Doctor MJ wrote:So yeah, some of this here is you just taking a more extreme perspective out of my statements that I had any intention of giving. I certainly don't assume Curry will be more impactful than everyone else because of his shooting, I just think his shooting makes it very difficult to put a ceiling on what his impact truly is.
Obviously, but doesn't that apply to the concept of playmaking as well? I mean, assist-derived stats and metrics aren't even close to accurately represent the impact of an all-time great playmaker such as Paul. For example, especially with volume playmakers, there are numerous instances throughout games where Paul will do his job but the possession will be statistically credited as 'a fail' because the recipient of the pass will not convert on the assist, even though Paul did most of the work and got the open man a good look in what should be his comfort zone which is what offenses should strive for anyway.
Point being that we can argue which impact is more measurable ''shooting-based gravity'' or ''scrambling defenses/making plays'' but I think we should both agree that it's definitely difficult to put a precise ceiling on both of those qualities, not only the shooting one.
Re: Magic; era. The general conclusion I've reached is that playmaking is more valuable than it used to be, and thus your typical volume scorer is less valuable than in the past.
Yes. So that confirms what I've said - a player of Paul's qualities also benefits in this era. Does he benefit more than Curry? I don't know, I'm not confident enough to make that claim because Curry is godlike player but looking at what Paul did with really not that stacked of an offensive assembly makes me wonder what his (and also players like Nash, Magic; ok Nash not so much, he was already part of an extremely potent offensive assembly) ceiling really is in a context that would benefit more from his skills.
Big thing here: Paul is already in this era where we can see his impact stats. If they were above everyone else, then I'd be saying as much. They aren't. They are fantastic, but they aren't clearly ahead of Curry's. And so that's where I came in: Why the assumption of Paul in your mind? As I've stated, if I've attributed to extreme a stance from you fine, but I myself am not showing an extreme stance. All I'm doing is following what all I see, but quantitatively and qualitatively, and I'm giving qualitative points that seem relevant to your assertions.
Uhm, ok. But just being in an era and actually playing on a team that reflects the current meta successfully are two different things, are they not? The Clippers are far away from playing as a meta team. For me, the only clear cut meta teams (these are; teams that utilize ball-movement, spacing and shooting at it's highest level) in the NBA right now are the Warriors, the Hawks and the Spurs. Curry plays for one of those teams, Paul does not. Therefore, even though we know what Paul's impact is, we only know what his impact is in the context of how the Clippers plays (which is not, and I repeat NOT anywhere close to the way the above three teams play - and this is also the meta way, which has in the last couple of years proven to be the most successful) and his impact is phenomenal in that respect.
I don't like playing hypotheticals but I can't help but wonder the offensive ceiling of a team that has Paul playing in a meta-type basketball environment... And we are already talking about a guy that is leading the best offensive team in the league which is a non-meta team. Take what the Hawks are doing, they are a Top 5 offensive team in the league with Teague as their catalyst. Picture CP3 there instead of Teague and imagine what that team would look like.
Now before you go all ''But CP3 would have to relinquish his 'control-freak' style of basketball for the Hawks to successfully run their system and I'm not sure if he can blabla''. Really? Not putting words in your mouth but I'm just flinging this out as a possibility of something you might bring up and I see no reason why a player of Paul's skills couldn't thrive in a system that turns Jeff Teague into an all-star.
Point being: Until I see CP3 in a meta-like system and/or with at least a better offensive cast I will refrain from calling Curry the better offensive player. The way the Warriors are set up now I think they're already getting close to the maximum of what they can from benefiting off Curry's abilites. From here on out it's only a matter of how Steph plays individually. Right now his scoring has been mighty impressive in the post-season so far and if he can improve upon as a scorer while remaining similarly efficient I will definitely stand firmer on the Curry bandwagon. I'll wait until this year is over. As far as CP3 goes, I don't think the Clippers are set up to maximize what he can bring offensively, yet they still manage to be the best offensive team in the league. That's impressive to me and that's why I'm kinda arguing for Paul here.
Why is Curry's benefit relevant then? Because I'm not using to argue that Curry is better, I'm using it to essentially saying, "What's so hard to believe about the numbers given how well suited Curry is to the era?".
That's not hard to believe. What's hard to believe is Paul doesn't do better than what he's doing right now playing for the Warriors or any of the meta teams given that this meta also suits Paul as a player not only Curry. Even if you might disagree.
And you might say ''Well, he's not doing better, so why so hypothetical?''. Because you are using metrics that are highly dependent on a separate deal of contexts which vary from player to player and while they do capture impact that impact is not represented as true value; that is the impact of the player within his context in relation to what and how much his teammates are or aren't doing.
You know what I can't wrap my head around honestly. If Curry was clearly ahead of Paul as you are alluding to in pretty much every single metric then why don't the Warriors have the best offense in the league? It should be easy for them in that case. And don't tell me because they sacrifice offense or they are, outside their point-guards, worse offensively then the Clippers. You'd have to sell some incredible stuff for me to buy that. Also note that good defense translates into offense (more possessions, easy transition/half-transition points, opponent defense is forced to pick up bad matchups etc.) so there's another advantage for the Warriors.
As Zach Lowe says: He is the glitch in the matrix. The entire reason for this paradigm shift is that superstars in Curry's position can't hit shots contested 3's, but Curry can. This changes everything, and gives us every reason to think that his impact may balloon even more than great playmakers.
The meta shifted way before Curry though. And while I agree Curry just may be the right mold of skill to take offensive impact to the next level he's not having that type of impact now.
Re: "ability to be threatening from the outside is laughably bad". I don't know what to say about this. If you take Curry & Paul's 3's out of the totals, here's what the rest of the team did:
Warriors: 597 3's, shooting 38.0%.
Clippers: 688 3's, shooting 37.1%.
Forget about arguing which is better for a moment: They are both phenomenal. The Clippers sans Paul would have the best % in the league other than the Hawks and the Warriors while still shooting more 3's than an average NBA team. How can you look at that and talk about the Clippers as being laughably bad from the outside? I'm happy to give Paul a lot of credit for making it happen, but the Clippers have been very successful from the outside.
LMAO, come on Doc, you trying to pull a fast one on me?

you know that can't be right.
First off, the Warriors w/o Curry consist of:
Klay - 77 G, 32 MPG, 3.1/7.1 - 44% 3PT
Barnes - 82 G, 28 MPG, 1.1/2.6 - 40% 3PT
Barbosa - 66 G, 15 MPG, 0.7/1.7 - 38% 3PT
Iguodala - 77 G, 27 MPG, 1.0/2.8 - 35% 3PT
Green - 79 G, 32 MPG, 1.4/4.2 - 34% 3PTHoliday - 59 G, 11 MPG, 0.6/1.8 - 32% 3PT
This are literary all the guys that shot threes for the Warriors this season in efficiency order.Outside of Holiday all key, major rotation players. Now let's take a look at the Clippers.
Hudson - 5 G, 11 MPG, 0.6/1.2 - 50% 3PT (who the f?)
Hamilton - 14 G, 9 MPG, 0.7/1.5 - 48% 3PT (who the f again?)
Redick - 78 G, 31 MPG, 2.6/5.9 - 44% 3PT (ok, first key player)Turkoglu - 62 G, 11 MPG, 1.0/2.2 - 43% 3PT (fringe rotation Holiday-esque player)
Griffin - 67 G, 35 MPG, 0.1/0.4 - 40% 3PT (the mighty stealth bomber Griffin with his 0.4 attempts per game boosting dat average)
Bullock - 25 G, 10 MPG, 0.6/1.6 - 39% 3PT (who the f, part 3)
Wilcox - 21 G, 5 MPG, 0.3/0.9 - 37% 3PT (who the f, part 4, seriously never heard of the guy until now)
Barnes - 76 G, 30 MPG, 1.8/4.9 - 36% 3PT (oh look, we've come to another key player, lucky us)Farmar - 36 G, 15 MPG, 1.0/2.7 - 36% 3PT (playing for Darüşşafaka Doğuş in Turkey as we speak)
Robinson - 9 G, 14 MPG, 0.8/2.2 - 35% 3PT (even lil' Nate decided to join this party, how nice)
Crawford - 64 G, 27 MPG, 1.9/5.7 - 33% 3PT (3rd key player, yay)
Hawes - 73 G, 18 MPG, 0.8/2.4 - 31% 3PT
Rivers - 41 G, 19 MPG, 0.6/2.0 - 31% 3PTSo out of all these wonderful shooters the Clippers had this season, we've got guys like Hudson, Hamilton, Bullock, Wilcox who barely get minutes. Farmar and Robinson are off the team. A fringe rotational player in Turkoglu filling the Justin Holiday role. And Griffin who's posing as an efficient three-point shooter but really isn't even an option out there.
Once we take out the trash. Out of the guys actually playing heavy or at least meaningful minutes out there that are shooting threes we have:
Redick - 78 G, 31 MPG, 2.6/5.9 - 44% 3PT
Barnes - 76 G, 30 MPG, 1.8/4.9 - 36% 3PT
Crawford - 64 G, 27 MPG, 1.9/5.7 - 33% 3PT
Hawes - 73 G, 18 MPG, 0.8/2.4 - 31% 3PT
Rivers - 41 G, 19 MPG, 0.6/2.0 - 31% 3PT
Now to quote you quoting me: ''How can you look at that and talk about the Clippers as being laughably bad from the outside?'' Well, Doc, how can you?
I realize as I say that that one can then move the goal posts and say something like "All those guys suck and Paul just makes them good.", but fundamentally here you're insisting on calling those guys a problem for team spacing, and the reality is they are functioning well.
No, fundamentally they suck. The reality is they aren't functioning well. There's Redick who's elite and there's Barnes who's solid. Everyone else outside of Paul is either not playing, off the roster or plain sucks at taking threes. Hawes and Griffin stretch the floor to some degree but Hawes is a bad three point shooter and Griffin doesn't shoot threes, Blake stretches up to mid-range and even there the defense is okay with him shooting it. Crawford shooting 33% on 6 attempts is definitely not ''functioning well'' and Rivers is one of the last guys you want to have open on the three point line.
Re: good teams will guard Curry this post-season. People keep saying stuff like this and it's weird. This isn't Harden here - a guy who has struggled in the playoffs. Curry first became a superstar BECAUSE of the playoffs. If you've been watching Curry these past two years in the post-season, what you've seen is that even intense playoff defenses really struggle against Curry because of the fact that pressuring his shot doesn't help as much as it does for normal stars and he's an able and willing passer.
I'm not suggesting Curry is gonna struggle, I was more alluding to being interested in how the better defenses will play Curry. How much are they gonna chase/switch/double, how much are they gonna allow him to shoot in contrast to making plays for others etc.
It has its flaws but there's no substitute for using it, and it shouldn't seem bizarre when someone says "We know Player X has impact that can't be quantified by conventional means, and when we look at the regression data this guy looks huge precisely where we would predict he might be." Find to say "I get it, but given the noise I'm still reluctant to give him the nod here.", but our exchange started with you writing a very long post on the subject without touching on this stuff at all. And while I can't fault you for not mentioning every counterpoint to your own argument, I would hope that when this stuff is pointed out you'd indicate where your own uncertainties are due to what these numbers indicate.
It's not that I'm skeptical about the ability of RAPM and similar +/- stats to measure what they're design to measure but rather that what it measures is not completely translated into ''Player X looks better in RAPM than Player Y; ERGO no reason to believe Player X less impactful than Player Y''. There are several factors outside the individual impact of a player that have an effect the outcome of RAPM that need to be taken into account.
Curry ranks better by RAPM and RPM yet. He also looks better by PER, WS/48, and BPM. And these are basically the sum total of the major all-in-one stats used commonly right now, so frankly I'm confused when you're like "Numbers? What numbers?". All of them. If you're using numbers to try to directly assess which guy is doing better right now, Curry beats Paul on everything.
Except leading a better offense
This is why it's hard for me to mount an argument for Paul. I can craft a narrative where he's the true MVP, but I can't point to anything objective that backs it up. On all fronts I'd have to say, "and yeah Curry looks better statistically, but it's close enough that you can't just go by that".
How about leading the best offense in the league with not the greatest of casts or healthiest of contexts, overrated three point shooting and close-to-last offensive rebounding. Having to play behind a mediocre defense instead of the best defense in the league like Curry does?
Look, in reality, I'm not trying to push some sort of agenda for Paul over Curry this year, because I honestly couldn't care less, but something about the Clippers puzzles me in the sense that they shouldn't really be this good on offense. I look at that team and see them having major flaws, I see lack of reliable shooting, I see lack of versatility and depth, I see the defense not really aiding their offense, I see several changes were made to the team during the year, I see several injuries the team has sustained during the year, yet they somehow come on top. So I wonder how are they doing it and everything naturally starts and ends with Paul being quietly amazing like he has his whole career.
Re: Shooting of other guys like Klay, and getting into Paul's shooting. I don't consider what Thompson's doing to be on the same planet as Curry. Emphasizing what I've said before: This is the era for off-ball shooting. What we've found is that if you're in position to shoot the 3, and someone gives you a good pass, it's vastly easier to hit it than to do so off the dribble.
Okay, point-taken, Curry is in a whole different universe, but having another shooter on the roster that can stroke them down like Klay is invaluable. Obviously, since you have Curry on-ball, you don't need a Jamal Crawford/Dion Waiters type of guy who's gonna pound the ball and pass up catch-and-shoot situations. You need a guy like Klay, Klay perfectly compliments Curry since he doesn't need the ball and he's an elite catch and shoot player. And Klay is much more than a shooter too, he's like a copy of Ray Allen in his early days out there.
Point being: Curry's historical prowess in being unprecedentedly good at shooting and hitting shots without any assistance doesn't take away from the impact of a strong off-ball threat with elite shooting capabilities like Klay.
I don't consider anyone doing what Curry is doing but Klay should be acknowledged properly for his massive contributions as a shooter and off-ball option. Pairing those two together is just bonkers.
See the Unassisted numbers above. To use related number: 90.8% of Thompson's 3's are assisted. For guys who shoot a lot of 3's, this is only possible if you're basically a catch & shoot guy most of the time. He's not creating his own 3's to anywhere near the extent of Curry or even Paul.
He doesn't need to. Being an off-ball catch n' shoot threat is a whole different dynamic. It's one that Curry excels in as well, no one is denying that, but we're arguing about the application of defensive attention here and Klay sucks more than his fair share. You definitely can't leave him open all the same if he's playing the ''catch and shoot/off-ball'' role or if he's having the ball on top of the key. It's just that when he IS covered by the defense it's less likely that he'll hit them compared to Curry.
Re: can't be ignored taking a bad team to a contender. It's not ignored. Lift is factored in, and so is the scalability of that lift. The latter is something that will be informed by how healthy the context is, but I'm fine with everyone using their own holistic judgment here. The key point though isn't so much that I think there's something fundamentally un-scalable about Paul as it is that it is really, really difficult for a team to click as well as the Warriors have this year. We haven't seen it happen since Jordan. And while there's luck involved, when we ask ourselves "How did the Warriors do it?", the big thing we coming back to is stuff enabled by Curry's unique skill set.
Right, but that doesn't mean that a guy like Paul doesn't have a different but all the same unique skill set that would enable his team to produce similar results, we just have not seen it yet in its full blossom because teams have repeteadly failed to fully maximize his skillset. And if you think it's easier to optimize a team's offensive output with a player like Curry than with a player like Paul then cool, it's definitely something I'm thinking about too but I'm not so quick to pull the trigger on either side so far.
Well sure, but a couple things:
1. You said before than Nash & Paul were pretty similar and I didn't respond, but the reality is they are very different. Paul is a control-freak not simply in the sense that he's ball-dominant, but that his game is predicated on turnover-prevention more than it is attack-maximization. While I don't really feel strongly about Nash over Paul overall - could easily make the argument Paul is better - I've always been more concerned about Paul's offensive ceiling on this front than Nash's. As such while I definitely will be applying what I'm saying about Curry to Nash comparisons, it's not quite relevant to what my point was there.
Okay. Fair enough, bu I'm sensing that you're talking about attack-maximization as necessarily a good thing. Why is that? I wouldn't call Paul's game turnover-prevention, he's just attack-efficient. Maybe call him some sort of perfectionista. He will push when he feels like it's good to push, he'll slow down when he feels the team is doing better in half-court, he won't waste silly possessions trying risky things like Nash and Magic did, he will try to get the best possible shot within the shot-clock, find the miss-match or open guy and not just the first one available like Nash and Magic often did. I guess, in that sense, Paul isn't maximizing the offense as much as he could, but is that a bad thing? Maybe the overall offensive ceiling of the team will look worse but how does Paul's style of play impacts the game as a whole? The opposing team has to adjust their defense constantly, they get less opportunities themselves to push and control the tempo etc. Every action has an equal or opposite reaction type thing.
2. I wouldn't get to caught up into what I'm saying about Magic. Certainly I try to be fair and objective, but he played in a very different era. As such when I say "Yeah, Magic could probably do more today.", it's much more of a guess than it is to make statements between guys who've played in the current era.
Ok, but seeing Curry now, does it kinda make you reevaluate how you look at maximizing or building optimal offenses in a sense that you favor scoring/spacing/shooting over volume playmaking? In that case Magic would be affected if we are debating all-time great offensive players even though Magic played in a different era, many people still claim that he would undoubtedly remain the best offensive player in any case.
Last year I ranked Curry 3rd and Paul 4th.
Year before Paul 3rd and Curry 4th.
So, probably with that you're thinking "Whoa, dude was wacko out there before, but at least he's consistently wacko.".
But I will say: I have no problem stating that I rate Curry considerably strong than last year. So what has changed?
Well, Curry isn't playing as he always has. He's playing in a different scheme this year, obviously. He's still shooting a lot of 3's etc, because of course he is, but the actions he's taking on average are considerably more effective than they were before, because primarily his options have gotten better.
Does that make him suspect? "The old Curry impact was the real Curry impact!" Nah, basketball doesn't work like that. When coaches come in and craft a smart scheme for a player, THAT is when you can truly judge the player. A dumb coach insisting Shaq should play point guard doesn't make Shaq a worse player, just a less effective one in that context. It will cost Shaq the MVP, but it won't change what Shaq actually is.
Well, can't fault the consistency
I don't think the Shaq example is a good one in this case though. Playing Shaq at the PG spot would mean you're basically taking all his qualities and throwing them out the window to put him in a role he simply can't play effectively. It's an extreme. With Curry, it's not like the Warriors played him at Center last season and then Kerr came through the door and said: ''Ohh, you dummies, why is Steph playing in the post? He should be outside running around, causing havoc, shooting threes, you guys are so dumb... Now watch me totally remold this player's role and we'll become a Godly team.'' - It wasn't even close to that. It's was more along the lines of: ''Ok Steph, you keep doing what you've always been doing, I'll just switch the starting lineup a bit, get these guys to play together because they synergize better, give you more shooters, better off-ball action, more options to pass to. What? Mark Jackson didn't run any plays on offense, OK, we will practice some more plays in there on offense. Iguodala will move to the bench because we don't need worse shooting and our secondary playmaker playing with our primary one, hey, have you heard Klay Thompson is much improved coming in this year, we'll give you a better Klay Thompson too, how about more depth on the bench?
So again, why is Curry getting credit for what people around him are doing? There's where most of the impact is coming in terms of Warriors being a better team.
To be clear: When I do a GOAT list, I do try to an extent for "curve" for fit. If a player had weaker fit on his roster because management was idiotic, I'm reluctant to call them a worse player in an absolute sense. But there's never going to be a time where I say "That guy should win the MVP, because he would have been the most valuable player if his teammates fit better with him."
In relation to the MVP award; me neither. But when I see a guy who might be having more individual impact and isn't because his team is incompetent and can't put the proper pieces or run the proper system around him, or injuries screw them up or whatever, I don't proclaim said guy as worse than Korver because Korver is God in Atlanta if you catch what I'm saying. We become trapped in a Boogie Cousins vs. Korver paradigm. Who's the better player? Who's more impactful? Who's more valuable for their team?(disclaimer: pls don't take it as me saying Cousins is a prefect player without fault held back by his team)
You feel me? On one hand we have Cousins, massive production, very good in several areas of basketball, first option on his team all that jazz, but ultimately he's put on his own team with inept managment, coaching changes and a bunch of mediocre players and he's expected to carry them somewhere. On the other hand we have Korver, a role player throughout practically his whole career, he comes to Atlanta where they already have some decent pieces in place and an uprising team and the coach develops a system that makes emphasizes what everyone on that team does best and Korver happens to be a main cog in that system that allows others to do what they do more effectively. How do we judge players on the basis of these two extremely different contexts?
Flip it around: Curry was less valuable before because a coach was telling him to do things wrong. Why are we punishing Curry because he had a coach who wasn't doing his job as good as he could have been?
No, he was equally valuable because he brought the same things

Everyone else around him got a better understanding how to play off what he's doing more effectively and raised their own impact around him and here we are.
today.
To try to take any other perspective here is untenable, because there's no reason to talk about either the Kerr year or the Jackson year as the "right" one. But even beyond that, as I mentioned above: You should judge a player based on what he can do in a healthy context, not based on some problematic one.
Ok, but the problem is we don't know what most players ''healthy'' context is because 90% of the players don't ever achieve said optimal context. It may be a very good context for them, sure, but also a lot of times their extreme talent allows them to make up for several weaknesses of the team. This is why so many people prefer Duncan over Garnett. if Garnett stayed to rot in Minnesota,and we would have never seen how he can be optimized in Boston (where he was past his prime mind you), would Garnett have been a worse player in your eyes? I mean, you clearly couldn't tell if he was capable of doing what he did in Boston if he never went to that situation, so how could you judge him in comparison to Duncan, you couldn't... Ok, you had the RAPM numbers telling you he had massive impact in Minnesota, but outside of that, you couldn't really point to many metrics that would confirm him having outter-wordly impact on defense. He was leading mediocre to bad defenses in Minny.
So I'd be definitely careful when looking at contexts. In terms of optimization, there can certainly be huge difference between a problematic context, an okay healthy context and a godlike context depending on how different players react to different contexts. Some better, some worse.
As I say this though, let me draw a distinction: The idea of a "system player" is based on production, not impact. It's problematic to judge a guy based on the context that maxes out his production, because he may be in a situation that allows for easy production for relatively replaceable players. But if you can provide impact within a context - actually lift a team up - that's real. There is no taking that away.
That also doesn't mean though that you simply rate whoever had the higher peak impact as the better player, because the other guy may have just been unfortunate in his contexts. You need to try to see the player outside of his contexts to truly judge who the better player is.
Curry's PER and BPM are considerably stronger than they were the year before. If when you look at the box score you don't see improvements, that only indicates that you're not seeing the box score the way metrics see it.
I definitely see improvements, never claimed I didn't, I just don't think that they are fundamentally so massive that they would transform Curry from Top 5 player last year into contender for GOAT offensive player or something.
Re: Byproduct. Well it's covered above, but again: Mark Jackson has no freaking right to set the bar for what Steph Curry is as a player, and your thinking does just that. Consider how you'd see Curry if Jackson had actually known how offense works in the modern NBA.
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But Jackson didn't set the bar, Curry set the bar. He always sets his own bar. Other Warrior players (with the help of Kerr & coaching taff) just got over said bar better than they did under Mark Jackson. The bar is still pretty much where it was last year.