mademan wrote:therealbig3 wrote:Yep, the same team that the 2014 Mavs took to 7 games would take out a far superior 2011 Mavs team, with a far superior version of Dirk, in 5 games.
Be conistent with that logic. Atl and a mediocre Cavs teams with Lebron struggling for most of the series took the Celtics to 7. But you have them as better than the Spurs.
Um, already addressed the point about Atlanta (maybe I did that in another thread). That was maybe the most lopsided 7-game series ever if you look at point differential.
As for the Cavs-Celtics series...yeah, Boston was hella lucky to win that series, they were actually outscored during that series. LeBron struggled...but so did Paul Pierce and Ray Allen. I'm not going to act like Boston toyed around with Cleveland before finishing them off...that wasn't the case.
Playoff series are about matchups. I think the 08 Celtics match up well with the Spurs, and they have the defensive IQ and personnel to slow down their offense more than anyone else this year was able to. Kevin Garnett, with Thibs and Rivers on the sidelines, is exactly what immediately comes to mind when I think about what kind of defense I would need to slow down the 2014 Spurs.
With regards to the 2014 Mavs...they're built pretty similarly to the 2011 Mavs...just with worse players. So the matchups would be similar if the 2011 Mavs played the 2014 Spurs...but the 2011 Mavs would have superior talent compared to their 2014 team.
Just because the 2014 Spurs weren't beaten doesn't mean they're unbeatable. They were pushed to the brink by the Mavs in the 1st round, and after taking care of business against Portland, they lucked out somewhat by facing OKC without Ibaka for the first 2 games. I still think the Spurs win that series if OKC had Ibaka, but considering that with Ibaka, the Spurs and Thunder split the last 4 games of the series, it's totally possible that OKC would have beaten them. And remember, they also faced by far the weakest Heat team in the big 3 era.