you don't want to be confused by the facts, do you?
Not any more than you.
:ph34r:
You know, when I think of the word "objectivity," you fail to come to mind. When I think of homerism, you do.
The fact is that both of us know that the Lakers are going to rely as heavily on their starting line-up as the Spurs rely on TD. Do the Spurs have a better bench? Sure -- because they have more role players. Do they have a better team? No, the Lakers have already proven that three times this year. Oops, only 2 of those did TD play in (not that it changed the outcome any).
And games in November mean as much as a predictor as games in March.
Also it never rains in the Pacific Northwest.
If you want to go back to your original analysis without wildly commenting about everything under the sun then use the last 10 games that the Spurs have played with Duncan in the lineup. It will give a much better "preview" of how they will do in the playoffs then looking at their last ten games of which Duncan missed 7.
It is really simple logic that any 3rd grader could comprehend.
It has nothing to do with the Lakers at all.
It has nothing to do with homerism.
It has nothing to do with lack of objectivity (except maybe on your part).
Simple statement: A "preview" of the Spurs playoff chances WITH DUNCAN cannot be based on how the team plays WITHOUT DUNCAN.
Or in Laker language....how a car runs with 3 tires will not predict how the car will run with 4 tires.
No comparisons with other teams. No homerism. Just plain objectivity. Measuring anything's outcome without one variable fails to predict how that thing will work with that variable.