Ryoga Hibiki wrote:rate_ wrote:Ryoga Hibiki wrote:They were played differently by the defenses, Miami was going all.out against Dirk.
Dirk was +40 for the series, while Dallas was -26 without him.
Wade was -6, the team was -8 without him.
Then there's the different impact in the 4th quarter.
The only thing Wade had over Dirk was ts%, and it's quite disappointing to see Elgee running with it.
Wade was a better all around player overall: as a rebounder, passer and defender while averaging the most points among both teams on superior efficiency. Dirk did shine in the 4th quarters but that doesn't mean his performances in quarters 1-3 should be ignored. His overall TS% was still a subpar 53.7% in the series. Wade shared duties with LeBron, who was very underwhelming for his standards while Dallas supporting cast overachieved.
Wade: 32.6 PER | 1.3 WS | 26.5 PPG | 7.0 RPG | 5.2 APG | 3.0 stocks
Dirk: 21.8 PER | 0.7 WS | 26.0 PPG | 9.7 RPG | 2.0 APG | 1.3 stocks
Elgee was completely correct in his decision that Wade was the best player in the series and was also the best player in the 2006 Finals, so this performance was not a fluke.
My issue is that Elgee sometimes goes on a tangent explaining how the boxscore is not catching the full impact. How Curry in the finals was more important than Durant because of the gravity and the way the defense was selling out to defend it. Even makes a video on how Curry si impacting the offense even when he's not making his shots.
Then we have a case of Dirk missing more shots than usual (mostly in Game 6, the only one he had a negative on/off) while being the engine of the offense and the Heat going all in to stop him, giving the likes of Terry, Marion, Chandler and Barea the space to operate, and Kidd the possibility to find them.
At the same time, the Mavs are prioritizing guarding LeBron, and that allows Wade to go 1v1.
And this is captured by on/off (that is a statistic, fwiw), with the Mavs falling apart without Dirk, while the Heat were almost at the same level without Wade.
Instead I have to read about PER and WS for a single series... and hear Elgee all the time bloating about how *GREAT* Chandler, Kidd and Marion were.
Its funny cause I was just watching the '11 finals and it didn't take more than a couple games to realize this talking point doesn't have legs.
- Wade was torching the Mavs so bad they switched Marion onto him from Lebron (and still couldn't stop him). Difficult to argue the Mavs were so unbothered by Wade when they deliberately switched their best defender to him from the guy they supposedly were obsessed with stopping, and were double teaming him in the post when other players were on him
- Lebron was also going one on one with his defender, until he drove. But if he wanted to, he could have shot single coverage jumpers over Kidd, Stevenson, and Barea all day. I'm not saying they didn't shade toward him with the defense, they did. But no more than they did Wade once he started to torch him. Wade was just slicker, faster, and smarter with his offensive attack strategies than Lebron was
- Wade scored a lot on off-ball cuts using his speed and athleticism, and offensive rebounding using his athleticism. Things that make it harder for a defense to gameplan for than just getting the ball and iso'ing. Another reason his offensive attack was smarter than Lebron's, who really wasn't doing much off the ball. Either lazy or stage frightened
- Wade's defense was an actual factor in the series, while Dirk was invisible on that end for the most part. He was significantly better on defense than Dirk was, even at the rim despite giving up 5 inches
- Dirk was indeed pulling his man out and drawing doubles that led to open shots, which you have to give credit to. But he just wasn't playing well outside of that. Not scoring well. Not shooting well. Turning the ball over. Some awesome clutchness too, for sure. But at some point you have to stop using gravity as a catch-all excuse for subpar play, which is an argument I've made about Curry in quite a few series as well. Like sure, in the 2015 finals his gravity was a factor, but he was also playing like dog **** in many other facets, including his decision making, which is why someone else could even be considered for MVP the first place. It had to happen somehow, right? Dirk was clearly the most valuable Mav or non-Wade Heat player in the series, but Wade was simply much more impressive on both ends -- full stop. Even moreso than I remembered before rewatching.
More '11 Finals notes:
- Jason Kidd was freaking awesome on defense this series. Unbelievable. I've thought he was the best defensive point ever for a while (at least of the star level players), but his offense even in his prime was so underwhelming I didn't see him as anywhere near the Nash's and CP3's. And now I'm wondering how much his possession to possession defensive impact makes up the gap. While Nash or Paul is still the much better option as the best player on your team, I think there's a real argument for preferring Kidd on teams that already have an offensive stud who can put points on the board
- Mario Chalmers could play. The '11 Heat are maligned for their lack of depth a lot, and rightfully compared to later incarnations. But Chalmers was a baller and played at an above average PG level at least for this series. It helped mitigate some of Lebron's disaster class
- Chris Bosh was also pulling his man out of the paint. Which I don't think he started getting credit for until the following years