View Full Version : I Hope I Am Wrong: But Spurs 13/14 = Utah Jazz 97/98
hitmantb
05-23-2014, 02:27 PM
Remember Jazz also had Karl Malone in his twilight years (I honestly believe the difference between Malone and Duncan is much smaller than the number of championships indicates), played way better than his age, they lost to the Bulls in the finals because they did not have home court advantage, they fought back and gained home court advantage the following year. They were taken to the final game against veteran rival Rockets (Mavericks of this year), beat young Spurs 4-1 (Blazers of this year, Duncan's game was much more mid-range then, similar to Aldridge), and swept superstar Lakers (Thunder of this year, the team NBA wanted to see in the finals), they carried home court advantage into the finals, won game 1 and lost 4 of next 5 games.
I hope I am wrong, but too many similarities between the current pick-and-roll happy Spurs team and Utah Jazz in 1997-1998. The resilient veteran team that relied on passing over athleticism everyone respected, the ultimate test for every young team trying to take it to the next level.
It is fate, it is the ending of the GDP book. The league needs the story of LeBron topping Jordan and the three-peat is inevitable. Refs will make balancing calls to slow momentum on either side and keep the games close until final minutes, GDP will tire out and LeBron will dominate with individual star power. Spurs has more consistency than anyone else, but against a more talented team with an actual system instead of "free style", individual ISO power will prevail.
Spurs in GDP's twilight years is exactly like Utah Jazz, the perfect opponent for heroes to overcome, but will never be able to beat the main character of the story book because the writer won't allow it.
http://www.gifsforum.com/images/gif/cool%20story%20bro/grand/2872452121.gif
KaiRMD1
05-23-2014, 02:36 PM
So according to this story, we sweep the Thunder?
benstanfield
05-23-2014, 03:22 PM
History doesn't matter so I don't really care about the comparison. I think a Heat-Spurs matchup this year is worlds different than it was last year.
In the 2014 playoffs, Tiago Splitter is averaging 8 points, 9 boards, and 2.4 assists.
In the 2013 finals, Tiago Splitter & Boris Diaw collectively averaged 9 points, 4 boards, and 2 assists.
People seem to forget that in the Finals Boris engaged in a level of passivity that we haven't seen from him all year, making him basically unplayable. This year (and especially during this series) he's turned into a small ball killer. He's shooting 30% of his shots from 0-3 feet and he's killing it from there, shooting better (.800) than anyone on the team that's taking those shots often. And these aren't transition layups. I don't think it's a stretch to say that at this point, Boris Diaw is our best back to the basket player. Miami's small ball caught us off guard last year, but this year Boris will eat Shane Battier for breakfast. Their only hope will be to put their best defender Lebron on a Spurs role player and tire him out down banging down low.
As for Tiago I think it's safe to say that if he was able to keep Dirk and LMA in check, he will have no trouble against Bosh. Last year he routinely got his shit pounded on offense, and his Euro layup was basically just beach volleyball for the Heat. This season he's made a change not in his shot selection or strength going to the hoop, but in the way he sees the court and helps his teammates succeed. His playoff PER is 19.6, his TO% is one of the lowest on the team, he's giving us career high numbers in assists, and his ORtg is a stunning 139 in the playoffs. Thats 32 points better than the 2013 playoffs. I'm as shocked as anyone, but on offense Tiago has turned into one of the smartest BBIQ guys we have. He would be the best passing big on basically any team that doesn't have Boris Diaw.
In short, Tiago and Boris each averaged a pathetic 15 minutes in last year's finals. We have every reason to believe this year will be completely different. Having these two in their current form makes the Spurs a stunningly versatile team. If the Heat go big we can put Splitter on Bosh and shut him down without help, giving TD a break on Haslem so that he can help at the rim, allowing Green and Leonard to play Wade & Lebron straight. If the Heat go small, Boris allows us to stay big and will punish whoever they put on him; it would be foolish of them to put LBJ on Boris for fatigue and fouls, but it will be their only recourse.
Chalmers, Wade, Allen, James, Bosh is the only lineup that the Heat could presumably throw at the Spurs for which SAS will not have an easy solution defensively. Any of their other players at the 2-5 spot will give the Spurs exploitable advantages.
This is the lineup that spaces the floor so that Lebron can do that thing where he bullrushes the rim and gets a layup or a foul call. I think our best bet would be to put Boris on LBJ and make him a jump shooter, play everyone else straight, switch screens for LBJ, and hope that TD/Boris can punish their bigs on offense. I like the Spurs' versatility in this series a lot.
hitmantb
05-23-2014, 03:31 PM
History doesn't matter so I don't really care about the comparison. I think a Heat-Spurs matchup this year is worlds different than it was last year.
In the 2014 playoffs, Tiago Splitter is averaging 8 points, 9 boards, and 2.4 assists.
In the 2013 finals, Tiago Splitter & Boris Diaw collectively averaged 9 points, 4 boards, and 2 assists.
People seem to forget that in the Finals Boris engaged in a level of passivity that we haven't seen from him all year, making him basically unplayable. This year (and especially during this series) he's turned into a small ball killer. He's shooting 30% of his shots from 0-3 feet and he's killing it from there, shooting better (.800) than anyone on the team that's taking those shots often. And these aren't transition layups. I don't think it's a stretch to say that at this point, Boris Diaw is our best back to the basket player. Miami's small ball caught us off guard last year, but this year Boris will eat Shane Battier for breakfast. Their only hope will be to put their best defender Lebron on a Spurs role player and tire him out down banging down low.
As for Tiago I think it's safe to say that if he was able to keep Dirk and LMA in check, he will have no trouble against Bosh. Last year he routinely got his shit pounded on offense, and his Euro layup was basically just beach volleyball for the Heat. This season he's made a change not in his shot selection or strength going to the hoop, but in the way he sees the court and helps his teammates succeed. His playoff PER is 19.6, his TO% is one of the lowest on the team, he's giving us career high numbers in assists, and his ORtg is a stunning 139 in the playoffs. Thats 32 points better than the 2013 playoffs. I'm as shocked as anyone, but on offense Tiago has turned into one of the smartest BBIQ guys we have. He would be the best passing big on basically any team that doesn't have Boris Diaw.
In short, Tiago and Boris each averaged a pathetic 15 minutes in last year's finals. We have every reason to believe this year will be completely different. Having these two in their current form makes the Spurs a stunningly versatile team. If the Heat go big we can put Splitter on Bosh and shut him down without help, giving TD a break on Haslem so that he can help at the rim, allowing Green and Leonard to play Wade & Lebron straight. If the Heat go small, Boris allows us to stay big and will punish whoever they put on him; it would be foolish of them to put LBJ on Boris for fatigue and fouls, but it will be their only recourse.
Chalmers, Wade, Allen, James, Bosh is the only lineup that the Heat could presumably throw at the Spurs for which SAS will not have an easy solution defensively. Any of their other players at the 2-5 spot will give the Spurs exploitable advantages.
This is the lineup that spaces the floor so that Lebron can do that thing where he bullrushes the rim and gets a layup or a foul call. I think our best bet would be to put Boris on LBJ and make him a jump shooter, play everyone else straight, switch screens for LBJ, and hope that TD/Boris can punish their bigs on offense. I like the Spurs' versatility in this series a lot.
Everything you said is only valid because Spurs have yet to play against a long, physical, athletic, defensive team that can disrupt the passing game. Same reason Jazz looked unstoppable against quadruple all-star Lakers, and their offense took a dive against the Bulls with Jordan/Pippen forcing turnovers like LeBron/Wade.
Miami's defense is a different league than any of Spurs's three opponents this year and I think a lot of the players you listed will not perform anywhere near what they did so far. You only need one good line-up in crunch time.
Like I said I really hope I am wrong, but I smell Utah Jazz 1998 ending here.
KaiRMD1
05-23-2014, 03:49 PM
Everything you said is only valid because Spurs have yet to play against a long, physical, athletic, defensive team that can disrupt the passing game. Same reason Jazz looked unstoppable against quadruple all-star Lakers, and their offense took a dive against the Bulls with Jordan/Pippen forcing turnovers like LeBron/Wade.
Miami's defense is a different league than any of Spurs's three opponents this year and I think a lot of the players you listed will not perform anywhere near what they did so far. You only need one good line-up in crunch time.
Like I said I really hope I am wrong, but I smell Utah Jazz 1998 ending here.
Does that mean also that Lebron will retire as well?
PublicOption
05-23-2014, 03:49 PM
you are dumb. bulls didn't beat jazz 2 years in a row. so by your own logic this year can't be like that year......end of comparison.
benstanfield
05-23-2014, 03:50 PM
Everything you said is only valid because Spurs have yet to play against a long, physical, athletic, defensive team that can disrupt the passing game.
Miami's defense is a different league than any of Spurs's three opponents this year and I think a lot of the players you listed will not perform anywhere near what they did so far. You only need one good line-up in crunch time.
Like I said I really hope I am wrong, but I smell Utah Jazz 1998 ending here.
The only players I listed were Boris and Tiago. The Heat are not "athletic" outside of Lebron, Wade, and MAYBE Bosh. In fact, the Heat have one of the least "athletic" frontcourt rotations in the NBA. When I think of a " long, physical, athletic, defensive team", the names Haslem, Andersen, Battier, Allen, Chalmers don't exactly jump off of the page at me. The Heat are the NBA's oldest team. You don't get to play Allen, Battier, and Haslem heavy minutes and call yourself an athletic team. Lebron is athletic. Lebron has also not been very good on defense this season, nor have the Heat by their standards. Maybe the Spurs haven't played a great defense yet, but the Heat haven't even played a decent offense in these playoffs. Charlotte, Brooklyn, then Indiana is one of the most offensively inept finals paths you could ever possibly hope to face in the NBA playoffs. Yet the Spurs are still giving up less points per shot, still holding opponents to worse adjusted fg%, and still scoring 107 points per game to Miami's 98.
I'm not saying it will be easy to shut down Lebron & co, just saying that if we score 105 points per game, keeping the Heat under that will be a simple matter of execution on defense. We can match up with any lineup they throw out MUCH more effectively than last year. That's the only history that matters.
Vic Petro
05-23-2014, 03:59 PM
If you think there isn't a big difference between Duncan and Malone, I don't know what to tell you. You are on an island with a bunch of Jazz fans.
spurs1990
05-23-2014, 04:18 PM
History doesn't matter so I don't really care about the comparison. I think a Heat-Spurs matchup this year is worlds different than it was last year.
In the 2014 playoffs, Tiago Splitter is averaging 8 points, 9 boards, and 2.4 assists.
In the 2013 finals, Tiago Splitter & Boris Diaw collectively averaged 9 points, 4 boards, and 2 assists.
People seem to forget that in the Finals Boris engaged in a level of passivity that we haven't seen from him all year, making him basically unplayable. This year (and especially during this series) he's turned into a small ball killer. He's shooting 30% of his shots from 0-3 feet and he's killing it from there, shooting better (.800) than anyone on the team that's taking those shots often. And these aren't transition layups. I don't think it's a stretch to say that at this point, Boris Diaw is our best back to the basket player. Miami's small ball caught us off guard last year, but this year Boris will eat Shane Battier for breakfast. Their only hope will be to put their best defender Lebron on a Spurs role player and tire him out down banging down low.
As for Tiago I think it's safe to say that if he was able to keep Dirk and LMA in check, he will have no trouble against Bosh. Last year he routinely got his shit pounded on offense, and his Euro layup was basically just beach volleyball for the Heat. This season he's made a change not in his shot selection or strength going to the hoop, but in the way he sees the court and helps his teammates succeed. His playoff PER is 19.6, his TO% is one of the lowest on the team, he's giving us career high numbers in assists, and his ORtg is a stunning 139 in the playoffs. Thats 32 points better than the 2013 playoffs. I'm as shocked as anyone, but on offense Tiago has turned into one of the smartest BBIQ guys we have. He would be the best passing big on basically any team that doesn't have Boris Diaw.
In short, Tiago and Boris each averaged a pathetic 15 minutes in last year's finals. We have every reason to believe this year will be completely different. Having these two in their current form makes the Spurs a stunningly versatile team. If the Heat go big we can put Splitter on Bosh and shut him down without help, giving TD a break on Haslem so that he can help at the rim, allowing Green and Leonard to play Wade & Lebron straight. If the Heat go small, Boris allows us to stay big and will punish whoever they put on him; it would be foolish of them to put LBJ on Boris for fatigue and fouls, but it will be their only recourse.
Chalmers, Wade, Allen, James, Bosh is the only lineup that the Heat could presumably throw at the Spurs for which SAS will not have an easy solution defensively. Any of their other players at the 2-5 spot will give the Spurs exploitable advantages.
This is the lineup that spaces the floor so that Lebron can do that thing where he bullrushes the rim and gets a layup or a foul call. I think our best bet would be to put Boris on LBJ and make him a jump shooter, play everyone else straight, switch screens for LBJ, and hope that TD/Boris can punish their bigs on offense. I like the Spurs' versatility in this series a lot.
Great take. I remember at times Boris was checking James rather effectively through Game Six. It'll be exciting seeing them go nine deep against Miami. Tiago barely even played in Games 6 and 7, and instead of Gary Neal as the seventh man, we'll have a combo of Mills and Belinelli to supplant Neal's production.
Just looked at the boxscores and shows that Manu startied in the last 3 games...I know I sure don't even recall that fact.
r0drig0lac
05-23-2014, 04:28 PM
this time Malone has more rings than Jordan right?
soxxx
05-23-2014, 04:33 PM
Its kinda different though, the Jazz never were in position to beat the Bulls. The Spurs were in a situation where they had a 5 point lead with 28 seconds left where previously 130 teams of 130 teams won in that situation in the playoffs.
This Heat team is not even as good as last year.
sananspursfan21
05-23-2014, 04:51 PM
This is so stupid. I'm sorry man
Juggity
05-23-2014, 05:19 PM
(I honestly believe the difference between Malone and Duncan is much smaller than the number of championships indicates)
lmao
baseline bum
05-23-2014, 05:33 PM
Nah man, the Thunder are the Jazz. Ref protected all throughout the WC playoffs and then blitzed when they play the league's glamour team in the Finals and don't get that ridiculous whistle.
Jenks
05-23-2014, 06:54 PM
I hope OKC's crowd starts counting every time Duncan gets the ball at the FT line.
No but seriously, that was one of the stupidest things I've ever read.
james evans
05-23-2014, 07:09 PM
the jazz never had the bulls beat in a game 6 and gave the game away in either of those series. so i'm not understanding. amd they were basically no comp really. utah in97 was probably the bulls easiest title. with 98 being the 3rd easiest.
ThePop
05-23-2014, 07:20 PM
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-QBwUuiehwBQ/T4IExllkxQI/AAAAAAAAA5Y/Rrxy4fkHypc/s1600/george-bush-gif.gif
Blizzardwizard
05-23-2014, 07:38 PM
STDalamon?
History doesn't matter so I don't really care about the comparison. I think a Heat-Spurs matchup this year is worlds different than it was last year.
In the 2014 playoffs, Tiago Splitter is averaging 8 points, 9 boards, and 2.4 assists.
In the 2013 finals, Tiago Splitter & Boris Diaw collectively averaged 9 points, 4 boards, and 2 assists.
People seem to forget that in the Finals Boris engaged in a level of passivity that we haven't seen from him all year, making him basically unplayable. This year (and especially during this series) he's turned into a small ball killer. He's shooting 30% of his shots from 0-3 feet and he's killing it from there, shooting better (.800) than anyone on the team that's taking those shots often. And these aren't transition layups. I don't think it's a stretch to say that at this point, Boris Diaw is our best back to the basket player. Miami's small ball caught us off guard last year, but this year Boris will eat Shane Battier for breakfast. Their only hope will be to put their best defender Lebron on a Spurs role player and tire him out down banging down low.
As for Tiago I think it's safe to say that if he was able to keep Dirk and LMA in check, he will have no trouble against Bosh. Last year he routinely got his shit pounded on offense, and his Euro layup was basically just beach volleyball for the Heat. This season he's made a change not in his shot selection or strength going to the hoop, but in the way he sees the court and helps his teammates succeed. His playoff PER is 19.6, his TO% is one of the lowest on the team, he's giving us career high numbers in assists, and his ORtg is a stunning 139 in the playoffs. Thats 32 points better than the 2013 playoffs. I'm as shocked as anyone, but on offense Tiago has turned into one of the smartest BBIQ guys we have. He would be the best passing big on basically any team that doesn't have Boris Diaw.
In short, Tiago and Boris each averaged a pathetic 15 minutes in last year's finals. We have every reason to believe this year will be completely different. Having these two in their current form makes the Spurs a stunningly versatile team. If the Heat go big we can put Splitter on Bosh and shut him down without help, giving TD a break on Haslem so that he can help at the rim, allowing Green and Leonard to play Wade & Lebron straight. If the Heat go small, Boris allows us to stay big and will punish whoever they put on him; it would be foolish of them to put LBJ on Boris for fatigue and fouls, but it will be their only recourse.
Chalmers, Wade, Allen, James, Bosh is the only lineup that the Heat could presumably throw at the Spurs for which SAS will not have an easy solution defensively. Any of their other players at the 2-5 spot will give the Spurs exploitable advantages.
This is the lineup that spaces the floor so that Lebron can do that thing where he bullrushes the rim and gets a layup or a foul call. I think our best bet would be to put Boris on LBJ and make him a jump shooter, play everyone else straight, switch screens for LBJ, and hope that TD/Boris can punish their bigs on offense. I like the Spurs' versatility in this series a lot.
Benstanfield just went HAM
SAtown
05-23-2014, 07:58 PM
you are dumb. bulls didn't beat jazz 2 years in a row. so by your own logic this year can't be like that year......end of comparison.
Wrong.
www.google.com
or fuck it
www.wikipedia.org
or better yet
memory. 90's basketball was the shit, regardless of how good the Spurs were *
cd021
05-23-2014, 10:25 PM
History doesn't matter so I don't really care about the comparison. I think a Heat-Spurs matchup this year is worlds different than it was last year.
In the 2014 playoffs, Tiago Splitter is averaging 8 points, 9 boards, and 2.4 assists.
In the 2013 finals, Tiago Splitter & Boris Diaw collectively averaged 9 points, 4 boards, and 2 assists.
People seem to forget that in the Finals Boris engaged in a level of passivity that we haven't seen from him all year, making him basically unplayable. This year (and especially during this series) he's turned into a small ball killer. He's shooting 30% of his shots from 0-3 feet and he's killing it from there, shooting better (.800) than anyone on the team that's taking those shots often. And these aren't transition layups. I don't think it's a stretch to say that at this point, Boris Diaw is our best back to the basket player. Miami's small ball caught us off guard last year, but this year Boris will eat Shane Battier for breakfast. Their only hope will be to put their best defender Lebron on a Spurs role player and tire him out down banging down low.
As for Tiago I think it's safe to say that if he was able to keep Dirk and LMA in check, he will have no trouble against Bosh. Last year he routinely got his shit pounded on offense, and his Euro layup was basically just beach volleyball for the Heat. This season he's made a change not in his shot selection or strength going to the hoop, but in the way he sees the court and helps his teammates succeed. His playoff PER is 19.6, his TO% is one of the lowest on the team, he's giving us career high numbers in assists, and his ORtg is a stunning 139 in the playoffs. Thats 32 points better than the 2013 playoffs. I'm as shocked as anyone, but on offense Tiago has turned into one of the smartest BBIQ guys we have. He would be the best passing big on basically any team that doesn't have Boris Diaw.
In short, Tiago and Boris each averaged a pathetic 15 minutes in last year's finals. We have every reason to believe this year will be completely different. Having these two in their current form makes the Spurs a stunningly versatile team. If the Heat go big we can put Splitter on Bosh and shut him down without help, giving TD a break on Haslem so that he can help at the rim, allowing Green and Leonard to play Wade & Lebron straight. If the Heat go small, Boris allows us to stay big and will punish whoever they put on him; it would be foolish of them to put LBJ on Boris for fatigue and fouls, but it will be their only recourse.
Chalmers, Wade, Allen, James, Bosh is the only lineup that the Heat could presumably throw at the Spurs for which SAS will not have an easy solution defensively. Any of their other players at the 2-5 spot will give the Spurs exploitable advantages.
This is the lineup that spaces the floor so that Lebron can do that thing where he bullrushes the rim and gets a layup or a foul call. I think our best bet would be to put Boris on LBJ and make him a jump shooter, play everyone else straight, switch screens for LBJ, and hope that TD/Boris can punish their bigs on offense. I like the Spurs' versatility in this series a lot.
:tu Great post
I will say Bosh has a tendency to come up small in the playoffs (i.e 0 points in the Finals Game 7) but he is an elite jump shooter who almost never shoots in the paint anymore. Splitter would spend most of his time at least 15 feet away from the rim.
If we get back there Diaw could be a massive factor. If Miami goes with the Wade-Allen-Lebron-Battier-Bosh matchup Diaw could either post Lebron or Battier and defend either as well, allowing Leonard to cover Wade. I could even see Pop going supper big with Duncan-Splitter and Diaw for stretches If Bosh-Anderson/Haslem-Lebron/Battier are on the court he did i in the blowout win in the RS.
Miami would also have a tougher time trapping on Parker and Ginobili with Diaw setting screens and spotting up from 3. They'd essentially be forcing the ball out of a guards hands and into an open high percentage 3pt shooter.
Kidd K
05-23-2014, 11:54 PM
Time to end this shitty comparison once and for all.
One simple fact debunks Malone's legacy. Did him playing in the Jordan era block him from getting 4-5 titles like Duncan? NO! Malone could not even play Jordan until the Finals and he only got there twice. Duncan got there six times and won 4-5 times. And Duncan had to go through Shaq, Dirk, KG, Ming, etc. Pretty legit fuckin bigs tbh, not to mention lesser but still good ones like Randolph, Gasol brothers, Amar'e, etc.
Malone can't even use the Jordan excuse. He was in the Finals against the oldest and slowest version of Bulls Jordan, and aside from that never got there.
Malone was a great player, but not a true champion. He did stuff well that's statistically measured well, but that doesn't always add up to a title. And btw the Jazz were the Thunder of that era too. Look how many more FTAs they got over the rest of the league. It's a joke.
Sean Cagney
05-24-2014, 12:05 AM
Time to end this shitty comparison once and for all.
One simple fact debunks Malone's legacy. Did him playing in the Jordan era block him from getting 4-5 titles like Duncan? NO! Malone could not even play Jordan until the Finals and he only got there twice. Duncan got there six times and won 4-5 times. And Duncan had to go through Shaq, Dirk, KG, Ming, etc. Pretty legit fuckin bigs tbh, not to mention lesser but still good ones like Randolph, Gasol brothers, Amar'e, etc.
I am sorry but a few flaws in there, Duncan got there six times but won 4-5 times? And went through Ming? He never met Ming in the playoffs! I know you must be tired and typing and made sense on alot but those two there were way off.
Mikeanaro
05-24-2014, 12:11 AM
I am sorry but a few flaws in there, Duncan got there six times but won 4-5 times? And went through Ming? He never met Ming in the playoffs! I know you must be tired and typing and made sense on alot but those two there were way off.
It was weird, six times... it wasnt a number typo, anyway this is a very stupid thread.
Kidd K
05-24-2014, 12:20 AM
I am sorry but a few flaws in there, Duncan got there six times but won 4-5 times? And went through Ming? He never met Ming in the playoffs! I know you must be tired and typing and made sense on alot but those two there were way off.
I'm including this season when I say Duncan got there six times and won 4-5 times. We're not losing to OKC and we have a strong chance at a title. I'm not tired at all.
Sean Cagney
05-24-2014, 12:22 AM
I'm including this season when I say Duncan got there six times and won 4-5 times. We're not losing to OKC and we have a strong chance at a title. I'm not tired at all.
Okay if you mean this season I can see that, it would be winning 5 out of 6 times then! Because IMO this year they would win if they made it. Ming though they never met in the playoffs, Rockets were not that great at the time and never got out of the first round.
BTW he has to get to the finals this year to be there 6 times, we still have 2 games left to do that! Lets not get ahead here and let the Spurs focus on their business :hat
Prose
05-24-2014, 12:34 AM
http://www.gifsforum.com/images/gif/cool%20story%20bro/grand/2872452121.gif
Arcadian
05-24-2014, 12:40 AM
Naaaaaahhh....It's a somewhat interesting comparison, but it's way too simplistic to think they are direct analogs.
The main difference is, Spurs are winning this shit.
Edit: That and, I don't recall the 97 Finals being a 7-game epic thriller where the team that should have won lost.
Prose
05-24-2014, 12:41 AM
Spurs have more athletic perimeter players than the jazz ever did then. Plus in think spurs are a litter younger as a whole than them and the leagues rules have changed a bit to favor jump shooters since then.
Prose
05-24-2014, 12:44 AM
Chalmers, Wade, Allen, James, Bosh is the only lineup that the Heat could presumably throw at the Spurs for which SAS will not have an easy solution defensively.
spurs could match with this line up...1.parker/mills 2.green 3.manu 4.leonard/Diaw 5.duncan/splitter
G-Dawgg
05-24-2014, 01:32 AM
I see some similarities.. Sloan played a flex/motion offense. Popovich adopted Jerry Sloan's motion type offense.
Kidd K
05-24-2014, 01:49 AM
Okay if you mean this season I can see that, it would be winning 5 out of 6 times then! Because IMO this year they would win if they made it. Ming though they never met in the playoffs, Rockets were not that great at the time and never got out of the first round.
BTW he has to get to the finals this year to be there 6 times, we still have 2 games left to do that! Lets not get ahead here and let the Spurs focus on their business :hat
We'll get there. OKC only beat us before because of atrocious officiating and stellar play by a player they don't have anymore. Westbrook has never played us well enough to make up for it either
Malik Hairston
05-24-2014, 01:56 AM
OP has been way off on his takes since the first week of the playoffs, he's trying to cover his bases and take different angles, tbh, taking the "hater" route..
pgardn
05-24-2014, 07:11 AM
History determines the outcome of games that have not been played.
A common theme on ST and in movies. The desperation to predict future results is so strong, shit, black cat...
MaNu4Tres
05-24-2014, 07:47 AM
Spurstalk is just not the same anymore.
Purch
05-24-2014, 08:43 AM
Jazz fan here.
This is an absolutely retarded thread. By makings this thread you're completley discrediting the fact that the Spurs have an up an coming young star on their roster.
Such a stupid comparison.
Jimcs50
05-24-2014, 10:38 AM
Bulls> Heat
hitmantb
05-24-2014, 12:20 PM
Jordan never took more than 6 games to win any of his finals, Jazz for all intents and purposes were the toughest opponents they faced with the possible exception of Suns. Jordan's teams were also extremely stacked, four all-stars during the first repeat, Jordan/Pippen/Rodman for the second.
It is also not fair to compare Malone's situation vs Duncan's, Malone did not get drafted into a 59-wins team that only went into the lottery due to injuries. Malone did not have a GOAT coach/organization that built a big three around him. Championship is honestly a team thing. If LeBron stayed in Cleveland and never won a title, he would be ranked where KG/Dirk is. But now he is tied with Duncan with 4 MVP + 2FMVP vs 2 MVP + 3 FMVP and will most likely exceed him. All I am saying is true fans of the game should not compare with number of championships alone, would you rank Parker ahead of Nash, Kobe ahead of Duncan?
Now obviously the gap between Bulls/Jazz is greater than Heat/Spurs, but the comparison is legit. The game's biggest star, destined for a three-peat, against a past-the-prime team desperately trying to make one last swing in the era of super teams and fought all the way back after losing in the previous year. All the league has to do is keep games close until the final minutes and LeBron's individual talent will win.
Johnny RIngo
05-24-2014, 01:58 PM
It is also not fair to compare Malone's situation vs Duncan's, Malone did not get drafted into a 59-wins team that only went into the lottery due to injuries. Malone did not have a GOAT coach/organization that built a big three around him. Championship is honestly a team thing. If LeBron stayed in Cleveland and never won a title, he would be ranked where KG/Dirk is. But now he is tied with Duncan with 4 MVP + 2FMVP vs 2 MVP + 3 FMVP and will most likely exceed him. All I am saying is true fans of the game should not compare with number of championships alone, would you rank Parker ahead of Nash, Kobe ahead of Duncan?
Nobody's ranking Duncan ahead of Malone because of rings. We're putting him ahead because Malone's a poor playoff performer. His performance sees a huge drop from regular season to post-season. Duncan, on the other hand, is remarkably consistent from RS(regular season) to PS(post-season). Throw in Duncan's superior defense and Malone doesn't really have an argument. Karl did have some amazing longevity though, which is probably the only thing he had in his favor. Even then, TD's looked pretty good in his old age as well.
24.6 - Duncan PER RS
24.7 - Duncan PER PS
.211 - Duncan WS/48 RS
.196 - Duncan WS/48 PS
55.1% - Duncan TS% RS
54.7% - Duncan TS% PS
110 - Duncan ORtg RS
110 - Duncan ORtg PS
-----------------------------------------------------------
23.9 - Malone PER RS
21.1 - Malone PER PS
.205 - Malone WS/48 RS
.140 - Malone WS/48 PS
57.7% - Malone TS% RS
52.6% - Malone TS% PS
113 - Malone ORtg RS
106 - Malone ORtg PS
hitmantb
05-24-2014, 03:23 PM
Nobody's ranking Duncan ahead of Malone because of rings. We're putting him ahead because Malone's a poor playoff performer. His performance sees a huge drop from regular season to post-season. Duncan, on the other hand, is remarkably consistent from RS(regular season) to PS(post-season). Throw in Duncan's superior defense and Malone doesn't really have an argument. Karl did have some amazing longevity though, which is probably the only thing he had in his favor. Even then, TD's looked pretty good in his old age as well.
24.6 - Duncan PER RS
24.7 - Duncan PER PS
.211 - Duncan WS/48 RS
.196 - Duncan WS/48 PS
55.1% - Duncan TS% RS
54.7% - Duncan TS% PS
110 - Duncan ORtg RS
110 - Duncan ORtg PS
-----------------------------------------------------------
23.9 - Malone PER RS
21.1 - Malone PER PS
.205 - Malone WS/48 RS
.140 - Malone WS/48 PS
57.7% - Malone TS% RS
52.6% - Malone TS% PS
113 - Malone ORtg RS
106 - Malone ORtg PS
What about comparing stats people actually look at? Points, rebounds and assists?
http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/m/malonka01.html
At age 38 he averaged 22.4 points and 8 rebounds, 38 minutes per game and played all 80 games. He simply had to do a lot more for the Jazz than Duncan needs to do today for the Spurs. 18 years career he averaged 25 and 10 on 51.6% field goal.
A huge part of Duncan's success is being at the right place at right time. Granted, I think Duncan would achieve even more if he was drafted by the Lakers and got stacked teams for most of his careers (cough, cough, Kobe). But you can't say Malone is not in the same league because he just didn't have the good luck of being supported by Popovich/Buford. I would rank him ahead of say, Kevin McHale for sure. If you put someone with Malone's longevity on that Celtics team they would have won more titles period.
There are too many "player X chokes in the playoffs after stunning regular seasons". The truth is everyone including Duncan (2005 finals bailed out by Horry after being shutdown by Wallace brothers) needs help, unless their team is flat out more talented than the opposition (Jordan/Pippen Bulls, Shaq/Kobe Lakers etc). A lot of the times we ask a superstar to carry a team for 38-40 minutes a night through the entire regular season, they were running low on gas and in the playoffs, the opposition can take advantage of the lack of talent by creating very specific defenses to shut one guy down and leave everyone open. It is the same reason I don't consider Robinson/Hakeem series in 1995 a true indication of their strength.
Post-prime Duncan Spurs have won as many championships as Utah Jazz, so my prediction stays: no better opponent to prove the greatness of the chosen one, but sorry, you are not the main character of this book . . .
I really really hope I am wrong and you can all laugh at me, but that is what I saw from reading stars/crystal ball/tea leaves . . .
FvckMavs
05-24-2014, 03:50 PM
This place is turning into trash with Timvp still hurting and stupid post like this.
Horse
05-24-2014, 05:25 PM
Remember Jazz also had Karl Malone in his twilight years (I honestly believe the difference between Malone and Duncan is much smaller than the number of championships indicates), played way better than his age, they lost to the Bulls in the finals because they did not have home court advantage, they fought back and gained home court advantage the following year. They were taken to the final game against veteran rival Rockets (Mavericks of this year), beat young Spurs 4-1 (Blazers of this year, Duncan's game was much more mid-range then, similar to Aldridge), and swept superstar Lakers (Thunder of this year, the team NBA wanted to see in the finals), they carried home court advantage into the finals, won game 1 and lost 4 of next 5 games.
I hope I am wrong, but too many similarities between the current pick-and-roll happy Spurs team and Utah Jazz in 1997-1998. The resilient veteran team that relied on passing over athleticism everyone respected, the ultimate test for every young team trying to take it to the next level.
It is fate, it is the ending of the GDP book. The league needs the story of LeBron topping Jordan and the three-peat is inevitable. Refs will make balancing calls to slow momentum on either side and keep the games close until final minutes, GDP will tire out and LeBron will dominate with individual star power. Spurs has more consistency than anyone else, but against a more talented team with an actual system instead of "free style", individual ISO power will prevail.
Spurs in GDP's twilight years is exactly like Utah Jazz, the perfect opponent for heroes to overcome, but will never be able to beat the main character of the story book because the writer won't allow it.
Big difference we were the better team last season and we're even better now where they have fallen off a little. lebron is even talking about how tired he is this season. No one ever liked that jazz team, but this Spurs team winning will be like a disney movie. I had no problem with the refs in the finals. They don't seem to clearly favor miami when we play them. If that remains the same we win easy. Who is gonna protect the rim for them?
testies
05-24-2014, 05:37 PM
our offense is so much more complex than "pick n roll happy" Jazz, its not even funny
also, Jazz weren't moral champions, they just got outplayed by Bulls. We "won" last year
testies
05-24-2014, 05:48 PM
I see some similarities.. Sloan played a flex/motion offense. Popovich adopted Jerry Sloan's motion type offense.
lol Pop uses obradovic/duda style basketball not jerry sloan
basketball exists outside of US you know?
pjjrfan
05-24-2014, 06:14 PM
If you think there isn't a big difference between Duncan and Malone, I don't know what to tell you. You are on an island with a bunch of Jazz fans.
what he said goes for me too
phxspurfan
05-24-2014, 09:57 PM
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-QBwUuiehwBQ/T4IExllkxQI/AAAAAAAAA5Y/Rrxy4fkHypc/s1600/george-bush-gif.gif
:lol
History doesn't matter so I don't really care about the comparison. I think a Heat-Spurs matchup this year is worlds different than it was last year.
In the 2014 playoffs, Tiago Splitter is averaging 8 points, 9 boards, and 2.4 assists.
In the 2013 finals, Tiago Splitter & Boris Diaw collectively averaged 9 points, 4 boards, and 2 assists.
People seem to forget that in the Finals Boris engaged in a level of passivity that we haven't seen from him all year, making him basically unplayable. This year (and especially during this series) he's turned into a small ball killer. He's shooting 30% of his shots from 0-3 feet and he's killing it from there, shooting better (.800) than anyone on the team that's taking those shots often. And these aren't transition layups. I don't think it's a stretch to say that at this point, Boris Diaw is our best back to the basket player. Miami's small ball caught us off guard last year, but this year Boris will eat Shane Battier for breakfast. Their only hope will be to put their best defender Lebron on a Spurs role player and tire him out down banging down low.
As for Tiago I think it's safe to say that if he was able to keep Dirk and LMA in check, he will have no trouble against Bosh. Last year he routinely got his shit pounded on offense, and his Euro layup was basically just beach volleyball for the Heat. This season he's made a change not in his shot selection or strength going to the hoop, but in the way he sees the court and helps his teammates succeed. His playoff PER is 19.6, his TO% is one of the lowest on the team, he's giving us career high numbers in assists, and his ORtg is a stunning 139 in the playoffs. Thats 32 points better than the 2013 playoffs. I'm as shocked as anyone, but on offense Tiago has turned into one of the smartest BBIQ guys we have. He would be the best passing big on basically any team that doesn't have Boris Diaw.
In short, Tiago and Boris each averaged a pathetic 15 minutes in last year's finals. We have every reason to believe this year will be completely different. Having these two in their current form makes the Spurs a stunningly versatile team. If the Heat go big we can put Splitter on Bosh and shut him down without help, giving TD a break on Haslem so that he can help at the rim, allowing Green and Leonard to play Wade & Lebron straight. If the Heat go small, Boris allows us to stay big and will punish whoever they put on him; it would be foolish of them to put LBJ on Boris for fatigue and fouls, but it will be their only recourse.
Chalmers, Wade, Allen, James, Bosh is the only lineup that the Heat could presumably throw at the Spurs for which SAS will not have an easy solution defensively. Any of their other players at the 2-5 spot will give the Spurs exploitable advantages.
This is the lineup that spaces the floor so that Lebron can do that thing where he bullrushes the rim and gets a layup or a foul call. I think our best bet would be to put Boris on LBJ and make him a jump shooter, play everyone else straight, switch screens for LBJ, and hope that TD/Boris can punish their bigs on offense. I like the Spurs' versatility in this series a lot.
Impressive take.
Darius McCrary
05-25-2014, 06:43 AM
Nah man, the Thunder are the Jazz. Ref protected all throughout the WC playoffs and then blitzed when they play the league's glamour team in the Finals and don't get that ridiculous whistle.
TRUTH
benefactor
05-25-2014, 08:18 AM
Remember Jazz also had Karl Malone in his twilight years (I honestly believe the difference between Malone and Duncan is much smaller than the number of championships indicates), played way better than his age, they lost to the Bulls in the finals because they did not have home court advantage, they fought back and gained home court advantage the following year. They were taken to the final game against veteran rival Rockets (Mavericks of this year), beat young Spurs 4-1 (Blazers of this year, Duncan's game was much more mid-range then, similar to Aldridge), and swept superstar Lakers (Thunder of this year, the team NBA wanted to see in the finals), they carried home court advantage into the finals, won game 1 and lost 4 of next 5 games.
I hope I am wrong, but too many similarities between the current pick-and-roll happy Spurs team and Utah Jazz in 1997-1998. The resilient veteran team that relied on passing over athleticism everyone respected, the ultimate test for every young team trying to take it to the next level.
It is fate, it is the ending of the GDP book. The league needs the story of LeBron topping Jordan and the three-peat is inevitable. Refs will make balancing calls to slow momentum on either side and keep the games close until final minutes, GDP will tire out and LeBron will dominate with individual star power. Spurs has more consistency than anyone else, but against a more talented team with an actual system instead of "free style", individual ISO power will prevail.
Spurs in GDP's twilight years is exactly like Utah Jazz, the perfect opponent for heroes to overcome, but will never be able to beat the main character of the story book because the writer won't allow it.
https://kmpunksays.files.wordpress.com/2012/11/rjoot.gif?w=830
aal04
05-25-2014, 03:15 PM
OP is right.
Duncan has a young girl who he puts to sleep
and Karl Malone has a young girl who he sleeps with
G-Dawgg
05-26-2014, 12:01 AM
.
G-Dawgg
05-26-2014, 12:04 AM
.
G-Dawgg
05-30-2014, 12:01 PM
lol Pop uses obradovic/duda style basketball not jerry sloan
basketball exists outside of US you know?Read this and get educated dude..
hitmantb
05-30-2014, 01:43 PM
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/10955188/gregg-popovich-tim-duncan-stories
As you can see Spurs DID have Jazz as an inspiration.
Unfortunately I still think Spurs will end up as LeBron's greatest challenge, but because LeBron is the hero of the book he is destined to three-peat.
Hope I am wrong and this is David Robinson story, nice guys don't always finish last, Pop/Duncan ride into the sunset as champions. But I still believe this is the Utah Jazz story.
hitmantb
05-31-2014, 11:37 PM
Jordan vs Malone round 2 in the finals.
J/K, I hope it is the David Robinson ending!
TheGreatYacht
06-08-2014, 10:48 PM
With the horrible officiating...
NBA wants a 3 peat...
BUMP
Purch
06-16-2014, 08:22 AM
Thought that this thread was dumb at the time... And it's even worse now
100%duncan
06-16-2014, 08:25 AM
:lol
barakz21
06-16-2014, 08:55 AM
Reverse jinx?:lol
therealtruth
06-16-2014, 10:25 PM
The Jazz were probably good enough to win in '98. Jordan was just not going to allow it to happen. He basically carried the team to that win in Utah in game 6. We'll just never see a player as good as Jordan. As good as Lebron was he couldn't get 40-50 against us. That's probably what it would have taken to make the games more competitive.
kobyz
06-17-2014, 12:49 AM
Great Reverse jinx! Op without you we could not make it happened!
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