Missing Rings wrote:Senior wrote:Dr Spaceman wrote:
Yeah Russillo said it really well last week: It’s always over before you think it is.
The guy that really upsets me is Durant. As the new guy I expected him to revitalize them and supercharge the team when the other guys can’t muster it and yet he’s been by far their biggest coaster. Even worse than Draymond, who is a player that relies almost entirely on motor and hustle.
Yeah. There were some teams like the older Celtics/Lakers/Rockets teams that knew their window was small but some such as Shaq/Kobe Lakers and big 3 heat that were projected to win like 5-6 titles. Then real life happened. Same with the Warriors - after last year everyone thought we might as well take a nap until 2020 when those guys get old. Problem is, those multiple years of playoff runs tack on basketball years/mileage at a much higher rate than a typical season. The difference between 60 and 80 vs 80 and 100 is much bigger than it appears to be, and all those teams I mentioned had significant and crippling injuries throughout their RS and then in the playoffs. GS isn't any different with all 4 of their main guys out. Most of those teams had playoff series that went the distance the year before they fell apart, so we'll see if that plays out with their likely WCF opponent in Houston.
Durant...I don't like playing armchair psychologist, but it's possible he saw how easily they wiped everyone last year and settled himself into coast-mode knowing the Warriors could just snooze through the RS. Not really an indefensible thing to do - and he himself has been making deep playoff runs (albeit with 1 year off). So as long as he can turn that on-off switch to ON, it shouldn't be damning.
To build on this...
Do you think this makes what LeBron has done more impressive?
Do you think LeBron knows this?
Is there an advantage for LeBron changing casts every 3-4 years since 07?
1. Could go both ways, Lebron's insane durability and management of himself during the RS is definitely a credit to him, but he basically reset the timer by changing teams. Wade was breaking down in year 3, their older vets like Allen and Battier were finished, and Bosh was eventually forced out so I'm not sure Miami would have enough to make it back even against a relatively weak conference. No one in the East was even close to Lebron either.
2. Yes. Too smart not to.
3. Absolutely. Left Wade and old Miami just as the ship was about to sink, and even now with the huge roster turnover/Kyrie gone/many guys injured, he might leave again. At this point no one knows what he will do and the clock is ticking.