What if the Portalnd TrailBlazers 1977 didn't trade Moses Malone to the Washington Bullets, and allowed Bill Walton to play less minutes?
What if the 50 win Detroit Pistons, a team that won the championship in 2004 without him, selected Carmelo Anthony 2nd in the 2003 NBA draft, and became the dynamic offensive threat the defensive-minded Pistons needed?
What if Robert Sarver and the WCF Phoenix Suns didn't trade away the draft pick that could've turned into Andre Igoudolla for money, and matched Atlanta's offer for Joe Johnson -who was a critical part of the 62 win squad, instead of letting the RFA walk? The Suns could've had an MVP Steve Nash, Andre Igoudolla, Joe Johnson, Shawn Marion, & Amare Stoudemire
What if the 1995 60 win Orlando Magic paid Shaquille O'Neal? What if Shaq and Kobe managed to put their differences aside, and extended their championship run?
In the NBA, talented teams have the opportunity to win a lot of games for a short while, but more often than not their excellence is a flash in a pan. The league adjusts, injuries happen, and suddenly the team that seemed poised to become a powerhouse simply becomes lost and forgotten amidst the sea of newer and younger teams that have replaced them in line to knock against the fleeting dynasty door.
Yes, the Warriors won 73 games last season and for all intents and purposes dominated the league. However, there's no definite way of determining if they'd ever reach that level again. What's to say they didn't plateau last season, and the NBA finals were the beginning of their decline? They'd have accomplished 2 years of being a championship contending team, one chip, and nothing else.
Right now, we're looking at the Warriors like a powerhouse, but looking at the NBA past puts things in perspective. There were many great teams that plateaued at times that people assumed they had yet to reach their potential. The Mike D'Antoni Phoenix Suns is just one example of a team that thought it had everything but wasn't able to sustain it's run at the top. Looking into the past shows that you never know when unpredictable external factors can mitigate a team's success.
In 1986 the Houston Rockets defeated the defending champion Lakers 4-1 and looked to be a powerhouse. The next season, Louis Lloyd and Mitchell Wiggins got suspended, John Lucas got traded, and Ralph Samson's back was injured. They went from making the finals to not advancing past the 2nd round until 1994. Meanwhile, the Lakers team it beat went on to win 2 more championships. Hakeem Olijuwan says the Rockets had the opportunity to trade Samson before the 1984 draft for the number 2 pick and Clyde Drexler. That pick turned into Michael Jordan. This means the Rockets could've had Olijuwan, Drexler, and Jordan on the same roster. Today, we look back at the roster and wonder what could've been.
Watching the Warriors today doesn't strike me as some extremely unfair twist of fate, but rather the most fascinating team ever constructed. Making a great team even better is something that most franchises can only dream of. Of course, they're going to be loathed by opponents, but I can't shake the side of me that is amazed at the level of basketball we're going to get to witness. Maybe this feeling will wear off, and maybe they'll turn into the Yankees of basketball, but for now it's nice to see greatness for a franchise that isn't the Lakers, Celtics, or Spurs. This is the next great basketball franchise, and to be honest, the team that will eventually surpass them will have achieved a far greater accomplishment





























