Doranku wrote:Jaqua92 wrote:GSP wrote:
Yes weve seen it time and time again a player w/ playoff woes or recent bad outing is penalized in Mvp voting
I dont think you know what dog walked means. Mavs barely scraped by Okc. Both teams scored 636 points that series and Okc had biggest blowout win of the series. 2 of Mavs wins came in 1 possession game including game 6 where Mavs had to rally and won the game at the Ft line in the last 2 seconds
What is you OKC fans?
Both teams scored 636, and Mavs barely scraped by OKC?
They didn't need a full series to win, and frankly, OKC got lucky they made it past game 5.
They were dominated.
The Mavs were lucky to escape that series. SGA tore them up all 6 games, Luka didn't play well for his standards, Kyrie had one of the worst playoff series of his career. Unfortunately for SGA, nobody else on OKC showed up.
It was the same BS with Jokic before he won a ring. People would cry playoffs even though he balled out in losses & was let down by his teammates. Playoff history incudes more than just winning or losing.
See, mind you I'm a big Kyrie fan so take this with a grain of salt, but this really wasn't one of Kyrie's worst series. What's happening is that people are so stuck in the idea that he's only a scorer that when he does well as a playmaker and defender, they don't look at those elements. OKC was doubling and hedging Kyrie much more so than they were Luka when I was looking, and 90% of the time, Kyrie made the right play and dished it to the wide, wide open man. PJ averaged 18 ppg or so as a result for a shooting performance he wouldn't repeat. What made this a trickier situation was that as the No. 2 option, Kyrie is still supposed to kind of defer to Luka, who was now being guarded by Dort in single coverage. That was working for a while, but eventually Luka got healthy enough I guess and, any one on one matchup with Luka is a mismatch for the defender. Ironically, I think Kyrie
could have gone against the game plan and just dribbled a lot and shot the ball 22 times instead of deferring to Luka and open shooters, but his decision making and playmaking and low turnover rate kept Luka and PJ engaged. And that's not even to account for the timely shots he hit and the great defense he was playing. People look at his point output, but look at how much less efficient SGA and Jalen Williams were compared to normal. Jalen had averaged like 19 a game on 62 TS% and he went down to 15 ppg on 50.9 TS%, for instance. And Kyrie was guarding him and SGA a decent amount, while getting steals and deflections all over the place. When I look back, he only really had one truly bad game:
Game 1: mavs lose, but he has 20 points on 65 TS%.
Meh, but not badGame 2: Mavs win, he doesn't score much, but anyone watching the game could see the impact. Had 9 points, two steals, two blocks, 11 assists and had some timely buckets. At the time no one was really saying this was a bad game. Really, everyone said it was a great game. so,
GOOD/Great. Game 3: Mavs win, kyrie has an efficient 22 points, 5 rebounds, 7 assists to go with a steal and a block. Even more notably though, he had a sequence to close out the game, and basically hit a game-winning shot over good defense.
VERY GOODGame 4: This was a game where I felt like he wasn't aggressive when he clearly needed to be. He started out great, passed well again, but this wasn't good, and they lost, naturally.
BADGame 5: He had 12 points on about 50% shooting with 4 assists and only one turnover. This wasn't a great Kyrie game, but he was still a plus and clearly didn't have to take a bunch of shots, and the team won comfortably by 12 points.
Game 6: This was the game he went into that chucker mode I spoke about, and it almost seems like people would have been happier if he did this the whole time. But, when it was needed, he went into this mode and got an efficient 22 points. But these included plenty of timely scoring to close out the game. Considering it was a closeout and considering the stakes and the shot-making, it's hard for me to call this a bad game. Maybe it's an okay game. Maybe it's a pretty good game. But he did what needed to be done when it mattered and they won. DECENT/GOOD
And most of this can't quite capture how solid he was on defense the entire way through, especially with a top 3 player in the league and two top 25 types in Jalen Williams and Chet.
So he ended the series averaging about 16 ppg and 6 assists on 53 TS%. Not great numbers, but considering how he took care of the ball and played defense and hit timely shots, this isn't much different from like, a 2019 or 2018 Kyle Lowry playoff series. So basically, Kyrie went from Kobe one series to a Kyle Lowry the next series. That's some crazy versatility and shows that his all-around game is pretty underrated. but because people can't accept his all-around game, it's seen as one of his worst series. But I'd say 2017 against the pacers and the raptors was worse, obviously the two Celtics series he lost and the 2019 bucks series are easily much worse than this OKC series, which I think will be considered an underrated one if people look back years from now.
Here's a pretty good video breakdown: