Chuck Texas wrote:Dr Spaceman wrote:
The biggest premise of my Korver argument was that he was not a guy who could be defended by normal means. And in the regular season, this was true, teams were going to extreme lengths to try to prevent the guy from getting his shot up. It seems though from the first two playoff series, that teams are having success just having a single disciplined defender shade him hard. I think teams have realized how limited he is off the dribble or inside the arc, and so they're having his defender play overly aggressive defense to not allow him easy catches. And it seems like both teams have sprinkled in a switching system in case someone gets tied up on a screen. So effectively Korver has been stopped just by teams having someone close to him at all times.
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This is a big part of why I think coaching is overrated in the regular season and terribly underrated in the post-season. You just don't enough time to effectively game plan against every team--especially teams not in your own division or conference and when faced with something like what the Hawks were doing this year its just really tough to get your guys to defend it right. But in the playoffs you can really get your guys dialed in.
Now Korver is still impacting games because of the coverage he requires, but I do think you may have gotten a little ahead of yourself on how much impact he was actually having in the RS. And I say that as a guy who has long felt like Korver was underrated as a basketball player #notjustashooter
Sure. Good points.
I want to clarify, though: to me this doesn't change anything about the RS impact he was having. To me, that was very real, and doesn't get discounted based on what has happened in this series; for 82 games he was having star-like impact on offense. That hasn't changed for me.
When Korver and the Hawks started blowing up, more than anything it was a signal about where the NBA was headed. A guy who in previous years was nothing more than a shooter was suddenly leading the charge on a 60 win team that had a historic winning streak. Given the sudden realization by everyone in basketball that shooting is the future, and the way the best off-ball shooter in the world was suddenly looking like a fringe MVP-type player in terms of impact, the question to me basically became "Can you build a championship-level team with this guy as your best player?" And at least in 2015, it seems that Korver is too limited to do that. I don't think this answers the question eternally, because in the future maybe there's a Korver who has just a bit more ball-handling ability who really can do what Korver attempted. That remains to be seen.
So yeah, I'm in no way questioning his regular season based on what I see here. I'm not going to start proclaiming that Korver is the #2 player in the east anymore, but at the same time I think it's reasonable to say he was during the regular season. The way I see it, I was simply following the evidence, and given that there's absolutely zero precedent for what we saw this season I don't think I was out of line. That was simply me refusing to place a ceiling on what a guy like Korver could accomplish based on the league's trends. Obviously with the playoffs I have a clearer picture of where that ceiling is, and it's far higher than I think anyone could have predicted except coach Bud.
And people saying, "told you so, look at the playoffs!" are just wrong to me, because the regular season happened. It's real, inarguable. Nobody arguing with me ever took the position of "Well, Korver looks like a top 15 player now, but let's see how that scheme fares in the playoffs". Instead, it was "Korver? LOL you've got to be smoking something" which to me is just a basic denial of facts.
That last paragraph isn't directed at you, BTW, just my general frustration with the way these debates have gone.
















