Post#625 » by Doctor MJ » Mon May 30, 2016 5:40 pm
I'm going to make one comment here for today and then i'll probably say something on the Thunder board after the game tonight if they lose:
While I don't think it's appropriate to put asterisks by winners in general, and I have no intention to do so here with the Warriors should they win, it really bothers me the way people have gone negative on the Thunder following a game last night that so easily could have gone the other way.
First off, let's be honest, Draymond should have been suspended, and if that were the case, Warriors lose. As a basketball fan looking to see the best series possible, I'm glad he wasn't suspended, as to me him staying in gives us the best sense of who the better team truly is at playing basketball - and I also don't really think Green's behavior scared or scarred the Thunder into playing worse. But rule-wise, I don't know how you justify not suspending him.
Second, realistically the Warriors only one with Klay having the game of his life and Durant & Westbrook shooting terribly from range. (Curry was also huge, arguably even more valuable than Klay because of his overall impact, but a performance like that from Curry is also to be expected. While Klay has had times like this before, it is not anything the Warriors can remotely count on.) Narrative moralists will look at this discrepancy and talk about big time players showing up while other guys choke, but we folks here know there's luck involved, and if the Thunder shoot more typically, they may well win the game.
Between these two things, and the fact that the Thunder already thoroughly outclassed the Spurs and have driven the Warriors to the very brink, this Thunder team has more than shown that they are championship-capable, and that's a big deal. I realize they were cursed with injuries the past few year and so you could argue they didn't have to prove this, but I certainly wasn't sold on these Thunder being able to regularly match and/or surpass the Warriors & Thunder and they only got there by means of role players who really work well with their stars. But the play of these role players can't seriously diminish what Westbrook & Durant do out there because EVERY champion has role players doing their thing well, so all this has proven is that this dynamic duo doesn't really need anything that crazy to reach the top of the mountain.
Last note: On the idea of Donovan needing to do a better job of coaching given the simplistic schemes the team still uses, and the continued tendency to simplify further to the detriment of effectiveness as things get tight:
I would urge people to remember that when Donovan's Florida Gators broke through to win their first national championship, their beautiful passing had everything to do with what made them unstoppable. As a UCLA Bruin fan, I got to watch my team get utterly decimated by them. We had a pressing defense that had crushed all of our opponents, and I was hoping to see it do the same against Florida. Instead what Florida showed was that if you've got smart, aware passers all throughout your team, pressing defenses get crushed as they only give the passers more space to work with.
All this to say that if this continues to be how OKC plays in the time to come with Donovan, it's not a Donovan issue. This is a way of me saying that I'm leaving the door open for Donovan to figure out how to build a smarter offense with these players, but I'm skeptical it's possible, and in a nutshell, this is what I mean by accepting what you have in your superstars and building the best thing you can with them.
Really the big issue is Westbrook imho, which should come as no surprise given my skepticism of him. The way he plays, full tilt, he's just not a guy who keeps the whole court in his head. He zeroes in on a goal, and he goes for it. This doesn't mean he can't make some nice passes along the way, but his tendency to get tunnel vision I think has everything to do with why he's able to seemingly "want it more". The good and the bad come together, and you just have to decide whether the good is worth it.
I've long been on record saying that if I had had to choose between Westbrook or Harden, I'd have kept Harden, for all these reasons. This year though is making more really back off on this front, and while part of that is Harden's issues in Houston, really it's more come from a realization that Westbrook's flaws, while they are significant, just don't seem to be enough to keep him from leading OKC to a championship even if the competition is pretty fierce give what all he brings to the table.
And if OKC loses tonight, that doesn't erase what I feel like I've learned this year.
Last thought: While I say Westbrook is "the big issue" keeping OKC from playing smarter basketball, at this point were Durant asking me advice about what he should do in free agency, I'd tell him he's crazy to leave unless he secretly dislikes where he is for reasons that aren't about basketball. This is a team that's very, very close to being unstoppable and should be able to go into the off-season hyped to take a leap forward simply by fine-tuning the roles that have worked so well this year.
If you're a Thunder fan (like bondom), a Game 7 loss here undoubtedly feels devastating, but speaking as an outsider, your team has sold me. I'll be cheering for the Warriors over the Thunder because I aesthetically prefer how Golden State plays, but I'm no longer under the illusion that that means the team has a higher ceiling than the Thunder do, and whatever happens in the years to come y'all should remind me of the crow that I've eaten on this front if I seem to forget it.
Best of luck to Thunder fans tonight. If they pull it out, I'll be happy for you.
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