Post#105 » by ronnymac2 » Tue May 10, 2016 7:14 pm
73 wins. You would think — even based on something as faulty as looking at other historic winning teams, colored by winning bias and all — that Golden State would be allowed to have two megastars.
For the record, I have not seen one poster who discussed the notion of Draymond going #1 this season (that includes myself) attempt to bring down Steph Curry in any way. None of the talk about Green has even went down any "Curry is overrated" avenue.
I'll share this. The whole reason why I am open to Draymond Green being as impactful AND as good as anybody in the league is because when I approach player analysis, I now do so, first and foremost, with an emphasis on the 5-man unit. Green is a good offensive big man without the faults on defense we usually associate with good offensive big men: poor defensive rebounder, poor post defender, poor paint-protector, etc. Green is a good defensive big man without the faults on offense we usually associate with good defensive big men: poor handles, slow, lack of shooting, not as good at passing/playmaking, etc. The flexibility he gives you in building a team is ridiculous.
He's not unique. Debusschere, Odom, Diaw, etc., we've seen this before. But not at this level. Like, there are levels to this stuff. There are levels to these player types.
Nobody doubts Curry's greatness, as well they shouldn't, but I think a major reason why most don't doubt Curry is because we've seen his TYPE of player have GOAT-level impact. Curry's type of player is volume scorer with elite playmaking. Curry in the end is in the same family as Jordan, Wade, LBJ, West, Robertson. Green's family is Diaw, Debusschere, Sheed, Odom. His brethren, while excellent, are not as exaulted as Curry's ancestors. So there is resistance in that, well, Boris Diaw wasn't as good as Michael Jordan, so Green can't be as good as Curry. Green's type is therefore immediately excluded from status, in my opinion before all the details are in. I don't think this is happening consciously or purposefully or with intent or willful bias, and in fact, I can readily admit it happens to me all the time. It makes analysis easy.
All I'm suggesting is to be open to Green being the current apex of his type, and that his type isn't inherently less or more valuable than any other type.
Pay no mind to the battles you've won
It'll take a lot more than rage and muscle
Open your heart and hands, my son
Or you'll never make it over the river