bondom34 wrote:Pelly24 wrote:bondom34 wrote:Who on Portland is as good as Love offensively? And to add, if Irving is superior as we're led to believe he should be able to lead a team to a better offense than Portland. I'd value a guy who leads a team to a positive rating over a guy who doesn't/can't.
First of all, it's kind of crazy because those samples prove that Kyrie's TS% actually went up when LeBron was off the floor, while Dame's went down when LMA was off the floor. So doesn't that point toward Kyrie being able to more effectively get his own offense without another star player? And mind you, that's also taking into account Kyrie's very uncharacteristic and likely related to his knee injury recovery 32% 3 point shooting this year. More likely, he'll shoot 38% from three. He shot 42% from three in 2015. The offensive ratings are barely different, and that's a more of an interdependent rating than something like ISO% and TS%. Kyrie also had like a 55 TS% when his team was AWFUL. So if you look take into account Kyrie's injury recovery, I don't even see a difference. If you focus on Kyrie's more likely productivity from 2015 in conjunction with Kyrie's more well-rounded scoring skills, I think Kyrie is clearly better when at his best. I just can't see any scenario where Dame does what Kyrie did this past playoffs. Also, CJ McCollum prob. isn't worse than K. Love as an offensive player, at this point. CJ can easily get buckets against good defenses when he needs to.
I was looking at team ratings. And yes, Love is still better than CJ McCollum. Lillard led a worse team to a winning record than Irving ever has, and that isn't even close. Take Lebron out and the Cavs are still a lotto team.
CJ McCollum averaged 21 points last year with a pretty solid 54 TS% and actually put up some solid numbers against GSW, which is still a really good defensive team. Portland's coaching and CJ McCollum's emergence as one of the league's better two guards were probably nearly as responsible for the Trail Blazers successful season as Dame was. K.Love vs. CJ isn't all that clear cut. Both are pretty much fringe all star level players at this point, with CJ honest to god being more useful in a bunch of situations. You're also blatantly ignoring the fact that Kyrie was:
1. 4-6 years younger than Dame was this past year.
2. On a team that was actively tanking for at least a year.
3. Playing with Dion Waiters, who is only getting $2.3 million this year. CJ? He's getting $23 million. I Basically, there's
nothing that you're saying that truly proves Kyrie couldn't lead a decent team to the playoffs. You probably think Dame is better than AD too, since AD missed the playoffs, and AD's team from this year was still better than Kyrie's pre-lebron teams.
Also,no, if you truly believe the Cavs would be as bad as they were before LeBron got there, you're crazy. Love, JR, Iman, Channing Frye, Dunleavy are all much better players than their counterparts on the Cavs teams of 2012-2014. Kyrie Irving is now 3 years older than he was during those years as well.
But since you're going to look at things in a vacuum let's look at this: Kyrie was far more successful as a 1B than Dame ever was. Kyrie torched the league's best defense and outplayed the league's supposed best player. We don't technically know that Kyrie can lead a team to the playoffs as it's best player. But what we do know, without a doubt, is that Kyrie can be a team's second best player and win a chip. Dame has not proven that he can do that. He had LMA, and still played "meh" at best. In an era of super teams, unless you're one of the league's top 8 players, that's more important than leading an average team to the playoffs "by yourself." Dame and Bron' don;t win a chip if they're on the same team. LeBron couldn't survive Dame missing layups and chucking contested threes.