SpreeS wrote:2008 NOH 2-0 SAN
2013 LAC 2-0 MEM
2015 LAC 3-1 HOU
2016 LAC 2-0 POR
2017 LAC 2-1 UTA
2018 HOU 3-2 GSW
2021 PHO 2-0 MIL
2022 PHO 2-0 DAL
In 4 of these series, injuries
directly explain the results - Blake in 2013, both Blake and CP3 in 2016, Blake/Gobert's injuries in 2017 (Gobert returned in game 4, Blake stopped playing then), CP3 in 2018. So automatically, 8 series dropping to 4 seems like a far more "plausible" outcome than the 8 you've prescribed.
In 2 of these series, CP3 was still a good player in the closing games (2008 and 2021). The Spurs were the defending champions, and it's not a shock that CP3's team might lose. Ditto for 2021 - there were 3 very close games to finish off the series and CP3 did an admirable job against arguably the best PG defender in the league in Jrue Holiday. I think that these seasons, the Spurs and the Bucks were actually the better teams (and extra analysis I've done on minutes played etc seems to support this - IIRC the Suns were actually the
clear underdog vs the Bucks). These series feel like weird hills to die on in terms of reaching a conclusion.
I kind of understand 2015 and 2022. Both series were kind of bizarre - CP3 balled out games 5-7, but the 4th quarter of game 6 had Houston making more 3s than the Clippers made in games 5, 6 AND 7 (with Harden on the bench, mind you), and we remember how oddly that turned out. I'm not sure what to even make of that - absolutely humiliating, sure, and I'm happy to give you
this series if you're trying to insinuate Paul was the cause of something happening.
2022, he hit 37 and forgot how to play basketball for a couple of weeks. I don't really know if there was more to it, but it was also highly bizarre.
So yes, of the 8 series, 4 are almost
perfectly explained by injuries and 2 series felt like the "expected" conclusion to me. There were only 2 series that felt disappointing from a team perspective to me, and both had a very bizarre set of events occur, and I don't know what to really make of those conclusions in terms of an overarching data point.
Curry
started 20G .441/.356/.855 5.2r 5.0a 1.7s 0.3b 3.6t 25.2p -0.9
finished 19G .478/.434/.851 6.2r 6.5a 1.8s 0.4b 3.4t 31.2p +13.8
Paul
started 20G .503/.426/.871 5.0r 7.9a 1.8s 0.2b 1.9b 22.8pts +9.1
finished 27G .501/.344/.833 3.9r 8.0a 1.6s 0.0b 2.7b 20.4pts -8.0
Is the insinuation here that Paul gets "figured out" in a way that Curry does?
One piece of commentary I'd like to share is that Curry (a 43% shooter) shot 36% from 3 in the "starting" games and 43% from 3 in the "finishing" games. Does this mean that defences suddenly knew how to hone in on Curry for half of a series, and then he managed to whip together some absurd magic in order to shoot properly again? Did Paul (a career 37-38% 3 point shooter) suddenly unleash a new weapon in the "starting" games and then get figured out in the "finishing" games?
Or did you literally take a subset of data following a certain pattern (e.g. series in which the Warriors improved later in the series) and then use their star players' per game numbers (which would highly correlate with the team results) and try to extrapolate what this dataset is showing us about both players?
I'm pretty sure that Curry, on the whole, historically had a statistically greater playoff drop than Paul (especially prime Paul, who besides a couple of seasons, actually tends to go
up in postseason efficacy). A cursory look at BPM, for example, is that Curry only increased his BPM in 2017 and 2021 (the latter being a notorious down year in the regular season statistically), and Paul has a closer to 50/50 ratio.
Also Curry team lost control of the series just one time against Cavs and Paul took over the lead 2 times. Looking at the whole picture these two players moved in different directions. Curry's numbers are all up, Paul's - down. Paul had injuries, teammates had inkuries, but it doesn't explain this turn around from 18W-4L to 3W-28L.Injuries and teammates actually explained a
very large part of that turnaround.
Owly wrote:It’s not evaluating the game or how the players played. It’s starting with the conclusion, “You failed” and often any area of relative weakness in the best player … that’s responsible.
Yep, this is the argument I've had with Paul over time.
People see that he lost, so there's always a "reason" that he lost which is tied to him. Sometimes, it
is him. Sometimes, the conclusions feel outlandish. For example, ideas that Paul was too conservative/passive are often shared in series in which his team had an elite ORTG and lost on
defence. The idea that he might be too conservative is fine - offering it as an explanation for why his team lost on the
defensive side of the court seems like the accuser is grasping for straws trying to pin the loss on Paul. I'd be open to the argument re: offensive passiveness if it was team offence causing his series to lose games, but historically (and definitely in his prime) that wasn't the case.
I've said this ad nauseam on the forum - I'm fine with criticising Paul in series such as 2009, where he actually played very poorly, but I think criticising him for losing a series in which he played excellent basketball and trying to offer too many overarching explanations about aggression, not being enough of a scorer, being small etc seems like they're
looking for a reason to blame him. Sometimes, this almost loosely translates to "CP3 wasn't 2016 Finals LeBron, so it's CP3's fault" with a different coat of paint.
Even though star player performance + playoff performance are correlated, that doesn't mean that there can't be any outliers. In fact, we'd
expect there to be outliers. CP3 has had many tight, coin flip-esque series (e.g. imagine winning 56 games in the regular season and playing a 56 win team in the first round) that have often been heavily influenced by things such as injuries. Until 2018, he never played a team with fewer than 51 wins in the regular season (bar Portland 2016). Is there any coincidence that many of the players known as "chokers" in the past couple of decades have been guys like CP3, Blake, Harden, Westbrook, Durant (until the GSW fiasco), Dirk (until 2011), KG (until going east) etc. The majority of these guys were playing their primes in the west, the
better conference for a long time. Guys like Kidd (great player, FWIW) get credit for making 2 consecutive finals, but the best team he played on the way was a 50 win team (2x). That's literally worse than the
worst team CP3 played until 2018, not including Portland, which had both CP3 and Blake get injured at the same time.
In the real world, if we flip a coin 10 times, it's entirely possible to get something like 2 heads and 8 tails. Is it so outlandish that a player facing so many competitive series might lose more close series than they win because the smaller, coin flip events just don't happen to go their way? I'd argue that it's almost
expected for there to be at least one player at the losing end of all of these series, because the concept of probability tells us that there probably
are going to be a handful of outliers.
Lost92Bricks wrote:Why does Chris never get compared to guys like Iverson or Damian Lillard or Westbrook or Reggie Miller on here.
People just like criticizing him and blaming him so they go right to the championship players to compare him to.
People don't really like Chris Paul on average. Some of it is Paul's conniving demeanour (whether it's nut punches, or feeling like a "teacher's pet" or whatever they dislike about him), and I understand that, but I sometimes feel like it's almost a
relief to people that the playoff results aren't on his side, because it makes it easier to subliminally dismiss how good he actually is.