penbeast0 wrote:One_and_Done wrote:penbeast0 wrote:Detroit is the clear best team in the league with the best RS record and winning the title in the PS. They have a good (7th) offense with Isiah having the ball in his hands and Dumars and Dantley/Aguirre providing more efficient scoring plus Laimbeer pulling opposing centers away from the basket to help Rodman's offensive rebounding. They have a better (3rd) defense with Laimbeer, Mahorn, and Rodman cheap shooting opponents for the Bad Boys rep while Dumars took on the opponents top guard. Seems more of a team effort, I don't know if any of them (Isiah, Laimbeer, Dumars) make my top 5.
Second best team was LA, though Cleveland tied their regular season record before flaming out in the 1st round v. the Bulls. LA is still Magic's team and has the best offense in the league even with reserve center Mychal Thompson getting more minutes/game than Kareem. Cleveland leads the league in SRS with the 2nd best defense. PF Larry Nance is their primary rim protector and defender; PG Mark Price the key to their offense. Another strong ensemble effort.
4 other teams won 50. Phoenix with Kevin Johnson and Tom Chambers, NY with Patrick Ewing, Atlanta with Moses and Nique, and Utah with Stockton, Malone, and DPOY Mark Eaton. Milwaukee, Chicago, Seattle, Philly, Houston, Denver, Golden State, and Boston were all above .500.
The compilation stats have Michael Jordan as the top individual player in the league with Magic ranking 2nd in 3 and Barkley in 2. John Stockton is the consistent 4th best in these ratings, top 5 in everything but PER (7th).
Player of the Year:
1. Magic Johnson: Same debate, MJ for the individual numbers or Magic for leading the best team offense. Magic's team also went to the finals though Jordan did beat the #2/3 RS Cleveland Cavaliers.
2. Michael Jordan
3. John Stockton. This spot is far from clear but Stockton led Utah to competition despite their playing Karl Malone and Thurl Bailey as their de facto SF with Mark Iavaronni, backup center Mike Brown, and the forgotten (by me) Jose Ortiz filling more the PF role adding more bangers next to offensive nonentity Mark Eaton. Stockton also led the league in both assist and steals.
4. Hakeem -- For the defense
5. Barkley -- for the lack of defense
HM Kevin Johnson was another dangerous and explosive PG in a very strong field of them.
I was about to question how anyone could have Ewing over Jordan, but then I saw this. Stockton was swept in the 1st round with HCA by a 43 win team. He wasn't even the best player on his team.
If the Jazz really had 2 MVP candidates and the DPOY, then 51 wins and a first round sweep was a horrific result, even if you are starting 2 G-Leaguers next to them (and Thurl Bailey and Griffiths were far from G-Leaguers, Bailey was a quite good in fact and in the era of 1989 him playing SF was fine.
Darrell Griffith was indeed bad; he had a ts% of .504, a turnover % greater than his assist %, and was the team's weak defender. Bailey was a reserve, though he played more minutes than the rotating pool of starters quite often. As I said, the starters were Iavaroni, Brown, and Ortiz. And if you believe at all in spacing, a front line where Karl Malone is your spacing starter is a bit problematic.
This was 1989. Nobody really took 3s anyway.