Outside wrote:kayess wrote:Is that why Curry has the greatest difference on the team's NetRTG, BY FAR, of those 4 legs? Because he's equal in value to the 3 others?
I'm not going to argue your points on LeBron, because it's
(1) tired, and
(2) complex (who else exactly was available on the market for a trade at the time he was going back? Could the Cavs have built a Warriors-like team with the assets they had in 2014? - none of these things factor into your narrative, but sure, let's take all that as a given and accept that it's all selfish LeBron's fault that the Cavs are so dependent on him.) - but your over-romanticized (implied) description of the Warriors as some team that's beyond the sum of their parts PURELY because of the style they play is a distortion of the truth.
The Warriors are able to empower this "everyone can make a decision" style of ball because Curry makes everyone else's decision easier. Without him, most of them would be far less effective... and guess what, when the going got tough, did the Warriors flash go with the type of ball implied by your table analogy? No. They spammed Curry and Durant PNRs and Curry/Durant ISOs when it got tough (and it ONLY got tough because LeBron was playing out of his damned mind, and Kyrie was flashing some GOAT-level shotmaking. The Cav's shooters IIRC shot below average, even on wide open looks).
The table analogy does not work at all here, and I feel like your agenda is backfiring because you're actually taking away from what the Warriors are by mis-characterizing them as something they're not - the Warriors are the GOAT team because they were a GOAT-level team driven by Curry's outlier level shooting, 2 way players who can make plays/defend at an above average level at every position, a great system and culture to house them in, AND they added a redundancy, a valve, a fail-safe in Durant. It's that simple.
Sorry that my table analogy was overly simplistic. Of course it's easy to find fault in it, but I don't think it's totally wrong. I'm also sorry that I brought in the Warriors as the 4-legged table example, because now you've made it all about the Warriors when I was trying to make a point about LeBron.
As to your point (2), it's not about the Warriors, it's about playing distributed team basketball. Other recent examples of that are the 2014 Spurs and 2012 Heat.
I'm not sure if you're taking this seriously because now you're faux apologizing and then back tracking on that analogy (but also still slightly hedging by saying it's not totally wrong).
The gist of your point is: "LeBron is polarizing, bad! Warriors share equally, good!". What I am showing is that:
(a) your table analogy is not only too simplistic, it doesn't reflect reality: the Warriors are HEAVILY dependent on Curry, they just have far more redundancies in place to not suck - unlike the Cavs without LeBron, therefore:
(b) even if everything you said applied to LeBron (and given the extreme nature of your points - it's probably not), it's something the Warriors are guilty of as well - they just have far better talent, so it is not apparent.
I don't think you want to make it about LeBron (not really), because your logic that:
P: Because LeBron had a large say in the team getting structured around him, then...
Q: It is his fault if they don't do well in his absence.
Has so many pitfalls: Is "player wanting to be at the center of things" the only (hell, is it even the biggest?) driver of performance without said player? Of course not. There's coaching, there's opponent strength, there's talent mix with/without the player...
[this is all even assuming that it's a bad idea to structure a team around LeBron. I don't think this is true at all, btw - when you have someone as GOAT-smackingly good as him, or Shaq, or Magic, you absolutely build your team to enable their strengths and shore up their weaknesses. There's tons of evidence for this - Net RTGs, historical ORTGs in the PS, etc. - but sure, let's assume for the sake of argument that structuring around someone is bad]
You said it yourself: It seems like Kyrie+shooters and Thompson should do well without LeBron but they don't - and the conclusion is it's LeBron's fault? That's not scientific at all, you need to (aside from a whole host of other things) look at other samples, e.g., how does Kyrie do when LeBron is on? He plays almost the exact same way, and while he's gotten better, he still doesn't read the defense the same way even a Delly does. Which is not to say he isn't more valuable than Delly on O, of course - his GOAT-level tough shot making is priceless vs. someone like the Warriors. He just stinks it up if it's not falling, which is what you might have observed when he plays with role players. How any of this can be construed to be LeBron's fault is beyond me.
Case in point: Remember when everyone (yes, everyone) was up in arms about Blatt being fired? At the time, LeBron was being crucified, was saying he wanted a yes-man in Lue (a point you yourself make, I believe), just essentially buying into all this **** because of (let's face it) all the losing LeBron had done recently. I'm guilty of this too - I thought he was a despicable human being for getting a coach fired like that.
Of course, time revealed the facts: (1) Blatt was actually the yes man who didn't want to criticize James, which ticked off his teammates (2) he acted like he deserved respect (which he did, IMO) from the get-go, which is about as tone-deaf as you could be as a head coach in this league, (3) Lue absolutely **** James for missing rotations and tells him to S T F U, thus not actually being a yes-man (4) But his coaching pedigree, bar ATO plays I guess, is still below Blatt's.
But sure, LeBron wanted a yes-man in Lue.
One last thing: I hope you're not serious with putting the 2012 Heat in the same sentence as the 2014 Spurs. The 2014 version, when he went more off-ball because somehow even Mario Chalmers started making correct reads, is actually more comparable (as was the 2013 version - that streak where LeBron got 30+ on 60TS he wasn't taking that many shots), than the 2012 version which relied on star power more than anything. The 2014 Spurs just wiped that eam off of the place of the planet, as they would have done with pretty mcuh any team the way they were playing.