eminence wrote:falcolombardi wrote:warriors against the grizzlies without morant (games 4-6)
102 offensive rating
warriors in the rest of the playoffs
120+ offensive rating
i am actually intrigued, did memphis show the blueprint of how to stop this warriors offense (boston defensive personnel is probably stronger/mpre athletic and switchable than the grizzlies )
or was it just a small sample outlier in what has otherwise been a pristine offensive run by the warriors?
boston defense is gonna be the ultimate test to warriors playoffs offense resiliency, if they can generate decent offende against boston the series is probably theirs
if they are held down to 102~ offensive ratings throufh the series like the grizzlies did once morant went down? i may take boston at that point
I wouldn't read too much into it, just a tiny sample, that they seemed to have moved past by game 6.
Game 4 caught by surprise/had a poor game/went up against a strong new defense, then whatever the hell that game 5 was.
Agreed. Not to mention that the Warriors had a 116.9 ORTG over the first three games as opposed to a 99.7 ORTG over the last three games (according to nba.com). Morant is a really bad defender but obviously he doesn't cause a 17 point swing in DRTG by himself. So I'd chalk it about to small sample size.
That being said, the Celtics are as well-equipped to stifle the Warriors offense as anyone (although they don't force as many turnovers as Memphis, or Miami for that matter, which is an Achilles heel for the Dubs). So I wouldn't be surprised if the Celtics can slow down the Warriors offense considerably – even though anything close to a 100 ORTG is obviously unrealistic.