As it happened was it a huge deal?
Seeing as the lakers were in the finals the year before, and still had the showtime reputation.
Wonder how far they could’ve gone with Barkley added some how
How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
On one hand, I believe that the Suns actually led the WC in regular season SRS that year. So from a statistical standpoint, it really wasn't much of an upset.
On the other hand, anyone in the WC beating the Lakers in the playoffs was seen as a huge upset, and to a casual fan it certainly felt like a huge upset. It certainly helped Portland make the finals as they had a huge mental block against the Lakers (as shown by their horrible play in the 1991 WCF) while the Suns were just one of the other good but non-Laker WC teams that they could beat.
I guess the one thing mitigating how big of an upset that it felt like was that Detroit was considered the clear title favorite regardless of who they faced in the finals. So it didn't really feel like it made a difference as far as who won the title.
On the other hand, anyone in the WC beating the Lakers in the playoffs was seen as a huge upset, and to a casual fan it certainly felt like a huge upset. It certainly helped Portland make the finals as they had a huge mental block against the Lakers (as shown by their horrible play in the 1991 WCF) while the Suns were just one of the other good but non-Laker WC teams that they could beat.
I guess the one thing mitigating how big of an upset that it felt like was that Detroit was considered the clear title favorite regardless of who they faced in the finals. So it didn't really feel like it made a difference as far as who won the title.
Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
1993Playoffs wrote:As it happened was it a huge deal?
Seeing as the lakers were in the finals the year before, and still had the showtime reputation.
Wonder how far they could’ve gone with Barkley added some how
At the time, people didn’t talk about SRS and rarely even MOV, but people knew the Suns were good, but they felt that that they were a regular season tiger (fuzzy memories of watching the series as a teen). Also, instead of looking at SRS/NRtg/MOV, people looked at wins and saw a 9 win difference in 1900 and a peak offensive Magic Johnson. People did know that it was difficult to play in that old Phoenix Memorial Coliseum and in the 1989 regular season, the Suns blew out the Lakers in games played there while getting beaten up at the Forum. Then the playoffs happened and the Suns lost two close games at the Forum (losing both 4th quarters), lost a close game 3, and then were swept.
In 1990, since the Lakers had home court and were a 63 win team (won many close games and exceed ped the expected PYTH wins by 5 games), people thought the same would happen because, well, the Lakers never lost in playoffs before the finals other than in 1986, and because the Suns had again lost three of the four games played vs. the Lakers in the regular season, all close games. But this time, the Suns won a close game 1 at the Forum, and a close game 5. One of the interesting things about the 1990 series was that Worthy and Scott didn’t score well like they had in 1989, so Magic went into scoring mode and had an incredible series showcasing the full arsenal of his offensive repertoire.
Looking back, nobody should have been surprised.
1989: 2nd in SRS, 2nd in NRtg, 1st in MOV, 2nd in ORtg
1990: 1st in SRS, 2nd in NRtg, 1st in MOV, 3rd in ORtg
Also, the Suns lost a bunch of close games in 1990 (54 wins, 58 expected PYTH wins) and the same happened in the WCF vs. the Blazers as they lost three very close game including blowing an 18 point halftime lead in game 2. Sansterre wrote about them in his greatest teams list.
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
Very condemnable individual off the court of play, but younger Kevin Johnson was a very good offensive player. Did he have great talent around him? Sure. Regardless, he was engining very formidable team offenses before Barkley even came along.
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
One of the interesting things about the 1990 series was that Worthy and Scott didn’t score well like they had in 1989, so Magic went into scoring mode and had an incredible series showcasing the full arsenal of his offensive repertoire.
That had a lot to do with the Suns defensive strategy. The Lakers often had a big size mismatch inside with Magic against KJ or Horny. Normally teams would bring aggressive help defense against that - letting Magic pick them apart passing from the post (much like modern Jokic). Instead Phoenix concentrated on covering everybody else and forced Magic to beat them scoring. While he hit his career playoff high scoring totals twice in the series by keeping Worthy, Scott and the rest of the Lakers from getting easier shots they were able to slow down the Lakers offense just enough to win (the Lakers also had defensive issues against the quickness of the Suns guards).
That had a lot to do with the Suns defensive strategy. The Lakers often had a big size mismatch inside with Magic against KJ or Horny. Normally teams would bring aggressive help defense against that - letting Magic pick them apart passing from the post (much like modern Jokic). Instead Phoenix concentrated on covering everybody else and forced Magic to beat them scoring. While he hit his career playoff high scoring totals twice in the series by keeping Worthy, Scott and the rest of the Lakers from getting easier shots they were able to slow down the Lakers offense just enough to win (the Lakers also had defensive issues against the quickness of the Suns guards).
Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
giberish wrote:One of the interesting things about the 1990 series was that Worthy and Scott didn’t score well like they had in 1989, so Magic went into scoring mode and had an incredible series showcasing the full arsenal of his offensive repertoire.
That had a lot to do with the Suns defensive strategy. The Lakers often had a big size mismatch inside with Magic against KJ or Horny. Normally teams would bring aggressive help defense against that - letting Magic pick them apart passing from the post (much like modern Jokic). Instead Phoenix concentrated on covering everybody else and forced Magic to beat them scoring. While he hit his career playoff high scoring totals twice in the series by keeping Worthy, Scott and the rest of the Lakers from getting easier shots they were able to slow down the Lakers offense just enough to win (the Lakers also had defensive issues against the quickness of the Suns guards).
Hypothetically do you see with the addition of Barkley them challenging Detroit? That was a pretty talented team
Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
1993Playoffs wrote:giberish wrote:One of the interesting things about the 1990 series was that Worthy and Scott didn’t score well like they had in 1989, so Magic went into scoring mode and had an incredible series showcasing the full arsenal of his offensive repertoire.
That had a lot to do with the Suns defensive strategy. The Lakers often had a big size mismatch inside with Magic against KJ or Horny. Normally teams would bring aggressive help defense against that - letting Magic pick them apart passing from the post (much like modern Jokic). Instead Phoenix concentrated on covering everybody else and forced Magic to beat them scoring. While he hit his career playoff high scoring totals twice in the series by keeping Worthy, Scott and the rest of the Lakers from getting easier shots they were able to slow down the Lakers offense just enough to win (the Lakers also had defensive issues against the quickness of the Suns guards).
Hypothetically do you see with the addition of Barkley them challenging Detroit? That was a pretty talented team
I don't really worry about it. Barkley wasn't remotely available at the time. Phoenix wouldn't just get him for free, they'd have to give up a lot to get him at that time - much more than they did 3 years later. So maybe they're down to KJ, Barkely and complete scrubs.
Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
giberish wrote:One of the interesting things about the 1990 series was that Worthy and Scott didn’t score well like they had in 1989, so Magic went into scoring mode and had an incredible series showcasing the full arsenal of his offensive repertoire.
That had a lot to do with the Suns defensive strategy. The Lakers often had a big size mismatch inside with Magic against KJ or Horny. Normally teams would bring aggressive help defense against that - letting Magic pick them apart passing from the post (much like modern Jokic). Instead Phoenix concentrated on covering everybody else and forced Magic to beat them scoring. While he hit his career playoff high scoring totals twice in the series by keeping Worthy, Scott and the rest of the Lakers from getting easier shots they were able to slow down the Lakers offense just enough to win (the Lakers also had defensive issues against the quickness of the Suns guards).
Yes, they did play Magic and the Lakers differently, and it shows in how many fewer FTs shot, but also a lot had to do with Scott missing many open jumpers and Worthy not playing well.
Here’s highlights of Magic’s game 4 and game 5 in which he shows off the entire offensive repertoire and incredible feel for the game. At 5:20, you hear Verne Lundquist say “finally gets one to fall,” about Byron Scott jumper.
Just game 4:
This video was posted by
, and I believe he either made a thread or a post about arguing how 1990 might be peak offensive Magic with worse defense and about how this wasn’t the Showtime Lakers anymore but an all time season long peak offensive performance from Magic to get that ORtg, but I may be misremembering.70sFan wrote:
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
homecourtloss wrote:I believe he either made a thread or a post about arguing how 1990 might be peak offensive Magic with worse defense and about how this wasn’t the Showtime Lakers anymore but an all time season long peak offensive performance from Magic to get that ORtg, but I may be misremembering.
I don't remember if I made such thread, but I definitely agree with that. Lakers stopped playing their fastbreak Showtime style in that season and they started relying on Magic more than ever before - the results were outstanding as well. I think 1990 Magic might be the best offensive player ever (with very few players approaching that level), the way he controlled the game was untouchable at that point. His post game became also more refined than ever, which combined with his shooting improvement turned him into the perfect offensive anchor basically.
Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
1990 definitely wasnt Showtime.
No Kareem and they were 20th of 27 teams in pace.
KJ and Horny messed them up and Mark West was a big deal.Chambers scored a lot on trash efficiency. Worthy was horrific. Scott didnt score enough (and some kf the why has already been discussed). Coop sucked and it wasnt like Woolridge, Thompson or rookie Vlade were going to pick up the slack. Phoenix was a 54-win team with the third-best O in the league and LA couldnt keep up eith how they forced gameplan on them
Magic ripped them apart for 30/12 and even dropped 43 in both kf the last two games but as with Jordan before Pip and Grant got going, a one-man show goes only so far.
Worthy was egregiously bad in the last 2 games, shooting 10/40 over them (this after 9/26 in game 1). You can't win when your second guy hoists that sort of garbage and you've no other support, not against a good team.
No Kareem and they were 20th of 27 teams in pace.
KJ and Horny messed them up and Mark West was a big deal.Chambers scored a lot on trash efficiency. Worthy was horrific. Scott didnt score enough (and some kf the why has already been discussed). Coop sucked and it wasnt like Woolridge, Thompson or rookie Vlade were going to pick up the slack. Phoenix was a 54-win team with the third-best O in the league and LA couldnt keep up eith how they forced gameplan on them
Magic ripped them apart for 30/12 and even dropped 43 in both kf the last two games but as with Jordan before Pip and Grant got going, a one-man show goes only so far.
Worthy was egregiously bad in the last 2 games, shooting 10/40 over them (this after 9/26 in game 1). You can't win when your second guy hoists that sort of garbage and you've no other support, not against a good team.
Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
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Re: How big of an upset were the Suns over the Lakers in ‘90?
As bad as Magic's teammates were I think you have to factor in the 3 straight finals and 7 of the last 8. I think it gets harder for guys to get up for every playoff series after that sort of grind. I think 3 finals in a row is sort of a big deal for players in terms of being able to stay mentally focused and not wear down as a result. Teams lose focus and all of that. Suddenly the idea of going home a week early doesn't seem so bad after you've won titles(probably more so as a role player) after an 82 game season.