Okafor is a victim of the modern obsession with stats.
Honestly, I'm really hoping that New Orleans finds a way to pair Anthony Davis with a dominant young interior presence so that the vogue in the league shifts back toward big men who create matchup problems with their scoring inside. Maybe Utah can shift the discussion if they can get a decent point guard and win 50+ games with Hayward / Favors / Gobert.
I like that small-ball and perimeter scoring have become much more popular. The game benefits from an emphasis on versatility, ball-movement, spacing, and so on. But it goes too far when people decide there's only way to construct a team that can win.
I'm hoping rule changes help in this area. I hope they remove the "hack-a" issues so guys like Jordan and Drummond can be dominant inside like players were throughout the history of the league, even if they can't shoot free throws. That would help for sure.
I do think just the right players coming along could do it. I mean, bigs can be so skilled at guard skills now that you can see teams playing these modern systems with height and size. You bring up the Lakers, and part of the reason that team worked was because Odom had those skills, Pau had those skills, and Bynum was great in the post (best C in the league for multiple years IMO, because he was a better low post scorer than Dwight ever was).
I dunno if you need rule changes. If Anthony Davis and Demarcus Cousins were on the same team, I think the discussion changes drastically.
The makeup of the best team in the league, whichever the "iconic" team of the moment is, has a tendency to direct the discussion on how to build a great team.
Interesting thing, the Spurs right now are a fairly paint-bound, mid-range heavy squad, with a point guard who scores 11-12 points per game, and yet it doesn't change the narrative at all. I guess the Spurs winning lots of games is just kind of passe now. People don't bat an eyelash. It's just what Popovich and Duncan do.
I think you should change the rules. I just have a long term mentality with the sport and this was only a recent issue. In the past there were a number of players we all think as great that if they played now would be embroiled in this "hack-a" thing where they can't even be in at the end of the game.
Yeah there are bigs that can shoot FTs. Always have been. But there's always been a few guys that can't but usually excel in rebounding and defense. Stuff bigs do. It would 100% help things balance out more.
I could go on with other reasons I hate it but that's just part.
You are right about the Spurs. As always, they are just kind of their own case because they generally have so much talent.
And really I don't think the whole league is following the Warriors blueprint quite as much as people think, either. Or at least, it was just a natural evolution of the game and where big men were going, learning to shoot threes and having guard skills more and more. Guys like KG and Nowitzki (and others even before them) set that in motion.