The Bill Simmons Podcast - A Finals Pick, Greatest Knicks Ever, ‘Made’ N.Y.C. Stars, and Big NFL Trades With Max Kellerman
Episode Date: June 2, 2026The Ringer’s Bill Simmons is joined by Max Kellerman to discuss the blockbuster Myles Garrett trade to the Rams (02:35) and the Patriots trade for A.J. Brown (16:05). Then, they preview the biggest ...storylines heading into a highly anticipated Knicks-Spurs NBA Finals (29:35). Finally, they discuss the greatest Knicks of all time (56:20), what’s next for OKC (1:39:30), and much more! Host: Bill SimmonsGuest: Max KellermanProducers: Chia Hao Tat, Eduardo Ocampo, Tucker Tashjian, and Chris Wohlers Brought to you by PayPal. Learn more at paypal.com Bundle and SaveBook now on Expedia.com The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit https://fanduel.com/playwithaplan to learn more about the resources and helplines. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Max Kowerman is here.
We are recording on a Tuesday morning
Pacific time.
A day before the New York Knicks
are in the NBA finals.
A day you never probably thought
you'd see again in your lifetime.
Getting to the finals?
possible.
Yeah.
Winning the finals, something else.
Impossible.
We're going to talk about that.
I have a whole bunch of Nick stuff for you,
but I want to talk about football first,
just because I didn't get a chance.
Like, the NBA, every time they think they have the stage,
they have Wembe coming in, vanquishing OKC.
We have a Nick Spurs, Wet Dream Finals.
The face of the league,
everyone loves him.
Oh, my God, worldwide sensation.
And the NFL is like, hold my beer.
Versus the biggest market and, like,
center of the known universe that is basketball starved.
And that is, by the way, a basketball town above all things.
Yeah.
Perfect for the NBA and they can get bumped off the back page.
Hardest ticket in probably the history of New York sports.
And the NFL is like, two monster trades for you today.
How about this?
We're going to take it for one day from you.
A buck 35 per seat, the first seats that sold,
$270,000 for two-course seats.
I was thinking about that.
My dad was always in this, but like,
dad in the 08 finals, you know, since season tickets, it's 74 for the Celts. But it was bad for,
I don't know, 15 years. They had one like decent team. And then the 08 finals, they play the
Lakers. And it's like, it's a lot of money. I could get for these tickets. I could basically
pay for the last seven years. But it's like, well, what's the point of having the tickets if I'm not
going to go to these games? But you do have to do the mental math for it. You got to go to
least one. I feel like you got to go to all. But I would understand if people sold.
Yeah, we never had season tickets growing up.
It was always like, yeah, I got box seats.
And I'm like, well, what are we doing up here?
Well, when I was a kid, box seats meant you sat down there.
So like I was a bleacher creature.
Yeah.
Football.
Miles Garrett.
Yeah.
For Jared verse, a one, a two, and a three in three different years.
In a lot of ways, a much bigger trade than Parsons.
Because Jared verse is awesome.
Yeah.
I was kind of stunned by this one.
The Rams, there's.
Zagging every year.
They're always trying to,
everyone's doing this.
We're doing this.
We don't care about first run picks,
whatever.
We'll just try to pick up guys later in the draft.
We're going to go in over and over again
on these guys in their prime.
And it's mostly work.
They won a Super Bowl.
They're always relevant.
They always feel like they're one of the five
or six best teams.
I wanted to hate this trade for them
because it was like,
man, first is really good.
Like, is that upgrade worth
all you're giving up?
But then I kept thinking back to all the Browns games I watched the last couple years,
especially last year.
He's just getting double-teamed.
And the line is just going backwards anyway.
He makes everyone better.
Yeah.
But versus, look, when I first heard about the trade, I just assumed it was draft picks.
Yeah.
I'm like, oh, they gave up this, this, this.
Oh, wait, and verse?
And verse?
Got to do it if you're the ramps.
Yeah, I guess, yeah.
First of all, Miles Garrett's wearing the crown.
Right?
So, like, there's a lineal champ in football, too, on the defensive side.
it went from J.J. Watt to Aaron Donald to Miles Garrett. This is the Miles Garrett defensive era right now. And he's in his prime.
That's a fun championship belt, by the way. Reggie White had it for a few years. L.T. Yeah. Reggie White.
Bruce Smith popped in there, maybe between those two. Yeah. There's like, it is. And every era has that guy.
Occasionally it's like, well, Khalil Mack never had it. This guy never had it.
But actually, it was really always Aaron Donald's.
And maybe you can find a few years.
But by and large, JJ Watt,
yeah, Aaron Donald, Miles Garrett.
And I'm sure that that's not the first thing they had in mind.
Hey, let's make verse into an even better player, right?
Yeah.
But if the opportunity presents itself to get a special player,
you go all in, you figure out the rest later.
Especially with how close they were last year.
That was a Super Bowl.
Like, you know, no offense, Pat's fans.
but like it was very clear sometimes.
I take no offense.
I'm not even sure we should have been in the Super Bowl.
Out of the out of the, out of the, out of the, uh, AFC or saying.
I was talking to my buddy Gus Ramsey yesterday, who's a huge Broncos fan.
And I was just like, I can't believe you guys didn't beat us.
Like that Bo Nex thing was such a crazy end of the game fluke.
And I just, they get, Denver gets to 20 points if they have Bo Nix in that game.
That's not a 10-7 game.
No, but that's a pretty evenly.
It's pretty even match.
It's like the, it's like the junior varsity ram Cahawks.
Pretty even matchup could go either way.
We couldn't block, though.
The further I get away from the playoffs,
I'm like, I can't believe we thought
we were going to win the Super Bowl.
Yeah, you went on it.
Both sides of our line couldn't block.
And then Seattle was like,
oh, Will Campbell,
we're going to attack this side too,
and they just destroyed us.
And Drake may look like a deer in headlights
in the Super Bowl,
but there's the AJ Brown trip.
Okay, well, first things first.
So this is what I love about what the Rams did.
Yeah.
Is your faith misplaced yes or no?
or if you put it in the right place,
hey, I know what we'll do.
We'll trade for James Hardin.
That'll win us a championship
and we'll give him everything he needs, right?
Misplaced faith.
Especially when it comes out
that could have had Drew Holiday instead.
That is brutal.
How did they decide on James Hardin over Drew Holiday?
That's insane.
I couldn't believe that.
So the Rams trade,
let's back up before Stafford.
Yeah.
They used a lot of draft capital
to get Jared Gough.
Jared Goff is not just like we had the number one pick.
Jared Goff represents multiple high-level draft picks
in order to move up to get Goff.
And it worked.
You made a Super Bowl.
Yeah.
But you didn't win a Super Bowl.
So then you put even more draft capital,
multiple high-end picks to turn Goff into Stafford,
thinking that is the difference between making and winning a Super Bowl.
And it worked.
And it almost worked twice.
Right.
So, like, is the faith placed in the right place?
Would they give up for Devante?
Was that second?
Yeah.
Yeah, it wasn't in first.
Yeah, no.
I'd have to check that.
Or they signed?
No, they signed them.
They signed Devante.
They signed Devante.
I knew it wasn't a first.
They signed Devante.
But, but, like, that is, when you think about what that took to get Stafford, the draft
capital, people would say you're insane.
They won a Super Bowl.
They came this close to winning another Super Bowl.
So you have a two-year window right now.
and who knows if it'll be good two years from now.
They also really, they draft well in the later rounds,
which I wonder, like, when you know you don't have picks,
you're basically crossing off the first 30 guys on the board, right?
And you're spending way more time on the next level guys.
If you're good at that.
That's how you get at, like, Puka Nakua.
If you're good at that, you can trade draft picks.
Yeah.
Right?
Which they've been good.
They've been real.
And then even the McDuffie thing is like, they'll be better there.
I forgot they did that too.
They'll be better there than they were.
Like, the real separation.
okay, special teams Seahawks had a big advantage
going into the Super Bowl and the secondary.
Seahawks had an advantage.
Well, the secondary is kind of shored up now.
And then you add Miles Garrett, like,
even if it doesn't work, it's worth the show.
Like, take a swing.
That is a swing worth thing.
Well, I also like, we're old enough to remember
when this moves like this over the years,
when you put a guy that couldn't get over the hump
and also wasn't getting enough attention
for how great he was,
and then you put him on the right team
in a big city with a chance to win,
you always get the bump.
You get the bump.
With Stafford, it was so unclear.
It was like he's always considered top five armed talent, right?
But then after he got to the point in his career
where it really wasn't clear,
you know, usually a great quarterback,
even in a bad organization, keeps you at a certain level.
And he did for a while, but not always.
And it was like, well, is Stafford a little overrated
by the real football heads,
or is this just a bad situation for him?
Stafford is.
That's Trevor Lawrence now.
Yeah.
It was the same thing where the nerds were saying he was better than he was,
but the eye test was like, all right, well, where is it?
And then he finally made the playoffs.
But Stafford, I could never figure out because he was on the Lions,
the worst football team of run franchise.
But he did have receivers.
So it was always like, what is this guy?
Yeah.
It always seemed like he was getting the shit kicked out of him.
But he put up numbers.
He did.
Yeah.
But there was a point I remember when it was like,
he's going to be a Hall of Fame or someday.
and the counter was like, really?
Matthew Stafford?
I mean, now it's like,
now is a surefire hole.
And even to win that Super Bowl,
you think about,
I think we've discussed this here,
but when Brady is defending the title in Tampa,
and he leads the team down
and scores at the end of the game,
the reason Brady wins all those championships,
the reason like guys like Kobe and these guys
won a lot of games,
like you think about like the Sacramento game
with the Lakers,
is because everyone on the court believes
that that guy is destined to win, right?
Kind of what the Knicks of...
With Jalen Brunson?
Stumbled into it with Brunson.
They just feel like if we can hang around,
he can win this for us.
But does the other team believe it too?
Because when Brady's on the field,
everyone, both teams believe it.
Yeah.
And like, okay, here comes,
like they win now.
And Stafford drove him right back down the field
and won the game
and then went on to win the Super Bowl.
He's a special guy.
Like to overcome that kind of stuff,
stuff that's a, it's like, like Kurt Schilling.
Whatever you think about Kurt Schilling should be in the Hall of Fame, obviously.
And when, when guys like Brocious and Tino hit home runs at the end of games, that signals
this ain't your year, especially 2001, 9-11.
And I did like in New York and the Yankees are destined to win.
But a guy like Kurt Schilling's like, not so fast, right?
Like, what was it, destiny, whatever in destiny or what do you have?
it was like we're strippers or whatever mystique and destiny or i forgot what two words it was
but everyone was using that in new york that the yankees are going to win yeah and and they and and the
the retort was those are you know that's all they i kind of still can't believe they didn't
win that year because part of it was because Rivera got dinged up in the ninth which was
inconceivable in the in the moment actually even worse even worse than that Rivera who's one of
the best fielding players at his position of all time.
Yeah.
Turned around.
Game was over.
Double play ball.
Turned around and threw it into center field.
Right?
Like stuff like that happens.
And then you bring the infield in, you get a little, and pop out.
But the point is, when you have a guy like that on your team, it, like, all that kind of
team of destiny stuff on the other side goes away.
Stafford's that kind of guy.
Yeah.
He had to overcome Brady to do that.
That's why when Stafford has the ball late in the guy, I thought the Rams were going to win the game late
in the game, even though Seahawks, you knew,
were a little bit better than them, but it's like, they got Stafford.
The Miles Garrett piece,
I don't think most people
know what he looks like. Now, you can say this
for most football players, but
like if, I don't know, Carl Anthony Towns walked into a restaurant,
most people know what he looks like because we see him on a basketball
court. And football players,
for the most part, we don't know what they look like.
I think people know what the quarterbacks look like.
You don't think they know what Garrett looks like? I think so.
I don't know,
would my son know what he looks like?
I'm just thinking like the recognizability
Of the NFL's helmet off on the field.
We know famously.
So I think there's just a level of fame that he doesn't have
That this ramps thing is going to immediately solve.
He was this underground.
He's playing at Sunday 1 o'clock ET
Getting the shit kicked out of.
His team's getting the shit kicked out of them every game basically.
He's on one Thursday night football game a year,
probably against the Steelers
and maybe a crappy Monday night game.
And then everyone is telling us how great he is, but, you know, sometimes this happens.
I remember this happened to Moss in the mid-2000s when he just became irrelevant for like three years.
When you're just on shitty teams year after year.
Moss went from, is he going to challenge Jerry Rice as the greatest wide out ever to, oh, I guess.
Yeah, at the time.
And then it was like, well, I guess that didn't happen.
And then it was like, oh, wait, maybe it did happen when he went to New England.
It was, we got him for a fourth round pick.
but that's how bad he was on the Raiders.
I have him, we might have talked about this.
I have him second.
Yeah, who would be second over Moss?
I feel like Rice won Moss 2 is kind of set in stone.
No question.
People try to push the Terrell Owens case every once in a while.
It's just like, doesn't team murdering matter?
I love T.O.
He murdered at least two teams, right?
Well, the thing, T.O. gets a little bit of...
Doesn't that math?
The chemistry stuff has to matter a tiny bit
when you're talking about the greatest of the greats.
Fine, but then you also have to give him credit for it.
And this was, trip me out when he plays in the Super Bowl, hurt.
With the broken leg.
He is the best player on his team.
I think he had eight catches, seven or eight catches.
He is arguably the best player in the game.
We couldn't cover him.
And he was criticized heading into that game.
He's a selfish play.
And I was thinking, wait, this guy's rep is so bad in the media that playing with a broken
leg, he's criticized for being selfish, and then he's the best player on the field?
It was tough.
It spoke a lot to how annoying he was in the 2000s.
But also how great he was.
The AJ Brown piece has just a whiff of that because he was unhappy with the Eagles, but
watching from my TV in LA, he should have been unhappy.
I didn't understand anything about their offense.
So the Pats get him.
Not last year.
It was rumored for, I don't know, three months.
It was pretty, once the Eagles started drafting receivers, it was pretty clear it was going to happen.
And they gave up a 28 first.
I wish they had top 10 protected it, but they don't do it in football.
Yeah, why don't they do this?
They don't do it.
Are they allowed to do it in football?
They are allowed to do it.
They just, you could have done it where it's like.
Make it top 15 at least, right?
Because if Drake may get served, something happens.
You wind up in the middle of the pack.
That's the NFL.
Well, it was interesting that they didn't make it 27.
Because I think if I'm the Patriots, I wouldn't have because of the schedule,
Super Bowl hangover.
If you're going to stink in 27 or 28,
is probably the safer pet.
You think that's the Pats?
I figured that's the Eagles.
I think that's the Pats.
I figured that's the Eagles saying,
all right, we don't want a late first round.
It's practically like a second round pick.
Why don't we roll the dice and see
maybe something happens in the next year or two?
I think it was the Eagles,
because they're playing the percentages
of what happens to the team that loses a Super Bowl
and gets the first place schedule
and had everything go right there before.
You think it's the Eagles wanting the next year.
Yeah, I agree.
I think the Eagles want,
Not this year.
No, I think the Patriots wanted it to be 28.
Because of some fear of 27, what could happen?
If I was the Eagles, I would have won a 27.
Really?
Yeah.
No, I want 28 because the thing about A.J. Brown, and this happened with J.
Helens.
What was Hertz's big problem before they got Brown?
Was that he couldn't see the middle of the field, right?
Then you get a guy who, and like, is A.J. Brown a little past it?
Yeah, he's probably not as good as he was a couple years ago.
But he's never a guy.
We don't know.
They didn't throw in the ball.
Yeah, right.
You don't know.
But he's also his age, it's the whole thing.
He's never a guy who relied on speed.
It's not like, oh my God, A.J. Brown is a one-on-one matchup nightmare because he gets all this separation.
He's a nightmare because he doesn't need separation.
He's going to catch the ball, right?
So a guy like that who's tough, who can go across the middle of the whole thing, makes a guy like Jalen Hertz go from, hey, is he going to work out to almost two-time Super Bowl MVP?
And you got a guy like Drake May who was in a version of the situation Hertz was in.
He looked lost in the Super Bowl.
You get a receiver like that,
and that could easily have him taking the next step,
especially in the moment of truth.
There's a lot of good stats with AJ Brown against man-to-man
where he's basically like the most unstoppable guy in the league.
Yeah, because that was the biggest issue with the Pats.
Like, none of the receivers could get open.
As the year went on, you could feel it.
And then in the playoffs, when they start going against his awesome defenses,
you know, not to make excuses for Drake because he, you know,
I don't think he was healthy,
but he was also really bad in the Super Bowl.
But then they do that all 22 shots
and you watch what he's looking at.
Yeah.
And everybody's just blanketed.
They would have like the straight line guys open.
Then every once in a while digs,
but really the second half of the year wasn't open as much.
But that's the thing about Adrian Brown.
He's kind of never open, but he's always open.
Yeah.
Like wherever he is, you can throw him the ball
and there's a good shot.
He's going to catch it.
And that is like the perfect player for a young quarterback
who needs to take a step forward.
He had 145 targets in 22 and 158 and 23.
And then the last two years was 97 and 121.
And it added up when you watched it because, and I get it.
Like they were doing that weird math thing with the possessions where it was like,
we're going to shorten the game because we have a better team.
Every play felt like it was 35, 40 seconds.
And the pace of the team just seemed way off.
But if I'm AJ Brown, I'm like he clearly got fed up with it.
now he's on this Patriots team that desperately needs him.
He's going to have Dobbs next to him.
They have a bunch of young receivers.
The offensive lines, okay.
It's going to be slightly better.
The Eagles, the Eagles just had, their offense was ridiculous last year.
Yeah.
Right.
And there was no real reason for, I mean, you can, you could try to rationalize.
It was a bad idea.
Empirically, it was a bad idea, right?
Well, which part?
Like how, because to me, it's like you're going to pay 50 million a year to Hertz.
and you're going to pay 60 million to two receivers,
and then you're basically going to walk the ball up the court.
Like, you've built this team that's supposed to do this.
That dominates both sides of the line.
Yeah, and now you're playing a different style than the team you vote,
which I never really fully understood.
I know it's frustrating with the Philly fans.
So the best case, and he's a Braybill guy, which we, you know,
is a big piece of this.
Brayble loves his guys.
Brable needed this, by the way.
He needed something good to happen.
he got AJ.
It was all worth it.
Yeah, you know, it's been two weeks without a story.
And now he's got AJ Brown.
That's good when coaches should go get there guys.
Yeah.
Well, I was looking at the wide receiver trades because best case was Moss.
When it gets in trouble, when you give up like big capital, like a first round pick,
the Cowboys gave up two for Joey Galloway that year and he immediately got hurt.
Roy Williams, Percy Harvin, people like that.
That's where you get into trouble.
You don't get into trouble
when you're getting
one of the best receivers in the league.
Actually, everyone thinks that
forever now, it's like,
quarterback's the most important guy, obviously, right?
And then everyone's thinking, well,
then his protection is this sort of left tackle.
And then it's defensive end off the right side
or pass rusher because that,
and that, no, it's actually quarterback one,
one A is a legit elite receiver.
At least one.
A, that's, that's,
that's, that's, that's, that's so much more valuable
than every other person.
position. That's what the league is now. And by the way, you bring up Randy Moss, when the Giants got Plexico
Burris, they won the Super Bowl. Then the next year, he literally shoots himself in the foot, right?
And they don't have Plexico Burris. And I'm thinking at the time, well, no one receiver. No,
it was night and day difference. Right. Like when you have an actual elite top five guy,
top 10 guy, it's other than the quarterback, the most important position on the field. But a
The other guys...
The 11 Giants so annoying to me.
The 11th.
You didn't have that.
Their second Giant Super Bowl.
No, we didn't have that, but we had some good receivers.
Terrible loss.
To me, that loss is much worse for me as a Pats fan than 07.
Can I tell you...
O7, they beat us.
That second one.
11's ridiculous.
That second one was so amazing as a Giants fan.
I was more exhausted after watching that game than I remember at any point in my life.
Because when I could have a Super Bowl, you didn't have a better team.
I could imagine a little kid growing up in Boston somewhere watching that game.
And all he knows, his first memory is that somehow the perfect season,
they're about to be anointed, greatest team in the history of sports, right?
Yeah.
And they somehow lose in the most unlikely way, like the Tyree catch.
It's happening again.
Again, it's like a train wreck for a Patriots.
Did you go to that game?
I did not.
I went to that game.
I was in LA flag.
From the moment Brady had the safety on the intentional grounding that I'm still don't know how that was the call.
And the game was just off.
We had gronk on one leg.
The Giants, who was it?
Brandon Jacobs was like it was just a weird Giants offense.
The was a lot of like the score was always weird the whole game.
It was like one of those games where it was like 15 to 12.
You let them score intentionally to try.
Yeah.
Every piece of that game was kind of off.
the and then the manning head like you hear bellichick say and this is what belichick did at his best
take away your first and second option beat us with your third option they did like that's okay
i was in the end zone where eli had that throw yeah the throw was incredible yes one of the best
throws ever i think he was he on like his own eight or his own nine or i don't remember but he just like
it was a fucking frozen rope it was unbelievable yards catching the guy like this in the one spot where
he could get it. And that's, if you're making the Eli Hall fame case, which I do, it's,
it's whatever he was doing on that last Giants drive, even though he tried to throw it to us three
times. But he was scrambling for his life and just creating shit and it somehow worked. And then that
Manningham throw. The same reason that Peyton, a lot of his career was bad in the playoffs. Yeah.
Is because when you are the chosen one and you are expected to be perfect, right? Man, there's a lot on
the line in those moments. When you're his kid brother, it's like, there's no, like, if I fail,
big deal. So why not go for it, right? Like, there's no fear of failure for a guy like Eli.
Do you think, now that we have DART, it's the face of the Giants, does he get compared to
Eli or is it too far gone now? He's more talented. Yeah. You know, it's a different game now,
but no, I mean, the Giants. Eli's just kind of over here. He's a Hall of Famer. First of all, he had an
Iron Man Streak.
He was playing in bad weather city
with the wind and everything
like Meadowlands was not.
So that's the real Hall of Fame case
is him in the playoff games.
He was freezing cold in Lambo.
The candlestick.
Twice against Farve and Rogers.
And taking huge, huge, huge punishment
in those games.
Tough as nails.
It's the toughest motherfucker.
And that's, I don't,
see, I have trouble with the Hall of Fame
in general because I feel like we've just
increased the capacity of the restaurant
not too ridiculous.
Yeah.
It's just,
the basketball has been ruined now.
But it's inevitable
because whoever the worst guy is
who gets in,
that will now be the benchmark
and people say,
well,
he's better than this guy.
Why isn't he in?
I'll do respect to Michael Cooper,
but that's where the NBA Hall of Fame
is now.
Like Michael Cooper's in.
So if you go through the Knicks team
right now, it's like,
who could make the Hall of Fame
from the next?
It's like,
who wouldn't make the Hall of Fame
from the Knicks.
You got three starters who could do it.
Yeah.
I mean, Towns is probably
a Hall of Famer at this point.
And it's nuts,
but it's...
Brunson.
Yeah, Brunson, definitely.
And then the question would be Oji.
Right.
If O.G could stay healthy for a couple of years.
And then it's like, what if McHell Bridges plays 1,700 games and is the number four guy in the title team?
Yeah, I think.
I don't know anymore.
I don't know what a Hallfamer is.
But you have to like, Cooper, you could hang your hat on something that defined him at a certain level.
He was an awesome role player.
Right.
Like, you know.
So, but although if Bridges, if Bridges keeps playing, like, he's two different guys, regular season playoffs.
He's like, during the regular season, it's like, you're five, five.
firsts on that? Are you out of your mind?
He's a nice 3-and-D guy, but that's it.
Three-and-D plus. Halfway through the Atlanta
series, it seemed like a catastrophe.
Every playoffs, he's like this, though.
Like, his defense is unbelievable.
He's hitting shots.
He was great on Maxie.
I love how he figured out how to play with Brunson and Towns
in the playoffs for some reason. It clicked.
Like, he's just popping in the right spots.
Because they changed the way to use towns, really.
That's the whole thing.
We got to talk about that
the finals. We're going to take one break
and hit the finals.
All right.
The 2026 NBA Finals is here.
New York.
San Antonio.
We're going to make some picks.
I am going to probably share picks for at least a few of the games on my Twitter feed from Fandall Sportsbook.
For the series, though, since we're doing this on a Tuesday, I like the Spurs to win the series.
I like the Spurs in six, which is five to one odds.
But I think the Spurs would be my series pick as well.
I wouldn't mess with the Wembi DiOliops.
is almost definitely the finals MVP.
You're just better off taking the Spurs money line at that point.
So game to game, I would definitely take San Antonio in game one,
and then we'll see how it goes.
Usually home team wins game one.
Game two becomes a little bit of a tester-out Slugfest.
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easy to build NBA bets on Fandil as well,
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Who are you picking for the finals?
This close to taking the Knicks.
They check a lot of boxes for the nobody believes in us pick.
They're like maybe one.
I'm short on the bench right now, but it doesn't...
I wish...
We don't know the Robinson situation.
That's the whole thing.
He's really their six, man.
He doesn't...
He's really...
You've seven guys.
Yeah.
Including Robinson.
Yeah.
Shammett and him off the bench.
McBride, we'll see.
We'll see what McBride looks like again.
I know, but we'll see what he looks like against San Antonio.
Yeah.
But Robinson, you need for...
Because you need fouls and...
He's also a great playoff performer.
Like, he really is a great...
defensive guys you don't always think of like that, but watch them play in the playoffs,
you go, championship player.
I want him on my team.
He's Wembe kryptonite too, because Zach and I talked about this little on Saturday,
the way to kind of hit, and Hartinstein did a little bit in the last series.
But when Wembe is playing that box in one zone, whatever the fuck he's doing,
and he's, especially with Brunson, where they'll have guys on Brunson,
and then Wembe kind of shifting over, and you leave the back of the basket open.
And that's like Mitch's special.
Like, you're not going to box me out.
I'm just going to get 10 offensive rebounds.
Now is what OKC, anytime they felt like they had momentum,
it was on the offensive board.
So they need Mitch for that for anything.
Knicks are good on the offensive glass.
Yeah.
OG would be the other one.
Nicks seem like they're healthy except for Robinson.
The game three game four crowds are going to be crazy.
That's a huge part of it.
Like health this time of year, they happen to be very healthy right now.
Well, not playing basketball always helps.
No question.
You just like it in the nine days off.
And as the road team, the long, like if you have a long layoff, I hate to have home court.
Because you're going to, you could give it up game one before you get that out of your system, you know, the rust gone.
But if you're on the road, so what you lose game one.
Now you're rested.
You have a good shot at splitting on the road and taking home court.
So it's like kind of working out in their favor.
And they beat them in the cup on a neutral site.
They came a possession away from beating them in San Antonio.
Right.
They have a way of playing the spurs.
The teams are even.
They're even.
Because the Knicks slow it up and when they have their version of the death line up on the floor,
they can hit shots late in the clock.
So they're slowing up the pace and scoring late in the clock.
And that kind of stymies the Spurs offense, I think.
Here's what I'm going to pick the Spurs.
Here's what I think really hurts the Knicks in this series is all the layoffs between the games.
Because they have this 2211 schedule and they've spaced stuff out.
think that's really helpful to Wemby.
100%.
I felt like in the OKC series,
it was a constant battle of,
you know,
there were just games
where he just seemed like he was dead.
Know why they won the series?
Because they could play him 28 minutes in game six.
Right.
Right?
If he had to play 34,
38 minutes in game six,
they may have lost.
That triple,
that double overtime game in game one,
which just wreaked havoc on both rosters.
But you could really feel it.
I just think,
especially after seeing him in person a couple of times,
and you've seen him in person too, right?
It's just he's not really meant to run up and down
in basketball court.
Like, that's not what God created,
a 7-foot-7 guy to do,
is just run up and down on a wooden floor like that.
And he does it, and he's about as graceful as you can,
like him and Kareem are the two tall guys
have ever seen who seem graceful as they went up and down.
But he starts throwing 42, 43 minutes,
all the stuff he has to do defensively,
all the hard roles they do with him
to kind of create three points out.
And it's just, I thought he war it out.
Like, he'll close out.
The play is lost.
Like, the guy's going to hit the shot.
But just because Wemby gives the effort to close out and put his hand up,
I think they're shoot.
I love to know what the numbers are.
I'll bet you shooting percentages get cut in half.
You have a guy shooting a three.
Wemby's just, he's not in position.
He's not going to get there in time.
But just the fact that he can kind of blot out the sun.
Like, you can't see the basket.
At the last second, guys who you expect to hit the shot don't hit the shot.
There was a great clip that somebody took a chat in game six
where in the same possession, he tried to challenge Wembe twice
and just kind of bailed on it the second time.
I was like, okay.
Like he was going to take a three from the corner.
And part of the problem with Chet in that series was he's got one of those long
developing jumpers and Wembe was always able to come out and challenge it.
So then he decided, all right, I'm going to take him off the dribble.
And he beat him off the dribble.
Did a spin move.
And it's like, oh, he's going to block this.
And he just kind of bailed.
And that's seven foot one.
He's not used to beat like he's, you know, it's like, why can't a lefty hit a lefty?
Because they never see the lefties, right?
Right.
When does Chet see a guy who's him but three, four inches taller?
And you got to credit Wemby.
I love this about Wemby.
When he threw that elbow, exactly.
If a guy's hitting you low and the ref doesn't do anything about it, hit him low back.
Do it harder, right?
He'll get the message.
Wemby swung that elbow and it changed a little bit the way they were playing them.
Right.
Oh, excuse me.
The other help and then when he ordered his team,
and he ordered the code red.
Yep, code red.
He did it.
It was a little fuck you from Wembe.
You want him on that line.
Yeah.
So like, yeah, like, can't handle the truth.
And he has this thing in him where he looks at, everyone's like,
well, it's come from the, the, when they're kids and, and Czech got MVP of this tournament.
Wemby sees Chet.
He sees the team he's on.
He knows that's my guy.
That's my rival.
Yeah.
He let him know at every chance.
Yeah.
I own you to the point where Chet started believing it, right?
Like, everyone's writing Ched off now, but I don't know.
He could learn from this.
Like, he could actually grow from it, but he got his heart.
Like, when, Wembe took his heart and everyone, the whole world saw it, right?
So he did that intentionally.
He knew, like, that's my guy.
I got to make sure he knows he doesn't have a shot.
We talked about it on Saturday night about the Drexler-Jordan.
that was a little like that too
where Jordan
you know
the people like
these guys who's better
and that was a real thing
that was happening
for about a week
and then Jordan was just like
all right
I've had enough for this
he took it personally
yeah so the reason I'm picking
I'll do respect to the Knicks
and they do check a lot of
my nobody believes in us
the Robinson thing
whereas me
I do think they have a really good team
to play the Knicks
like if you were creating a team
to kind of stop Bruns
especially in the fourth quarter, you would say you want these defensive guards and swings
that could switch combined with this big tall guy in the back to challenge all like the 12 to 15
footer stuff. I just think it's a bad matchup. So the way for the Knicks to beat him, obviously,
is hope Wembe wears down, hope the spurs three-point shooting is in there, hope the crowd is going
to come through in your home games, and then just get an awesome OG bridges combo.
If Josh Hart is
If Josh Hart is hitting from outside
Knicks or hard.
But you know that's going to happen
one of the games.
Josh Hard will have this one of series.
And then can you get the offensive rebounds?
Like I see the path for it.
I just think this is like a generational thing now.
And I'm not going against it.
And I felt the whole year I was like,
are the Spurs really since December?
Are they the 90 Bulls or the 91 Bulls?
And I think they're telling us
they're the 91 Bulls.
Well, first of all, the 90 Bulls were the best team in basketball.
Pippin got a migraine in game seven.
Yeah.
Right.
Like, you know, otherwise they probably, everyone was like, oh, Jordan had to win.
No, he didn't.
He needed one other All-Star with him.
He didn't, and then in game seven, he didn't have them.
You can't beat the champs by yourself.
But they weren't dominant in the playoffs that year, the way they were.
But next year, they fucking destroyed everybody.
But that was also Baby Pippin.
Like Pippin made his first All-Star game.
But he wasn't what he would be the next year.
He became into his prime, right?
100%.
I would say that I would say that,
I agree with you 100% about your analysis of why the Spurs would win.
What got me thinking the Spurs, like I was, I said all season, but from like the middle
of the season, I said the Spurs are the best team in basketball.
They're going to win the championship.
But by the time the Knicks were finished playing them the third time, I thought, if the
Knicks come out of the East, they would have like a 40% shot of beating the Spurs.
I think 40%'s the right number.
For what you identified, which is, and it occurred to me in game seven, actually.
actually. Really the number one name is Castle. Castle and Harper are puppies. And they're even
like out in front of themselves, like a puppy gets out in front of himself. Yeah. But like they're
pure bred puppy. Like these guys are already dogs, right? They're already a problem. They don't even
know what they're doing yet. They're overly exuberant on defense. They can wind up in foul trouble
because of how they're bumping around out there. Right. But because of Castle's size and his tenacity,
it's like you kind of don't want that overgrown, you know, eager puppy at his size on these smaller Knicks players.
You know, like Brunson.
They could us put champagne on him.
And they're big and strong.
They can have Vessel who's taller.
They're also like big, strong guys.
Like Brunson, yes, he's strong, but he's short.
Mikhail Bridges is not built like those other guys.
It's like there's a lot of kind of size and strength.
and like youthful exuberance on the perimeter defender types on the spurs
that I think are a bad matchup for the Knicks.
We talked about on Saturday night,
mentioned on the podcast that did with Zach.
We were like, what is Castle?
I don't even know what he, who is, who's the Castle doppelganger?
So a bunch of people sent emails.
These were the candidates.
This is what got sent to me.
Guard Kauai.
Yeah, Kauai.
More defensive, Dwayne Wade.
Um, more explosive Drew Halliday.
That's a good one.
Springier Artest.
Ooh, that's, I hadn't even thought of Artest.
That's a good one.
Yeah, early Artest.
But Artes could shoot for his time, better than Castle can shoot for, like, I don't know what the league
averages are off top of my head.
But Artest was a better shooter in his day than Castle is in his.
Guard Jimmy Butler.
Another good one.
Uh, Latrell Spreewell.
Didn't really see that one, but it, it, it,
made me think.
Well, Spree was a good defender.
He was energetic.
Yeah.
But he was, and I guess I see that because he was also athletic leper guy who didn't shoot it
especially well.
But I just get to feeling like Castle's going to be a shooter, a good enough shooter when it's all said and done.
Better offense, Marcus Smart, and Heinz Ward.
Those were all the comparisons I got from all these very serious.
Like a basketball player.
Just like Heinz, how Heinz Word was just like, I'm a football player.
athlete, I'm physical.
He's not just a receiver.
He's a football player.
I can do in traffic.
I like, who did you say, who was second of last?
Marcus Smart.
That's interesting if Smart were bigger and...
I think he's a better offensive player and a better athlete
than Marcus Smart was, but I like...
I do too.
The way younger Marcus Smart, how balls to the wall he was all the time,
which I think Castle has.
Also, one of the things I love about Castle and the Spurs team in general is
they don't seem to wear mistakes or like bad shooting or get psyched out.
Or value possessions.
They just kind of go.
Yeah, it's true.
Short memories.
Yeah, when you're talking about like puppies, purebred puppies, like they're just kind of
running around and they don't really carry their past with them.
And it's like that's why you say are the 90 or 91 bulls.
And my like the way I interpret that is, is that short memory and like is that going to go too much
on the side of not valuing the possessions in crunch time because they just go?
Yeah.
Or is that actually good for them because they don't worry about it?
And if they don't score on that possession or they turn the ball live turnover and it leads
to two or three points, they're fine.
It's gone and they're going to do it again.
And because they're so aggressive, sometimes it's going to work.
The other reason, I think I'm taking the spurs and I know feel great about it.
But the competition in the East, it has to be said.
Like, they beat, they fall two to one Atlanta.
They changed their offense.
I love the way they played.
To me, they looked like the 2014 spurs crossed with whatever Brunson's doing.
But that Atlanta team, when you look back, it's pretty brutal.
Like, they had like five guys like that were playable.
They had one center.
Couldn't really rebound.
McCollum died as the series went along.
They had no kind of guy who could calm the runs.
They won two games by a point, though.
Yeah.
And they could have probably should have.
gotten swept. They play Philly the next
round, and Bede's already, Bid put
one week of the season, he was done.
Right? And all you do is shut down Maxie
and you were good. And then that
Cleveland team,
they're just a mess.
Well, yes.
But the Knicks weren't.
That game one loss was just
one of the most egregious blown.
You knew it was a sweep after that.
After that, it's sweet. When you lose like
that, it's a sweet. The coaching combined with
like them not running back and they just
rolled over. So you go from
that. And meanwhile, here are the Spurs, who are just going through this gauntlet. Even Portland was
like, you know, they probably probably would have been like a five or a six seat in the
they're a tough team and they showed up. Yeah. And I don't know, that OKC team they beat. I just,
I take that seriously. I thought OKC was an incredible team missing one of their best guys. Yeah,
one of them missing one of their best guys. It's missing their second best player. Yeah.
That's a lot. It's a lot to miss your second best player. Like if if this, well,
the spurs don't, if the spurs didn't have the Aaron Fox, they'd have lost.
Right?
Like the live ball turnovers were killing them.
But that's the thing.
So the spurs didn't have Fox for a couple games.
And then he didn't seem right, really until game seven.
And then the Harper thing, Harper in the middle of the series is just useless.
And then kind of came back as it went along.
But I think the spurs is 991 bowls.
So I'm going spurs in five.
The thing about the Knicks is, I think it's going to be a long series.
I do think that.
The thing about the Knicks is they're not beating these teams by 10 or 12 points.
I get it.
You're feeding everybody into a wood chipper, right?
They are destroying teams.
They have two losses, each by a point, and they're beating the breaks off of everyone.
And the team that they are not compared to enough is the 2016, they did lose in the finals, Warriors.
They have a death lineup.
Yeah.
except it's a better shoot.
They don't have the two greatest shooters of all time in the death lineup, right?
When Josh Hart is hitting his shots, that's why I say, if you want to look at a few key things,
if Josh Hart is hot more often than he's cold in this series, the Knicks are virtually impossible
to beat because everyone, like all five guys are killing you at that point.
Right.
How do you guard that, especially with the offense running through towns who's like not only the
best shooting big ever maybe, but he's also like kind of Yokic in a way that I didn't understand,
right? I'm not saying he's as good as Yokic. I'm saying he's doing some of that stuff there.
It was impressive. So, like, I think that's really what it comes down to. If Josh Hart is hot in
this series, this is going seven games and the Knicks might win. You're probably right. I'm going to,
I'm going to amend to Knicks and six. To the Spurs and Six. I'm sorry, Spurs and Six.
Broody and Slip. I'm going to amend to Spurs and Six because you're right. I forgot to factor in the one
Josh Hart game. That's it.
And if there can be two or three.
Five for seven from three or something stupid.
Right.
So correct score, spurs in six is five to one.
That also sets up for the devastating everyone at MSG
trying to send the series to a seventh game
and just the all-time gut punch of whatever.
So what did you have Nixon six or seven?
If the Knicks and win, it'll be a seven game series, I think.
But by the way, what you said about when you said about what you said about Wemby,
is the thing about him because he's so big,
so everything's magnified,
you can see all the detail,
is it's very apparent when he's fatigued, right?
He looks uncoordinated all of a sudden.
He's like the most coordinated big guy
you've ever seen in your life.
First of all,
you've never seen a guy that tall, right?
But he's so coordinated at that size.
And when he is fatigued,
you can see, oh, where's,
where'd the coordination go?
You know, even on lobs and stuff,
he can't do it.
He starts getting a little, like,
almost like a little kid
where little kids start falling down
and,
right.
You know, it's time for a nap.
Yeah, yeah.
Because, but the guy's physiology is just like, this is unexplored territory.
And he is doing everything in his power to make, to give himself the best possible shot.
But that schedule where there are essentially no travel days was brutal in the Western Conference Finals for him.
And more rest is good for Wemby.
It's also why guys like LeBron as they hit their late 30s, it just becomes impossible to put together four straight rounds to win a title.
Definitely on the defense of everything.
You have to have younger players.
And that's been the thing over and over again that we've seen this decade is the combination
of how the regular season got much harder, it became harder just for guys to carry big minutes.
But then you get into that every other day in the third round.
You have to have the younger dudes for that.
So you have Knicks and seven that would be eight to one.
Let's talk about...
I have not yet made my pick.
I do think...
Are you going to make it on Game Over with Rich Paul?
I think I will make it on game over.
Do it.
Make it.
Make it.
Make it.
I would say that it's the, if I had to handicap it, I think it's a 60-40 type series favoring the spurs,
but 40's a pretty damn good shot for the Knicks.
And I have to think if I like their chances.
So I bet on the spurs for, I had the spurs before the series.
And before, after game five, I did a hedge on OKC for game six.
Because I thought the Harper Fox thing, I just didn't think those guys were there.
And of course, San Antonio 1.
Then I doubled down and bet on San Antonio Game 7.
Smart.
Just because of the Wemby piece.
And I think ultimately, like, I was thinking about it.
I was like, I just think Wembe is the best player in the league now.
And I don't want to go against him in a game 7.
I've been saying this since like the All-Star break.
Yeah, but you still, you have to do it in the playoffs.
It's a different level.
You got to see like the ebb and flow of the games, the fatigue.
How do you handle foul trouble?
how do you handle when the
handle when the refs
aren't giving you calls?
But you know what he has?
But now I think he's there.
He's tasted it.
That O.K.C. thing was such a good seasoning
for this finals.
Look, it's a hunch until you see him do it.
My hunch was he's the best player
in the league, but you're right.
You have to see him do it in this circumstance.
But the thing about Wembe that I love
that, like, I thought middle of the season,
he's better than Yokic.
He's better than SGA.
I don't think SGA's in the conversation
with Yokic and Wembe.
But he's better than Yokic is,
there's a floor.
to Wembe's game because of the defense,
he can't really have a bad game ever.
He's such a defensive presence.
So when his offense is clicking,
it's like, well, he might,
he's a very good chance if he stays healthy.
Right, if he hits a couple threes
and a couple turnarounds and get some fouls.
That's all it takes.
But there's a good chance he winds up
the greatest player of all time.
But health is going to be a big thing
just because we've never seen a guy this size before.
Right?
And the other thing about Yokichbill is
you're down to possessions in the playoffs.
your seasons on the line, there's like two minutes left.
Okay, overcome it.
Right.
And Jamal Murray was taken out of the series, who's normally a very clutch player,
because you have a six-foot-eight wing defensive specialist who's doing an unbelievable job on him.
So now you have Gobert, who's also a great defensive player on Yokic, and it's like,
okay, Yokic, do it, though.
It's two possessions.
Can you make up two possessions in two minutes?
We've seen this from super great players throughout history.
And Rich and I play a game nowadays on the show where it's like, do you, does this player need to win or does he love the game?
So for example, or love to play.
Need to win, love to play.
For example, the player that best epitomizes needing to win and loving to play on the highest level possible is Magic Johnson.
That dude, like Larry Bird needed to win more than he loved to play.
same thing with Michael Jordan, right?
There are other guys who love to play more than they need to win.
For example, Kevin Durant, right?
Clearly loves to play.
Does he need to win?
It doesn't seem that way, right?
Or he would really, people who put him above bird and they should not,
it's because of that.
No, he doesn't need to win like that.
This is the LeBron issue for years.
Yes, he loved to play more than he needed.
I think LeBron does need to win, but not as much as he loves to play.
2011 finals flipped it.
Then he flipped it.
Yeah.
Yokic, I don't know if he's a basketball.
genius. I don't know if he loves
to play or he needs to win. I don't know if he
has either. I know Wemby has both.
Yoke just ripped through everybody in 23.
Because he's got to get credit for that.
He's among the greatest players.
I'm giving him loves to play. I think you guys are wrong.
Does he? Yeah, I think he does. He seems so pissed off at the press conference
he just wants to go right as well. He's from
fucking Serbia. He is, there's, listen, his basketball brain
could be like studied. It's ridiculous. He's,
he's, he's LeBron
James, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson.
I'd move him more toward a problem
that was a problem for Shaq.
Is it fun to be you
when you play?
Shaq was, you know, I never
Shack was immensely frustrating
for me because I never felt like he was in shape
the way he should have been. I never understood the
free throws. It always felt like
there was more there, but he still ended up being one of
the best 15 ever. Yeah, do the Rick Barry. Come on.
Do the grandfather. Just figured out.
But I also think it would have been
incredibly unfun to be Shack.
for eight months a year playing basketball
when everybody's like, we can't stop you.
So we're allowed to do X, Yance, yeah.
The reps are going to be like, yeah, this isn't fair.
Do what you need to do.
Bang them in the back, pull his shoulders down.
And I honestly think with Yokic, it's becoming a little similar
where the way he's defended,
Wembe, we're starting to see it.
Like some of the stuff OKC was doing against him,
I just don't think is legal.
I don't, you should be able to.
You should be able to run to your spot
without somebody like pushing back,
like they have a blocking sled.
It's because he's 7-7.
They let it go.
I've had a big problem with the officiating all series.
I feel like they officiated it straight up and down at San Antonio
and gave the thunder the whistles in OKC.
I agree.
And like it is so,
it's already,
there's already a rule on the books about it's a non-on sportsman like tech if you flop.
Come on, ref.
Everyone can see it on TV.
in real time with like
90%
90% accuracy
you know
maybe not every time
but like
and then go review it
afterwards
and where did I
someone maybe you said
this someone said
maybe Zach said it
I had a flopping
flopping points
that's what I want
to do that you review it after
oh yeah you did
but I really think just
it's a tech
it should two of them
and you should be suspended
a game
or like a yellow card
yeah like yellow card
and soccer
just like I didn't like
we did their yellow card
yeah one more of those
and you're out right
and then it would
stop and the product would get better.
And also, you're right,
any kind of guy who's seen as having an unstoppable physical advantage,
like Shaq or like,
I'm sure this happened to Wilt,
but I didn't see it.
It 100% happened to Wilt who started,
that's when he developed that awful turnaround he had.
He'd have this little spin,
because he didn't want to get fouled and he was tired of getting hit.
By the way, with Kareem, they were just like,
no, you can't dunk.
Right.
Yeah, and so,
you guys comes up in the sky.
Well, Kareem would be interesting now
because if you're allowed to do this stuff
in the 70s and 80s
that we can do now with shoving
a guy before he can get to his spot,
Mikhail would have been in trouble.
Hakeem would have been in trouble.
It's this new thing that I don't really know
why they've allowed it the way they've allowed it.
I hate it.
And it seems so fit.
So to legislate out tanking is difficult.
And I don't know.
They're trying to address it.
I don't know if they did successfully.
We'll see empirically whether it works or it helps.
But this is like,
There's a problem.
The fans don't like what's happening.
There are like a million easy solutions,
and they just refuse to do them.
Right.
All right.
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Not as much fun to watch game to gaming it.
The sons were playing a lot like some of the style that we have now,
fast-breaking, freewheeling, unselfish.
So when I think about 2000s, I think about them.
I think about the 2008 Celtics win in the title, obviously.
the piston shocking the Lakers
and then those three straight
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three titles that I still have trouble
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All right, Max, it's education time.
Okay.
we need to, I have a nice big picture of Settle Down Juice for everybody.
It just happened. It just happened. This is the moment we became old, right? Like, it just happened.
But we used to do this when we were younger and we were kids where you just think what you're seeing recently has to be the greatest thing that ever happened.
A picture of settled down juice? A big picture of settled down juice. Did this happen in your house? Was this an
expression in your house.
Bill, if you don't pipe down,
you're going to have a big picture,
big helping glass with ice cubes.
Jalen Brunson,
Jalen Brunson, there's two separate things
happening right now. There's two pass for him.
One is New York
immortality. And then
the other is, where do you rank in the greatest
Knicks? He's not
the greatest Nick yet, just because they made the finals.
Of course. I don't think
people, there's people out there that are
like he's the greatest nick they made the finals it has to so i want to go through some of the history
of the actual greatest nicks but let's move into the new york side who is can we can we can we
establish a criteria for greatness and before we do this yeah we i'm ready to do whatever you want
so let's i want to just establish a criteria for greatness would you want to do the new york side first or
the nix side first any way you want but like like let's establish like what we're i think part of
the problem is when kids it's not just recency bias
or, you know, you give a guy a book and he reads the book
and it's the only book he ever read
that's everything he knows, right?
Like, you know, it's something.
Yeah.
There's a conflation between better and greater, right?
And kids correctly, intuitively understand.
Everyone now is better than everyone before.
That is, kids, you're right about that.
Everyone now is better just about, more or less,
than everyone before.
It's the car's analogy.
If I had a 2006 Porsche,
it would drive better than in 1982.
Because you built that new platform on what came before.
You didn't just invent it from whole cloth.
You saw it.
You improved, you improved, you improved.
Okay.
If you, in the one sport that can be objectively measured, track and field,
you can put a stopwatch on Jesse Owens and the stopwatch on the 10th best sprinter in the world today
and know objectively that Jesse Owens is not as good as the 10th best sprint.
But that's, I don't think that's how, this is why I wrote my book.
I don't think that's how you can think about it.
think you have to measure greatness by how you compare it to everybody you were going.
Correct, because I'm talking about better.
Yeah.
And the conflation is between better and greater.
The reason it sounds ridiculous to say the 10th best sprinter in the world whose name you don't know is better than Jesse Owens is because, yeah, duh, no kidding.
That's not what we're talking about.
Does boxing work this way, though?
Yes, but there are influences in boxing, for example, the number of fights and stuff like that.
and the number of rounds, and the number of participants in this country,
that selected out for different characteristics once upon a time than it does nowadays.
You needed to be tougher.
You needed to be more resistant to cuts.
You needed to have a better chin.
You needed to, you know, like, there's more stamina.
But the point is that we are talking about greater everybody.
We're talking about how you did against your contemporaries.
Now, does it matter if you're playing in a league with eight to 12 teams as Bill Russell did?
do you discount him? Yes, you do. But then the court, do you discount Babe Ruth. I disagree on the 8 to 12.
But how much of a discount, even when you discount Bay Bruce gets a real discount because he was not
playing against any minorities, basically. And he was a black player on top of it. Yeah. Or Latin American
players, anybody. Right. He was played against nobody other than whites. But but no one who ever lived in
any league ever dominated that league nearly to the extent that Ruth dominated his league. So even with the
discount, he comes out number one. I think with Bill Russell's discount, he probably comes out
four, something like that. I would say Jordan, LeBron, Kareem, Bill Russell. If you want to
argue Bill Russell, it has to be those four in whatever order you want, but those have to be the
first four. I think Jordan has to be one, and then you can argue the, right, the next. I have
Jordan one as well. But that, okay, so that gets, so first of all, we're talking about great or not
better. Let's establish that first. And we're talking about, you do take discounts on the Babe
Bruce and the Bill Russell's. The question is, after the discount, where is there greatness?
Sometimes it's still number one. Sometimes it's no longer. Now the next thing. Are we mostly
valuing career or mostly valuing peak? When I got Bill James' historical baseball abstract,
volume two as a bar mitzvah president when I was 13 years old, it taught me comparative analysis,
really, in a new way. And the thing I loved he did is he separated it into two lists, peak versus
career. Sandy Kofax's peak or Nolan Ryan's career. How do you compare
Kofax and Ryan? If you just weigh their value, Nolan Ryan did a lot more. Is that really
what we mean, though? Or are we talking about, as long as they sustained their peak for a
reasonable amount of time, peak, I favor peak. I think that's what we're really talking about.
I had when I made the Earl Monroe trying to figure out where he ranked. Yeah. I called it the
Bill Walton Corollary. If a guy peaked for just two or three years is a truly great player,
that's more appealing than someone who never peaked at all.
That's the difference of Bernard King versus Ewing.
Okay, agreed.
Then the question is how close,
so we both value peak over career, right?
So Bill Wong peaks for a year and a half
and then as a six man on the 86 Celtics,
and that's it.
I still had him in the top 35 of my book.
Because his best year,
he was the best guy in the league and took it to Kareem.
I had a, this is not exactly the same thing,
but I had a producer, John Crystal,
at HBO. We talked about Roy Jones in his prime, and he said, I know what I saw. Right? Like,
you watched Bill Walton, I know what I saw. Well, what was that the Tony fight? What was that,
94? Yeah. And he beat him with one hand. No, he beat Hopkins with one hand. He beat Tony with both
hands. But so, so. Well, that's Aaron Pryor, too. Aaron Pryor's peak was absurd. So this is the
LeBron Jordan argument. If you just weigh their win totals, right, their win shares,
LeBron played twice as long. I don't think that's what we're talking about.
At least it's not what I'm talking about.
A good question is, okay, you can have one guy who played for 20 years, or you could have another guy who played for 13.
But the 13 years and the peak of the 13 years was better than the 20.
What would you rather want if you were starting a franchise?
Well, what kind of fan are you?
Are you the kind of guy who wants to be a powerhouse team for 20 years with no championships?
Or would you like to maybe not be a powerhouse team for 20 years, but you wind up with three,
four championships. I'll take the championships.
Like Bird was,
bird came in the league in October
79 and for
the next nine years
was either the best or the second best
player in the league every single year
and then was the best player three years in a row.
You were always in the finals or near
the finals with him. That's basically what Yoak
is doing now. No Burke really was and no one really
because their styles weren't the same. He
more than anyone
was the original Michael Jordan.
Right. Because their styles are so
different. And also racial, obvious, like, there are differences in the style of the play.
The one's a white guy. One's a black guy. The whole thing. And Berg was compared to magic.
And Dr. Jay seemed to be the guy who, like, Jordan was the evolution of. No. There was
Larry Bird who ran shit. And then there was Michael Jordan who ran shit. Like, that's, that's...
And honestly, I think Wemby's going to do that, too. It seems to me that that's the case.
I just feel like he's, especially when you think this is probably the worst, he's going to be over the
next seven years, unless he gets injured.
it just feels like the way,
when you're impacting every part of a game,
that's kind of the last level.
I do feel like LeBron got there when he was on Miami.
No doubt.
Unquestionably.
The closest I've ever seen in terms of value of a player
to a prime Michael Jordan,
like the one who made me think,
hmm, that's getting close,
was years two and three in Miami.
The 20s, I really, I've talked about this before.
I love the 27 game winning streak.
In a way, like, I like that more than,
either title for them.
Because they started slow?
I just thought it was such a cool streak
because it was just so atypical
it was in the middle of the season.
It wasn't like the Warriors had that 24
or whatever they had to start.
I think when you start a season
with continuity, it's a little easier.
It's just the middle of the season when you're just
ripping off wins and you
get a bullseye in your head around 16
and you can't rest anyone and it's
the rhythm of the schedule you're playing
four and five nights. I don't think we're
going to see that again. That was LeBron
defending, defending.
Defending, not just switching on,
defending all five positions.
You could put LeBron on all five positions
on the defense event. He knew exactly
where his spots were on the floor.
He's a basketball genius.
He was when, but like you,
that's an unsustainable style of play
for your whole career, I think, right?
I think, but you could do that for two or three years.
I had this thing, the wine bottle team
where it's like pick a greatest team, but you have to
pick the vintage year of what,
what bottle of line you'd want to order
from that player's career
2013 is the LeBron year.
Clearly.
You could put that version of him
on any team with any teammates
and he would just be the most additive player possible.
Right. No player ever
could take a lower level group of guys
farther than that LeBron James.
Or fit in with a better group of, like,
to me it's like...
With other All-Stars.
Because you always think about like who are the best guys
you could just put together.
and you kind of have to have LeBron, Bird, Magic, and Jordan
on that foursome and then just pick the fifth?
I love Magic Johnson. I love Magic Johnson.
You would just worry about the defense? No.
The shooting, because to play in any error...
I know, but all the shooting better, the shooting would get better.
I would put LeBron at point. I'd have LeBron run the point, Jordan at the two.
I probably wind up putting Bird at the four and Hakeem at the five,
and then maybe KD at the three, because he doesn't need to really
he just kind of gets in the flow.
He can defend.
He's tall.
You know, if I'm trying to win.
Duncan would be in the conversation for me.
Right.
Duncan or, but not over Byrd because I want the shooting.
No, but if you just gave me Duncan, Bird, LeBron, Jordan, and Magic, I'm pretty confident.
The thing about Duncan is, Hakeem needs the ball a little more, number one.
And Duncan, for more of his career, was a better pastor.
Hakeem wasn't a good pastor till later.
The problem with Hakeem is, because I've done this before, and every time I take
Duncan, someone's like,
Hakeem. And I'm thinking, yeah,
he just made my team a little bit better. He's just like,
by the time, Hakeem, if we're talking prime, not
just career. Yeah, the two-way stuff with him
was nuts. I just feel like the O3
Duncan gets slept on.
Like, he basically beats the Lakers by himself.
He was unbelievable. He was, you know what Jim
Lampley told me? Just crushing everybody.
That if you want to know who
Bill Russell was, he's
Duncan, but not as good as shooter.
And I never saw
Russell play or Wilts.
play. So I was like, oh, okay, I get it. That's pretty damn good. Well, that's another thing with
Wembe because I think Duncan had it. Everyone said Curry had it. And it feels like,
it feels like Wembe has it too of this culture they create, like the leadership. And I always
called it with Duncan. It was always the arms around the shoulders. There's certain leaders where they're
just, they're constantly touching their teammates and they're just very inclusive and
they're like dead mothers almost. And he has that already at age 22. All right.
He's a serial killer.
You realize that, right?
No one's this perfect.
No one, like, like, when you say he's a serial killer,
like he kind of is as a competitor.
I do think he has that side of like,
I think he wants to destroy everybody.
Look what he did to chat.
Yeah.
But I mean, like, Wemby is so perfect in terms of what he's doing,
how he's preparing himself, how he's going after it,
how he's using his talents, the whole thing,
that it's like there must be something really wrong with this guy
that I don't know about yet because he's perfect.
Well, when was the last time you saw somebody celebrate like he did after they won game seven
where you felt like it was completely authentic?
Jordan after he won the first championship, maybe?
Right.
Because this is one of the things that's been terrible with tennis.
And I don't know who started, maybe it was Agassi, but it was like you win and then you just sink to the ground.
You have to do that whole thing.
And now it's like this whole performative thing and you never...
Because people are self-conscious.
Like everyone, even that...
Web is not self-consum.
conscious at all, I don't feel like. He's not. He knows like he, yeah, he's, he's, there's nothing
not to love about this guy. That's why I'm suspicious. No one's this perfect. Okay, so greatest
snakes. So we've established the peak versus, um, sustained career. But we're also, we,
about the greatness has to be when you're comparing to the other people in your era.
But, but we should take a slight discount if you get past a certain, like, I'd say modern
NBA starts obviously absorption of the ABA team's three point shot, right?
So you want to say 7980, you want to say 76, 70.
You could pick.
I'd say 7980 is the start of the modern era.
That's fair.
But I had when I did my book, which was 09, did the paper back in 2010,
Willis was the highest Nick I had at number 30.
I now have him 38.
But Willis was two-time finals MVP, 70 MVP.
Went like the one of the things that one of the guys-
He was two-time finals MVP, but.
But Fraser should have been the 71.
It's fine.
one of the things I value with him,
he's,
his prime is right against all these great centers.
He's against Kareem coming in the league.
He's against Will.
And he's going head to head with all these dudes
for a couple of years there.
I'm not saying,
I'm not saying that he's like this player.
I'm saying the position he occupies
and the way history has recorded him unfairly
in terms of where he's ranked
is similar to Moses Malone.
Moses Malone.
Yeah, Moses higher.
Right.
But Moses Malone was the best.
Like, we talk about Larry Bird, how amazing he was in the very beginning.
Best player in the game was not Kareem or Larry Bird back then.
For like five years, Moses is the best guy.
At least two or three.
He's among the two or three best for five years.
And at least two or three years, you're like, that's the best player in the game.
Yeah.
And like kind of the guy you want, even though, yeah, Kareem is better.
We get it.
But kind of the guy you want.
Willis Reed was sort of that.
So he was also the biggest and fourth.
or that error, which you need.
And then the game seven,
playing with that injury he had is one of the,
I did a whole thing in my book about it.
I had him when I did my book,
when I did all the work,
I thought he was the greatest Nick
because of the titles.
More than Clyde?
I would play.
I'd clad right after him.
I'd clad at 32.
I would flip that,
but you're a few,
like you're enough years old.
I'm 53 in August.
Okay, all right.
But you're still a little closer to it.
You know,
I have this theory that the weakest knowledge base that one has in terms of history is the
era that occurred in the 20 years before, 10 years right before they were born.
Because that's not history yet.
So people assume in the world, the world just assumes you know all this, that everyone knows
this, but you don't know it.
You didn't live through it.
So like the 70, I was born in 73.
That Knicks era is kind of my weakest era of sports history in a way.
I had, I saw Clyde probably last couple years in the Knicks and then when he was on Cleveland.
But I did have my dad who went to all these games.
My dad, my dad, listen to this.
This is embarrassing for me.
My dad used to root for the Celtics when they had Bird and McHale and Dennis Johnson and Robert Parrish and age.
And I was to be like, I hated the Celtics.
And I was like, what are you doing?
He'd just be watching TV.
He didn't go to the games.
He just watched.
He'd say, they'd say, they remind me.
me of the Knicks. The way
they play reminds me of that Knicks
dynasty. And that was over.
It wasn't coming back. And the closest
thing he could get to it was watching
the Celtics. So my dad
had Jordan and
Frazier. This is in 2010
as his all-time backcourt.
And he said,
Frazier killed us. He was an assassin.
You didn't want any part of him in a big game. He was
always been the best guy in the court. I've never been
happier to see anyone retire.
Isn't it amazing?
Like when you think about if he's just gone now, like people just know him as the announcer.
And also, there's so many things about what?
First of all, his style was so flashy off the court.
Yeah.
Right.
He was him and Joe Namath, right?
But on the court, he was textbook by that, by the standards of that era.
He was one of the best big game guards ever.
He was the best defensive guard in the league.
For the first 35, 40 years of the league.
And then game seven, 75.
finals, Willis comes out and he's done after a minute.
35, 7.
36, 19, and 7, and 5 steals and took it to Jerry West.
To Jerry West.
And Willett was playing.
So whether you want to go Willis or Walt,
they're right next to each other,
I had Willis slightly hedges because center was more important,
but Fraser's fine, but those are the top.
That's interesting.
Like, now guard play is so important or back court is so important.
Back then center, you had to have a center.
You had to have a big.
But I just feel like,
it's like Magic Johnson,
I guess La Cereem is greater than Magic,
I get it,
but Clyde Fraser did in game seven
against the Lakers
in a more unlikely situation,
what Magic did in game six
against Philadelphia,
right?
Like you look at those,
even the lines are similar,
42, 15, and 7 versus 36, 19,
7 and 5,
whatever it is,
both guards missing their big,
the iconic guy and the big,
and I guess,
I guess you're right.
Kareem is ahead of magic a little bit.
Maybe Willis reads ahead of Walt.
It's definitely an argument.
I had, I wrote about this in my book.
So they had Game 7 in the 1973 Eastern Conference final, Celtics, Nix.
Have a check separates his shoulder halfway through.
It's the best of all the Celtic teams, even though they won in 74 and 76.
Everyone says 73 team is the best team.
Havichick gets hurt.
Celtics still have game seven at home to win.
And Frazier just murders them in the second half.
but the NBA had, this is crazy,
they don't have the game.
Because there would just be games
that would just,
it just don't exist.
But they had a game
with no audio.
And they sent me the game
for when I was doing my book.
Was it just a DVD
of the game with no audio?
Home movie or something?
Yeah, it's like a home movie.
That's the only way
I've seen Sugar Ray Robinson
fight it well to make home movies.
And it's just Fraser coming down,
backing down whoever to like
18 feet away and just hitting jumpers.
And it's the whole second half in silence.
I was just like, oh my God.
So, anyway, Brunson, so Frazier was...
By the way, isn't it amazing how you, like,
your dad puts Frazier in the back court with MJ?
Like, not even blinking.
Right.
When you are, if someone says who's the most clutch player I've seen,
it's always going to be the guy on the other team who killed my team, right?
Like, you can't tell me, if I'm making my all-time baseball team,
George Brett is playing third base.
George Brett, I don't care who you tell me whoever you want.
I'm taking George Brett at third base.
The D.H is David Ortiz.
These guys killed me.
So, like, those are the guys I want on my team.
Well, I had, I wrote, this is what I wrote in 2010,
and I'm interested to see who you would add to this list.
In my basketball watching lifetime,
only seven guys were crowd killers.
Jordan, Bird, Kobe, Bernard, Isaiah,
Andrew Tony, and strangely enough, Vinnie Johnson.
And those are my seven in 2010.
Who would you add to the?
the crowd killer list since then.
That's a great question.
Because I don't think LeBron always had it,
but he could summon it every once in a while,
but I don't think it was...
It's usually going to be a shooter.
It's usually a shooter who's like, oh, fuck.
I feel like SGA is right on the border of having it,
but hasn't really crossed over yet.
But the funny thing, the reason I bring this up is,
I think Brunson's on this list.
I was...
The closest thing today, I think, is Brunson.
It's Brunson.
Right?
And I think Durant would be another one on paper,
but I don't know if I put him on this list.
It's a guy who you know rises to the occasion.
And Durant didn't always have it.
And also like a guy who rises to the occasion,
but physically, well, how can, why is it him,
why he's rising to the occasion?
You know, like Durant's seven feet tall.
So I think Brunson's on that list.
I think so.
But anyway, the point is you've somebody like Frazier,
who was first team All-MBA four times.
Second team All-M-B-B-A twice
was all defense basically from,
they created the award in the late 60s.
He was all defense for the rest of the time.
I'd have him won in Willis-Reed, too,
but okay, those two are the top two.
So Brunson wins the title.
Yeah.
They win the title.
He beats San Antonio as a two-to-one underdog.
Would you have him ahead of those two guys?
No, not.
But he'd be third.
He'd be, he'd unquestionably be third.
He'd be third.
One chip, third.
Those guys won two.
And also when you mention all NBA,
back then you're not talking about first, second, third team.
You mean like, he's one of the two best guards in the league.
And by the way, he's contemporaries with the logo.
Right.
That's the other best guard in the league every, like, you know, that's the level he's on.
And the one thing I will say is that in a league where two thirds of the team are still playing,
When the season is over.
Yeah, right?
There's no point in a regular season award.
The only season that matters is the very long and very high leverage playoffs, right, postseason.
And when you say a guy, and this is like the Jimmy Butler rule for me, when every year you're like, when the playoffs start, you're like, you know, Jimmy Butler is one of the top five guys in the playoffs.
What you're really saying is Jimmy Butler is one of the top five guys in the NBA.
Right. That's really what that means. So Brunson is not first team all NBA, but he is first team all NBA. At least this year. But if you ask any basketball fan, who would you rather have in the playoffs going forward? He wouldn't be one of the first three picks, but he might be four or five. But when you look back at it and see what actually happens, it may be that we say, well, that's how we felt at the time. But in fact, he was the number one guy. You'd want, like,
I did this on the show the other day.
How many guys in the NBA are you taking over Brunson right now,
heading into a series?
Who do you want over Brunson?
Brunson or SGA?
They both, the SGA's taller.
I'd rather have SGA.
SGA's taller.
He's a much better defender.
I would rather have Brunson.
I would rather, like, this is not, oh, it's Nick's box.
Brunson could flip that for me in this series.
Sure.
I think SGA, like he won the title last year.
He won good just now.
I mean, he wasn't awful, but he won that good in this series.
He wasn't.
You know, and the different, and when we talk about like,
I thought he was awesome in game seven, even though he died in the fourth quarter.
But I think he died because, yeah, he kept them.
I just thought what he was doing that game was sick.
He, the difference between SGA and I'll say James Harden too.
Yeah.
And let's say MJ or Kobe when they are looking, like when they get the whistle is the priority for
MJ and Kobe were hit the shot.
And if I get the whistle, fine.
the priority for Hardin and to a lesser extent, SGA, is the whistle.
And if I hit the shot, fine.
And it's not the same thing.
Brunson, second team all-inbae three times in a row, three-year peak of 27 and seven,
four-year playoff peak, counting this year, 29 points a game, four rebound, seven assists, 46% field goal.
29 for four playoff years is really good.
I mean, that's, so the case for him now is best part in a finals team, which I value.
I have to do my pyramid at the end of the year.
I always redo it every year.
After the playoffs?
Yeah, he's sniffing around now in the top hundred because of the peak.
I mean, he'd have to do it for a couple more years.
But this is, this is pretty special.
There's also something about winning a championship for a franchise that hasn't for 53 years.
But that's where you get the Wilton, I mean, the Willis and Walt, that's why you're
have to value those because of what that team
meant to the city and Patrick Ewing,
I have third. I had him
40th in the book now. Because Brunson
hasn't won a title yet. Now I have him 47.
Yeah. I mean, Ewing was
top five once, top ten,
six times playing during an era
with Hakeem and
and Shaq and
David Robinson. David
Robinson was better, I get it. I also felt
like Ewing maybe had the
edge in that matchup when they played each other,
just experiencing those games. I thought
it was close, but maybe Ewing had the edge.
Obviously not against Olajuwon or Shaq,
but who could against Olajuwon or Shaq?
The 94 finals is tough for him.
If you're talking about Ewing, big picture,
where he ranks, like, he just got his ass kicked against the team.
He was 18.9 points a game, 36% in that series, seven game.
They just needed him to be better, and it came down to, like, you know, a couple of players.
He was very good defensively.
Like, people forget, he was, he had like some, like, six blocks
in one of those games.
Just the offense never...
He had the best...
He had a guy who's in the conversation
for greatest defensive player of all time
on him.
On his...
It is best.
Like, that's the best Elajuwon ever played.
But it's a good example of like,
if he flips that,
and they actually win game six or game seven,
and he wins the title,
then Ewing's the best thing of all time.
Well, how about this?
Elajuan doesn't get his fingertips
in game six on Stark's three.
Yeah, but you think that shot was going in?
I don't know.
I have no idea.
Like, Elijah, I blocked it.
My theory of that 94 Knicks team was always,
you didn't win the title
because the ball was in John Stark's hands
in the biggest moments of games for you,
and that's the reason you weren't a champion.
But the bigger issue is John Starks is a sixth man
pressed into action
because they didn't really have an all-star caliber score.
Because you didn't have the...
Doc Rivers.
You didn't have the...
Didn't he tear his ACL that year?
Or is it Blackman?
One of the years was Rivers.
That was Blackman.
Harper.
Harper. That was Derek Harper.
What was the year?
Rivers was pre-Harper.
But Doc told me this whole story about how he was hurt.
And then they could have put him on the playoff roster and they didn't.
But Doc was post-prime at that point.
But how he gets to the next?
He's a good point card for the niche.
No, they were in, they only had one All-Star scorer.
Yeah.
Like John Starks was an All-Star Sixth Man type.
He's like a, he starred in the role of sixth-man.
He should not have been the starting shooting guard.
He had to be because the Knicks didn't have Reggie Miller or Allen Houston at that point, right?
Yeah. If they have that guy, they probably win that series.
They didn't have that guy.
That was the flaw of the team.
That's why I said this starting five is this last year.
Best starting five, starting five of my lifetime watching the Knicks.
There's, in other words, there's no, all the players are at least league average.
and you have a couple of all-stars,
and you have a guy who's the next thing to an all-star,
and multiple players have an offensive game.
So I have Willis 1A and Frazier 1B,
U-B, U-NK3, the Bisher 4,
Bernard 5.
The busher over Bernard?
Because the Bernard, he just wasn't on the Knicks long enough.
I mean, and his peak,
where he's the second best player in the league,
the Piston Series,
taking the Celtics toe-to-to-to-for-seven,
which was an awesome Celtics team
with multiple guys to throw out of them
and didn't matter.
But the peak was...
Here's where you're going to...
Here's the DeBusher case, though.
Okay.
Best defensive forward of his whole generation.
Born too early.
Three-point shooter, but they didn't have a three-point line.
So if you put him in a different error,
it's actually more interesting.
But everyone was just like,
this guy was just the all-time winning player
to throw on your team.
And so it's tough.
because I love, as you know, I love Bernard more than anybody, but I just don't think it was a long enough thing to put him ahead of DeBuscher.
Here's the thing that you'll run into with the DeBusia pick.
It was a different league.
It's pre-modern basketball in the sense that it predate, as you say, there's no three-point shot.
And Carmelo Anthony was on the Knicks long enough at a point where he was still among the 10 best players in the league.
I don't know that the Busha was ever considered
one of the 10 best players in the league.
Like, is he the role on that...
He made one All-MBA top 10,
6 to 9, all defense six times.
Right.
Third best player on two title teams.
Yeah.
He's kind of of of that team,
the O.G. Ananobee,
who you love having on your team,
but I don't know that 50 years from now
will have O.G. Anobey ranked fourth on the all-time league list.
So I had the Busher 46th in my book,
re-ranked to 57.
You love DeBusher.
I mean, my dad loves DeBusher.
That's the thing.
I was really riding with what the old guys were telling me,
and DeBusher was the guy over and over again that they talked about, like, reverentially.
You got to listen to that.
By the way, one day, years from now, someone will look at Draymond Green and be like,
right?
But Draymond Green changed basketball.
Right.
The Carmelow thing, I think, has been overblown, and you can pick it apart pretty easily.
I would not have him in the top five.
I think we have to make allowances for Carmelow and for Kobe who tend to get underrate.
They're overrated by some and underrated by others because the game changed from underneath their feet.
The ground was moving.
And because they were featured offensive scorers, the analytics will tend to underrate them.
You know, they didn't like Carmelho didn't.
evolve his game the way Vince Carter did, let's say.
Not that there's a same kind of player,
but Vince Carter evolved with the league and had a 20-year career.
And Carmelo didn't.
But the analytics are going to underrate Carmelo
because the game changed out from underneath his feet.
He just never had the one run.
The closest was 09 against when they made the conference finals.
He wasn't on the right team.
Well, part of that was his fault, though.
I got to ding him on that.
Like, he could have waited a sign with the Knicks,
and instead he made them trade a whole bunch of shit for him
and goes to a team and then he has no help
and it's like, I don't have any help.
It's like, yeah, because you forced them to trade
all these dudes to get you and you could have waited.
Well, by the way, Dolan didn't need to intervene.
Donnie Walsh was going to get him for a lot less, you know?
But like the argument that convinced me about Carmelo
is what if Detroit just has a normal draft
and drafts Carmelo Anthony?
What are we saying about them now?
I know it didn't happen.
I know.
But nothing had to change about the kind of
player he was, he just needed to be in another situation. How many times is Carmelo all NBA?
I have that. I was a big Carmelo defender because I always felt like the best thing about him
was that he thought he was as good as LeBron and Wade and Kobe. So if I had that in a series,
at least I know I'm going to war with somebody who's like, I'm as good as whether it's true or not,
he believed it. He was as he was as good as like back end of the career Kobe, like the more kind
post-up game Kobe. Carmelo was as good as that.
Carmelo, two second-team Ombias,
three, four third teams.
Seven times one of the, yeah, it's pretty good.
He wasn't a defender, you know?
I thought in maybe 2013, he was the third best part in the week.
Right.
It was him and Durant and LeBron.
And LeBron and Durant were above him.
He just had a game that was tailored to the previous era.
Like, you don't have to go back.
three errors.
Just go back one half an error.
They're two-two in that Nuggett series.
Nuggets Lakers in 09, right?
Sears tied it two.
He's playing really well in the playoffs.
And then last two games, whatever.
And then the Indiana, which everybody blames on Tyson Chandler.
But Carmelo was in that series, too.
He just kind of never had the moment.
I agree.
I don't know.
I'm just saying, like,
DeBuscha over Carmelo is, you can argue it.
I don't know if you win the argument.
I don't know if you win that argument.
But by the way, the Knicks fans, like, who actually lived through the DeBuscha era will agree with you.
Yeah, I really trusted the old guys because I wasn't.
It was what we talked about earlier.
And there were a couple guys that they were just fanatical about.
DeBuscher was one of them.
Like, we're talking about greatest Nix.
If you say greatest players, hard to argue DeBuscia over Carmel.
But greatest Nix, you could argue DeBusia over Carmel.
Yeah.
I got to say, like, I don't 100% understand the romantic.
with Carmelo and the Knicks.
Like, was that an incredibly fun time that I missed?
Like, even Linsanity was probably the most fun part of the entire Carmelo experience.
And he drove Jeremy Lynn out of New York.
I was defending Carmelo to Knicks fans that whole time, like, oh, when Carmelo gets back,
he's going to stop the ball.
I'm like, no, Carmelo's a winning player.
Listen, I was hearing about T.J. Ford all that year.
And I saw Carmelo Anthony play for Syracuse once, and I said, they're going to win the championship.
That guy's the best player in the country.
Not close, Carmelo Anthony.
And they did.
So I thought of him as a winner.
I mean, he had a little McNamara and like winning players on that team.
And then he doesn't get drafted by Detroit where he probably would have won multiple championships.
And then when, but like, so I'm like, no, he's not going to stop the ball.
He did.
And he did drive Jeremy Lynn away.
In the end, though, was Jeremy Lynn going to win you a championship?
Yeah.
He was not.
The Denver stuff isn't great either when you go back and there's just a lot of first round exits.
and, you know, he basically until the 09 finals,
that's like his six year in the league,
and then round two, just not enough success.
Carmelo was unlucky and then was a victim of his own hubris later on.
And made the mistake, which the other guys didn't do,
of signing the longer contract in 2006.
Oh, believe me.
And those guys all had the outs, but he didn't.
He was stuck with the Knicks for that extra year.
Well, the second part of this conversation is the keys to the city conversation.
All right.
Guys who just minted in New York, Nameth, Jeter.
In order?
No, no order.
Namath Jeter, Eli.
Reggie Jackson?
Yeah, he is.
There's a butt with Reggie, though.
What is it?
Thurman Munson.
Well, I had Munson next.
So beloved that the fact that Munson couldn't stand Reggie because of what Reggie said early on,
Yeah. Even though it's not, he didn't need to make it about Munson.
Reggie showed up with a baseball bat after the Yankees had been swept in the World Series by the big red machine and said, no one will ever embarrass the Yankees again as long as I'm holding this in my hand.
Yeah.
And then hit five home runs, three of them in a rowing the deciding game six.
Then they gave him the candy bar because he had said the thing, you know,
But baby Ruth, he thought it was after Babe Ruth.
And it was actually after Teddy Roosevelt's kid, baby Ruth, right, Ruth, his daughter.
But everyone thought it was named after Babe Ruth.
So he said, if I ever play in New York, then named a candy bar after me.
So after no one did embarrass the Yankees with the bat in Reggie's hand, they gave him the Reggie bar.
And on opening day at Yankee Stadium, 78, after they won the championship, he hit a home run.
They had given out Reggie bars.
and everyone threw the empty rappers on the field like confetti.
Like, I know Bill James and others will argue
that it's either very difficult
or maybe clutch hitting doesn't exist.
Look at Reggie Jackson's record in the World Series.
It's a big sample size.
It's a big sample size.
Because how do you explain Ortiz then?
Right.
Did you think Ortiz was getting hit against you
when Ortiz came up?
You did.
Every time.
He's still getting a hit somewhere.
I have Reggie and Thurman.
I have Mariano.
But there's,
There's a distaste that as much as people love Reggie.
Unlike everyone else, you just mentioned, there's an undercurrent of because of Munson.
Not with Mariano.
Mariano, come on.
And I think Messia is there.
No question, Messier is there.
Is there a Met?
I mean, I would say Tom Siever once upon a time, probably.
You know, he's not around, but.
Seber was the one I had.
I didn't know if you'd want to, there was an 86 met.
I'm trying to think of who the 86 met is.
I thought like Hernandez was like close.
That's the Gary Carter.
Close.
And by the way.
Not on that, not on the level of the guys we just ripped off.
You know what the real is?
Here are the two guys from that.
Gooden and Strawberry.
Gooden and Strawberry.
Yeah.
Gooden and Strawberry were the biggest stars in New York at the time.
Would you have any other Yankees from that 96 to 2000 run other than Jeter and Mariana?
Well, I mean, I have a personal.
favorite. No, but for the city. This is the exercise. Paul O'Neill. Paul O'Neill got the keys to the city.
Paul O'Neill is beloved in New York. Okay. And then the other guy who people have a love for in New York,
like other people outside New York, don't understand, is Bernie Williams. Bernie Williams
on my all-time clutch team, remember, if your all-time clutch team, a lot of times it didn't play for
your team.
But like, if I was the fan of another team in that whole era, in fact, of everyone in
baseball in that era, the last guy I'd want to see come up of everyone in any situation in
the clutch would be Bernie Williams because he was a switch hitter.
He was patient.
He was clutch.
Look what he did in the playoffs.
He was calm.
He was calm.
He always wasted the good pitches.
I hated Bernie Williams.
He had plus power.
He would hit 300 plus every year.
like, and he's a switch hitter. He always had the matchup. So Bernie, I would say Bernie.
For me, it's Bernie and for the people I know it's Bernie. Hard for me to talk for all of New York
there, but he's up there. Jalen Brunson wins this thing. Forget it. Reed and Fraser would be
the two Knicks. So many young people don't understand, like, the reason that, right, Brunson is
going to be the greatest of all time is because they don't. One of the most treasured memories I have in my
life is bumping into Clyde Frazier downstairs the day of the decision.
Yeah.
And having breakfast with him at this little place across the street from Madison Square Garden.
And while we're lamenting the state of the Knicks and the fact that all I can think about is
having breakfast with Clyde Frazier on the day that LeBron like, this is the Knicks that goes to Miami.
Oh my, I'll tell my grandkids about this.
But I don't think a lot of younger fans in New York care.
I think there's for a specific generation Bernard is on that list,
but it's only like,
it's an age window of like 15 years.
Yeah.
But Bernard in 84 and then the first part of 85 was like,
Go watch.
I was,
I love Bernard.
She's got to have it, right?
Like, you know, he's arguing Bernard King,
Spike Lee,
in she's got to have it,
is arguing Bernard King over Larry Bird.
That's who we had in New York at the time.
Yeah.
So Brunson has a chance to elevate to that level.
No other Knicks from this team.
Oh, I'll tell you another guy with the keys to the city.
Who?
Don Mattingly has the keys to the city.
Without the title.
Without the title.
Don Mattingly is...
The hit man?
He is so beloved in New York.
Like, between Jeter and Mickey Mantle,
he was probably the most universally loved Yankee,
and that includes Reggie and Thurman,
even though those guys won World Series, and he didn't.
And Lawrence Taylor, just because he was the best ever, right?
Like, Lawrence Taylor.
is you...
LT's a good one.
You can't tell anyone in New York
anything about Lawrence Taylor.
He's the best defensive part I've ever seen.
Best player, yeah, best defensive player of all time.
I think he might be the best football player
I've ever seen.
Yeah, probably.
Like, if we're doing...
If we're doing a draft
to try to...
Him and Jerry Rice
and even Brady,
like, I'll divorce myself as a Pat's fan,
but just, like, got non-patriots.
Jerry Rice and Taylor were the two best parts
I ever saw.
The thing about Brady is, if we're choosing up an all-time, let's draft an all-time team, right?
Yeah.
If you take Brady, I'll take Montana.
I'm good.
Right.
The two players, I don't think.
There's no drop off of L-T to the next guy.
It's L-T.
and the other guy for me is Dion Sanders.
If we're strategically, like, if we're drafting short stops and catchers because there's
going to be a run on them, like there's no, I know the advanced metrics like other guys
better than Dion Sanders, but I know what I saw.
Like, I don't think there's anyone close to Dion at his position.
I don't think there's anyone, you can't approximate that.
You know, you want to take Reggie White, I'll take Bruce Smith, or I'll take, you know, I'll take, I can, I can take Aaron Donald if I just want a guy on the defensive line.
If you want to take Jerry Rice, I could take Randy Moss.
Yes, I would much rather have Jerry Rice, but Randy Moss is, you know, basically, you know, but I don't know what to do.
If you take Lawrence Taylor, I'm like, well, you're looking into Derek Thomas, like, you're already over there.
Outside linebacker who can drop into coverage, like forget about the pass rushing.
John Hannah's like that for guard.
Yeah.
It's like if I get John Hannah now, it's a huge drop-off.
That's true.
And by the way, that's the strategy.
You always go for like the scarcity at the position.
What should O KC do I had in my notes as well for you?
Zach and I talked about this for a while.
There's, I was thinking about this.
And I don't know if it's the time we live in now.
We have to overreact to whatever happens at all times, right?
And how if that had been the case in the 80s,
like the,
with the Lakers have traded magic after the 84 finals.
After tragic Johnson?
Yeah.
Especially when he wanted to trade.
The Pistons, when Isaiah, the bird steals the ball,
and they blow it in game seven.
It's like, what do the pistons do?
They got to blow it up.
They got to do this, that.
It's kind of the mentality we have.
The more I look at it, I think the move is just to ride it out.
You won the title last year.
You went against a crazy freak.
Without your second best player.
You didn't have your second best player.
You had a big bull's eye on you all year.
Just like, take a deep breath.
It's a marathon out of sprint.
It makes me think of what Riley said when he was trying to jet-eyed mind trick
right before LeBron left to go back to Cleveland.
And Riley had that press conference.
And he's like, winning's hard.
Only one team wins every year.
Like the hard part is now when you don't win.
And you stay together.
He's basically like sending this coded message to LeBron.
Well, Jordan ruins basketball that way.
Yeah.
The problem with the standard that Jordan set is he's the greatest of all time.
And people know that they're going to be compared against that.
And when you dig into the numbers, it says that Jordan is the greatest of all time.
And when you dig into the analytics, it says Jordan's the greatest of all time.
And when the analytics get more advanced, it furthers the argument that you remember real box plus minus uses
say LeBron had a slight edge over Michael Jordan.
As it's become more sophisticated,
Jordan now has the edge even in that stat,
like a kind of point guard stat over LeBron Jane.
So he set that bar.
How do you beat that?
Will you at least, like, he also never lost a championship, right?
He was six and oh and three-peated twice.
And the only times he ever lost
when he had another All-Star on his team,
even won, was the year he played baseball,
came back and didn't have his legs.
And the year Pippin got the migraine
against the piston. Otherwise, if you gave him an...
So, LeBron and everyone
is being measured against that and they're aware
of it. And if you look at the stats
and the advanced analytics and everything, like,
shit, not quite.
I got to get him in championships. But you could beat him on game,
and duration of career
is the way LeBron's trying to beat him now.
Well, I mean, like, you just do what you can.
Kobe was like, I'm going to do M.J. better than M.J.
And he took the number 24.
He should have taken the number
22 because he got super close, right?
But not quite.
So it ruined because like before MJ, you were allowed to lose championships.
Yeah.
And if people, and it's like it's, it's what Harold Bloom, the literary critic, wrote about
Shakespeare, about how there's an anxiety.
And stop me if I've done this with you before, because this is from my greatest hit volume
three.
But it's, it's, it's, every writer since Shakespeare, because writers, great writers are
always aware of what came before them. And in fact, they're kind of having a dialogue with what's
come before them, right? And so, or they're involved in this dialectic as time goes on. And they,
and every writer understands that Shakespeare covered it all. There's nothing new you can do.
So you have this anxiety of influence. And that's Michael Jordan. He has created an anxiety of
influence in basketball that has warped the way we think about basketball. In terms of
Chet Holmgren, he has shown that at this point, he is at best, the third best player on a championship team.
But he's very young.
He ran into a guy who may replace Jordan one day as the goat, if he can stay healthy, maybe.
And he can grow from this.
And I compared it to, oh, Warriors fans mad at me right now.
But I just mean in this way.
When LeBron blocked Steph in game six and screamed on him and Steph kind of hung his head,
in 2016, I was thinking, oh, I mean, not in retrospect.
At the time, I'm thinking, that's not how you react to that, right?
Like, he knows he's better than you.
You know that too.
And then in game seven, yeah, I know Steph was hurt.
I know he was tired.
Everyone's tired.
You know, it's game seven, 73 wins at home, fourth quarter, five and a half minutes left.
You can't score a point.
You can't set up a teammate to score a point.
You're throwing the ball out of bounds behind your back.
and you lose like that at home to LeBron James,
he told you he was better than you and you believed him.
There's something about that.
I believe that.
And Wembe did that to Chet.
He's been prepping it this whole time.
At every instance, I own you.
Now, Steph, I think, consistently underperformed in the finals earlier in his career.
In 15 and 16, I looked and I thought this is not the same guy as the regular season.
It's slightly worse.
Different, you've seen a guy every day for two weeks.
Okay.
You can start to shift stuff against them.
Sure.
I took them a while to unlock that.
They shifted against Jordan.
They shifted against Larry Bird.
But in 22, he answered that one.
Even before then, I started to see him turn the corner against Kauai.
I saw him win games where it looked like, okay, Kauai is telling everyone, I'm the best player in this series.
Look at this, look at this.
And Steph answered him right back and won a couple games at home.
And then by 22, he's the best player on it.
In other words, he got where I wanted to see him get.
Truly as the best player in the world.
The Duran thing kind of screwed it up to in this way.
I kind of wish Duran had just gone somewhere else.
Even though that 17 Warriors was the most fun or the most successful team we probably had since 01.
But I thought that Rob Curry of like his Rocky 3 moment.
If you know, coming off the 16 finals.
Coming back and beating Clubberlank.
Yeah.
But yes, maybe, maybe.
But the fact is this is how it happened.
But my point is, Steph matured and figured it out, in my opinion.
And so I wouldn't-
Yeah, I got to push back slightly in the block.
I remember the moment.
I just, I don't, I just don't think Steph,
I think that team was banged up and tired from going for that 73 wins
from winning the year before.
I just thought they were running on fumes.
You watch those games and it doesn't even, looks like a,
like, Draymond has 35.
five in game seven and they still lose.
He was going to be the MVP of the series.
They were going to lose that game by 20 points if he doesn't do that.
I saw, yeah, I saw that moment.
Maybe you're right.
Because I thought the key to me with that series is game four,
Cleveland brought it.
That's an awesome game that's been lost in NBA history,
and Golden State won the game.
And at the tail end of it, Traymond got punched in the balls.
But I think Golden State was going to win that series of five.
I, well, I think that's LeBron goading.
like he knows this guy
one more tech and he's out. He won't admit that he did it.
I know. But I don't know why. It's to his credit that he did it.
It's super smart. It's like Muhammad Ali level psychology.
He should say like, yeah, I knew maybe I could get to Jemann the game was over.
But I would say this.
But that's like the John Stark's 94, the Achilles seal of that Warriors team was Drayman's.
100%.
When you have that kind of Dennis Robben type, what side of the line is he going to be on?
And if you, he fished and he got it.
But I'll say this about your pushback.
it could be that I'm confusing correlation with causation.
Like, for example, if I saw a dark cloud and thought, oh, there's going to be an earthquake,
and then there was an earthquake, the cloud didn't cause it.
But hard to tell me when I, when my, you know, my great-grandfather told whatever it was,
that this in my family, we always knew if there's a dark cloud, it's going to be, hard to tell me that that's not the case if it happens, right?
Whatever, it's a bad example, but you get the idea.
Yeah.
when I saw that moment, I thought, uh-oh.
Right.
That's my reaction to it.
And then so that I linked it to the last.
But Bill, it wasn't the last minute.
It wasn't the last two minutes.
They didn't score six points and the other team scored eight points with 522 to go.
I believe it was 522.
In the fourth quarter of a game seven at home.
they didn't score a single point.
So maybe you're right,
but hard to tell me that
because it's not like I looked back
and connected those two things. At the moment,
I'm like, what is this?
It's funny. It's such a fascinating game
because the Warriors, the Bogot injury happens,
and then Harrison Barnes
over the course of that series basically just dies
and becomes unplayable, right?
Unreal, couldn't hit anything.
If you go back and watch,
it's like an all-time game seven rock fight,
Curry doesn't really have his,
just doesn't seem like he has his mojo in the same way.
Tremont's keep in the minute.
And they have Azealia out there with like six minutes left.
Who was also not good, by the way.
Who, I don't think ever,
I'm pretty sure he never played another NBA game.
Yeah.
I'm almost positive that's true.
No, that was an all-time choke.
But they had to have Azealia out there.
He didn't know who to play.
He needed to buy somebody minutes.
And LeBron sniffed it out.
And the first time he got,
you've got it, Azili to fall into him for three free throws.
and the second time, Azale was afraid to come out and him hit the three.
I always felt like that was the game.
It's like, you have Festa ZZili out there with five minutes left in a game seven
because your team is this depleted or whatever.
I mean, and then also...
That was it.
And that, yeah, maybe...
Yeah, sure, sure.
I mean, obviously it takes...
I just think they ran out of guys as that series went along,
and, you know, they weren't that deep to begin with.
Fine.
Hit a shot.
You have five and a half minutes is the greatest...
Kevin Love Guarding Curry is the worst moment of Curry's career.
Hit a shot or or use your gravity to create a shot for a teammate.
Or try this.
Don't have an unforced turnover.
Like throwing the, value of possession.
But that is the only finals he ever lost.
Well, okay except the only reason they won in 15 is because LeBron's second best player
with Matthew Delavadova.
There is like we look, two years ago, last year the Pacers were better than the Knicks.
It was clear.
They're better in the Knicks.
two years ago, the Knicks were better than the Pacers,
but injury allowed the Pacers to win.
We all saw 2015.
That was injury.
You know, that was injury.
Now, we are in a time in the NBA,
and maybe it's always been like this, and I don't know.
And I'm not remember.
I don't chalk that up to an injury finals.
15?
No, I thought the words were good that year.
I think I would have figured it out.
So if you think the calves are good that year,
it's because they have LeBron James and Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love.
Yeah.
And if you took Kevin Loving Kyrie overing off the team, you'd be like, well, they're not so good, right?
But they had to change how they played in that finals in a way that I thought actually weirdly helped them a little bit with what they did with LeBron.
The difference was...
In other words, LeBron, because he didn't have his two guys, they played in a way that got the most out of the rest of the group.
I thought it fucked the Warriors up.
And then when the Warriors figured out the lineup of death thing, that flipped the series back.
But there was something about how that series was so weird that I actually thought it.
I still feel like the Warriors,
if you're just putting
those 15 teams together
and the newness of that team
and what was going on with Kevin Love,
that, you know,
Kevin Love thing was weird
those first two years.
Kyrie was a big game player, though.
He was,
but he'd never really done it before the...
And he couldn't have a chance.
Yeah, didn't have a chance.
That's LeBron on the 07 Cavs.
He basically took the 07 Cavs,
six games against the Warriors.
I feel like the right team,
so if you're going to go 15 and 16,
going one and one was probably the right outcome.
Yes, but right.
But you have to flip them.
Yeah, yeah, but it's just like each team probably should have won once.
Here's the right way for that.
Okay, here's the best argument for all the Steph Curry fans.
Not only are the individual stats great,
but he created an environment, both a culture
and in terms of the space that he provided,
and the way he could play off ball, on ball, the whole thing.
Where it's like in chess,
if you dominate the middle of the board,
all tactics will tend to favor you.
If you have Steph Curry on your team,
if you have Steph Curry on your team,
all these situations will tend to favor you
because of structurally what he creates
both in terms of the culture
and in terms of the spacing on the floor
and all that kind of stuff, fine.
I would not take that away from Steph.
I still think that he is an example
of how a player can mature in the clutch
and not the Chet is Steph Curry,
but I wouldn't be so quick to move
off Chet. Here's another, unless you just think at his size, we were worried about the longevity
anyway, given his frame, blah, blah, blah, maybe even then you're still selling low. If you look at a
guy like Iguadala who was miscast as a number one in Philly, right? Eventually he's a number four
in Golden State, but you still want Iguodala on your team. Yeah. If Chet is a three or a four,
I get he's a very expensive three or four, but he, like it seems to me he's one of the
the things that makes that team really good.
That's the biggest part of this, though, is can you afford three expensive guys if you're
not sure about one of the three?
That's how...
Or could you turn them into a...
Into a...
Well, let me ask you this.
If they called the clippers and said, give us the fifth pick for Chet, what do the
quippers do?
Because they have the cap space to make it work.
I think the clippers would.
I think the clippers would.
I think they would, too.
Would Milwaukee do it?
I'm not, Janice isn't answering the question.
The question for me is, would O.KC. want to turn Chet into the fifth pick in the draft making $30 million less, then you bring Hartenstein back.
You have Hartnstein and Jay Willis your centers.
And then try to go get Porzengis or someone like that.
Or maybe you try, yeah, or you try to get Robert Williams and Frayagy.
Maybe at five, you then try to trade in the top four.
Maybe you can talk Memphis and then going back two spots or Chicago.
It says that was the most interesting fake trade
of all the Chet fake trades for me.
Could they get to five for the Quippers,
a team that has Kauai, Darius Garland,
some urgency,
not knowing what the aspiration settlement's going to be
and all that shit.
Without running pleas for Chet Holmgren,
he's giving you 17, what?
He's like a 19 and 9.
19 and 9.
But he was the second best defensive player in the league.
I mean, like, Chet's a lot.
And also, you want...
You're just you're paying 40.
$31 million for him.
And he's a three, four, really.
Like, like, Wembe's really a three.
He's playing four or five because he's very tall, but he plays kind of like three.
He's a ring protection.
I don't know.
I would think about it.
Yeah.
Chets a lot.
That's it.
I would have to get major salary cap relief and I would have to get some sort of big chip.
The Warriors are going to, sorry, the Warriors, the thunder are going to have to do something.
Is the general feeling about things because of the way check came up small?
And the money.
And the money, sure.
Right, of course.
If they have Jaylon Williams, maybe they win this year.
They went seven games.
They had their second best player.
That's, I think, where you land after the wounds,
after you're licking your wounds,
cleaning up the blood off the floor.
You're like, fuck, would we have won that series
if Jaylon Williams was 100% healthy, we probably would have.
It's more really preparing for what the spurs
are likely to become, you know?
So that's the big picture.
You win the Super Bowl in Madden,
and then the next year, all your young players
are rated 10.
points higher. Right. Like all of a sudden, Steph and
Castle and Harper and everything start to blossom and it's like,
we needed to do something then. Here's that you'll love this analogy. I love to
bring in boxing with you every once in a while just so, you know,
it puts the hair in your arms standing up. Frazier couldn't beat Foreman.
No. Frazier was awesome.
Put Frazier against anybody else. It was a great fight. He was the worst
possible guy to fight Ali. Something about Foreman,
He had no chance.
Yeah, it's rock paper.
And they did it twice.
Rock paper, scissors.
He said no chance.
I don't know what the, like, I don't think Frazier at any point in his career would have figured
out what to do against Foreman.
No, Forman would have knocked them out every time.
And the question is, is that Chad against Wemby?
But Stiles make.
Is he Frazier against Foreman?
Probably, but Stiles make fights.
So Ali, the boxer, has a hard time with the volume pressure fighter, Frazier, because the guy who wants
you to miss, yeah, you make Frazier miss five times.
Who cares?
Here come another 10 punches, right?
Yeah.
Hard for Ali.
Frazier versus Foreman,
the pressure fighter has to come inside against the puncher.
He gets clipped coming in.
He's knocked out, hard for Frazier.
Foreman, the puncher,
trying to swing one at a time against Ali,
the guy who can make you miss,
bad for Foreman, right?
So it's rock,
it really is rock paper scissors.
And if you're saying that the problem is that the rock
is going to be sitting there in your path every single year,
yeah,
you know,
that's true.
But again,
I don't,
that,
but no one,
who's going to,
matchup with Wemby.
Like, you're not going to find that matchup for Lennie.
It's like, everyone's going to have this problem.
So do you just accept that there is no Wemby answer?
And maybe you did the best job you could have done against him, but every team is
going to have this issue.
So just put your best possible team together.
Yeah, if I'm the Thunder, I don't think I'm looking at that matchup.
I think I'm looking at it.
I think we're better than them.
We were missing our second best player.
And we have him.
If we have them, we're good.
Yeah.
And one more shooter, I think, is the other thing.
It was a team that when they couldn't hit threes
felt like they could lose to anybody.
Well, if they lose Dort, then they're going to, you know.
But could they make a run at somebody who's just a more reliable
heat check three point guy that?
But I think really what you're preparing for is not when.
Wemby's always going to be better than Chet.
Even if Chet does better, he's still going to be better than Chet.
You're preparing for the evolution of.
This was.
Yes, he, he didn't try.
Chet was a puddle.
Yes, he was.
I didn't realize when we did the pod Saturday night,
Chet took both of his shots at the beginning of the game.
He went like 28 minutes without taking a shot.
It was that late possession where he thought about shooting.
He didn't shoot.
But I think really if you're the thunder, you're thinking,
how do we counteract the evolution of Castle and Harper really?
That's really what you're going to have to deal with.
Yeah.
And that's, I wouldn't worry about.
And also, like, what if Carter Bryan all of a sudden is good in two years?
He's good now.
Yeah, I know.
But could be like a 35 minute a game guy.
It's pretty rough.
I think they're set up.
It's so funny because we were saying this about OKC'd last year.
And somehow San Antonio set up even better.
And it's really just can Wemby stay healthy at 7 foot 6 or whatever it is.
If I was thinking, I said this on the-
Because we remember when Samson got hurt.
And Wembees plays a much, he's playing in space more than Samson ever did.
It's a different time.
And when he now he's-
But Samson didn't train with the Shaolin monks either.
Or like train had a fall.
That's another thing.
Like, Wembe actually works on how to fall, how to land, which I don't, they just didn't know this shit.
Like Samson 40 years ago, nobody was working with them on.
Here's what happens if you're starting to fall.
Right.
So he has a three-year prime, and that's what people are thinking about.
He fell in the Boston Guardian.
He was never the same.
He fell in his back.
Led to all this other shit.
All right, Max Kellerman.
You're going to go to at least one next home game.
I got to go to the show in a minute.
I don't know if, like, let's see if I can get into a home game.
I think I might have to catch him in San Antonio.
Hot ticket.
Yeah.
Good luck, though.
This is, ever since I've known you, this seemed like an inconceivable conversation
that the Knicks might have the greatest Nick ever on their team, that they might win the finals.
It's not since, like, when people say 99, it's so annoying.
They didn't have a shot in 99.
Yeah, Ewing was.
Like, Ewing didn't play, and then they were an eight seed.
Like, you know, Camby and, and, and, and, uh, Camby's kind of forgotten it.
He was excellent.
That was a great trade.
He had a great run.
But like it's Spreewell in Houston and those guys.
But they didn't have a shot.
This is the only shot they've ever had since 94.
So I said this on a pot a couple weeks ago where I said this next team had the best chance to make the finals since the 94 team.
Yeah.
And people were like, what about the 99 team?
They made the finals.
And it was like, they lost Ewing.
Like it was a miracle.
They beat the Pacers.
They wouldn't have won with Ewing, but they would have gone six or seven games.
Yeah.
Like that was crazy that they even got out of.
of round three. But I would say that in a way, this Knicks team is playing with House Money
that the 94 team wasn't playing with. Because in Jordan's absence, it's like, okay, now.
Like we were taking the Bulls. No one, in the West took him seven games. We were taking them seven
games. We took them seven games with Jordan and Pipp and Grant. Right. Now is the time. And this is
Patrick Ewing's time. Here we get to see the parallel universe with no Michael Jordan. The Knicks
are going to win a championship. So it felt you weren't playing with House.
money. You were like destined to do it. And it was so bizarre when they didn't. It was like, wait,
what? They lost the chain. How is this possible? This is house money. The Knicks were not
supposed to be here. Right. Like they became this new team in the playoffs. I agree and I disagree.
Because I also think this is going to be your best chance this decade to win the title.
Yeah. It's the best chance. You're probably not going to have Mitch next year. He's going to leave
because I just don't think they can pay him 20 to 25 million bucks. You had no Indiana.
year. You had Boston with Tatum
coming back. You're going to have other
teams in these getting better. You don't know where the next
challengers coming from. You have younger
Wembe who's only going to get better.
Or OKC. Like this is... If the Knicks
can... This is it. I think it's not as
much about they didn't have the gauntlet
because I think they would have... You've all this
rest. Based on what I've seen,
they would have beaten all those teams. Based on what I've seen
these playoffs. They wouldn't have swept everyone, but they would
have won. I think they were... No, Indiana
had your number, though. If it was the same Indiana
team? But they're not winning by 12.
winning by 40.
I get it.
The math says yes.
Who knows?
But that's my feeling.
I feel like they're really,
really good.
The question is,
is it sustainable
for more than a year or two?
Yeah.
Right?
So is this it?
And they're firing an old cylinder?
I wrote about this,
the Pat Riley,
disease of more,
which was one of my favorite things
to read about in my book.
You've all these guys
sacrificing this year
because they're trying to win the title.
Once you win the title,
you're not as excited to sacrifice.
Towns is like,
yeah, eight shots a game.
I'm ready to take some more.
You know what?
I don't think that's his problem.
I think he has the other problem.
Towns, shoot more.
I think that's really, he's such a team guy.
It's like, you know, like, I just think it's the, when you say the 2014 spurs,
they had largely the same cast, but it never came together like that year.
It was awesome.
Right?
And so this is, now it does seem like they caught lightning in a bottle.
They didn't have to run the gauntlet.
They're rested.
They're mostly healthy.
We'll see if Mitch can play.
They just happen to be, and maybe they're catching the dynasty the year before it becomes a dynasty.
Right.
So I'll do spurs and six.
I don't feel great about it.
You'll talk about your pick on Game Over with Rich Paul and Max Cowerman.
Correct.
Good to see you.
Thanks for coming in.
Always good.
All right, that's it for the podcast.
Thanks to Max Calerman.
Thanks to Eduardo and Chris and Gahow as well.
Don't forget, I am going to be coming back right after Game 1 of the NBA Finals tomorrow.
night. We're going to be live on Netflix and new rewatchables mailbag coming on
Thursday. And then I'm not sure if I'm doing another podcast that week after the Wednesday
pod. We will see. Don't forget about the new rewatchables with Steven Spielberg and Sean
Fennessee as well, 2001, a space odyssey. So I will see you tomorrow.
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