bwgood77 wrote:I agree about Westbrook, not that he can't win the finals...this Spurs team may have been better than any finals team this year and they beat them....granted that is easy to argue, but they nearly beat GS, another historically good team, on the road as well. Not sure why you don't think they could win the finals ever, particularly when you have two historically good teams record and scoring margin wise in the west. Do you think the Spurs could have won it this year?
I feel that the Thunder "could" have won the title this year, and Oklahoma City "could" win the championship in the future (if Durant and ultimately Westbrook re-sign), but there is also a reason why, even when healthy or relatively healthy, that team keeps coming up short. And although Westbrook's flaws do not represent the entire reason, and although he can carry a club, his defects constitute a large part of that reason.
I would analogize the situation to Charles Barkley in Phoenix. Sure, the Suns "could" have won the championship in any of his first three seasons with the Suns (and maybe the fourth if management had not foolishly forced Danny Ainge into retirement rather than bringing him back for another year). But given how Barkley would hold the ball or slowly dribble down the shot clock; given how he would attempt cringe-worthy threes, especially off the dribble, even though he possessed the worst three-point field goal percentage in NBA history among those with a certain volume of attempts; given how he would sometimes revert to "hero-ball"; given his general inattention to defense; given that he almost never practiced, even when healthy; given that he set his own hours for arrival at practices (where he would often just sit in the stands and read magazines and newspapers rather than at least working out on his own); given that he would generally arrive at games (including Game Seven of the 1995 Western Conference Semifinals) forty minutes after the assigned arrival time; given how he rarely joined team huddles if he was not in the game; and given that he was a party animal, is the fact that the Suns did not win a title with Barkley surprising? And I am not even criticizing Barkley. I am just saying that a lack of discipline, on or off the court (both in Barkley's case) makes winning a championship less likely. In other words, if you are betting in Vegas, bet against it. If the team gets lucky, a title still could happen—if, for example, John Paxson had missed that wide-open three at the end of Game Six of the 1993 NBA Finals off a defensive breakdown that began when Barkley, trying to be a hero, gambled, went for a steal, and missed. But even with immense talent, a lack of discipline sort of gives you 40/60 odds instead of the 60/40 odds that you could otherwise enjoy. That is the paradox of Russell Westbrook, much as it was the paradox of Charles Barkley.
The Spurs probably could have won the championship this year, but unfortunately, for the second straight season, we did not see a San Antonio-Golden State matchup in the playoffs and how that would have shaken out. We last saw these two teams face each other in the postseason in 2013, when the Warriors were just starting to emerge and still two years away from elite status.
My point regarding Westbrook is not about the NBA Finals stage per se, but about beating enough championship-caliber opponents over the course of a postseason in order to win a title. Sooner or later, that lack of discipline comes back to bite you, as always occurred with Barkley and his Phoenix teams, which were more "talented" than the Suns' clubs of the preceding few years, but not necessarily better equipped to win a championship in the end, even if they made the NBA Finals once. (The operative word there is "once.")