f4p wrote:Peregrine01 wrote:f4p wrote:
Since I’m guessing he’ll have Steph #2 (if he can keep himself from picking him #1), I’d love an honest to goodness explanation of the 2018 and 2019 rockets warriors series. Steph had another mvp in his prime and a DPOY and massive impact guy (who apparently makes any team a title favorite) and klay and RAPM standout iggy (half of 2018, all of 2019), and harden had the last prime season of massive impact cp3 and what…Clint capela and the two series were dead even. Like +2 for the warriors in non garbage time in 2018 games with cp3 and +1.7 in 2019 with cp3 a shell of himself. With a 6-5 record for the warriors.
These should be epic bloodbaths if harden is 19th. You simply can’t square the circle of the difference in rankings and the series results.
KD deserves blame for that 2018 series being as close as it was, IMO. Warriors ended up iso-balling and playing into the Rockets' hand and of course Rockets' defense mucking things up helped as well.
My teammate was scoring 31 ppg on 60 TS% doesn’t seem like a good excuse for Steph through the first 5 games when Steph was at 24 ppg on 56 TS%, a decline of 11.5% from the regular season. The fact Chris Paul so consistently shut down Steph in the playoffs and Steph got better right when Paul got hurt makes the “peaked way above “ harden argument tough.
Also, 2019 is arguably crazier. Chris Paul looking completely washed, the rockets with no bench and Kd averaging 35 ppg and it was somehow 6 super close games with harden massively outplaying Steph for the series. Either hardens peak is really really high or Steph needs to be ranked lower because he was getting massively outplayed by the 19th peak when Steph was basically at his own peak.
History has not been kind to KD-led offenses, no matter how efficiently it looks like he scored.
Not going to lay the blame of all of Curry's struggles in the first few games at KD's feet as Curry is very much a flow and "whole is better than the sum of its parts" player which has its plusses and minuses. But KD was and is not a cerebral player and couldn't see how his ball-stopping tendencies were playing into the Rockets' hands and taking away from what made the Warriors great. This was really the core of the friction between KD and the Warriors (which Draymond was really a figurehead of).
In 2019, the series really turned after KD got hurt and the Warriors went back to Warriors ball.
Anyway, not really debating about where Harden should stand on a list like this just providing some context on why the Warriors struggled so much against the Rockets despite the talent difference on paper.