"I got Dallas and the Lakers ahead of the Spurs to be honest with you. To be honest with you, if the season ended today I think Oklahoma City can beat the Spurs because I think the Spurs are a little overrated to be honest with you because I think they play very hard, they play very smart but I think they are missing a big guy to be honest with you. Tim Duncan is struggling on the downside of his career but I just don’t think they don’t get enough easy baskets because their two best players are Parker and Ginobili, and I love Ginobili, but I believe in jump shooters being your go-to guy to be honest, that was my only knock on Oklahoma City. I always tell people you don’t win with jump shots. They have gotten better around the basket defensively but I think Dallas and the Lakers are the two best teams in the West."Now, when I actually sit down and read that, it's really confusing to me, but I think I get the gist of it. I think. Essentially, Barkley is saying that despite the league best record, the Spurs aren't his favorites to win a championship, which can be a legitimate statement. It was only in 2007 that we saw the league-best 67-15 Dallas Mavericks embarrassingly ousted from the first round of the playoffs by the Cinderella We Believe Golden State Warriors, lead by Baron Davis, Stephen Jackson, and Jason Richardson. We saw in 2009 66-16 Cleveland Cavaliers get destroyed by a Hedo Turkoglu and Dwight Howard pick-and-roll in the Eastern Conference Finals and then in 2010 the 61-21 Cavaliers saw LeBron James check out during the second round against the Boston Celtics. So if we've learned anything from history, we do know that regular season record isn't necessarily indicative of anything. In 2006 the 64-18 Detroit Pistons were upset by the Miami Heat, led by Dwayne Wade and Shaquille O'Neal in the Eastern Conference Finals. So that means in the last 5 years, only the 66-16 Boston Celtics of 2008 both held the NBA league-best record AND won a championship. That's not to say that there is a negative correlation, but rather, that they are probably less related than one might initially imagine. Fair enough.
That brings me to the second point though, which is where Barkley thinks that all these other teams are ahead of the Spurs, which I'm not entirely sure about. While it's fair to say that on paper, Lakers have an edge, I don't know that you can definitively declare the Spurs patently "worse" than the Mavericks and Lakers considering that the Spurs at worse can split the season with either team, having already beaten both teams twice out of their annual four meetings. I mean, on paper, sure, the Lakers and Mavericks "look" better, but that isn't always telling. I mean, seriously, when was the last time the Spurs "looked good" on paper? 2003? Yet with all these no-name players and journeymen and such, the Spurs have managed to cobble together consecutive playoff appearances and 4 championships since Duncan's rookie year in 1998. However, I can still see that just based on intuition how Barkley would pick the Lakers over the Spurs (though maybe it's bias that causes me to dislike the Mavericks and wonder how anyone could think that team is good). Let's look at all these teams that Barkley likes over the Spurs:
| SPURS | LAKERS | MAVERICKS | THUNDER |
PG | Tony Parker | Derek Fisher | Jason Kidd | Russell Westbrook |
SG | Manu Ginobili | Kobe Bryant | Rodrigue Beaubois | Thabo Sefolosha |
SF | Richard Jefferson | Ron Artest | Peja Stojakovic | Kevin Durant |
PF | DeJuan Blair | Pau Gasol | Dirk Nowitzki | Serge Ibaka |
C | Tim Duncan | Andrew Bynum | Tyson Chandler | Kendrick Perkins |
| | | | |
G-3 | George Hill | Steve Blake | J.J. Barea | Eric Maynor |
G-4 | Gary Neal | Shannon Brown | Jason Terry | James Harden |
F-3 | James Anderson | Matt Barnes | DeShawn Stevenson | Daequan Cook |
F-4 | Antonio McDyess | Lamar Odom | Shawn Marion | Nick Collison |
C-2 | Tiago Splitter | Joe Smith | Brendan Haywood | Nazr Mohammed |
| | | | |
Res | Matt Bonner | Luke Walton | Ian Mahinmi | Cole Aldrich |
Res | Chris Quinn | Devin Ebanks | Brian Cardinal | Nate Robinson |
Which kind of leads my rambling to my last point, which is simply, I don't think Charles Barkley has watched a Spurs game. Essentially, he labelled Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili "jump shooters" and went on to say, "you don't win with jump shots". Okay, fair enough. 76% of Ginobili's shot attempts are categorized as jump shots on 82games.com, but so are 81% of Kobe Bryant's, 86% of Kevin Durant's, and 88% of Dirk Nowitzki's shot attempts, furthermore, Tony Parker only has about 52% of his shots categorized as jump shots, so essentially, the go-to guys on the Spurs are less jump shooters than all the other teams. That was a lot of numbers, let's see if a chart can help:
| Tony Parker | Manu Ginobili | Kobe Bryant | Pau Gasol | Dirk Nowitzki | Jason Terry | Kevin Durant | Russell Westbrook |
% jump shot | 58% | 76% | 81% | 55% | 88% | 88% | 86% | 63% |
% close | 42% | 22% | 17% | 34% | 11% | 11% | 8% | 33% |
% dunk | 0% | 1% | 1% | 5% | 1% | 1% | 6% | 4% |
% tip | 0% | 1% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 1% | 1% |
% inside | 42% | 24% | 19% | 45% | 12% | 12% | 14% | 37% |
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