HeartBreakKid wrote:LakersLegacy wrote:Wade had the most help.
What would Stockton do with
Shaq, Zo, Payton, a myriad of fringe all-stars
O
What would he do with a bunch of players way past their prime? Probably lose.
Stockton isn't a primary star, is I think the consensus of assessment of him as a player. He didn't score enough to really support a team that way. He needed a primary scoring dude, and then he could enhance the efficacy of that guy and the peripheral players with high-end execution, maximizing high-quality possessions. And he depended a lot on structure, which was troublesome against teams capable of disrupting gameplan execution. But he was outstanding at helping others, and very good defensively.
Shaq was a little too old to carry things with just Stockton and spare parts/old vets. He needed something more dynamic on the perimeter by that stage of his career. And in truth, that was the best pairing for him all across his career. He had a high-end guard who could score coupled to strong roleplayers who provided good spacing and defense. And boom, contention. Stockton couldn't pressure a defense enough to contend with Shaq the way he did with Penny, Kobe or Wade.
The 2006 Heat needed a LOT of scoring from Wade to get it done against Dallas, even with Dirk struggling. Dude dropped almost 35 ppg in that series and bombed in a pair of 40+-point games along the way. Stockton never averaged 20 ppg on a postseason in which he played more than 3 games, and sometimes, Utah needed that. It just wasn't in his wheelhouse to do that. It's very hard to do that without major physical advantages, which he did not possess. Not that he was unathletic, he just wasn't tall, wasn't super powerful, wasn't explosive, he didn't have elite athleticism/size and that is a major barrier to high-end scoring, which is the major thing missing from his skill profile for inclusion among the upper tier elite.