falcolombardi wrote:in all those losses (2013, 2014,2015,2017) clippers dominated chris paul minutes by a ton while losing almost everyone else minutes
he had consistently the best or near best +/- in those series
griffin minutes were generally around neutral in spite of sharinf the court so much with paul
reddick, crawford and others starters consistently appear as absolute liabilities in +/-, again, in spite of all the minutes with paul
i put the numbers ln a posr above, they all essentially scream that clippers were awful without chris paul and the best team in the court when he played, but in average
in those 4 losses chris paul averages a +16 net rating (offensive rating - defensive rating for the series)
chris paul +16
(128 offense/112 defense, so clippers played like a -6 defense with a +22 offense when chris paul played, those team problems were depth and defense)
blake griffin -1
jamal crawford -17
JJ Redick -3
Deandre jordan -3
Okay, so first, you're bringing up more good stuff to consider, but not showing any indication that what I'm saying seems noteworthy to you. I mean, did you know these facts about Paul before I said it? If not, doesn't it give you pause that maybe I'm pointing to something significant you hadn't considered before?
On to your points, let's look at what those numbers look like in the front of the series compared to the back end.
I'll start by the very first SRS-upset in Paul's career, '07-08 against the Spurs. Those Spurs were an excellent team mind you, but just take a look:
'07-08 Spurs
First 3 games: +28
Last 4 games: -17
Next we move to the Clipper years:
'12-13 Grizzlies
First 3 games: -6
Last 3 games: -37
'13-14 Thunder
First 3 games: +28
Last 3 games: +19
(most impressive number of the bunch, but worse than it looks, because they lost the last 2 games by losing the 4th quarter in each, and in one of those games the lClippers had a 7 point lead with less than a minute to play and Paul was at the center of the criticism). This was actually where the "these Clippers are a bunch of chokers" meme really started, and it just kept building from there.
'14-15 Rockets:
First 3 games: +33 (note, these are Games 3-5 because Paul missed the first two with injury)
Last 2 games: -14
'15-16 Blazers
First 3 games: +37
Last 1 game: -7 (missed the last two with injury)
'16-17 Jazz
First 3 games: +17
Last 4 games: -12
And now for good measure:
'17-18 Warriors
First 3 games: -12
Last 2 games: -8 (missed the last two with injury)
'20-21 Bucks
First 3 games: +13
Last 3 games: -24
I think the trend is pretty clear:
Generally when Paul's team loses to a team with a worse regular season SRS, his team wins with him on the court the first 3 games, and loses it with him over the rest of the series, which means we are definitely not talking about a case of him beating these other teams generally but simply being unable to play every single minute. We're talking about a very real recurring phenomenon where Paul's team with him on the court becomes less effective against these team as they have longer to play against him, and this often flipping the series from a win to a loss.
Paul is not the only one with issues like this. The phenomenon of one side/player figuring out or being figured out by their opponents over the course of a series is a real thing, and to be clear, typically players have both types of series in their career. To point to a recent that goes in the opposite direction for Paul:
'20-21 Lakers
First 3 games: -12
Last 3 games: +46
(Incidentally if anyone wants to bring up more data like this - I'm starting to feel like I should start a thorough personal project about this - please do. And of course it's possible possible that further data will make Paul look less of an outlier in the negative direction here, or say something that argues against Curry or Garnett or other interesting folks.)
But note: Whether or not Paul is an extreme outlier, the fact remains that even when it looks like you can say "but his team won the Paul minutes!", these are basically always situations where Paul's team really is getting outplayed with him (and presumably even worse without him too to be fair) as his team loses the series, and this - I would argue - is often the real question.
Is a worse regular season team - whether by general capacity, health, or effort - figuring out how to get the better of you in a seven game series? In Paul's case, the answer is a yes.