SelfishPlayer wrote:The Dream Team is held as the standard, a standard that can't be surpassed unless equal blowouts are produced. You clearly can see that Team USA plays better teams today and two of the names on the Dream Team that are used to define their greatness over other US teams were actually not in their best form at the time they completed in 1992. This is like my Jordan never made it out of the first round of the playoffs without Pippen line. It's a line that only rings more and more true as we see Lebron looking dominant at the same age where Jordan was given a pass for not getting the Wizards to the playoffs. As time goes on we can see clearer. The Dream Team didn't play anyone while Magic and Bird were no longer great players.
Magic was pretty clearly still a great player, though, which was my point. He was a YEAR removed from coming 2nd to Jordan in the MVP vote, man. It's violently inaccurate that Magic wasn't still a great player. Bird, sure, he had his injuries and could barely be on the court due to his back. Magic, though, was a different story.
Yes, Team USA has stiffer competition today. That's fine, it's harder, the margins are smaller. That's normal. That doesn't really change anything about what happened in 92, though. There was still an aura about that team, and an international impact, which has nothing to do with the quality of the competition. It was about the narrative as much as anything else. There's no need to compare teams 30 years apart because the contexts are so different. That was my point.