Mike G wrote:
You probably aren't saying quite what you mean to say here.
I said exactly what I wanted to say. And I mean it. The Lakers were clearly better offensively than they were defensively in comparison to the league average.
Mike G wrote:
You may agree that teams win by prevailing at both ends of the court. Teams with great offenses who did not contend for titles in the '80s were the Nuggets, the Suns, the Hawks, the Mavs ... Had they been better defensive teams, they would have won more.
Did I say anything about the Lakers being bad defensively? Honestly, read what I wrote and take it as it stands and try not to interpret that in away to fit your own argument. You just invented a strawman in the discussion by pointing out bad defensive teams with good/great offense. That doesn't describe the Lakers' situation nor does it describe the situation of the Bulls right now.
Mike G wrote:
Someone was certainly playing D for the Lakers; Magic may have been the original "matador" defender. And he beat you with his offense.
Correct, the Lakers beat other teams with their offense. And Magic was the catalyst for their great offense. Calling Magic the leader of the Lakers makes sense here. But as I pointed out that is not related to the Bulls today. The Bulls offense is a bit better than average, but their defense is clearly better than average. The analogy would be here that the Bulls play offense, but they beat the other teams with their defense.
Mike G wrote:
The Bulls today don't win games entirely by their defense. No team has nor ever will; someone has to score points, create shots, etc. The sole offensive master on a defensive team is probably their most valuable asset. Rip Hamilton gets 36 minutes, just because he may create some offense.
No, the Bulls with Rose out are outscoring their opponents even more than with him. Their biggest strength is defense and depth. Seriously, I'm a Bulls fan and I know how great Rose is, but he is not the biggest factor for the Bulls success. For sure, replacing Rose with a weaker player will also dimishing their championship chances, because a team needs some offfense in order to win games. But it should be obvious that Rose is not the most valuable asset for their team's strength.
Regarding the Lakers we should also keep in mind that they always started a smaller player next to Magic. First it was Norm Nixon (even their starting point guard until 1983), then Byron Scott. The other player was always defending the opponents PG, Magic didn't do that. Magic wasn't a typical point guard, listing him as a point guard (while suggesting point guard means small) is misleading.