Are you gonna sit there and tell me 142 minutes / 28 stretches is the difference between Kyrie only having 3.3 ISOs per game, and LeBron having 6.6 per game? LeBron averages basically
twice the amount of ISOs as Kyrie, yet you're ruling it down to the fact Kyrie plays 28 more stretches with another mediocre ball-handler.
Lord have mercy.
See, this is the problem, Smart shouldn't be taking ball-handling duties off anyone because he makes horrendous decisions with the ball in hand, he's near the top in the league in turnovers per time of possession (he even averages more turnovers per game than Kyrie despite handling the ball for 60% less time). He only handles the ball because the team's system is built off ball-movement, and player movement, where multiple players are expected to handle it, not because they're necessarily capable of handling it.
The exact same would apply if any of the Cavs players were on the team as well - Love, for example, would probably control the ball twice as long as he does on the Cavs, because of the duties the roll-man has in Boston's system.
JR's a decent ball-handler, there's no reason why he can't handle the ball more, in fact, it would do him good since it would help his rhythm (he used to handle the 6th man duties when he was in NY, on the regular).
You only think this way because the Cavs system marginalizes its players' skillsets, whereas Boston's maximizes its players' skillsets, sometimes to a fault.
There's a reason why despite all this ball movement, player accountability, and system play, the Celtics offense is ranked to the equivalent of the 6th-best offense in the league when Kyrie's on the court (110.6 ORTG), and why they're even worse than the worst offensive team in the league when Kyrie's off the court (102.4 ORTG), because they're not all that talented/experienced when it comes to generating offense, which is why Kyrie is forced to generate offense for himself in games.
To put that into perspective the Cavs offense has a 108 ORTG when LeBron is off the court, despite barely having a system.
And yet, I have to reiterate, even when he's forced to generate offense for himself because of the lack of offensive weapons, he still averages only half the amount of ISO possessions that LeBron does.
Only half the amount of ISOs as LeBron. Only half the amount of ISOs as LeBron. How many times do I need to repeat this before you grasp that concept?
How the hell can you say he's doing the same shyt as he was doing in Cleveland, when he takes 30% fewer ISOs compared to last season, with even MORE offensive responsibility? The fact he has to do more on a team because he's now the #1 option (as opposed to last season), is without his co-offensive anchor, and is surrounded by less talented and/or experienced scorers, on a bad offensive team, and yet still has managed to significantly decrease his ISO activity speaks to how much he's adapted his play to fit within the Celtics system.
He is NOT, and I repeat NOT doing the same shyt as he was in Cleveland.
The funny thing is, the Celtics actually need Kyrie to ISO more, because they regularly go on scoring droughts due to being limited in areas where they can score, effectively.
See:
"Boston's offense:
ISO - 75th percentile (top-5 in the league)
Transition - 6.9th percentile (bottom-5 in the league)
P&R (ball-handler) - 86th percentile (top-5 in the league)
P&R (roll man) - 41st percentile (bottom half of the league)
Post-up - 24th percentile (bottom-5 in the league)
Spot up - 69th percentile (top-10 in the league)
Hand-off - 48th percentile (bottom half of the league)
Off-screen - 89th percentile (top-5 in the league)
Basically, ISOs are one of the very few areas where Boston has had success scoring this season, and areas like transition, P&R (roll man), post-up and hand-off are the reasons for why they haven't had success scoring this season.
I bet none of y'all LeBron stans will even acknowledge this post."
You're just turning a blind eye to reality and parroting LeBron stan agitprop.