DB23 wrote:cupcakesnake wrote:life_saver wrote:Wolves were definitely not the same team all year...Wolves were a 0.500 team until like mid-January (W/L record was 22-21 during middle of January)..they struggled in first half of season with incorporating Randle into offense and few other issues...but from January onwards, they started playing lot better. then they finished the 2nd half of the season extremely strong (27-12). They had the 2nd best Net rating in the West across entire season. Problem was that they lost lot of close games...their actual performance was better than their record.
Pretty negligible difference between the Wolves and Warriors from the time of the Jimmy trade. Warriors were +9.6 (31 games post Jimmy trade) and Wolves were +8.5 over their final 40. Both played easy schedules down the stretch, but the Warriors was even easier than the numbers due to a crazy stretch where any time they played a good team, the opponent sat their star/stars.
You can't just take the Warriors best stretch and compare it to the Wolves whole season. The Wolves started badly, had some mid-season injuries where they started establishing their identity, and then a pretty monster blitz of the league over the final 30ish games.
Wolves a +8 team the whole second half, and the Warriors are a +9 team their final 30 games. Calling us +5 means the Warriors are +3. Want to focus on the Warriors best stretch, then do the same for the Wolves.
Comparing the Lakers and Rockets by saying everything bad about the Lakers and everything good about the Rockets seems a little biased. Lakers were widely picked to beat the Wolves. Golden State was widely picked to beat the Rockets. Houston had some serious low hanging fruit to attack offensively. The Warriors unique defense was only really tested on the boards, because it's not a crazy accomplishment to guard a Sengun/FVV led offense surrounded by several bad shooters. I'm not sure how proud Golden State fans should be of this series win in 7, but I picked the Rockets, so I think it's pretty cool. I think the Warriors are like a better version of the Lakers and will be a tougher matchup for the Wolves.
Ultimately, whilst we were lucky to get out of the rockets series I do believe we were a fair amount better than them. Thing is, this team has always played with it’s food. Especially this season. They got up 3-1 and coasted, they knew they were better.
Ultimately I think the teams are close and it probably comes down to 1-2 big role player games like the hield one we just had. Dubs need one of podz, hield or moody to play well on any given night to be in with a chance. Then just hope experience gets them through.
I agree. In most NBA playoff series, I feel one team emerges with the more obvious set of advantages. They don't always win. The disadvantaged team's job is to make changes or just muck things up enough to give themselves a chance to steal games and ultimately a series. Each game is always played around this dynamic: a team trying to keep it's advantage while the opponent tries to mitigate it.
It was pretty clear the Warriors held the better set of advantages. They had Steph and easier ways to score. The default was that Steph was probably going to shoot you to death while Jimmy got pull ups and free throws. Their defensive default was being able to guard everyone 1-on-1. The Houston default was... Alperen Sengun trying to score against Draymond single coverage, FVV hoping for a hot night, everyone else missing a ton of shots, and then bringing in Steven Adams to give the whole team multiple chances to correct those misses. The Adams advantage ended up being crazy. It corrected their offense just enough that when paired with the really good Houston defense, they had a real chance at upending the Warriors advantage every night. Muck up Steph, hit his thumb a bunch, and maybe Rockets have a chance. It ended up going 7, and I think that's really impressive work by Udoka, Adams and the rest of those boys. At the outset of the series, I thought the defense and the rebounding might mean Houston had the advantage, but after the first 2 games it was clear that Golden State having actual legit offensive options was going to give them an easier path to winning.
I think Minnesota has the advantages in this series (we'll see soon enough). We're bigger, faster, and have less obvious matchup questions. However, a crafty veteran team like Golden State is better equipped than a younger team to muck things up an flip those advantages. They'll try to find ways to make Ant overthink, neuter Rudy on offense, frustrate Juju etc. I feared the Lakers finding ways to do this with their offense, and I fear Golden State more because they can do it on both ends. Jimmy Butler has long been a master of finding competitive edges, and Draymond is just as demonic. Steph is just always an automatic problem. You know he's going off at some point, you just want to harrass him into a couple more bad games than the Warriors can handle.
Minnesota is a potent mix of rim drives, shooting, and size. I'm hoping Golden State can't deal with all of these things at once. The Lakers certainly couldn't, but the Warriors are a better version of them, defensively. Draymond is an actual source of rim protection, and he can shut down a big man matchup if needed. Jimmy can masquerade as a big in terms of putting a strong, smart body on people (and he's way more mobile than Lebron or anyone like that the lakers said this about.)