ScrantonBulls wrote:The reasoning is simple. The playing field was dead even every game. Neither team had home court. Home court advantage is a REAL thing. The odds show it. That could be because of the gone team being more comfortable and getting cheered, or because refs unconsciously have slight bias towards the home team because of the pressure of the crowd.
NEITHER team had home court. It was completely fair in that aspect. One team doesn't have to sleep in hotels while the other got to sleep in their cozy mansion. Neither had the burden of traveling. The resting and traveling conditions were identical.
The bubble year was the most even playing field ever. All conditions were equal for the teams. Never before have the conditions been so equal. That's what makes it the purest championship ever.
I'm basically with you.
Back when the Bubble was happening, to me it felt like the ultimate pressure cooker of a playoffs where many players and teams proved too mentally weak to perform at the level required. Yet somehow, people after the fact have tried to make it seem like the team's teams with serious professional fortitude to thrive there were themselves the ones who were soft.
With regards to the Lakers, who of course won that title, there's some karma coming back to them because it was Phil Jackson who started this whole "asterisk" thing against the Spurs. From my perspective it was an obviously stupid chain of logic that was only defensible as a pre-meditated lie to get in the heads of his opponents.
Any way put me down in the "Duh! All Championships are Championships" camp. Not looking to knock any of the champs, but all for recognizing what made each one special and distinct.








































