therealbig3 wrote:LOL Blake Griffin was arguably their best player in this series.
I really don't understand this kind of logic for Chris Paul anymore...no other superstar in the league plays with someone as good as Blake. Just how much more help does Paul need when he already has Blake? Not to mention that Redick and Jordan are excellent role players that any team would love to have.
Paul deserves MORE criticism than LeBron when he wasn't able to win with Wade...unlike Wade, Blake doesn't provide redundancy with Paul...and unlike Wade, Blake isn't constantly injured and on the decline. He's in the prime of his career.
I was referring to this series only. If you watched how many WIDE open shots that Matt Barnes, JJ Redick, and Jamal Crawford missed, you would see that his teammates were just off. I don't even think that is debatable if you actually watched games 6 and 7 at least.
Yes Paul has Blake. But at the end of the day, that was a two man team when it comes to consistent performance that you can count on in the playoffs. Sure DeAndre and JJ are great role players, but how about we analyze their actual play in the series that they lost instead of acting like they played as well as they did in the regular season?
DeAndre was fine for the most part(the usual ok defense, lob threats, rebounding, and crappy free throw shooting). JJ Redick was having a fine series himself, but in game 6 he shot 30.8% from the field and in game 7 he shot 33.3% from the field with 6 turnovers! Are we gonna pretend like some of those turnovers weren't crucial? Or that if one of the best shooters in the NBA hits his normal percentage(on WIDE open shots created by both Paul & Griffin) in game 6 that we're not even worried about game 7? At the end of the day, the problem with the Clipper's offense was that they didn't make open shots. Not JJ Redick, not Matt Barnes, and not Jamal Crawford. I think I'll blame GM Doc Rivers for that, more than anything, considering that none of those players provide much value on the defensive end to make up for it. The flaw with the Clippers is that if one of Paul, Griffin, Jordan, or Redick, is off their games, it takes a herculean effort from the others, because the rest of the team is really really really bad.
This board likes to claim that they don't worry too much about team results when evaluating player performance, but I think it can be as reactionary as everyone else.
Case in point, why in the world are we back to talking about the flaws of CP3 holding the ball? As if it's really a detriment to team offense? I've already posted before how the Clipper's were running GOAT level offense when CP3 and Griffin were both in the lineup this year. The synergy with Paul and Griffin is fine, CP3 led the league in secondary(hockey) assists in both the playoffs and regular season. I guarantee you that most of those were the result of an initial pick and roll/pop to Griffin who then used his excellent vision to find Redick for a three or DeAndre for a lob. I find the whole, "he holds the ball too long and prevents easy opportunities to avoid turnovers" criticism to be so off base. Just watch the Clippers and it should be obvious that if Redick or Griffin is down the court, Paul will throw it ahead to them. If Redick or Griffin grabs the rebound, about half the time those guys are taking the ball up and initiating the offense.
At the end of the day the Clippers choked, they blew it. If you're gonna blame CP3, as the leader of the team, for letting that happen, I'm cool with it. If you're gonna blame him or missing a couple games in the playoffs, I think that's a fair criticism too. But I'm not gonna bring up these so-called "flaws" that no one was really blaming when they beat the defending champion Spurs in 7 games in round 1, or when they were up 18 points in the 3rd quarter of a closeout game in round 2. That's essentially saying that Paul has flaws as a player that prevent him from going to the wcf. Um...if you can beat the Spurs and are a quarter away from going to the wcf, why in the world are we going to say that you are too flawed as you are to make a deep playoff run? Let's not overanalyze. The Clippers blew it. They should be playing the Warriors right now. It was a missed opportunity, unlucky, and a choke.
My updated rankings:
1. Curry
2. Harden
3. Davis
4. Paul
5. Lebron