SA37 wrote:NZB2323 wrote:Spoiler:
On/off shows that his team did better by at least 10 points per 100 possessions when he played as opposed to when he didn’t.
And his stats against the Lakers speak for themselves:
Rudy Gobert's defense through the 5 game series against the Lakers (per NBA.com head-to-head stats): total DFG% against Gobert 35.8%.
Look at players FG% against him in their most recent playoffs matchup:
Durant: 40%
Booker: 35.3%
Kyrie: 28.6%
SGA: 37.5%
Austin Reaves: 33.3%
Lebron: 25%
Luka: 42.2%
And yet, the Minny coaching staff decided to play Gobert about half the game v 35-40m.
Gobert can have played good defense while having a bad playoffs. He was useless on offense and his output relative to his own lowered standards was dismal in pretty much every area.
You're free to obviate the wide-ranging metrics that show how ineffective he was overall and focus on some really specific stat.
There are plenty of negative things one can say about Gobert in the playoffs, and sometimes by the eye test he looked bad. I don't disagree with any of that. On the flip side, he played some absolutely dominant defense, and his offensive struggles could be blamed on Minnesota's playmakers, who shied away from interior passing in general.
My main concern with Gobert is the decline of his rebounding. There's been a definite drop off there statistically, and I think it's the biggest sign of him moving with less strength and balance as he gets deeper into his 30s. His rebounding is still good, but he used to be one of the best in the league. Now he looks creaky on box outs.
You like to say "plus minus is a garbage stat" a lot, but at some point, you'll probably have to defend that position. I dont view +/- based arguments as definite or any sort of checkmate, but they're useful data in terms of understanding how a team is performing when a player in on the floor, in the most basic way. I can say "PPG is a garbage stat" but if I never make a case why, it just sounds like I'm dodging a part of an argument that isn't in my favor. +/- can be noisy and misleading, but throwing it out entirely is silliness.
In general, Minnesota dominated opposition when we had Jaden and/or Gobert on the floor. Despite Finch getting nervous about offense, and picking Randle/Naz lineups, those didn't work out. So you can point to Finch's wisdom on this and trust it, but it's important to note that he ended up being wrong that. The offense got 3 points better when Gobert sat, but the defense fell straight to hell. Teams scored 118 point per 100 against us in the non-Gobert minutes (vs. 106 in Gobert's minutes). It's not uncommon for coach's to get nervous and try to fix the problem with more offense in the playoffs, but that doesn't mean it's the correct move. We weren't beating the Thunder either way, but less Gobert went disatrously.