ATLTimekeeper wrote:sidsid wrote:I think it does matter if OG is guarding Durant instead of FVV, and Durant would agree with me, along with every coach in the league. And if it didn't matter, you could put 5 FVVs on the floor - I mean, there's no difference defensively and everyone is unstoppable and there are no downsides at all to doing that - and start winning some 'chips.
No, that's not what I mean. You've reduced defense to individual match-ups, when we both know that Kevin Durant can't get the FVV match-up every time he wants. If it's individualized, still Durant is scoring on Simmons, prime Rodman, Pippen, you name it. It's not, though, and that's why FVV is still really valuable defensively. That's what those stats are useful for, and why you have no examples of FVV getting picked on defensively in the playoffs. They put him on Curry in the Finals. They tried Kawhi and he got destroyed in under a quarter and had to be moved off.
Your reply to my post reduced defense down to "Durant is unstoppable so it doesn't matter", not me. My entire post explains the advantages of big, versatile Defenders individually and as a group. Wishing all of that away is why your Ben vs. FVV defense argument doesn't hold water and why you're avoiding it here.
Durant absolutely can get the FVV matchup whenever he wants, and the 4th quarter "watch Durant work" offense is exactly when it would happen.
The reason we don't have stats for it is because our chip run didn't run into them. We did have a Jimmy Butler problem - solved by Kawhi, a big athletic wing who ate him up, late in games (or likely Ben or OG if available) - but that was easy to avoid. Fred was rendered unplayable by a guy named Ellis (or Enis? Don't even know if he's still in the league) in that series so he didn't see a lot of floor time. A bad matchup if you will.
And I have an answer for Curry in my previous post: switching - which, again, you brushed away as "FVV short posts" - or OG.
t's true that not every playoff team can exploit your liabilities, but most can, and that's why these types of players are vulnerable to matchups. It explains Fred's futility against big playoff defenses, for example (even if our 'chip run didn't include a Superstar shooting wing targetting Fred on the offensive end).
Klay wasn't a superstar shooting wing. Middleton not enough of a shooting wing? Was Jimmy Butler hunting down Fred?
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Klay absolutely went off on our team. A guy who's only move is a mid-range post-up and shooting over short players. Watching as Lowry and Fred with outstretched arms "contesting" shots that went in. Open shots all over the place (transition, runouts, on-ball). A very bad example to pick for the undersized backcourt defense. A great one for the 6'8 crew.
After watching the Bucks infuriatingly dumb 'chip run, it does not shock me that they didn't exploit liabilities. Jimmy I covered. BTW, none of these guys are superstars, but they serve the point well enough.
If you want to make an argument against trading Ben for Fred, it's banking on Ben not improving offensively at all for the rest of his career (a very real possibility imo), and tanking his trade value in other ways. Not by pretending that being talented, tall and athletic doesn't matter in the NBA.
The argument is that Fred has more utility than Ben on any team, including a champ. You have to have wiped your memory clear of certain events to deny this. The primary case is that the Raptors couldn't afford to trade 9 3PAs for 0. The secondary case has been proven that Fred's defensive aptitude is highly underrated. Ben is a great defender, but being a great big defender on a team full of great big defenders... well, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson comes cheap.
My argument is for the future, not the now. It might even help us tank a bit this year for a better pick with the lack of shooting (that's good to me, but we might not share this goal).
But a debatable point that right now, Ben would not help any other team as much as Fred. I believe Ben has a fatal flaw and a low playoff ceiling like Fred, but for different reasons we've exausted in this thread. And Ben simply can't play with Embiid, Giannis or Gobert which is a very real limitation.
The larger point still rests on the upside of a 24 year old. In order for you not to want to trade for a guy like him for Fred:
1. Believe he won't improve at all offensively
2. Will tank his trade value further
That's it. Because as soon as he does make an improvement it's not close. Might even be our best player over Siakam at that point.
Very possible and good reasons to not make that gamble. Maybe you want to save the assets for a different gamble. I just doubt the FO believes in number 1.