Jordan Syndrome wrote:No-more-rings wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
And the 2010 series I alluded for Wade shows this in a nutshell.
In that series against that stellar Boston defense, Wade scored 33.2 PPG on 65.0 TS%. Looks positively GOAT-like.
His team had an ORtg of 97.8, which was 6.1 worse than what the Celtics allowed in the regular season, despite the fact that in the regular season the Heat's offense was pretty much average.
Some will see that and think "My gosh, imagine if Wade had better teammates!", but you do have to remember that it's not the defenses job to keep Wade from scoring, it's their job to keep the Heat from scoring. And they did that well enough they didn't even have to really break a sweat before moving on to the next round.
So i don't think you should leave out, or perhaps forgot what Boston did to other offenses in the playoffs.
Vs the Heat, 97.8 ORTG, their regular season was 106.6(-8.8)
Vs the Cavs, 103 ORTG, their regular season was 111.2(-8.2)
Vs the Magic, 102.5 ORTG, their regular season was 111.4(-8.9)
Vs the Lakers, 106.1 ORTG, their regular season was 108.8(-2.7)
I'd also invite you to look at how much better those teams did in the other series that year. The Heat's dropoff in ORTG wasn't any worse than the Cavs or Magic.
Really, there's nothing Wade could've done about Jermaine Oneal not being able to hit wide open jumpers but hey let's not let context get in the way of things.
If I am to have understood Doc MJ's post it boiled down to "Wade is good enough to get his numbers but not good enough to raise his teammates level of play". There has never been a case during Nash's peak where his team's Offensive Rating cratered like Wade's did, and one has to think if it has to do with generating open shots.
When the 2005 Suns went up against a 98.8 (1st) Defense in the San Antonio Spurs, the Suns posted a 114.0 Offensive Rating in the series. Nash, against the best team in the NBA, was able to control the tempo and pace of the game to give his team the best opportunity to win. Now, here is the thing, in the previous round, the Spurs faced the #2 ranked offense in the Supersonics (R.I.P) and held them to -4.5 their regular season Offensive Rating.
If we switch over to check out Wade and the Heat, the Heat struggled to create shots even though the ball was in the hands of Wade just as much, if not more than Nash's in 2005. This is a tell-tale sign of Wade being, as Doc MJ mentioned, a tremendous volume scorer and a secondary playmaker but not a primary, catalyst offensively like Steve Nash. I will say that just because Wade and Nash are different molds and Nash is an offensive catalyst doesn't make Nash the better player (this project does have Durant ahead of Nash as well--another player who isn't a catalyst offensively) but to try to paint Wade as something he isn't just isn't right or accurate.
I never denied that Nash was better at raising team ORTGs, but if people want to just remove all context when it comes to Wade, i don't know what else to say other than we can't do that. Teams can adjust to styles and that's what the Spurs did considering they put up a 118.6 ORTG against the Suns. The Suns were also held to under 100 points twice in that series which seems pretty damning for a Dn'toni-Nash team.

















