Kizz Fastfists wrote:
The same way they claimed it last year. I have found far too many Thunder fans that didn't follow the NBA until OKC got a team. Even now they don't follow the NBA just the Thunder so they idea about where OKC is relative to the rest of the league. They don't understand the difference between teams being built for the regular season and teams built for the playoffs. I started following the NBA as a kid in the 80s. I grew up a LAL fan because I loved watching Magic. I actively rooted against Jordan after the Bulls won their first championship over the Lakers.
When OKC got a team I became a Thunder fan. I had stopped rooting for the Lakers shortly after Magic left the game. I had just been a fan of the game. When I talk to people who grew up here and stayed loyal to the team they grew up cheering for I understand that. If OKC got a MLB team I can't say I would root for them over the Cubs that I have loved/hated since I was a kid. I would follow the local team and if they were in the AL it would be easy to be a fan of both knowing in the unlikely event the two met in the World Series I'd make a choice at that time. I often find the most optimistic OKC fans did not follow the NBA before 2007. There is nothing wrong with that, but the ones like that are very annoying to me because they have no sense of the history. Those are the ones I find who think OKC is going to magically make the WCF or Finals with the current roster. They can't back it up with any reasoning.
I am following NBA since 1988. and I don't find anything outrageus in stating that this team could get to the conference finals. It all gets down to the seedings in my opinion. Sure, if we meet either Golden State, or Denver perhaps, in the first 2 rounds then yeah, you might have a point. But I am really not sure why you think we wouldn't be able to beat the Jazz, the Spurs, the Blazers, or even the Houston in a seven game series? What historical point of view backs that up?
OKC isn't playing for championships.
How do you know? It doesn't look to me that way at all. I see a great chemistry, a great spirit and high energy group of guys who love to play with each other. I don't see any blatant dispay of selfishness like you claim there is.
They can't think through how the team will deal being game planned for in a series and shut down like Utah did to them last year. They have seen OKC make deep playoff runs and just expect it without understand the difference in team dynamics, opponents and strategy.
This is entirely different team. It's like night and day. Last year team had no depth whatsoever. No backup bigs, Felton was like our only option of the bench and off course, there was Melo in there too. So, you are talking about completely different team. This year, George is playing out of his mind, defense is alot better, the bench is way better with Schroder and Noel, Grant is playing better, Ferguson is emerging etc etc. It's really uncomparable.
The player who wanted rings above all else left so he could get them.
He left because he's coward and he wanted the easy way out. He wanted to collect rings, not earn them. He left because he realized he's not the man for the job. Otherwise he would have closed the series out being up 3-1 with game 6 at home. And while you mention Michael Jordan. You think he would allow his man, or any other player at his position, droping 11 threes in the most cruacial part of the most crucial game of the season? You don't think after 4th or 5th threes, he would say "OK, he's mine now. I'm going to lock his ass down"? Has Kevin Durant done that? Nope. He was just starring and jogging around while Klay Thompson was ending his season. Sorry, that does not sound like a champion to me.