FuShengTHEGreat wrote:I remember watching this game live in NBC and I'm rewatching their meeting in the 93-94 season here:
Shaq got Robinson to bite on a fake with slick up under and at 1:46 leading a dunk (Jokic could never do that move from that distance as he lacks the fast twitch explosion of Orlando Shaq) and also later he got Robinson to bite on a fake resulting in a foul. Other than that Robinson contested everything from Shaq in a defensively sound manner without being caught out of place.
Let's take a closer look at this video. Here are all the possessions Admiral guarded Shaq:
0:52 - sound defense, bad shot by Shaq
1:43 - Robinson bitten on a pump fake, dunk by Shaq
1:57 - unsuccessful gamble by Robinson leading to a foul
2:24 - sound defense, hook missed
3:35 - no mistake here, Shaq made hook without contest
4:05 - again, Shaq made hook (goaltending)
5:07 - no major weakness, but Robinson showed no resistance against Shaq strength, he didn't even try physically to fight for position
5:55 - successfull gamble, steal
6:52 - good shot defense, but no boxout and easy second chance points by Shaq
7:40 - bitten on a pump fake, foul
9:10 - successfull gamble, steal
We can see Robinson going for pump fake twice, went for a steal three times (missing one), contesting two shots well, allowing for easy putback and showing little physicality inside. This is only one game from his sophomore season, peak Shaq was a different beast.
Of course Jokic couldn't dunk on him all the time, but these positional mistakes would have a high cost against someone as refined offensively as Jokic. Not to mention that Jokic could punish him from basically any area on the floor.
This was the 2nd highest scoring season of Shaqs entire career. For someone to bring up him being a sophomore is just a excuse imho. Shaq was already pretty much "there" as a offensive force.
Just because his scoring production was similar to 2000 doesn't mean he was "there". Shaq became significantly more refined low post scorer, there is no debate here.