CptPeteMaverick23

joined 1 year ago
[–] CptPeteMaverick23@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Hawks, because Trae Young.

 

The thing about him is how he is able to take off from anywhere on the court, insane elevation and the finishing is just ferocious.

The dunk over Weis...just pure insanity.

 

Went 59-23 and nearly defeated the Lakers.

Had a nice roster of vets and aspiring players.

Shared the ball, no clear superstar and was a very good example of team basketball.

 

Swept 0-4 in 1995, but the players roster was obviously more stacked with Penny and Shaq, compared to just Dwight in 2009.

Shaq and (peak) Penny were obviously/arguably bigger stars than Dwight ever was.

 

Dude brought the Knicks to 2 Finals trips. You can argue that he wasn't putting up the same numbers in 1999 but he was old; superstars centers from his era like The Dream and The Admiral were also pretty much busted by 1999.

In the 1994 run, the Knicks could had won the title if not for that Hakeem block and John Starks playing horribly overall. Yes, Ewing shot the ball horribly at .363 (raw), but he was never acclaimed as an offensive superstar anyway. He was always known to be a defensive beast. Hakeem averaged 9.1 rebounds and 3.9 blocks while Ewing 12.4 and 4.3. I'm not saying that Ewing played better than Hakeem; just that defensively, Ewing was still pulling his weight.

The Bulls acknowledged that the Knicks were their nemesis and the toughest nuts to crack in their title runs. Not anyone else, but the Knicks that were led by Ewing. Obviously there is no pity trophy for runner-ups, but there can only be one winning team and basketball is also a team sport; no matter how good Ewing was, he still need his teammates to be good enough.

[–] CptPeteMaverick23@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

OP, I like you, hehehe.

 

Mutombo has 1 more blocks leader title and a higher peak at 4.5 bpg compared to Zo's 3.9.

However, Alonzo's late age run really impressed me. Even after his kidney problems, during the 2005 playoffs, despite playing just 17 mpg, he managed 2.2 bpg. This included 3.0 bpg during the ECF. In the 2006 Finals, Alonzo also managed 1.5 bpg. 1.5 bpg isn't a lot by an elite shot-blocker's standards, but he was playing limited minutes, was 36 and literally hampered by a life-threatening health condition.

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