Folks, in the real world, most Knicks-Bulls series went the full 7 games. In '94, when Jordan was out, a fathom call against Pippen pushed the series the full route. Otherwise, Chicago would have won it in 6, without Michael Jordan. In contrast, whenever Olajuwon was not on the Rockets, the team played miserably. Just watch any of their regular season games, during either Ramadan or when Hakeem was injured.
Here's my point, a great defensive team wins series. Now, here's the added caveat ... provided that that great defensive team has an alpha male franchise player scorer on board.
Where I wholeheartedly disagree with many is that Patrick Ewing was this alpha male center. Instead, he was a Cartwright plus but unlike Bill, Ewing was asked to lead the Knicks in all departments. And realize, like Cartwright in earlier times, he put up good stats for the Knicks but when push came to shove, he'd miss layups, free throws, and more or less disappear from the game, either offensively or defensively. That's not an alpha male franchise player.
Now, given the Knick's tough defensive schemes, if you replace Ewing w/ Olajuwon, you get that alpha male scorer and one, who's more or less, unstoppable. Thus, it would be easy for Riley to draw up plays where Hakeem, more of less, explodes for numerous scoring stretches, without him having to defend for every possession, which he was indirectly expected to do for Houston. The 90s Knicks would have the perfect locale for a Hakeem era.
And no, I disagree, Hakeem was the best player of the 90s, not the mid-90s, when Jordan was on vacation. Jordan was the best swingman of his era and had the luck of the 'Jordan Rules', by the refs, and was on the right defensive team for his circumstances.
And I think Olajuwon even held his ground against McHale, Parish, and Walton pretty well during the '86 finals. But C'mon, was it expected that one Hakeem, 3 role players, and one choked Sampson was gonna beat the '86 Celtics? I think not.