Congratulations Myth on putting together a great team. I am not sure it is possible to build a better team than Denver to play the traditional 60s/70s style of basketball where teams set up their big men in the post while their wing players shoot jump shots from outside. So . . . we aren’t going to try.
I built the Heat deliberately to counter the traditional old school powerhouse teams using our strengths to dictate the game and force them to play our game. First, we aren’t going to try to post up Wilt and Rodman, allowing them to body our big men and hang around the low post for rebounds. Mutombo will be playing less minutes in this series with Larry Nance and Jack Sikma coming in to force Wilt and the Worm to chase us around the perimeter or give us open midrange shots.
Deke and Derek Harper will still start but Nance will come in quickly and he and Wade will play the starter minutes with Harper and Sikma as the primary reserves and Mutombo and Dandridge (another All-D F/G greyhound that can shoot the lights out) spotting the top 7.
Code: Select all
Player Stats Rpg Apg Ppg FG% 3pt FT% Bl St
PG Magic Johnson 7.5 11.8 21.0 .523 .303 .850 0.5 2.0
SG Dwayne Wade 4.8 6.5 23.9 .481 .258 .774 0.9 1.7
SF LeBron James 6.9 6.6 27.3 .467 .324 .728 0.8 1.8
PF/SF Larry Nance 8.7 3.0 19.9 .565 .733 2.1 1.1
C/PF Bob McAdoo 13.2 3.2 29.7 .516 .765 2.1 1.2
PG/SG Derek Harper 2.9 7.4 17.6 .474 .352 .751 0.3 2.1
C/PF Jack Sikma 11.2 3.5 18.8 .477 .845 1.1 1.2
C Dikembe Mutombo 12.3 1.3 11.9 .545 .662 3.8 0.5
SF/SG Bob Dandridge 7.1 3.4 19.5 .502 .782 0.6 1.2
C Mel Daniels 16.9 2.0 20.3 .490 .677 not kept
SG/PG Jeff Hornacek 3.4 4.7 17.3 .516 .427 .883 0.2 1.6
PG/SG Brian Taylor 2.7 4.3 14.3 .500 .370 .793 0.3 2.3
Team Strategy
Offensive Schemes: We will be attacking the Denver to turn their strengths into weaknesses. Their main strength is their two super physical rebounding low post defenders in Wilt and Rodman. Both, however, while GREAT low post defenders, tended to hang near the basket rather than expend their energy chasing opponents around the perimeter (Wilt more than Rodman of course)
“Wilt hated playing Lovellette. Lovellette was the first big outside shooting center (he wasn’t actually, Dolph Schayes was) and Wilt would start by chasing him but soon just let him take unguarded jump shots” Tall Tales quoting on of Wilt’s teammates. And, to quote RealGM HOF poster Tsherkin, “Rodman routinely ignored perimeter defense to chase rebounds” (lol) though to be fair, Michael Jordan make the same criticism … several times.
Lovellette was a 15-20 point, 44%, not terribly quick center. Bob McAdoo, on the other hand, is a 30ppg, 51%shooting, very quick athletic big who won MVP over Kareem (and was 2nd the year before and after) … if Wilt doesn’t chase him, Mac will dominate this series. Nance will also kill Rodman if Dennis hangs back, he is a 10ppg scorer with a .565FG%!! who was athletic enough to beat Dr. J and Nique in the first ever NBA Slam Dunk competition. He was very active, too active for Wilt, and will force Rodman to stay close, limiting the Worm’s ability to rebound and help Wilt. Sikma too was a big man who scored outside in leading Seattle to its only title and able to force Wilt/Rodman away from the basket. (And Eaton was as big and slow footed as any great defensive center too.) Denver has GREAT low post defenders and rebounders (unless they use the defensively weak Amare) but we aren’t challenging them there, we will instead run our Magic led passing offense to set up McAdoo or Nance/Sikma for open looks.
Our other offensive focus will be attacking the weak defense of Rick Barry and to a lesser extent Reggie Miller. Miller was a better defender than Barry, but both were vulnerable, particularly to quick, strong penetrators (hello LeBron/Magic/DWade!). If Wilt hangs under the basket to stop penetration, all our wings are great unselfish passers and it will be raining open 15 foot jumpers. If he does chase Mac out (assuming he covers McAdoo since Mac, for all his quickness, was more a standstill jump shooter than the running, wing penetrator style of a young Larry Nance), then LeBron, Magic, and Wade will be driving on their overmatched defenders. Even Billups, Denver’s only starting wing defender, would be badly overmatched trying to handle Magic, the greatest mismatch creator in NBA history. And, we still have solid outside shooting in McAdoo, Harper, Magic, Wade (Sikma, Dandridge, Hornacek, Taylor).
Defensive Schemes: Denver’s great outside shooting will force us to use the 2-2-1 match up zone only rarely if at all. I said Myth had a well constructed team! So, we will be in man coverage with Wade/Harper on Miller, the deepest threat, and LeBron and Magic using their greater strength and athleticism to mark Rick Barry and Billups. Bob Dandridge will be playing more this series when LeBron goes to the bench so we can still have an athletic defender and 20 point scorer to force Barry to work hard at both ends of the floor. Inside, Nance will be cheating off Rodman who had no range on his shot to allow him to double down on Chamberlain whenever Wilt gets the ball near the low post. McAdoo honed his skills against Kareem, Lanier, Bellamy, etc. but Wilt is close to unstoppable one on one and Mac can be overpowered. However, Nance and Mac were great leapers with good quickness who averaged over a steal a game (and over 2 blocks!) and Magic, LeBron, and Wade are all super athletic ball hawks who will disrupt the passing lanes into Wilt. And, of course, we will be running off those steals!
Finally, although Chamberlain and Rodman are two of the greatest rebounders ever, they will be kept away from the defensive boards chasing our sweet shooting bigs. This will free rebounding lanes for the other players and we have big rebounding edges at all three of the other positions. Barry was a below average rebounder; even in his championship season playing a lot of PF, he was out rebounded badly by his 6-5 F/G running mate Jamaal Wilkes, LeBron is stronger, quicker, and has a nose for the ball (even clearer taking pace into account!). Reggie, despite his size, disliked the contact, he never even reached 4 rpg in his career; Wade averages far better than Reggie’s peak. And Magic just dominates Billups in this area.
Overall: This series will be won by the team that can impose its will and style on the match up. If Denver can force a walk it up, feed it into the middle for post moves or kick out jumpers on Miami, they deserve to win. If Miami can push the pace and turn it into an open court game with Denver’s big rebounders chasing our jump shooters out away from the basket and our athletic wings able to drive on their weaker jump shooters, we will take this series. As great as Wilt was, I trust Magic to dictate the play and win.
MATCHUPS
Magic Johnson v. Chauncey Billups: Magic dominates the point guard match up. Chauncey is a big strong point, Magic is not just much bigger and stronger, he is also quicker and more skilled. He will create offense in the open court and be able to both drive on Billups and shoot over him efficiently and consistently. Edge: HEAT
Dwayne Wade v. Reggie Miller: Both great offensive players with clutch credentials. Wade is the quicker and stronger, he can body Reggie, take him to the hoop, and force him into fouls. Reggie has the shooting range and will try to run him off screens though all our defenders are quick and athletic with good court awareness able to help or fight past screens. Wade has an extra dimension though, he plays All-NBA defense. Edge HEAT
LeBron James v. Rick Barry: Two more great offensive players who were both great scorers and passers. LeBron again is the quicker and stronger who can take Barry off the dribble and force fouls, Barry again the long range threat (though LeBron was the better 3 point shooter). Again, LeBron’s rebounding and better defense adds the extra dimension. Edge: HEAT
Larry Nance v. Dennis Rodman: Two tremendous defenders. Nance is the quicker, more fluid player who adds the defensive shotblocking too (the only non-center in the top 10 all-time). Rodman is the super strong post defender (who won’t be facing post up offense) and rebounder. Nance adds the extra element of offense, scoring 20ppg on .556fg%! as opposed to Rodman’s career average of, well, 7, almost all from less than a yard away from the hoop. Edge: HEAT
Bob McAdoo v. Wilt Chamberlain: Let’s be honest. Wilt dominates everyone. He is the greatest rebounder and the most efficient scorer in history. But … McAdoo was a consistent MVP candidate in his peak, finishing 2nd, 1st, 2nd in three straight years against the likes of Kareem, Walton, Lanier, Frazier, West, Havlicek, etc. and he did it playing center during the era of the dominant centers by taking those centers out of their comfort zones and being the best shooting big man ever (ok, 2nd if you count Bird as a big). Wilt is the individual GOAT but McAdoo is going to give him more match up problems than even the GOAT candidates like Kareem or Russell by forcing Wilt to play a game he didn’t care to play. Still, edge NUGGETS
Depth: Miami has great depth starting with two way stars Jack Sikma (19pts/11reb, outside shooting big with All-D cred), Derek Harper (18pt/7ast, outside shooting guard with All-D cred), Bob Dandridge (20 pt, All-D) and Dikembe Mutombo (only 12 pt but 4 time DPOY) plus another MVP big man in Mel Daniels and two more sharpshooters in Hornacek and Taylor for 3 point offense. Our players play both ways with good offense and defense.
Denver has either good offense (Amare, Baker, Marques) or good defense (Buse, Bell, Eaton, Robertson) but only Robertson brought it on both ends and he was not a good percentage guy either shooting or passing. EDGE MIAMI
Intangibles: I won’t try to deconstruct the Nuggets. TrueLAFan did that well last round and you can read it here viewtopic.php?t=796808&start=0 (note, check out the notes on rebounding too, and we are stronger outside than LA is). But I will say that we have tremendous individual talents 12 deep and, we have unselfish talents. Magic, LeBron, and DWade have all been criticized for being TOO unselfish and Harper and Nance coexisted with great scorers and high usage stars. Even Big Mac took on the role of defensive specialist when needed in LA, much like Ron Harper did in Chicago. Our team is super talented, but they are the kind of players who will play TEAM ball and our top star, Magic, is the player in NBA history who is the greatest team first catalyst. EDGE MIAMI