laika wrote:iggymcfrack wrote:laika wrote:
No it's not.
Curry had a much better On/Off and Rapm than Harden in the regular season. His scoring was significantly more efficient. On defensive metrics Curry scores much better than Harden.
Curry actually has been undeniably better than Harden in the playoffs though.
There’s a lot of colinearity with KD and Draymond Green involved in Steph’s plus/minus while Harden played a lot of minutes with really weak lineups as the only scorer. I really doubt that Steph’s defense and Harden’s makes up for the difference between a 24.4 PER and a 30.6 PER in the regular season. Even with playoffs included, Harden still has the higher RPM. My list right now would be:
1. Kawhi (set in stone barring an epically terrible last 2 games)
2. Giannis
3. Harden
4. George
5. Curry (could climb as high as #3 with a fantastic last 2 games and a Warriors comeback)
6. Davis/Jokic/Embiid/Durant
You have no idea if there is any collinearity or not. Curry has been putting up historically great impact numbers for 5 years now now matter who he is playing with.
PER is close to a worthless stat.
RPM includes very little playoff data. It has not updated in a long time. Anyways, it's a black box that should be viewed with significant suspicion.
Your rankings are self contradictory.
Curry was monumentally better than Kawhi in the regular season.
Curry has been massively better than Harden in the playoffs.
There is no rational way to rank both Harden and Kawhi ahead of Curry this year. At most you could choose one.
I don’t buy that Curry has been “massively better” than Harden in the playoffs. I’d consider their playoffs pretty close. Kawhi has been massively better than either.
Kawhi: 28.4 PER with excellent defense, +17.7 on/off
Steph: 22.9 PER with average defense, +13.5 on/off
Harden: 25.3 PER with average defense, +8.4 on/off

























