I re-open the debate: How many MVPs should LeBron James have?

Rigby.

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rigby breh, you've said you're 16 before. at most 17. why you talking about 2006 like you weren't a fukking 6 year old. :dahell:
re-analyzing the game from a pure statistical and unbiased video analysis still gives me a more honest opinion than some of what y'all be spewing :ufdup:
 
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The gap with Rose was HUGE though - from 1.03ppp with him on the court to 0.93ppp with him off the court. He had the worst defensive +/- of any of Chicago's 9 main rotation players, and it was much worse than the other 8.
This is why you have to provide the proper context when discussing ORTG and DRTG because they're team-based metrics - all influenced by the surrounding players you play with - they're not based on individual defensive impact and ability. Same goes for defensive +/-, it is meaningless without the proper context - something which you haven't provided or even begun to explore. All you've done is trot out team-based defensive formulas and seeing which ones stick to the wall, in a vain attempt at trying to prop up your hero.
Pointing out that the Bulls had a fantastic defensive bench is not a good argument for Rose getting MVP. If the Bulls don't win 60 games and have the best record in the league, he doesn't sniff that award.
Now you're shifting the argument. I pointed out the bench's defensive value and impact to explain the difference on why Rose's on/off court defensive ratings are what they are during that season. Team defense was a major part of the Bulls success that season, and yes it played a significant part in Rose's MVP nod. However, need I remind you that I was responding to your statement of Rose being a liability on defense, not what his case for MVP was.
And the MAIN reason they jumped from 41 to 62 wins was because of Thibs and the defense, not because Rose suddenly had 20+ wins improvement in one season. In 2011-12 the Bulls went 18-9 in games that Rose didn't play in, showing that they could be a very good team even when their best player was completely subtracted from the equation. They mentally collapsed when they lost him in the playoffs, as most teams do when they lose their best player, but that's not an argument for MVP. The Thunder collapsed when they lost Westbrook in 2013, and he wasn't even the best player on the team, much less in the NBA.

Can you imagine that 2010-11 Heat team going 18-9 without Lebron? (FTW, the Heat were 2-5 without Lebron from 2010-2012.)
What in the fukk are you doing here? Stop it. I did NOT quote you over what you perceive as what the cause of the change in the Bulls success was - simply just to point out you were mistaken on Rose's defensive ability/impact during that season for the Bulls. You have a tendency to do this. Stick to what I was addressing and nothing else.
I think it follows that when literally every teammate on the court (except maybe Boozer) is better at defense than you and your coach is the best defensive mind in all of basketball, your defensive numbers are going to get inflated.
What evidence do you have in regards to every teammate being better than him on the defensive end? And to what point are you willing to argue that he was carried on the defensive end, when all his individual defensive stats show he was one of the best (if not the best) starting PG on defense during that season?
As Henry Abbott pointed out, he didn't just suddenly go from an awful defender to one of the best in the league. No one makes an offseason improvement like that. He went from abysmal to average. Maybe a little above-average, but that's pushing it. Every one of your stats is influenced by the fact that he had elite defensive teammates taking the toughest matchups, elite defensive teammates swarming the passing lanes, elite defensive teammates picking up slack when he got beat on drives, and elite defensive teammates generally breaking down the other team until they got weary and beat-down as hell every game.
:heh:

This is how I know you don't know what the fukk you're talking about. I watched every single Bulls game that season, even some games more than once - Rose guarded the opposing PG/main ball-handler practically every night; Bogans would typically chase around the off-ball guard and Deng would take the bigger wing players. Rose's role on defense did NOT change throughout the season, in fact he stepped it up on that end whenever he came up against an elite offensive PG.

But let's say for argument's sake say that his INDIVIDUAL defensive stats were influenced on what you claim [elite defensive teammates taking the tougher matchups, teammates swarming the passing lanes and picking up the slack when he got beat on drives etc etc], if he was as big of a liability as you claim he was, he wouldn't have ranked #1 or #2 out of all the starting point guards in defensive overall points per possession, isolation defensive points per possession, pick and roll: ball-handler defensive points per possession, spot up points per possession and blocks.

If he was a "liability" to his team on defense, he would have at the very least ranked below the medium in all those individual defensive categories - even if he was guarding the weaker offensive players, he was still doing a better job than practically every other starting PG, and he was still helping his team on defense with the matchups and situations he was faced with.

You do NOT rank as high as Rose did in all those categories are be a liability to your team.
And how can you brag about his "statistical feats" that season, while acknowledging that not only were they the result of Thibs' defense, but ignoring that Lebron had greater statistical feats on the offensive and defensive side of the ball than Rose did? And it certainly wasn't because of Spolstra's amazing defensive brain.

As long as you're quoting some advanced stats, let's do some comparisons:

Lebron Drtg 101.6
Rose Drtg 102.7

Lebron Ortg 116.2
Rose Ortg 112.8

Lebron Offensive Win Shares 10.3
Rose Offensive Win Shares 8.3

Lebron Defensive Win Shares 5.3
Rose Defensive Win Shares 4.8

Lebron Box +/- 8.6 (6.5 offense, 2.1 defense)
Rose Box +/- 5.9 (5.8 offense, 0.1 defense)

Lebron VORP 8.2
Rose VORP 6.0
:merchant:

Now you've gone right off the deep end. Not only do you not know how to use team metrics in the right manner, but you've completely shifted this from me addressing you calling Rose a "liability" on defense during that season (this was all I addressed, and nothing else) to a Rose v. LeBron argument. I never once mentioned LeBron, nor insinuated anything in regards to Rose's defensive impact in comparison to LeBron's.
The Chicago Bulls won all of 4 more games than the Heat, 62 instead of 58, so it's not like team success was meaningfully different. Rose got the MVP because The Decision made everyone want to vote for anyone but Lebron, back-to-back MVPs had caused voter fatigue (even Jordan only won back-to-back MVPs once, and never three in a row), and because the Bulls hit that magic number of 60 wins. But Lebron was the better and more valuable player that season.
Only can LeBron stans turn a discussion about another player's worth/ability into a comparison with LeBron.
 
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Doesnt just apply to him either, I've seen a couple of posters that I know for a fact are under 25 discuss guys like Larry Bird as if they saw them play.
I honestly don't think age is the most important thing when discussing shyt - it's the volume of what you've actually seen. Just because old heads were alive and mentally capable of digesting the game doesn't mean their opinion is more valuable than someone younger (who actively seeks out games and watches them decades later), just because they happened to watch Bird play 3-4 times a season.
 

MAKAVELI25

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I honestly don't think age is the most important thing when discussing shyt - it's the volume of what you've actually seen. Just because old heads were alive and mentally capable of digesting the game doesn't mean their opinion is more valuable than someone younger (who actively seeks out games and watches them decades later), just because they happened to watch Bird play 3-4 times a season.

My point is that most people under 25 never saw Larry Bird play.... :dahell:

Obviously if they did they can speak on it, I didn't think that needed to be said.
 
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My point is that most people under 25 never saw Larry Bird play.... :dahell:

Obviously if they did they can speak on it, I didn't think that needed to be said.
I know what your point was, I just wanted to add on to what you said. You can still be under 25 and discuss Bird's game if you've seen enough of his game.

:manny:
 

I AM WARHOL

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Bron stans so excessive with these type of threads. No amount of crying and whining from y'all will get him more accolades:mjlol:. Theses threads are just a circle jerk of Lebron stans that realize his window is closing
 

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Only can LeBron stans turn a discussion about another player's worth/ability into a comparison with LeBron.

:lolbron:

I had to put this up top because it shows how much this is getting into your emotions. Did you forget what the whole thread is about? Do you need to look at the thread title again? The issue discussed in my comment was whether Lebron deserved the MVP in 2011 over Rose.

Of course it's a comparison with Lebron. What else could it be? :heh: Ya'all getting a little bit too crazy to think straight.




This is why you have to provide the proper context when discussing ORTG and DRTG because they're team-based metrics - all influenced by the surrounding players you play with - they're not based on individual defensive impact and ability. Same goes for defensive +/-, it is meaningless without the proper context - something which you haven't provided or even begun to explore. All you've done is trot out team-based defensive formulas and seeing which ones stick to the wall, in a vain attempt at trying to prop up your hero.

Did you forget order of events again? YOU posted the context-less defensive stats in an attempt to prop up Rose. I simply pointed out that if we're going to use context-less defensive stats as our measure, then Lebron clearly wins that argument.

Now, if we're saying that the numbers are distorted by who we're playing with, then who is going to win that argument? The guy whose defensive numbers are propped up by playing in Thibs' defensive system and surrounded by above-average defensive players at every position? Or the guy playing in Spolstra's defensive system who has to make up for having 2-3 average-or-worse defensive players on the court with him at all times?



Now you're shifting the argument. I pointed out the bench's defensive value and impact to explain the difference on why Rose's on/off court defensive ratings are what they are during that season. Team defense was a major part of the Bulls success that season, and yes it played a significant part in Rose's MVP nod. However, need I remind you that I was responding to your statement of Rose being a liability on defense, not what his case for MVP was.

I'm not "shifting the argument". The whole argument from the beginning has been who deserved MVP in 2011, Lebron or Rose.

And what I said was that Rose was the biggest liability on the team on defense. I later shifted that to acknowledge that Boozer may have actually been the biggest liability, although he did play 40% fewer minutes. And no matter what you've tried to toss out, you've still only been making my argument for me. Other than Boozer, who was a bigger liability on defense for that team? Bogans? Brewer? Deng? Gibson? Noah? Asik? Thomas?



What in the fukk are you doing here? Stop it. I did NOT quote you over what you perceive as what the cause of the change in the Bulls success was - simply just to point out you were mistaken on Rose's defensive ability/impact during that season for the Bulls. You have a tendency to do this. Stick to what I was addressing and nothing else.

Why do you have this weird obsession with thinking that you can force me to argue the argument YOU want to have, rather than the point I was actually making?

:heh:

I made the point. You replied to me. If you don't want to argue who the MVP of the 2011 season was, then don't reply to my comment about the MVP of the 2011 season.



What evidence do you have in regards to every teammate being better than him on the defensive end? And to what point are you willing to argue that he was carried on the defensive end, when all his individual defensive stats show he was one of the best (if not the best) starting PG on defense during that season?

1. You haven't shown convincing evidence that Rose was the best starting PG on defense that season. You put out some stats, and then acknowledge that those stats need context...and the clear context is that Rose benefited from the best defensive system in the entire NBA and a roster stocked with guys who were better at and more committed to defense than himself.

Rose was a poor defender in 2009-10. He went from a 109.1 Drtg w/out Thibs to a 102.7 Drtg the very next year with him, and was back up to a 109.2 Drtg again this year without him. (By comparison, Lebron has NEVER had worse than a 104.6 Drtg in any season in his entire 13-year career, no matter how good or bad his team was, who his coaches were, or who his teammates were) By what miracle do you think Rose jumped from well below-average to "best in the NBA" in a single season? What I can see is that his coach's defensive schemes were amazing, the defensive talent he was surrounded with was amazing.

And this is all a pointless argument anyway...who besides you decided to compare Rose to other starting point guards? To see whether Rose deserved MVP over Lebron, his contributions should be compared to those of his teammates, especially his own backup, or to Lebron. Unless one of those other starting PGs is a threat to deserve the MVP that year.

2. Sticking on the perimeter, I had never even heard someone claim that Rose was superior on defense to Deng, Bogans, or Brewer that year. I didn't know that would be a serious argument that anyone considered. Everyone else on that roster was a strong defender already, made even better by Thibs system. Rose was a bad defender who was made average or slightly above-average by Thibs system.

Rose was 9th on the team in DWS/48 in 2011. Rose was 11th on the team in DBPM. 6th in steal%, 7th in block%, 11th in DRB%.



This is how I know you don't know what the fukk you're talking about. I watched every single Bulls game that season, even some games more than once

Yeah, you're in too deep. :cape:




But let's say for argument's sake say that his INDIVIDUAL defensive stats were influenced on what you claim [elite defensive teammates taking the tougher matchups, teammates swarming the passing lanes and picking up the slack when he got beat on drives etc etc], if he was as big of a liability as you claim he was, he wouldn't have ranked #1 or #2 out of all the starting point guards in defensive overall points per possession, isolation defensive points per possession, pick and roll: ball-handler defensive points per possession, spot up points per possession and blocks.

If he was a "liability" to his team on defense, he would have at the very least ranked below the medium in all those individual defensive categories - even if he was guarding the weaker offensive players, he was still doing a better job than practically every other starting PG, and he was still helping his team on defense with the matchups and situations he was faced with.

You do NOT rank as high as Rose did in all those categories are be a liability to your team.

That argument makes no sense. Being in a better defensive system and surrounded by better teammates DOES make you better in every one of those categories. No NBA player is actually on a pure one-on-one island, ever. If you can trust your other defenders to have their men cloaked, if you know the rim is protected behind you, if the passing lanes are all filled, if the paint is packed - all those things allow you to defend differently and more effectively than if that's not the case. Someone who constantly has to give help defense, can't trust the rim to be protected, works in a less-effective defensive system with less-effective switching, is put out on an island in space more often - their numbers are going to be worse. Everything that limits your opponents' options makes life easier on you and improves your efficiency numbers. All those PPP stats are helped if you man is swarmed even when he gets by you. You can't say that a single one of those numbers isn't affected by being in a better defensive scheme and with better teammates. You can't say that Rose didn't have a decisive schematic advantage that distorted his contribution in comparison to PG's on other teams in every case.

You're totally obsessed with comparing Rose's numbers favorably to other point guards, and acting like that somehow proves something in comparison to his other teammates. My point was that his TEAMMATES were more effective defenders than him. That's all I said - that he was an inferior defender compared to the other rotation players (though I've admitted that Boozer deserved to be up there). You keep talking about other starting point guards as if that means something - sorry, but THEY weren't benefiting from Thibs system, THEY weren't on the court with Rose's teammates, and THEY aren't a part of the discussion about whether Lebron or Rose is a better MVP candidate.
 

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This dude out here calling Rose a "liability" on defense during his MVP season. :heh:

Well, he probably didnt watch many Bulls games then :francis:

and, as for Bron should have had that MVP? :dahell:

that is some straight revisionist history shyt, nobody, NOBODY was putting Bron over Rose on their lists that season. Dwight was the only name people were pushing outside Derrick

dude is trying to rewrite history from fukking 5 years ago like we werent here and dont remember :heh:
 

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This dude out here calling Rose a "liability" on defense during his MVP season. :heh:
http://offthedribble.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/01/19/rose-dwarfs-other-improvements-with-defense/

More outstanding yet are Rose’s individual defensive numbers.According to Synergy Sports Technology, Rose has allowed just 0.77 points per possession overall on defense this season, an elite mark for any defender, regardless of position. Chris Paul (0.86 points per possession allowed), Rajon Rondo (0.83 PPP allowed), and Russell Westbrook (0.92 PPP allowed) –- all excellent defenders -– have been trumped statistically this year, and by no slim margin. Rose has each of those players handily beat, and boasts a shockingly comprehensive defensive profile.

Rose is particularly effective in defending isolation sequences, where he allows just 0.61 points per possession. Rose’s lateral quickness becomes a huge asset when opponents go one-on-one.
 
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:lolbron:

I had to put this up top because it shows how much this is getting into your emotions. Did you forget what the whole thread is about? Do you need to look at the thread title again? The issue discussed in my comment was whether Lebron deserved the MVP in 2011 over Rose..
I realize what this thread is centered around. I only quoted your post to point out your statement of Rose being a liability on defense as being false. If I had a problem with all your other points, I would've quoted and addressed them. But I didn't. The insecurities of a LeBron stan aside, why did you feel the need to shift the argument?
Did you forget order of events again? YOU posted the context-less defensive stats in an attempt to prop up Rose. I simply pointed out that if we're going to use context-less defensive stats as our measure, then Lebron clearly wins that argument.
:heh:

Individual defensive stats (overall defensive PPP, iso defensive PPP, spot up defensive ppp P&R ballhandler and roll man stats) are a better measurement of one's defensive impact/ability than team defensive stats (defensive rating, defensive plus minus). I used those stats to PROVE he wasn't a liability. I suggest you look up the definition and get back to me.
Now, if we're saying that the numbers are distorted by who we're playing with, then who is going to win that argument? The guy whose defensive numbers are propped up by playing in Thibs' defensive system and surrounded by above-average defensive players at every position? Or the guy playing in Spolstra's defensive system who has to make up for having 2-3 average-or-worse defensive players on the court with him at all times?
:merchant:

The point is, Rose was NOT a liability to his team on defense; in relation to winning MVP and as a standalone. Was he aided by his teammates on defense? Absolutely (as is every PG in the league), but he most definitely was not a liability. There's a stark difference between the two. You should've done a better job at phrasing your statement - something along the lines of LeBron was more important or had more defensive impact than Rose did during that season - not deem Rose as a liability.
I'm not "shifting the argument". The whole argument from the beginning has been who deserved MVP in 2011, Lebron or Rose.
Are you that agenda driven that you can't address individual points properly without going on an unrelated tangent?
And what I said was that Rose was the biggest liability on the team on defense. I later shifted that to acknowledge that Boozer may have actually been the biggest liability, although he did play 40% fewer minutes. And no matter what you've tried to toss out, you've still only been making my argument for me. Other than Boozer, who was a bigger liability on defense for that team? Bogans? Brewer? Deng? Gibson? Noah? Asik? Thomas?.
Not only do you have a strange interpretation of etymology (Why does Rose have to be ruled as a liability? Why can't you just say he wasn't as good as some of the other defenders? A liability is implying he either didn't show enough effort, focus, have the ability or contribute anything defensively to the team). The only real liabilities on that team that played meaningful minutes that season were Boozer and Korver.

Even if we take a surface defensive measurement like blocks - if you went through each season's stats, you wouldn't be able to find a PG who averaged the most blocks, who was a liability to their team's defense.
Why do you have this weird obsession with thinking that you can force me to argue the argument YOU want to have, rather than the point I was actually making?

:heh:
.
I'm forcing you to acknowledge that your assessment on Rose's role, ability and impact on defense in '10/'11 is wrong. I don't particularly care on what you have to say about LeBron, as most of the time it's usually re-runs of LeBron stan talking points. This is another problem of yours, you either ignore the details or you fill in the blanks to push your agenda. Then you get all defensive and start pointing to the end of your third act, as if it makes sense and sounds reasonable on some deus ex machina type shyt.

Like I said above, it would've been better for you to say that LeBron had more defensive impact, and played more of a defensive role on his respective team, than Rose did. You didn't even call him a liability based on watching him play, I can tell you all you did was look a bunch of articles and looked at a few stats during when the MVP talk was heating up and made your conclusion from there.
I made the point. You replied to me. If you don't want to argue who the MVP of the 2011 season was, then don't reply to my comment about the MVP of the 2011 season.
You do NOT get to put up the parameters on what I reply to. You fukked up with your comment on Rose, what's so hard and admitting you were wrong?
1. You haven't shown convincing evidence that Rose was the best starting PG on defense that season. You put out some stats, and then acknowledge that those stats need context...and the clear context is that Rose benefited from the best defensive system in the entire NBA and a roster stocked with guys who were better at and more committed to defense than himself.
All stats need context - you haven't been able to provide any context whatsoever on why you said Rose was a liability on defense during that season. I didn't bring up those stats to necessarily show he was arguably the best, I brought them up to show you that he wasn't a liability. Even through all the noise of the more context-laden ones (ball-handler PPP and overall PPP), being #1 in isolation PPP and #2 in spot up PPP is more than enough to prove a player isn't a liability on that end.

With all the isolation situations he guarded (which were mostly PGs, from the bottom to the elite), he came on top that season - out of every starting PG.
Rose was a poor defender in 2009-10. He went from a 109.1 Drtg w/out Thibs to a 102.7 Drtg the very next year with him, and was back up to a 109.2 Drtg again this year without him. (By comparison, Lebron has NEVER had worse than a 104.6 Drtg in any season in his entire 13-year career, no matter how good or bad his team was, who his coaches were, or who his teammates were) By what miracle do you think Rose jumped from well below-average to "best in the NBA" in a single season? What I can see is that his coach's defensive schemes were amazing, the defensive talent he was surrounded with was amazing.
You don't use DRTG to gauge one's defensive ability, it's not an individual based metric. It's the defensive rating the team has when a specific player is on the floor. How many times do I need to say this before it gets through to you? Second of all, you can't use DRTGs of two players who play two different positions - especially if one of them is a PG.
And this is all a pointless argument anyway...who besides you decided to compare Rose to other starting point guards? To see whether Rose deserved MVP over Lebron, his contributions should be compared to those of his teammates, especially his own backup, or to Lebron. Unless one of those other starting PGs is a threat to deserve the MVP that year.
.
I compared him to other starting PGs, to show you how effective he was on defense in relation to his peers who played the same position. If you felt he was a liability on that end, than that would mean every other starting PG would be a liability too, would it not? It was to put his defensive PPP on matchup situation into perspective; giving up only 0.77 points per possession on defense doesn't mean shyt if you can't compare it to other players at his position and how effective they are at guarding players in the same situations.

I'd like you to explain how Rose could've been a liability to his team while holding his matchups to 0.77 ppp - better than every other starting PG?
2. Sticking on the perimeter, I had never even heard someone claim that Rose was superior on defense to Deng, Bogans, or Brewer that year. I didn't know that would be a serious argument that anyone considered. Everyone else on that roster was a strong defender already, made even better by Thibs system. Rose was a bad defender who was made average or slightly above-average by Thibs system.
Who the fukk said Rose was superior on defense to Deng, Bogans and Brewer that season? Deng, Bogans and Brewer for starters not only had more defensive versatility, but due to their position had more influence on the defensive end (a PG can only have so much impact - unless they're capable of guarding multiple positions). There's a reason I compared Rose's defensive PPP to other PGs - I used Brewer's defensive PPP as a scale to show that Rose was able to keep his opposite to just as low scoring #s - adding to the notion that he wasn't a liability.

You're assessment on Rose's defensive ability couldn't be further from the truth. Stop regurgitating articles you read.
Rose was 9th on the team in DWS/48 in 2011. Rose was 11th on the team in DBPM. 6th in steal%, 7th in block%, 11th in DRB%.
Context. Context. Context.
That argument makes no sense. Being in a better defensive system and surrounded by better teammates DOES make you better in every one of those categories. No NBA player is actually on a pure one-on-one island, ever.
It makes complete sense, if Rose was a liability to their defense, he would've not ranked as high as he did. This is what you're failing to grasp, if he was a liability - he wouldn't have been #1 in iso situations (which is the closest you'll get to on an island) - in order for him to be #1 or #2 in these individual defensive spots he needs to be at the center of the player (even if aided by teammates) that would rule him out of the running of being a liability to his team.

You do not average the most blocks for a PG: hold opponents to the lowest points per possession in iso situations, lowest points per possession in P&R ball handler situations and second to lowest points per possession in spot up situations and be a liability to your team's defense.
If you can trust your other defenders to have their men cloaked, if you know the rim is protected behind you, if the passing lanes are all filled, if the paint is packed - all those things allow you to defend differently and more effectively than if that's not the case. Someone who constantly has to give help defense, can't trust the rim to be protected, works in a less-effective defensive system with less-effective switching, is put out on an island in space more often - their numbers are going to be worse. Everything that limits your opponents' options makes life easier on you and improves your efficiency numbers.
You say this shyt, but you use DRTG to gauge one's defensive ability? shyt is like the Twilight Zone.:heh:
All those PPP stats are helped if you man is swarmed even when he gets by you. You can't say that a single one of those numbers isn't affected by being in a better defensive scheme and with better teammates. You can't say that Rose didn't have a decisive schematic advantage that distorted his contribution in comparison to PG's on other teams in every case.
No, not all those PPP stats are helped if they get by Rose - they're the situation he's guarding - if they get by him then they're credited to the player who defends the shot. All defensive stats are affected by scheme and personnel. A PG needs more help than any other position; of course Rose was aided by his teammates and Thibs' principles on defense. When have I even alluded to that it hasn't?

Rose played heavy minutes with Boozer (who had statistically horrible rim protection, P&R coverage and was well below average in most PPP situations) - here Rose played with a player who not only was an actual liability to the team's defense, but the other three starters (Noah, Deng and Bogans) weren't nearly good enough to not only cover up Boozer's mistakes but also cover up Rose's and aid him to the point where he statistically was the best amongst starting PGs. It was simply not possible.

Whenever Boozer was on the court, it made every Bulls player's life that much harder on defense - particularly guards like Rose in P&R situations and big men who had to worry about Boozer's man.
You're totally obsessed with comparing Rose's numbers favorably to other point guards, and acting like that somehow proves something in comparison to his other teammates. My point was that his TEAMMATES were more effective defenders than him.
Nah, that's NOT what you said - for starters SGs, SFs, PFs and Cs in general are more effective defenders, simply based off position. Second of all, his teammates can still be more effective defenders, yet that doesn't make Rose a liability - it just means he's not as effective as others. Deng wasn't as effective as Noah on defense that season, it doesn't mean Deng was a liability. It just means Noah was better and had more impact because he was the anchor.

How many Bulls games did you actually watch that season?
 
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I couldn't keep reading past the first 3 paragraphs.

So if I understand correctly, this entire exercise by you has been based on the fact that you don't think I should have said, "liability", when what I meant was "weaker in comparison to his teammates"?

:bryan:


Sure bubba, if that's the way you want it, I'll concede that point.
 
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I couldn't keep reading past the first 3 paragraphs.

So if I understand correctly, this entire exercise by you has been based on the fact that you don't think I should have said, "liability", when what I meant was "weaker in comparison to his teammates"?

:bryan:


Sure bubba, if that's the way you want it, I'll concede that point.
It's based on the fact you shouldn't be discussing things you have little to no knowledge of, just for the sake of pushing your LeBron agenda. It's quite evident you didn't watch enough Bulls games to have an accurate observation of his defensive play.
It would pay for you to read this article @The Dankster - most certainly when it has quotes like this in it:
More outstanding yet are Rose’s individual defensive numbers.According to Synergy Sports Technology, Rose has allowed just 0.77 points per possession overall on defense this season, an elite mark for any defender, regardless of position. Chris Paul (0.86 points per possession allowed), Rajon Rondo (0.83 PPP allowed), and Russell Westbrook (0.92 PPP allowed) –- all excellent defenders -– have been trumped statistically this year, and by no slim margin. Rose has each of those players handily beat, and boasts a shockingly comprehensive defensive profile.

Rose is particularly effective in defending isolation sequences, where he allows just 0.61 points per possession. Rose’s lateral quickness becomes a huge asset when opponents go one-on-one.
All of that makes for a pretty impressive résumé, but neglects the most drastic improvement in Rose’s game this season; whether due to natural evolution, Tom Thibodeau’s tutelage, or his time with the defense-first Team U.S.A., Rose has learned to use his incredible physical gifts more effectively on the defensive end, and has become into one of the league’s most surprisingly effective perimeter defenders.
Joakim Noah, thought to be the single key to the Bulls’ defensive success, has played only 24 of 41 games this season, and yet Chicago is still best in the league in points allowed per 100 possessions. Rose doesn’t deserve all of the credit, but the perimeter trio of Rose, Ronnie Brewer, and Luol Deng has made things tough for opposing teams. It’s a matter of necessity; Chicago’s offense isn’t good enough to keep it afloat, and its defense provides the most consistent path toward victory. If Rose were still a defensive sieve, the Bulls would be struggling without Noah. If Rose were merely a moderately successful defender, the Bulls wouldn’t have the top defense and the third seed in the Eastern Conference. It’s taken every bit of Rose’s defensive improvement to keep the Bulls rolling despite significant injuries to both Noah and Carlos Boozer, but he’s quickly taken to Thibodeau’s famed defensive system and delivered in a big way.
 
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