Capn'O wrote:No - I'm saying the '96 Orlando Magic/Bulls series gives us some idea of how that would have gone since it featured Shaq and he was paired with prime Penny and the Bulls smoked them. Lakers Shaq was better than that version of Shaq and prime Kobe was better than Penny but the fact that the Bulls overwhelmed the Magic in that series should be an indication that despite Shaq doing Shaq things these differences wouldn't overwhelm the Bulls. The '96 Bulls dealt with Shaq.
The Bulls always had this rolodex of big stiffs to deal with the big men of the league. Wennington, Purdue, Cartwright (a stiff at that point), Longley, Edwards, and so on. And also Rodman. They always had enough guys to make Ewing a bit uncomfortable.
Oh. No, I don't agree with that at all. Kobe was better than Penny, the 01 Lakers' roleplayers didn't crap themselves under pressure and having Horry spacing things out for peak Shaq was very different than having a Shaq who was smaller and still on his rookie contract.
The Bulls "dealt with Shaq" to the tune of 27/11 on 64% from the field, he obliterated them inside. Their problems were more related to the rest of the team utterly failing to come through, other than Penny, and that's a difference in the main which the Lakers were. Orlando was less competitive precisely because of its supporting cast.
You know I love Ewing, but he was well-overtaxed as a volume scorer by New York's roster and had a relatively simplistic game, so it's not surprising that the Bulls could frustrate him, as did Olajuwon (though in different ways, obviously). But this wasn't that. Chicago SURVIVED Shaq, and that was younger Shaq who had less experience. 01 Shaq would be an even larger nightmare for them, and very much wouldn't be the issue.
Shaq was going to do Shaq things to them. Worse, in this particular matchup. But the Lakers were a much better team than the 96 Magic.