The Coli Where we rank Kyle Lowry over Jason Kidd.. Scust @malta

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In Lowry's defense, he is severely overrated.
I'm gathering you mean underrated here?
But he has only been playing at such a high level for the past few seasons, and he still is not a better defender, rebounder or passer than Kidd. He also fades in the playoffs. This season, he has been more efficient than he has ever been, but Kidd still trumps him. Kidd is overrated, though. He was a liability on offense all throughout his career.
Like I said above, it's not as simple as Kidd being better in all those categories, you have to weigh them accordingly to how much impact they have on the game. You could make the same argument for Kidd being a better defender, rebounder and passer than Curry, yet it doesn't make him the better player. It's all about impact. The margin between Lowry's and Kidd's defensive abilities and impact is closer than most care to admit, even so defense doesn't have as much value as offense does when comparing the roles of both these players. Rebounding is near meaningless in this context since Kidd was grabbing mostly uncontested rebounds and wasn't crashing the glass over/next to bigs anymore than Lowry does (Lowry's hustle is underrated here). Despite Kidd being a better passer, it's what you do with your passing ability that counts at the end of the day - Lowry's a great playmaker/passer and while not on Kidd's level in terms of passing ability he can run a better offense.
 
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but Kidd still trumps him. Kidd is overrated, though. He was a liability on offense all throughout his career.
And I still don't understand why (well I do, because of our tendency to romanticize the past) folk are choosing to not acknowledge this and come with some revisionist shyt like he was this masterful offensive player. He was basically the complete opposite. When you try telling folk this, they won't hear it. When you point to any corresponding stats, they tell you to stop looking at the stats because they don't mean anything.
 

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I'm gathering you mean underrated here?

Like I said above, it's not as simple as Kidd being better in all those categories, you have to weigh them accordingly to how much impact they have on the game. You could make the same argument for Kidd being a better defender, rebounder and passer than Curry, yet it doesn't make him the better player. It's all about impact. The margin between Lowry's and Kidd's defensive abilities and impact is closer than most care to admit, even so defense doesn't have as much value as offense does when comparing the roles of both these players. Rebounding is near meaningless in this context since Kidd was grabbing mostly uncontested rebounds and wasn't crashing the glass over/next to bigs anymore than Lowry does (Lowry's hustle is underrated here). Despite Kidd being a better passer, it's what you do with your passing ability that counts at the end of the day - Lowry's a great playmaker/passer and while not on Kidd's level in terms of passing ability he can run a better offense.

If Lowry can have a few more years at the level he is playing, I would say he has a case. He is a very solid all-around player, though. He doesn't defend the way he used to, though.

Kidd was the best defender at his position at his peak, and that is a big distinction between the two. He was also a better leader. While Lowry continues to grow in his leadership role, he us just not on Kidd's level as far as intangibles go. Lowry has gotten to where he is because he put in a lot of work, but Kidd had special, natural talent that you can't learn.
 
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If Lowry can have a few more years at the level he is playing, I would say he has a case. He is a very solid all-around player, though. He doesn't defend the way he used to, though.
A few more years at this current level? There'll be no point even mentioning Kidd if Lowry can keep up this play for the next few seasons. He doesn't bring the constant defensive pressure he once did, simply because he's got more of an offensive workload now; the defensive IQ and the hustle is still all there. And I'd actually argue that his defensive ability hasn't diminished really at all, because he showed he could still bring it when he played that Pat Bev role in the Olympics.
Kidd was the best defender at his position at his peak, and that is a big distinction between the two.
He was, but his peak as a defender and his peak on offense weren't at the same time, which is why you can't necessarily take the two and put them together as an end argument against Lowry.
He was also a better leader
We can't quantify this, especially since he wasn't that great at his main job - running an offense. As a leader he gets points docked simply for that.
While Lowry continues to grow in his leadership role, he us just not on Kidd's level as far as intangibles go.
I don't know, we tend to magnify the intangibles of players who're less skilled in other areas, particularly on offense to overcompensate for their lack of ability (we do the opposite for players who're skilled in a lot of areas). I honestly don't think there's a noticeable gap between the two. It's hard though because I think Kidd's intangibles improved as he got older (with more experience and decline in skillset), but again you can't use that against Lowry in this context because this thread is peak v peak, and not their respective careers.
 

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The fact that Kidd didn't get MVP at all just proves that these awards aren't fully based on merit and that the league was quite concerned about its image/public perception. Keep in mind, we're talking about the early 2000s (i.e., the A.I./urban-inspired/"thug" era ). Around that time, the league was getting a bit too "urban" for the targeted audience demographic. :mjpls:There was NO WAY on God's green earth that Stern was going to give the MVP to a player that was subject to criminal charges for domestic violence. :stopitslime:

And beyond that, you do know that during that era, Kidd was vying with players like Kobe, Shaq, Duncan, and KG for that award PERENNIALLY, right?
He had a strong case for it in 2003 but they gave it to Duncan and you can't really argue against him gettin it.

Plus J. Kidd was still smackin up Joumana and shyt the media was like :mjpls:
 

Goatpoacher

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:pachaha:

I've been doing that all throughout this discussion. If the PG is the main-ball handler they must be a scoring threat, as they dictate what the offense does more than any other player. If your main ball-handler isn't a threat to score, it basically affects the entire offense and how teams defend you and the team. Why else do you think teams send more defensive help and alter their defensives schemes when they play Westbrook, Harden, Curry and Lillard and not to the same degree that they would a Rondo, Rubio or Payton?

See, you lump together PG of a certain type without delineating which are actually the most impactful. YOu also fail to account for other factors in a player's overall game. Harden and Westbrook are NOT as good as Curry because they both have stupid aspects to their game. I'm not going to pick a player just because they have a deeper shot, I am going to look at the total package. Jason Kidd was a better decision maker than any current PG except maybe CP3. Even Curry has his brain fart crunch time behind the pack turnovers way too often. However, I would take Curry or Westbrook over Kidd in a heartbeat. I never liked Kidd and yes, he had a terrible shot. But... We're talking about KYLE fukkING LOWRY ....not Curry.

I also maintain that the necessity of being a "scoring threat" is a modern trend and it applies to all positions, not just PG. This was not the case in Kidd's heyday.




You can't just take their FG% and 3-pt% without looking at specifically how many 2s and 3s they attempted. Although I'm not the biggest fan of TS%, it serves its purpose in this argument for scoring efficiency:

Lowry is scoring 21.2 ppg on 61.9 TS% - 14.8 shots per game (he's 2nd in qualifying PGs, only behind Curry who's at 64 TS% on 24.7 ppg)
Kidd was scoring 18.7 ppg on 52.6 TS% - 15.6 shots per game (just to put it into perspective that would be around 30th among PGs today)

And this isn't even taking into account that he started the season off slowly, and has been on a tear for the last 5-6 weeks (23 ppg on 68 TS% / 14.2 shots per game, 7.7 assists and only 2.8 turnovers)

LOL. His "tear" may regress in a few days. That's why we should use the last entire season... especially since your claim was last year.

Overall, the numbers are not as far apart, especially when you consider overall scoring in Kidd's prime. You seem to be entirely ignoring the NBA paradigm back in the 00's.

There's a near 10% difference in their scoring efficency, and this is with Lowry scoring nearly THREE extra points - with Kidd attempting 15.6 shots per game and Lowry attempting 14.8 shots per game. Lowry is scoring nearly three extra points while attempting one less shot. I don't think you quite understand how big of a difference that is. The closest comparison I can get with wings is the difference between Durant and Wiggins (12 TS% difference and a 3.8 PPG difference on nearly the same amount of shots). That's how much of a difference there is.

Well since I can leave out the PPG/efficiency (he's not even remotely close), why don't we address the other areas. See now this is the issue I have with a lot of posters on this board, first of all they overvalue surface stats in the box score and they mistake that all surface aspects of basketball have equal value or near. When you compare players you don't give a player one point for being a better scorer, one point for being a better rebounder, one point for being a better passer etc etc and then deem the player that has the most points the better player. You weigh up the impact they have v the role and position on the team v their skillset.

You have a strange defined role for point guards. I pointed out that Kidd's productivity was not so far behind Lowry's and was the product of a very different era, so now you fall back on stats to make a mountain out of a mole hill. This is ironic because you then make a case for Lowry being a great defender without ANY points of comparison.

What you don't understand is that I'm not the one fixated on stats. You are fixated on a notion about "the proper role of a PG". I'm just not buying that. I think you look at the team constructed as a whole. I

Since you are the stat expert, please show the Raptor's stats without lowry playing last year and compare them to the Nets without kidd in the 2003 season. That would give me a better idea of total value, not some ill defined internal construct you have that you have been unable to support without recursive logic.

Now when you're comparing PGs who're the main ball-handlers, the most valuable and important thing by far is offensive impact (simply because PGs can only have so much defensive impact, and they're not like big man where you need to value defense more when comparing players). Same reason why Magic is the GOAT PG (I feel like I've used this example 1000x this week), because as you know he was only an average defender who was often hidden on defense. The majority of his impact was through what he could do on offense.

Again, look at the totality of a team's construction before you make deterministic assertions. I'm not sure why you hate the idea of looking at the totality and context, but it's absolutely necessary. YOu also look at the totality of a player. Sure Westbrook and Curry are capable scorers, but would you take Westbrook over Curry for the Warriors? Are there cases in which Westbrook is a better option than Curry for a team? Same analysis applies for all star players. The closest thing we had to a perfect wing player was MJ, ALl others have had flaws that need addressing through the system or through the roster.

Lowry is also one one of the best passers/playmakers in the league too. He can play without the ball just as well as he can on it (Kidd can't), and the intangibles/leadership cues and all the miscellaneous shyt that doesn't appear in the box score (diving for loose balls, taking charges, shadowing players full-court, playing m2m and help defense, setting screens, defending multiple positions - yes Lowry does this, cutting/curling etc etc)

And with the fact of being a greater volume, more efficient scorer, he also has a higher points/assist to turnover ratio and a better assist/turnover ratio during their respective surface statistical peaks too:

Lowry - 21.2 ppg on 14.8 shots, 7.7 assists and 2.9 turnovers
Kidd - 18.7 ppg on 15.6 shots, 8.9 assists and 3.7 turnovers

Those numbers are supposed to blow me away? This is particularly strange given that you prefer Westbrook to CP3 and Kobe to Lebron.

Like I said prior, Lowry's offensive impact and offensive skillset is greater than Kidd's ever was, over the last two seasons. His play is powering one of the most efficient offenses in recorded history. Although Lowry isn't Kidd's equal on defense, he isn't too far off (he's one of the best PG defenses we have in the league), there's a reason why he was noted as more of a defensive PG in his early 20s when he was still finding his way offensively.

So you point to minor productivity differences on offense, and claim they are mountains without putting in context the talent level and construction of the rest of the team. Then you claim there are only minor differences in defense, something that's just not true. I saw Old Man Kidd lock up star wings for the Mavs. I saw Prime Kidd orchestrating crunch time defenses in playoff games, getting steals and deflections. What I saw of Lowry in the playoffs last year? :merchant:
 

Goatpoacher

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A few more years at this current level? There'll be no point even mentioning Kidd if Lowry can keep up this play for the next few seasons. He doesn't bring the constant defensive pressure he once did, simply because he's got more of an offensive workload now; the defensive IQ and the hustle is still all there. And I'd actually argue that his defensive ability hasn't diminished really at all, because he showed he could still bring it when he played that Pat Bev role in the Olympics.

Hmm, Lowry gets a pass from you for slacking on defense because of an offensive workload... Kiwi does not :jbhmm:
 

Goatpoacher

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I'm gathering you mean underrated here?

Like I said above, it's not as simple as Kidd being better in all those categories, you have to weigh them accordingly to how much impact they have on the game. You could make the same argument for Kidd being a better defender, rebounder and passer than Curry, yet it doesn't make him the better player. It's all about impact. The margin between Lowry's and Kidd's defensive abilities and impact is closer than most care to admit, even so defense doesn't have as much value as offense does when comparing the roles of both these players. Rebounding is near meaningless in this context since Kidd was grabbing mostly uncontested rebounds and wasn't crashing the glass over/next to bigs anymore than Lowry does (Lowry's hustle is underrated here). Despite Kidd being a better passer, it's what you do with your passing ability that counts at the end of the day - Lowry's a great playmaker/passer and while not on Kidd's level in terms of passing ability he can run a better offense.

Kidd's overall impact >> Lowry

Curry' overall impact >> Kidd.

You are right that you look at the total picture, but you are intentionally glossing over Kidd's true impact on the defensive end and overstating his offensive inability. If you were on sohh back in the 00's, then you'd know that I constantly ripped _Ason Kidd. But I rip Kobe all the time, still won't say Demar Derozan is better than him.
 
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See, you lump together PG of a certain type without delineating which are actually the most impactful. YOu also fail to account for other factors in a player's overall game.
I just explained to you how to weigh what impact a main ball-handling PG has on the game. Just because a particular player might be more well-rounded doesn't mean they have more impact. I've already stated in this very thread the "other factors" when comparing players. Except what you're not understanding is that not all surface aspects of the game have equal value, which is why you're having trouble comprehending my position.
Harden and Westbrook are NOT as good as Curry because they both have stupid aspects to their game. I'm not going to pick a player just because they have a deeper shot, I am going to look at the total package.
That's not how basketball works (especially when comparing PGs). You should be looking at whom has the most impact v their skillset.
Jason Kidd was a better decision maker than any current PG except maybe CP3. Even Curry has his brain fart crunch time behind the pack turnovers way too often.
First of all, not only is this wrong, but why are we talking about something that is in a sense unquantifiable and near-meaningless to the crux of the argument? You're just proving my theory right of magnifying intangibles to overcompensate for a player's lack of skill in other areas.
Even Curry has his brain fart crunch time behind the pack turnovers way too often. However, I would take Curry or Westbrook over Kidd in a heartbeat. I never liked Kidd and yes, he had a terrible shot. But... We're talking about KYLE fukkING LOWRY ....not Curry.
I'm afraid I can't take your opinion seriously of his game after you've told me you don't watch enough Raptors games. Going off some of his playoff games last season (where he was still suffering from an elbow injury which was affecting his shot, which obviously you didn't take into account because you weren't watching him before said injury) to argue your position isn't enough. This is half the trouble with this board, they argue until they're blue in the face about players they don't even watch and regurgitate casual fan talking points about that player's game.

Even if you didn't have a high opinion of his game beforehand, and you're not watching the Raptors play regularly, surely you can either say that you're not familiar with his game to the level that would warrant a genuine discussion or/and you could admit that by looking at the surface stats (the difference in their ppg and efficiency) that you're open to changing your views after matching it with the tape. Rather than just sticking your fingers and your ears and not listen to reason.
I also maintain that the necessity of being a "scoring threat" is a modern trend and it applies to all positions, not just PG. This was not the case in Kidd's heyday.
Why do you keep saying this?

You don't need a "scoring threat" at all positions, you do however need a scoring threat at the PG position because typically (not always, again) they handle the ball more than any other player. If you're handling the ball more than any other player than you need to be an equal threat (because everything revolves around WHAT that player does), else your offense will suffer - it's half the reason why Kidd didn't run an efficient offense in NJ, because of his inability to score/shoot. Regardless of whether or not you think it's a modern trend or not (Kidd's prime was only a decade ago, we're not talking about when Jack Dolph was still in charge) if a player has more 'scoring ability' as a main ball-handler it should be taken into account when comparing players.
LOL. His "tear" may regress in a few days. That's why we should use the last entire season... especially since your claim was last year.
i) Whether or not his tear may regress or not, he's already shown over a large enough sample size (80+ games) that this is what his play looks like at its peak. It's not like I'm taking a isolated five-game sample size and using it as the rule.
ii) I'm using last season (up until his elbow injury near the end of the regular season), and this season, because he's backing up his play from last year with arguably better play.
iii) This tear he's on is a better stretch than Kidd ever had. I suggest you actually tune in to see what he's doing.
.

Overall, the numbers are not as far apart,.
The scoring and efficiency is, and if you're willing to come to the party of their overall #s not being far apart surely you can entertain the idea that their games aren't either. You're arguing as if Kidd is a galaxy beyond Lowry, and yet the #s are in favor of Lowry. Surely you must realize that your position isn't as grounded in reality as you initially thought.
especially when you consider overall scoring in Kidd's prime. You seem to be entirely ignoring the NBA paradigm back in the 00's.
What specifically do you mean by overall scoring? During his highest PPG season, he took ONE extra shot than Lowry's doing right now and scoring nearly less than THREE points a game. Like I said above, I don't think you truly realize how much of difference that is. And you can get the hell outta here with this "paradigm" nonsense to cover up for Kidd's lack of scoring ability. Not only is this far from the truth, and you're falling victim to romanticizing this emanation of 00's basketball but you had players like Payton, Nash, Cassell, Bibby and Parker (even stretch it out to Marbury) who still managed to be near the top in leading PG scorers while being efficient.

Stop making excuses for his lack of efficient scoring, when other players in similar roles had no trouble doing so.
You have a strange defined role for point guards.
I don't have a strange defined role for point guards - in fact I don't really have a defined role - it's more about what impact a PG has. It's one of the most accurate impact relays on this board. Dudes are too stuck on some archaic shyt when valuing the position. When you're the main ball-handling for your team at the PG position, your main job is to run the offense and do what's necessary to put the team in the best possible position of scoring is it not? Does that not require you to not just be a scoring threat, but also be an efficient and have a high-end scoring skillset? Does that not require you exploiting and creating weaknesses in the defense? If you're a scoring threat while handling the ball most of the time you don't think that allows your teammates to get easier shots, as opposed to a PG who isn't a threat to score? You can't see how that affects how the offense works? This isn't the same as a center not being able to score in this discussion, because it's MORE important for the player who's handling the ball the most to be a scoring threat - the center isn't running the offense, the center isn't trying to open up the floor by setting up teammates, the center isn't dictating the pace of the offense etc etc. How can you maximize these opportunities for not only yourself but your teammates if you're not an equal threat to score/pass. It's half the reason why Nash ran the best or second best offense from the early 00s until the 2010, on two different teams, with 3-4 different coaches with every type of style of player because he was an equal threat to pass/shoot.

If Nash didn't have his shooting/scoring ability, those offenses wouldn't have been as good as they were. I do not understand how you can not understand this. Again, you have the ball in your hands more than any other player it's more important for you to be a scoring threat, than a position/player that doesn't have the ball in their hands as often.
I pointed out that Kidd's productivity was not so far behind Lowry's and was the product of a very different era, so now you fall back on stats to make a mountain out of a mole hill.
If Kidd's productivity is behind Lowry's, than how are you arguing that Lowry isn't even close to him? This is what I'm trying to get you to see. I'm not falling back on the stats per say, I'm trying to illustrate to you that this comparison is a lot closer than you're willing to admit, by showing you their stats. You're not watching the games, so the only basis I can use to make you see sense is use the stats. Stats that are in favor of Lowry. Yet here you are arguing as if Lowry's basically a scrub in comparison to Kidd.

And even if I were falling back on simply just the stats, that's a helluva lot more substantial than whatever the fukk it is you're arguing. Same applies to the majority of people in this thread. If the stats were favoring Kidd, they'd be shoving it under your face, but since they favor Lowry they're acting as if these stats don't exist, and that you can't use them as argument because Kidd's play went beyond the box score.

The opinions and views in this thread are absolutely hilarious, and it truly shows how uninformed and casual-thinking this board truly is.
This is ironic because you then make a case for Lowry being a great defender without ANY points of comparison.
:merchant:

This is why you shouldn't be talking about his game, because you want me to prove (never mind the fact I've already provided an article that talks up his defensive ability, plus corresponding defensive stats while he was on the floor) his defensive worth, rather than actually watching for yourself. You're arguing that Kidd's a better defender, without truly knowing how good Lowry is on that end to make a proper assessment of their abilities.

Wouldn't it be easier for you to just state that you don't have an informed enough opinion of his game and leave it at that?
What you don't understand is that I'm not the one fixated on stats. You are fixated on a notion about "the proper role of a PG". I'm just not buying that. I think you look at the team constructed as a whole.
The irony of that is, I'm the complete opposite of using fixated roles when it comes to positions. Here's the thing that you're still not acknowledging, both Kidd and Lowry have almost identical roles on their respective team's: PGs who're the main ball-handlers and who're one of the main leading scorers. I wondered if you'd be using stats if they were in your favor? I think so. Regardless, you shouldn't just sweep stats in the context under the rug so easily. They matter. Certainly when you're up in here trying to argue there's no comparison between the two.
Since you are the stat expert, please show the Raptor's stats without lowry playing last year and compare them to the Nets without kidd in the 2003 season. That would give me a better idea of total value, not some ill defined internal construct you have that you have been unable to support without recursive logic.
:merchant:

Lowry missed five games last season, how the hell would that sample size give you a better idea of total value? Do you hear yourself right now? This can't be life. Kidd missed two games in the 2003 season. The problems with even suggesting this are mind-boggling. I don't even know if this statement warrants a proper response. I'm using recursive logic to show you how a main-ballhandler's play affects his team's offense. You can not seriously believe that a player who controls the ball and offense isn't one of, if not the most influential player on offense. Because that's what you're arguing against. Despite all logic and facts staring you right in the face you still want to claim it's some "ill defined internal construct", but then try to use play of their teams over a 2-5 game sample size that doesn't take into account an infinite # of factors. If you actually watched the Raptors play, you wouldn't be arguing against something that is in clear view and basic as this.

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If you watched any of these players regularly you'd see their offense goes as they go, and they're the ones who dictate what happens throughout games on offense and how efficient the offense runs. This is basic, rudimentary stuff that isn't worth debating. Why you can not see this, I don't know.
Again, look at the totality of a team's construction before you make deterministic assertions. I'm not sure why you hate the idea of looking at the totality and context, but it's absolutely necessary.
:merchant:

That's exactly what I'm doing. I did this well before this thread was even created. And I did this by actually watching Lowry play. You didn't.
 
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YOu also look at the totality of a player.
:merchant:

That's what I'm doing, except I'm going a step further than you and actually looking at impact, not just seeing who might be marginally better in more areas, yet disregarding the large gap(s) in the most important ones. Hence why I'm focusing on scoring as much as I am, because it is probably the most important thing in this argument. Simply because of their roles. It's different for a center because they don't need the same offensive skillset and impact that main guard ball-handlers do, because their impact on the defensive end is equally as important (if not more in some cases). An example of this is Rudy Gobert, despite him being a limited scorer and having a limited scoring skillset, his defensive impact makes up for what he doesn't provide on the offensive end and surpasses almost every big man, even the likes of B.Lopez who scores nearly eight points more than he does and has a better scoring skillset by a considerable margin.

Look at Ben Wallace, he was a terrible scorer and didn't attract defensive attention (again, I go back to the fact that both Kidd and Lowry handle the ball the majority of the time, you can't apply the same reasoning to other positions in the same manner. See: list of factors I've posted 1000x. Because it isn't what's most important for a player like Wallace in order for him to have the impact he had), but he still was among the most impactful big men during his prime because of the impact and influence he had on the defensive end. This is why I'm valuing scoring and offense in general when comparing Kidd and Lowry, because this is where most of the impact is had for two main ball-handling PGs. Not the defensive end, and that's not to say defense doesn't come into it, but it doesn't play as big of a part as offense does.

It's not about the 'totality' of a player, but the impact they have on the game within the roles they play and the skillsets they have. Lillard and Irving aren't what I call particularity well-rounded players, yet they still have more impact than a lot of players who are more well-rounded than they are. Why? Again this goes back to the impact on offense and the roles they play and skillsets.
Sure Westbrook and Curry are capable scorers, but would you take Westbrook over Curry for the Warriors?
This doesn't even make any sense, and actually goes against your theory of looking at the "totality" of a player. I mean many would argue on this board that Westbrook is a more complete player. Can you not see how this actually adds weight to my argument? People would bring up Westbrook's rebounding, his assists etc etc in argument for suggesting he's better than Curry.
but would you take Westbrook over Curry for the Warriors? Are there cases in which Westbrook is a better option than Curry for a team? Same analysis applies for all star players. The closest thing we had to a perfect wing player was MJ, ALl others have had flaws that need addressing through the system or through the roster.
Where exactly are you going with this?

You're pretty much arguing my case at this point. It could be argued (although I don't necessarily agree) that Westbrook is a better overall player than Curry, the "totality" as you like to put it, but does he have more impact than Curry does? This is what I'm trying to get you to see with Lowry. If you'd actually pay attention to what I'm saying and watch Raptors games you'd actually see my position as being completely reasonable. Lowry can fit in more lineup structures than Kidd can because he can run an efficient offense, he can score and pass together at a high level, he can get his teammates involved and providing spacing because of his shooting ability, he attracts more defensive attention than Kidd does when he's handling the ball - opening up more opportunities and space for teammates, he can play off the ball/provide spot up shooting and cutting opportunities etc etc.
Those numbers are supposed to blow me away? This is particularly strange given that you prefer Westbrook to CP3 and Kobe to Lebron.
Those #s aren't suppose to blow you away, I used them in reference to show you the margin gap in their points and assists against efficiency and turnovers, and a simple assist to turnover ratio.

Purely from an aesthetic and fan level I prefer Kobe to LeBron, but that doesn't mean LeBron isn't the better player because he is. LeBron's higher on my all-time list and he also has a higher peak than Kobe did. Westbrook and CP3 is another case altogether, and it's not the same as arguing Lowry v Kidd because Lowry scores more points than Kidd while being greatly more efficient. CP3 is more efficient but doesn't but doesn't score more points than Westbrook (he doesn't even close close) nor does he average more points and assists combined.

I mean shyt I find it particularly strange you'd even bring up Wesbrook v CP3, when Westbrook is scoring on a level that CP3 hasn't even come close to. If CP3 even attempted to match Westbrook's scoring output, it'd stand to reason he wouldn't be as efficient as he is now.

None of these comparisons make any sense to our argument.
So you point to minor productivity differences on offense, and claim they are mountains without putting in context the talent level and construction of the rest of the team.
This is what you're not understanding, yes this Raptors team has more general offensive talent than those Nets teams, however the most influential and impactful player on the Raptors offense is Lowry and it's because he's handling the ball and creating offfense more than any other player + his ability to score/pass at a high level. Those Nets teams weren't void of talent, and if Kidd could score at a high, efficient level his teams' offenses would be among the best in the league. What you also have to take into account is that due to the lack of widespread offensive team talent during the 00s, it was easier for Kidd to propel his team to having a good offense because he was competing against a medium that was of poor offensive value (especially in the Eastern conference). Except Kidd still couldn't, all those horrible offenses during the 00s and yet still this master floor general couldn't even lead his team to having a top-10 offense in the league. Lowry's actually doing this during a time where you have arguably the greatest offensive talented squad ever, a D'Antoni-run offense with a high-level PnR threat, a LeBron/Kyrie/Love led-team etc etc. Lowry's play is pushing his team alongside and even above those types of teams.

And they aren't minor productivity differences on offense either, certainly not at all.
Then you claim there are only minor differences in defense, something that's just not true.
Well clearly you need to watch more Raptors games.
I saw Old Man Kidd lock up star wings for the Mavs. I saw Prime Kidd orchestrating crunch time defenses in playoff games, getting steals and deflections. What I saw of Lowry in the playoffs last year? :merchant:
Lowry's been doing this for the last two seasons. In fact despite his elbow injury fukking up his shot in the playoffs, if you were actually paying attention it was his defense which was the most consistent thing about his game in the playoffs.

This is the type of shyt he's displayed on the defensive end all throughout his career (blocking M.Gasol at the rim, locking up PG out on the perimeter etc etc) -





Did you even bother to watch the Olympics to see how good his defense was, and why the team had the best DRTG with him on court - while playing the 5th most minutes?

 

Goatpoacher

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I just explained to you how to weigh what impact a main ball-handling PG has on the game.

No. You've made an assertion on incomplete information and expect me to buy it. I'm not buying so stop selling.


Just because a particular player might be more well-rounded doesn't mean they have more impact. I've already stated in this very thread the "other factors" when comparing players. Except what you're not understanding is that not all surface aspects of the game have equal value, which is why you're having trouble comprehending my position.

Wrong. I'm stating the totality of a player's production should be weighed. You are saying that scoring should be weighed more heavily for pg's. You make this assertion. Over and over. Without any explanation. Sure, it makes sense in your head. I agree that you firmly believe this. But your belief fails to move the meter. To be clear, you have not provided empirical data to back up the assertion, and your "logical" reasoning is a restatement bordering on tautology.

That's not how basketball works (especially when comparing PGs). You should be looking at whom has the most impact v their skillset.

I just want proof Lowry has more "impact". Comparing him to Curry, a much better player, doesn't mean much. Would I rather have a Curry type player that is at Lowry's talent level? Or a Jason Kidd type that is at Jason Kidd's talent level? You are fixated on this notion that Curry type PG's, scoring first pg's, are the be-all end all of basketball. This is an unproven assertion.

I am going to end this particular response here because you need to let this soak in. Once again, stop selling, I'm not buying.
 
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