itsxtray wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:parsnips33 wrote:
I struggle with this one, because clearly his numbers are down and he hasn't looked as good as he did even just last season. But the Warriors are still a great team (especially at full strength) and his relative importance to the team doesn't look much different to me than it did at his height, even with the emergence of Poole as a secondary ball handler and Wiggins soaking up some offensive possessions.
Maybe it's as simple as 2016 Steph could've made this another 70 win team rather than what they are
I'll chime in with a few thoughts:
1. I don't think Kerr's system was ever about getting Curry the best opportunity for volume & efficiency, and I think the times where he has maxed those out tend to represent times where the Warriors just said "go for it Steph". I think people think that Steph is dependent on the system when what's closer to the truth is that it's for everyone else on the team more than it is for his own production. 
 
I disagree massively with this. Imma use 15-16 as the main example because that was when Steph played at his absolute best. Taking the ball somewhat out of his hands (he still had it alot, he was truly a 50/50 hybrid that season) was done for the express purpose OF maximizing Steph. The most efficient jumpshots are catch & shoot jumpshots and that holds true even for Steph and with warriors fans crowing for him to play more on ball. Running all those spilt cuts, pin downs, dho's etc... allowed Steph to shoot open/wide open catch and shoot jumpers more often which helped maximize his efficiency.
Steve Kerr recognized that Steph could "playmake" off his movement with Draymond/Iggy making reads so giving them ballhandling duties wasn't about taking away from Steph but using the attention he drew to maximize the team but like I said Steph still had the ball a ton and his PnR with Draymond while teams were playing drop let him walk into open 3's as well, truly great insight from Kerr.
Finally, the times he maxed out volume and efficiency wasn't when they just said "go for it Steph" it was 15-16 with the warriors playing beautiful team basketball built around Steph's strengths: Get the best shooter ever more open catch & shoot jumpers, destroy teams dropping with pull up 3's and when they blitz, Draymond kills them in the 4 on 3. The truth is that the "system" isn't more for everyone else on the team, it maximizes everyone including Steph. Now, the warriors can play this way b/c of Steph's skills and Draymonds passing/defense from the 4/5 positions which is the true magic but yeah i had to say my piece cause i very much disagree.
 
Seems like you're saying that you disagree with me because Curry had his best year's under Kerr's system, but to me this doesn't contradict what I said.
Let's note that in '13-14 scored more than he did in '14-15, did so with TS better than 60%, and had a massive +/- all while once again having a season from 3 better than anyone else in the history of the game. The idea then that the team had to switch coaches in the name of getting more out of Curry just doesn't fit with how Golden State or anyone else would have thought about things at the time.
On the other hand:
1. Klay Thompson was Jerry West's guy.
2. Jerry West thought Mark Jackson wasn't making use of Klay to anywhere near his potential and though a motion offense would work a lot better to get the most out of not one but two shooters. 
3. This was at the heart of the feud between the two that resulted in Jackson not wanting West around the team.
4. Klay had a massive improvement the next year, significantly increasing his volume while also improving his efficiency from mediocre to quite good.
So, my understanding is that it really was about helping Klay more than helping Steph, and the data in '14-15 absolutely backs that up.
Now to be clear, when I said "go for it Steph", I wasn't suggesting a Mark Jackson-style offense. What I meant is that within Kerr's years, there are still times where the offense is more about developing that "strength in numbers" and other times it's more about just riding Steph.