ElGee wrote:So, it seems so farfetched to suggest a team has that much control that we should throw our hands up in the air and say, "hey, if we spot Miami 17 points in this series from FT's, we really have NO IDEA how that would change things because Dallas would try harder."
Can you show me how you come up with 17 points via FT? Because if we apply the regular season average conversation rate to each player in the finals (and doing the same for the Mavericks), I get 9. I also checked the games and only in one game it actually made a difference in terms of the outcome of the game. Only in game two would the Heat with their average FT% make it a "tie", because we could have expected them to make 2 more than they did. That still leaves us with Dallas scoring more overall, while having 3.5 wins and the Heat 2.5.
The difference isn't huge, but the last two games were clear wins for the Mavericks, while only the first one was a clear win for the Heat. Overall for that series the Mavericks played better than the Heat. They were more efficient by using their possessions. Wouldn't you agree?
So, what exactly is the point here? Do you think that James playing bad in this series wasn't on him? Should we ignore those games? Did James really impact the games before that much more that it didn't make a difference? What was James' real impact over the season? Or are you also only evaluate how James could have, if he would have ...?
We have to keep in mind that we are talking about a team game, and how someone is effecting this team game without the ball seems to be an important point. You are accepting this on the defensive end, but somehow I have the feeling you aren't accounting for that on the offensive end. Unless you think that is only a minor part or we can even completely ignore that, you are missing something, I would say.