You can say that about any position.
Portland 18 points 12 assists
Minnesota 31 and 11
Denver 30 and 12
Toronto 23 and 16
Lakers 32 and 5 (29 point loss)
Golden State 28 and 12
Sacramento 15 and 19
Houston 14 and 11
Washington 22 and 8 (with no Butler or Arenas)
Houston 37 and 11
Detroit 14 and 14
Boston 22 and 10
Lakers 15 and 17
Dallas 20 and 10
They lost. Jameer Nelson had 8 points, 33% shooting, 2 asts, and 3 turnovers.
Teams are built differently. Obviously NO is going to outperform GS's PG and GS' wingmen are going to out perform NO's SG. If NO played a series with Boston, Paul would dominate Rondo, and NO would lose 4-2 or 4-1.
You can use the so and so outplayed so and so for any team's player. 90% of the games NO wins CP3 will have outplayed the other team's PG, however, 90% of the time they lose, he'll have outplayed the other team's PG.
In the playoffs, I'd say it has little to do with PG vs PG and more to do with your best player vs their best player, your second best player vs theirs, your third best player and on and on. Statistically, Tony Parker dominated Fisher last year in the playoffs, and in 3 of the Lakers/Celtics games, the PG with a better statline lost. There are way too many variables to say that the team with better PG play wins. If that was the case, the finals sure as hell wouldn't have been Rondo vs Fisher.
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