lessthanjake wrote:The 2015 Cavs were of course weaker than they could’ve been, but the fact that they swept the Hawks largely without Kyrie (he played limited minutes in two games and they outscored the Hawks with Kyrie off the floor in both those games) is pretty relevant since the Hawks were the best team that the East otherwise had to offer. Despite the injuries, the Cavs were clearly the best team in the East. Does that mean they were a particularly difficult Finals opponent? No. But it’s not an example of a fluke team that wouldn’t have made the Finals in the state that they were in in the Finals. They were more just an example of the best team in a very weak conference.
The Cavs were the best team in the East, sure. But as many people will try to point out to you for agenda sake, being the best team in the East is a different animal from being the best team in the NBA. Now make no mistake about it, that 2015 Cavaliers team at full strength was an elite team, but the simple fact is... they weren't at full strength. This can't really be argued. And beating the 2015 Hawks definitely looks impressive, but when you look further into the surface... it doesn't really look all that meaningful, or even that surprising.
One of the key problems for Atlanta is that as good as they were defensively (6th in the league in fact), they didn't really have anyone to stop LeBron from doing whatever he wanted. More importantly, Cleveland being without Irving for half the series and having no Love forced them to play a more gritty and dirty type of defensive pressure, and having the likes of Delly, Shumpert, Thompson out there was suffocating for the Hawks defensively. The Hawks were a top offensive team that season and failed to score 90 points in three of the four games (and the only time they did, it was an OT game). But the main reason why they struggled offensively is that they just didn't have a clear offensive go-to man in this situation. And prior to the Cavaliers, they just didn't run into anyone who could do this to Atlanta defensively. Another big problem is that they could not contain Cleveland on the boards. In all four games, the Cavaliers had a 10+ rebounding advantage every single time. Tristan Thompson in particular dominated the boards throughout the series. And it isn't like the Hawks had many options from a depth perspective to respond to something like this. If their big four wasn't able to impose their will, they were kind of screwed.
So in this series, the Hawks couldn't really score against the Cleveland defense, couldn't contain them on the boards, and could do nothing to stop LeBron. To me, this sounds a lot more like a matchup problem than it does Cleveland being as good of a team as you make them out to be.
Let's compare that to Golden State for a moment. Unlike Atlanta, Golden State had multiple elite (all team worthy defenders in fact) on their squad, capable of slowing down the Cavaliers offense (who failed to score double digits in all but one game that went to OT, and that one had Irving playing in it). They were deep in talent, had multiple options on how they could run their lineups without really hurting themselves on either end of the floor, and were an elite offensive team that required Cleveland's defense to move a LOT more on the floor and cover more ground.
So this means one of two things... one, that Warriors team was really that good, or we're overrating that Cavaliers team. Either way, this points to a not particularly difficult situation for Golden State as they are clearly above their opponent here.
lessthanjake wrote:And prior to the Finals I think it’s tough to argue that the 2015 Warriors had a particularly easy run. There’s definitely harder runs to the Finals, but they faced a 55-win team and a 56-win team. The 56-win team was led by a major superstar—which is a major factor in playoff difficulty IMO. And even their first-round opponent was a team led by an all-NBA first team guy, which is the type of first-round opponent that is most dangerous. They didn’t face any true juggernaut on the way to the Finals, but they did face tough opponents. I think one can point to injuries to players on opposing teams prior to the Finals, but the only meaningful one was Mike Conley, and he only missed one game.
Okay, let's talk about those teams shall we?
First we'll address the first one, the Pelicans, who they swept. This is a clear mismatch and not even worth discussing. Granted, AD did feast on the Warriors that year, but overall, his team did not have the capabilities to stand up to GS. A lot of people will mention the fact that Jrue Holiday was missing that entire series, but I don't really think that would have mattered all that much. Warriors were just that much better.
Second team, the Grizzlies. This is easily the biggest challenge Golden State faced that year. That Grizzlies team was no joke. But the only problem is... injuries. Yeah, they did eventually get Conley back. Unfortunately for them, Tony Allen got injured in game 4, reinjured himself in game 5 and couldn't come back. Grizzlies were pretty much screwed without Allen and it was no coincidence that they lost all of their remaining games in dominant fashion once Allen was no longer a factor. This matters.
Then there's the WCF opponent... the Rockets. First off, no Patrick Beverly for that entire playoff run. That's pretty significant given that Curry and Thompson were on that Warriors team. Dwight Howard was given fits all series long by Bogut. But probably most importantly, you had historic playoff choker James Harden leading their team. That was pretty much a handicap in of itself. Yeah sure, he had a couple good games. He also had two absolute stinkers in games 3 and 5 and was a complete non factor. I don't care how good the Rockets were in the regular season. When you have James Harden leading your team, what you did in the regular season no longer matters.
So overall, this was a pretty easy playoff run for the Warriors leading into the finals. A completely outmatched first round opponent, a very good, if not great second round opponent who missed key players at certain points in the series, and a good WCF opponent led by a career choker in Harden. Overall, there's nothing here that I'm particularly impressed by, nor do I have a reason to be impressed.
lessthanjake wrote:On balance, I’d say that having a run to the Finals that goes through good teams but no juggernauts, followed by facing a best-team-in-a-weak-conference in the Finals is on the easier side of things in terms of title runs. But there’s definitely been plenty of easier title runs.
And I’ll note that I definitely don’t think it makes sense to tether the ease of the playoff run to the Warriors being a 67-win team. The fact that they were a 67-win team reflects on how good they were, not on how good their opponents were. And it doesn’t make sense to effectively discount what they achieved in the title run on the basis that they were really good. If it was easy for them because they were really good, then that reflects well on them and what they accomplished!
Why does the Warriors being a 67 win team not matter? It makes perfect sense to point out just how elite of a team the Warriors were that year. If they were just a good or very good team, that would actually help this point a lot more. Going through good teams matters a lot more in that situation. However, none of the teams that GS went through prior to facing Cleveland were on their level, even without injuries. They had a 10.01 SRS that season for crying out loud... they were historically good.