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With money Memo, Millsap, Dwill, and Kosta Boom Bitches off the bench...We can only dream right? But imagine a starting 5 of:
Stockton
Mitchell
Ingles
Malone
Gobert
Good hell. Win all the rings.
With money Memo, Millsap, Dwill, and Kosta Boom Bitches off the bench...We can only dream right? But imagine a starting 5 of:
Stockton
Mitchell
Ingles
Malone
Gobert
Good hell. Win all the rings.
Would Gobert have struggled against the top bigs at that time? Would Duncan have given him problems? Maybe? Divac? Lol. Yao? Zo? Rasheed? Shaq? I’m talking about the late 90s early 2000s when the centers were much heavier. Or would Gobert’s length and unique athleticism won the day?Thats pretty much perfection right there
Boom. Thad youngI agree.
My biggest worry is our lack of size, especially at the 4. I wish royce and bojan were both a couple inches taller.
Teams will try to get Rudy out of the paint and when successful we can't rebound or defend the rim.
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I think Gobert would be great against 90% of the centers from those days. Shaq would probably kick his *** but shaq kicked everyones *** and you could always just foul him. I think gobert would do fine against duncan and divac and yao and zo and sheed. In fact, overall he would probably be better defensively back then because he could just stay in the paint all time since there weren't many players like jokic, KAT, Porz, etc back then.Would Gobert have struggled against the top bigs at that time? Would Duncan have given him problems? Maybe? Divac? Lol. Yao? Zo? Rasheed? Shaq? I’m talking about the late 90s early 2000s when the centers were much heavier. Or would Gobert’s length and unique athleticism won the day?
I don't think anyone questions that the 96-97 Jazz team was a dominant force at that time, and had years to build their style and team and gel together, years of success in the playoffs, multiple runs to the WCF, and record broken by proven hall-of-famers. Of course this is just a comparison of records, because really it is the only thing we can definitely compare between the 2 teams. It is important to remember that the 97 Jazz team built that 7 game lead with a 15-game winning streak, part of winning 19 of their last 20 games, which pushed them well ahead of the pack.It's very difficult to compare anything beyond just record between this year's Jazz and the 1997 team. The NBA back then didn't have nearly as many contenders and while there's no Chicago Bulls dynasty to compete with, Utah was unequivocally the best team in the West. They finished 7 games ahead of the second place team (the Sonics and Rockets tied with the second-best record in the West) and were the clear favorites to win the conference when they entered the playoffs (with the only concern being their inability to do so in prior years).
At this time, I just don't see the Jazz as near the clear-cut favorite out West like they were in 1997.
So, while there is no Chicago waiting at the very end for Utah, I think it's far more likely this team fails to even make it to the Finals than that 1997 team was looking at by the end of the regular season.
Now I'll admit that if the Jazz do make it out of the West, their odds of actually winning it all are much greater than in 1997 because, again, no Jordan.
But right now, absolutely I think the '97 Jazz was better positioned to actually make the Finals than this current team and it's because the gap between a #1 seeded Jazz team and the rest of the field is much smaller than it was in 1997's Western Conference.
Snyder is just so far ahead of Jerry Sloan at this point.
Way aheadI don't know why, but I keep coming back to this quote because it's just so ****ing hilarious.
By the end of Jerry's seventh season, the Jazz had made the Western Conference Finals twice - 1992 and 1994.
Quin, as good as he's been, hasn't remotely gotten Utah close to the WCF and I'm suspicious if he will this season.
His ceiling, until proven otherwise, is the semifinals - and even there, they're not competitive and haven't been there since the 2018 season (where they lost 4-1 to the Rockets).
Quin may, one day or another, prove to be so far ahead of Jerry Sloan that your comment isn't foolishness. But those early (to mid) 90s Jazz' ceiling under Sloan was, as we saw in 1992, and 1994 and even 1996, the Conference Finals.
The ceiling at the moment under Quin is the semis.
Not remotely ahead of him lmao
Way ahead
Jerry’s teams were very underwhelming in the playoffs until the first Finals teams finally broke thru. Very underwhelming to say the least.Gosh if he keeps getting any further ahead we might just get swept in the first round.
Hell, he's already blown a 3-1 series lead.
So...
Jerry's playoff record in his first six seasons with the Jazz: 25-29 (.462)Jerry’s teams were very underwhelming in the playoffs until the first Finals teams finally broke thru. Very underwhelming to say the least.
But keep Hero Worshipping.
I wonder what Jerry woulda done if he’d had two of the greatest players of all time in their primes? ****ing scary to imagine if he did.Jerry's playoff record in his first six seasons with the Jazz: 25-29 (.462)
Quin's playoff record in his first six seasons with the Jazz: 13-21 (.382)
You're right, tho, it's not even close.
I wonder what Jerry woulda done if he’d had two of the greatest players of all time in their primes? ****ing scary to imagine if he did.
Yeah, Eisley and Carr were ****ing chumps, man. I’m glad you see it, too.Who knows? Instead, he had a great PG who often hid from the limelight in big games, opting to pass the ball to a PF who was often a noshow in big games.![]()