Friday, October 1st, 2010 at 5:07 pm  |  120 responses

Centers of Attention

The ’90s best centers.

by Allen Powell

The most valuable players in the NBA are a rock solid point guard, and dominant two-way big men. We’ve already reviewed who manned the point with poise and panache in the 1990s; now it’s time to consider the big men who patrolled the paint. Many of the names are no surprise, but a few of them just might make you say “Hmmmm…”

Hakeem Olajuwon

Throughout his amazing career Hakeem Olajuwon was known to many fans as “The Dream.” But, for opposing centers, power forwards and coaches he was always recurring nightmare.

It started when Olajuwon made his debut as “Big Brother Dream Shake” while a member of Phi Slama Jamma at thHakeem Olajuwone University of Houston, and he and Clyde Drexler provided free facials to college players across the country.

It continued in the NBA when just two years removed from being the first pick in famed ‘84 draft, Dream joined forces with a creaky-kneed Ralph Sampson to challenge the Bird-led Celtics for the NBA‘s Golden Globe. The Rockets would fall, but Olajuwon would serve notice that before Christian Okoye ever picked up a football he was the real Nigerian Nightmare.

The League’s night terrors only got worse in the 1990s because at his apex Olajuwon could drop 27 points, 12 boards, 3 assists and 4 blocks and never break his cool. Dream would never conquer Mount Jordan, but unlike his peers, Hakeem took advantage of Mike’s brief dalliance in baseball’s minor leagues to snatch two rings of his own.

Whether he was schooling The Admiral by the Riverwalk, or teaching a break dancing Shaq the meaning of “craftiness“, there can be no doubt that Olajuwon was the defining center of the 1990s.

Sweet dreams suckers.

David Robinson

Does unapologetic dominance impress you, or is well-rounded brilliance more your cup of tea? Your preference likely dictates whether placing David Robinson over Shaquille O’Neal on this list seems like a logical move, or proof of idiocy.

Like the sun, David Robinson is an underappreciated star. Few people marvel at the sunlight that sustains life, and many NBA fans don’t realize that in his prime Robinson was a two-way player for the ages. Labeled “a black Adonis” by sportswriters infatuated with his physique, the beastliness of Robinson’s game was often overshadowed by his attention gathering deltoids and pectorals.

But, unlike some players, Robinson wasn’t content with living off his physical gifts; instead he developed a smooth lefty-stroke from 15-feet that made his first step even more devastating. In his best statistical year, Robinson posted a ridiculous 30 points, 11 boards, 5 assists and 3 blocks, and that was the year before he finagled the MVP away from Olajuwon!

Sadly, Robinson’s achievements have been overshadowed by Hakeem’s dominance, and the fact that he never won a ring without Tim Duncan. Like Sol, it seems like Robinson’s brilliance will be forever hidden in plain sight.

Shaquille O’Neal

Shaq may be the most physically gifted player to ever enter the NBA.

Younger fans probably scoff at that notion when considering the plodding journeyman now sporting Celtics’ green. Even those fans who remember O’Neal slamming his purple and gold bulk into opposing centers until they whimpered might not appreciate the full range of his gifts.

But, trust and believe, when Shaq was sporting the Magic’s pinstripes his incomparable combination of speed, grace, agility, leaping ability and strength was awe-inspiring.

Shaq was a bigger,, meaner and more coordinated version of Dwight Howard when he turned the Magic from laughingstock to championship contender.

Consider the numbers from his rookie year in 1993 when he averaged 23 points, 14 boards and 3.5 blocks, and immediately made the Magic a .500 team. The next year, paired with Penny Hardaway, O’Neal would drop 29 points and 13 boards while shooting 60 percent from the field

But, Shaq always had a problem staying on the court, and by the middle of the decade he regularly missed 20 games a season. His defensive numbers declined, and his teams, despite their talent, were becoming known for being swept from the Playoffs. The Diesel wouldn’t truly begin his reign until the next decade, but even as a young buck battling wily vets he was a bad, bad man.

Patrick Ewing

It was all about the scowl.

“Game face” doesn’t really do justice to what Patrick Ewing sported. Teammates, opponents and fans often call Ewing a “warrior”, and it’s easy to imagine that he considered every game a life or death battle.

How else can you explain the grim visage and plethora of perspiration he brought to every contest?

Ewing likely developed his glower by staring down racist fans who called him a “monkey” as he dominated high school basketball in Boston. The glare only improved when he joined forces with John Thompson at Georgetown and became college basketball’s Bad Boys without actually doing anything bad. By the time, Ewing got to New York, he had learned that basketball was more than just a game, and his attitude reflected that truth.

Ewing wasn’t better than the names ahead of him on this list, but that’s true of most big men. Patrick was still a guaranteed 20 points and 10 boards in the 90’s, and even if he constantly failed to deliver a championship to the Mecca, he never failed to leave his heart and soul on the hardwood. He was the leader of Knicks’ teams that are forever linked to gritty, hard-nosed basketball.

That’s a legacy that suits him.

Alonzo Mourning

What’s that old saying about the size of the fight in the dog?

Alonzo Mourning wasn’t a particularly large man as far as NBA centers go. He wasn’t ridiculously athletic and didn’t have a bevy of post moves. But, Zo was one of the toughest competitors and fiercest defenders the game has ever seen.

For example, most folks don’t know that Mourning averaged 20 and 10 with 3 blocks his rookie year, or that halfway through that year he had already set the CAREER blocks record for the Charlotte franchise. Throughout the 90’s, Mourning was one of most dependable offensive centers in the League, and on defense he was in an elite class.

But, the most enduring memories of Mourning come from the epic playoff battles waged between his Heat and their archrivals in New York. Many folks have unfairly blamed those literal slugfests for the NBA’s new rules about perimeter touching and its overreaction to fights between players. Zo typically lost those ugly skirmishes, but the raw emotion displayed by both teams still sparks nostalgia in many fans.

Who doesn’t love a good fight?

Dikembe Mutombo

Deke. Mt. Mutombo. Gramps. The guy with the funny voice.

Those monikers were attached to Dikembe Mutombo during his impressive NBA career, but none of them truly encompass everything Mutombo embodied.

Class. Intelligence. Dignity. Rejection

That’s more like it.

Mutombo won the defensive player of the year award three times in the 1990’s, and four times overall in his career. He’s second on the all-time blocks list behind Hakeem Olajuwon, and in his prime never averaged fewer than 10 rebounds and 2 blocks a game, even if he rarely cracked the 14 point plateau.

Deke had the patented Georgetown scowl down pat, but with his finger wagging and cheerful off-court demeanor he never seemed too angry. Mutombo will always be known as a staunch defender, but his most enduring legacies are the hospital he built in his home country, and the sense that he truly cared about the world beyond basketball.

Rik Smits

This is where the list got a little funky. There was a bottleneck for these last three positions and a decision had to be made about how much value to assign statistics and how much value to give potentially faulty recollection.

Statistics say that Rik Smits was an injury-prone, piss poor rebounder who never averaged 20 points per game for a season. Ah, but memory focused on Smits’ beautiful touch around the basket, his outstanding up-and-under move, and his refusal to back down from the brutes who attempted to punk him.

Memory won.

Smits was the second-best player on a perennial playoff team and championship contender. That’s the best way to describe him. He managed to carve out a respectable career in the League despite bad feet and distinct lack of jumping ability because he knew how to play the game. Alongside Reggie Miller, he was the go-to post player for the Indiana Pacers who counted on the “Davis Boys” to do all the dirty work in the paint. Smits wasn’t a star, but for a four or five year stretch he was definitely a problem for opposing coaches.

And the Dunkin’ Dutchman had a wicked nickname.

Rony Seikaly

Rony Seikaly is something of a forgotten man in NBA history.

Seikaly was the first pick of the expansion Miami Heat, and at the time he was heralded as the perfect building block for the new franchise on South Beach.

Rony got off to a slow start, but worked his way into a consistent 16 points and 11 boards for much of his early career. Seikaly always seemed to play a little too fast for his brain, which was reflected in his extremely high fouls per game numbers. But, when under control, Seikaly could wheel and deal on the block with jump hooks and fadeaways, and he regularly crammed on the skulls of players who got their scouting reports from Sidney Deane.

Seikaly had the tools to be one of the greats, but almost seemed to view life in the League as afterthought. He didn’t mind letting general managers know they couldn’t hold him hostage for the money since his family was wealthy, and he even refused to report to camp in Golden State one year because he was unhappy with his role.

Last, but certainly not least, his ex-wife makes Glenn Rice’s ex-wife look like Lady Gaga.

Brad Daugherty

This spot came down to Vlade Divac or Brad Daugherty. Should Vlade’s superior passing and flopping be rewarded, or should Daugherty’s injury shortened by still sublime career be recognized?

The flashes of brilliance Daugherty showed would not be denied.

Daugherty was a legit 20 and 10 in the ‘90s, and combined with Mark Price to form one of the League’s toughest little man/ big man combos. With a wide base, atrocious biker shorts and post moves galore, Daugherty was as fundamentally sound a big man as you could find. He played in three All-Star games in the 90’s and even made the All-NBA third team once. Before chronic back problems forced him to retire at 28, Daugherty seemed poised to round into the consummate building block, even as his Cavaliers continued to be foils for Jordan’s Bulls.

Sadly, we can only ask “what if”?

Vlade Divac

Vlade Divac was not dominant nor was he a star. His stats for the ’90s were right at 13 points and 9 rebounds. Despite his reputation as a passing big man without equal, his assist numbers aren’t even that eye-popping when compared to the other centers on this list.

But Vlade was a gamer. Who can forget him running with his arms down by his side to Magic Johnson for a hug after converting a sweet assist in the 1991 Finals? How the way Divac always seemed to have flop sweat and miasma of cigarette smoke around him in the middle of basketball games?

Divac was consistently good, and played well on some fairly talented teams. True, he is partially responsible for the horrible increase in flopping in the League, and he clearly didn’t care much about physical conditioning, but he understood the game. Divac played with smoothness and a flair that was fun to watch. His place on this list is arguable, but his game was not.

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  • http://slamonline.com AlbertBarr

    Sweet list. Vlade had to be on the list just for being a character…my favorite Bill Walton quote ever “Vlade Divac: you know the move is coming, there is just nothing you can do to stop it.” Said after a particularly slow-motion-esque post move that seemed to take forever yet still hit nothing but net.

  • http://www.need4sheed.com Tarzan Cooper

    Shout out to christian okoye!!!!!

  • LJP

    If you widen the consideration to the entirety of the NBA, you’ll find that Shaq arguably is not the most dominate center ever. I recommend using old fashion objective measures like scoring, rebounds, assists, MVP awards and Championships. On these objective measures, Shaq’s career regular season numbers (28,255 total points, 24.1Pts/G, 11.0Rbs, 2.6As, 1 MVP & 4 Championships) aren’t dominant when considering the career accomplishments of the following Centers: Kareem (38,387 total points, 24.6Pts/G, 11.2 Rbs, 3.6 As, 6 MPVs & 6 Championships), Wilt (31,419 total points, 30.1 Pts/G, 22.9Rbs, 4.4As, 4 MPVs & 2 Championships), Russell (14,522 total points, 15.1 Pts/G, 22.5 Rbs, 4.3 As, 5 MVPs & 11 Championships — all in just 13 seasons), Duncan (20,641 total points, 21.1 Pts/G, 11.6 Rbs, 3.2 As, 2 MVPs and 4 Championships) and Olajuwon (26,946 total points,21.8Pts/G, 11.1Rbs, 2.5As, 1 MVP, 2 Championships & 2 Defensive Player awards). Honorable mention could be given to David Robinson, Bob Lanier, Elvin Hayes and Moses Malone.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    I didn’t call him the most dominant ever.
    I think that was Wilt.
    I called him the most physically gifted.
    And I think that’s true, but that’s because I never actually saw Wilt.
    Shaq was Lebron before Lebron. It was unfair.

  • hangtime Hec

    Interesting fact the top three centers in this list were also the top three scoring leaders in 93, 94 and top 5 in 95. I don’t know what that has to do with anything and I dont actually feel like dwelling into it lol. But that hasnt happen at all in this decade.

  • http://www.need4sheed.com Tarzan Cooper

    Great stuff allen. Da bulls(mike) got taken out by orl in 95, and orl with shaq got swept by houston. That doesnt exactly mean bulls would have had the same fate, but whodafuc would have attempted to guard hakeem? Just for fun, lets say rockets made 96 finals vs great bulls team. Who would have guarded hakeem? Rodman would have been sent home crying. I know its a ‘what if’, but I stand by my theory, hakeem would have demolished the bulls.

  • http://www.need4sheed.com Tarzan Cooper

    Side note, hakeem and okoye were from nigeria, so theyre nigerian. What about people from niger? Are they nigeran? Nigerites? These are the kind of thoughts that keep me from making any real progress in life.

  • http://slamonline.com JL

    where’s sabonis?

  • http://slamonline.com Yknot

    @Tarzan shout out to Steve Atwater!!

  • http://thephotoriot.com davidR

    great list allen. your writeup of david robinson was super dope. the way you played off the star theme with the lines about the sun, then tied him into it especially with “Like Sol, it seems like Robinson’s brilliance will be forever hidden in plain sight”
    too sick

  • 80y4n

    Great list with in-depth analysis of every player, though i would refrain myself from comparing shaq with dwight. Big men of today in general are displaying modest abilities. Worst example is our Dwight who i like as a showman but as a player he is so untalented that his horrid footwork, eye-hand coordination, stiffness, is an insult to every eye that sees him play. On the other hand shaq was really amazing to watch when he came to the league, and even though i hated him as a knick fan i was in awe of his terrifying talent.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    David R
    Thanks for the compliment, I appreciate that a lot.
    Tarzan
    I don’t know man. The Bulls beat teams with great centers, and the Rockets really were weak outside of Dream. Really weak. Jordan and Pippen would have erased any second option and helped on Hakeem. It would have been tough.
    80y4n
    I was trying to say Dwight Howard is a pale shadow of Shaq. Shaq is what Dwight Howard should be.

  • JTaylor21

    Hakeem is another dude that cuts another chink in the false notion that MJ’s GOAT talk. Would MJ and the Bulls have beaten the Rockets if he stayed around in 94/95? No one will ever know and that’s another reason why people need to stop calling MJ the goat. He never played against Wilt, West, Baylor, Big O, Russel, never played against Kareem in the finals, and was playing baseball when Hakeem was dominating the finals. You can NOT be better than someone you’ve never played against, SIMPLE as it gets.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    Co-sign Tarzan. Hakeem would have stomped his foot in the Bulls’ collective @sses. Don’t forget about Drex either, Allen.
    And another great piece, props AlP.

  • http://slamonline.com JL

    @Jtaylor21 what are you talking about he played hakeem alot they entered the league in the same draft. The rockets couldn’t even make it to the finals when the bulls were winning championships. they got lucky both years being low seeds that advanced. i mean I loved watching it but they weren’t the best teams of the regular season.

  • http://www.facebook.com/#!/profile.php?id=100000580635564 Bryan

    I gotta go with Zo over Patrick but other than that great list.

  • http://slamonline.com mike

    damn who proof reads this stuff

  • JTaylor21

    I clearly stated that he never played either Hakeem or Kareem in a finals game, so how can you dissect that into something completely different. Don’t even reply to a comment unless you take the 15 seconds that’s needed to read one.

  • http://www.slamonline.com J

    Great stuff again Allen. No problem with the list and I’m glad Daugherty gets a spot..

  • tavoris

    MJ is the GOAT. Every other player that’s in the conversation called him that.

  • tavoris

    Olajuwon had a BEAUTIFUL game….dude could literally do everything on the court.

  • http://Slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    @JT21: The way you hate on MJ (and Kobe) is unreal. Like, you don’t even give them any credit whatsoever. You would rather put guys that, for the most part, none of us actually saw, who played in a totally different era, when the League was markedly different, more credit than the two greatest SG’s that EVER played. I have a problem with that and it damages your credibility as a fan and as someone with basketball knowledge. You’re a LeBron fan, I’m not. But even I give credit where it’s due. Your fandom of LeBron lends itself to comments that makes one wonder how much you really know about this game. It’s Ok to be a fan of a player, but not at the expense of having common basketball sense. You really need to work on that homie. That’s why people think you’re nothing but a hater who knows nothing about basketball. No disrespect, but give respect where it’s due, bro. Oh yeah, nice write-up Allen.

  • http://theurbangriot.com The Nupe

    Nice write-up. I actually agree with you on the order. Great mention of Christian Okoye, I almost forgot about him.

  • MikeC.

    Great list AllenP. Perfect description of Ewing and the Knicks-Heat playoff battles. Patrick Ewing’s Knicks are why I became a basketball fan and the memories of those 90′s playoff battles are the reason I still am. Too much buddy-buddy in the L today. Somebody hit somebody!

  • Overtime

    Good job Allen. Personally, Im still fuming at the guy who said Robinson was a 90′s Dwight Howard in the old time sake post

  • http://www.need4sheed.com Tarzan Cooper

    Allen, bulls beat teams with great centers? Knicks with ewing, and……um….yea thats it. Sam I am, clyde, mario, horry, etc proved to be championship caliber role players. Yes, mike and scottie would have helped, but hakeem would have shredded whatever defensive stragety the bulls conceived, either by quick moves to the rim, or sharp passes to waiting and open shooters. We will never really know. If bulls could get past magic, how woul they beat rockets, even later with rodman, who dream would have unequivocally(sp) demolished. would have been a great series to watch. …………………… Anyone want to join a slam commenters fantasy league? Post ur email. Teddy? Mikec?

  • Robb

    Great article. Hakeem is definitely my favorite center ever.

  • The Fresh Prince of Nsam

    My man Allenp (the new Scoop Jackson!), can’t wait 2 read ur stuff in Slam – the magazine.

  • The Fresh Prince of Nsam

    I remember Smits, isn’t he the tall white guy who played 4 Indiana with Reginald. Yeah good player (4 a white boy).

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    This is ridiculous… People need to go back and look at those Houston Rockets championship rosters again before they say things like the Bulls WITH Michael Jordan wouldn’t have gotten past Houston. Like Allenp said: Hakeem took advantage of Mike’s brief dalliance in baseball’s minor leagues to snatch two rings of his own.
    Now I’m not sure if Allen meant it the way I’m taking it but, to me that says that had MJ not taken time off, Hakeem would have NO RINGS.

  • JTaylor21

    BCrawford, everyone’s entitled to their opinion but when did I ever mention Bron’s name in this post, maybe I was having an out-of-body experience but I don’t remember ever mentioning dude’s name. I’m probably the only person that doesn’t disrespect other greats by claiming that MJ is the GOAT. So just because most of us were fortunate enough to see MJ play, we should just ignore those greats that played before him and claim that he’s better than them all. Based on what factual evidence to back up that ludacris claim, he never played against anyone of those guys and never played Kareem or Hakeem in the finals, so how can you guys claim he’s the GOAT, it makes NO sense. I love MJ like the next fan but I refuse to turn on my air jordan blinders and act like I don’t recognize past greats. I remember that someone said that MJ’s the greatest because he sold the most shoes and is the most famous, WHAAT? does that have to do with what goes on the court. You guys have every right to believe that bull but I refuse to.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    Yo Tarzan, tedong487@yahoo.com is my fantasy e-mail. Props.

  • The Fresh Prince of Nsam

    Black guys on top, white guys at the bottom. AllenP ur list has a race factor in it.

  • http://scott.r.carter10@gmail.com Scott Carter

    Nothing against any of those names, but it also kinda shows how the center position has gotten weaker and weaker over the years. Just sayin.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    By that I mean the e-mail I use for fantasy basketball. It’s a real e-mail. lol.

  • The Fresh Prince of Nsam

    @ Tarzan 5:56 People from Niger are Nigeriens.

  • Tom

    Great post!!! And you are spot on regarding Robinson. I watched him since his rookie year and quite frankly he dominated the association and did more with less than anyone else in the game at that time. The things he did those first 5 years in the NBA were nothing short of spectacular. The ’94 MVP should have been his (even SI thought so w/it’s cover- Mr. MVP) HANDS DOWN. Always putting up >24pts 10rbs 3 or 4 dimes and 3 or 4 Blks each and every night?! Just AWESOME. He even had a signature type move that he never got credit for- the reverse alley-oop out of a post up. Dave would just spin of his man catch the lob and slam it down over his head with his back to the basket at least once a game it seemed. Yes, his playoff failures are strongly documented but he openly stated that the playoffs expose your weaknesses and the reality was the Spurs were a 1-man team (no offense Sean Elliott). Thanks for giving The Admiral his due.

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    @JT21: No, you didn’t mention LeBron in your comments, I’ll give you that. My bad. Maybe I should’ve brought that up in the post regarding the Kobe vid. So to keep things relevant… No, MJ didn’t play Hakeem in the Finals and because he didn’t, the safe play is to say, “we’ll never know because it didn’t happen.” I think that’s garbage. The way that team was constructed, they wouldn’t have lost to ANYBODY in the 90′s and they had another run left in them had the team not been dismantled. This is not speculation, this is FACT. As for recognizing past greats, I give them credit for being great, IN THEIR ERA’S. During the time that they played, compared to what’s affectionately known as the “modern era,” the game was a lot slower, players were less athletic, etc. I know that MJ downplays all the GOAT talk and says exactly what you say, that he didn’t play against those guys. But that’s him being PC. So don’t think for a second that MJ doesn’t know that he would’ve busted all those guys asses had he been around in their era or if they were around in his. Hell, between the time he hit the League up until the 1st Championship, nobody could stop him then and a lot of those players were very similar to those past greats you mention in terms of style of play.

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    @JT21: And to take this “past greats” arguments even further, how big was the NBA back in the ’50s-’60s when these guys played? If that doesn’t put things in perspective for you, nothing else will. For example, when the ’58-59 Celtics won the NBA Championship, they played the Knicks 12 TIMES. There was only 10 TEAMS in the League back then. So like I said, I give past greats their due, but I keep their eras in perspective and the 80′s-90′s were THE toughest eras in the history of the NBA.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Mike, my bad on any typos. I read through it quickly before I submitted it, but the person who usually edits my stuff wasn’t around on Friday. I suck at picking up mistakes in my own stuff because I’m always anticipating what I know I wrote.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    @ Bryan: Wait, the Bulls wouldn’t have lost to anybody in the ’90s? So when did they lose to the Orlando Magic… The ’80s?

  • JTaylor21

    @BCrawford, you’re right nobody could stop MJ but what makes you think that either him or the bulls could stop those guys. I’m probably one of a handful of people that believe in giving players equal respect regardless of the era they played in because we will never know just how good Wilt or Big O would be in this era and vice versa. It’s the same notion I think that I used when you and I were arguing on whether JBrown could dominate today like he did 50 years ago. For guys like Big O and Wilt who were athletically and physically ahead of their time just imagine if they were playing today with all the weight-training, nutritional knowledge and advanced training staff at their disposal. I put all greats on the same plane to begin with regardless of era and then philter them according to how dominant they were. Wilt, Big O, and MJ all dominated their era regardless of the level of comp.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    Also, it’s a myth that the ’60s and ’70s were tiny. ’50s, okay. But the ’60s and ’70s were an era stacked with GREAT centers and other big forwards. People only use the (false) argument that players were all midgets back then aside from Wilt because it’s their ONLY argument to discredit Wilt’s dominance. There were less teams, yes, but that means the talent was more concentrated. On any given night Wilt could be up against Wes Unseld, Willis Reed, Nate Thurmond, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Walt Bellamy, or Jerry Lucas. And before that, his toughest match-up was only one of the greatest defenders of all time in Bill Russell, an athletic freak of nature. I’m just using Wilt as an example, but the ’60s and ’70s were certainly no cakewalk, my friend.

  • http://thetroyblog.com Teddy-the-Bear

    Oh yeah, can’t forget Dave DeBusschere (RIP), all-time great at the Forward position.

  • http://Slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    @Teddy: I KNEW somebody was gonna bring up the Magic/Bulls, so I’m not gonna even address that comment. I’ll let you figure out why that is.

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    @Teddy: I don’t engage in revisionist history arguments.

  • MikeC.

    When the Bulls lost to the Magic in 95, that wasn’t a true litmus test to the greatness of MJ’s Bulls teams. MJ came back, played a handful of regular season games and lost to a more cohesive team in the playoffs. It wasn’t so much a talent : talent ratio, but more based on chemistry, familiarity and cohesion. That Magic team had been together for awhile. The Bulls were Pippen’s team the year before, and all of 94-95 until Jordan came back. Adding role players to contenders tends not to muck up chemistry, but riding one alpha dog for most of two seasons, then having arguably the best player ever jammed onto the roster with a few games left in the season would kinda mess up the chemistry and flow. No surprise that they fell to a more cohesive unit with fairly equal talent. What happened the next year when that same Bulls team added Rodman and had time to gel? Best regular season campaign in league history and a dominant playoff run which resulted in a championship.

  • MikeC.

    @Tarzan – I’m not really into fantasy leagues. Just keeping up on the news is enough for me at the moment. Thanks for the invite though.

  • JTaylor21

    @BCrawford but you do engage in 80/90s arguments right, isn’t that history?

  • http://slamonline.com Bryan Crawford

    @JT21: Revisionist history is something totally different.

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