ball_takes23 wrote:AEnigma wrote:Hilarious that now we are claiming Draymond was not still in his prime in 2022.
whats even more hilarious is claiming that a 35 yr old Butler still is in his prime.
I find both of these takes hilarious.
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ball_takes23 wrote:AEnigma wrote:Hilarious that now we are claiming Draymond was not still in his prime in 2022.
whats even more hilarious is claiming that a 35 yr old Butler still is in his prime.
ball_takes23 wrote:f4p wrote:Special_Puppy wrote:Why didn’t more teams trade for Butler? Warriors didn’t really give up much and he only wanted a 2 year deal
Because steph is this generation's Duncan and is never allowed to play with less than 2 prime hall of famers would be my guess. Butler is just perfect from a "high IQ passing forward who plays defense" perspective like Iggy and dray, except he can also score 30 and get to the line. It was so weird how everyone acted like Butler forgot how to play just because he wanted 2 years of money.
Steph has arguably the best ring of this decade, and its been like 6 years since he's even played with one prime HOFer much less 2. Bron and KD have easily played more years with prime HOFers than Steph has.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
lessthanjake wrote:I think there’s an argument that Draymond had a short prime that was like 2015-2017 or 2015-2018. He was actually not a huge negative in those years in terms of scoring threat—his three-pointers in those years were okay enough that he wasn’t necessarily totally ignored, and he had higher scoring volume in general. The league also wasn’t quite as three-point-centric as it eventually became, so his shooting weakness wasn’t as much of a problem in the context of the league. His prime defensively was much longer and I do think it extended out to 2022, but I think his overall impact was definitely notably better in those 2015-2017 or 2015-2018 years, because he wasn’t an offensive negative those years, so there’s an argument that his prime was that shorter period. There’s also an argument that he had a fairly lengthy “prime” and those years I mentioned were just his peak.
therealbig3 wrote:Didn't think this deserved its own thread, just more of a curiosity, and I wonder how people determine this:
Why has LeBron not been considered a PG outside of like his rookie year? He's been listed at SF and PF, but functionally, what makes his role any different than a guy like Magic or Nash? These were guys that were pretty ball-dominant and were the engines behind their offenses. I'm not making any remark about James not playing off ball or saying he couldn't...he obviously could and did very well, but he's been his teams' primary ball handler, decision maker, passer pretty much his entire career. Why does he not get the PG label? Is it because of his size? That doesn't make sense either, because Magic was listed at PG.
Is it because he played next to a PG? Again, Magic played next to other PGs and small guards, Chalmers isn't really any different than Byron Scott. Kyrie Irving is CLEARLY more of a SG.
IDK, I don't quite get how we differentiate LeBron's role in his teams' offenses from the role that other HOF PGs played for their teams. Which means, he should be considered a PG, no? He certainly doesn't play like your typical SF.
f4p wrote:Special_Puppy wrote:Why didn’t more teams trade for Butler? Warriors didn’t really give up much and he only wanted a 2 year deal
Because steph is this generation's Duncan and is never allowed to play with less than 2 prime hall of famers would be my guess. Butler is just perfect from a "high IQ passing forward who plays defense" perspective like Iggy and dray, except he can also score 30 and get to the line. It was so weird how everyone acted like Butler forgot how to play just because he wanted 2 years of money.
AEnigma wrote:Hilarious that now we are claiming Draymond was not still in his prime in 2022.
parsnips33 wrote:AEnigma wrote:Hilarious that now we are claiming Draymond was not still in his prime in 2022.
You think that was the last year of his prime? Or it extends further?
It's kinda an ambiguous term
AEnigma wrote:parsnips33 wrote:AEnigma wrote:Hilarious that now we are claiming Draymond was not still in his prime in 2022.
You think that was the last year of his prime? Or it extends further?
It's kinda an ambiguous term
For now I think his prime is ongoing. This attempted narrative by some that “primes” refer to a player’s absolute best years and nothing more feels at best oblivious and at worst outright deceptive. Yeah, Draymond’s offensive production and value has not been what it was in the 2010s, but he is still consistently one of the league’s best defenders (in a way that reliably translates to the postseason), and that is where the bulk of his impact has always been — which is a significant part of why all the metrics feeding in boxscore inputs have consistently been lower on him than rawer impact measures continue to be. Over the past five years, he is 23-20 without Steph, and Steph is 35-33 without him. As always, it is their synergy which makes the Warriors dangerous, and while it is certainly true that this later prime Draymond’s offensive value is almost completely tied to Steph, his defence is still the other main pillar of the team.
That said, Draymond has always been something of a postseason riser, so if we reach the postseason and he is unable to play heavier minutes in close games, or if Kerr needs to bench him outright at the end of close games, then that would indeed be a new point of distinction. It was not a concern in 2023 (or 2022), but I would not be completely shocked if two years down the line it had become more of an issue. Same with Butler, who two years ago led an incredible 8/1 upset and reached the Finals.
AEnigma wrote:parsnips33 wrote:AEnigma wrote:Hilarious that now we are claiming Draymond was not still in his prime in 2022.
You think that was the last year of his prime? Or it extends further?
It's kinda an ambiguous term
For now I think his prime is ongoing. This attempted narrative by some that “primes” refer to a player’s absolute best years and nothing more feels at best oblivious and at worst outright deceptive. Yeah, Draymond’s offensive production and value have not been what they were in the 2010s, but he is still consistently one of the league’s best defenders (in a way that reliably translates to the postseason), and that is where the bulk of his impact has always been — which is a significant part of why all the metrics feeding in boxscore inputs have consistently been lower on him than rawer impact measures continue to be. Over the past five years, he is 23-20 without Steph, and Steph is 35-33 without him. As always, it is their synergy which makes the Warriors dangerous, and while it is certainly true that this later prime Draymond’s offensive value is almost completely tied to Steph, his defence is still the other main pillar of the team.
That said, Draymond has always been something of a postseason riser, so if we reach the postseason and he is unable to play heavier minutes in close games, or if Kerr needs to bench him outright at the end of close games, then that would indeed be a new point of distinction. It was not a concern in 2023 (or 2022), but I would not be completely shocked if two years down the line it had become more of an issue. Same with Butler, who two years ago led an incredible 8/1 upset and reached the Finals.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
O_6 wrote:Just wanted to give a shout out to Cade Cunningham. I have to admit that I rushed my judgement on him these past 2 years. I saw a guy who seemed like he'd be good with a chance to make 3/4 All-Star teams and an All-NBA 3rd team at his peak
Peregrine01 wrote:Watching OKC play defense makes me wonder if the NBA allowed aggressive hand checking again.
Peregrine01 wrote:Watching OKC play defense makes me wonder if the NBA allowed aggressive hand checking again.