Can the Spurs Save the NBA Playoffs?

To many, the prospect of watching another NBA Finals that features the San Antonio Spurs and Detroit Pistons is, well, boring.

Unquestionably the two top teams of the last several seasons, their styles are well known, their stars familiar, and the mutual storylines milked for the smallest point of interest.

But that aside, I'd watch a closely-contested six-game series between those two powerhouses anytime, especially considering the current alternatives.

With either the Phoenix Suns or L.A. Clippers guaranteed a spot in the Western Conference Finals and the Dallas Mavericks holding a surprising lead over the defending champion Spurs, the long-standing tradition of defensive-minded teams rising to the top in later rounds is facing a serious threat of exception.

For years, I've been one of many to harp on clubs like the Mavs and Suns, ones that can run and score with anyone, but when faced with the task of actually keeping the ball out of the basket, you know, can't.

But this year it might not end that way. Assuming the Pistons continue to steamroll their way through the field in the Eastern Conference and Dallas can knock off San Anton, I think the emerging final would give new meaning to the word "boring."

Phoenix finished third from the bottom during the regular season defensively, allowing opponents to score almost 103 points a game. For their part, Dallas and the Clippers actually finished in the top 10 in the same category, but their team defense recently hardly draws comparisons to all-time great clamp-down clubs. And they're nowhere near last year's finalists, who finished second and third in team D this year.

Here's the point: Phoenix, L.A., and Dallas are fun teams to watch, but simply put, should any of them reach the finals and face the Pistons, we could be looking at one of the most lopsided contests since Nick Lachey and Jessica Simpson vied over post-breakup media attention.

And that would be boring, because as much as the endless sideline shots of Eva Longoria can get tiresome come playoff time (I'm reaching, I know), it's considerably more interesting than watching Shaun Livingston or Devin Harris melt under the pressure of hard-nosed championship basketball they're not ready to play.

And thus, I'm torn. Yes, cheering for new blood is always appealing, and merely entertaining the thought of the Los Angeles Clippers reaching the NBA finals is enough to make milk spew from my nostrils. And yet when I see Quentin Ross on the court, somehow I have trouble believing.

Look, I just want a good NBA Finals and I don't think anyone left in the West can provide that against the Pistons other than the Spurs.

So let's settle. We'll just have to take a two-time MVP and one of the most dominant starting lineups in decades. We'll just have to deal with two of the best point guards in the league and the defensive player of the year (again). We'll just have to learn more about Eva Longoria, no matter how boring it is.

It'll just have to do.

Comments and Conversation

May 17, 2006

DeWayne Bridges:

Aaron,
Where have you been all season.
In their first meeting of the regular season the Mavs destroyed the Pistons 119 to 82. Which team played defense in this game? The only significant player missing this game was Jerry Stackhouse of the Mavs. In the 2nd meeting between Detroit and Dallas in Detroit the Pistons won a well played game by both teams 97 to 90. The game was better than the score would indicate and the Mavs played without Josh Howard and Deven Harris both out with hamstring injuries.
As far the current Spurs and Mavs playoff series, the pace of play being dictated my the Mavs has forced the higher scores. You might notice that the Mavs have out scored the “defensive Spurs” in 3 of the 4 games.
All the games in this series have been well played with some outstanding and exciting offense and key moments of outstanding defense on both sides. Key defensive stops near the end of the last three games have allowed the Mavs to win these games. This series is certainly not over yet - though the Mavs have taken command.
Aaron,
Are you saying you would prefer the inept basketball as demonstrated in game 4 of the Cavs vs Pistons series where both teams struggled to score 70 points ???

There has to be good offense for defensive skills to have any meaning. Poorly played, sloppy, inempt basketball that happens to be low scoring does not get it!

May 18, 2006

Jon:

Aaron Miller, are you for real? The Pistons and Spurs are good teams, but their defense is diminishing as their age is ever increasing. How can anyone say the Cavs/Pistons and Mavs/Spurs series are boring? You have a masterful matching of talent and wits with Spurs/Mavs. And you have the emergence of playoff greatness in Lebron. And please don’t compare the Mavs to the Suns. Yes, the Mavs can run but they can also defend when it is necessary to win a game. They whipped the Spurs in three straight, and there have now been four tremendously exciting games. Check your pulse and disclose your team affiliation while you’re at it. Your opinion sounds like that of a fan whose team isn’t performing.

May 18, 2006

Jon:

I can’t barely muster a comment on this article after reading it a second time. Inacurate observations that border on ridiculous. You are nuts… and sore that your Spurs are losing.

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