Raptors) haven't had that, how'd he perform in those situations? Well take out Curry's Finals series and the first 2 games he played in 2016 where he was injured and he's averaged:
30.4/5.9/6.5 on 62.4 TS% with a 120 ORTG and 28.6 PER in 29 games.
That's in line with his numbers in 2017 (slightly less efficient, slightly lower PER, more ppg). His Finals numbers in those 3 years against opponents that weren't overwhelmed?
26.2/5.1/5.3 on 58.8 TS% with a 109 ORTG and 20.8 PER in 19 games.
And I'm confident saying it's a trend now after 3 Finals series without KD against tough defenses that could key in on him. He might've avoided that weakness in 2017, but I don't think it makes his postseason performance actually better, it just means he got favorable matchups (I will acknowledge that yes, every matchup ever would be favorable with that squad).
Does 2022 inherently disprove all of this retroactively? Does it mean they were “wrong” and therefore everyone beating the Curry drum was “right” and by rule the people we all should ask to enlighten us with their superior basketball vision? (Incidentally, 2022 Draymond again cleared Steph in postseason on/off, as he has for five of their six Finals runs, as well as in postseason plus/minus.)
If Curry “critics”, so to speak, should be expected to “[recognise] the way we anchor ourselves when we look to evaluate the ideas put forth by others - cognitive dissonance, confirmation bias, all that stuff,” then that needs to be applied both ways. However, most of the time, the focus instead seems to me to be redirected from reflection on potential personal cognitive dissonance and confirmation bias to everyone else implicitly refusing to accept these very objective and internally consistent Curry conclusions. Again, to me, biweekly posts lamenting the board’s supposed failure to properly appreciate Curry’s greatness seems counter-productive. To me, if we were committed to learning from the past, around the fifth or sixth time there probably should have been some recognition that the problem may lie elsewhere.
This will probably be interpreted antagonistically, so I will clarify what I mean: if the goal is to foster understanding, I am legitimately baffled by the idea that the best approach is to establish a routine chiding those who dare attempt to highlight perceived inconsistencies and methodological faults. If indeed the whole body of work is truly so impeccable and indisputable as seems to be the feeling, then it feels as though the most intuitive response should be to engage with those concerns honestly. Maybe, it might even be best to do some self-reflection as to why these concerns recur, on a level beyond, “Well, everyone else must be too reluctant or obstinate to accept what I know.”