bondom34 wrote:Dr Spaceman wrote:bondom34 wrote:I have no issues w/ O vs. D, I have issues w/ workload and what is asked of different players, Green's role is that of a role player.
Edit: Or another way, what if you take each guy off his team or reduce his role greatly? With Dray, you get......well basically last year's Warriors, still agreat team. With Westbrook, you get a 3-10 team with about a negative 15 net rating.
I'm sorry Bondom, but using "workload" as an argument against Draymond borders on completely disingenuous. Honestly I don't know how someone could even come to that conclusion unless you were literally only watching the guy with the ball the whole time. Draymond is more active and involved than basically any player in the NBA on both ends, with his screen setting, passing, shooting, and oh yeah being the best defensive player in the NBA on a team that works primarily due to his ability to cover every inch of the floor.
The only way this is tenable is if you personally just put way less value on defensive work than offensive work. In such case I would ask you why you believe this (and actually please lay out the logical steps that led you there, because it will help everyone in this discussion), and also note that this is exactly the perspective that Doc put forth in his response to you and you rejected that... and then went on with the exact same thing.
The second point still stands, and my mistake for not wording well but I can't think or a way to put it. Remove each guy from a team, and what results? That's what I mean by "workload".
Is replaceability better?
Your point isn't a bad one in general, but here's the thing: we have reason to believe the Warriors would lose more by losing Draymond than any team would losing any player. Look at his net on/off for the playoffs. His numbers KILL any player playing starting minutes in the league. RAPM is what it is, but at this point basically every other metric that uses that method is saying the same thing.
The data aren't saying Green is a really valuable role player. The data are saying Green is the singular most impactful player in the league. And it's not just one stat anymore. So frankly the onus is on everyone to make a case against that, which I already have, but you're essentially sitting here saying "Come on guys, we know this isn't right, move along because there's nothing to see here".
I'd be more sympathetic to your stance if, say, these stats had a history of making "super role players" look like the MVP of the league. They don't, though, so it behooves us to look into what makes Draymond special here, and there isn't probable cause for outright dismissal.