1) The Warriors were the biggest favorite to win the title in 20 years and much much bigger favorite than any team in the 80's. -Moranis response odds are bad and don't mean much (subquestion you didn't answer, why did you do extensive posting on the cavs title odds against the celtics after the kyrie trade to prove they were a more serious contender, this completely contradicts your viewpoint on odds. If you have any self respect never used odds to support your arguments again.
Both gross mischaracterizations of the arguments I made. As for this thread, being a favorite doesn't mean a thing when you have actual results to look at. Last year the Lakers had the 4th best title odds entering the season. Those odds were clearly garbage and show the fallacy of using them to prove a lack of competitive balance. Those are the points I'm making. The Warriors did not win the title last year and only clinched home-court the last week of the season. Now sure maybe if Durant doesn't go down they win again, but maybe not. After all, they barely beat Houston the year before that.
2) Every year in the 80's there were 3-4 times as many teams given a chance to win the title compared to the last few years (note this is one of the most commonly cited ways the media and commentators discuss the league as being competitive) Moranis - Odds are garbage irrelevant
You've basically summarized my argument correctly, you know since it is based on actual results. Given a chance before a season absolutely 100% doesn't mean a thing when you have the actual season results to look at. The bottom line is the Lakers, Celtics, Sixers, Rockets, and Pistons were the only 5 teams to make the NBA Finals for an entire decade and the Lakers and the Celtics were the only teams to be good for basically the entire decade. The Rockets had 2 fluke seasons, the Sixers were good the first half, and the Pistons were good the last few. I don't think you could make a realistic argument that any team could have actually won the title in any season in the 80's. A team like the Bucks, for example, that in the strange year actually competed with the Celtics got blitzed by the Sixers. That isn't necessarily true of the NBA the last few years, where yeah, the Warriors were the heavy favorites, but the Rockets won 5 playoff games against them the last 2 years and were perhaps a Chris Paul injury away from taking them out 2 seasons ago and of course the Raptors won the title this year (and the Sixers and Bucks were clear contenders. The Cavs 2 years ago were in the Finals (and it obviously wasn't close), but had the Warriors had an injury, the Cavs certainly could have won. So in the last 2 seasons you had the Warriors, Rockets, Cavs, Raptors, Sixers, and Bucks that all could have won a title. That makes the league more competitive than any given season in the 80's when quite simply there just wasn't that sort of swing.
3) The Warriors were the first team in history of NBA from anything I can find to have active back to back MVPs on their team (a pretty clear sign of a dominant team) - Moranis reply - not answered
to be fair Durant was 2 seasons removed from winning the MVP. But again this is a strange argument since players while playing on the same team don't generally win MVP's. That said, Dr. J and Moses were both on the 83 Sixers and they were back to back MVP's. Moses won again in 83, meaning those 2 teammates held the last 3 MVP's including 1 when they were actually teammates (something the Warriors never did). Starting with the 84-85 season, the Sixers also added Barkley who would go on to win the MVP with the Suns, so they had Moses, Dr. J, and Barkley all in their 20's on the same team not to mention other HOFers Mo Cheeks and Bobby Jones. Yet somehow the Sixers aren't equivalent to the Warriors of today. That seems a bit strange to me.
Also for the record, Kareem and Magic both won MVP's for the Lakers in the 80's, though they weren't back to back (they also were joined by a past his prime McAdoo so another MVP and HOFer).
Going back a long time, Russell and Cousy won back to back MVP's.
4) The Warriors had 4 players that made all NBA season the previous season on their roster, best I can tell never done before in history of NBA - Moranis reply - tries to compare teams all-nba players over entire decade to one season of warriors Bizarre. Brings in the 60's for the first time on the 8th page of the thread. Bizarre
What is bizarre? My argument has been that the league has never had competitive balance. Why wouldn't that extend to the entire history of the league? The Warriors didn't have 4 All NBA members on the same team, as they've never had more than 3 in any given season. That was the point I was making. Taking things before they joined up seems strange. As for why I brought up the C's, it was because they were all on All NBA teams (again only 2 teams and not 3) within a few years of each other. That is important because it shows the quality of play and also shows that things like All NBA Teams are stat driven. It is hard to get stats when your stats are cannibalized. That is why, with Durant, the Warriors had 3, 2, and 2 members on All NBA Teams. They never had 4. Not even close. They never had more than 2 on the 1st or 2nd team. Plenty of teams in NBA history had at least 2 players make the 1st or 2nd Team All NBA.
Look man. Objectively the NBA has been the least competitive it has been in 40 years because there are were 4 all-nba guys on one team and 2 of the those guys were on the same team also. Of all the teams you were talking about in the 80's none of them were that stacked, and that is why this whole 80's premise was wrong. Worse, the NBA could have been more competitive if there were 3-4 other great teams to at least make the title competitive. But I mean we almost made the finals with terry rozier and brown and tatum. There just weren't many good teams.
That just isn't true. You claim it is objective, but it isn't objective at all.
Also since you decided to randomly bring in the 60's Celtics, I would agree with you that was less competitive than it is now. There were way less teams and the Celtics absolutely dominated. If you say something that is accurate I am going to be the first one to admit, which is a difference between you and I in these debates. You tried to make comparison to the 80's and the numbers were just not on your side, but instead of actually realizing this you just kept moving the goalposts and changing what we could consider as valid evidence in the argument. It is quite disappointing. Its not going to kill you to be like, yea I guess this has been a more extreme the last few years than other eras. Or maybe it would.
My argument has the NBA has never had competitive balance. In fact, the first post you responded to talked about the entire league history. I focused on the 80's because I think everyone would agree the 60's and the 90's weren't competitive at all. They had a dominant team. The 80's had 2 dominant teams and 2 other teams that were dominant for half the decade. In fact, the 70's and the mid to late 00's (6 different champs in a 9 year period) have really been the only time when the league has had any sort of real competitive balance. That was brought on for different reasons each time, but is in fact the objective reality given the actual results. Frankly, if a team that is not the Warriors, Raptors, or Cavs wins the next title that would be 4 different champions in a 5 year season, which just hasn't happened all that often in league history until recently or the 70's (didn't happen at all in the 80's or 90's).
Also this is pretty funny, Warriors had highest Elo score across 4 consecutive seasons in NBA History. Worse for this 80's arguments a bunch of teams from the 80's made the list at the same time. What makes a league more competitive one great team dominating the rest of the league, or a bunch of heavy weight contenders competing against each other. I think even a toddler could understand a league with a bunch of good teams competing for the title is literally, by definition, competitive:
Highest average* blended Elo across four consecutive seasons for NBA franchises, 1948-18
TEAM SEASONS TITLES 4-YEAR BLENDED ELO
Golden State Warriors 2015-18 3 1789
Chicago Bulls 1995-98 3 1745
San Antonio Spurs 2013-16 1 1736
San Antonio Spurs 2003-06 2 1719
Chicago Bulls 1991-94 3 1717
Boston Celtics 1984-87 2 1716
Los Angeles Lakers 1985-88 3 1715
Los Angeles Lakers 2008-11 2 1706
Los Angeles Lakers 2000-03 3 1703
Miami Heat 2011-14 2 1702
Utah Jazz 1995-98 0 1702
Milwaukee Bucks 1971-74 1 1701
Philadelphia 76ers 1980-83 1 1698
Detroit Pistons 1987-90 2 1695
Oklahoma City Thunder 2011-14 0 1692
That doesn't actually prove the dominance you think it does. If anything, that shows that while the Warriors have performed the best, they haven't performed significantly better than many other teams throughout history and that includes overlap with the Spurs (and frankly if Leonard stays, I bet the Raptors enter that list with a 2 season overlap just like the Spurs had a 2 season overlap). And if Jordan hadn't retired, I suspect the Bulls would have been higher than the Warriors adding in a much better 95 season.