WASHINGTON 鈥 We have an obsession in the sports world with arguing the unarguable. Call it 鈥淔irst Take Syndrome,鈥 the product of the political talking (or screaming) head show leaking its way into sports. We insist on comparing everything, ranking who is better, even when there is absolutely no viable way to do so, spending all our time arguing instead of just enjoying what we鈥檙e lucky enough to be watching.
The latest debate taking center stage is whether the 72-win Chicago Bulls team of 1995-96, would beat this year鈥檚 Golden State Warriors, who will go for their record-breaking 73rd win in their final game Wednesday in Oakland against the Memphis Grizzlies. That Bulls record was thought to be unmatchable as recently as a few months ago, even as the Warriors raced off to a historic start.
https://twitter.com/JerryGiaimis/status/719346808565166080
Whoops.
Anyway,聽now that we鈥檙e here, nobody can help but compare the two teams.
Sure, it鈥檚 fun to think about Michael Jordan and Steph Curry matching each other shot-for-shot; Dennis Rodman and Draymond Green getting after every rebound; Steve Kerr the coach trying to take away Steve Kerr the player鈥檚 comfort zone beyond the arc. But you鈥檙e talking about two teams that play in fundamentally different eras of basketball, each optimized to win under the rules as they existed at the time.
But don鈥檛 take it from me. Here鈥檚 Kerr, the most direct connection between the two teams, on the topic.
鈥淢y initial thought are that it is literally impossible to even compare, because the rules are so different and the eras are so different,鈥 Kerr back in November of last year, highlighting the crux of the fallacy.
With hand-checking allowed and illegal defense rules in the NBA that prevented help-side defenders from coming over to double-team, the game was driven around isolated, one-on-one action in the mid-90s. This favored those Bulls teams, who could exploit the simple fact that nobody could really guard Jordan. They could play a lineup where their top four players and nine of the top 10 in minutes played were 6-foot-6 and up, a plodding, physical team.
The Warriors are not that team. They aren鈥檛 built to withstand the beating of that era, and their defense is predicated on constant switching that the rules now allow them to do.
But the Warriors are full of athletes and great shooters, the latter aspect often the only thing anyone focuses on. But this team doesn鈥檛 just huck threes. They lead the NBA with 20.8 fast-break points per game, including a mind-blowing 23.8 per game at home, the best rate of any NBA team since the 2007-08 Warriors run-and-gunned their way to 27.2 at Oracle Arena.
You can say the Warriors wouldn鈥檛 be tough enough. You can say the Bulls wouldn鈥檛 be able to keep up on the break without adapting their lineup. The fact that we鈥檒l never know for sure certainly hasn鈥檛 stopped people from affirming wild speculation as truth.
Want an idea of the idiocy this has provoked? Do a .鈥
The real question we should be asking is why anyone feels the need to make declarative statements about something that clearly can鈥檛 be measured. Whether or not you think the Warriors are better than those Bulls, they have actually, in real life, matched their 72 wins. They have a chance to go for 73, to set a new record. This is the reason we play sports, to see if we can improve upon the marks that have been set.
Instead of focusing on what they could never accomplish in a hypothetical world that can never exist, let鈥檚 look at what this team is actually doing.
They are the first team in history to go the entire NBA season without losing to the same team twice. They will finish the season without losing back-to-back games, something the Bulls didn鈥檛 accomplish. By winning for the first time in 34 tries on the road in San Antonio, they became the only team in the NBA this year to beat the Spurs on their home floor. Had San Antonio won Sunday and again Tuesday against Oklahoma City, the Spurs would have been the first team to ever finish a home slate undefeated.
History is unfolding in front of your eyes. Whether the Warriors beat a tattered Memphis Grizzlies team in Oakland Wednesday night shouldn鈥檛 be a referendum on their status compared to the 鈥95-鈥96 Bulls. It will be to some 鈥 because 73 is a bigger number than 72 鈥 but anyone with any sense of the game will tell you that Sunday night鈥檚 win deep in the heart of Texas provided far more validation for the season the Warriors have put together.
Those 鈥95-鈥96 Bulls will always be recognized as the pinnacle of a dominant era, the first year of the second three-peat under Jordan and Phil Jackson. The Warriors would need to win a string of titles to match that legacy. Maybe they will, and we鈥檒l be relegated to whole other discussion about which dynasty was more impressive.
But for now, do us all a favor. Sit back, relax and enjoy watching a team aim for a historical moment most of us never thought we鈥檇 see. If you can鈥檛 enjoy this, it鈥檚 time to really ask yourself why you watch sports at all.