Poll

Initial Reaction: Grade The Trade!

A+
40 (21.2%)
A / A-
37 (19.6%)
B+
28 (14.8%)
B / B-
24 (12.7%)
C+
9 (4.8%)
C / C-
15 (7.9%)
D+
6 (3.2%)
D / D-
6 (3.2%)
F
9 (4.8%)
Incomplete (I Just Can't Give It A Grade Yet)
15 (7.9%)

Total Members Voted: 187

Author Topic: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade  (Read 59929 times)

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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #300 on: November 25, 2018, 08:59:54 AM »

Offline Eddie20

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

The root of all Tarheels irrational hate explained:

https://www.google.com/amp/s/articles.masslive.com/celtics/index.ssf/2018/09/kyrie_irving_boston_celtics_st_21.amp

Kyrie Irving: Boston Celtics star considered teaming up with Harrison Barnes at UNC in college

Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #301 on: November 25, 2018, 09:02:23 PM »

Offline Big333223

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #302 on: December 02, 2018, 10:10:22 PM »

Offline Moranis

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.
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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #303 on: December 02, 2018, 11:55:38 PM »

Offline tarheelsxxiii

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.

TP for the stats. Personal attacks dont hold up well to evidence, though it's painful to see how the evidence needs to be repeatedly shared for any of it to stick at times.
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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #304 on: December 03, 2018, 01:22:19 AM »

Offline nickagneta

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.
Even a four game difference makes a difference. In a tight top 6 in the East, a 4 game win differential could be the difference between a 2 seed and a 5th seed in the playoffs. That's quite a difference. And in the playoffs that could translate to one extra win in a 7game series which could be the difference between winning and losing a 7 game Finals series. That's a big difference. And I suspect the winning percentage of the Cs without Kyrie would only get worse if Kyrie actually missed an entire year, so the difference he makes could actually be many more than 4 games.

Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #305 on: December 03, 2018, 02:45:37 AM »

Online The Oracle

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.
Even a four game difference makes a difference. In a tight top 6 in the East, a 4 game win differential could be the difference between a 2 seed and a 5th seed in the playoffs. That's quite a difference. And in the playoffs that could translate to one extra win in a 7game series which could be the difference between winning and losing a 7 game Finals series. That's a big difference. And I suspect the winning percentage of the Cs without Kyrie would only get worse if Kyrie actually missed an entire year, so the difference he makes could actually be many more than 4 games.
It's even a bigger difference than that as Moranis's analysis includes games that shouldn't factor in.  The C's were beating Indy by 10 at halftime when Kyrie ended his season and without him the C's ended up losing the game.  The games without Kyrie also include beating the Nets without most of the C's main rotation playing in the last game of the year.  The C's only outscored opponents by 8 points in those final 15 games last year and that's with being +13 in that final game against Brooklyn.

The C's shot very well down the stretch and probably won a few games they wouldn't in an average sample without Kyrie, that's the problem with using extremely small sample sizes in the manner that Moranis is here.  The C's were +257 in 1931 minutes with Kyrie last year and +37 in 2030 minutes without him.  This year the C's are +106 in 707 minutes with Kyrie and -5 in 407 minutes without him.

The offensive rating was 8.8 points worse without Kyrie last year and 14.6 points worse so far this year.  The net rating was 5.4 points worse last year and 7.4 points worse so far this year without Kyrie.  No single statistic can tell the whole story and when you look at them all with context Kyrie's positive impact is crystal clear.

Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #306 on: December 03, 2018, 03:17:08 AM »

Offline Androslav

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During my deep statistical analysis I discovered that there is 0% chance we win 18. this year without Kyrie.

With him chances rise above 0%, so mathematically he infinitely increases our title odds.

"The joy of the balling under the rims."

Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #307 on: December 03, 2018, 03:18:15 AM »

Offline GreenEnvy

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I want to see how IT plays when healthy, and hopefully it’s this year (and soon).

I know many are counting him out, but if he returns anywhere close to the caliber he was for us, that Nets pick would have been huge.

In an alternate universe, we have a now-healthy IT (had surgery sooner than March), a never-injured Hayward, Horford, and possibly Davis (via some combo of the 8th pick, Tatum, Brown, picks).

IT wouldn’t have gotten the truck he expected, so we are in better shape salary-wise too.

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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #308 on: December 03, 2018, 06:09:03 AM »

Offline Moranis

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.
Even a four game difference makes a difference. In a tight top 6 in the East, a 4 game win differential could be the difference between a 2 seed and a 5th seed in the playoffs. That's quite a difference. And in the playoffs that could translate to one extra win in a 7game series which could be the difference between winning and losing a 7 game Finals series. That's a big difference. And I suspect the winning percentage of the Cs without Kyrie would only get worse if Kyrie actually missed an entire year, so the difference he makes could actually be many more than 4 games.
It might, it might not.  That also includes the 15-2 unsustainable start to last season as well (Irving missed 1 of the games).  If you take that crazy start to the season the win percentages are nearly identical at 39-26 (60%) vs. 13-9 (59.1%).  That is less than a game different.  Now obviously we had that crazy 16 game winning streak, but it also wasn't an accurate representation of what that team was.  Boston was 11-8 in the playoffs and was 1 game away from the NBA Finals without Irving playing a single second of playoff basketball. 

There is plenty of evidence to support the idea that Irving just doesn't affect wins all that much.  The Cavs won basically the same amount games without him as with him.  The Celtics didn't miss a beat when he got hurt. 
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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #309 on: December 03, 2018, 06:22:14 AM »

Offline Moranis

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.
Even a four game difference makes a difference. In a tight top 6 in the East, a 4 game win differential could be the difference between a 2 seed and a 5th seed in the playoffs. That's quite a difference. And in the playoffs that could translate to one extra win in a 7game series which could be the difference between winning and losing a 7 game Finals series. That's a big difference. And I suspect the winning percentage of the Cs without Kyrie would only get worse if Kyrie actually missed an entire year, so the difference he makes could actually be many more than 4 games.
It's even a bigger difference than that as Moranis's analysis includes games that shouldn't factor in.  The C's were beating Indy by 10 at halftime when Kyrie ended his season and without him the C's ended up losing the game.  The games without Kyrie also include beating the Nets without most of the C's main rotation playing in the last game of the year.  The C's only outscored opponents by 8 points in those final 15 games last year and that's with being +13 in that final game against Brooklyn.

The C's shot very well down the stretch and probably won a few games they wouldn't in an average sample without Kyrie, that's the problem with using extremely small sample sizes in the manner that Moranis is here.  The C's were +257 in 1931 minutes with Kyrie last year and +37 in 2030 minutes without him.  This year the C's are +106 in 707 minutes with Kyrie and -5 in 407 minutes without him.

The offensive rating was 8.8 points worse without Kyrie last year and 14.6 points worse so far this year.  The net rating was 5.4 points worse last year and 7.4 points worse so far this year without Kyrie.  No single statistic can tell the whole story and when you look at them all with context Kyrie's positive impact is crystal clear.
Irving's on/off differential was 3.1 last year, so obviously the team was better with him on the floor, but that also isn't a very good on/off differential for a supposed superstar.  That 3.1 was also well behind Brown, Tatum, Horford, Baynes, and Smart.  This year the on/off differential for Irving is only 2.3 again behind Tatum, Baynes, and Smart.   And it isn't just Boston where his numbers are so low (as in maybe the team is so deep there isn't much of a drop off).  He has only had 2 seasons in his career above 7 (his first and last year with Lebron).  He even had a negative differential while playing on a team and a lot of his minutes with Lebron his second year with him.  The year before Lebron got there, the Cavs were 4.3 points per 100 possession worse with Irving on the floor then when he was off the floor. 

Irving is a good player.  At times he is a great player, but he far too often lacks effort defensively (and even when he tries he isn't a + defender) and goes cold offensively.  He is one of the best ever at creating a shot for himself, but is subpar at creating for others. 

He is absolutely better than Thomas and if he re-signs Boston will have won the trade, though also might regret giving him that 5 year max contract at some point down the line, given his injury history and all of those deficiencies in his game.  Boston will not win a title with Irving as the team's best player, which right now he is.  Hopefully Hayward returns to form and takes that mantel while keeping it warm a couple of seasons for Tatum, or whomever Tatum gets traded for.  For Boston to really create the type of team we want, Boston needs a gold medal superstar and it doesn't currently have one (though hopefully Tatum gets there).
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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #310 on: December 03, 2018, 06:44:47 AM »

Offline Celtics4ever

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At times he is a great player, but he far too often lacks effort defensively (and even when he tries he isn't a + defender) and goes cold offensively.  He is one of the best ever at creating a shot for himself, but is subpar at creating for others. 

This was more true last year than this year.

He is 9th in steals this year with 1.73 a game

http://www.espn.com/nba/statistics/player/_/stat/steals/sort/avgSteals/year/2019/seasontype/2

I think he is trying more this year on D.

Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #311 on: December 03, 2018, 08:28:59 AM »

Offline Moranis

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At times he is a great player, but he far too often lacks effort defensively (and even when he tries he isn't a + defender) and goes cold offensively.  He is one of the best ever at creating a shot for himself, but is subpar at creating for others. 

This was more true last year than this year.

He is 9th in steals this year with 1.73 a game

http://www.espn.com/nba/statistics/player/_/stat/steals/sort/avgSteals/year/2019/seasontype/2

I think he is trying more this year on D.
Thus far this is his career best in the steal generation department, but it isn't appreciably better then several other seasons in his career (he had 3 straight years of 1.5 spg, for example).  And while steal generation often shows effort, it doesn't always and certainly doesn't always mean consistent effort (a gamble or two every once in awhile doesn't equate to consistent defensive effort).  Steal generation also isn't always a great indicator of great defense.  Many of the leaders in steals often gamble and hurt overall team defense.  That said, Irving's advanced defensive metrics are career bests thus far and he does appear to be giving more consistent effort.  He will always be a poor defender though and expecting much more from him will only let people down. 
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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #312 on: December 03, 2018, 08:35:31 AM »

Online The Oracle

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.
Even a four game difference makes a difference. In a tight top 6 in the East, a 4 game win differential could be the difference between a 2 seed and a 5th seed in the playoffs. That's quite a difference. And in the playoffs that could translate to one extra win in a 7game series which could be the difference between winning and losing a 7 game Finals series. That's a big difference. And I suspect the winning percentage of the Cs without Kyrie would only get worse if Kyrie actually missed an entire year, so the difference he makes could actually be many more than 4 games.
It's even a bigger difference than that as Moranis's analysis includes games that shouldn't factor in.  The C's were beating Indy by 10 at halftime when Kyrie ended his season and without him the C's ended up losing the game.  The games without Kyrie also include beating the Nets without most of the C's main rotation playing in the last game of the year.  The C's only outscored opponents by 8 points in those final 15 games last year and that's with being +13 in that final game against Brooklyn.

The C's shot very well down the stretch and probably won a few games they wouldn't in an average sample without Kyrie, that's the problem with using extremely small sample sizes in the manner that Moranis is here.  The C's were +257 in 1931 minutes with Kyrie last year and +37 in 2030 minutes without him.  This year the C's are +106 in 707 minutes with Kyrie and -5 in 407 minutes without him.

The offensive rating was 8.8 points worse without Kyrie last year and 14.6 points worse so far this year.  The net rating was 5.4 points worse last year and 7.4 points worse so far this year without Kyrie.  No single statistic can tell the whole story and when you look at them all with context Kyrie's positive impact is crystal clear.
Irving's on/off differential was 3.1 last year, so obviously the team was better with him on the floor, but that also isn't a very good on/off differential for a supposed superstar.  That 3.1 was also well behind Brown, Tatum, Horford, Baynes, and Smart.  This year the on/off differential for Irving is only 2.3 again behind Tatum, Baynes, and Smart.   And it isn't just Boston where his numbers are so low (as in maybe the team is so deep there isn't much of a drop off).  He has only had 2 seasons in his career above 7 (his first and last year with Lebron).  He even had a negative differential while playing on a team and a lot of his minutes with Lebron his second year with him.  The year before Lebron got there, the Cavs were 4.3 points per 100 possession worse with Irving on the floor then when he was off the floor. 

Irving is a good player.  At times he is a great player, but he far too often lacks effort defensively (and even when he tries he isn't a + defender) and goes cold offensively.  He is one of the best ever at creating a shot for himself, but is subpar at creating for others. 

He is absolutely better than Thomas and if he re-signs Boston will have won the trade, though also might regret giving him that 5 year max contract at some point down the line, given his injury history and all of those deficiencies in his game.  Boston will not win a title with Irving as the team's best player, which right now he is.  Hopefully Hayward returns to form and takes that mantel while keeping it warm a couple of seasons for Tatum, or whomever Tatum gets traded for.  For Boston to really create the type of team we want, Boston needs a gold medal superstar and it doesn't currently have one (though hopefully Tatum gets there).
It gets incredibly confusing when people quote numbers off of BBREF rather than just using the official numbers from NBA.com.  BBREF estimates some of their info (like possessions) and many of their numbers are therefor vastly different than NBA.com. 

In regard to the on/off differential numbers you simply are putting way to much stock in them.  The C's have an extremely strong bench and when Kyrie is out of the game they don't drop a lot numbers wise against opposing benches.  The offense drops off a lot but the defense takes a large step forward against weaker benches.  When Kyrie was in Cleveland he could not carry the team as well as Lebron could when they were not in the game together, there is no shame in that   as nobody can.  When Lebron is not in the game his replacement is always a massive drop off. Having a strong bench kills great players/starters on/off differential in some instances.  Having another great player that you are often on the floor without/is on the floor without you, can also kill your numbers. 

Kyrie primarily plays starter minutes and comparing success against other starting lineups, to the benches success against other benches, tells you next to nothing by itself without context.  Some players like Tatum get pulled early and come back with the bench a lot, on a team with a great bench this will bolster his on/off diff., if the bench was terrible it would crush his numbers just the same.  Hayward now playing with the bench is going to likely amplify the benches numbers and make the starters on/off numbers look worse.  There are a million variables that affect a given players on/off numbers and using them as an indictment against said player without a ton of context is way off base.

Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #313 on: December 03, 2018, 09:37:23 AM »

Offline Moranis

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.
Even a four game difference makes a difference. In a tight top 6 in the East, a 4 game win differential could be the difference between a 2 seed and a 5th seed in the playoffs. That's quite a difference. And in the playoffs that could translate to one extra win in a 7game series which could be the difference between winning and losing a 7 game Finals series. That's a big difference. And I suspect the winning percentage of the Cs without Kyrie would only get worse if Kyrie actually missed an entire year, so the difference he makes could actually be many more than 4 games.
It's even a bigger difference than that as Moranis's analysis includes games that shouldn't factor in.  The C's were beating Indy by 10 at halftime when Kyrie ended his season and without him the C's ended up losing the game.  The games without Kyrie also include beating the Nets without most of the C's main rotation playing in the last game of the year.  The C's only outscored opponents by 8 points in those final 15 games last year and that's with being +13 in that final game against Brooklyn.

The C's shot very well down the stretch and probably won a few games they wouldn't in an average sample without Kyrie, that's the problem with using extremely small sample sizes in the manner that Moranis is here.  The C's were +257 in 1931 minutes with Kyrie last year and +37 in 2030 minutes without him.  This year the C's are +106 in 707 minutes with Kyrie and -5 in 407 minutes without him.

The offensive rating was 8.8 points worse without Kyrie last year and 14.6 points worse so far this year.  The net rating was 5.4 points worse last year and 7.4 points worse so far this year without Kyrie.  No single statistic can tell the whole story and when you look at them all with context Kyrie's positive impact is crystal clear.
Irving's on/off differential was 3.1 last year, so obviously the team was better with him on the floor, but that also isn't a very good on/off differential for a supposed superstar.  That 3.1 was also well behind Brown, Tatum, Horford, Baynes, and Smart.  This year the on/off differential for Irving is only 2.3 again behind Tatum, Baynes, and Smart.   And it isn't just Boston where his numbers are so low (as in maybe the team is so deep there isn't much of a drop off).  He has only had 2 seasons in his career above 7 (his first and last year with Lebron).  He even had a negative differential while playing on a team and a lot of his minutes with Lebron his second year with him.  The year before Lebron got there, the Cavs were 4.3 points per 100 possession worse with Irving on the floor then when he was off the floor. 

Irving is a good player.  At times he is a great player, but he far too often lacks effort defensively (and even when he tries he isn't a + defender) and goes cold offensively.  He is one of the best ever at creating a shot for himself, but is subpar at creating for others. 

He is absolutely better than Thomas and if he re-signs Boston will have won the trade, though also might regret giving him that 5 year max contract at some point down the line, given his injury history and all of those deficiencies in his game.  Boston will not win a title with Irving as the team's best player, which right now he is.  Hopefully Hayward returns to form and takes that mantel while keeping it warm a couple of seasons for Tatum, or whomever Tatum gets traded for.  For Boston to really create the type of team we want, Boston needs a gold medal superstar and it doesn't currently have one (though hopefully Tatum gets there).
It gets incredibly confusing when people quote numbers off of BBREF rather than just using the official numbers from NBA.com.  BBREF estimates some of their info (like possessions) and many of their numbers are therefor vastly different than NBA.com. 

In regard to the on/off differential numbers you simply are putting way to much stock in them.  The C's have an extremely strong bench and when Kyrie is out of the game they don't drop a lot numbers wise against opposing benches.  The offense drops off a lot but the defense takes a large step forward against weaker benches.  When Kyrie was in Cleveland he could not carry the team as well as Lebron could when they were not in the game together, there is no shame in that   as nobody can.  When Lebron is not in the game his replacement is always a massive drop off. Having a strong bench kills great players/starters on/off differential in some instances.  Having another great player that you are often on the floor without/is on the floor without you, can also kill your numbers. 

Kyrie primarily plays starter minutes and comparing success against other starting lineups, to the benches success against other benches, tells you next to nothing by itself without context.  Some players like Tatum get pulled early and come back with the bench a lot, on a team with a great bench this will bolster his on/off diff., if the bench was terrible it would crush his numbers just the same.  Hayward now playing with the bench is going to likely amplify the benches numbers and make the starters on/off numbers look worse.  There are a million variables that affect a given players on/off numbers and using them as an indictment against said player without a ton of context is way off base.
Irving is behind Baynes, Smart, and Tatum this year in actual +- though.  Last year he was behind those 3 as well as Horford and Brown. 

The team is better when he is on the court, but not like you would expect from a guy that is supposed to be a superstar and your best player. 
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Re: Poll: Give The Kyrie Irving-To-Boston Trade A Letter Grade
« Reply #314 on: December 03, 2018, 09:42:31 AM »

Offline adam8

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Sexton has looked pretty darn good the last 6 games for the Cavs including a dominant performance in the Cavs upset of the Rockets today.  This is why Irving re-signing is key to the trade for the Celtics.  You can't trade an injury riddled 2 seasons (and at best 1 post season) for the likely at least 8 years of a top rookie,  not to mention the other players given up.  Irving has to re-sign or it is a bad trade for the C's

Even if he does resign, at his cost, is he not better as a trade asset? He's so marketable and talented, but equally frail and overrated, with a clearly limited impact on winning.

Is that why he a championship in Cleveland?

LeBron won him a championship in Cleveland, without any let down after trading him.  Last year's CLE roster was probably the worst team to reach the Finals in recent memory.

The mental gymnastics that you go through to justify your Kyrie hate is astounding.

And saying “without any let down” is nonsense. Last year was by far the most difficult time that Cavs team had getting to the Finals, barely getting there by squeaking out two game 7 wins. And it’s funny that you point that out, because Kyrie being injured for the C’s is probably the only reason the Cavs even got to to game 7 with us.

And Kyrie put up 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.7 steals on 48% fg% and 44% 3pfg%, along with sealing the championship with the dagger three. Lebron doesn’t win a championship in Cleveland without Kyrie, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous.

LeBron dragging that horrible team to the Finals speaks to his utter dominance.  Kyrie was a 2nd fiddle in Cleveland that could've been replaced by more than 20 other guys in the league.  His locker room issues near the end suggest he was aware of that.

Those are empty stats, and I don't consider a low-percentage chuck after several scoreless minutes to be a "dagger."  He has not won before or after LeBron.  But you suggest that is coming? 

For gymnastics, that felt pretty easy, pots.

What a stale, baseless argument. Aside from the Cavs championship, Lebron has only won a championship with at least 2 other hall of famers playing beside him. The Cavs championship came with only 1 probable hall of famer next to him (Kyrie). He was the clear #2 on that Cavs team and was a lot better than the #3 man (Love).

Your weird hate of Kyrie just gets weirder as time goes on.
Lebron has also dragged perhaps the worst Finals team ever to the Finals (I mean have you actually looked at that 07 Cavs roster).  Irving gets hurt and Boston goes to the ECF without him and the Cavs still ended up in the Finals without him (even with that trainwreck of a season).  Boston's record with and without Irving last year was only slightly worse without him.  Including this year in the regular season Boston is 54-28 with him (65.9%) and 14-9 without him (60.8%) so only about 4 games worse over the course of a season when Irving doesn't play.  There is plenty of evidence to support the notion that Irving's contribution to winning aren't nearly as good as many on this board would try to claim.
Even a four game difference makes a difference. In a tight top 6 in the East, a 4 game win differential could be the difference between a 2 seed and a 5th seed in the playoffs. That's quite a difference. And in the playoffs that could translate to one extra win in a 7game series which could be the difference between winning and losing a 7 game Finals series. That's a big difference. And I suspect the winning percentage of the Cs without Kyrie would only get worse if Kyrie actually missed an entire year, so the difference he makes could actually be many more than 4 games.
It's even a bigger difference than that as Moranis's analysis includes games that shouldn't factor in.  The C's were beating Indy by 10 at halftime when Kyrie ended his season and without him the C's ended up losing the game.  The games without Kyrie also include beating the Nets without most of the C's main rotation playing in the last game of the year.  The C's only outscored opponents by 8 points in those final 15 games last year and that's with being +13 in that final game against Brooklyn.

The C's shot very well down the stretch and probably won a few games they wouldn't in an average sample without Kyrie, that's the problem with using extremely small sample sizes in the manner that Moranis is here.  The C's were +257 in 1931 minutes with Kyrie last year and +37 in 2030 minutes without him.  This year the C's are +106 in 707 minutes with Kyrie and -5 in 407 minutes without him.

The offensive rating was 8.8 points worse without Kyrie last year and 14.6 points worse so far this year.  The net rating was 5.4 points worse last year and 7.4 points worse so far this year without Kyrie.  No single statistic can tell the whole story and when you look at them all with context Kyrie's positive impact is crystal clear.
Irving's on/off differential was 3.1 last year, so obviously the team was better with him on the floor, but that also isn't a very good on/off differential for a supposed superstar.  That 3.1 was also well behind Brown, Tatum, Horford, Baynes, and Smart.  This year the on/off differential for Irving is only 2.3 again behind Tatum, Baynes, and Smart.   And it isn't just Boston where his numbers are so low (as in maybe the team is so deep there isn't much of a drop off).  He has only had 2 seasons in his career above 7 (his first and last year with Lebron).  He even had a negative differential while playing on a team and a lot of his minutes with Lebron his second year with him.  The year before Lebron got there, the Cavs were 4.3 points per 100 possession worse with Irving on the floor then when he was off the floor. 

Irving is a good player.  At times he is a great player, but he far too often lacks effort defensively (and even when he tries he isn't a + defender) and goes cold offensively.  He is one of the best ever at creating a shot for himself, but is subpar at creating for others. 

He is absolutely better than Thomas and if he re-signs Boston will have won the trade, though also might regret giving him that 5 year max contract at some point down the line, given his injury history and all of those deficiencies in his game.  Boston will not win a title with Irving as the team's best player, which right now he is.  Hopefully Hayward returns to form and takes that mantel while keeping it warm a couple of seasons for Tatum, or whomever Tatum gets traded for.  For Boston to really create the type of team we want, Boston needs a gold medal superstar and it doesn't currently have one (though hopefully Tatum gets there).
It gets incredibly confusing when people quote numbers off of BBREF rather than just using the official numbers from NBA.com.  BBREF estimates some of their info (like possessions) and many of their numbers are therefor vastly different than NBA.com. 

In regard to the on/off differential numbers you simply are putting way to much stock in them.  The C's have an extremely strong bench and when Kyrie is out of the game they don't drop a lot numbers wise against opposing benches.  The offense drops off a lot but the defense takes a large step forward against weaker benches.  When Kyrie was in Cleveland he could not carry the team as well as Lebron could when they were not in the game together, there is no shame in that   as nobody can.  When Lebron is not in the game his replacement is always a massive drop off. Having a strong bench kills great players/starters on/off differential in some instances.  Having another great player that you are often on the floor without/is on the floor without you, can also kill your numbers. 

Kyrie primarily plays starter minutes and comparing success against other starting lineups, to the benches success against other benches, tells you next to nothing by itself without context.  Some players like Tatum get pulled early and come back with the bench a lot, on a team with a great bench this will bolster his on/off diff., if the bench was terrible it would crush his numbers just the same.  Hayward now playing with the bench is going to likely amplify the benches numbers and make the starters on/off numbers look worse.  There are a million variables that affect a given players on/off numbers and using them as an indictment against said player without a ton of context is way off base.
TP

Using these type of statistics can really show whatever you want if you pick out the ones that look good from side of the argument. This is why statistics are a good piece of an arguement but not necessarily an entire argument. There are always a few crazy stats you see in the off/def rating and net ratings stats, like I remember when it used to say but Avery Bradley and Klay Thompson are bad defenders but the eye test says differently.

You watch Kyrie with this Celtics team and they are a different team offensively when he is on the court, he attracts attention like no one else on our team can. He can creat his own shot better than anyone else on our team as well, I am not shocked that we wouldn't have huge on/off differentials however because Terry and Marcus are quality backups that bring the intensity and can change games.