Dr Spaceman wrote:drza wrote:Chiming into the Green/Curry discussion. I think that I'm one of the few (am I the only?) really active posters that doesn't have any problem at all with the concept that Green might be as important to the Warriors as Curry. I'm pretty thoroughly not convinced that Curry is having the GOAT peak (in the last thread on it, I had him fighting for top-10). And I'm also pretty thoroughly open to the concept that Green's level of impact might be more translatable to more teams in the current NBA than Curry's.
Now that I've blasphemed and pissed off the majority of the people on here, including some of the ones that I respect the most, I'll continue. I'm not going to go too deep here because I literally don't have time for the type of marathon post that I like to do. But I'm going to take an entirely different tact, and focus entirely on Green here.
With RAPM, WOWY, and all of the attempts that we've made in various projects to try to estimate a player's non-boxscore impact, there are some pretty clear trends about the types of players that have huge impacts. We see great point guards having bigger offensive impact than their box scores suggest, great defensive bigs having bigger impact than their boxscore stats suggest. We see spacing showing up well, especially among bigs. These are three of the biggies, as far as unexpected impact, with a player showing strength in any one of them often enough to boost them surprisingly high in the impact studies.
And Green shows up well in ALL THREE of them!
I And-1'd someones post recently...maybe RonnyMac?, that pointed that out succinctly. But I don't think that concept is getting nearly enough run around here. Draymond Green is essentially playing point guard for the Warriors, from the big-man positions. He is a very credible DPoY candidate, by both reputation and measured impact. AND he's a 40% shooter from downtown, again from the big man slots.
Let's take two of those skills, big man as an offensive hub from the high-post, and defensive player-of-the-year caliber defensive impact. Using B-R's season-finder (for forward-centers with at least 5 assists per game), this is the list of players in NBA history that could fit that description:
Bill Russell
Wilt Chamberlain
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
BIll Walton
Kevin Garnett
Joakim Noah (2014)
Draymond Green
And that's pretty much it. Three are some names on the list I'm not fully familiar with, but this is at least the majority of the names that could realistically be argued as a high-post offensive hub big man with DPoY caliber defense.
Now, the point here is obviously not to say that Draymond Green is the GOAT of his generation the way some of those other names were. But on the flip side, we have people (again, posters I really respect) doing mental gymnastics to figure out a reason for Curry having to be the biggest impact player for these Warriors. We're turning the numbers upside down. We're trying to break it down by competition level. We're arguing over who played with better tertiary players.
And again, you all know I'm all about digging into the context to tell the story. But in this case, most of the posts aren't looking for full context...they're trying to make the numbers fit a preconceived notion. And even doing that, from what I've seen of the arguments, all of this digging isn't producing anything all that convincing.
Meanwhile, every impact study we've ever conducted would strongly suggest that a big man that you could run the offense through from out-top, that played DPoY defense, AND provided excellent big-man spacing would be an off-the-charts impact player. And, lo-and-behold, Draymond Green fits all of those categories and has been measuring out as an off-the-charts impact player for two straight seasons now. Again, this isn't rigorous by any means, but...maybe we should at least give some consideration to the possibility that Green really might be who he seems to be measuring out to be.
Just for clarity's sake:
If you were on an opposing coaching staff, would you feel comfortable with the statement "we should focus more energy on stopping Green than we do Curry?"
I think it's just that certain lineups, like the sbds, need green more than curry, if you know what I mean.
Otoh, some people have gone into lineups. While rapm is supposed to fix this, I feel like greens minutes without a "go to scorer" in klay or curry are so low that they don't really "show" in his rapm numbers, you know what I mean?
I mean, the-power made a post on game planning, and it does make sense that the Warriors have more plays without curry than without draymond. It's kinda like a just in case... Kinda thing, so that if curry is out they still have plays they can run. While draymond is great and all, he doesent warrant that on offense, if you know what I mean. I think that 2 things we have to consider are that a bad game from curry, despite it happening rarely, impact wise, effects the team more than a bad game from draymond. Otoh, draymonds impact is a lot more consistent, because he will rarely go 35 minutes with bad defense, and a lot of his impact is just his spacing honestly.
I mean, looking at each of the games curry hasn't played while draymond has, the Warriors had offensive rtgs of
110.8 against the Hawks
114.3 vs the rockets
97.6 against the mavericks
98.8 against the rockets
121.4 against the rockets
Small sample size
Now, looking at each of these games, klay shot pretty badly in most of them, which is honestly expected. Some games were overboard but his shooting going down and his volume/shot difficulty increasing isn't shocking at all
Looking at the games the Warriors did well on offense
Against the Hawks, they had 18 offensive rebounds. They also had relatively few turnovers, at 11, while the Hawks had 17 (idk how many were live ball, but we know how that effects opposing offense)
Klay shot 16/27 against the rockets in their 4 point win
34.2% offensive rebound rate against the rockets in game 2. They scored 17 points off of these.
In 3 of these 5 games, green had a net rating that was tied for the lowest or second lowest on his team for players with over 25 minutes, the 2 games this didn't happen were the Atlanta game (net rating of 10, second best on his team though 2 players with 8 less minutes had ratings of 9, and klay had a rating of 2 despite going 8/27, though all of their ratings would have gone up as well I guess if klay made his shots)
And the Dallas game (only 3 players played more than 25 minutes, -11)
And whenever curry and draymond play together, net rating wise, I can't help but feel that a bad draymond performance can be drowned out by a good curry performance than vice versa
Small sample size but iirc, JE himself said that the rapm comparison between curry and draymond would not be reliable because of sample size. The thing that was notable was the difference in stats.
And tbh in terms of sample size, when curry was on the floor with Bogut, who obviously is a good defender, the opponents offensive rating jumped up to the 120s so that would effect both of their rapms. Also, greens stats without klay and curry were solid, which wouldn't be something I'd knock him for if the "stats" shown were, well, not full of noise.
Next year, I hope someone does something like blackmill said in his box score thread so we can finally clarify this.