In the 2010s, you always had your clear-cut contenders such as the Spurs, Warriors, Heat, OKC, etc. Most of the time, the top teams in each conference would have a staggering amount of wins. 60-65+ wins was very common back then. Hell, the top-2 teams in 15/16 in the West had 73 and 67 wins a piece. The issue was, was that the middle/bottom of the league was terrible.

Ever since the summer of 2019, there has been a lack of the DOMINANT teams that we were so accustomed to. That isn’t to say that there aren’t great teams, but the days of the cream of the crop seem to be over. Last year, it was honestly difficult to determine who would win the title because there were so many great teams and contenders. This also explains the lack of high-win teams as well.

Do you guys agree?

  • BetweenTheBuzzAndMeB
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    11 months ago

    The parity over the last couple seasons is the best I’ve seen since I started watching in the early 2000s. There’s almost always been 1 or 2 heavy favorites to win their conferences and/or the title, lots of teams expected to repeat, threepeat, etc… And it would be a massive surprise if anything below a 4 seed made a run.

    Today, any team that wins a round seems to have a very good chance of taking it all, and that hasn’t been the case at basically any other point this century.