![]() “If Chris Paul was so good, why did his teams keep losing?”Ĭhris Paul starred for a number of great, but not championship-great teams. Ring or not, those numbers are the product of an elite guard. Taking a deeper dive into the more specific statistics, things still check out.Īmong guards that averaged more than 30 minutes in the playoffs, Paul ranks second all-time in assist percentage (44.4), 13th in true shooting percentage (58.1), and 2nd in win shares per 48 minutes (.207). Paul has shot better from the field than five of them (Cheeks), and better from three than all of them. ![]() That’s incredible!Īccording to StatMuse, just six other players have averaged those numbers in the postseason, including Michael Jordan, Allen Iverson, Maurice Cheeks, Isiah Thomas, Mookie Blaylock, and Baron Davis. In 85 playoff game appearances (not including the Game 5 win), Chris Paul is averaging 21 points per game on 48 percent shooting (37 percent three-point shooting), nine assists, five rebounds and two steals in 37 minutes. Nothing matters without a ring in the eyes of many, and only 15 players win one each year. It’s part of why LeBron James went to Miami, Kevin Durant went to Golden State, and Paul to Houston, despite all three performing brilliantly in the postseason each year they’re asked to. Mocking Paul’s inability to reach a conference finals was illogical from the startĬritics, media and fans alike love to unfairly clump championship rings and other forms of team playoff success into a stat category for the individual greats. –Chris Paul /3CMxgpZFbM- SportsCenter May 7, 2018īut now he’s finished the job. ![]() "I've been here before, 3-1, s- went bad real quick."
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |