First off, JoMal is the one who sees clearly! And he is correct about my "motivation". However this is about logic and seeing clearly.
Spurs fans can focus on the mantra that the Spurs are a better team, but to me, the Nuggets are an unknown quantity without a long-term track record.
You need to think about that statement. Spurs fans are betting on a "known", you seem to prefer the "unkown", is that how you invest in the stock market? While I agree with your classification of the Spurs and Nuggets I don't agree with you favoring the "unkown". That's not where you put your money.
Great individual players overcome these types of obstacles. That is why Michael Jordan is still respected as the greatest- he overcame other team's focused on stopping him.
Sooooooo NOT true, MJ didn't have success until he had RELIABLE support, he won nothing on his own, he would put up Kobe-like numbers in the playoffs and get bounced by the Celtics and Pistons every year until his team mates were able to shoulder the load because the obstacles thrown at MJ did stop MJ from winning, which is the point of the playoffs.
Let me clarity please. The Spurs are more of a known quantity based on their track record. The Nuggets are not. It is not because the Nuggets are unknown that I pick them to win the series. I pick them because I think that when you have two players of Iverson and Carmello's talent, and they are surrounded by quality players like Camby and Nene and Kleiza and the rest, that they should be a very, very good team, possibly with enough talent to overcome the Spurs. I base that on my experience watching lots of teams over the years and seeing what it takes to win a championship.
I really don't know if the Nuggets are that good. I know I'm out on a limb here against conventional wisdom, but then again I have little respect for conventional wisdom!
In the stock market, I am in fact investing in the unknown. I do not have a crystal ball and do not know where a given stock is going. I use technical analysis to define the trends in the stock, and rely on chart patterns to make my decisions. When I see certain pattens, I'm confident that the stock will perform as others have in the past. But even when I make the decision, I watch the trade like a hawk until I close it out. The action in the price tells me whether the decision was a good one, and that can change based on what happens with the price.
I don't have the same tools to analyze basketball teams. Yes, there are statistics, but not enough with the Nuggets to make a projection. Just instincts and feelings from a lot of experience watching teams.
In the case of MJ, he was a star before he won championships. The same way AI is a star without a ring. He needed a good team around him to win a championship. Some players never get the chance to win a ring, but I thought would have been good enough if circumstances were different. Reggie Miller was a player I though was worthy of a ring. If that MJ character wasn't around, he might have actually gotten one.
AI is still in search of one, and I think he is with a significantly more talented team then the one he went to the finals with in Philly. That team played better team defense (pre-Mutumbo) than Denver does, but Denver has a much better offense than that Philly team could ever dream of.
Enough to beat the Spurs? A Championship-calibur club? I'm not really sure, I think so, and watch the series to see if my thinking is justified. So far, "the jury" is out. The Nuggets have done enough that it seems reasonable, and I think game three will be pivotal for psychological reasons.
To me game 1 was huge because the sixth seed shouldn't be able to do that to the three seed. Game 2 made it clear that the Spurs weren't about to roll over. Now for Denver to upset the Spurs they need to defend their home court. IF the Spurs win, they take control over the series. If the Spurs loose, the Nuggets are right where they need to be to take the series.
What is unusual is that a first round series is in doubt. Usually the higher seed takes it no question. But I have doubts because the Nuggets are an above average team talent wise to be sixth. Not because I have any doubts about the Spurs.