Impuniti wrote:Lost92Bricks wrote:Impuniti wrote:Absolutely zero chance whatsoever. He's one of the best playmakers ever but his style of play is also detrimental to the game. He sucks the air out of the game by wanting to control everything.
I don't rate KD as much as other on here (latter end of top 20), but CP3 isn't even a top 25 player.
This makes no sense.
He made everyone better.
All the players he played with had their best years because of him.
His teams were completely irrelevant before and after him. He made them competitive.
All PGs make everyone better, that means absolutely nothing in the grand scheme of things. And through most of his career, his teams were completely irrelevant with him in the team as well. Did the right, safe thing all the time and wasn't able to take over games in pivotal moments.
CP3 is the basketball pseudo intellectual's dream. People get off on the idea that they're so smart to see his value, which is why he's so popular on here.
This is not necessarily true though.
If Paul did the right and safe thing all the time, he wouldn't have had the OKC game 5 blunder, the right and safe thing would have been to stand and get fouled.
Paul actually gets overstated as being too safe and gets underrated in his ability to take over with scoring. Part of this is just the results based analysis that we do, which is understandable.
While I'm going to counter some of the arguments made, I still maintain that I'd take Durant over him, and to me health is also a bigger factor than many are acknowledging. I simply have far more faith that Durant can make it through multiple playoff runs.
Score and Get Stops
As a Clipper the biggest problem they had late in games is that they could not get late game stops as a team, and looking at the team build it's clear why they couldn't consistently do that (lack of wings with size and defense, lack of solid backup bigs, so no rim protection if DJ was off the court and, not enough POA defenders).
When we analyze we look at the individual or team scoring, but many times ignore the points against. For example, even vs OKC, in game 6, Paul had 14 in the 4th, but they were beat 32-26. Griffin had 4 fouls in the 4th alone and fouled out which hurt the team.
In the 3rd Paul only had 4 pts, but had nothing to do with playing safe, he tied with Blake for most FGA in that quarter at 7 each, but the shots didn't fall, even KD and Russ only took 5 and 6, but KD went 5/5 in that quarter, that was the difference.
Go back to the GS series in 04, in the finishing game 7 he had 15/8 in the second half.
Rest on Defense Helps
One of the other problems the Clippers teams with Paul ran into is that they were built in a way that made him have to work more than his counterparts. The Clippers 2/3 (Redick, Crawford, Barnes) could not guard the 1. The opposing teams would use guys like Tony Allen, Danny Green, Kawhi, Klay, Sefolosha, etc on Paul, either for whole games, long stretches, or to give their guy a break.
On the other hand, Paul was the one chasing Curry around screens all game, chasing Westbrook around, guarding Lillard, etc. If your main guy is having to take a tough matchup most of the game just due to roster construction, while his counterpart gets rest and many times is not guarding him down the stretch (and gets someone like Barnes) while he has to still guard that guy, it can impact performance just enough to determine who comes out.
In 2018 vs Utah, he closed out that series for the Rockets as Harden struggled in game 4 and 5. They could have unnecessarily extended that series to 6 or 7 games if he doesn't step up (34/10/8 in game 4/5).
A younger Paul could have definitely had more ability to push Milwaukee further. At 36 he was still very good, but Jrue is a tough defender, his performance at that age against Jrue was still very good. The Suns took advantage of the recovering Giannis in the first two games, but as soon as he was back in form, they really had nothing to contain him.
Paul's biggest issue is actually still that he simply does not stay healthy enough and that's just a big hurdle to overcome because not being on the floor is only worse than being significantly injured and not productive / hurting the team (eg: Lakers series in 2020 for example).
dhsilv2 wrote:Mr Peanut wrote:Lost92Bricks wrote:CP3 > Booker.
CP3 led that team to the finals.
CP3 was the missing piece that guided the Suns to the Finals but he wasn't the Suns best player that season, or at least not outright like Durant was on the 2012 Thunder.
Season stats:
Booker - 25.6 ppg, 4.2 rpg, 4.3 apg on 58.7% TS
CP3 - 16.4 ppg, 4.5 rpg, 8.9 apg on 59.9% TS
Playoff stats:
Booker - 27.3 ppg, 5.6 rpg, 4.5 apg on 55.8% TS
CP3 - 19.2 ppg, 3.5 rpg, 8.6 apg on 58.4% TS
CP3 was clearly the better playmaker and Booker the better scorer. I think at best you can make the argument that they were 1A and 1B, but if you're going to definitively state that CP3 > Booker then you're going to have to bring some actual facts to the table.
We have stats the put everything together so we don't have to type out a lot of numbers.
CP3 vs Booker
VORP 1.2 vs 0.4
BPM 5.0 vs -0.4
WS 2.5 vs 1.2
WS/48 .178 vs .066
PER 20.7 vs 16.1
If we're just talking box score stats the gap between the two was massive.
I actually also think we should add that the slashes undeerrate his performance when he was healthy enough that playoffs. No one is 100% healthy, but there's healthy enough (vs Bucks hand injury) and then there's significantly impacted by injury (vs Lakers non functional arm). The Lakers series, we clearly know the guy was off, he was using one hand the whole series, it didn't even make sense.
If you look at Denver series and on, he averaged 23.5 / 3.5 / 8.9 and shot 52/49/91 (61.8 TS), but in typical fashion he has to have something go wrong, the Lakers injury AND a COVID haitus.