And yet the East series are all being dominated by 1 team while 3 of the 4 series in the West are dog fights. So maybe just maybe it really is as I said all season long i.e. the West has more good teams than the the East and thus is in fact the better deeper conference. The allegedly awful Pelicans are all tied up with the Suns, and sure the Suns lost Booker, but if the Pelicans are really that bad, shouldn't that have still been a blowout for the Suns? You know like the Bucks losing Middleton and still blowing the doors off the Bulls because the Bucks are just flat out better.
Does this mean that the Pels are better than people think or that the Suns are not as good as people think? You are choosing to interpret this in the manner that supports your perspective on this.
I think the only thing people are disagreeing on is the definition of "deeper" or "better". The top 4 teams in the East may all be better than the top team in the West (who ever that is). The "middle" 4 in the west, UTA, DEN, MIN. NOP, may all be better than CHI, TOR, and ATL but I am not so sure, but BKN is probably better than all of the west "middle" teams. And even if they are, does that make the west deeper?
What these series are showing is that the top 4 in the east are farther ahead of the middle 4 in the east than the top 4 in the west are ahead of the middle 4 in the west. So yes, the west series are more evenly matched. But is this more about the good teams in the west not being as good as the good teams in the east or is it more about the middle teams in the west being better than some of the middle team in the east?
I'm sure it is some of both on the Suns/Pelicans, but I've seen close hard fought series all playoffs in the West and blow-outs in the East. And many of the blow-outs in the East involve teams with very similar records, which does in fact support the point I was making all year i.e. that because teams like Phoenix had such a great record, it deflated the record of the teams in the middle. Despite this, each of the top 7 teams in the West had a better record than their Eastern counterparts. That is a lot of wins that would have flowed down to teams like New Orleans (who is clearly different after the trade deadline), had the top evened out some (or conversely if Miami was 11 games better it would have taken a lot of wins from teams like the Hawks, Hornets, etc. to get there).
Milwaukee is the best team in the sport and has been all year. Their record doesn't change that fact. I believe the Boston/Milwaukee winner should and will be the heavy favorites to win the title because they look like the two best teams in the sport right now, but the next 4 or 5 best teams are in fact in the West as they've been all year. The Sixers don't have enough depth, Miami is similar to Phoenix, but not as good (if Booker is healthy). We see what the Nets look like when a team can load up on Durant and they have no one else reliable on the team. The Warriors, Mavs, Grizzlies, etc. are all led by super duper players, something you need to really win and they all have solid players around them.