For me it’s the Bulls. Which
is hard for me to say because I never liked the Bulls, and I love this year’s Warriors
team.
When we’re talking about a
Bulls team that won 72 out of 82 regular season games, and a Warriors team
that will win either 72 or 73 games, we’re talking about teams of roughly the
same level of ability and achievement. Despite what former Bulls’ Scottie
Pippen and Horace Grant say, either team could win a hypothetical
seven-game series.
The Bulls have the
slightly higher point differential; +12 more points per game than their opposition,
compared to the Warriors’ +11. The Bulls’ point differential is more impressive
when you factor in that less points
per game were scored in 1995-96.
But what underlies that differential?
I don’t buy the argument that the Bulls were better simply because they had
Michael Jordan. Stephen Curry this year has
been pretty much as good as Jordan ever was. His shooting is considerably
better than Jordan was in his ’95-96 season, with a true shooting
percentage of .67, compared to .58 for
Jordan. His rebounds per game are slightly lower, but his assists per game
are higher. Jordan’s defense is generally considered as better; he did win
Defensive Player of the Year once, whereas Curry has never generally been
considered as a candidate for that award. In sum, Curry shot better and Jordan
probably made his opponents shoot worse, but overall Curry’s 2015-16 season
could be considered about as good as Jordan’s 1995-96 season.
Where the Bulls have the edge
for me is Scottie Pippen and Dennis Rodman. The Warriors’ Draymond Green is a
fantastic all-around player, but Pippen I think surpasses him because his
shooting efficiency was better. And
there was never a better rebounder in the NBA than Dennis Rodman. Curry's fellow guard Klay
Thompson is a great shooter, but Rodman’s value is to me significantly more.
Which again hurts to say because I never liked Rodman on the Bulls.
The Warriors do have more depth.
Outside of Curry, Green, and Thompson, the Warriors have several productive
players in Andre Iguodala, Andrew Bogut, Shaun Livingston, Festus Ezeli, Brandon
Rush, and Harrison Barnes depending
on which metric you use. For the Bulls, outside of Jordan, Pippen, and
Rodman there was Toni Kukoc, Ron Harper, and Steve Kerr, and that
was about it.
But that higher point
differential, and the Pippen-Rodman combination, still tips it towards the
Bulls for me. I do love the current Warriors though, and I hope they break the Bulls’
record tomorrow night. Jordan still has enough records anyway.
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