Godymas wrote:cupcakesnake wrote:shanedude wrote:Jokic got to beat up an undersized, depleted, injured Heat. It's easily Giannis.
Eh, destroying Deandre Ayton and Jae Crowder (backed up by Frank Kaminsky and Torrey Craig) isn't a more impressive accomplishment than a frontcourt with Bam in it.
Neither finals opponent was well equipped to deal with either of these guys.
you’re underrating how good Ayton was in those playoffs. He was legitimately playing for a max. He also had a great series vs. Jokic that year. Bam is 6’9 and heavily undersized. He’s great defensively, but he’s going to run into issues against the bigger Jokic. Imo beating Bam who was depleted and whose backup was Cody Zeller is less impressive. Ayton sucks today but in that finals run he was very good.
Ayton had a decent showing against Jokic that year, but in a very skewed context where Denver had no guards (Facundo Campazzo and Austin Rivers started in that series). Not only was there no 2-man game to operate in, but Phoenix could sag off every ball handler and sit in Jokic's lanes.
I thought Ayton was amazing against both LA teams in those playoffs, but less so against both Jokic and Giannis.
You're correct to point out that Ayton was much better in those playoffs that he's ever been since, but even at the time, I felt his defense was getting vastly overrated from looking so good against the injured LA frontcourts. AD/Drummond, and Zubac/Cousins were all playing through injuries and missing games. Ayton basically looked really solid against 3 very injured teams, and then a healthy Milwaukee just throttled him. I felt it was a bit of a mirage at the time, but gave him the benefit of the doubt that he'd keep improving and that those playoffs were a positive.
Jokic crushing Miami wasn't impressive either, but I don't think Giannis was up against a good defensive frontcourt. Even if you loved Ayton in that series (which I think is dubious), Phoenix was a really tiny team around him. 6'5" Crowder as the primary power forward, a few other wings (Cam Johnson who was a defensive liability that year, and Torrey Craig who is also 6'5" and then Frank Kaminsky).