Doctor MJ wrote:iggymcfrack wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:So yeah, I'm higher on KD's regular season than many. I've said a few times in this project that I think both Curry & Durant get underrated when it comes to perception around their success together. People see how dominant they were together, they combine that with the super-team nature of their get together, and they essentially allocate less credit for them than they would the stars of most championship runs. I understand the instinct, but I'd argue it falls prey to the idea that all championships are the same. I believe those Warriors were the best team ever in '16-17, and I think it unlikely they lose to anyone in the playoffs in '18-19 if not for injuries.
I don't know. I think more often I've seen the opposite where because they have the mantle of "greatest team ever" and "dynasty" people inflate how much total-credit there is to be thrown around so they can justify placing everyone involved as better than those who had the misfortune of not getting an invitation.
And I think we can illustrate this with Harden who, filtering out garbage time, played the
KD Warriors to a dead-heat in back to back postseasons with chris paul on the floor. That combination also won the majority of the games between the duos, yet it seems "greatest team ever" does not offer much of a positive boost for the reputation of the players who ran into them more than it's cited as a potential excuse.
People hated the KD move largely because barring an injury to the core, no one --should-- be able to challenge them and be it from a box-production or a team-success approach, they anticipated it would be practically impossible for anyone not on those teams to distinguish themselves positively from Durant/steph. The Warriors were fated to crush everyone....except they didn't crush the harden-cp3 rockets. And them winning at all is not really something that can be tied to Durant. The Houston Rockets proved to be the challenger for the greatest team ever everyone else was not yet mysteriously no individual involved is generally held in similar regard to any of the key individuals involved with the Warriors.
FWIW, I'd also speculate that the 2019 Bucks had good chances vs the 2019 Warriors
with KD. I do not think the Warriors had the personnel to successfully execute what the Raptors managed and in lieu of that, the Bucks were looking to be an all-time juggernaut in their own right. Alas, Nurse, Kawhi, and Gasol had other plans.
fp4 wrote:oldschoolnobull wrote:and now the playoffs. 15-9 with a +4.4 net rating to 16-1 with a +13.5 net rating. so worth +9 when it mattered. no one questioned whether the warriors could win regular season games. but after struggling against an injured team in the 2015 finals and gagging away the 2016 finals, it appeared lebron was a bit of a mental block for the team.
Doesn't change much but may as well adjust for opponents here. You may recall 2016 featured 2 regular-season juggernauts(4 if you look at games where the best players played) and 4 playoff ones in a period
without expansion(I believe that is the only time that has happened). If we adjust for opponent...
15 Warriors ->
+9.8 psrs
16 Warriors ->
+11.27 psrs
2017 Warriors ->
+19.45 psrs
2018 Warriors ->
+15.75 psrs
2019 Warriors with Durant:
first round -> Outscores +1.1 Clippers by +9.8 =
+10.9 srs eqfirst four games of the WCSF -> Outscores +7.8 Rockets by
+.25 =
+8.1 srs eq(he is -1 in game 5 vs Houston and +6 vs the +9.1 raptors for anyone who wants to finish the calc)
There is plenty of favorable opponent injury context for both iterations of the Warriors, but Durant holds up pretty well fixing in on 2017 with an 8-point delta. Paired with his playoff on/off, rs impact, the warriors performance without him in the rs, and his box-score contributions through 3 of 4 rounds, I'd say it's fair to mark KD's 2017 as an
extremely bootleg variant of Kobe's 2001.
Everything after seems pretty underwhelming and if we peek before we see three playoff runs where, asked to do superstar things outside of scoring, he folds while his teammate posts better impact, adjusted impact, and conventional box.
There are also two games left in single coverage vs the Bucks where he replicates what Luka did for 7 against the Kawhi-PG Clippers, nice scoring numbers in 2012 when he grades out as an ineffectual role-player in every other facet of the game, and the 2014 regular-season. Otherwise he is getting outplayed by teammates, posting pedestrian playoff on/off, playoff apm, playoff aupm, regular-season apm, and regular season on/off while being a marginal defender, offering little as a creator, and being disproportionately dependent on all-time playmakers for his scoring efficiency because his handles are extremely limited relative to other modern offensive centerpieces.
Durant's legacy is basically built on a single series he had the privilege of being "needed for" against a team that was horribly set-up to stop him in just about the easiest context possible.
Durant is a pretty viable candidate for "greatest casts across a career of any superstar" and has converted that into 1 championship as a clear 2nd fiddle, and another championship where an opposing injury bailed him out despite being paired with 2 superstars. His teams have always been good to contention-worthy without him with even the 2015 thunder playing near 50-win basketball with the other starters and no KD.
For all the hype and scoring titles, his "making teams win" resume reads a lot like Pippen's(with 5 less rings). Just looking at the last 20-years, Lebron, Duncan, KG, Steph, Shaq, Giannis, Kobe, Harden, Duncan, Chris Paul, Jokic, Wade, and Nash are all more valuable regular-season forces and Durant isn't some resiliency stand-out unless you squint.
On most teams he's probably an outright faller and I very much doubt he'd be discussed this high if he'd been involved in a more typical situations.