
PG: James Harden 2017 - 18.9
SG: Kentavious Caldwell-Pope 2020 - 7.3
SF: Paul Pierce 2008 - 13.7
PF: James Worthy 1986 - 14.5
C: Shaquille O'Neal 2001 - 19.2
Bench: Pablo Prigioni 2014 - 3.0
Bench: Dorian Finney-Smith 2020 - 7.4
Bench: Andrew Bogut 2016 - 4.0
88/88
PG: James Harden 37 / Pablo Prigioni 11
SG: Kentavious Caldwell-Pope 34 / Dorian Finney Smith 12 / James Harden 2
SF: Paul Pierce 39 / Dorian Finney Smith 9
PF: James Worthy 38 / Dorian Finney Smith 10
C: Shaquille O'Neal 38 / Andrew Bogut 10
vs
Malone (38) / Perkins (10)
Artest (38) / AC (6) / Perkins (4)
Magic (38) / AC (10)
EJ (38) / Scott (10)
Payton (38) / Scott (10)
Matchup- Defensive assignments: KCP vs Payton, Harden vs Artest, Pierce vs EJ, Worthy vs Magic, Shaq vs Moses.
- We match up well across the board. Our 1–4 are big and switchable, and even Harden/Prigioni are oversized PGs who can comfortably guard wings. Magic’s primary defender is Worthy, but we feel good mixing in Pierce, DFS, KCP, and even Harden to give him different looks and keep him out of rhythm.
- Their offense suffers from lack of spacing. Outside of Eddie Jones and some Byron Scott minutes, they offer very little perimeter threat. Payton, Artest, and AC Green all allow us to help and shrink the floor against Magic and Moses without real punishment.
- Their elite perimeter defenders (Payton, Artest, EJ) don’t help them on Shaq. Moses is a respectable defender, but Shaq is the biggest mismatch of the series — bigger, stronger, and physically overwhelming. He forces fouls on Moses (their best scorer) and collapses their defense every possession.
- Our offense is far more balanced. Harden–Shaq is an elite inside–outside foundation, with KCP, Pierce, DFS, and Prigioni providing real spacing support around them, while Worthy adds consistent slashing and midpost offense. We maintain two-way balance in every lineup, in contrast to their offense, which bottlenecks around Magic and Moses with limited spacing.