Of course, the "he started it!" argument
Sure, the Grant and Jerry homerism can be nauseating. From the "Great Rudini" to their excuses for McLemore all the down to, yes, the "Huslin' Husky" narrative, its all emotional rah-rah that I'm not particularly interested in.
However, the only player rah-rah that gets such a vitriolic response is Isaiah's for whatever reason. The response to this of course is "Grant and Jerry are shoving the Isaiah narrative down our throats!" which is true, but not to an extent greater than most other players on our roster relative to their respective talent.
But given that the shoving of Isaiah down our throats is unacceptable while the shoving of Rudy or McLemore or whoever down our throats is perfectly fine, there are indications of an a priori animus that most around these parts either choose to ignore or are ignorant of.
first, i'd hardly say that demarcus cousins has been immune from kf.com vitriol this season. and as far as ben mclemore is concerned, i'd say that there has been an
extremely vitriolic response at kf.com to his poor play
in spite of his rookie status. the disgusted clank of the word "bust" has dripped off of nearly every game thread this season, so much so in fact that we've seen such vitriol recede of late, as it has given way to abject resignation...
rudy gay, on the other hand, has performed well above just about everybody's expectations
because of his recently-earned reputation as an inefficient ball stopper and destroyer of chemistry. it's sort of hard to justify being vitriolic towards rudy in any fashion, given that he's provided the kings with quite a lift (nearly .500 since he arrived), and without much practice time or familiarity with an ever-changing roster...
but isaiah thomas is in his third season as a king. we know much about what he is and we know much about what he isn't. this season, he's been thrust into a very high usage role alongside two other very high usage players, and it's fairly understandable that controversy has erupted over IT's place in that hierarchy...
And its equally hilarious that some cling so dearly to their ideas about Isaiah in the face of facts to the extent where the fact-presenter is depicted as "slobbering" over IT and the facts themselves are downplayed as presented without context. Because that is exactly what statistics are: facts. Now whether facts support an argument or not is up to debate. But there is an incredible amount of reading into another's argument that goes around, and its probably due to the aformentioned animus. For example: Aykis presented 10 players who accomplished what Isaiah has so far in his career. The assertion was then made that Aykis thinks Isaiah is as good as those players, and therefore he is an IT slobberer who bans people from StR that don't worship at the altar of IT. The backlash is rather stupid.
i'm not terribly interested in "the backlash." it's a byproduct of poor argumentative approaches. but i'd say that it's certainly worth questioning the motives of an individual who is seeking to frame his argument by comparing isaiah thomas to magic johnson. Aykis' article is titled "Isaiah Thomas is putting himself in elite company," and after Aykis has done his statistical dance, he writes, "While I wouldn't go so far as to say Isaiah is or will be as good as these players, it's enough to me that he's performing at an incredibly high level. Thomas has done more than enough in my eyes to prove that not only can he be a starter in this league, but that he can be a damn good one."
my question for Aykis would be, if "it's enough...that [IT is] performing at an incredibly high level," then why attempt to shoehorn IT into a statistical conversation with the likes of chris paul at all? there's no useful comparison to be made in such an instance. it was silly when the kings mentioned tyreke evans' name in the same breath as oscar robertson during the 20-5-5 campaign, and it's silly to draw the same kinds of parallels to isaiah thomas unless you're attempting to convince others of something that they might not be so easily convinced of without the irresponsible wielding of "facts" such as these...
Here are some more facts: Isaiah is an elite scoring PG and average distributer/playmaker. Without Isaiah on the court, Demarcus uses less possessions (Usage rate drops from 33.6 to 28.9) and his scoring efficiency plummets (from 55.6 TS% to 51.5). Without Isaiah on the court, the team's offensive rating drops from 107.6 to 102.4. The opponent's offensive rating is 107.9 with Isaiah on the court and 110.8 with him off the court.
What the evidence points to me is that he's been a rather big part of whatever success the team's had this year. The assertion that we could replace Isaiah in the lineup with a Mario Chalmers type and see an improvement in the team is without evidence. Yet somehow one is slobbering and the other is rational thought.
and here we have more "facts," and they're wielded just as irresponsibly as before. the statistics you've provided are buoyed by a significant factor that you've omitted: the kings have
not one additional playmaker on their roster.
not one. it should hardly be surprising that demarcus cousins uses less possessions or scores less efficiently when isaiah thomas is on the bench; the only other guard on the entire roster capable of handling the ball and making even the simplest of plays is a second round draft pick in his rookie season. this has less to do with what isaiah thomas is doing right and much more to do with the fact that his usage rate has skyrocketed for lack of competence elsewhere in the kings' backcourt rotation. that's not to say that thomas is doing
nothing right, but again, this is where advanced statistics, while useful, are often rendered ineffective by those who wield them. context is everything...
beyond that, "The assertion that we could replace Isaiah in the starting lineup with a Mario Chalmers type and see an improvement in the team is without evidence" is a convenient but dishonest arguing position. of course it's without evidence because it hasn't yet been done, and we wouldn't have evidence until it had been done. but there is more than enough
suggestion in the possibility of such a move to recommend it. mario chalmers measures out as one of the best defensive PG's in the nba. inserting him into the starting PG role would likely result in fewer instances of successful dribble penetration from opposing PG's, thus easing the pressure on demarcus cousins to slide over and help on defense as often as he currently does. if the only result is that cousins picks up fewer fouls as a help defender, then, in my opinion, it's still more than reason enough to seek out defensively-inclined players for the kings' starting backcourt...