esqtvd wrote:og15 wrote:Well, I have no argument that Lou is good in the playoffs, and I've argued the opposite in fact, so you are preaching to the choir.
I can't even say he'll be better than Reggie Jackson in the playoffs, he could be, but Reggie has done decently well in the playoffs. My only point is that Clippers have three bench guards who all have an issue for playing them in the playoffs, and for all of them, defense to some degree is one of those issues. Mann the 4th bench guard is the only one who can defend, though he has other short comings.
So unless Lou is traded for a guard who can defend, the bench guard problem doesn't go away by just trading him. Where I lack confidence is that the team can find a trade partner that wants him and sends back a valuable piece.
If you want a guard who can defend, sign Sindarius. The NBA in 2021 is not about defense, it's about putting the ball in the hole. That's why Sindarius is unemployed again. He can't.
Lou had a FANTASTIC playoffs vs GSW 2 years ago! 21.7 ppg and 7.7 assists. Last year's Mickey Mouse Playoffs proved nothing. Lou just carried us through the last month along with PG. It's time for the rest of this team to stop getting a free ride. Kawhi, PG and Lou are dragging the rest on their backs.
Lou has a whole career of data, if that season was the norm, great, but it's not, so citing that one good playoffs consisting of 6 of his 71 playoff games doesn't really make sense as an argument that he's good in the playoffs, especially since he can't have the basically first option role he had in that series on this team.
Lou has played 12 playoff series' and had one good one, and you want to argue that the outlier is the expectation? You realize that last season's "Mickey Mouse" playoffs lined up with all his other 11 series, so why are we taking the outlier as the standard? The other factor is that 2019 was 2 years ago, and Lou is a player in his 30's, which means there's always the expectation of reduced productivity due to age.
His TS% has consistently gone down since 17-18, so there's a possible decline going on. This is similar to Jamal Crawford all over again, the same types of arguments were made, and we kept getting the same results, sorry, I'm not going to be fooled into believing Lou is a good playoff performer.
If Lou performs great in the playoffs, guess what? I'll cheer and be extremely happy, but that doesn't mean I'll expect what should not be expected.
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The NBA is and will always be about doing both (offense and defense).
Last 5 champs:
Lakers #3 Drtg
Raptors #5 Drtg
Warriors #11 Drtg (#1 Playoff Drtg)
Warriors #2 Drtg
Cleveland #10 Drtg
The only team out of the top 10 ( barely) was GS who was coasting through the regular season and then had a dominant playoff defense.
The current NBA also offensively isn't simply about putting the ball in the basket, it's about doing it efficiently, hence why Westbrook despite being able to put up numbers is considered one of the league's worst contracts and not tradable. He can certainly put up PPG, but no one cares.
It's even harder to defend now, and teams that can't defend well will still have issues. It's also why guys like Ryan Anderson who you could previously hide and keep for elite shooting are no longer NBA players. Thornwell is not a stopper or elite defensive player AND he's not a reliable shooter. It's not like he's Lugentz Dort on defense. He doesn't have the size to handle so many positions and as far as I remember still fouls too much, so that's a pretty terrible counter example.
A proper counter example is someone like KCP who the Lakers played 29 mpg through their championship run, and you would say "only averaged 10.7 ppg", yes, but he can knock down shots efficiently and defend well. A proper counter example is Lou's own teammate Beverley who can barely create offense but is the starter and the Clippers paid more money to, because he defense and can shoot. A proper counter example is "only 7.6 ppg" Royce O'Neale playing 33 mpg as a starter for the best record in the league Jazz. A proper counter example is Robert Covington averaging 7.9 ppg and starting on Portland despite struggling with his shot through the season.
Then we have Draymond Green who hardly ever puts the ball in the basket, but positively affects the Warriors both offensively with playmaking and defensively, and many other examples including Batum on the Clippers. He’s averaging like 5 ppg.
There's no need to stick our head in the sand about it. There are players who can definitely help you win and pick up slack in the regular season but aren't reliable in the playoffs. It happens, Lou through his career is that player. We don't know what we will get consistently from him in the playoffs offensively and efficiency wise, and his defense is a concern. This is reality, it's not something that has to be debated. Now, whether the team can manage that reality is the question.