Doctor MJ wrote:@fallacy
As nonemus pointed out, there are statistical arguments that go both ways. I want to make clear though, the idea of "it's even more impressive when you consider Westbrook's ball hogging" cuts both ways.
Rose (and Westbrook) is an on-ball player, Durant is an off-ball player. Two different roles, that really shouldn't be compared simply by comparing stats apples-to-apples. I cut a player like Durant slack for not getting assists because of his role. It bothers me though when an off-ball scorer is passive, and some of Westbrook's "ball hogging" amounts to Durant not being more assertive.
We also need to factor in efficiency context. While I get annoyed when people say "The Bulls would have ZERO offense with Rose!", the reality is that whenever the Bulls offense breaks down, it's Rose who is expected to make something happen. Durant does not carry the same kind of burden in OKC.
Last part of the deal right now I think is that people are equating the two teams because they got knocked out at roughly the same point. They shouldn't do this. The Bulls had a brilliant season that got ended by a dream team that really is starting to come together. The Thunder was a 4 seed with a rep for not being able to hang with elite teams who got to the WCF by beating an 8 seed in 7 games with HCA.
While I was more impressed with Durant than Rose in the post-season, I have trouble seeing that as enough to overcome the regular season. And in the regular season, remember Durant was playing a slightly lesser role than the year before on a team with no major SRS improvement.
Not going to reply to the whole post, but just some of the major things I think are wrong.
You say that the Thunder looked unimpressive because they "played an 8 seed to 7 games." I think everyone will agree that the Thunder played much tougher teams than the Bulls did in the playoffs.
Denver is a much, much, much better team than the Pacers. The Nuggets were the best team in the NBA after the trade deadline. Their team might not have been perfect for the playoffs, but were still infinitely better than the Pacers.
Memphis, again, was a better team the the Atlanta Hawks. Memphis would probably beat Atlanta in 6 games.
No one could argue that Rose was near Durant's postseason production, actually he is much closer to Westbrook than Durant is that aspect. So I agree with you there.
And again, I don't see any statistical measurement that shows that Rose was better in the regular season either. People seem to want to try to bend stats to try to discredit why Durant's stats are better instead of just accepting the stats (or facts). People think that there is no offensive weapons around Rose, but in reality the Bull's have a much more balanced offensive team than the Thunder.
The Bull's had 3 players that averaged over 17 points a game, and 4 that averaged 12 a game. OKC's third highest scoring player averaged barely over 12 points. So let's stop this, "Rose has no other option's on his team!!! OMG!" train of thought, he had more weapons than Durant or Westbrook.











