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NBA Things That Aren't True, Even if People Tell You They Are

We live in a world full of critics, better statistics and technology that allows better visual access to, well, almost everything.  Twenty years ago, if Pamela Anderson or Kim Kardashian make a sex tape, it might be disappointing to their families and communities and copies might be found in a few thousand adult stores.  I would guess that 10 or so clicks of the mouse would get you a copy straight to your computer if you were into that kind of thing.  Ten years ago, critiques of films ended with "what did you think of movie X?" and Roger and Eberts TV show.  Now I can google reviews of Inception and read summaries and explanations for 3 straight hours.  You can even go to Youtube and see ratings and comments on a kid who just went to the dentist.  The same is true for analyzing sports and athletes.  We are better at it.  For the most part, fans and analysts can tell what players help their teams and what players just shoot every time they have the ball.  And yet there are a handful of myths that still exist in NBA circles all over America.  Let's discuss.

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MYTH #1- Chris Paul is better than Deron Williams-

Many of the so called experts have come around on this issue, at least by debating about it rather than naming Paul the outright winner, but there are still myth-spreaders among us.  When arguing the Deron Williams vs. Chris Paul case, there are really only two numbers you need to remember: 41 and 22.  The first number is how many more games Chris Paul has sat out due to injury than Deron Williams in 5 years.  The second number is Eric Gordon's scoring average when playing the Hornets his rookie season.  I haven't seen a non Jazz fan mention it, but Chris Paul is a defensive liability.  If he's matched up against Aaron Brooks, or Jonny Flynn, then he's fine.  But put him against a team that has a big point guard and shooting guard and he literally can't guard anyone on the court.  It is the main reason that the Hornets can't beat the Jazz head to head.  Paul can't guard Deron Williams or Ronnie Brewer, or Wes Matthews. In fact, often he can't even stay on the court and out of foul trouble when he has to guard Williams.  Deron Williams is a fantastic perimeter defender.  And he is big and strong.  Deron has shown that he can guard a guy like Dwyane Wade, or Kobe Bryant or Brandon Roy when switched on them.  Paul may put up flashier statistics, but Paul can't touch him in head to head matchups, durability, or defensive abilities.  Pick Paul if you are playing fantasy basketball, but pick Deron if you want to win basketball games.

MYTH #2- Future Contract Extensions will Doom the OKC Thunder

The Thunder have a lot of things going right for them that aren't Kevin Durant.  They have him locked up for the near future so he is locked and loaded and committed to winning for a small market team.  Jeff Green was also up for an extension, but the Thunder decided to make him wait til next offseason to work on an extension.  More on that later.  Russell Westbrook is the Thunder's second best player and he isn't due for a contract extension until 2012-13.  Ibaka James Harden and Serge Ibaka will come after that.  So they won't have to shell out big money for all of these guys at the same time and if they are able to play it right, they MIGHT and it's a big "might" be able to retain all of their young players.  The other thing that OKC has going for them is that a new CBA will hypothetically help owners more than it helps players.  Maybe a max contract for Westbrook in 2012 will mean a lot less than they just shelled out to Durant.  This is why it is so smart for OKC to make Jeff Green wait for a contract extension until the next CBA.  The Thunder might lose one or two of these young players, but Green isn't close to a max contract and Ibaka and Harden aren't going to be either.  As long as they can retain Durant and Westbrook, this team will be contenders.  And I think at worst, they will be able to afford Durant and Westbrook at max contracts and either Harden or Ibaka at a quasi-large contract.  But more than likely, future contract extensions will keep the whole core from staying together.  If not, Amar owes David Stern part of his kidney

MYTH #3- Carmelo Anthony is a Franchise Player

The evidence is mounting against him.  People look at his offensive game and his 28 points per game and his olympic performance and think "what a great player."  I have already talked about Anthony's offensive game being very overrated.  He also isn't very good at getting his teammates involved.  He doesn't get a lot of assists and he is an average rebounder at best.  If Carmelo Anthony is as elite as people pretend, he would be able to carry his team, a team that has been very talented since Chauncey Billups came to Denver, to a better record in the playoffs than he has.  Anthony has only taken the Nuggets past the first round once in 7 tries.  I know he probably thinks he is doing all he can and his teammates are letting him down, but the truth is that Anthony can't carry a team as the best player.  The main reason is because he is a terrible defender.  I think one of the reasons that the myth that Anthony is a franchise player goes on is honestly due to his lone championship...at Syracuse.  He seems like a go-to guy, but let's be honest.  College basketball isn't the NBA.  Scorers thrive in college, especially the Big East where scoring 60 points as a team might earn you a blowout.  His size and athleticism allowed him to get by defensively as well.  But I can guarantee you that Anthony won't do anything of value in the NBA if he is the best player on his team.  In fact, I hope that he hooks up with Amare Stoudemire and Chris Paul in New York, because that team would be awesome...offensively.  All 3 of those guys are bad defenders.  But importantly for the Jazz, Anthony's incorrect perception of how fantastic a player he is, is going to help the Jazz.  Either the Nuggets are going to have inner turmoil or they are trading Anthony and gutting the team.

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Comments

#1 - My sentiments exactly

I couldn’t have worded it any better. I have had many debates about which guard is better, and my #1 argument has always been, “Just look at them head to head.” DWill owns Paul every single time. Watching 20 minutes of any given game between the Hornets and the Jazz and it is inherently obvious who is the better player, and it always amazes me when Paul is mentioned as being “arguably the best” PG in the game.

I think Rajon Rondo has a better argument, because he knows how to play defense, and because he plays the role of PG very well.

I still think DWill is the best PG in the game today though. Make no mistake. I just don’t think Paul should even be in the discussion, despite his offensive numbers.

#2 could go either way

If there is one thing that we should have learned from this NBA off season it is that with this new generation of superstars predicting their behavior is no sure thing. No one knows what will come on the new CBA and how players will react to it is even less certain. But with Carmelo saying he is open to going to the Clippers of all teams, with Chris Paul wanting out of NOLA, the only thing clear about NBA players is that they are only looking out for #1.

One thing we know is that Kevin Durant is the future in OKC and the city will do everything in its power to keep him there, but we would have said the same 3 years ago about LeBron. This young team that has grown up together and like with brothers and sisters might have some friction come up along the way. If Jeff Green thinks he isn’t getting treated the way he deserves to be treated, it could cause chemistry problems. There might not be a role player in the NBA that I would like to have on the Jazz as much as Ibaka (if only we would have drafted him). I have a feeling that a lot of other teams will have those same sentiments. Keeping him will be key for OKCs future and maybe Portland gives him a crazy offer in a few years and OKC either has to match the offer and then risk loosing other pieces in the future, maybe Harden, or let him go and try to find another freak athlete big man with a good attitude that blocks shots and makes hustle plays. As all Jazz fans know, those guys don’t grow on trees.

Another thing that OKC will have to deal with is learning how to add players when they aren’t lottery a team every year. They have built almost there entire rotation through the draft. Though I think they have a good front office and I like Harden’s game, can you imagine if they would have drafted Curry last year instead? Not only are the contracts going to get bigger, but the new talent coming in won’t be lottery level. As they get closer to the cap or even go over the cap, they no longer will be able to receive salary dump gifts, i.e. Eric Maynor. Going forward they are going to have to improve some positions and keep the players they have happy. They better find a new center or find a way to keep their starting center happy or they could get hit with a chair. Cole Aldrich in platforms might not be the best center to get OKC to the next level. They really missed out on not getting Camby for peanuts on the dollar last year at the deadline, but so did the Jazz.

I’m not saying that they are going to be a bad team going forward, but what if Russell Westbrook wants out. He played at UCLA and what if a team in purple and gold made it possible that he could play with Kobe and Pau in their last stand? The Lakers have to know Steve Blake isn’t the answer at the point. Maybe he would want to go back to LA. Remember KG and Marbury in Minnesota. Steph wanted to go home and KG and the T’Wolves went from up and comer to basement dweller. The poor T’Wolves had to go through the Spreewell experiment only to have that back fire on them and ended up shipping their franchise player away which eventually led to Kahhhhnnnnnnnn. On the bright side, for the Jazz at least, got us Big Al for a couple picks and the Koof.

The way things are in the NBA anymore your myth number 2 isn’t a myth. It isn’t a certainty either. It is an unknown.

Good post

#1—The Jazz got this debate right in 2005 when they drafted Williams over Paul.

  1. OKC will have a better shot at keeping their core together than the Raptors did several years back, but BoddyD31 made some good points too. Player behavior is impossible to predict
  2. As a Jazz fan would you trade Williams straight across for Anthony? Probably not.

The next myth to bust is the stupid idea that the Blazers are destined to be a dynasty in the near future.

#3

I love the post, but I wonder how much we should factor in the lack of a disciplined system in Denver. George Karl established an every-man-for-himself offense, so it’s no great surprise that Melo plays selfishly within the system. I’d be curious to know what would happen if Carmelo played for a disciplinarian. It’s possible that he would whine and pout and be disruptive, but it’s at least conceivable that he would flourish into the complete player that he at least has the potential to become. I agree that Melo is not quite a franchise player for Denver, but I don’t see why he couldn’t be one for Chicago or San Antonio or someplace where he might be consistently held to a high standard.

Another thing that isn't true

Eric Gordon played his rookie season for the Hornets.

I advise you to reread the paragraph and then try again.

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