One more rant: In my not-so-humble opinion, perimeter defense in guards is just a ridiculously overrated attribute among fans. In the modern NBA it is a joke. A farce. Between two guards, one being an elite defender and an average offensive player and the other being an elite offensive player and an average defender, the latter is massively more valuable in today's NBA.
With the importance of the 3PT shot and the lack of hand-checking, elite attacking guards cannot be stopped. So called 'elite' perimeter defenders do not stop them. They barely slow them down.
When you spend your money on offense and defense, spend your defensive dollars on your bigs. Because they are the ones who are going to be defending the vast majority of shots because attacking guards are going to go right by your perimeter defenders.
This becomes very apparent if you spend some time looking at the shot contention stats in the NBA player tracking data. On a per-minute basis, the bigs end up defending far more shots than the guards do. Yet guards, overall, take far more of the shots.
The only time that elite scoring guards like Lowry, Harden, Thomas, DeRozan or Westbrook every get 'shut down' in a game is if either (a) they are the _only_ scorer on the team playing a very good paint defense that can put them in a box or (b) they simply have a bad game on their own. Otherwise, those players are putting up 20+ points nightly and it doesn't matter whether they are facing Marcus Smart or Kemba Walker.
So any argument about star or super star criteria that puts defense and offense on the same weighting for a guard in the modern NBA is an argument that doesn't acknowledge that we aren't playing in Gary Payton's NBA.
Completely disagree. I think with as perimeter-oriented as today's game is, perimeter defense is as important as ever. You can't sit there and say that perimeter defense is overrated when one of the most important qualities of a good NBA team is having at least one to two good perimeter defenders - Lebron/Shump, Kawhi/Green, Iggy/Green, Roberson/Oladipo, Smart/AB/Jae, Lowry/Carroll, Conley/Allen, etc. to defend and challenge the perimeter scoring threats of the opponent.
But it's a completely different type of defense than interior defense. I'd argue that where interior defense is meant
to actually anchor the defense and get stops in itself, perimeter defense is more about
making things difficult for the offensive player and not giving them easy looks from the perimeter, which hopefully leads to a stop from a missed shot or bad pass.
Sure, you can't really "shut down" perimeter plays in today's game, but that's not really the point of perimeter defense. If you don't have challenging defenders that can make things difficult for the perimeter offensive player, then they go off offensively, just as Derozan did on IT, Brown, and Green the other night, though not against Smart who made it difficult for him. That could very well be the difference between a player going 14 for 20 and 8 for 20.
And last year when we were at our best we were actually do both of these things - making opponents work hard to score from the perimeter and actually forcing turnovers, too.
- The ability to get around screens in the PnR;
- The proper rotations and help defense to keep off the ball shooters at bay;
- The ability to challenge and make things difficult for perimeter players;
These are all important contributions that perimeter defenders play. How do you think we've been so competitive with Golden State for the past three years? Perimeter defense.
Obviously, an offensive guard is more valuable than a defensive guard in the NBA, but to completely write it off like you're suggesting is short-sighted. It wouldn't make sense that perimeter defense becomes less important as the game evolves more and more to a perimeter orientation.