Doctor MJ wrote:2) The Clippers had a better peak SRS than those Heat and did so playing a style that works better in the current age...and while '05-06 was early in that age, that truth was true even then. So to me, the Clippers show all indications of being the better regular season team.
To be honest, this is probably true. Old Shaq was on full-coast mode in the RS, and I do believe that Paul is better suited to lead an RS offense than Wade, especially young Wade. However, the Heat were easily the better playoff team and showed it by knocking off better teams than the Clippers did despite contending just as short a time. I would rather have a team that gets better in the playoffs vs the RS than the opposite.
3) Lost to Thunder and Rockets. Well the Thunder were a better team than either of these teams, and I'm glad you mention the Spurs because they also were at least comparable to the Heat.
I agree with the Thunder. The Thunder were better AND had the favorable matchups against LAC (namely terrible perimeter defense vs Durant/Westbrook).
Spurs were a great champion albeit probably on a hot streak...fwiw I think the Spurs would've waxed the Clippers, but you never know until you play the series.
4) The Rockets remain an undeniable blemish. There are times when I find myself cheering against destructive narrative. The Clippers losing that series against Houston to me was first and foremost a fluke that reinforced unfair ideas. I bit like what happened with LeBron against Boston - he choked momentarily, but that didn't make the choker narrative he'd been saddled with as a fundamental attribute reasonable.
I don't want to make too much out of one series as you don't, but something similar happened in 2014. Although the Thunder were better, LAC was on a precipice of a 3-2 lead going back home for a closeout game - they could've upset the Thunder and faced SA had they not shot themselves in the head in Game 5 and blew Game 6 on their home floor. Not as egregious as the Houston series, but similarly bad because they were in great position to win the series.
Then he or Blake got hurt for the other 4 years. They did beat Memphis in 2012 so there's that.
5) Can't see Riley/Wade/Shaq coasting. Shaq, coasting? I mean, that's basically what he did all the time. He had 3 modes: coast, kill, quit. He leapt from the first to 3rd quite quickly, as did Kobe, which was why they were both known for blowout defeats. I'll agree with you though that Wade is a killer. It's not just a personality thing though. Wade had a minimalistic game almost devoid of the need for high BBIQ much like young Jordan. When all you do is attack, you'll never look like a coaster. More intellectual games, like Paul's are more susceptible to other issues.
With Shaq I always felt that he put the coasting thing aside in the playoffs and switched to more on the kill side. But old Shaq probably only saved his heavy artillery when his teams had their backs to the wall. Think you're right on him, had prime Shaq more on my mind. All business in the playoffs.
With Wade, despite his relative lack of options on offense vs Paul, fact remains that his style was always effective at creating his own offense at will, which is what those teams needed given their weak offensive depth. The Pistons and Mavs couldn't stop him no matter what, even when they knew he was gunning for the hoop most of the time. Paul is a more versatile scorer, and coasting doesn't seem like the right word, but he was a less effective playoff scorer than young Wade. A more intellectual, versatile game like Paul's would lead your team to better results over the RS, but a minimalistic, score-at-any cost such as young Wade's seems better suited for a playoff run when points can come at a premium. I can't see Wade not scoring at least a few times if he was in Paul's place in that Game 6, for example.
I guess it comes to this - which issues are more acceptable to you? Wade's worse shooting/floor generalship or Paul's desire to always create the smart play, even if it means he uses his superior scoring less? Against high-level defenses, I can't help but feel that Paul's scoring ability would be needed far more than he's willing to use it whereas young Wade can always get me points even if his passing and shooting is worse. Given their construction of those Heat teams (defensive depth such as Posey, Zo, Haslem, old Shaq who opens up driving lanes but can't dominate for 40 minutes, relatively weak offensive depth), a guy like Wade who can score and isn't hesitant to do so is what they needed.
But still, fundamentally, teams coast in 7 game series and it's just a fact. When a team wins game 1 on the road, they almost always conserve energy in game 2, and do so thinking they are conserving energy for game 3. The maddening thing about it is that it's truly strategic, but if a team can't summon their A game at will it's dangerous. The thing is that I think almost all teams are prone to it, and case in point:
Why is it Jordan's Bulls never flirted with an undefeated post-season like we saw from the '83 76ers or the '01 Lakers or the Warriors last year? I really think it's to some degree because a championship is a championship, and even if you're Jordan, you don't want to wear yourself out prematurely.
I'm not sure it has to do with "coasting", I think all those teams were giving 100% in the playoffs but near-undefeated teams had some breaks go their way that resulted in only 1 loss. 83 Sixers avoided Boston and the Lakers apart from Magic/Kareem were basically crippled in the Finals. 01 Lakers won 3 games vs the Kings by a combined 15 points. Last year's Warriors were by far the most stacked team and they basically avoided the Spurs who looked ready to steal Game 1 on the road. I'd say that they were by far the best teams in their respective years, they turned up the jets when they needed it, they were good enough to win the other 75% of games just by doing their thing, and they caught some breaks. No team is good enough to win at that percentage against playoff-level competition without catching some breaks - even the best ones of all time didn't do it.
I'm not sure the Bulls had this kind of luxury apart from 1991 (15-2) - with their worst East competition of any title year except 1996 and Magic's Lakers upsetting a better Portland team in the WCFs. I think they just lost to playoff-caliber teams. It happens. That said, I'm not saying it was impossible that the Bulls coasted but never enough for it to matter as far as the outcome was concerned.
Still, whether the Clippers were coasting after stealing HCA after Game 1 or not, they couldn't turn on the switch, or maybe their switch wasn't as good as they thought it was late in the series. Looking at Game 5, it's not crazy to think they approached that game as a house-money game - whatever happened that game didn't matter because they were going to close them out in Game 6 at home anyway. LAC was down 20 soon after the 3rd en route to a blowout loss. And honestly - maybe the switch came on for Game 6. LAC was up double digits in the 4th of that game before falling apart. Then a perfect storm of stuff happened and they lost. Then the switch didn't come on for Game 7.
Really, the switch mindset isn't something a non-title winning core should have anyway because they haven't proven that they can play at the level needed to win a title yet. Not even the players themselves believe they can win a title until it actually happens.