Juice's Lecture Notes wrote:
long time guy wrote:
I haven't really had the time but While you are at it explain to me how Klay Thompson and Paul George are nowhere to be found on any of these top lists? Per doesn't have either in the top 50 players.
Well, Thompson has fallen off from what he was last year. His 3P% is down almost 40 points, but his USG% is still up over 25%. So, his scoring ability has fallen off a bit but he's being used about as much as he was last year, rate-wise, so his inefficiency is going to drop. He's also now playing third fiddle with Kevin Durant on the team. Of note is that his corner-3 game has fallen off precipitously from 41% last year to 33% this year.
George is fairing pretty well this year, but he's not barnstorming by any stretch. One curious thing I saw is that he is playing the 3 almost exclusively this year, as opposed to last year where almost 40% of his minutes were at the 4. He's taking and making more mid-range shots and shooting fewer 3's (and as a result making more of them). This has come at the cost of high-percentage shots close to the basket, as well as fewer trips to the charity stripe, and facing generally more athletic opponents, now needing to rely on teammates to help get him open as opposed to last year when he could blow by bigger, slower 4's. He's not doing many of the things that made him a top-10 forward in the league last year.
They both should be higher in the rankings in theory though. My issue is that an overreiance on it can become problematic. That is why I keep harping on Curry/Kyrie. Curry offensively stacks up with some of the greats all time if you simply go off advanced stats. The way he performed against OKC and particularly Cleveland strongly dispels that though. He didn't do anything in the previous years finals either.
It is apparent that there are holes in his game offensively and Cleveland exploited it. He couldn't get around Thompson or Love on those switches and he shot a number of airballs. No greatest all time shooter should do that. It wasn't just that he missed. He missed badly. Can't guard his lunch and decision making is atrocious.
It is apparent that he is product of that offense and a beneficiary of having playmaking bigs Bogut/Green.
When I look at Butler I see much the same thing. Curry is a much better offensive player than Butler though. He doesn't do anything special offensively. Not quick off the bounce. Just an average shooter. Doesn't pass particularly well. Doesn't get great separation from his defender. Can't blow by guys. Does go strong to the bucket however. That is his best asset.
You have to do more than that to be an elite player.
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The Hawk wrote:
This is going to reach a head pretty soon.