Francisco Elson wrote:I see where you're going at, but I was talking about in their primes.
Would a duo consisting of Pippen in his prime and a big man in his prime (Hakeem, Duncan, Shaq even) have been more succesful than Pippen/Jordan in their primes? I think so. A duo like this would've been a lot harder to stop.
I don't think they'd be any harder to stop, at least at the offensive end. MJ outscored Hakeem every year except 85/86 (when MJ missed 64 games with a broken foot) and 94/95 (played 17 games after an 18 month retirement). I don't think different pairings would show significant difference.
Francisco Elson wrote:Also, about Hakeem's help, Drexler was still a good player, but he played 35, 52, 62 and 70 games in his years with Houston. Not a lot of games to make a difference.
What about the playoffs? That is where the championship is won.

Francisco Elson wrote:When joining Houston for 98-99, Pippen was coming off a season where he had 19.1ppg, 5.2 rpg and 5.8 apg, hardly a season in decline, he was even able to play 40mpg in Houston. Only his scoring went down, due to lower FGA, because they had to share the ball more. 15ppg, 6.5 rpg, 5.9 apg.
You're right about Pippen, he was still more or less the player he was during the 90s.
Francisco Elson wrote:Barkley was still a rebounding machine in Houston, his scoring had gone down a little because he had less attempts in Houston also. Hakeem needs the ball
He still had over 12 rebounds and 15 points a game in 98-99. Hakeem, 19ppg, 10 rpg on 51% shooting. Just below his career numbers. They were also surrounded by talented youngsters like Dickerson, Harrington and Mobley. I'm still amazed they didn't get far.
Barkley, by his own admission, was no longer the player he used to be. Hakeem's last truly great season was 95/96. Nagging injuries and advancing age affected his performance during the 97/98 season and beyond. Like all the great players of the 80s/90s era, Barkley and Olajuwon were starting to decline from 97/98 onwards.