gtn130 wrote:...You guys are repackaging the same argument and refusing to acknowledge how context would affect Harden. I understand players are the same person from team to team and coach to coach, but if they're asked to do completely different things then it doesn't matter.
Kevin Love functionally plays a completely different position with Cleveland than he did with Minnesota. His rebounding numbers have tanked because he's standing behind the 3pt line for a huge chunk of offensive possessions instead of being the centerpiece of the offense posting his man up and collecting offensive boards...
...Using broad strokes and saying "Guys usually don't get much better/worse while in their primes! It's all just variance!!!!!!!!!1111" is cool and all, but this isn't some hot take narrative I'm spinning. ...
I love arguments like this, where all you have to do is point to numbers and what you're responding to just evaporates.
E.g. Love's rebounding "tanked" when he went to Cleveland: his last year in Minny he got 13.8 boards per 40 minutes. This year in Cleveland he got 12.6 boards per 40 minutes. IOW, he "tanked" 1.2 rebounds. Oh, but you stress offensive boards. He "tanked" .48 of those per 40 minutes at Cleveland this year.
And it's all because "he's standing behind the 3 pt line...": his last year in Minny, he took 7.2 three point attempts per 40 minutes. This year in Cleveland he took... 7.2 three point attempts per 40 minutes. Hmmmm.
Well, what *has* changed? Pretty simple, really. Minny had very few scoring weapons, so Love got heavier usage *aside from* 3 point attempts. He took @50% more 2-point shots, and he got to the line a ton. But, he's the same guy, so he shot just about the same FT% this last year as he did his last year in Minny.
So, you aren't really saying anything at all about "how context would affect" a player, are you? What you are saying is that if a guy takes fewer shots, it's very very likely that he will score fewer points.
You know what, gtn? You are right. In fact, shockingly, if you look around the league you will find that by and large guys who shoot less score less. Overall, that is.
But this pointless comparison you provide -- whether it's of Love or any other player -- tells us nothing about James Harden. There is no wire and no wireless connectivity either between Love's productivity and Harden's productivity, though you are right that Love is no longer the centerpiece of his team's offense -- after all, Cleveland does have LeBron James, Kyrie Irving, etc.
But even that has no bearing on James Harden. He would have been the centerpiece of our offense just as he is in Houston, had he come here instead of Houston.