Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history

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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#121 » by dhsilv2 » Fri Mar 5, 2021 2:30 pm

Lockdown504090 wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:
Lockdown504090 wrote:While this is all true, it doesnt take away from what he does overall in the RS. in 3/4 of the games hes not playing a top guy that doenst care about his length and he has a massive impact on those games defensively . I would rather have simmons AD bam giannis and draymond green in the playoffs on defense in the playoffs because they are more versitile and can guard with both feet above the 3 point line though. Dpoy is a RS award though, so I wouldnt call him overrated as a dpoy, hes just never going to be the best because there are guys who can do more.

This would be like saying James harden is a better scorer than mike and durant because he does a bunch of things that lend itself to RS success while having weaknesses that will prevent him from beating more well rounded and better scorers.


Gobert has been great in the playoffs....once his coach made adjustments to counter the rocket's schemes. The problem for the Jazz was how slow their coaching staff was to make adjustments. Great coaches can make adjustments in game. Good coaches need a game to adjust. The Jazz needed two full games before they were able to make meaningful adjustments. Defense today isn't like the 90's where good old man to man was good enough to hold down the fort. Today the teamwork on that end is critical and coaching plays a much bigger role on that side of the ball.

the second time he was good, yes. they also played a lot of zone, and I dont think the strategies they had to employ against them would be sucessful against other teams which is why they didnt go to a lot of those things against denver in the bubble. to your point about todays defense I agree, which is why goberts value has always been less than what it is in the playoffs. I do not think hes bad, I just dont think he is as good as the other people I mentioned, and there is a dropoff, which is a problem for someone who is also really a slight positive on offense because of the jazz's scheme which is also countered by those defenders i mentioned.

My issue with him, is that teams can run plays when rudy is on the court, switching defenses totally get teams out of their pnr sets and forces iso ball. The clippers did it to them. the heat do it, the lakers will do it at as well, and rudy cant do that back. So if he is playing traditional pnr defense and you have a star that can score against rudy, which some have shown they can( I dont think james harden is an elite finisher in the paint btw), rudy becomes something less than a dpoy.

If you have a guy like steph who can get kawhi on a switch(not saying kawhi is better than rudy) and cook him like he does everyone else, whats kawhi giving you on defense? he can still be switchable on other players, he can get in the passing lane at an all time great level, he can contest jumpers really well, and hes more mobile.

He wasnt great agains tthe warriors, he wasnt great against rockets the first time, and he had little effect on jokic or murray last year. He has been good against some teams, just not anyone great, unless you think he was good in any of the series i mentioned or i'm forgetting someone.

I would like to see him with better surrounding talent though, royce oneil is good, but a lot of his sucess on D is because rudy exists. Theyre playing him in many lineups with a bunch of guys with little defensive talent, what would he look like if he had ben simmons or paul george out there with him i wonder.

Again... i think hes good, just not as good as he is in the RS


If you look at Embiid he doesn't get put into these situations at nearly the same rate, in large part because he has better defenders around him. To be honest, I still am not sure Ben is a better defender than Embiid on that topic, but the reality is they both make each other LOOK better, even if the aren't better per say together. This is the same reason Bowen got more love than Duncan for years in DPOY voting.

As for playoffs, if a team has to adjust and change their offense to take a guy out of the game, that's generally a net possessive. The problem is if the rest of the team is weak defensively. So now you compound the issue of a coach who's slow to adjust with a player effectively being stretched too thin. It's kinda the same thing as a great slasher is better surrounded by 3 point shooters. An iso guy like Leonard benefited greatly from having 4 shooters on the floor on the raptors, but with George struggling and a worse shooting clippers team, he looked much more mortal. Same player, still a great playoff player, but it's a team game and the team's weaknesses end up reflecting poorly on the stars.

That isn't to say I am going to argue that Gobert is without flaws, if he was flawless, a lot of the coaching items would matter less. But we saw Giannis look bad against miami on defense (imo that was as big a reason as they lost as his offense). Giannis has the benefit of Lopez being a wall he can fall back on and it lets him be the best version of a "free safety" as he can be. But and I don't have that series etched in my brain as well as I'd like, it seemed the heat were able to take Giannis out of his element.

we still have people talking about Hakeem destroying Robinson in a series where Robinson was given the task to take on Hakeem while the rockets built a whole defense around Robinson (wasn't like he had shooters or other options).
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#122 » by Baski » Fri Mar 5, 2021 3:22 pm

USWAY wrote:
You mistake me for someone who hasn't already said in this thread that Rudy is one of the best defenders in recent memory. His value as an anchor and rim protector is noted and each DPOY he's won is deserved. We're talking about the two best defensive players in the NBA so in reality we're splitting hairs.

The problem with this is that your argument would have Rudy behind a bunch of defenders, not just Ben, and thus outside of the top 2 like you're saying.
You don't switch him to anyone else, but in those situations he loses a lot of his value and the Jazz' team defense structure completely falls apart.

He loses as much value as any defensive superstar does when they get torched (which happens way more frequently than folks here think apparently) . Regardless of how badly he's being destroyed, you know that noone else on the team will do better. That's why you put him there in the first place. Looking to switch him off is rarely a good idea, especially with the Jazz's defensive talent.
The defense structure completely falls apart because he's the only elite defender, not because one guy is torching him. Did the Warriors defensive structure fall apart when guys like Anthony Davis and LeBron James were going off against their matchups? No because they had other elite defenders to help stop their teammates. As long as the Jazz as a team can stop the rest of the 76ers from scoring, Embiid going off (as superstars often do) would not matter. The numbers show that Rudy is doing his part on the other 4 players. If he could just get Klay Thompson, Andre Iguodala, LeBron James or Ben Simmons on his team, nobody would care about Embiid going off because the 76ers would lose.
If Rudy can't anchor and defend the paint against the best centers, then is he just taking advantage of a league that lacked strong offensive bigs for a while? Is the Jazz' "team defense" structure that just funnels players to him at the rim (where he's obviously elite) really what makes is defensive metrics so other worldly?

The problem is that his defensive impact doesn't come from shutting down only his matchup. It's from shutting down the opposing team, so even when his matchup is going off, the rest of the team generally doesn't. You're still getting huge value from Rudy. And when he's shutting everybody down that's even better.
If all it took for teams to win games is to shut down the opponent's best player you wouldn't have so many series where one guy goes off and they still lose in 4 or 5 games. The vast majority of players shoot much worse and less frequently when Rudy is near them. That's what's important for the Jazz defense, not Jokic or Embiid's scoring numbers.
Meanwhile, Ben Simmons has taken his defensive game to another level this year. He can legitimately guard 1-5 effectively. Night after night, this dude is taking on the best offensive assignment from perimeter players of all shapes and sizes. I've seen him hold Lillard to 6-21, shut down Doncic, then hold Mitchell to 33on 34 shots the other night; all within the last month. The dudes he's taking on are the most important offensive hubs for their respective teams and he's shutting them down. I just think that matters.

Versatility matters a lot, but it doesn't automatically put anyone above anyone else. As versatile as Ben Simmons is, he can't check Towns, Davis, Embiid or Jokic as well as Gobert can. He can't protect the rim as well as Rudy, by far the most important defensive skill, which is why Gobert can provide that much value even though he's not super versatile.
KG can do pretty much everything on offense but as long as he doesn't provide the scoring impact Shaq does it's moot. And Shaq's offense isn't diminished by the fact that he struggled to score against 6'7" Malik Rose.
Ben is elite no doubt but just being able to do things Rudy can't do doesn't make him better.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#123 » by BenoUdrihFTL » Fri Mar 5, 2021 3:26 pm

USWAY wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:
primecougar wrote:
By your own evaluation, wouldn't that make gobert an average defender?


If you're an average man defender and the best off ball rim protector in the game. You're 99 times out of 100 the best defender in the game.

But I didn't watch the game. Were the Jazz playing Embiid mostly straight up? If so holding a guy to below average efficiency would be incredible defense on an MVP level guy. If they were hard doubling then we'd have to judge the system and double.


I mean, if your making an argument for Rudy as the DPOY and you quote that the leading MVP candidate abused him like he does the rest of the league for 10 more points on marginally less effeciency (-3.5%), I think your going the wrong route. Your basically calling him an average Joe lol.

Read on Twitter

Virtually all of these buckets were in the paint, mostly deep in the paint. 3 highly efficient scorers converting only 54% of them actually speaks to Gobert's defensive prowess. If the guy who posted this tweet was trying to clown on Gobert... it kinda backfired
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#124 » by dhsilv2 » Fri Mar 5, 2021 3:47 pm

BenoUdrihFTL wrote:Virtually all of these buckets were in the paint, mostly deep in the paint. 3 highly efficient scorers converting only 54% of them actually speaks to Gobert's defensive prowess. If the guy who posted this tweet was trying to clown on Gobert... it kinda backfired


I just watched the video itself. If you're clowning a guy's defense for Simmons hitting a running hooker with a hand in his face as bad defense...we don't agree on what defense is. There was a blow by from Embiid you'd like to not see and he got over powered a time or two, but otherwise this was a reel of highlight level defense with guys just making really tough shots.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#125 » by kuclas » Fri Mar 5, 2021 4:17 pm

The issue isn't that Gobert is over rated. It's just that he's the Mark Eaton of the current era. Eaton was 2x defensive player of the year as well. For that era Eaton played, he was a big tall statue but did what he needed to. That's Gobert for today's NBA era. Eaton lasted 10-11 years in NBA and he started his career late. So Gobert will last a good 2-3 more seasons at this "elite" defensive level.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#126 » by Nate505 » Fri Mar 5, 2021 4:57 pm

kuclas wrote:The issue isn't that Gobert is over rated. It's just that he's the Mark Eaton of the current era. Eaton was 2x defensive player of the year as well. For that era Eaton played, he was a big tall statue but did what he needed to. That's Gobert for today's NBA era. Eaton lasted 10-11 years in NBA and he started his career late. So Gobert will last a good 2-3 more seasons at this "elite" defensive level.

I saw both of them play, and Gobert is miles ahead of what Eaton was as a player. Not only is his defense better (though it's a hard comparison as Eaton played in an era where everyone and their mother didn't shoot 3s), he is about 100x the offensive player Eaton was. Which is more about just how useless Eaton was on that end.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#127 » by KGtabake » Fri Mar 5, 2021 5:05 pm

kuclas wrote:The issue isn't that Gobert is over rated. It's just that he's the Mark Eaton of the current era. Eaton was 2x defensive player of the year as well. For that era Eaton played, he was a big tall statue but did what he needed to. That's Gobert for today's NBA era. Eaton lasted 10-11 years in NBA and he started his career late. So Gobert will last a good 2-3 more seasons at this "elite" defensive level.


There aren't any "issues" regarding Gobert.
The "issue" is that the GB is filled with dumb threads this season (corona effect?).
Literally every two days we're having a bashing thread for some player who is elite by all means (awards, stats, value to the team) and has proven it through the years.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#128 » by SoulJah » Fri Mar 5, 2021 5:28 pm

kio80 wrote:
sashaturiaf wrote:Good offense always beats good defense. If you want to "stop" a top offensive player in the league, you gotta scheme for it as a team. One man won't get it done


Simmons clamped up little Bitchell, took him 34 shots to score 33, didn’t need any scheme, or does midget chucker boy just suck?


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Dude, calm yourself down, you're still not winning a championship with a player who can't make a shot outside of 5 feet running a point. I'm not even a Jazz fan but even I know if refs hadn't helped you guys out, Jazz had that game. We all know how refs treat that team. Of Simmons clamps, watch him closely, most of his drives are offensive fouls and his defense is fouled but for some reason, he gets the benefit of the doubt every time. At the end of the day, Sixers are fakes, aren't winning anything anytime soon, so just enjoy the top spot however long you have it for.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#129 » by ADMVP » Fri Mar 5, 2021 7:58 pm

He didn't deserve it in 2018 vs Davis either.

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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#130 » by Eagle4 » Fri Mar 5, 2021 8:17 pm

6:45 unk Sharpe and skip see it. Everyone with eyes but Realgmers see it.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#131 » by kuclas » Sat Mar 6, 2021 2:33 am

Nate505 wrote:
kuclas wrote:The issue isn't that Gobert is over rated. It's just that he's the Mark Eaton of the current era. Eaton was 2x defensive player of the year as well. For that era Eaton played, he was a big tall statue but did what he needed to. That's Gobert for today's NBA era. Eaton lasted 10-11 years in NBA and he started his career late. So Gobert will last a good 2-3 more seasons at this "elite" defensive level.

I saw both of them play, and Gobert is miles ahead of what Eaton was as a player. Not only is his defense better (though it's a hard comparison as Eaton played in an era where everyone and their mother didn't shoot 3s), he is about 100x the offensive player Eaton was. Which is more about just how useless Eaton was on that end.

Eaton was very good defensively. Don’t sell him short. I saw him play also. Here are some old YouTube high lights. He held his own against the greats.

https://youtu.be/nHHbfKFhqdE

As for offense. Eaton was very limited offensively. But considering the era va today’s era. I have zero doubt with more wide spread offense. With put backs and easy dunks. He’s probably average 10-12 points a game. Still less than Gobert 14-15 points a game. But not that far off.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#132 » by stormi » Sat Mar 6, 2021 3:28 am

Eagle4 wrote:6:45 unk Sharpe and skip see it. Everyone with eyes but Realgmers see it.


I haven't watched a Skip Bayless segment in years. I didn't know they were allowed to refer players by troll monikers like "Pandemic P" :lol:
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#133 » by baldur » Sat Mar 6, 2021 3:42 am

overrated and also perennial? these two words shouldn't mesh very well.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#134 » by primecougar » Tue Mar 9, 2021 2:36 am

XTC wrote:
jamaalstar21 wrote:I don't want to invoke the "c word" on here, but if your only way of analyzing defense is matchups/man to man/on-ball... you're a casual. (i'm sorry lord they made me say it, I promise I won't do it again.).

Gobert was never special because of his man-to-man defense. The guy came into the league at 230lbs, he was never built to bang. Gobert is special because he's got ridiculously long arms, has great anticipation, and is graceful in his rotations. Gobert's job is to protect the paint and make life hard for the entire other team, not just one guy. 1 on 1 post defense... isn't a special skill. Andrea Bargnani was a pretty sick 1 on 1 post defender... and he's one of the worst defensive 5s we've ever seen play 30mpg.

Ben Wallace was my favorite player in the early 2000s, and while he was a really good one-on-one defender, that's not why he was winning DPOY. He won DPOY because of his "no-fly zone"; he made it really hard to get easy shots in the paint. Wallace wasn't matchup-proof either. Just like Rudy is skinny, Ben was short. He'd rough up KG and Duncan, but sometimes they'd just turn and shoot. Rudy can still bother Jokic/Embiid with that length, but they're going to try to body him every chance they get.

Believe it or not, DPOY is not an award for: "how well you matchup with the best players at your position". It's about overall defensive impact. Rudy Gobert is a defensive monster. Utah is a top 3 defense this year, despite having a more offensive slanted roster.


Damn homie just ended the thread just like that :lol:

The same posters calling out Gobert are the same guys who think Mourning, Dwight, and Ben Wallace where not great defenders because they got dunked on :lol:

I wish I could give this post a +100


Rudy gobert struggles with elite bigs and struggles in the pick and roll. A guy that's only known for his defense, those are big glaring holes that can be exposed in the playoffs. He has struggled mightly in playoffs because of those holes. He can't be regarded as the best defensive player in the league, if you have massive holes that can be exposed.

If you think gobert is the dpoy, you should also think giannis is the best offensive player in the league. They both have great regular season numbers but they have holes in their games that can be exposed.

The rockets were happy to face gobert in the playoffs, kd doesn't regard him as a top defensive player, other players in the league don't regard him highly, and his advanced stats in the playoffs are terrible compared what he normally averages.

Calling people causal but you can barely breakdown a player.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#135 » by cupcakesnake » Tue Mar 9, 2021 2:27 pm

primecougar wrote:
XTC wrote:
jamaalstar21 wrote:I don't want to invoke the "c word" on here, but if your only way of analyzing defense is matchups/man to man/on-ball... you're a casual. (i'm sorry lord they made me say it, I promise I won't do it again.).

Gobert was never special because of his man-to-man defense. The guy came into the league at 230lbs, he was never built to bang. Gobert is special because he's got ridiculously long arms, has great anticipation, and is graceful in his rotations. Gobert's job is to protect the paint and make life hard for the entire other team, not just one guy. 1 on 1 post defense... isn't a special skill. Andrea Bargnani was a pretty sick 1 on 1 post defender... and he's one of the worst defensive 5s we've ever seen play 30mpg.

Ben Wallace was my favorite player in the early 2000s, and while he was a really good one-on-one defender, that's not why he was winning DPOY. He won DPOY because of his "no-fly zone"; he made it really hard to get easy shots in the paint. Wallace wasn't matchup-proof either. Just like Rudy is skinny, Ben was short. He'd rough up KG and Duncan, but sometimes they'd just turn and shoot. Rudy can still bother Jokic/Embiid with that length, but they're going to try to body him every chance they get.

Believe it or not, DPOY is not an award for: "how well you matchup with the best players at your position". It's about overall defensive impact. Rudy Gobert is a defensive monster. Utah is a top 3 defense this year, despite having a more offensive slanted roster.


Damn homie just ended the thread just like that :lol:

The same posters calling out Gobert are the same guys who think Mourning, Dwight, and Ben Wallace where not great defenders because they got dunked on :lol:

I wish I could give this post a +100


Rudy gobert struggles with elite bigs and struggles in the pick and roll. A guy that's only known for his defense, those are big glaring holes that can be exposed in the playoffs. He has struggled mightly in playoffs because of those holes. He can't be regarded as the best defensive player in the league, if you have massive holes that can be exposed.


I dont agree with Rudy "struggling" with either of these things. Especially not to the point where they're considered massive holes. Houston was an overall matchup problem with Utah, and yes Utah did attempt to go small against them a couple times when nothing else worked. This created some narrative hype around the DPOY getting "played off the floor". Utah's standard defense with Gobert playing in drop coverage was always going to be a problem against Hardenball. Gobert is a paint protector, and Houston had a unique ability to just avoid the paint whenever they wanted. Harden step backs obviously, but also fakes into the paint to generate open threes. Houston was a matchup hunter in the Harden days, avoiding Gobert and attacking specific players was a big part of their game plan. Watching the games in the last series they played against each other, there were a lot of interesting adjustments in Utah's defense, and Gobert was a clear driver of success when Utah played Houston well.

In terms of struggling against elite bigs... I honestly haven't looked at it much. I thought Utah actually guarded Jokic well overall, forcing Jokic to attack one on one, rather than waking up the entire Nuggets offense. Jokic has always shown reluctance to be a high volume scorer. It was imo, a good strategy against Jokic and Denver. Unfortunately, Jokic got over this reluctance as the series went on, Jamal Murray went infernal, and Denver also started cobbling together an NBA level defense. Jokic is probably the most complete offensive center ever, and great player that he is, he figured things out and kept bombing from 3. I guess I'd need to see evidence that Gobert guards Jokic, Embiid worse than anyone else in the NBA? But are people saying that? Or are they just overreacting to one game where Embiid bodied Gobert?

primecougar wrote:If you think gobert is the dpoy, you should also think giannis is the best offensive player in the league. They both have great regular season numbers but they have holes in their games that can be exposed.


No. Thinking something about one player, does not equal thinking another thing about another player. You making a single correlation between them does not make that so.

primecougar wrote:The rockets were happy to face gobert in the playoffs, kd doesn't regard him as a top defensive player, other players in the league don't regard him highly, and his advanced stats in the playoffs are terrible compared what he normally averages.


It's clear opposing players don't like Gobert. I listened to the podcast where he hated on Gobert. KD celebrated guys who specifically guarded him well (Tony Allen, Jrue Holiday). But player analysis of other players in the NBA is usually pretty suspect. I'm sure we've both read 1000x idiot/biased quotes from players about other players, so I don't really understand why people ever bring them up as some sort of interesting proof. If I don't like Gobert, I'm gonna trash him in the media maybe. So all I learned is that KD doesn't like Gobert.

Can you cite actual advanced stats in the playoffs that are comparable to what he normally averages? He's got bad on/off against Houston, but besides that everything seems to hold pretty steady. Rudy's playoff history isn't really that bad. He was injured in his first playoff series and then came back to help close out the Clippers. Utah then got wrecked by Golden State like everyone else. He was a monster against OKC. Then Utah ran into Houston for 2 years. The Chris Paul/James Harden Rockets were a bad matchup for them, and also just.... a really really good team. That 2018 teams imo is one of the best teams to not win a championship. I don't think it's great bball analysis to make big conclusions about the Jazz or Gobert based off a single team matchup. All that aside, digging deep into the Houston Jazz playoff games, unearths a lot of great defense from Gobert, even as Utah adjusted its scheme 3 times across the 2 series.

primecougar wrote:Calling people causal but you can barely breakdown a player.


The casual thing was a just a joke. I apologize if it didn't come across well. Team defense value vs. man defense value is one of those things that I've personally completely switched on the more I've learned about basketball. I remember not understanding why the numbers said Robert Covington was better than Avery Bradley for example. Bradley was clearly a menace to whoever he was guarding when they had the ball in his hands, and I watched Covington get blown by, by elite guards and wings pretty regularly. (by the way, I guarantee Durant would also say Avery Bradley is better than Cocoington.) Realizing that I didn't actually watch off-ball defense, and therefor barely saw Covington's ability to help and recover, gumming up entire offenses, made me re-think defense. This isn't a unique take on my part. I learned this from watching the professionals do film breakdown, people who can more than "barely breakdown a player".

I'm not a huge Gobert fan. I don't specifically root for him. But when people analyze his defense based on single games, or specific styles of matchups, and extrapolate that into sweeping conclusions, I'll admit, I feel pushing back on that.

im Stealing a lot Gobert takes from:
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#136 » by primecougar » Wed Mar 10, 2021 1:03 am

jamaalstar21 wrote:
primecougar wrote:
XTC wrote:
Damn homie just ended the thread just like that :lol:

The same posters calling out Gobert are the same guys who think Mourning, Dwight, and Ben Wallace where not great defenders because they got dunked on :lol:

I wish I could give this post a +100


Rudy gobert struggles with elite bigs and struggles in the pick and roll. A guy that's only known for his defense, those are big glaring holes that can be exposed in the playoffs. He has struggled mightly in playoffs because of those holes. He can't be regarded as the best defensive player in the league, if you have massive holes that can be exposed.


I dont agree with Rudy "struggling" with either of these things. Especially not to the point where they're considered massive holes. Houston was an overall matchup problem with Utah, and yes Utah did attempt to go small against them a couple times when nothing else worked. This created some narrative hype around the DPOY getting "played off the floor". Utah's standard defense with Gobert playing in drop coverage was always going to be a problem against Hardenball. Gobert is a paint protector, and Houston had a unique ability to just avoid the paint whenever they wanted. Harden step backs obviously, but also fakes into the paint to generate open threes. Houston was a matchup hunter in the Harden days, avoiding Gobert and attacking specific players was a big part of their game plan. Watching the games in the last series they played against each other, there were a lot of interesting adjustments in Utah's defense, and Gobert was a clear driver of success when Utah played Houston well.

In terms of struggling against elite bigs... I honestly haven't looked at it much. I thought Utah actually guarded Jokic well overall, forcing Jokic to attack one on one, rather than waking up the entire Nuggets offense. Jokic has always shown reluctance to be a high volume scorer. It was imo, a good strategy against Jokic and Denver. Unfortunately, Jokic got over this reluctance as the series went on, Jamal Murray went infernal, and Denver also started cobbling together an NBA level defense. Jokic is probably the most complete offensive center ever, and great player that he is, he figured things out and kept bombing from 3. I guess I'd need to see evidence that Gobert guards Jokic, Embiid worse than anyone else in the NBA? But are people saying that? Or are they just overreacting to one game where Embiid bodied Gobert?

primecougar wrote:If you think gobert is the dpoy, you should also think giannis is the best offensive player in the league. They both have great regular season numbers but they have holes in their games that can be exposed.


No. Thinking something about one player, does not equal thinking another thing about another player. You making a single correlation between them does not make that so.

primecougar wrote:The rockets were happy to face gobert in the playoffs, kd doesn't regard him as a top defensive player, other players in the league don't regard him highly, and his advanced stats in the playoffs are terrible compared what he normally averages.


It's clear opposing players don't like Gobert. I listened to the podcast where he hated on Gobert. KD celebrated guys who specifically guarded him well (Tony Allen, Jrue Holiday). But player analysis of other players in the NBA is usually pretty suspect. I'm sure we've both read 1000x idiot/biased quotes from players about other players, so I don't really understand why people ever bring them up as some sort of interesting proof. If I don't like Gobert, I'm gonna trash him in the media maybe. So all I learned is that KD doesn't like Gobert.

Can you cite actual advanced stats in the playoffs that are comparable to what he normally averages? He's got bad on/off against Houston, but besides that everything seems to hold pretty steady. Rudy's playoff history isn't really that bad. He was injured in his first playoff series and then came back to help close out the Clippers. Utah then got wrecked by Golden State like everyone else. He was a monster against OKC. Then Utah ran into Houston for 2 years. The Chris Paul/James Harden Rockets were a bad matchup for them, and also just.... a really really good team. That 2018 teams imo is one of the best teams to not win a championship. I don't think it's great bball analysis to make big conclusions about the Jazz or Gobert based off a single team matchup. All that aside, digging deep into the Houston Jazz playoff games, unearths a lot of great defense from Gobert, even as Utah adjusted its scheme 3 times across the 2 series.

primecougar wrote:Calling people causal but you can barely breakdown a player.


The casual thing was a just a joke. I apologize if it didn't come across well. Team defense value vs. man defense value is one of those things that I've personally completely switched on the more I've learned about basketball. I remember not understanding why the numbers said Robert Covington was better than Avery Bradley for example. Bradley was clearly a menace to whoever he was guarding when they had the ball in his hands, and I watched Covington get blown by, by elite guards and wings pretty regularly. (by the way, I guarantee Durant would also say Avery Bradley is better than Cocoington.) Realizing that I didn't actually watch off-ball defense, and therefor barely saw Covington's ability to help and recover, gumming up entire offenses, made me re-think defense. This isn't a unique take on my part. I learned this from watching the professionals do film breakdown, people who can more than "barely breakdown a player".

I'm not a huge Gobert fan. I don't specifically root for him. But when people analyze his defense based on single games, or specific styles of matchups, and extrapolate that into sweeping conclusions, I'll admit, I feel pushing back on that.

im Stealing a lot Gobert takes from:
;ab_channel=ThinkingBasketball


I appreciate your reply and you do bring some good points about players making idiotic comments. I also agree with you 100% that team defense Is far more important compared to man defence. its easier to notice and appreciate man defense but it would be foolish to think superstars could be stopped 1v1. Its a team game and even great defenders are always shading the offensive player to their help.

I want to be fair and say that Gobert is a really good player and he covers a lot of ground. My problem with Gobert is that the areas he lacks in are PnR defense and 1v1 defence against the top bigs in the league. Over the course of the regular season, he looks really good but once the playoffs start, those weaknesses are exploited which is why his advance numbers drop.

here are the specific stats comparing his past 4 regular season averages vs his post season averages. These numbers were posted on reddit. The problem with his play style is that you can just go small and kinda negate his paint presence like how the rockets did. if you have a decent shooting big, Gobert kinda becomes useless. This is why I compared his def to Giannis offensive skills.
during the regular season it will work but those glaring holes can be exposed or his impact can be lessened with a solid game plan.

Over the past 4 regular seasons Rudy Gobert's Defensive metrics:
Defensive Box Plus/Minus~ 2.2
Defensive Player Impact Plus/Minus~ 4.4(1st in the NBA)
Jacob Goldstein luck-adjusted Defensive On/Off~ 4.16(5th in the NBA)
Gobert Defensive net-rating- 104.84 on court 108.58 off court= +3.74

Past 4 post-seasons
Defensive Box Plus/Minus~ 1.5
Defensive Player Impact Plus-Minus~ 0.93(41st in the NBA)
Jacob Goldstein luck adjusted Defensive On/Off~ -1.73(81st in the NBA)
Gobert Defensie net-rating- 112.97 on court 105.48 off court= -7.49

I don't see what Utah or Gobert can do. either teams will go small vs Utah or when he will struggle vs the elite bigs like Jokic/davis. Gobert won't have the same impact on the game again. I truly think if he was a better offensive player, it would help the team a lot more on def. Teams like the old rockets wouldn't be able to play pj tucker against a 7-1 centre.

teams have figured out what to do with Gobert much like they have giannis figured out. unless they make changes to their game, they will continue to have great regular seasons with disappointing playoffs.
#1 pick wrote:MJ wasn't more skilled than Lebron. Quite the opposite to be honest.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#137 » by JN61 » Wed Mar 10, 2021 1:21 am

BenoUdrihFTL wrote:
USWAY wrote:
dhsilv2 wrote:
If you're an average man defender and the best off ball rim protector in the game. You're 99 times out of 100 the best defender in the game.

But I didn't watch the game. Were the Jazz playing Embiid mostly straight up? If so holding a guy to below average efficiency would be incredible defense on an MVP level guy. If they were hard doubling then we'd have to judge the system and double.


I mean, if your making an argument for Rudy as the DPOY and you quote that the leading MVP candidate abused him like he does the rest of the league for 10 more points on marginally less effeciency (-3.5%), I think your going the wrong route. Your basically calling him an average Joe lol.

Read on Twitter

Virtually all of these buckets were in the paint, mostly deep in the paint. 3 highly efficient scorers converting only 54% of them actually speaks to Gobert's defensive prowess. If the guy who posted this tweet was trying to clown on Gobert... it kinda backfired

Not to mentioning offensive post players are allowed to get away with a murder these days. offhand to push player off/shove them to side is just a norm. Stuff that players do these days would be called offensive foul every time even 40 years ago.
Pennebaker wrote:And Bird did it while being a defensive liability. But he also made All-Defensive teams, which was another controversial issue regarding Bird and votes.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#138 » by Some smartguy » Wed Mar 10, 2021 2:17 am

In a way, I have to sort of agree. It seemed ridiculous at first, but then I thought about it. Gobert is one of the best team/help defending big-men of all-time. I just can't put him as a perennial DPOY candidate over a guy like Giannis or Ben Simmons, since they can guard one-on-one and move better laterally and coming off screens on the perimeter. Gobert allows a few uncontested 3s off of screens if they force a switch, and the DPOY favourite every year should be able to guard both the paint and the perimeter and guard 1-5 or at least 4 positions.
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#139 » by dhsilv2 » Wed Mar 10, 2021 2:51 am

JN61 wrote:
BenoUdrihFTL wrote:
USWAY wrote:
I mean, if your making an argument for Rudy as the DPOY and you quote that the leading MVP candidate abused him like he does the rest of the league for 10 more points on marginally less effeciency (-3.5%), I think your going the wrong route. Your basically calling him an average Joe lol.

Read on Twitter

Virtually all of these buckets were in the paint, mostly deep in the paint. 3 highly efficient scorers converting only 54% of them actually speaks to Gobert's defensive prowess. If the guy who posted this tweet was trying to clown on Gobert... it kinda backfired

Not to mentioning offensive post players are allowed to get away with a murder these days. offhand to push player off/shove them to side is just a norm. Stuff that players do these days would be called offensive foul every time even 40 years ago.


They also let defenders hack post up offensive players....
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Re: Gobert has to be the most overrated perennial DPOY contender in recent history 

Post#140 » by Jazztop » Wed Mar 10, 2021 4:41 am

kio80 wrote:
sashaturiaf wrote:Good offense always beats good defense. If you want to "stop" a top offensive player in the league, you gotta scheme for it as a team. One man won't get it done


Simmons clamped up little Bitchell, took him 34 shots to score 33, didn’t need any scheme, or does midget chucker boy just suck?


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Simmons also locked up Luka. I guess he sucks too

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