PG: James Harden 21' - 16.7 - Nets
SG: Ray Allen 99' - 13.5 - 99' Lockout
SF: Jimmy Butler 23' - 13.9 - Heat
PF: Draymond Green 19' - 6.4 - One Franchise
C: David Robinson 98' - 14.6 - Spurs
G: Aaron McKie 97' - 4.4 - Pistons
F: Lauri Markannen 22' - 11.5 - Cavs
C: Tyson Chandler 12' - 5.7 - Knicks
86.7/88
PG: James Harden 38 / Aaron McKie 10
SG: Ray Allen 38 / Aaron McKie 6 / Jimmy Butler 4
SF: Jimmy Butler 34 / Lauri Markannen 14
PF: Draymond Green 34 / Lauri Markannen 10 / David Robinson 4
C: David Robinson 33 / Tyson Chandler 15
vs
Brunson (37)/White (11)
White (22)/Bridges (26)
Bridges (11)/Battier (26)/Wade (11)
Malone (37)/Wade (11)
Jokic (37)/Stewart (11)
Matchup:- Defensive assignments: Butler vs Brunson, Harden vs Spurs Derrick White, Allen vs Bridges, Draymond vs Malone, Robinson vs Jokic.
- We counter their core perfectly—Butler disrupts Brunson’s rhythm, Draymond is one of the few defenders who can credibly battle Malone’s physicality and mid-post game, and Robinson has the mobility and strength to contest Jokic inside without fouling. On the other end, nowhere to really hide Brunson.
- Against an interior focused offense with Jokic Malone and Brunson who also posts up a lot, the combination of Draymond-Robinson-Chandler is going to be deadly.
- Ray Allen in ‘99 was already an elite scorer—hyper-athletic, great off-ball mover, and knocked down 47% from three in the playoffs. He wasn’t named an All-Star only because the game wasn’t held due to the lockout, but he received All-NBA votes and was clearly on that trajectory.
- Harden Allen Butler form a superb backcourt trio which can apply tremendous pressure in all kinds of ways, with Robinson at the middle. Butler and Draymond already showed they work together well, and Draymond has many shooters who can thrive off his passes. Markannen is a superb sixth man, with DPOY Chandler as backup big.
- Being forced to rely on Spurs-era Derrick White is a notable downgrade—he hadn’t yet developed the offensive polish or confidence he later showed in Boston, and even there, it didn’t fully click until he started playing under Mazzulla. At this stage, he was a solid defender but still inconsistent and hesitant offensively, especially in big moments.
- I think McKie-Markannen-Chandler form an extremely reliable bench, and comfortably better than 22 minutes of Dean Wade.
- Overall, we match up exceptionally well—our starters are balanced on both ends, our defensive trio (Butler, Draymond, Robinson) clamps down their core, and our backcourt of Harden and Allen offers elite shot creation and spacing. Add in a versatile bench with McKie, Markkanen, and Chandler, and we’re simply deeper, better defensively, and harder to game-plan against than a roster leaning heavily on Brunson-Malone-Jokic without enough elite shot creation or spacing behind them.