The High Cyde wrote:RRR3 wrote:Hope MJ fans enjoyed that game winner yesterday.
Like them Wizards years, it never happened!
Jordan hit a game winner in 02 against Cleveland…..how long you been watching the nba?
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The High Cyde wrote:RRR3 wrote:Hope MJ fans enjoyed that game winner yesterday.
Like them Wizards years, it never happened!
Ainosterhaspie wrote:Jordan isn't the reason there weren't other dynasties in the 90s. No other team was good enough to become one and if Jordan never existed, the 90s would have looked more like the 70s with several different one year winners. Houston still gets 2 max. Utah gets two max. Maybe New York gets a couple. Outside of that, you get a few more teams who win one. There just wasn't another team stacked with enough talent, health and good coaching in that decade.
The discussion is too focused on the word though instead of the broader picture. It doesn't really.matter if a team was or could have been a dynasty. It matters how good the team was the year a player faced them. The 83 Sixers weren't a dynasty, but beating them that year would have been as impressive an achievement as beating any dynasty. It doesn't matter how good a team was the year before or the next year, it matters how good they are the year you face them.
Ainosterhaspie wrote:The discussion is too focused on the word though instead of the broader picture. It doesn't really.matter if a team was or could have been a dynasty. It matters how good the team was the year a player faced them. The 83 Sixers weren't a dynasty, but beating them that year would have been as impressive an achievement as beating any dynasty. It doesn't matter how good a team was the year before or the next year, it matters how good they are the year you face them.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
The High Cyde wrote:RRR3 wrote:Hope MJ fans enjoyed that game winner yesterday.
Like them Wizards years, it never happened!
RRR3 wrote:Hope MJ fans enjoyed that game winner yesterday.
lessthanjake wrote:Ainosterhaspie wrote:The discussion is too focused on the word though instead of the broader picture. It doesn't really.matter if a team was or could have been a dynasty. It matters how good the team was the year a player faced them. The 83 Sixers weren't a dynasty, but beating them that year would have been as impressive an achievement as beating any dynasty. It doesn't matter how good a team was the year before or the next year, it matters how good they are the year you face them.
I think this is right, and a good point to make. But Jordan’s Finals opponents were clearly really good when we look at how good they were that year.
They all won between 57 and 64 regular season games (and mostly towards the top of that range). They all had between 5.73 and 7.97 SRS (and all but one was above 6 SRS). On their way to the Finals, each one of them beat at least one team that would make the Finals or win a title in that era (and most of them beat a team that did that in an immediately surrounding year). Most of them had an all-time great in their prime that won an MVP award either that year or in an immediately surrounding year. One of the two that didn’t have that had a guy who was #2 in MVP voting that year behind Jordan, and the other one had a guy who finished as high as 3rd in MVP voting in that era and had two guys who were repeatedly top 10 in MVP voting (including both being top 8 that season). Four out of the six Finals opponents had the best pre-playoffs title odds aside from the Bulls (and one of them actually had better odds than the Bulls). The other two Finals opponents had the 2nd best pre-playoff titles odds aside from the Bulls, and one of them beat the one other team with better odds than them while the Bulls vanquished the team with the 2nd best title odds in the conference finals in the other year. So we are talking about Finals opponents that all (1) had great regular seasons; (2) defeated great teams in the playoffs; (3) had the types of major superstars you usually need in order to have big playoff success; and (4) were amongst the very top title favorites. These were great teams!
It’s also the case that, in those 6 title years, the Bulls had to beat a total of seven 5-7 SRS teams prior to the Finals (for reference: In his 10 Finals runs, LeBron only had to beat a total of two 5+ SRS teams prior to the Finals). Most of those 5+ SRS Eastern Conference opponents were led by easy hall of famers in their prime. The only year the Bulls didn’t have to beat a 5+ SRS team in order to make the Finals was in 1991, when they beat the two-time defending champions. Relatedly, in those title runs, they had to beat every other team from the East that made the Finals from 1988 to 2000. There is also only one year where the Bulls did not have to beat the Eastern Conference team with the next best pre-playoff title odds (that was 1991, where the Celtics actually had better odds than the Pistons). So the teams Jordan’s Bulls had to beat on the way to the Finals were really good too.
MavsDirk41 wrote:Ainosterhaspie wrote:Jordan isn't the reason there weren't other dynasties in the 90s. No other team was good enough to become one and if Jordan never existed, the 90s would have looked more like the 70s with several different one year winners. Houston still gets 2 max. Utah gets two max. Maybe New York gets a couple. Outside of that, you get a few more teams who win one. There just wasn't another team stacked with enough talent, health and good coaching in that decade.
The discussion is too focused on the word though instead of the broader picture. It doesn't really.matter if a team was or could have been a dynasty. It matters how good the team was the year a player faced them. The 83 Sixers weren't a dynasty, but beating them that year would have been as impressive an achievement as beating any dynasty. It doesn't matter how good a team was the year before or the next year, it matters how good they are the year you face them.
I love the excuses of James fans for dismissing the Bulls opponents in the finals. Just glad the dynasty Mavs embarrassed James in 2011
MavsDirk41 wrote:Ainosterhaspie wrote:Jordan isn't the reason there weren't other dynasties in the 90s. No other team was good enough to become one and if Jordan never existed, the 90s would have looked more like the 70s with several different one year winners. Houston still gets 2 max. Utah gets two max. Maybe New York gets a couple. Outside of that, you get a few more teams who win one. There just wasn't another team stacked with enough talent, health and good coaching in that decade.
The discussion is too focused on the word though instead of the broader picture. It doesn't really.matter if a team was or could have been a dynasty. It matters how good the team was the year a player faced them. The 83 Sixers weren't a dynasty, but beating them that year would have been as impressive an achievement as beating any dynasty. It doesn't matter how good a team was the year before or the next year, it matters how good they are the year you face them.
I love the excuses of James fans for dismissing the Bulls opponents in the finals. Just glad the dynasty Mavs embarrassed James in 2011
Ainosterhaspie wrote:MavsDirk41 wrote:Ainosterhaspie wrote:Jordan isn't the reason there weren't other dynasties in the 90s. No other team was good enough to become one and if Jordan never existed, the 90s would have looked more like the 70s with several different one year winners. Houston still gets 2 max. Utah gets two max. Maybe New York gets a couple. Outside of that, you get a few more teams who win one. There just wasn't another team stacked with enough talent, health and good coaching in that decade.
The discussion is too focused on the word though instead of the broader picture. It doesn't really.matter if a team was or could have been a dynasty. It matters how good the team was the year a player faced them. The 83 Sixers weren't a dynasty, but beating them that year would have been as impressive an achievement as beating any dynasty. It doesn't matter how good a team was the year before or the next year, it matters how good they are the year you face them.
I love the excuses of James fans for dismissing the Bulls opponents in the finals. Just glad the dynasty Mavs embarrassed James in 2011
You've failed to rebut anything I said, but chosen instead to deflect.
Nothing I said there necessarily argues for or against Jordan or LeBron or any other particular player and I certainly made no claim about the quality of the Mavs or excusing James in that series. That's a straw man.
I think focusing on beating a dynasty or preventing one is misplaced and, at least in the context of the 90s, an ahistorical narrative. There were no teams other than the Bulls who could have been dynasties in that era.
That does not necessarily mean that beating the 96 Sonics for example wasn't more impressive than beating the Rockets in 96 would have been and preventing them from being a dynasty. The Rockets were fading by that time. Beating the Sonics was more impressive, and that's the point I'm trying to make. It's the quality of the team that year and that series that matters not whether they are a real or potential dynasty.
Special_Puppy wrote:The Jazz probably would have gone B2B if they faced a typical finals opponent (say the 1997 Heat or the 1998 Pacers) instead of an unusually strong one. Maybe not a dynasty, but they would probably be held in similar regard to the Heatles or Bad Boys Pistons
OldSchoolNoBull wrote:All this talk about the 90s teams is a reaction to the argument that LeBron's competition was stronger, and while some good arguments have been made about how good those Jazz teams were(really tired of the disrespect they are shown by some on here), I think the argument I'd go with is that era strength shouldn't matter at all. Over the last few years I've become a more and more staunch era-relativist - meaning you evaluate players based on what they did, when the played, with the teammates they had, against the competition in front of them, under the rules in place at the time. You don't do time machine hypotheticals about what Jerry West might look like in 2025 and you don't penalize players from that past for things they had no control over(like the quality of their competition or the fact that three-point shooting wasn't as important in the past or the fact that zone defense was illegal).
These types of time machine arguments are almost always used to diminish past players, and these types of stronger/weaker era arguments often lead to hyperbole-fueled disrespect for large swaths of the league's history, whether that means downplaying the 50s and 60s as a joke league with 8-9 teams, the 80s/90s as an era of isolation-heavy offenses and archaic defenses in a watered down league, or the current league as a soft, flop-riddled, defensively deficient three-point chuckfest. There may be kernels of truth in all of those descriptions but on the whole they're unfair. I'd rather avoid all of that and take an approach that doesn't pit one era against another. I won't post a whole list, but my top 4 using this logic is this:
1. Russell
2. Jordan
3. LeBron
4. Mikan
I don't think any other players in league history dominated their eras the way these four have. You can scoff at Mikan if you want, but in an era-relative context, he belongs there. After that we're looking at Kareem, Magic, Wilt, Shaq, and Duncan in some order.
Ainosterhaspie wrote:MavsDirk41 wrote:Ainosterhaspie wrote:Jordan isn't the reason there weren't other dynasties in the 90s. No other team was good enough to become one and if Jordan never existed, the 90s would have looked more like the 70s with several different one year winners. Houston still gets 2 max. Utah gets two max. Maybe New York gets a couple. Outside of that, you get a few more teams who win one. There just wasn't another team stacked with enough talent, health and good coaching in that decade.
The discussion is too focused on the word though instead of the broader picture. It doesn't really.matter if a team was or could have been a dynasty. It matters how good the team was the year a player faced them. The 83 Sixers weren't a dynasty, but beating them that year would have been as impressive an achievement as beating any dynasty. It doesn't matter how good a team was the year before or the next year, it matters how good they are the year you face them.
I love the excuses of James fans for dismissing the Bulls opponents in the finals. Just glad the dynasty Mavs embarrassed James in 2011
You've failed to rebut anything I said, but chosen instead to deflect.
Nothing I said there necessarily argues for or against Jordan or LeBron or any other particular player and I certainly made no claim about the quality of the Mavs or excusing James in that series. That's a straw man.
I think focusing on beating a dynasty or preventing one is misplaced and, at least in the context of the 90s, an ahistorical narrative. There were no teams other than the Bulls who could have been dynasties in that era.
That does not necessarily mean that beating the 96 Sonics for example wasn't more impressive than beating the Rockets in 96 would have been and preventing them from being a dynasty. The Rockets were fading by that time. Beating the Sonics was more impressive, and that's the point I'm trying to make. It's the quality of the team that year and that series that matters not whether they are a real or potential dynasty.
MavsDirk41 wrote:Ainosterhaspie wrote:MavsDirk41 wrote:
I love the excuses of James fans for dismissing the Bulls opponents in the finals. Just glad the dynasty Mavs embarrassed James in 2011
You've failed to rebut anything I said, but chosen instead to deflect.
Nothing I said there necessarily argues for or against Jordan or LeBron or any other particular player and I certainly made no claim about the quality of the Mavs or excusing James in that series. That's a straw man.
I think focusing on beating a dynasty or preventing one is misplaced and, at least in the context of the 90s, an ahistorical narrative. There were no teams other than the Bulls who could have been dynasties in that era.
That does not necessarily mean that beating the 96 Sonics for example wasn't more impressive than beating the Rockets in 96 would have been and preventing them from being a dynasty. The Rockets were fading by that time. Beating the Sonics was more impressive, and that's the point I'm trying to make. It's the quality of the team that year and that series that matters not whether they are a real or potential dynasty.
For me the most impressive thing a player can do is create a dynasty with the franchise that drafted them and dominate the league. Duncan in San Antonio, Jordan in Chicago, Russell in Boston, Magic in LA. That’s exactly what they did.
DOT wrote:I find the "MJ prevented so many HoFers from winning rings" arguments to be strange, because if you actually look into it, would they have won for sure if he wasn't there?
Like, the Jazz are the best example for that case, they made the Finals twice and lost twice. But to say they for sure would have beaten whoever came out of the East if not for MJ is a complete hypothetical, one which is actively undermined by the other argument of "look how strong the East was when MJ played"
If the East was that strong, then you can't say be default the 6 teams MJ beat in the Finals would have won if not for him
And then vice versa, just because a team in the East lost to MJ does not mean they would have won had he not been around. The Knicks made the Finals when MJ retired and still lost, same for the Magic with Shaq, after they beat MJ in the playoffs (which for some reason doesn't count)
The math just doesn't work, to say there are 5-8 guys MJ prevented from winning multiple rings, like in a hypothetical world where MJ doesn't exist, most of those guys still don't get rings either. And then logically speaking, most of those guys only had the one chance anyways, like when we talk about Barkley, the Bucks beat him in the playoffs 3 times in Philly to MJ's twice. Should we not say it was Sidney Moncrief who prevented him from winning rings, not MJ? Or why do we credit MJ for beating the Suns once when Hakeem did it twice? Should not the credit go to Hakeem for preventing Barkley from winning rings instead?
It's just yet another circular logic argument from based on pure conjecture and hypotheticals.
OhayoKD wrote:Lebron contributes more to all the phases of play than Messi does. And he is of course a defensive anchor unlike messi.
The4thHorseman wrote:MavsDirk41 wrote:Ainosterhaspie wrote:You've failed to rebut anything I said, but chosen instead to deflect.
Nothing I said there necessarily argues for or against Jordan or LeBron or any other particular player and I certainly made no claim about the quality of the Mavs or excusing James in that series. That's a straw man.
I think focusing on beating a dynasty or preventing one is misplaced and, at least in the context of the 90s, an ahistorical narrative. There were no teams other than the Bulls who could have been dynasties in that era.
That does not necessarily mean that beating the 96 Sonics for example wasn't more impressive than beating the Rockets in 96 would have been and preventing them from being a dynasty. The Rockets were fading by that time. Beating the Sonics was more impressive, and that's the point I'm trying to make. It's the quality of the team that year and that series that matters not whether they are a real or potential dynasty.
For me the most impressive thing a player can do is create a dynasty with the franchise that drafted them and dominate the league. Duncan in San Antonio, Jordan in Chicago, Russell in Boston, Magic in LA. That’s exactly what they did.
3 titles, 3 FMVP's, with 2 different organizations in 5yrs aka self-dynasty is more impressive.
The4thHorseman wrote:MavsDirk41 wrote:Ainosterhaspie wrote:You've failed to rebut anything I said, but chosen instead to deflect.
Nothing I said there necessarily argues for or against Jordan or LeBron or any other particular player and I certainly made no claim about the quality of the Mavs or excusing James in that series. That's a straw man.
I think focusing on beating a dynasty or preventing one is misplaced and, at least in the context of the 90s, an ahistorical narrative. There were no teams other than the Bulls who could have been dynasties in that era.
That does not necessarily mean that beating the 96 Sonics for example wasn't more impressive than beating the Rockets in 96 would have been and preventing them from being a dynasty. The Rockets were fading by that time. Beating the Sonics was more impressive, and that's the point I'm trying to make. It's the quality of the team that year and that series that matters not whether they are a real or potential dynasty.
For me the most impressive thing a player can do is create a dynasty with the franchise that drafted them and dominate the league. Duncan in San Antonio, Jordan in Chicago, Russell in Boston, Magic in LA. That’s exactly what they did.
3 titles, 3 FMVP's, with 2 different organizations in 5yrs aka self-dynasty is more impressive.