Joey Wheeler wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Joey Wheeler wrote:
That's a strange route to go, points per game. Surely I didn't claim Curry can't score 30 in playoff games. That said, if you want to go ppg, his best season is still below Durant's career average, Durant is clearly a more consistent volume scorer in the playoff. He's just clearly superior as a scorer and this holds up on the biggest stage, the 3 most efficient high scoring Finals series in history are Durant's 3 appearances.
But even if you think, Curry is a better player (which I couldn't disagree with more):
Points:
RS:
Durant - 22940
Curry - 16419
PS:
Durant - 4043
Curry - 2968
Other stats tell the same stories. All-NBA teams if you care about that, Durant has 9 (6 first team), Curry has 5 (3 first team).
Durant has a very clear longevity advantage, also more accolades with his scoring titles and 2 FMVPs. You'd have to either completely ignore longevity or think Curry is better by a really large margin (which strikes me as a very out there position to hold) to have Curry ahead.
Hold up here, just so we're clear:
I'm focusing on points per game in the playoffs because you said "This is all true... in the regular season. Curry's game just isn't resilient against tough playoff defenses, he goes from game-breaking to just a star."
You were obviously talking about his ability to volume score, and essentially asserting that despite the fact that all of my reasons for picking Curry were all true for the regular season, you saw something in the playoffs that overwhelmed all of that.
And so what I pointed out is that the gap between these players in terms of demonstrated playoff scoring volume is a lot smaller than people think and drastically inflated by perceptions of the 2017 finals (along with the 2016 finals) in particular.
I asked you for clarification on why you picked Durant, you gave it to me, I responded by pointing out that you probably overrated that aspect of things, and now you're making a slew of arguments that don't pertain to either the arguments I've made or the previous focus you gave.
Joey Wheeler wrote:Can we talk about why Curry is even ahead of Harden btw? Same draft, Harden is clearly ahead by most cumulative numbers and has had clearly more MVP-level seasons. No titles, but let's be real the reason the Warriors beat the Rockets was not Curry being superior to Harden, if they switched teams the results would most likely remain the same.
If you'd like to know my reasons for Curry over Harden, you could just look at my original reasons for Curry over Durant.
Doctor MJ wrote:But look for me, I feel like it's pretty simple:
1. I've always known that if someone were good enough at shooting, a guy who is otherwise less talented all-around could in theory rise up above everyone else.
2. With Curry we very clearly have a guy who is that kind of next-level shooter.
3. He's taking to new levels the dark art of off-ball movement now known as "gravity". It's a bigger deal than many still realize.
4. When we look at the +/-, Curry's pretty clearly had the edge all through his prime.
5. Intangibles matter, and Durant's taken a significant hit in my eyes as a result of his behavior since the last Top 100. I also continue to hold Curry exceptionally highly in all of these leadership-related domains.
I do see Durant as fairly easily above Harden so there's more about Harden's issues relative to Curry I could go into, but seeing as how no one is actually arguing for Harden and I don't expect Harden to gain any traction for a good while, I'll leave it at that.
Not really. His ability to volume scorer goes down and is soundly below Durant's
Okay, so I think we're approaching an impasse. You're basically throwing out a bunch of stuff do to "Durant scores better in the playoffs" and when I point out how small the difference is between them by your chosen metric, you're not coming back with anything that indicates you're chewing on this. You just keep coming back with versions of "But Durant still has an edge in that one area, so end of argument there". I'm working on the assumption that you understand that there's more to the game than this one facet, and merely having a small edge here does not render the rest of basketball moot.
Joey Wheeler wrote:, but there's more. On offense, the gravitational effect of his shooting also goes down when defenses can key in on him, the Warriors playoff offenses in the non-Durant years were nothing special. They were actually worse than Durant's with OKC in general.
Okay so first: It really feels like you're trying to not credit Curry at all for the gravitational effect his shooting had which enabled Durant's 2017 finals performance that you see as basically proof that Durant was better than Curry. Just remember: You don't get a performance like that from Durant without Curry.
Re: Actually worse than Durant's in OKC. Hmm, let's look at it year by year, which player had the higher on-court playoff ORtg:
'12-13: Curry
'13-14: Curry
'14-15: Curry by default, Durant wasn't in the playoffs.
'15-16: Durant
So in terms of years you can hope to compare them by a metric like this, Curry had the edge in each year except for '15-16 when Curry's team beat Durant's team and Durant decided to abandon ship to join Curry's afterward.
Joey Wheeler wrote:Curry is also far more exploitable on defense due to his lack of size/physicality, while Durant can be a positive contributor on that end.
I keep trying to address the single point you said was the main point and you keep on throwing in whatever other argument comes to your mind.
If you decide to give Durant the nod based on defense, I get that. I'd point out - as I've already done - that overall impact metrics give Curry the nod, but I do understand your perspective there.
But you said your main focus was on Durant's volume scoring edge in the playoffs, so that's what I'm trying to concentrate on trying to make you see that that your perception of that gap is likely overblown compared to reality.
Joey Wheeler wrote:Your arguments for Curry over Durant seem based on hypotheticals of what a game-breaking shooter could do. Yes, a guy with game-breaking shooting ability could theoretically rise above everyone else. But in the playoffs, especially in the biggest/toughest series, Curry did not rise above everyone else. I don't see how this can be ignored.
That was literally just the first of 6 statements I made and it was about the nature of basketball not Curry. The rest of the points that followed are the ones that pertain specifically to what we've seen from Curry, which includes his gravitational impact.
Re: Curry did not rise above everyone else. By raw volume scoring numbers he's barely behind Durant, and Curry's gravitational impact is an additional boost that goes beyond that.
I'll put it to you this way, compare these two scenarios:
It's the summer of 2016 and rather than Durant going to GS, GS clones Curry and and OKC clones Durant. Which team improves more offensively?
I'm arguing GS. I'm arguing that the reason why Curry + Durant was so effective had everything to do with the fact that Curry remains extremely valuable even when he's off-ball and thus he's a more scalable. By contrast, I don't think adding another Durant onto OKC helps your offense all that much.
And I'll go further and say that adding Curry to OKC would have been huge. Would have really made life easier for Durant & Westbrook. That's what off-ball impact does.
I'm saying that I think you take Durant's volume scoring particularly at an opportune moment, along with the fact that the team became the playoff GOAT with Durant's arrival, and trying to say Durant was the cause of things far more than Curry, and I think you've got that backwards.
Joey Wheeler wrote:Aside from ignoring Curry's playoff struggles, you also seem to be ignoring his relatively poor longevity.
Curry's playoff struggles where he nearly won 5 championships in a row, only lost two series total, and lost the 2nd of those on a crippled team that he was carrying heroically? Let's not blow things out of proportion. You're putting a ton of focus on one specific series (2016 finals) to judge Curry's entire run.
Re: ignoring relatively poor longevity. Please stop trying to turn this back around at me. You want to specifically address my 6 bullet points one by one? Go for it. I'm trying to have a meaningful conversation based on what you said the most important thing was to you, and you keep trying to take us on tangents.
Focusing the conversation on a key point of disagreement is not "ignoring" everything else, it's the process by which intellectuals actually get anywhere in a complex space. We can shift to talk about whatever you want, but when you try to paint me as if I'm manipulating things when I'm just doing what people have done for thousands of years in the intellectual space, you come off like someone who is just trying to win however you can think to win.
Joey Wheeler wrote: To argue for Curry here, I think you have to put a huge premium on RS peak.
I mean, let's not act like Curry doesn't have more playoff success than Durant does. Is it so hard to believe that someone might conclude that the guy with more team playoff success who also has the more portable/scalable skillset is the guy more likely to help you get to a chip?
But there is a thing here relating to how we see the '15-16 regular season. If you see that as something utterly divorced from what Curry can do in the playoffs, then it's quite understandable why you'd pick Durant.
As I've said, I don't think the qualitative difference in your mind between Durant's volume scoring ability and Curry's volume scoring ability is accurate. It's a considerably smaller gap than that, there's more to scoring impact than direct points scored, and it's not like we have seen runs where Curry is dominant in the playoffs given that literally the last time we saw Curry without Durant, he was busy scoring tons of 30 point games.
Joey Wheeler wrote:That said, although I believe Durant is the superior player, I agree with you on intangibles, Curry seems to bring more off-court in ways that actively help you win a title, but it's hard to really quantify that..
I think you have every right to ignore these intangibles when you rank players, but when you do so, you're essentially trying to be the dumbest GM in the world.
I'm sorry if that's super-inflammatory. I'm not saying you're dumb, and there's lots of other really smart posters here who do the same thing, but to me it just makes sense to try to emulate the process by which GMs and their staff earn their keep.
Does it matter that you're talking about one guy here who is mature and secure in himself and allow others to shine without jealousy while the other guy takes the most joyful culture in the NBA and after a year there during which they win the championship and he gets Finals MVP, he comes back sour and effectively covers the locker room with broken glass until he decides to leave?
Yes. It would matter to every single GM & coach a great deal, and thus despite the difficulties in quantification, my philosophy is that we've got to try our best, just like the GMs and coaches do.
If I want a guy to build my franchise and its culture around, it's Curry over Durant and it's not close.
But as I say, I'm not saying you can't ignore all of this stuff. It's your right to do so.
Joey Wheeler wrote:I think Curry's superiority over Harden needs to be established and not just assumed. Yes, Curry is getting traction already and Harden likely won't for a while. But looking at the numbers and what they did since they both started their prime more or less at the same time, you really have to ask why that is the case...
Hmm. My first thought is:
Y'know both of these guys played with Durant on teams that should be looked at as superteams. How did those teams compare?
'11-12 Thunder playoff ORtg: 111.8
'16-17 Warriors playoff ORtg: 119.0
You seem to be saying a lot of "I understand the theory of Curry's value, but in practice, isn't this all turning out about the same?", and I just don't think it is.
Now, you may find it unfair that I used '11-12 or other stuff, and you're free to point that out, but the fact of the matter is that Durant, Westbrook, and Harden were 3 guys who would soon prove to be MVPs based on offense, and together they didn't show any ability to create an offense like what the Warriors did.
Last note on primes:
I consider Steph Curry's prime to begin in '12-13, and I think most people are clear as to why given that Curry's '11-12 was lost to injury. But I think also that if you just hand the offense to Curry earlier (and kick Monta "miss'em all" Ellis to the curb), you're talking about a guy who basically could have been an all-star by his 2nd season if not earlier. Regardless of that, an area where I diverge from most is that I rated Curry as the 4th best player in the NBA in '12-13.
I consider James Harden's prime to begin in '11-12. Despite the fact that Harden missed a chunk of the season, based on what I saw in the playoffs I rated Harden as a Top 10 player at that time, and through 2012 I rated Harden as having had the superior career.
Curry took the lead for me in '12-13 and never looked back. The only times where I've ranked Harden above Curry for the year since '11-12 were '17-18 and '19-20 when Curry had significant injuries. If you'd like to drill down on a particular year, we could.