2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread

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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#741 » by Doctor MJ » Tue May 28, 2019 11:39 pm

Dr Positivity wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:As far as Philly, first, let's acknowledge that Embiid is basically the reason why Toronto acquired Gasol. Then let's remember that when Embiid was on the court, Toronto wasn't winning. So, Gasol helped in that series because it's the one series where they really needed him, but even there, he never really seemed like the difference maker. Not like I'd be shocked if you pointed out some data where Gasol could be objectively classified as more defensively valuable than Kawhi, but to me "Wow, Gasol's amazing at defense" wasn't really a major story coming out of that series the way you'd dream about.


Embiid's health/conditioning had something to do with it, but Gasol killed him on defense outside of Game 3 in my opinion. I'm aware the +/- for the series and +/- as a whole isn't as strong for Gasol, but I think with SSS, blowouts, having a strong backup in Ibaka, etc. it's harder to use playoff +/-. Like for example Boban was -44 in 25 minutes in the series and Toronto put out smaller lineup to BBQ him so that would affect both Gasol and Embiid +/-. To me PHI having their #1 guy so limited on offense would have a domino effect that changes the whole series for them, and one could see by Game 3 how much better they look emotionally when he's rolling. Gasol also has an impact as a help defender.

Kawhi also wasn't as valuable on defense against Philly as against Milwaukee, he did great against Butler in G7, but Butler had a great series up through the first 6 games cause Kawhi wasn't defending him


Reasonable points, and you're right that part of my thoughts here related to the fact that Embiid just didn't look like himself. The fact that Embiid looked under the weather when Gasol wasn't near him and yet still Philly won whenever Embiid was on the court makes me feel like Toronto should basically look at that series and think "No, we don't have an answer for Embiid." And if that's the case, then it's hard for me to crow too much about Gasol's performance.

But I'll acknowledge that Gasol's focus was defense from the start whereas Kawhi's energy is always conserved on defense for as long as it can be now that he's being asked to manufacture shots like he is.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#742 » by LA Bird » Wed May 29, 2019 1:06 am

Doctor MJ wrote:What I'm trying to get across here is an achievement based perspective. It's great to say that the Embiid-led team showed signs of being something far more impressive than merely being the 2nd round level team that we already know they could be without him. But in reality with him, the team never proved itself anything more than that. Embiid wasn't able to raise them to elite status in the regular season, and in the playoffs they lost where you'd expect them to, so why are we so excited about what he accomplished?

The +/- and raw WOWY numbers suggest they would at best be first round fodder without Embiid.

With Embiid: 43-21 (55.1 win rate, +4.8 MOV)
Without Embiid: 8-10 (36.4 win rate, -4.8 MOV)

Besides, how is an "achievement based perspective" any different than something like ring counting? Maybe you have changed after your hiatus but I seem to recall you having Garnett top 4 all time before based in part on +/- stats. I am not saying Embiid is as good as Garnett but applying this "achievement based perspective", you would have to say KG didn't raise the TWolves to elite status either (outside of 2004) and that there is no reason to be excited about all the first round exits he accomplished in Minnesota. I don't want to derail this thread with KG discussion but your current stance on this team achievement based perspective seems to go against your previous views on +/- numbers.

I think the reality is that much of the reason for the excitement are +/- scores from a single series during which Embiid couldn't get his team over the hump.

I'm not saying that it's either "win or bust" when evaluating accomplishments, but if you're going to essentially ignore the fact that the team never won anything it couldn't win without Embiid on the basis of small sample +/- impact, I think you're putting the cart before the horse.

Embiid has had double digit on/offs for all 3 regular seasons he has played in. The sample size for his high impact metrics is more than just 1 playoff series. If the 76ers without Embiid were a more reasonable -10 net instead of -50, they would have advanced to the ECF - does that mean Greg Monroe or Boban's performance dictate whether Embiid was good enough to lead his team over the hump? As much as you deny it, this is a "win or bust" approach. Your opinion of Embiid is decided by whether the 76ers could go to the ECF, which is heavily influenced by factors outside of Embiid's control (eg. how bad the bench is).

* Note: I am not saying Embiid is without fault. Part of the loss is on him for his inability to play heavy minutes outside of G7 which only exacerbated the bench problem. However, nowhere in your posts did you criticize his lack of durability. All you said was that Embiid wasn't impressive because he didn't advance past the second round which I think is rather reductionist.

I'm not going to let small sample size +/- make me forget that Embiid's team has Simmons - capable of leading a team to the 2nd round on his own - or Butler - a much more dependable star than Embiid.

There is no proof Simmons could lead a 2nd round team on his own. Unless you are referring to the 9-0 run at the end of the 2018 regular season when half of their opponents were tanking teams. Butler can more reliably create his own shot but that's about it. Overall 2-way play, Embiid is clearly the best and most impactful player on the team.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#743 » by Joey Wheeler » Wed May 29, 2019 1:15 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:You're probably right the Sixers would make the second round even without Embiid, though it's far from a guarantee, they could easily lose to Boston or Indiana. But it hardly means much given how imbalanced the East is at the moment, you have three elite teams and then basically fodder. Series involving 2 of Sixers/Raptors/Bucks were the only ones going past 5 games for a reason...

The Sixers are at the same level as the Raptors (and are actually better when Embiid is on court), how far from that would they be without Embiid? I'm going to say very, very far. His massive impact is undeniable. It definitely can't be boiled down to "losing in the 2nd round either way", there's a big chasm in quality between being sweep fodder and basically losing on a coin flip.


You're coming at this thinking about how close Philly played their 2nd round opponent as if it makes a big difference, but Philly is a 51 win team, and a 51 win team seeded to lose in the 2nd round who then loses to the 2nd round is normal.

What I'm trying to get across here is an achievement based perspective. It's great to say that the Embiid-led team showed signs of being something far more impressive than merely being the 2nd round level team that we already know they could be without him. But in reality with him, the team never proved itself anything more than that. Embiid wasn't able to raise them to elite status in the regular season, and in the playoffs they lost where you'd expect them to, so why are we so excited about what he accomplished?

I think the reality is that much of the reason for the excitement are +/- scores from a single series during which Embiid couldn't get his team over the hump.

I'm not saying that it's either "win or bust" when evaluating accomplishments, but if you're going to essentially ignore the fact that the team never won anything it couldn't win without Embiid on the basis of small sample +/- impact, I think you're putting the cart before the horse.

For the record, I have Embiid in my top 10 this year so I'm not saying I give him no credit. But I give him credit for being on a team that won 51 games and then lost where it should lose based on the fact that it only won 51 games. Not that I'm going by W-L records rather than player play, but the 76ers clearly never meshed fit-wise this year and thus underachieved relative to their talent. I'm not going to let small sample size +/- make me forget that Embiid's team has Simmons - capable of leading a team to the 2nd round on his own - or Butler - a much more dependable star than Embiid.


Because "lost in the second round" is way too simplistic. For starters, Philly lost due to sheer dumb luck, let's be real. Let's not pretend the Raptors won that series because they had something Philly didn't or any other narrative nonsense. Basketball is a sport where there are no draws so even when two teams are evenly matched one simply has to win and the other has to lose, it's what happened here. A couple different bounces and it might be Philly in the Finals now. I know it'd be more comforting if every outcome had a logical explanation, but let's face some series are decided on a dice roll and this was one of those.

Secondly, there's an enormous chasm between the top teams in the East and the rest so it's quite conceivable that a player can have massive impact and still their team would lose in the same round with or without him. You seem way too hung up on the fact that they lost; sure they lost the series, are they an elite team though? Yes. Are they a way, way better than they'd be without Embiid? Yes. The way you're framing things, it sounds like you'd be higher on Embiid if Philly had won the series, which makes sense narrative-wise but in reality doesn't really hold up since again the final outcome of the series was predicated on dumb luck. "Embiid couldn't get his team over the hump" could easily be "Embiid led his team to the Finals/championships" with just one uncontrollable bounce going the other way.

Also, I have serious reservations about your assessment of other Philly players? Simmons can lead a team to the 2nd round as the best player? I seriously doubt that. Butler is more dependable than Embiid, what do you mean by that exactly?
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#744 » by Doctor MJ » Wed May 29, 2019 11:50 pm

Joey Wheeler wrote:Simmons can lead a team to the 2nd round as the best player? I seriously doubt that.


I had already written some of the response when I got to this line, but this line makes other conversation moot.

Go back and look at how Philly did after Embiid got hurt late in the season in 2018. Notice the win streak to end the year and how it continued unabated without Embiid. Philly looked basically untouchable that whole time and through the 1st round, with or without Embiid. No one who was watching Simmons back then doubted he could already be the star of a quite good team without Embiid.

And that's only Embiid's 2nd best teammate now.

Look, everyone is terrified of the 76ers. Everyone knows they already have the most talent in the East, and perhaps the whole league. After making the 2nd round last year and getting undone by a less talented team who was just older and smarter, it was something of a given this year that Philly aiming for better this year. This was the case before the team acquired Jimmy Butler, and the Butler acquisition just affirmed for everyone "We're trying to win a title right now!". Instead they ended up losing in the same round.

It's a disappointment. Yeah competition is tougher this year...it's still a disappointment. Not a disappointment that should feel crushing as the reason for hope is clear - "We have better talent than the team's we're losing to, we just have to figure out how to fit better" but the issue with Embiid in this POY conversation is that folks like you championing him are doing so leaning heavily on +/-, and a +/- argument for a 2nd round exit is essentially a version of "It's a miracle they even got that far!" which is not how anyone on Earth actually sees Philly. It's not a miracle they got this far, it's a sign they have to get smarter that they managed not to go any further.

For the record I have Embiid in my Top 10 and could see an argument for him in the Top 5 depending on the year. It's not that I think he is utterly unworthy, I just can't get behind any argument that asserts Embiid's teammates are nothing without him because we know better than that.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#745 » by Doctor MJ » Thu May 30, 2019 1:21 am

LA Bird wrote:
Doctor MJ wrote:What I'm trying to get across here is an achievement based perspective. It's great to say that the Embiid-led team showed signs of being something far more impressive than merely being the 2nd round level team that we already know they could be without him. But in reality with him, the team never proved itself anything more than that. Embiid wasn't able to raise them to elite status in the regular season, and in the playoffs they lost where you'd expect them to, so why are we so excited about what he accomplished?

The +/- and raw WOWY numbers suggest they would at best be first round fodder without Embiid.

With Embiid: 43-21 (55.1 win rate, +4.8 MOV)
Without Embiid: 8-10 (36.4 win rate, -4.8 MOV)


+/- and raw WOWY certainly wouldn't predict how well Philly did last year when Embiid went down and Philly kept right on dominating, nevertheless, we saw it.

LA Bird wrote:
Besides, how is an "achievement based perspective" any different than something like ring counting? Maybe you have changed after your hiatus but I seem to recall you having Garnett top 4 all time before based in part on +/- stats. I am not saying Embiid is as good as Garnett but applying this "achievement based perspective", you would have to say KG didn't raise the TWolves to elite status either (outside of 2004) and that there is no reason to be excited about all the first round exits he accomplished in Minnesota. I don't want to derail this thread with KG discussion but your current stance on this team achievement based perspective seems to go against your previous views on +/- numbers.


So, what we're really talking about here is what it takes to move a player up a tier because of playoff performance.

Consider Giannis vs Kawhi for POY. Giannis was far ahead of Kawhi in the regular season, so what exactly would it take for Kawhi to surpass him based on a series between their two teams?

At a certain point in the series my assessment was "Kawhi's been better, but Giannis will still get the nod from me if his team wins". Why? Because one series against one opponent is not enough to make me ignore an 82 game season....unless it renders all advantages from the regular season moot. Now that Toronto has won while establishing itself as the stronger team, literally no one in the world cares that Milwaukee was better in the regular season. At that point it makes sense to just compare how the two players looked against each other, and since Kawhi came out ahead there, he gets the nod.

Embiid could have had arguments like Kawhi does now, but to my mind he doesn't. Why? Well, aside from the fact his team lost, he visibly wasn't play his best, and his production stats were far below normal. To elevate Embiid a tier based on his playoff run you basically have to ignore all these things and say "But +/-!!!!". And +/- just doesn't work like that.

It's a high noise stat. There's randomness, and there are the quirks of any given series with a particular set of improvised strategies. The reality is that it's completely unreasonable to the Embiid's Off numbers in the Toronto series actually are a fair assessment of how much talent he had on his team.

You bring up Garnett and of course the thing about Garnett was: His +/- argument wasn't for him to go up a tier in the playoffs because of how those numbers looked in one series.

LA Bird wrote:
I think the reality is that much of the reason for the excitement are +/- scores from a single series during which Embiid couldn't get his team over the hump.

I'm not saying that it's either "win or bust" when evaluating accomplishments, but if you're going to essentially ignore the fact that the team never won anything it couldn't win without Embiid on the basis of small sample +/- impact, I think you're putting the cart before the horse.

Embiid has had double digit on/offs for all 3 regular seasons he has played in. The sample size for his high impact metrics is more than just 1 playoff series. If the 76ers without Embiid were a more reasonable -10 net instead of -50, they would have advanced to the ECF - does that mean Greg Monroe or Boban's performance dictate whether Embiid was good enough to lead his team over the hump? As much as you deny it, this is a "win or bust" approach. Your opinion of Embiid is decided by whether the 76ers could go to the ECF, which is heavily influenced by factors outside of Embiid's control (eg. how bad the bench is).


Embiid's general +/- numbers are already factored into our regular season assessment. While I warn people to not mistake +/- for true VORP, the reality is that if you already had him in your Top 5, I don't expect him to drop.

But when people go nuts about the +/- from a single series, they are making the case that he should rise a tier based on that specific small sample size theater, and that's what I'm really taking issue with.

Re: My opinion of Embiid is decided by...my ranking of him in the regular season, and a cautious assessment of how much to change that based on the playoffs. In the end, I've essentially opted to not have my opinion of his accomplishment significantly change after his team lost when it was expected to lose, and I saw Embiid struggling out there with both injury and sickness.

Is that really so crazy?

LA Bird wrote:
* Note: I am not saying Embiid is without fault. Part of the loss is on him for his inability to play heavy minutes outside of G7 which only exacerbated the bench problem. However, nowhere in your posts did you criticize his lack of durability. All you said was that Embiid wasn't impressive because he didn't advance past the second round which I think is rather reductionist.


Really, that's all I said? So you condense all of I've written into a couple sentences, use +/- like it's an absolute statement of impact, miss the nuance relating to the comparison with KG, and then call me the reductionist?

LA Bird wrote:
I'm not going to let small sample size +/- make me forget that Embiid's team has Simmons - capable of leading a team to the 2nd round on his own - or Butler - a much more dependable star than Embiid.

There is no proof Simmons could lead a 2nd round team on his own. Unless you are referring to the 9-0 run at the end of the 2018 regular season when half of their opponents were tanking teams. Butler can more reliably create his own shot but that's about it. Overall 2-way play, Embiid is clearly the best and most impactful player on the team.


You're looking for reasons to pretend stuff that really happened doesn't matter while focusing on statistics that shouldn't be wielded as if they are the final say.

It's telling that your critique of what the Simmons-led team did isn't based on any specific statement about why it was flawed. You're just saying "End of season so doesn't count". In reality, what that team did was an outlier of the magnitude we rarely, then we saw it largely continue in the 1st round of the playoffs, and all of that served only to further back up the notion that if you've got a dominant physical presence with a tremendous gift for passing and you surround him with shooters, it works.

The formula for how to build the best possible team around Simmons is really simple - much simpler than Embiid. Does that mean Embiid isn't the guy to build around? No, I'd go with Embiid as well, but no conversation about Embiid is complete without acknowledging that it's not exactly obvious how to get the best fit around him, and until that fit is achieved, Embiid's teams are going to fall short of their talent levels.

Right now everyone thinks Philly is the most talented team in the East, but they won only 51 games and lost to the first higher seed they faced. I think it goes without saying they haven't reached their ceiling yet, and until they do, I'm going to be uncomfortable leaning on +/- too heavily here.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#746 » by ardee » Thu May 30, 2019 1:58 am

I don't know who said Butler is more dependable than Embiid because the multiple quotes are getting me a bit lost: but that is a very strange assertion. Butler is the guy who almost ran a franchise into the ground earlier this year to leave: the exact opposite of dependable in my eyes.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#747 » by TheGOATRises007 » Thu May 30, 2019 2:37 am

ardee wrote:I don't know who said Butler is more dependable than Embiid because the multiple quotes are getting me a bit lost: but that is a very strange assertion. Butler is the guy who almost ran a franchise into the ground earlier this year to leave: the exact opposite of dependable in my eyes.


He also led that same franchise to their only playoff berth in years and likely only berth in the years to follow.

If their owner didn't throw that ludicrous contract at Wiggins, I think Butler would still be there.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#748 » by DatAsh » Thu May 30, 2019 3:10 am

dontcalltimeout wrote:Does anyone else think Kawhi is getting a bit overrated now? He's clearly an elite player but he gets discussed like he's doing all this on offense and is still 2016 Kawhi on defense, which is plainly not the case IMO. Obviously, he's been able to ramp up somewhat in the playoffs, particularly on-ball.

I remember in 2017 when he emerged as an MVP candidate in the popular discourse there was a lot of debate about whether his deteriorating defensive numbers were due to a change in priorities or just "noise." Looking back at 2019 and 2017 it's clear he just doesn't have the same motor on that end when he's carrying the load offensively. This is completely understandable, and he's still beasting out there. It just seems to me that people have mentally "added" his offensive game to their perception of Kawhi as DPOY, and i don't think that's the case....


Having only watched the games once in real time, I tend to agree, but I put very little stock in my own eye test when it comes to defense. I'd say that when watching games normally, my focus is 60-70% offense and 30-40% defense. I plan to go back and watch the Raptor games after the finals and focus specifically on Kawhi's defense, so I might change my mind after having done so.

From my very flawed judgement as of now, I'd say he's been probably the best or second man defender in the playoffs, and somewhere between average and good on help defense.

Overrated/underrated is kinda hard to define, as there's no correct rating, and it has to be relative to something else. DoctorMJ, who's opinion I respect more than my own, has Kawhi as the best defender of these playoffs. My opinion is that Draymond's impact on defense has been probably double that of Kawhi's(mainly due to help defense), but from his perspective, he would say I'm underrating Kawhi.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#749 » by LA Bird » Thu May 30, 2019 5:57 am

Doctor MJ wrote:+/- and raw WOWY certainly wouldn't predict how well Philly did last year when Embiid went down and Philly kept right on dominating, nevertheless, we saw it.

We also saw Philly going 12-19 in the other 31 games Embiid missed the last 2 seasons. That short stretch of domination was an aberration, not the norm.

Embiid could have had arguments like Kawhi does now, but to my mind he doesn't. Why? Well, aside from the fact his team lost, he visibly wasn't play his best, and his production stats were far below normal.

Fair enough. Embiid definitely wasn't 100% in the series. However, the fact that Philly with a sick Embiid could outplay the Raptors with Kawhi when both were on court is something to think about.

To elevate Embiid a tier based on his playoff run you basically have to ignore all these things and say "But +/-!!!!". And +/- just doesn't work like that.
...
But when people go nuts about the +/- from a single series, they are making the case that he should rise a tier based on that specific small sample size theater, and that's what I'm really taking issue with.

This is a straw man argument. I never said anything about elevating Embiid a tier because of single series +/-. I haven't even said where I rank Embiid at all. The numbers were cited to show the 76ers with Embiid were better than the Raptors and with a little less horrible luck, they could be in the ECF. Criticizing Embiid for failing to lead his team past the second round overlooks the fact that it was the bench that failed to show up and blew the lead Embiid had established.

It's a high noise stat. There's randomness, and there are the quirks of any given series with a particular set of improvised strategies. The reality is that it's completely unreasonable to the Embiid's Off numbers in the Toronto series actually are a fair assessment of how much talent he had on his team.

This was already addressed in my first post: You could point out that Embiid's off minutes is a minuscule sample and that Philly without him aren't really that horrible. That is true but then again, Kawhi's case for POY is also based on the same small postseason sample.
My point is that you can't use the small bench sample to dock Embiid for losing the series (or reward Kawhi for winning) and then turn around and say it was just bad luck that the 76ers vastly underperformed without Embiid. The fact that we know the bench is much better than -50 net only goes to reinforce why we should not be holding the loss against Embiid.

You're looking for reasons to pretend stuff that really happened doesn't matter while focusing on statistics that shouldn't be wielded as if they are the final say.

The 76ers being 8-10 without Embiid in 2019 and 3-8 in the other 11 games Embiid missed early in 2018 before that late season run is stuff that really happened as well. Why should a 9 game run take precedence over the much larger sample we have where the 76ers were subpar without Embiid?

It's telling that your critique of what the Simmons-led team did isn't based on any specific statement about why it was flawed. You're just saying "End of season so doesn't count". In reality, what that team did was an outlier of the magnitude we rarely, then we saw it largely continue in the 1st round of the playoffs, and all of that served only to further back up the notion that if you've got a dominant physical presence with a tremendous gift for passing and you surround him with shooters, it works

I said "end of season" because those wins against the tanking Knicks, Hawks (twice) and Mavs are worth little under context. A specific critique of Ben Simmons' game isn't necessary because everybody already knows his flaw. That is why you stopped short of the series against Boston where he was turned into a net negative because he can't shoot. Embiid, even when sick with diarrhea and shooting poorly, has never been exposed as badly as Simmons was in that series. That is something Simmons has to fix first before we can say he is already a bona fide star who can lead the 76ers to success without Embiid.

This is getting a bit long winded so I will summarize my arguments:
1. 76ers without Embiid are a .500 level team. They are 20-19 the last two seasons without him (1-1 in the playoffs) and you taking a 9 game subsample where they won every game (many against tanking teams) does not prove otherwise.
2. 76ers outplayed the Raptors with both Embiid and Kawhi on court in the ECSF. They were a +64 in the series including 4 wins by margins of at least 14 points. This is strictly the On minutes performance which I have yet to see any counter arguments against.
3. 76ers lost the series because they got demolished when Embiid was resting. No, the -50 net is not representative of their true level without Embiid (which I think is .500). However, this small sample randomness is what cost them the series. Penalizing Embiid for not going past the 2nd round is just penalizing him for how poorly his bench replacement played.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#750 » by Dr Positivity » Thu May 30, 2019 6:04 am

Doctor MJ wrote:
Joey Wheeler wrote:Go back and look at how Philly did after Embiid got hurt late in the season in 2018. Notice the win streak to end the year and how it continued unabated without Embiid. Philly looked basically untouchable that whole time and through the 1st round, with or without Embiid. No one who was watching Simmons back then doubted he could already be the star of a quite good team without Embiid.


I think it felt more impressive at the time than it really was. They beat the Hawks, Hornets, Nets, Pistons, Cavs, Mavs, Hawks and Bucks to end the season, and were 1-1 in the playoffs before Embiid came back and crushed Miami from there.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#751 » by DatAsh » Thu May 30, 2019 7:59 pm

Playoff PIPM top 5:

Code: Select all

Player        Off      Def    Tot
-----------------------------------
1. Green      +2.41   +3.47   +5.87
2. Curry      +5.43   +0.20   +5.63
3. Giannis    +2.07   +3.46   +5.54
4. Kawhi      +3.61   +0.88   +4.49
5. Durant     +2.94   +0.04   +2.95


Taking minutes played into account, the overall ranking is:
1. Green
2. Kawhi
3. Curry
4. Giannis
5. Lowry

Interesting to note that PIPM has Toronto as a very strong but balanced defense, where no one player really stands out, unlike Golden State, where Draymond Green is head and shoulders above everyone else.

Per PIPM, Top 5 defenders on the Raptors are
1. Gasol +1.87
2. Green +1.31
3. Siakam +1.04
4. Kawhi +0.88
5. Lowry +0.75

This kinda reinforces my current view that people are overrating Kawhi's playoff defense based on his excellent man defense, and underrating the other Raptors' help defense. Again though, my views on this might change once I go back and rewatch the Raptors games to focus specifically on defense.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#752 » by eminence » Fri May 31, 2019 12:56 pm

I'm not really sure what Game 1 did for the POY discussion... Raptors won, but Kawhi wasn't all that. Curry played fairly well, I guess neither of them will be dinged for poor performance for this one. Dray laid an egg.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#753 » by PaulieWal » Fri May 31, 2019 1:25 pm

eminence wrote:I'm not really sure what Game 1 did for the POY discussion... Raptors won, but Kawhi wasn't all that. Curry played fairly well, I guess neither of them will be dinged for poor performance for this one. Dray laid an egg.


Warriors were doubling and shading him pretty hard. He still played awesome defense and did hit a couple of key shots to stem Warriors runs. His raw scoring might be down this series if Warriors keep on getting the ball out of his hands but he's still the best player on the floor for my money.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#754 » by MisterHibachi » Fri May 31, 2019 2:07 pm

Thought Kawhi missed a lot of very easy passes. Hard doubles really expose his play making short comings
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#755 » by TheGOATRises007 » Fri May 31, 2019 8:21 pm

MisterHibachi wrote:Thought Kawhi missed a lot of very easy passes. Hard doubles really expose his play making short comings


He was reading the double really well the 1st quarter or so.

But he definitely lagged off as the game progressed.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#756 » by MapleJordan79 » Sat Jun 1, 2019 12:29 am

PaulieWal wrote:
eminence wrote:I'm not really sure what Game 1 did for the POY discussion... Raptors won, but Kawhi wasn't all that. Curry played fairly well, I guess neither of them will be dinged for poor performance for this one. Dray laid an egg.


Warriors were doubling and shading him pretty hard. He still played awesome defense and did hit a couple of key shots to stem Warriors runs. His raw scoring might be down this series if Warriors keep on getting the ball out of his hands but he's still the best player on the floor for my money.

Curry got more defensive attention than Kawhi did and he still got 34 on 70ts. Kawhi did a poor job finding open teammates too even with all the bodies GS was sending at him. Curry is the best player in the series or any series for that matter.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#757 » by DatAsh » Sat Jun 1, 2019 1:13 am

eminence wrote:I'm not really sure what Game 1 did for the POY discussion... Raptors won, but Kawhi wasn't all that. Curry played fairly well, I guess neither of them will be dinged for poor performance for this one. Dray laid an egg.


I wouldn't ding Kawhi for game 1. Siakam was playing all time great, and the Raptors were in control most of the game; Kawhi really never had any need to step it up. He seemed content to let his teammates ride their hot hands, and why not? it was working.

Draymond is the only one who really lost any stock imo. He really underestimated Siakam.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#758 » by PaulieWal » Sat Jun 1, 2019 1:22 am

MapleJordan79 wrote:
PaulieWal wrote:
eminence wrote:I'm not really sure what Game 1 did for the POY discussion... Raptors won, but Kawhi wasn't all that. Curry played fairly well, I guess neither of them will be dinged for poor performance for this one. Dray laid an egg.


Warriors were doubling and shading him pretty hard. He still played awesome defense and did hit a couple of key shots to stem Warriors runs. His raw scoring might be down this series if Warriors keep on getting the ball out of his hands but he's still the best player on the floor for my money.

Curry got more defensive attention than Kawhi did and he still got 34 on 70ts. Kawhi did a poor job finding open teammates too even with all the bodies GS was sending at him. Curry is the best player in the series or any series for that matter.


How did Curry get more defensive attention? Looks like we were watching two different games.
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#759 » by Dupp » Sat Jun 1, 2019 1:25 am

Where would people have siakam in this discussion? Is he top 10 or can he finish there?

Is he a better player than Lowry / had he had a better season than Lowry?
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Re: 2018-19 Player of the Year Discussion Thread 

Post#760 » by MapleJordan79 » Sat Jun 1, 2019 3:49 am

PaulieWal wrote:
MapleJordan79 wrote:
PaulieWal wrote:
Warriors were doubling and shading him pretty hard. He still played awesome defense and did hit a couple of key shots to stem Warriors runs. His raw scoring might be down this series if Warriors keep on getting the ball out of his hands but he's still the best player on the floor for my money.

Curry got more defensive attention than Kawhi did and he still got 34 on 70ts. Kawhi did a poor job finding open teammates too even with all the bodies GS was sending at him. Curry is the best player in the series or any series for that matter.


How did Curry get more defensive attention? Looks like we were watching two different games.

Yeah I think we were. I was watching a game where every time Curry had the ball they had a guy pressed up on him to take away his shot and a guy on either side blocking off driving lanes and a big waiting to help at the rim. I was also watching a game where he was frequently doubled and or pulled defenders away from him when cutting or coming off screens without the ball and was trapped hard every time he came out of a pick and roll. I also was watching a game where the only time Kawhi got more than one defender thrown his way was off of drives or when he isod on the wing but didn't post up. Maybe you accidentally were watching a regular season rerun?

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