Post#72 » by SonicMcMahon » Wed Nov 28, 2012 2:19 am
As about as a big a fan of Gary Payton as there is, here's my take:
Firstly, no one could 'lock-down' MJ, Gary himself would tell you that.
However, for a three game stretch in those NBA finals, I think we saw someone do as good a job as has ever been done on guarding the greatest ever one-on-one. Were there other factors that may have slowed Jordan here? Yes. The Sonics total team D for one; complacency may have been another factor for Mj and the bulls, and perhaps Michael was just a bit 'off' as some have stated - the video definitely shows him missing his normal makes. However, I think credit has to be given to Payton for that somewhat, (as I believe someone mentioned before: it's a common symptom of being well guarded). GP was pesky, exhausting and may have gotten Jordan thinking twice about shots he'd normally make without thinking. He got under Michael, up and in his business, in his ear, and kept him working on the other end as well. It was a different era and Payton had a defensive rep, so he was getting away with D that was physical and nasty, and would be downright illegal in modern play. He as able to gamble because the Sonics' rotations were crisp. All that said, he deserves due credit for about the best stretch of D anyone has played on Michael.
Now, I want to note that as others have said, I don't believe GP could do this for a full 7 games, he would be exhausted, and eventually Michael would break him for 35+ I am confident, (maybe even 50 for spite). I also don't think GP is even the right matchup in the regular season either. Not worth the physical punishment, and the sacrifice of GP's energy to be an offensive player. Which is why I might defend Dumars is a better candidate for the course of their careers. But for a short, shocking burst, one of the greatest defensive guards ever, gave MJ trouble.
Now is that so hard for the Jordanites to admit?