Doctor MJ wrote:My real opinion is "depends", but I voted "no" because I feel like making points against all the pro-LeBron stuff I'm hearing.
As of right now, here are the Warriors' ORtg/DRtg differentials in all of their playoff series:
vs Pellies: +8.5
vs Grizz: +8.8
vs Rockets: +8.3
vs Cavs: +7.5
As you can see that Cavs are basically only doing about what anyone else has done against the Warriors, and it hasn't been close. For further perspective, here are the differentials between other finals in the past decade:
2014 +16
2013 -0.8 (Miami actually lower than Spurs despite winning the series)
2012 +4.5
2011 +2.8
2010 +4.0
2009 +10.3
2008 +9.2
2007 +7.2
2006 +1.0
2005 -2.3 (Champ Spurs outscored)
So basically, there's a pretty clear trend that close series are within 5 of each other, and most series are in this range. I have a problem with giving the MVP of a series to a guy whose teams got blown out.
I'd imagine this all sounds quite strange to people, because they don't feel like this has been a blowout, but by objective standards it has been. And oddly, I'd argue the reason why it doesn't feel like it is because people's perceptions are biased precisely against the things they'd consider most important. Yeah it was close in all of the Warriors' wins for most of the way...and then when it really mattered, the Warriors destroyed the Cavs each time. Yeah the Cavs edged out a 2-1 lead...and then the Warriors made adjustments and have won both games in blowouts since.
Where I'm getting at with all of this, is that if Game 6 goes like the previous two, no one should see this series as the Cavs being ridiculously impressive. They will have been beaten much more soundly than a typical finals loser. And while I'm all for a Finals MVP to go to someone on the losing team in principle, I think it's basically a given that you've got to truly push your eventual conqueror to the brink for that to make sense. Not factoring that in means that you're basically punishing the star of the winning team for not playing more desperately when he had no reason to do so.
Hopefully we all know that you'd never want LeBron to play like this if things were going as designed. It's incredibly impressive that he can do what he is doing of course, and I'm happy to praise him for it, but Curry's not doing something "wrong" because he's actually playing within a smart offensive scheme.
Okay now as I say all of that, as I said, my real answer is "depends", because the series isn't over. If the Cavs do come back and make the Warriors have to fight tooth and nail to scrape out this title, I'll probably be on board the LeBron train too. But those who are simply looking at LeBron's production right now and haven't notice that the Warriors are totally handling the Cavs, and specifically handling the Cavs offense, are really missing the key takeaways from a coaching or scouting perspective.
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As usual you shave a really good and reasoned argument and nothing you say is intentionally or overly subjective. I hate to disagree, and that's not even the right term, but let me offer a dissenting viewpoint.
While I will agree that Curry can not be punished for wisely playing within a system that in all probability will win out over the decidedly disadvantaged Cavs over a seven game series, it also speaks additionally to the sizable chasm in responsibility taken on by each team respective superstar. While I conceded that both the eyeball test and the numbers must acknowledge that Steph Curry appaers to have become a bonafide Superstar this season, the old school in me and a great number of fans needs him to prove it when it matters most.
Most of his evidence has been compiled against opponents that were not even fringe contenders in games with a lot less at stake. In the finals Curry has been solid, he has had spectacular moments feasting on the exhausted Cavs late in games. On the one hand that is just smart basketball it it is coming up big when it matters most, a win-win. On the other, the Warriors lost two games, and should have lost three but caught a lot of breaks in game one with Curry finding his rhythm. Through three games he was shooting below 40% and until his late spurt (which wasn't enough) in game three, he was hoovering around 1 of 4 from deep) If the Warriors don't catch some probability in the late stages of game one it's 3-0 and they probably lose the series on a fluke a la the 2005 Pistons or 1988 Pistons, I imagine you as a numbers guy will back me in saying the Pistons won those series by the numbers. If not please tell me why so I can make sure I am prepared for that argument if it ever comes.
Anyway, with LeBron doing something of such historical significance, for the first time we have someone meeting the "West precedent" if it goes to seven it's a lock for me unless somehow he's not the key reason. If not, but he plays like he did in games 1,2,3 and 5 and it's close like games 1-3...I still give him the nod likely.
Before it starts, what are the odds this series gets to seven based on the numbers? A healthy 67 win team against a 53-win team missing it's 2nd and 3rd most utilized players and possessing no other players who can create shots for themselves or others? Facing a team with five current or former all-NBA players as well as Draymond Green and Harrison Barnes in their early prime?
The reason I lean towards James is the literal sense of the word, valuable. There is no argument that Curry is more valuable to the Warriors than James is to the Cavs. While James usage rate allows him to put up ungodly raw numbers, it also forces him out of his lane and away from the style of play we saw in Miami the last few seasons where he was one of the most efficient scoring superstars in NBA history. Meanwhile Curry does what he does best and has the liberty to pick his spots when he feels that shooters rhythm to make seemingly impossible shots look fundamental. Iguodala, while not more valuable, nor out-performing Curry, has arguably had a more profound impact on this particular series for the Warriors, their is no such secondary contributor for James, setting aside the aforementioned, and obvious talent and depth disparity among the teams cores.
That's the counterpoint as I see it, and I think both sides have their merit.