Saturday, May 30, 2015

2014-2015 NBA Playoffs Round 4

I have had the Warriors for a few rounds now, and am not changing. They were the best team all year, and nothing has substantially changed. Dubs in 5 over the Cavs. A sweep wouldn’t surprise me.

Honestly, I had to take a step back before making my prediction because I wanted to remove my biases. I have never liked Lebron, just not my style of superstar. The Cavs team is built terribly, and is going to sink itself this offseason by extending JR, Iman, and Thompson while Love runs away. They traded a career of Wiggins for an incomplete season of Love, which sounds insane. They run painful offensive sets and their defense, while much better in the playoffs to be fair, is not that good. Kyrie is a turnstile.

Meanwhile, I love these Warriors. Curry is what I made Steve Nash be in 2K for years: a freak shooter and passer who has 30 point/10 assist games with 7 3s. It just never happened in real life until Steph came into the league. Klay won me a fantasy title at the end of his rookie year (the Dubs were terrible and injured so they let a rookie SG just take as many shots as he wanted. It was fantastic for fantasy purposes). Barnes was one of my favorite college players. Bogut was a 2K mainstay in the early part of his career: I had sneaky Bucks’ wins when my opponents couldn’t name half the team (Redd and Mo Williams!). Iguodala was one of my favorite players of the last decade, still an underrated (if now overpaid) Swiss Army knife, leader, and awesome competitor. Barbosa can get a ring to represent all those Suns from the mid  to late 00’s that deserve one. However, I think my biases can be put aside for this prediction. Simply, the Warriors are so much better by any metric. They are a child of the D’Antoni Suns and 14-15 Spurs.

Honestly, I don’t think the Cavs are that good. I feel stronger about this one on paper than I did about the Spurs over the Cavs last season. They Xs and Os are more conclusive. There is a leadership factor to input because Lebron has been here and Golden State has not. However, Golden State isn’t exactly a young team. Green. Barnes, and Klay are still relatively green. However, Green and Barnes have been in the playoffs every year of their career. Steph is in year 6, Bogut and Lee have 10 years in the NBA at this point, and guys like Barbosa, Iguodala and Livingston have been around a long while. The Cavs, outside of Lebron and Perkins, really don’t have much more experience under pressure. If anything, they have less. Kyrie, Thompson, and Shumpert have few high leverage reps in their career.

Kerr has outcoached Blatt all year. Kerr gets the rookie coach title, but worked as a GM for so many years with a good team in Phoenix (and now has high class assistant coaches with him in Golden State) that his relative coaching age isn’t “rookie”. Blatt has been better in the playoffs than the regular season, but still makes stupid mistakes.

In terms of matchups, there are two glaring issues. The first is that there is nowhere to hide Kyrie. He can’t guard Steph, and Klay/Barnes would be a disaster in the post or while running around screens. No matter what you do, Kyrie is a sieve defensively. Take him out of the game because of his defensive liabilities, and then you don’t have to worry as much on the other end about defending the CLE PG spot.

The second issue is Lebron. No one can guard him, still. However, in the playoffs his jumper is broken and I don’t think a week is going to fix it. For the first time in a long time, Lebron is in part getting stats and impact through sheer numbers of possessions, not shot efficiency. Part of his allure was that he got 25 points on 15 shots. Now he is getting 30 on 25 shots. The 3s are not falling. So, the gameplan should be to find people who can slow him down and force him to take jumpers. Ignore the times he makes them and go forward. The Spurs did it with Leonard. Most teams have 1 or 0 guys who can make an attempt. Jimmy Butler did okay, and Carroll, before the injury, was again okay at it. The reason I love this matchup for the Warriors is that they have 4 guys who can do an acceptable job on Lebron.

Draymond Green is a great match for Lebron among all available defenders. Iguodala has always been a good option and is still viable. Harrison Barnes has the length and youth to be a really good third defensive option and one that Golden State doesn’t have to panic about when a switch happens. Klay Thompson isn’t the greatest option on Lebron, but he plays good hard defense using his length on opponents. He will have Kyrie I’d assume (consider how well Klay defends CP3 and Mike Conley), but like with Barnes the Warriors won’t panic if he gets switched on Lebron. Most teams would love to have Klay as the 4th option defensively on Lebron.

Generally, the Warriors can switch just about everything and that is a major key to their success defensively. Bogut guarded Tony Allen as the key adjustment in the second round for goodness’ sake. The Cavs always have to hide Kyrie, and bench Mozgov when something just doesn’t work with him. The Warriors may blitz with the Curry/Klay/Barnes/Iggy/Green lineup and I have no idea how the Cavs contain that unless they try Lebron at the 5 himself. The 3 point shooters Cleveland uses in James Jones and Mike Miller would get abused this series where they walked about unscathed in the Hawks’ series. Plus, you know, there is the Curry problem. If Lebron covers Curry that’d be most effective, but would have devastating impact in the rest of the matchups. Barnes, Green, and Iggy would kill whoever they got in the cross match.  

The numbers suggest a very efficient series victory for Golden State. I think Golden State got its scare in the past series injury wise and in the previous series with their invincibility bubble popped. Cleveland has been overachieving for a while now, and taking advantage of a really easy Eastern Conference. Curry completes the incredibly hard (and statistically unlikely) task of being able to beat each of the other four All-NBA performers in 4 consecutive rounds.



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